As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on March 29, 2018.
Registration Nos.
2-99356
811-04367
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
FORM N-1A
REGISTRATION STATEMENT
UNDER
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THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
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☒
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Pre-Effective Amendment No.
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☐
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Post-Effective Amendment No. 318
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and/or
REGISTRATION STATEMENT
UNDER
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THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
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Amendment No. 322
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(Check Appropriate Box or Boxes)
COLUMBIA FUNDS SERIES TRUST I
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)
225 Franklin
Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110
(Address of Principal Executive Officers) (Zip Code)
Registrants Telephone Number, Including Area Code: (800)
345-6611
Christopher O. Petersen, Esq.
c/o Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC
225 Franklin Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02110
(Name and Address of Agent for Service)
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Approximate Date of Proposed Public Offering: April 5, 2018
It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box)
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☐ Immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
☒ On April 2, 2018 pursuant to paragraph (b)
☐ 60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
☐ On (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
☐ 75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)
☐ On (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of rule 485
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If appropriate, check the following box:
☐ This post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a previously filed post-effective amendment.
This Post-Effective Amendment relates solely to the Registrants
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund and Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
series. Information contained in the Registrants Registration Statement
relating to any other series of the Registrant is neither amended nor superseded hereby.
Prospectus
April 2,
2018
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
Class:
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Advisor
(Class Adv)
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Institutional
3 (Class Inst3)
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Ticker
Symbol:
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CAAHX
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CAIDX
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Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
Class:
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Advisor
(Class Adv)
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Institutional
3 (Class Inst3)
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Ticker
Symbol:
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CARJX
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CAIEX
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Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
Class:
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Advisor
(Class Adv)
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Institutional
3 (Class Inst3)
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Ticker
Symbol:
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CARPX
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CAIHX
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Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
Class:
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Advisor
(Class Adv)
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Institutional
3 (Class Inst3)
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Ticker
Symbol:
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CARFX
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CAIJX
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As with all mutual funds, the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) has not approved or disapproved these securities or passed upon the adequacy of this prospectus. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025
Fund
Investment Objective
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund (the 2025 Fund or the
Fund)
seeks capital appreciation and current income.
Fees and Expenses of the Fund
This table describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if
you buy and hold shares of the Fund. An investor transacting in a class of Fund shares without any front-end sales charge, contingent deferred sales charge, or other asset-based fee for sales or distribution may be required to pay a commission to
the financial intermediary for effecting such transactions. Such commission rates are set by the financial intermediary and are not reflected in the tables or the example below.
Shareholder
Fees (fees paid directly from your investment)
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Class
Adv
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Class
Inst3
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Maximum
sales charge (load) imposed on purchases
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None
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None
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Maximum
deferred sales charge (load) imposed on redemptions
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None
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None
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Annual
Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment)
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Class
Adv
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Class
Inst3
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Management
fees
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0.45%
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0.45%
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Distribution
and/or service (12b-1) fees
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0.00%
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0.00%
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Other
expenses
(a)
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1.54%
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1.33%
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Acquired
fund fees and expenses
(b)
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0.06%
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0.06%
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Total
annual Fund operating expenses
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2.05%
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1.84%
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Less:
Fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
(c)
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(1.37%)
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(1.34%)
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Total
annual Fund operating expenses after fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
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0.68%
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0.50%
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(a)
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Other expenses are based on
estimated amounts for the Fund's current fiscal year.
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(b)
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Acquired fund fees and
expenses are based on estimated amounts for the Fund's current fiscal year.
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(c)
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Columbia Management Investment
Advisers, LLC and certain of its affiliates have contractually agreed to waive fees and/or to reimburse expenses (excluding transaction costs and certain other investment related expenses, interest, taxes, and infrequent and/or unusual expenses)
through July 31, 2021, unless sooner terminated at the sole discretion of the Fund’s Board of Trustees. Under this agreement, the Fund’s net operating expenses, subject to applicable exclusions, will not exceed the annual rates of 0.68%
for Class Adv and 0.50% for Class Inst3.
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The following example is intended to help
you compare the cost of investing in the Fund with the cost of investing in other mutual funds. The example illustrates the hypothetical expenses that you would incur over the time periods indicated, and assumes that:
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you invest $10,000 in the
applicable class of Fund shares for the periods indicated,
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your investment has a 5%
return each year, and
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the
Fund’s total annual operating expenses remain the same as shown in the
Annual Fund Operating Expenses
table above.
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Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
Since the waivers and/or reimbursements
shown in the
Annual Fund Operating Expenses
table above expire as indicated in the preceding table, they are reflected in the 1 year example and the 3 year example. Although your actual costs may be
higher or lower, based on the assumptions listed above, your costs (based on estimated Fund expenses) would be:
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1
year
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3
years
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Class
Adv
(whether or not shares are redeemed)
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$69
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$218
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Class
Inst3
(whether or not shares are redeemed)
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$51
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$160
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Portfolio Turnover
The Fund, underlying funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs)
pay transaction costs, such as commissions, when they buy and sell securities (or “turn over” their portfolios). The Fund will indirectly bear the expenses associated with portfolio turnover of the underlying funds and ETFs. A high
portfolio turnover rate may indicate higher transaction costs. These costs, which are not reflected in annual fund operating expenses or in the example, affect the Fund’s performance. Because the Fund is newly organized, portfolio turnover
information is not available as of the date of this prospectus.
Principal Investment Strategies
Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC (the Investment
Manager) manages the Fund using an adaptive risk allocation methodology. The Investment Manager employs quantitative and fundamental methods to identify distinct market states (capital preservation, neutral, bullish and highly bullish) and creates a
strategic risk allocation to four broad asset categories (equity securities, fixed income securities issued by governments (rate assets), other fixed income securities (spread assets) and inflation-hedging assets) for each market state that is
intended to generate attractive risk-adjusted returns in that market state. Allocations of risk to asset classes may differ significantly across market states. In addition to strategic risk allocations based on the market state, the Investment
Manager may make tactical adjustments within and among asset classes and pursue opportunistic strategies in response to changing market, economic or other conditions. For these purposes, risk is the expected volatility (i.e., dispersion of returns)
of a security, market, index or asset class, as determined by the Investment Manager.
The Investment Manager allocates the Fund’s risk across
global asset classes by reference to a specified “Target Date” (the year referenced in the name of the Fund), and periodically (generally monthly) reallocates risk across these asset classes as market or other conditions change, in an
effort to provide capital appreciation and current income consistent with retirement as of the Target Date. As a general matter, the Fund’s overall risk allocation is determined by the Fund’s proximity to its Target Date, with an
expectation that the further away the Target Date, the greater the Fund’s exposure to assets with greater expected risk, such as equities, that historically have tended to provide higher return potential relative to asset classes with
historically less risk, such as fixed income securities. As time passes, and the Target Date nears, the expectation is that the Fund’s overall risk allocation will become more conservative. Fund risk allocations are managed up to and 25 years
beyond the Target Date, and this gradual transition toward historically lower-risk assets over time is known as the “glide path.” Approximately 25 years past the Target Date (the Landing Point), the asset allocation for each market state
will become static although the Investment Manager will continue to assess market states and adjust the Fund’s asset allocation in accordance with the glide path for the applicable market state and may make tactical allocation changes as
well.
The charts below show the Fund’s expected
economic exposure (including leverage) to each of four broad asset categories. As the charts illustrate, the Fund’s economic exposure to the asset categories varies based on the current market state and proximity to the applicable Target Date.
The Fund may utilize leverage within certain asset classes and during certain market states in order to maintain attractive expected risk-adjusted returns while adhering to the risk allocation framework. The charts also show that, for each market
state, the Fund’s total economic exposure is expected to decline over time, although changes in the Investment Manager’s assessment of the market state may cause the Fund’s actual economic exposure to increase relative to its
historical exposure at a time when the Investment Manager’s assessment of the market state was more conservative. The Investment Manager anticipates that the Fund’s net notional investment exposure will be approximately 125% of the net
assets of the
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
Fund in the neutral market state, although leverage may be higher
(approximately 175% of net assets in the highly bullish market state) or lower in other market states or when the Investment Manager otherwise believes conditions so warrant. A Fund’s actual allocations may differ from the glide path when
the Investment Manager makes tactical asset allocation changes. The Investment Manager intends to review the glide paths at least annually and may adjust the glide paths or change its asset categories or classes at any time.
Neutral
Glide Path
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Bullish
Glide Path
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Capital
Preservation Glide Path
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Highly
Bullish Glide Path
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Although the Target Date is not intended to represent the
retirement or other investment goal year of any specific investor, it is a factor in the construction of the glide path. The Investment Manager expects that most investors in the Fund plan to retire on or about the Target Date and that many
investors will cease making new investments in the Fund and begin withdrawing from their accounts on or about the Target Date. The Board of Trustees of the Fund has the authority to combine the Fund with another Columbia Adaptive Retirement Fund
once a Fund has reached its Landing Point, without obtaining shareholder approval.
The Fund is non-diversified, which means that it can invest a
greater percentage of its assets in the securities of fewer issuers than can a diversified fund.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
Investment in Underlying Funds
Under normal circumstances, the Fund will gain exposure to
equity securities, rate assets, spread assets and inflation-hedging assets by investing in affiliated and unaffiliated funds (Underlying Funds). The glide paths shown above reflect the indirect exposure to the four asset categories gained through
investment in the Underlying Funds.
Under normal
circumstances, the Investment Manager expects that approximately 80% of each Fund’s net assets will be invested in Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio (the Solutions Series Funds), two mutual
funds managed by the Investment Manager through which the Fund expects to gain the desired amount of leverage regarding each of the asset categories. As illustrated in the glide path below, each Fund’s investment in the Solution Series Funds
will transition over time, with investments in Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio continuing to decrease until approximately 25 years after the Target Date, the entire 80% of the Fund invested in the Solution Series Funds will be allocated to
Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio. Under normal circumstances, Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio will have more leverage and exposure to equity securities than Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio; in certain market states, these
differences between these two Funds may be substantial.
Under normal circumstances,
the Investment Manager expects that approximately 20% of each Fund’s net assets will be invested in other mutual funds and ETFs. Currently, the Investment Manager intends to invest this portion of the Fund in Columbia Commodity Strategy Fund,
a mutual fund managed by the Investment Manager, and third party ETFs. The Investment Manager can modify the list of Underlying Funds and types of instruments in which the Fund invests, or the asset categories, at any time, without the approval of
or notice to Fund shareholders, including by adding Underlying Funds introduced after the date of this prospectus.
Summary of the Principal Investment Strategies of the Solution
Series Funds
The Solutions Series Funds (referred to
together as the Fund) are non-diversified funds that pursue consistent total returns by seeking to allocate risks across multiple asset classes.
Under normal circumstances, the Fund pursues its investment
objective by allocating portfolio risk across multiple asset classes in U.S. and non-U.S. markets with the goal of generating consistent risk-adjusted returns. The Investment Manager employs the same methods described above for the Columbia Adaptive
Retirement Funds to identify market states and create a strategic risk allocation for each state and to make tactical allocations.
The Investment Manager may use a variety of security and
instrument types to gain exposure to equity securities, inflation-hedging assets and fixed income securities. The equity securities in which the Fund may invest include direct or indirect investments in common stocks, preferred stocks and
convertible securities. The inflation-hedging assets in which the Fund may invest include direct or indirect investments in inflation-linked bonds and real estate investment trusts. The fixed-income assets in which the Fund may invest include direct
and indirect investments in corporate bonds, securities in the to-be-announced market, dollar rolls, exchange-traded notes (including both leveraged and inverse notes), sovereign debt obligations (including emerging market sovereign debt
obligations), U.S. Government securities, repurchase agreements and reverse repurchase agreements. These securities or instruments may be issued by U.S. or non-U.S. entities (including issuers in emerging market countries) and they may have
any
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
maturity or credit rating. The Fund may also invest in currencies. Although
the Fund may invest directly in these securities and instruments, it is expected that the Fund will primarily gain exposure to such securities and instruments through derivatives. The Investment Manager will determine, in its discretion, the
categorization of any investment (or portion thereof) within one or more of the general asset class categories.
The Fund may invest in derivatives, such as forward
contracts, futures and swaps for both hedging and non-hedging purposes, including, for example, seeking to enhance returns or as a substitute for a position in an underlying asset. The Fund may invest in derivatives to manage the Fund's
overall risk exposure. The Fund also expects to use derivatives to obtain leverage (market exposure in excess of the Fund’s assets). The Fund may utilize leverage within certain asset classes and during certain market states in order to
maintain attractive expected risk-adjusted returns while adhering to the Fund's risk allocation framework. The Investment Manager anticipates that Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio’s net notional investment exposure will be approximately
199% of the net assets of the Fund and approximately 80% of the portfolio invested in equities in the market state that the Investment Manager expects to be the most frequent, although leverage and the level of equity investment will
vary in other market states or when the Investment Manager otherwise believes conditions warrant. The Investment Manager does not currently anticipate that Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio will be significantly leveraged and expects
the portfolio to be invested approximately 20% in equities in the market state that the Investment Manager expects to be the most frequent.
The Fund may also take short positions, for hedging or
investment purposes.
The Fund may invest in privately placed and
other securities or instruments that are purchased and sold pursuant to Rule 144A or other exemptions under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the 1933 Act), subject to liquidity determinations and certain regulatory restrictions.
The Fund may hold a significant amount of cash, money
market instruments (which may include investments in one or more affiliated or unaffiliated money market funds or similar vehicles), other high-quality, short-term investments, or other liquid assets for investment purposes or to meet its
segregation obligations as a result of its investments in derivatives. In certain market conditions, the Fund may have no market positions (i.e., the Fund may hold only cash and cash equivalents) when the Investment Manager believes it is in the
best interests of the Fund.
The Fund’s investment
strategy may involve the frequent trading of portfolio securities.
Principal Risks
An investment in the Fund involves risks, including specific
risks relating to the investment in the Fund based on its investment process and its "fund-of-funds" structure, as well as specific risks related to the underlying funds in which it invests that in the aggregate are principal risks to the Fund,
including among others, those described below. More information about underlying funds, including their principal risks, is available in their prospectuses, which are incorporated by reference into this prospectus. This prospectus is not an
offer for any of the underlying funds.
There is no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective and you may lose money
. The value of the Fund’s holdings may decline, and the Fund’s
net asset value (NAV) and share price may go down. An investment in the Fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency.
Active Management Risk.
While
security selection is driven by fundamental concepts, a quantitative process is used to construct the portfolio. Additionally, a qualitative review of the quantitative output is conducted by the portfolio managers. Therefore, the Fund’s
performance will reflect, in part, the ability of the portfolio managers to make active, qualitative decisions, including allocation decisions that seek to achieve the Fund’s investment objective. The Fund could underperform its benchmark
index and/or other funds with similar investment objectives and/or strategies.
Allocation Risk.
The Fund uses
asset and risk allocation strategies in pursuit of its investment objective. There is a risk that the Fund’s allocation among asset classes or investments will cause the Fund’s shares to lose value or cause the Fund to underperform other
funds with similar investment objectives and/or strategies, or that the investments themselves will not produce the returns expected. Although the Fund will pursue its objective by allocating investment risks (measured by volatility expectations)
across asset classes that may react differently to
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
various environments, there is no guarantee that it will be successful. The
portfolio managers may not correctly estimate expected returns, volatility and correlations of various asset classes, causing the Fund’s risk allocation methodology to fail to meet the Fund’s investment objective.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
Regulatory Risk.
Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Commodity Strategy Fund do not qualify for an exemption from registration as a “commodity pool” under rules of the Commodity Exchange
Act (the CEA). Accordingly, the Funds are each a commodity pool under the CEA and the Investment Manager is registered as a “commodity pool operator” under the CEA. The Funds are subject to dual regulation by the SEC and the CFTC.
Compliance with the CFTC’s regulatory requirements could increase Fund expenses, adversely affecting the Funds’ total return.
Commodity-related Investment Risk.
The value of commodities investments will generally be affected by overall market movements and factors specific to a particular industry or commodity, which may include demand for the commodity, weather, embargoes,
tariffs, and economic health, political, international, regulatory and other developments. Exposure to commodities and commodities markets may subject the value of the Fund’s investments to greater volatility than other types of investments.
Commodities investments may also subject the Fund to counterparty risk and liquidity risk. The Fund may invest in one or more underlying funds that make commodity-related investments through one or more wholly-owned subsidiaries organized outside
the U.S. that are generally not subject to U.S. laws (including securities laws) and their protections.
Counterparty Risk.
Counterparty risk is the risk that a counterparty to a transaction in a financial instrument held by the Fund or by a special purpose or structured vehicle invested in by the Fund may become insolvent or otherwise fail to perform its obligations. As
a result, the Fund may obtain no or limited recovery of its investment, and any recovery may be significantly delayed.
Credit Risk.
Credit risk is
the risk that the value of debt instruments may decline if the issuer thereof defaults or otherwise becomes unable or unwilling, or is perceived to be unable or unwilling, to honor its financial obligations, such as making payments to the Fund when
due. Rating agencies assign credit ratings to certain debt instruments to indicate their credit risk. Unless otherwise provided in the Fund’s Principal Investment Strategies, investment grade debt instruments are those rated at or above BBB-
by Standard and Poor’s Ratings Services, or equivalently rated by Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. or Fitch, Inc., or, if unrated, determined to be of comparable quality. Conversely, below investment grade (commonly called
“high-yield” or “junk”) debt instruments are those rated below BBB- (or its equivalent) by such agencies or, if unrated, determined to be of comparable quality. A rating downgrade by such agencies can negatively impact the
value of such instruments. Lower quality or unrated instruments held by the Fund may present increased credit risk as compared to higher-rated instruments. Non-investment grade debt instruments may be subject to greater price fluctuations and are
more likely to experience a default than investment grade debt instruments and therefore may expose the Fund to increased credit risk. If the Fund purchases unrated instruments, or if the ratings of instruments held by the Fund are lowered after
purchase, the Fund will depend on analysis of credit risk more heavily than usual.
Derivatives Risk.
Derivatives
may involve significant risks. Derivatives are financial instruments with a value in relation to, or derived from, the value of an underlying asset(s) or other reference, such as an index, rate or other economic indicator (each an underlying
reference). Derivatives may include those that are privately placed or otherwise exempt from SEC registration, including certain Rule 144A eligible securities. Derivatives could result in Fund losses if the underlying reference does not perform as
anticipated. Use of derivatives is a highly specialized activity that can involve investment techniques, risks, and tax planning different from those associated with more traditional investment instruments. The Fund’s derivatives strategy may
not be successful and use of certain derivatives could result in substantial, potentially unlimited, losses to the Fund regardless of the Fund’s actual investment. A relatively small movement in the price, rate or other economic indicator
associated with the underlying reference may result in substantial loss for the Fund. Derivatives may be more volatile than other types of investments. The value of derivatives may be influenced by a variety of factors, including national and
international political and economic developments. Potential changes to the regulation of the derivatives markets may make derivatives more costly, may limit the market for derivatives, or may otherwise adversely affect the value or
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
performance of derivatives. Derivatives can increase the Fund’s risk
exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk,
pricing risk and volatility risk.
Derivatives Risk –
Forward Contracts Risk.
A forward contract is an over-the-counter derivative transaction between two parties to buy or sell a specified amount of an underlying reference at a specified price (or rate) on a specified
date in the future. Forward contracts are negotiated on an individual basis and are not standardized or traded on exchanges. The market for forward contracts is substantially unregulated and can experience lengthy periods of illiquidity, unusually
high trading volume and other negative impacts, such as political intervention, which may result in volatility or disruptions in such markets. A relatively small price movement in a forward contract may result in substantial losses to the Fund,
exceeding the amount of the margin paid. Forward contracts can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also
exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
Derivatives Risk – Futures Contracts Risk.
A futures contract is an exchange-traded derivative transaction between two parties in which a buyer (holding the “long” position) agrees to pay a fixed price (or rate) at a specified future date for
delivery of an underlying reference from a seller (holding the “short” position). The seller hopes that the market price on the delivery date is less than the agreed upon price, while the buyer hopes for the contrary. Certain futures
contract markets are highly volatile, and futures contracts may be illiquid. Futures exchanges may limit fluctuations in futures contract prices by imposing a maximum permissible daily price movement. The Fund may be disadvantaged if it is
prohibited from executing a trade outside the daily permissible price movement. At or prior to maturity of a futures contract, the Fund may enter into an offsetting contract and may incur a loss to the extent there has been adverse movement in
futures contract prices. The liquidity of the futures markets depends on participants entering into offsetting transactions rather than making or taking delivery. To the extent participants make or take delivery, liquidity in the futures market
could be reduced. Because of the low margin deposits normally required in futures trading, it is possible that the Fund may employ a high degree of leverage in the portfolio. As a result, a relatively small price movement in a futures contract may
result in substantial losses to the Fund, exceeding the amount of the margin paid. For certain types of futures contracts, losses are potentially unlimited. Futures markets are highly volatile and the use of futures may increase the volatility of
the Fund’s NAV. Futures contracts executed (if any) on foreign exchanges may not provide the same protection as U.S. exchanges. Futures contracts can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks,
such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
Derivatives Risk – Swaps Risk.
In a typical swap transaction, two parties agree to exchange the return earned on a specified underlying reference for a fixed return or the return from another underlying reference during a specified period of time.
Swaps may be difficult to value and may be illiquid. Swaps could result in Fund losses if the underlying asset or reference does not perform as anticipated. Swaps create significant investment leverage such that a relatively small price movement in
a swap may result in immediate and substantial losses to the Fund. The Fund may only close out a swap with its particular counterparty, and may only transfer a position with the consent of that counterparty. Certain swaps, such as short swap
transactions and total return swaps, have the potential for unlimited losses, regardless of the size of the initial investment. Swaps can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit
risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, inflation risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
Emerging Market Securities Risk.
Securities issued by foreign governments or companies in emerging market countries, such as China, Russia and certain countries in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Latin America or Africa, are more
likely to have greater exposure to the risks of investing in foreign securities that are described in Foreign Securities Risk. In addition, emerging market countries are more likely to experience instability resulting, for example, from rapid
changes or developments in social, political, economic or other conditions. Their economies are usually less mature and their securities markets are typically less developed with more limited trading activity (i.e., lower trading volumes and less
liquidity) than more developed countries. Emerging market securities tend to be
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
more volatile than securities in more developed markets. Many emerging market
countries are heavily dependent on international trade and have fewer trading partners, which makes them more sensitive to world commodity prices and economic downturns in other countries, and some have a higher risk of currency devaluations.
Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) Risk.
Investments in ETFs have unique characteristics, including, but not limited to, the expense structure and additional expenses associated with investing in ETFs. ETFs are subject to, among other risks, tracking risk and
passive and, in some cases, active investment risk. In addition, shareholders bear both their proportionate share of the Fund’s expenses, and indirectly the ETF’s expenses, incurred through the Fund’s ownership of the ETF. Because
the expenses and costs of an underlying ETF are shared by its investors, redemptions by other investors in the ETF could result in decreased economies of scale and increased operating expenses for such ETF. The ETFs may not achieve their investment
objective. The Fund, through its investment in ETFs, may not achieve its investment objective.
Foreign Currency-Related Tax Risk.
The Internal Revenue Service might issue regulations treating gains from some of the Fund’s foreign currency-denominated positions as not “qualifying income” and there is a possibility that such
regulations might be applied retroactively, in which case, the Fund might not qualify as a regulated investment company for one or more years. In the event the Internal Revenue Service issues such regulations, the Fund’s Board may authorize a
significant change in investment strategy or the Fund’s liquidation.
Foreign Securities Risk.
Investments in or exposure to foreign securities involve certain risks not associated with investments in or exposure to securities of U.S. companies. Foreign securities subject the Fund to the risks associated with investing in the particular
country of an issuer, including political, regulatory, economic, social, diplomatic and other conditions or events (including, for example, military confrontations, war and terrorism), occurring in the country or region, as well as risks associated
with less developed custody and settlement practices. Foreign securities may be more volatile and less liquid than securities of U.S. companies, and are subject to the risks associated with potential imposition of economic and other sanctions
against a particular foreign country, its nationals or industries or businesses within the country. In addition, foreign governments may impose withholding or other taxes on the Fund’s income, capital gains or proceeds from the disposition of
foreign securities, which could reduce the Fund’s return on such securities.
Forward Commitments on Mortgage-Backed Securities (including
Dollar Rolls) Risk.
When purchasing mortgage-backed securities in the “to be announced” (TBA) market (MBS TBAs), the seller agrees to deliver mortgage-backed securities for an agreed upon price on an
agreed upon date, but may make no guarantee as to the specific securities to be delivered. In lieu of taking delivery of mortgage-backed securities, the Fund could enter into dollar rolls, which are transactions in which the Fund sells securities to
a counterparty and simultaneously agrees to purchase those or similar securities in the future at a predetermined price. Dollar rolls involve the risk that the market value of the securities the Fund is obligated to repurchase may decline below the
repurchase price, or that the counterparty may default on its obligations. These transactions may also increase the Fund’s portfolio turnover rate. If the Fund reinvests the proceeds of the security sold, the Fund will also be subject to the
risk that the investments purchased with such proceeds will decline in value (a form of leverage risk). MBS TBAs and dollar rolls are subject to the risk that the counterparty to the transaction may not perform or be unable to perform in accordance
with the terms of the instrument.
Frequent
Trading Risk.
The portfolio managers may actively and frequently trade investments in the Fund's portfolio to carry out its investment strategies. Frequent trading of investments increases the possibility
that the Fund, as relevant, will realize taxable capital gains (including short-term capital gains, which are generally taxable to shareholders at higher rates than long-term capital gains for U.S. federal income tax purposes), which could reduce
the Fund's after-tax return. Frequent trading can also mean higher brokerage and other transaction costs, which could reduce the Fund's return. The trading costs and tax effects associated with portfolio turnover may adversely affect the
Fund’s performance.
Fund-of-Funds Risk.
Determinations regarding asset classes or underlying funds and the Fund’s allocations thereto may not successfully achieve the Fund’s investment objective, in whole or in part. The ability of the Fund to
realize its investment objective will depend, in large part, on the extent to which the underlying funds realize their investment objective. There is no guarantee that the underlying funds will achieve their respective investment objectives.
The
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
Fund is exposed to the same risks as the underlying funds in direct
proportion to the allocation of its assets among the underlying funds. Therefore, to the extent that the Fund invests significantly in a particular underlying fund, the Fund’s performance would be significantly impacted by the performance of
such underlying fund. Generally, by investing in a combination of underlying funds, the Fund has exposure to the risks of many areas of the market. By concentrating its investments in relatively few underlying funds, the Fund may have more
concentrated market exposures, subjecting the Fund to greater risk of loss should those markets decline or fail to rise. The performance of underlying funds could be adversely affected if other entities that invest in the same underlying funds make
relatively large investments or redemptions in such underlying funds. The Fund, and its shareholders, indirectly bear a portion of the expenses of any funds in which the Fund invests. Because the expenses and costs of each underlying fund are shared
by its investors, redemptions by other investors in an underlying fund could result in decreased economies of scale and increased operating expenses for such fund. The Investment Manager may have potential conflicts of interest in selecting
affiliated funds (for which it receives management fees) over unaffiliated funds (for which it does not receive management fees) for investment by the Fund, and may also face potential conflicts of interest in selecting affiliated funds, because the
fees the Investment Manager receives from some underlying funds may be higher than the fees paid by other underlying funds. Also, to the extent that the Fund is constrained/restricted from investing (or investing further) in a particular underlying
fund for one or more reasons (e.g., underlying fund capacity constraints or regulatory restrictions) or if the Fund chooses to sell its investment in an underlying fund because of poor investment performance or for other reasons, the Fund may have
to invest in another underlying fund(s), including less desirable funds – from a strategy or investment performance standpoint – which could have a negative impact on Fund performance. In addition, Fund performance could be negatively
impacted if an appropriate alternate underlying fund(s) does not present itself in a timely manner or at all.
High-Yield Investments Risk.
Securities and other debt instruments held by the Fund that are rated below investment grade (commonly called “high-yield” or “junk” bonds) and unrated debt instruments of comparable quality
expose the Fund to a greater risk of loss of principal and income than a fund that invests solely or primarily in investment grade debt instruments. In addition, these investments have greater price fluctuations, are less liquid and are more likely
to experience a default than higher-rated debt instruments. High-yield debt instruments are considered to be predominantly speculative with respect to the issuer’s capacity to pay interest and repay principal.
Inflation Risk.
Inflation risk
is the uncertainty over the future real value (after inflation) of an investment. Inflation rates may change frequently and drastically as a result of various factors, including unexpected shifts in the domestic or global economy, and the
Fund’s investments may not keep pace with inflation, which may result in losses to Fund investors.
Inflation-Protected Securities Risk.
Inflation-protected debt securities tend to react to changes in real interest rates (i.e., nominal interest rates minus the expected impact of inflation). In general, the price of such securities falls when real
interest rates rise, and rises when real interest rates fall. Interest payments on these securities will vary and may be more volatile than interest paid on ordinary bonds. In periods of deflation, the Fund may have no income at all from such
investments.
Interest Rate Risk.
Interest rate risk is the risk of losses attributable to changes in interest rates. In general, if prevailing interest rates (which are currently near historic lows) rise, the values of debt instruments tend to fall,
and if interest rates fall, the values of debt instruments tend to rise. Changes in the value of a debt instrument usually will not affect the amount of income the Fund receives from it but will generally affect the value of your investment in the
Fund. Changes in interest rates may also affect the liquidity of the Fund’s investments in debt instruments. In general, the longer the maturity or duration of a debt instrument, the greater its sensitivity to changes in interest rates.
Interest rate declines also may increase prepayments of debt obligations, which, in turn, would increase prepayment risk. Similarly, a period of rising interest rates may negatively impact the Fund’s performance. Actions by governments and
central banking authorities can result in increases in interest rates. Such actions may negatively affect the value of debt instruments held by the Fund, resulting in a negative impact on the Fund's performance and NAV. Any interest rate increases
could cause the value of the Fund’s investments in debt instruments to decrease. Rising interest rates may prompt redemptions from the Fund, which may force the Fund to sell investments at a time when it is not advantageous to do so, which
could result in losses.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
Issuer Risk.
An issuer in
which the Fund invests or to which it has exposure may perform poorly, and the value of its securities may therefore decline, which would negatively affect the Fund’s performance. Poor performance may be caused by poor management decisions,
competitive pressures, breakthroughs in technology, reliance on suppliers, labor problems or shortages, corporate restructurings, fraudulent disclosures, natural disasters or other events, conditions or factors. The market capitalization of an
issuer may also impact its risk profile. Investments in larger, more established companies may involve certain risks associated with their larger size. For instance, larger, more established companies may be less able to respond quickly to new
competitive challenges, such as changes in consumer tastes or innovation from smaller competitors. Also, larger companies are sometimes less able to attain the high growth rates of successful smaller companies, especially during extended periods of
economic expansion.
Leverage Risk.
Leverage occurs when the Fund increases its assets available for investment using borrowings, short sales, derivatives, or similar instruments or techniques. Use of leverage can produce volatility and may exaggerate
changes in the NAV of Fund shares and in the return on the Fund’s portfolio, which may increase the risk that the Fund will lose more than it has invested. If the Fund uses leverage, through the purchase of particular instruments such as
derivatives, the Fund may experience capital losses that exceed the net assets of the Fund. Because short sales involve borrowing securities and then selling them, the Fund’s short sales effectively leverage the Fund’s assets. The Fund's
assets that are used as collateral to secure the Fund's obligations to return the securities sold short may decrease in value while the short positions are outstanding, which may force the Fund to use its other assets to increase the collateral.
Leverage can create an interest expense that may lower the Fund's overall returns. Leverage presents the opportunity for increased net income and capital gains, but may also exaggerate the Fund’s volatility and risk of loss. There can be no
guarantee that a leveraging strategy will be successful.
Liquidity Risk.
Liquidity risk
is the risk associated with any event, circumstance, or characteristic of an investment or market that negatively impacts the Fund’s ability to sell, or realize the proceeds from the sale of, an investment at a desirable time or price.
Liquidity risk may arise because of, for example, a lack of marketability of the investment, which means that when seeking to sell its portfolio investments, the Fund could find that selling is more difficult than anticipated, especially during
times of high market volatility. Decreases in the number of financial institutions, including banks and broker-dealers, willing to make markets (match up sellers and buyers) in the Fund’s investments or decreases in their capacity or
willingness to trade such investments may increase the Fund’s exposure to this risk. The debt market has experienced considerable growth, and financial institutions making markets in instruments purchased and sold by the Fund (e.g., bond
dealers) have been subject to increased regulation. The impact of that growth and regulation on the ability and willingness of financial institutions to engage in trading or “making a market” in such instruments remains unsettled.
Certain types of investments, such as lower-rated securities or those that are purchased and sold in over-the-counter markets, may be especially subject to liquidity risk. Securities or other assets in which the Fund invests may be traded in the
over-the-counter market rather than on an exchange and therefore may be more difficult to purchase or sell at a fair price, which may have a negative impact on the Fund’s performance. Market participants attempting to sell the same or a
similar instrument at the same time as the Fund could exacerbate the Fund’s exposure to liquidity risk. The Fund may have to accept a lower selling price for the holding, sell other liquid or more liquid investments that it might otherwise
prefer to hold (thereby increasing the proportion of the Fund’s investments in less liquid or illiquid securities), or forego another more appealing investment opportunity. Certain investments that were liquid when purchased by the Fund may
later become illiquid, particularly in times of overall economic distress. Changing regulatory, market or other conditions or environments (for example, the interest rate or credit environments) may also adversely affect the liquidity and the price
of the Fund's investments. Judgment plays a larger role in valuing illiquid or less liquid investments as compared to valuing liquid or more liquid investments. Price volatility may be higher for illiquid or less liquid investments as a result of,
for example, the relatively less frequent pricing of such securities (as compared to liquid or more liquid investments). Generally, the less liquid the market at the time the Fund sells a portfolio investment, the greater the risk of loss or decline
of value to the Fund. Overall market liquidity and other factors can lead to an increase in redemptions, which may negatively impact Fund performance and NAV, including, for example, if the Fund is forced to sell investments in a down market.
Foreign securities can present enhanced liquidity risks, including as a result of less developed custody, settlement or other practices of foreign markets. Floating rate loans generally are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale, may
trade infrequently, their value may be impaired when the Fund needs to liquidate such loans, and are typically subject to extended settlement periods, each of which gives rise to liquidity risk.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
Market Risk.
Market risk
refers to the possibility that the market values of securities or other investments that the Fund holds will fall, sometimes rapidly or unpredictably, or fail to rise. An investment in the Fund could lose money over short or long
periods.
Money Market Fund Investment Risk.
An investment in a money market fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by any bank, the FDIC or any other government agency. Certain money market funds float their NAV while others seek to preserve
the value of investments at a stable NAV (typically, $1.00 per share). An investment in a money market fund, even an investment in a fund seeking to maintain a stable NAV per share, is not guaranteed and it is possible for the Fund to lose money by
investing in these and other types of money market funds. If the liquidity of a money market fund’s portfolio deteriorates below certain levels, the money market fund may suspend redemptions (i.e., impose a redemption gate) and thereby prevent
the Fund from selling its investment in the money market fund or impose a fee of up to 2% on amounts the Fund redeems from the money market fund (i.e., impose a liquidity fee). These measures may result in an investment loss or prohibit the Fund
from redeeming shares when the Investment Manager would otherwise redeem shares. In addition to the fees and expenses that the Fund directly bears, the Fund indirectly bears the fees and expenses of any money market funds in which it invests,
including affiliated money market funds. By investing in a money market fund, the Fund will be exposed to the investment risks of the money market fund in direct proportion to such investment. To the extent the Fund invests in instruments such as
derivatives, the Fund may hold investments, which may be significant, in money market fund shares to cover its obligations resulting from the Fund’s investments in derivatives. Money market funds and the securities they invest in are subject
to comprehensive regulations. The enactment of new legislation or regulations, as well as changes in interpretation and enforcement of current laws, may affect the manner of operation, performance and/or yield of money market funds.
Mortgage- and Other Asset-Backed Securities Risk.
The value of any mortgage-backed and other asset-backed securities held by the Fund may be affected by, among other things, changes or perceived changes in: interest rates; factors concerning the interests in and
structure of the issuer or the originator of the mortgages or other assets; the creditworthiness of the entities that provide any supporting letters of credit, surety bonds or other credit enhancements; or the market's assessment of the quality
of underlying assets. Payment of principal and interest on some mortgage-backed securities (but not the market value of the securities themselves) may be guaranteed by the full faith and credit of a particular U.S. Government agency, authority,
enterprise or instrumentality, and some, but not all, are also insured or guaranteed by the U.S. Government. Mortgage-backed securities issued by non-governmental issuers (such as commercial banks, savings and loan institutions, private mortgage
insurance companies, mortgage bankers and other secondary market issuers) may entail greater risk than obligations guaranteed by the U.S. Government. Mortgage- and other asset-backed securities are subject to prepayment risk, which is the
possibility that the underlying mortgage or other asset may be refinanced or prepaid prior to maturity during periods of declining or low interest rates, causing the Fund to have to reinvest the money received in securities that have lower yields.
Rising or high interest rates tend to extend the duration of mortgage- and other asset-backed securities, making their prices more volatile and more sensitive to changes in interest rates.
New Fund Risk.
Investors in
newly formed funds bear the risk that the fund may not be successful in implementing its investment strategy, and may not employ a successful investment strategy, either of which could result in the fund being liquidated at any time without
shareholder approval and/or at a time that may not be favorable for certain shareholders. Such a liquidation could have negative tax consequences for shareholders.
Non-Diversified
Fund Risk.
The Fund is non-diversified, which generally means that it will invest a greater percentage of its total assets in the securities of fewer issuers than a “diversified” fund. This
increases the risk that a change in the value of any one investment held by the Fund could affect the overall value of the Fund more than it would affect that of a diversified fund holding a greater number of investments. Accordingly, the Fund's
value will likely be more volatile than the value of a more diversified fund.
Prepayment and Extension Risk.
Prepayment and extension risk is the risk that a bond or other security or investment might, in the case of prepayment risk, be called or otherwise converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity and, in the case of extension risk, that the
investment might not be called as expected. In the case of prepayment risk, if the investment is converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity, the portfolio managers may not be able to invest the proceeds in other investments providing as high a
level of income, resulting in a reduced
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
yield to the Fund. In the case of mortgage- or asset-backed securities, as
interest rates decrease or spreads narrow, the likelihood of prepayment increases. Conversely, extension risk is the risk that an unexpected rise in interest rates will extend the life of a mortgage- or asset-backed security beyond the prepayment
time. If the Fund’s investments are locked in at a lower interest rate for a longer period of time, the portfolio managers may be unable to capitalize on securities with higher interest rates or wider spreads.
Quantitative Model Risk.
Investments selected using quantitative methods may perform differently from the market as a whole. There can be no assurance that these methodologies will enable the Fund to achieve its objective or that the models will perform as
expected.
Real Estate-Related Investment Risk.
Investments in real estate investment trusts (REITs) and in securities of other companies (wherever organized) principally engaged in the real estate industry subject the Fund to, among other things, risks similar to
those of direct investments in real estate and the real estate industry in general. These include risks related to general and local economic conditions, possible lack of availability of financing and changes in interest rates or property values.
REITs are entities that either own properties or make construction or mortgage loans, and also may include operating or finance companies. The value of interests in a REIT may be affected by, among other factors, changes in the value of the
underlying properties owned by the REIT, changes in the prospect for earnings and/or cash flow growth of the REIT itself, defaults by borrowers or tenants, market saturation, decreases in market rates for rents, and other economic, political, or
regulatory matters affecting the real estate industry, including REITs. REITs and similar non-U.S. entities depend upon specialized management skills, may have limited financial resources, may have less trading volume in their securities, and may be
subject to more abrupt or erratic price movements than the overall securities markets. REITs are also subject to the risk of failing to qualify for favorable tax treatment under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. Some REITs (especially
mortgage REITs) are affected by risks similar to those associated with investments in debt securities including changes in interest rates and the quality of credit extended.
Reinvestment Risk.
Reinvestment risk is the risk that the Fund will not be able to reinvest income or principal at the same return it is currently earning.
Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Repurchase agreements are agreements in which the seller of a security to the Fund agrees to repurchase that security from the Fund at a mutually agreed upon price and time. Repurchase agreements carry the risk that the
counterparty may not fulfill its obligations under the agreement. This could cause the Fund's income and the value of your investment in the Fund to decline.
Reverse Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Reverse repurchase agreements are agreements in which a Fund sells a security to a counterparty, such as a bank or broker-dealer, in return for cash and agrees to repurchase that security at a mutually agreed upon price
and time. Reverse repurchase agreements carry the risk that the market value of the security sold by the Fund may decline below the price at which the Fund must repurchase the security. Reverse repurchase agreements also may be viewed as a form of
borrowing, and borrowed assets used for investment creates leverage risk. Leverage can create an interest expense that may lower the Fund's overall returns. Leverage presents the opportunity for increased net income and capital gains, but may also
exaggerate the Fund’s volatility and risk of loss. There can be no guarantee that this strategy will be successful.
Rule 144A and Other Exempted Securities Risk.
The Fund may invest in privately placed and other securities or instruments exempt from SEC registration (collectively “private placements”), subject to liquidity and other regulatory restrictions. In the
U.S. market, private placements are typically sold only to qualified institutional buyers, or qualified purchasers, as applicable. An insufficient number of buyers interested in purchasing private placements at a particular time could adversely
affect the marketability of such investments and the Fund might be unable to dispose of them promptly or at reasonable prices, subjecting the Fund to liquidity risk. The Fund may invest in private placements determined to be liquid as well as those
determined to be illiquid. Even if determined to be liquid, the Fund’s holdings of private placements may increase the level of Fund illiquidity if eligible buyers are unable or unwilling to purchase them at a particular time. Issuers of Rule
144A eligible securities are required to furnish information to potential investors upon request. However, the required disclosure is much less extensive than that
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
required of public companies and is not publicly available since the offering
is not filed with the SEC. Further, issuers of Rule 144A eligible securities can require recipients of the offering information (such as the Fund) to agree contractually to keep the information confidential, which could also adversely affect the
Fund’s ability to dispose of the security.
Short Positions Risk.
The Fund
may establish short positions which introduce more risk to the Fund than long positions (where the Fund owns the instrument or other asset) because the maximum sustainable loss on an instrument or other asset purchased (held long) is limited to the
amount paid for the instrument or other asset plus the transaction costs, whereas there is no maximum price of the shorted instrument or other asset when purchased in the open market. Therefore, in theory, short positions have unlimited risk. The
Fund’s use of short positions in effect “leverages” the Fund. Leverage potentially exposes the Fund to greater risks of loss due to unanticipated market movements, which may magnify losses and increase the volatility of returns. To
the extent the Fund takes a short position in a derivative instrument or other asset, this involves the risk of a potentially unlimited increase in the value of the underlying instrument or other asset.
Small- and Mid-Cap Company Securities Risk.
Investments in small- and mid-capitalization companies (small- and mid-cap companies) often involve greater risks than investments in larger, more established companies (larger companies) because small- and mid-cap
companies tend to have less predictable earnings and may lack the management experience, financial resources, product diversification and competitive strengths of larger companies. Securities of small- and mid-cap companies may be less liquid and
more volatile than the securities of larger companies.
Sovereign Debt Risk.
A
sovereign debtor’s willingness or ability to repay principal and pay interest in a timely manner may be affected by a variety of factors, including its cash flow situation, the extent of its reserves, the availability of sufficient foreign
exchange on the date a payment is due, the relative size of the debt service burden to the economy as a whole, the sovereign debtor’s policy toward international lenders, and the political constraints to which a sovereign debtor may be
subject.
Target Date Funds Risk.
The Fund is a target date fund, and the risks associated with a target date fund include the risk of loss, including losses near, at or after the target date, and there is no guarantee that the Fund will provide
adequate income at and through the investor’s retirement or other investment goal.
U.S. Government Obligations Risk.
While U.S. Treasury obligations are backed by the “full faith and credit” of the U.S. Government, such securities are nonetheless subject to credit risk (i.e., the risk that the U.S. Government may be, or be
perceived to be, unable or unwilling to honor its financial obligations, such as making payments). Securities issued or guaranteed by federal agencies or authorities and U.S. Government-sponsored instrumentalities or enterprises may or may not be
backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government.
Volatility Risk.
The Fund may
have investments that appreciate or decrease significantly in value over short periods of time. This may cause the Fund’s NAV per share to experience significant increases or declines in value over short periods of time, however, all
investments long- or short-term are subject to risk of loss.
Performance Information
The Fund is new as of the date of this prospectus and
therefore performance information is not available.
When
available, the Fund intends to compare its performance to the performance of Dow Jones Target 2025 Index.
When available, updated performance information can be
obtained by calling toll-free 800.345.6611 or visiting columbiathreadneedle.com/us.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
Fund Management
Investment Manager:
Columbia
Management Investment Advisers, LLC
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
Title
|
|
Role
with Fund
|
|
Managed
Fund Since
|
Jeffrey
Knight, CFA
|
|
Senior
Portfolio Manager, Managing Director, Global Head of Solutions and Co-Head of Global Asset Allocation
|
|
Lead
Portfolio Manager
|
|
April 2018
|
Joshua
Kutin, CFA
|
|
Senior
Portfolio Manager
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
April 2018
|
Alexander
Wilkinson, CFA, CAIA
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
April
2018
|
Purchase and Sale of
Fund Shares
You may purchase or redeem shares of the
Fund on any business day by contacting the Fund in the ways described below:
Online
|
|
Regular
Mail
|
|
Express
Mail
|
|
By
Telephone
|
investor.columbiathreadneedle.com/us
|
|
Columbia
Funds,
c/o Columbia Management
Investment Services Corp.
P.O. Box 8081
Boston, MA 02266-8081
|
|
Columbia
Funds,
c/o Columbia Management
Investment Services Corp.
30 Dan Road, Suite 8081
Canton, MA 02021-2809
|
|
800.422.3737
|
You may purchase shares and receive
redemption proceeds by electronic funds transfer, by check or by wire. If you maintain your account with a broker-dealer or other financial intermediary, you must contact that financial intermediary to buy, sell or exchange shares of the Fund
through your account with the intermediary.
The minimum
initial investment amounts for the share class offered by the Fund are shown below:
Minimum Initial Investment
Class
|
Category
of eligible account
|
For
accounts other than
systematic investment
plan accounts
|
For
systematic investment
plan accounts
|
Class
Adv
|
All
eligible accounts
|
$0,
$1,000 or $2,000
depending upon the category
of eligible investor
|
$100
|
Class
Inst3
|
All
eligible accounts
|
$0,
$1,000, $2,000 or
$1 million depending
upon the category of
eligible investor
|
$100
(for certain eligible investors)
|
More information about these minimums can be
found in the
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares - Buying Shares
section of the prospectus. There is no minimum additional investment for any share class.
Tax Information
The Fund normally distributes net investment income and net
realized capital gains, if any, to shareholders. These distributions are generally taxable to you as ordinary income or capital gains, unless you are investing through a tax-advantaged account, such as a 401(k) plan or an IRA. The use of a
fund-of-funds structure could affect the timing, amount and character of distributions to you and therefore may increase the amount of taxes payable by you. If you are investing through a tax-advantaged account, you may be taxed upon withdrawals
from that account.
Payments to Broker-Dealers and Other
Financial Intermediaries
If you purchase the Fund
through a broker-dealer or other financial intermediary (such as a bank), the Fund and its related companies — including Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC (the Investment Manager), Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc.
(the Distributor) and Columbia Management Investment Services Corp. (the Transfer Agent) — may pay the intermediary for the sale of Fund shares and related services. These payments
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
(continued)
may create a conflict of interest by influencing the broker-dealer or other
intermediary and your financial advisor to recommend the Fund over another investment. Ask your financial advisor or visit your financial intermediary’s website for more information.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035
Fund
Investment Objective
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund (the 2035 Fund or the
Fund)
seeks capital appreciation and current income.
Fees and Expenses of the Fund
This table describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if
you buy and hold shares of the Fund. An investor transacting in a class of Fund shares without any front-end sales charge, contingent deferred sales charge, or other asset-based fee for sales or distribution may be required to pay a commission to
the financial intermediary for effecting such transactions. Such commission rates are set by the financial intermediary and are not reflected in the tables or the example below.
Shareholder
Fees (fees paid directly from your investment)
|
|
Class
Adv
|
Class
Inst3
|
Maximum
sales charge (load) imposed on purchases
|
None
|
None
|
Maximum
deferred sales charge (load) imposed on redemptions
|
None
|
None
|
Annual
Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment)
|
|
Class
Adv
|
Class
Inst3
|
Management
fees
|
0.45%
|
0.45%
|
Distribution
and/or service (12b-1) fees
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
Other
expenses
(a)
|
8.28%
|
8.07%
|
Acquired
fund fees and expenses
(b)
|
0.06%
|
0.06%
|
Total
annual Fund operating expenses
|
8.79%
|
8.58%
|
Less:
Fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
(c)
|
(8.11%)
|
(8.08%)
|
Total
annual Fund operating expenses after fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
|
0.68%
|
0.50%
|
(a)
|
Other expenses are based on
estimated amounts for the Fund's current fiscal year.
|
(b)
|
Acquired fund fees and
expenses are based on estimated amounts for the Fund's current fiscal year.
|
(c)
|
Columbia Management Investment
Advisers, LLC and certain of its affiliates have contractually agreed to waive fees and/or to reimburse expenses (excluding transaction costs and certain other investment related expenses, interest, taxes, and infrequent and/or unusual expenses)
through July 31, 2021, unless sooner terminated at the sole discretion of the Fund’s Board of Trustees. Under this agreement, the Fund’s net operating expenses, subject to applicable exclusions, will not exceed the annual rates of 0.68%
for Class Adv and 0.50% for Class Inst3.
|
The following example is intended to help
you compare the cost of investing in the Fund with the cost of investing in other mutual funds. The example illustrates the hypothetical expenses that you would incur over the time periods indicated, and assumes that:
■
|
you invest $10,000 in the
applicable class of Fund shares for the periods indicated,
|
■
|
your investment has a 5%
return each year, and
|
■
|
the
Fund’s total annual operating expenses remain the same as shown in the
Annual Fund Operating Expenses
table above.
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
(continued)
Since the waivers and/or reimbursements
shown in the
Annual Fund Operating Expenses
table above expire as indicated in the preceding table, they are reflected in the 1 year example and the 3 year example. Although your actual costs may be
higher or lower, based on the assumptions listed above, your costs (based on estimated Fund expenses) would be:
|
1
year
|
3
years
|
Class
Adv
(whether or not shares are redeemed)
|
$69
|
$218
|
Class
Inst3
(whether or not shares are redeemed)
|
$51
|
$160
|
Portfolio Turnover
The Fund, underlying funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs)
pay transaction costs, such as commissions, when they buy and sell securities (or “turn over” their portfolios). The Fund will indirectly bear the expenses associated with portfolio turnover of the underlying funds and ETFs. A high
portfolio turnover rate may indicate higher transaction costs. These costs, which are not reflected in annual fund operating expenses or in the example, affect the Fund’s performance. Because the Fund is newly organized, portfolio turnover
information is not available as of the date of this prospectus.
Principal Investment Strategies
Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC (the Investment
Manager) manages the Fund using an adaptive risk allocation methodology. The Investment Manager employs quantitative and fundamental methods to identify distinct market states (capital preservation, neutral, bullish and highly bullish) and creates a
strategic risk allocation to four broad asset categories (equity securities, fixed income securities issued by governments (rate assets), other fixed income securities (spread assets) and inflation-hedging assets) for each market state that is
intended to generate attractive risk-adjusted returns in that market state. Allocations of risk to asset classes may differ significantly across market states. In addition to strategic risk allocations based on the market state, the Investment
Manager may make tactical adjustments within and among asset classes and pursue opportunistic strategies in response to changing market, economic or other conditions. For these purposes, risk is the expected volatility (i.e., dispersion of returns)
of a security, market, index or asset class, as determined by the Investment Manager.
The Investment Manager allocates the Fund’s risk across
global asset classes by reference to a specified “Target Date” (the year referenced in the name of the Fund), and periodically (generally monthly) reallocates risk across these asset classes as market or other conditions change, in an
effort to provide capital appreciation and current income consistent with retirement as of the Target Date. As a general matter, the Fund’s overall risk allocation is determined by the Fund’s proximity to its Target Date, with an
expectation that the further away the Target Date, the greater the Fund’s exposure to assets with greater expected risk, such as equities, that historically have tended to provide higher return potential relative to asset classes with
historically less risk, such as fixed income securities. As time passes, and the Target Date nears, the expectation is that the Fund’s overall risk allocation will become more conservative. Fund risk allocations are managed up to and 25 years
beyond the Target Date, and this gradual transition toward historically lower-risk assets over time is known as the “glide path.” Approximately 25 years past the Target Date (the Landing Point), the asset allocation for each market state
will become static although the Investment Manager will continue to assess market states and adjust the Fund’s asset allocation in accordance with the glide path for the applicable market state and may make tactical allocation changes as
well.
The charts below show the Fund’s expected
economic exposure (including leverage) to each of four broad asset categories. As the charts illustrate, the Fund’s economic exposure to the asset categories varies based on the current market state and proximity to the applicable Target Date.
The Fund may utilize leverage within certain asset classes and during certain market states in order to maintain attractive expected risk-adjusted returns while adhering to the risk allocation framework. The charts also show that, for each market
state, the Fund’s total economic exposure is expected to decline over time, although changes in the Investment Manager’s assessment of the market state may cause the Fund’s actual economic exposure to increase relative to its
historical exposure at a time when the Investment Manager’s assessment of the market state was more conservative. The Investment Manager anticipates that the Fund’s net notional investment exposure will be approximately 150% of the net
assets of the
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Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
(continued)
Fund in the neutral market state, although leverage may be higher
(approximately 175% of net assets in the highly bullish market state) or lower in other market states or when the Investment Manager otherwise believes conditions so warrant. A Fund’s actual allocations may differ from the glide path when
the Investment Manager makes tactical asset allocation changes. The Investment Manager intends to review the glide paths at least annually and may adjust the glide paths or change its asset categories or classes at any time.
Neutral
Glide Path
|
|
Bullish
Glide Path
|
|
|
|
Capital
Preservation Glide Path
|
|
Highly
Bullish Glide Path
|
|
|
|
Although the Target Date is not intended to represent the
retirement or other investment goal year of any specific investor, it is a factor in the construction of the glide path. The Investment Manager expects that most investors in the Fund plan to retire on or about the Target Date and that many
investors will cease making new investments in the Fund and begin withdrawing from their accounts on or about the Target Date. The Board of Trustees of the Fund has the authority to combine the Fund with another Columbia Adaptive Retirement Fund
once a Fund has reached its Landing Point, without obtaining shareholder approval.
The Fund is non-diversified, which means that it can invest a
greater percentage of its assets in the securities of fewer issuers than can a diversified fund.
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Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
(continued)
Investment in Underlying Funds
Under normal circumstances, the Fund will gain exposure to
equity securities, rate assets, spread assets and inflation-hedging assets by investing in affiliated and unaffiliated funds (Underlying Funds). The glide paths shown above reflect the indirect exposure to the four asset categories gained through
investment in the Underlying Funds.
Under normal
circumstances, the Investment Manager expects that approximately 80% of each Fund’s net assets will be invested in Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio (the Solutions Series Funds), two mutual
funds managed by the Investment Manager through which the Fund expects to gain the desired amount of leverage regarding each of the asset categories. As illustrated in the glide path below, each Fund’s investment in the Solution Series Funds
will transition over time, with investments in Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio continuing to decrease until approximately 25 years after the Target Date, the entire 80% of the Fund invested in the Solution Series Funds will be allocated to
Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio. Under normal circumstances, Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio will have more leverage and exposure to equity securities than Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio; in certain market states, these
differences between these two Funds may be substantial.
Under normal circumstances,
the Investment Manager expects that approximately 20% of each Fund’s net assets will be invested in other mutual funds and ETFs. Currently, the Investment Manager intends to invest this portion of the Fund in Columbia Commodity Strategy Fund,
a mutual fund managed by the Investment Manager, and third party ETFs. The Investment Manager can modify the list of Underlying Funds and types of instruments in which the Fund invests, or the asset categories, at any time, without the approval of
or notice to Fund shareholders, including by adding Underlying Funds introduced after the date of this prospectus.
Summary of the Principal Investment Strategies of the Solution
Series Funds
The Solutions Series Funds (referred to
together as the Fund) are non-diversified funds that pursue consistent total returns by seeking to allocate risks across multiple asset classes.
Under normal circumstances, the Fund pursues its investment
objective by allocating portfolio risk across multiple asset classes in U.S. and non-U.S. markets with the goal of generating consistent risk-adjusted returns. The Investment Manager employs the same methods described above for the Columbia Adaptive
Retirement Funds to identify market states and create a strategic risk allocation for each state and to make tactical allocations.
The Investment Manager may use a variety of security and
instrument types to gain exposure to equity securities, inflation-hedging assets and fixed income securities. The equity securities in which the Fund may invest include direct or indirect investments in common stocks, preferred stocks and
convertible securities. The inflation-hedging assets in which the Fund may invest include direct or indirect investments in inflation-linked bonds and real estate investment trusts. The fixed-income assets in which the Fund may invest include direct
and indirect investments in corporate bonds, securities in the to-be-announced market, dollar rolls, exchange-traded notes (including both leveraged and inverse notes), sovereign debt obligations (including emerging market sovereign debt
obligations), U.S. Government securities, repurchase agreements and reverse repurchase agreements. These securities or instruments may be issued by U.S. or non-U.S. entities (including issuers in emerging market countries) and they may have
any
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Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
(continued)
maturity or credit rating. The Fund may also invest in currencies. Although
the Fund may invest directly in these securities and instruments, it is expected that the Fund will primarily gain exposure to such securities and instruments through derivatives. The Investment Manager will determine, in its discretion, the
categorization of any investment (or portion thereof) within one or more of the general asset class categories.
The Fund may invest in derivatives, such as forward
contracts, futures and swaps for both hedging and non-hedging purposes, including, for example, seeking to enhance returns or as a substitute for a position in an underlying asset. The Fund may invest in derivatives to manage the Fund's
overall risk exposure. The Fund also expects to use derivatives to obtain leverage (market exposure in excess of the Fund’s assets). The Fund may utilize leverage within certain asset classes and during certain market states in order to
maintain attractive expected risk-adjusted returns while adhering to the Fund's risk allocation framework. The Investment Manager anticipates that Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio’s net notional investment exposure will be approximately
199% of the net assets of the Fund and approximately 80% of the portfolio invested in equities in the market state that the Investment Manager expects to be the most frequent, although leverage and the level of equity investment will
vary in other market states or when the Investment Manager otherwise believes conditions warrant. The Investment Manager does not currently anticipate that Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio will be significantly leveraged and expects
the portfolio to be invested approximately 20% in equities in the market state that the Investment Manager expects to be the most frequent.
The Fund may also take short positions, for hedging or
investment purposes.
The Fund may invest in privately placed and
other securities or instruments that are purchased and sold pursuant to Rule 144A or other exemptions under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the 1933 Act), subject to liquidity determinations and certain regulatory restrictions.
The Fund may hold a significant amount of cash, money
market instruments (which may include investments in one or more affiliated or unaffiliated money market funds or similar vehicles), other high-quality, short-term investments, or other liquid assets for investment purposes or to meet its
segregation obligations as a result of its investments in derivatives. In certain market conditions, the Fund may have no market positions (i.e., the Fund may hold only cash and cash equivalents) when the Investment Manager believes it is in the
best interests of the Fund.
The Fund’s investment
strategy may involve the frequent trading of portfolio securities.
Principal Risks
An investment in the Fund involves risks, including specific
risks relating to the investment in the Fund based on its investment process and its "fund-of-funds" structure, as well as specific risks related to the underlying funds in which it invests that in the aggregate are principal risks to the Fund,
including among others, those described below. More information about underlying funds, including their principal risks, is available in their prospectuses, which are incorporated by reference into this prospectus. This prospectus is not an
offer for any of the underlying funds.
There is no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective and you may lose money
. The value of the Fund’s holdings may decline, and the Fund’s
net asset value (NAV) and share price may go down. An investment in the Fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency.
Active Management Risk.
While
security selection is driven by fundamental concepts, a quantitative process is used to construct the portfolio. Additionally, a qualitative review of the quantitative output is conducted by the portfolio managers. Therefore, the Fund’s
performance will reflect, in part, the ability of the portfolio managers to make active, qualitative decisions, including allocation decisions that seek to achieve the Fund’s investment objective. The Fund could underperform its benchmark
index and/or other funds with similar investment objectives and/or strategies.
Allocation Risk.
The Fund uses
asset and risk allocation strategies in pursuit of its investment objective. There is a risk that the Fund’s allocation among asset classes or investments will cause the Fund’s shares to lose value or cause the Fund to underperform other
funds with similar investment objectives and/or strategies, or that the investments themselves will not produce the returns expected. Although the Fund will pursue its objective by allocating investment risks (measured by volatility expectations)
across asset classes that may react differently to
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Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
(continued)
various environments, there is no guarantee that it will be successful. The
portfolio managers may not correctly estimate expected returns, volatility and correlations of various asset classes, causing the Fund’s risk allocation methodology to fail to meet the Fund’s investment objective.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
Regulatory Risk.
Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Commodity Strategy Fund do not qualify for an exemption from registration as a “commodity pool” under rules of the Commodity Exchange
Act (the CEA). Accordingly, the Funds are each a commodity pool under the CEA and the Investment Manager is registered as a “commodity pool operator” under the CEA. The Funds are subject to dual regulation by the SEC and the CFTC.
Compliance with the CFTC’s regulatory requirements could increase Fund expenses, adversely affecting the Funds’ total return.
Commodity-related Investment Risk.
The value of commodities investments will generally be affected by overall market movements and factors specific to a particular industry or commodity, which may include demand for the commodity, weather, embargoes,
tariffs, and economic health, political, international, regulatory and other developments. Exposure to commodities and commodities markets may subject the value of the Fund’s investments to greater volatility than other types of investments.
Commodities investments may also subject the Fund to counterparty risk and liquidity risk. The Fund may invest in one or more underlying funds that make commodity-related investments through one or more wholly-owned subsidiaries organized outside
the U.S. that are generally not subject to U.S. laws (including securities laws) and their protections.
Counterparty Risk.
Counterparty risk is the risk that a counterparty to a transaction in a financial instrument held by the Fund or by a special purpose or structured vehicle invested in by the Fund may become insolvent or otherwise fail to perform its obligations. As
a result, the Fund may obtain no or limited recovery of its investment, and any recovery may be significantly delayed.
Credit Risk.
Credit risk is
the risk that the value of debt instruments may decline if the issuer thereof defaults or otherwise becomes unable or unwilling, or is perceived to be unable or unwilling, to honor its financial obligations, such as making payments to the Fund when
due. Rating agencies assign credit ratings to certain debt instruments to indicate their credit risk. Unless otherwise provided in the Fund’s Principal Investment Strategies, investment grade debt instruments are those rated at or above BBB-
by Standard and Poor’s Ratings Services, or equivalently rated by Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. or Fitch, Inc., or, if unrated, determined to be of comparable quality. Conversely, below investment grade (commonly called
“high-yield” or “junk”) debt instruments are those rated below BBB- (or its equivalent) by such agencies or, if unrated, determined to be of comparable quality. A rating downgrade by such agencies can negatively impact the
value of such instruments. Lower quality or unrated instruments held by the Fund may present increased credit risk as compared to higher-rated instruments. Non-investment grade debt instruments may be subject to greater price fluctuations and are
more likely to experience a default than investment grade debt instruments and therefore may expose the Fund to increased credit risk. If the Fund purchases unrated instruments, or if the ratings of instruments held by the Fund are lowered after
purchase, the Fund will depend on analysis of credit risk more heavily than usual.
Derivatives Risk.
Derivatives
may involve significant risks. Derivatives are financial instruments with a value in relation to, or derived from, the value of an underlying asset(s) or other reference, such as an index, rate or other economic indicator (each an underlying
reference). Derivatives may include those that are privately placed or otherwise exempt from SEC registration, including certain Rule 144A eligible securities. Derivatives could result in Fund losses if the underlying reference does not perform as
anticipated. Use of derivatives is a highly specialized activity that can involve investment techniques, risks, and tax planning different from those associated with more traditional investment instruments. The Fund’s derivatives strategy may
not be successful and use of certain derivatives could result in substantial, potentially unlimited, losses to the Fund regardless of the Fund’s actual investment. A relatively small movement in the price, rate or other economic indicator
associated with the underlying reference may result in substantial loss for the Fund. Derivatives may be more volatile than other types of investments. The value of derivatives may be influenced by a variety of factors, including national and
international political and economic developments. Potential changes to the regulation of the derivatives markets may make derivatives more costly, may limit the market for derivatives, or may otherwise adversely affect the value or
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
(continued)
performance of derivatives. Derivatives can increase the Fund’s risk
exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk,
pricing risk and volatility risk.
Derivatives Risk –
Forward Contracts Risk.
A forward contract is an over-the-counter derivative transaction between two parties to buy or sell a specified amount of an underlying reference at a specified price (or rate) on a specified
date in the future. Forward contracts are negotiated on an individual basis and are not standardized or traded on exchanges. The market for forward contracts is substantially unregulated and can experience lengthy periods of illiquidity, unusually
high trading volume and other negative impacts, such as political intervention, which may result in volatility or disruptions in such markets. A relatively small price movement in a forward contract may result in substantial losses to the Fund,
exceeding the amount of the margin paid. Forward contracts can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also
exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
Derivatives Risk – Futures Contracts Risk.
A futures contract is an exchange-traded derivative transaction between two parties in which a buyer (holding the “long” position) agrees to pay a fixed price (or rate) at a specified future date for
delivery of an underlying reference from a seller (holding the “short” position). The seller hopes that the market price on the delivery date is less than the agreed upon price, while the buyer hopes for the contrary. Certain futures
contract markets are highly volatile, and futures contracts may be illiquid. Futures exchanges may limit fluctuations in futures contract prices by imposing a maximum permissible daily price movement. The Fund may be disadvantaged if it is
prohibited from executing a trade outside the daily permissible price movement. At or prior to maturity of a futures contract, the Fund may enter into an offsetting contract and may incur a loss to the extent there has been adverse movement in
futures contract prices. The liquidity of the futures markets depends on participants entering into offsetting transactions rather than making or taking delivery. To the extent participants make or take delivery, liquidity in the futures market
could be reduced. Because of the low margin deposits normally required in futures trading, it is possible that the Fund may employ a high degree of leverage in the portfolio. As a result, a relatively small price movement in a futures contract may
result in substantial losses to the Fund, exceeding the amount of the margin paid. For certain types of futures contracts, losses are potentially unlimited. Futures markets are highly volatile and the use of futures may increase the volatility of
the Fund’s NAV. Futures contracts executed (if any) on foreign exchanges may not provide the same protection as U.S. exchanges. Futures contracts can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks,
such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
Derivatives Risk – Swaps Risk.
In a typical swap transaction, two parties agree to exchange the return earned on a specified underlying reference for a fixed return or the return from another underlying reference during a specified period of time.
Swaps may be difficult to value and may be illiquid. Swaps could result in Fund losses if the underlying asset or reference does not perform as anticipated. Swaps create significant investment leverage such that a relatively small price movement in
a swap may result in immediate and substantial losses to the Fund. The Fund may only close out a swap with its particular counterparty, and may only transfer a position with the consent of that counterparty. Certain swaps, such as short swap
transactions and total return swaps, have the potential for unlimited losses, regardless of the size of the initial investment. Swaps can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit
risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, inflation risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
Emerging Market Securities Risk.
Securities issued by foreign governments or companies in emerging market countries, such as China, Russia and certain countries in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Latin America or Africa, are more
likely to have greater exposure to the risks of investing in foreign securities that are described in Foreign Securities Risk. In addition, emerging market countries are more likely to experience instability resulting, for example, from rapid
changes or developments in social, political, economic or other conditions. Their economies are usually less mature and their securities markets are typically less developed with more limited trading activity (i.e., lower trading volumes and less
liquidity) than more developed countries. Emerging market securities tend to be
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
(continued)
more volatile than securities in more developed markets. Many emerging market
countries are heavily dependent on international trade and have fewer trading partners, which makes them more sensitive to world commodity prices and economic downturns in other countries, and some have a higher risk of currency devaluations.
Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) Risk.
Investments in ETFs have unique characteristics, including, but not limited to, the expense structure and additional expenses associated with investing in ETFs. ETFs are subject to, among other risks, tracking risk and
passive and, in some cases, active investment risk. In addition, shareholders bear both their proportionate share of the Fund’s expenses, and indirectly the ETF’s expenses, incurred through the Fund’s ownership of the ETF. Because
the expenses and costs of an underlying ETF are shared by its investors, redemptions by other investors in the ETF could result in decreased economies of scale and increased operating expenses for such ETF. The ETFs may not achieve their investment
objective. The Fund, through its investment in ETFs, may not achieve its investment objective.
Foreign Currency-Related Tax Risk.
The Internal Revenue Service might issue regulations treating gains from some of the Fund’s foreign currency-denominated positions as not “qualifying income” and there is a possibility that such
regulations might be applied retroactively, in which case, the Fund might not qualify as a regulated investment company for one or more years. In the event the Internal Revenue Service issues such regulations, the Fund’s Board may authorize a
significant change in investment strategy or the Fund’s liquidation.
Foreign Securities Risk.
Investments in or exposure to foreign securities involve certain risks not associated with investments in or exposure to securities of U.S. companies. Foreign securities subject the Fund to the risks associated with investing in the particular
country of an issuer, including political, regulatory, economic, social, diplomatic and other conditions or events (including, for example, military confrontations, war and terrorism), occurring in the country or region, as well as risks associated
with less developed custody and settlement practices. Foreign securities may be more volatile and less liquid than securities of U.S. companies, and are subject to the risks associated with potential imposition of economic and other sanctions
against a particular foreign country, its nationals or industries or businesses within the country. In addition, foreign governments may impose withholding or other taxes on the Fund’s income, capital gains or proceeds from the disposition of
foreign securities, which could reduce the Fund’s return on such securities.
Forward Commitments on Mortgage-Backed Securities (including
Dollar Rolls) Risk.
When purchasing mortgage-backed securities in the “to be announced” (TBA) market (MBS TBAs), the seller agrees to deliver mortgage-backed securities for an agreed upon price on an
agreed upon date, but may make no guarantee as to the specific securities to be delivered. In lieu of taking delivery of mortgage-backed securities, the Fund could enter into dollar rolls, which are transactions in which the Fund sells securities to
a counterparty and simultaneously agrees to purchase those or similar securities in the future at a predetermined price. Dollar rolls involve the risk that the market value of the securities the Fund is obligated to repurchase may decline below the
repurchase price, or that the counterparty may default on its obligations. These transactions may also increase the Fund’s portfolio turnover rate. If the Fund reinvests the proceeds of the security sold, the Fund will also be subject to the
risk that the investments purchased with such proceeds will decline in value (a form of leverage risk). MBS TBAs and dollar rolls are subject to the risk that the counterparty to the transaction may not perform or be unable to perform in accordance
with the terms of the instrument.
Frequent
Trading Risk.
The portfolio managers may actively and frequently trade investments in the Fund's portfolio to carry out its investment strategies. Frequent trading of investments increases the possibility
that the Fund, as relevant, will realize taxable capital gains (including short-term capital gains, which are generally taxable to shareholders at higher rates than long-term capital gains for U.S. federal income tax purposes), which could reduce
the Fund's after-tax return. Frequent trading can also mean higher brokerage and other transaction costs, which could reduce the Fund's return. The trading costs and tax effects associated with portfolio turnover may adversely affect the
Fund’s performance.
Fund-of-Funds Risk.
Determinations regarding asset classes or underlying funds and the Fund’s allocations thereto may not successfully achieve the Fund’s investment objective, in whole or in part. The ability of the Fund to
realize its investment objective will depend, in large part, on the extent to which the underlying funds realize their investment objective. There is no guarantee that the underlying funds will achieve their respective investment objectives.
The
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Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
(continued)
Fund is exposed to the same risks as the underlying funds in direct
proportion to the allocation of its assets among the underlying funds. Therefore, to the extent that the Fund invests significantly in a particular underlying fund, the Fund’s performance would be significantly impacted by the performance of
such underlying fund. Generally, by investing in a combination of underlying funds, the Fund has exposure to the risks of many areas of the market. By concentrating its investments in relatively few underlying funds, the Fund may have more
concentrated market exposures, subjecting the Fund to greater risk of loss should those markets decline or fail to rise. The performance of underlying funds could be adversely affected if other entities that invest in the same underlying funds make
relatively large investments or redemptions in such underlying funds. The Fund, and its shareholders, indirectly bear a portion of the expenses of any funds in which the Fund invests. Because the expenses and costs of each underlying fund are shared
by its investors, redemptions by other investors in an underlying fund could result in decreased economies of scale and increased operating expenses for such fund. The Investment Manager may have potential conflicts of interest in selecting
affiliated funds (for which it receives management fees) over unaffiliated funds (for which it does not receive management fees) for investment by the Fund, and may also face potential conflicts of interest in selecting affiliated funds, because the
fees the Investment Manager receives from some underlying funds may be higher than the fees paid by other underlying funds. Also, to the extent that the Fund is constrained/restricted from investing (or investing further) in a particular underlying
fund for one or more reasons (e.g., underlying fund capacity constraints or regulatory restrictions) or if the Fund chooses to sell its investment in an underlying fund because of poor investment performance or for other reasons, the Fund may have
to invest in another underlying fund(s), including less desirable funds – from a strategy or investment performance standpoint – which could have a negative impact on Fund performance. In addition, Fund performance could be negatively
impacted if an appropriate alternate underlying fund(s) does not present itself in a timely manner or at all.
High-Yield Investments Risk.
Securities and other debt instruments held by the Fund that are rated below investment grade (commonly called “high-yield” or “junk” bonds) and unrated debt instruments of comparable quality
expose the Fund to a greater risk of loss of principal and income than a fund that invests solely or primarily in investment grade debt instruments. In addition, these investments have greater price fluctuations, are less liquid and are more likely
to experience a default than higher-rated debt instruments. High-yield debt instruments are considered to be predominantly speculative with respect to the issuer’s capacity to pay interest and repay principal.
Inflation Risk.
Inflation risk
is the uncertainty over the future real value (after inflation) of an investment. Inflation rates may change frequently and drastically as a result of various factors, including unexpected shifts in the domestic or global economy, and the
Fund’s investments may not keep pace with inflation, which may result in losses to Fund investors.
Inflation-Protected Securities Risk.
Inflation-protected debt securities tend to react to changes in real interest rates (i.e., nominal interest rates minus the expected impact of inflation). In general, the price of such securities falls when real
interest rates rise, and rises when real interest rates fall. Interest payments on these securities will vary and may be more volatile than interest paid on ordinary bonds. In periods of deflation, the Fund may have no income at all from such
investments.
Interest Rate Risk.
Interest rate risk is the risk of losses attributable to changes in interest rates. In general, if prevailing interest rates (which are currently near historic lows) rise, the values of debt instruments tend to fall,
and if interest rates fall, the values of debt instruments tend to rise. Changes in the value of a debt instrument usually will not affect the amount of income the Fund receives from it but will generally affect the value of your investment in the
Fund. Changes in interest rates may also affect the liquidity of the Fund’s investments in debt instruments. In general, the longer the maturity or duration of a debt instrument, the greater its sensitivity to changes in interest rates.
Interest rate declines also may increase prepayments of debt obligations, which, in turn, would increase prepayment risk. Similarly, a period of rising interest rates may negatively impact the Fund’s performance. Actions by governments and
central banking authorities can result in increases in interest rates. Such actions may negatively affect the value of debt instruments held by the Fund, resulting in a negative impact on the Fund's performance and NAV. Any interest rate increases
could cause the value of the Fund’s investments in debt instruments to decrease. Rising interest rates may prompt redemptions from the Fund, which may force the Fund to sell investments at a time when it is not advantageous to do so, which
could result in losses.
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(continued)
Issuer Risk.
An issuer in
which the Fund invests or to which it has exposure may perform poorly, and the value of its securities may therefore decline, which would negatively affect the Fund’s performance. Poor performance may be caused by poor management decisions,
competitive pressures, breakthroughs in technology, reliance on suppliers, labor problems or shortages, corporate restructurings, fraudulent disclosures, natural disasters or other events, conditions or factors. The market capitalization of an
issuer may also impact its risk profile. Investments in larger, more established companies may involve certain risks associated with their larger size. For instance, larger, more established companies may be less able to respond quickly to new
competitive challenges, such as changes in consumer tastes or innovation from smaller competitors. Also, larger companies are sometimes less able to attain the high growth rates of successful smaller companies, especially during extended periods of
economic expansion.
Leverage Risk.
Leverage occurs when the Fund increases its assets available for investment using borrowings, short sales, derivatives, or similar instruments or techniques. Use of leverage can produce volatility and may exaggerate
changes in the NAV of Fund shares and in the return on the Fund’s portfolio, which may increase the risk that the Fund will lose more than it has invested. If the Fund uses leverage, through the purchase of particular instruments such as
derivatives, the Fund may experience capital losses that exceed the net assets of the Fund. Because short sales involve borrowing securities and then selling them, the Fund’s short sales effectively leverage the Fund’s assets. The Fund's
assets that are used as collateral to secure the Fund's obligations to return the securities sold short may decrease in value while the short positions are outstanding, which may force the Fund to use its other assets to increase the collateral.
Leverage can create an interest expense that may lower the Fund's overall returns. Leverage presents the opportunity for increased net income and capital gains, but may also exaggerate the Fund’s volatility and risk of loss. There can be no
guarantee that a leveraging strategy will be successful.
Liquidity Risk.
Liquidity risk
is the risk associated with any event, circumstance, or characteristic of an investment or market that negatively impacts the Fund’s ability to sell, or realize the proceeds from the sale of, an investment at a desirable time or price.
Liquidity risk may arise because of, for example, a lack of marketability of the investment, which means that when seeking to sell its portfolio investments, the Fund could find that selling is more difficult than anticipated, especially during
times of high market volatility. Decreases in the number of financial institutions, including banks and broker-dealers, willing to make markets (match up sellers and buyers) in the Fund’s investments or decreases in their capacity or
willingness to trade such investments may increase the Fund’s exposure to this risk. The debt market has experienced considerable growth, and financial institutions making markets in instruments purchased and sold by the Fund (e.g., bond
dealers) have been subject to increased regulation. The impact of that growth and regulation on the ability and willingness of financial institutions to engage in trading or “making a market” in such instruments remains unsettled.
Certain types of investments, such as lower-rated securities or those that are purchased and sold in over-the-counter markets, may be especially subject to liquidity risk. Securities or other assets in which the Fund invests may be traded in the
over-the-counter market rather than on an exchange and therefore may be more difficult to purchase or sell at a fair price, which may have a negative impact on the Fund’s performance. Market participants attempting to sell the same or a
similar instrument at the same time as the Fund could exacerbate the Fund’s exposure to liquidity risk. The Fund may have to accept a lower selling price for the holding, sell other liquid or more liquid investments that it might otherwise
prefer to hold (thereby increasing the proportion of the Fund’s investments in less liquid or illiquid securities), or forego another more appealing investment opportunity. Certain investments that were liquid when purchased by the Fund may
later become illiquid, particularly in times of overall economic distress. Changing regulatory, market or other conditions or environments (for example, the interest rate or credit environments) may also adversely affect the liquidity and the price
of the Fund's investments. Judgment plays a larger role in valuing illiquid or less liquid investments as compared to valuing liquid or more liquid investments. Price volatility may be higher for illiquid or less liquid investments as a result of,
for example, the relatively less frequent pricing of such securities (as compared to liquid or more liquid investments). Generally, the less liquid the market at the time the Fund sells a portfolio investment, the greater the risk of loss or decline
of value to the Fund. Overall market liquidity and other factors can lead to an increase in redemptions, which may negatively impact Fund performance and NAV, including, for example, if the Fund is forced to sell investments in a down market.
Foreign securities can present enhanced liquidity risks, including as a result of less developed custody, settlement or other practices of foreign markets. Floating rate loans generally are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale, may
trade infrequently, their value may be impaired when the Fund needs to liquidate such loans, and are typically subject to extended settlement periods, each of which gives rise to liquidity risk.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
(continued)
Market Risk.
Market risk
refers to the possibility that the market values of securities or other investments that the Fund holds will fall, sometimes rapidly or unpredictably, or fail to rise. An investment in the Fund could lose money over short or long
periods.
Money Market Fund Investment Risk.
An investment in a money market fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by any bank, the FDIC or any other government agency. Certain money market funds float their NAV while others seek to preserve
the value of investments at a stable NAV (typically, $1.00 per share). An investment in a money market fund, even an investment in a fund seeking to maintain a stable NAV per share, is not guaranteed and it is possible for the Fund to lose money by
investing in these and other types of money market funds. If the liquidity of a money market fund’s portfolio deteriorates below certain levels, the money market fund may suspend redemptions (i.e., impose a redemption gate) and thereby prevent
the Fund from selling its investment in the money market fund or impose a fee of up to 2% on amounts the Fund redeems from the money market fund (i.e., impose a liquidity fee). These measures may result in an investment loss or prohibit the Fund
from redeeming shares when the Investment Manager would otherwise redeem shares. In addition to the fees and expenses that the Fund directly bears, the Fund indirectly bears the fees and expenses of any money market funds in which it invests,
including affiliated money market funds. By investing in a money market fund, the Fund will be exposed to the investment risks of the money market fund in direct proportion to such investment. To the extent the Fund invests in instruments such as
derivatives, the Fund may hold investments, which may be significant, in money market fund shares to cover its obligations resulting from the Fund’s investments in derivatives. Money market funds and the securities they invest in are subject
to comprehensive regulations. The enactment of new legislation or regulations, as well as changes in interpretation and enforcement of current laws, may affect the manner of operation, performance and/or yield of money market funds.
Mortgage- and Other Asset-Backed Securities Risk.
The value of any mortgage-backed and other asset-backed securities held by the Fund may be affected by, among other things, changes or perceived changes in: interest rates; factors concerning the interests in and
structure of the issuer or the originator of the mortgages or other assets; the creditworthiness of the entities that provide any supporting letters of credit, surety bonds or other credit enhancements; or the market's assessment of the quality
of underlying assets. Payment of principal and interest on some mortgage-backed securities (but not the market value of the securities themselves) may be guaranteed by the full faith and credit of a particular U.S. Government agency, authority,
enterprise or instrumentality, and some, but not all, are also insured or guaranteed by the U.S. Government. Mortgage-backed securities issued by non-governmental issuers (such as commercial banks, savings and loan institutions, private mortgage
insurance companies, mortgage bankers and other secondary market issuers) may entail greater risk than obligations guaranteed by the U.S. Government. Mortgage- and other asset-backed securities are subject to prepayment risk, which is the
possibility that the underlying mortgage or other asset may be refinanced or prepaid prior to maturity during periods of declining or low interest rates, causing the Fund to have to reinvest the money received in securities that have lower yields.
Rising or high interest rates tend to extend the duration of mortgage- and other asset-backed securities, making their prices more volatile and more sensitive to changes in interest rates.
New Fund Risk.
Investors in
newly formed funds bear the risk that the fund may not be successful in implementing its investment strategy, and may not employ a successful investment strategy, either of which could result in the fund being liquidated at any time without
shareholder approval and/or at a time that may not be favorable for certain shareholders. Such a liquidation could have negative tax consequences for shareholders.
Non-Diversified
Fund Risk.
The Fund is non-diversified, which generally means that it will invest a greater percentage of its total assets in the securities of fewer issuers than a “diversified” fund. This
increases the risk that a change in the value of any one investment held by the Fund could affect the overall value of the Fund more than it would affect that of a diversified fund holding a greater number of investments. Accordingly, the Fund's
value will likely be more volatile than the value of a more diversified fund.
Prepayment and Extension Risk.
Prepayment and extension risk is the risk that a bond or other security or investment might, in the case of prepayment risk, be called or otherwise converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity and, in the case of extension risk, that the
investment might not be called as expected. In the case of prepayment risk, if the investment is converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity, the portfolio managers may not be able to invest the proceeds in other investments providing as high a
level of income, resulting in a reduced
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
(continued)
yield to the Fund. In the case of mortgage- or asset-backed securities, as
interest rates decrease or spreads narrow, the likelihood of prepayment increases. Conversely, extension risk is the risk that an unexpected rise in interest rates will extend the life of a mortgage- or asset-backed security beyond the prepayment
time. If the Fund’s investments are locked in at a lower interest rate for a longer period of time, the portfolio managers may be unable to capitalize on securities with higher interest rates or wider spreads.
Quantitative Model Risk.
Investments selected using quantitative methods may perform differently from the market as a whole. There can be no assurance that these methodologies will enable the Fund to achieve its objective or that the models will perform as
expected.
Real Estate-Related Investment Risk.
Investments in real estate investment trusts (REITs) and in securities of other companies (wherever organized) principally engaged in the real estate industry subject the Fund to, among other things, risks similar to
those of direct investments in real estate and the real estate industry in general. These include risks related to general and local economic conditions, possible lack of availability of financing and changes in interest rates or property values.
REITs are entities that either own properties or make construction or mortgage loans, and also may include operating or finance companies. The value of interests in a REIT may be affected by, among other factors, changes in the value of the
underlying properties owned by the REIT, changes in the prospect for earnings and/or cash flow growth of the REIT itself, defaults by borrowers or tenants, market saturation, decreases in market rates for rents, and other economic, political, or
regulatory matters affecting the real estate industry, including REITs. REITs and similar non-U.S. entities depend upon specialized management skills, may have limited financial resources, may have less trading volume in their securities, and may be
subject to more abrupt or erratic price movements than the overall securities markets. REITs are also subject to the risk of failing to qualify for favorable tax treatment under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. Some REITs (especially
mortgage REITs) are affected by risks similar to those associated with investments in debt securities including changes in interest rates and the quality of credit extended.
Reinvestment Risk.
Reinvestment risk is the risk that the Fund will not be able to reinvest income or principal at the same return it is currently earning.
Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Repurchase agreements are agreements in which the seller of a security to the Fund agrees to repurchase that security from the Fund at a mutually agreed upon price and time. Repurchase agreements carry the risk that the
counterparty may not fulfill its obligations under the agreement. This could cause the Fund's income and the value of your investment in the Fund to decline.
Reverse Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Reverse repurchase agreements are agreements in which a Fund sells a security to a counterparty, such as a bank or broker-dealer, in return for cash and agrees to repurchase that security at a mutually agreed upon price
and time. Reverse repurchase agreements carry the risk that the market value of the security sold by the Fund may decline below the price at which the Fund must repurchase the security. Reverse repurchase agreements also may be viewed as a form of
borrowing, and borrowed assets used for investment creates leverage risk. Leverage can create an interest expense that may lower the Fund's overall returns. Leverage presents the opportunity for increased net income and capital gains, but may also
exaggerate the Fund’s volatility and risk of loss. There can be no guarantee that this strategy will be successful.
Rule 144A and Other Exempted Securities Risk.
The Fund may invest in privately placed and other securities or instruments exempt from SEC registration (collectively “private placements”), subject to liquidity and other regulatory restrictions. In the
U.S. market, private placements are typically sold only to qualified institutional buyers, or qualified purchasers, as applicable. An insufficient number of buyers interested in purchasing private placements at a particular time could adversely
affect the marketability of such investments and the Fund might be unable to dispose of them promptly or at reasonable prices, subjecting the Fund to liquidity risk. The Fund may invest in private placements determined to be liquid as well as those
determined to be illiquid. Even if determined to be liquid, the Fund’s holdings of private placements may increase the level of Fund illiquidity if eligible buyers are unable or unwilling to purchase them at a particular time. Issuers of Rule
144A eligible securities are required to furnish information to potential investors upon request. However, the required disclosure is much less extensive than that
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
(continued)
required of public companies and is not publicly available since the offering
is not filed with the SEC. Further, issuers of Rule 144A eligible securities can require recipients of the offering information (such as the Fund) to agree contractually to keep the information confidential, which could also adversely affect the
Fund’s ability to dispose of the security.
Short Positions Risk.
The Fund
may establish short positions which introduce more risk to the Fund than long positions (where the Fund owns the instrument or other asset) because the maximum sustainable loss on an instrument or other asset purchased (held long) is limited to the
amount paid for the instrument or other asset plus the transaction costs, whereas there is no maximum price of the shorted instrument or other asset when purchased in the open market. Therefore, in theory, short positions have unlimited risk. The
Fund’s use of short positions in effect “leverages” the Fund. Leverage potentially exposes the Fund to greater risks of loss due to unanticipated market movements, which may magnify losses and increase the volatility of returns. To
the extent the Fund takes a short position in a derivative instrument or other asset, this involves the risk of a potentially unlimited increase in the value of the underlying instrument or other asset.
Small- and Mid-Cap Company Securities Risk.
Investments in small- and mid-capitalization companies (small- and mid-cap companies) often involve greater risks than investments in larger, more established companies (larger companies) because small- and mid-cap
companies tend to have less predictable earnings and may lack the management experience, financial resources, product diversification and competitive strengths of larger companies. Securities of small- and mid-cap companies may be less liquid and
more volatile than the securities of larger companies.
Sovereign Debt Risk.
A
sovereign debtor’s willingness or ability to repay principal and pay interest in a timely manner may be affected by a variety of factors, including its cash flow situation, the extent of its reserves, the availability of sufficient foreign
exchange on the date a payment is due, the relative size of the debt service burden to the economy as a whole, the sovereign debtor’s policy toward international lenders, and the political constraints to which a sovereign debtor may be
subject.
Target Date Funds Risk.
The Fund is a target date fund, and the risks associated with a target date fund include the risk of loss, including losses near, at or after the target date, and there is no guarantee that the Fund will provide
adequate income at and through the investor’s retirement or other investment goal.
U.S. Government Obligations Risk.
While U.S. Treasury obligations are backed by the “full faith and credit” of the U.S. Government, such securities are nonetheless subject to credit risk (i.e., the risk that the U.S. Government may be, or be
perceived to be, unable or unwilling to honor its financial obligations, such as making payments). Securities issued or guaranteed by federal agencies or authorities and U.S. Government-sponsored instrumentalities or enterprises may or may not be
backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government.
Volatility Risk.
The Fund may
have investments that appreciate or decrease significantly in value over short periods of time. This may cause the Fund’s NAV per share to experience significant increases or declines in value over short periods of time, however, all
investments long- or short-term are subject to risk of loss.
Performance Information
The Fund is new as of the date of this prospectus and
therefore performance information is not available.
When
available, the Fund intends to compare its performance to the performance of Dow Jones Target 2035 Index.
When available, updated performance information can be
obtained by calling toll-free 800.345.6611 or visiting columbiathreadneedle.com/us.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
(continued)
Fund Management
Investment Manager:
Columbia
Management Investment Advisers, LLC
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
Title
|
|
Role
with Fund
|
|
Managed
Fund Since
|
Jeffrey
Knight, CFA
|
|
Senior
Portfolio Manager, Managing Director, Global Head of Solutions and Co-Head of Global Asset Allocation
|
|
Lead
Portfolio Manager
|
|
April 2018
|
Joshua
Kutin, CFA
|
|
Senior
Portfolio Manager
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
April 2018
|
Alexander
Wilkinson, CFA, CAIA
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
April
2018
|
Purchase and Sale of
Fund Shares
You may purchase or redeem shares of the
Fund on any business day by contacting the Fund in the ways described below:
Online
|
|
Regular
Mail
|
|
Express
Mail
|
|
By
Telephone
|
investor.columbiathreadneedle.com/us
|
|
Columbia
Funds,
c/o Columbia Management
Investment Services Corp.
P.O. Box 8081
Boston, MA 02266-8081
|
|
Columbia
Funds,
c/o Columbia Management
Investment Services Corp.
30 Dan Road, Suite 8081
Canton, MA 02021-2809
|
|
800.422.3737
|
You may purchase shares and receive
redemption proceeds by electronic funds transfer, by check or by wire. If you maintain your account with a broker-dealer or other financial intermediary, you must contact that financial intermediary to buy, sell or exchange shares of the Fund
through your account with the intermediary.
The minimum
initial investment amounts for the share class offered by the Fund are shown below:
Minimum Initial Investment
Class
|
Category
of eligible account
|
For
accounts other than
systematic investment
plan accounts
|
For
systematic investment
plan accounts
|
Class
Adv
|
All
eligible accounts
|
$0,
$1,000 or $2,000
depending upon the category
of eligible investor
|
$100
|
Class
Inst3
|
All
eligible accounts
|
$0,
$1,000, $2,000 or
$1 million depending
upon the category of
eligible investor
|
$100
(for certain eligible investors)
|
More information about these minimums can be
found in the
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares - Buying Shares
section of the prospectus. There is no minimum additional investment for any share class.
Tax Information
The Fund normally distributes net investment income and net
realized capital gains, if any, to shareholders. These distributions are generally taxable to you as ordinary income or capital gains, unless you are investing through a tax-advantaged account, such as a 401(k) plan or an IRA. The use of a
fund-of-funds structure could affect the timing, amount and character of distributions to you and therefore may increase the amount of taxes payable by you. If you are investing through a tax-advantaged account, you may be taxed upon withdrawals
from that account.
Payments to Broker-Dealers and Other
Financial Intermediaries
If you purchase the Fund
through a broker-dealer or other financial intermediary (such as a bank), the Fund and its related companies — including Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC (the Investment Manager), Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc.
(the Distributor) and Columbia Management Investment Services Corp. (the Transfer Agent) — may pay the intermediary for the sale of Fund shares and related services. These payments
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
(continued)
may create a conflict of interest by influencing the broker-dealer or other
intermediary and your financial advisor to recommend the Fund over another investment. Ask your financial advisor or visit your financial intermediary’s website for more information.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045
Fund
Investment Objective
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund (the 2045 Fund or the
Fund)
seeks capital appreciation and current income.
Fees and Expenses of the Fund
This table describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if
you buy and hold shares of the Fund. An investor transacting in a class of Fund shares without any front-end sales charge, contingent deferred sales charge, or other asset-based fee for sales or distribution may be required to pay a commission to
the financial intermediary for effecting such transactions. Such commission rates are set by the financial intermediary and are not reflected in the tables or the example below.
Shareholder
Fees (fees paid directly from your investment)
|
|
Class
Adv
|
Class
Inst3
|
Maximum
sales charge (load) imposed on purchases
|
None
|
None
|
Maximum
deferred sales charge (load) imposed on redemptions
|
None
|
None
|
Annual
Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment)
|
|
Class
Adv
|
Class
Inst3
|
Management
fees
|
0.45%
|
0.45%
|
Distribution
and/or service (12b-1) fees
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
Other
expenses
(a)
|
8.28%
|
8.07%
|
Acquired
fund fees and expenses
(b)
|
0.06%
|
0.06%
|
Total
annual Fund operating expenses
|
8.79%
|
8.58%
|
Less:
Fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
(c)
|
(8.11%)
|
(8.08%)
|
Total
annual Fund operating expenses after fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
|
0.68%
|
0.50%
|
(a)
|
Other expenses are based on
estimated amounts for the Fund's current fiscal year.
|
(b)
|
Acquired fund fees and
expenses are based on estimated amounts for the Fund's current fiscal year.
|
(c)
|
Columbia Management Investment
Advisers, LLC and certain of its affiliates have contractually agreed to waive fees and/or to reimburse expenses (excluding transaction costs and certain other investment related expenses, interest, taxes, and infrequent and/or unusual expenses)
through July 31, 2021, unless sooner terminated at the sole discretion of the Fund’s Board of Trustees. Under this agreement, the Fund’s net operating expenses, subject to applicable exclusions, will not exceed the annual rates of 0.68%
for Class Adv and 0.50% for Class Inst3.
|
The following example is intended to help
you compare the cost of investing in the Fund with the cost of investing in other mutual funds. The example illustrates the hypothetical expenses that you would incur over the time periods indicated, and assumes that:
■
|
you invest $10,000 in the
applicable class of Fund shares for the periods indicated,
|
■
|
your investment has a 5%
return each year, and
|
■
|
the
Fund’s total annual operating expenses remain the same as shown in the
Annual Fund Operating Expenses
table above.
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
(continued)
Since the waivers and/or reimbursements
shown in the
Annual Fund Operating Expenses
table above expire as indicated in the preceding table, they are reflected in the 1 year example and the 3 year example. Although your actual costs may be
higher or lower, based on the assumptions listed above, your costs (based on estimated Fund expenses) would be:
|
1
year
|
3
years
|
Class
Adv
(whether or not shares are redeemed)
|
$69
|
$218
|
Class
Inst3
(whether or not shares are redeemed)
|
$51
|
$160
|
Portfolio Turnover
The Fund, underlying funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs)
pay transaction costs, such as commissions, when they buy and sell securities (or “turn over” their portfolios). The Fund will indirectly bear the expenses associated with portfolio turnover of the underlying funds and ETFs. A high
portfolio turnover rate may indicate higher transaction costs. These costs, which are not reflected in annual fund operating expenses or in the example, affect the Fund’s performance. Because the Fund is newly organized, portfolio turnover
information is not available as of the date of this prospectus.
Principal Investment Strategies
Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC (the Investment
Manager) manages the Fund using an adaptive risk allocation methodology. The Investment Manager employs quantitative and fundamental methods to identify distinct market states (capital preservation, neutral, bullish and highly bullish) and creates a
strategic risk allocation to four broad asset categories (equity securities, fixed income securities issued by governments (rate assets), other fixed income securities (spread assets) and inflation-hedging assets) for each market state that is
intended to generate attractive risk-adjusted returns in that market state. Allocations of risk to asset classes may differ significantly across market states. In addition to strategic risk allocations based on the market state, the Investment
Manager may make tactical adjustments within and among asset classes and pursue opportunistic strategies in response to changing market, economic or other conditions. For these purposes, risk is the expected volatility (i.e., dispersion of returns)
of a security, market, index or asset class, as determined by the Investment Manager.
The Investment Manager allocates the Fund’s risk across
global asset classes by reference to a specified “Target Date” (the year referenced in the name of the Fund), and periodically (generally monthly) reallocates risk across these asset classes as market or other conditions change, in an
effort to provide capital appreciation and current income consistent with retirement as of the Target Date. As a general matter, the Fund’s overall risk allocation is determined by the Fund’s proximity to its Target Date, with an
expectation that the further away the Target Date, the greater the Fund’s exposure to assets with greater expected risk, such as equities, that historically have tended to provide higher return potential relative to asset classes with
historically less risk, such as fixed income securities. As time passes, and the Target Date nears, the expectation is that the Fund’s overall risk allocation will become more conservative. Fund risk allocations are managed up to and 25 years
beyond the Target Date, and this gradual transition toward historically lower-risk assets over time is known as the “glide path.” Approximately 25 years past the Target Date (the Landing Point), the asset allocation for each market state
will become static although the Investment Manager will continue to assess market states and adjust the Fund’s asset allocation in accordance with the glide path for the applicable market state and may make tactical allocation changes as
well.
The charts below show the Fund’s expected
economic exposure (including leverage) to each of four broad asset categories. As the charts illustrate, the Fund’s economic exposure to the asset categories varies based on the current market state and proximity to the applicable Target Date.
The Fund may utilize leverage within certain asset classes and during certain market states in order to maintain attractive expected risk-adjusted returns while adhering to the risk allocation framework. The charts also show that, for each market
state, the Fund’s total economic exposure is expected to decline over time, although changes in the Investment Manager’s assessment of the market state may cause the Fund’s actual economic exposure to increase relative to its
historical exposure at a time when the Investment Manager’s assessment of the market state was more conservative. The Investment Manager anticipates that the Fund’s net notional investment exposure will be approximately 172% of the net
assets of the
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
(continued)
Fund in the neutral market state, although leverage may be higher
(approximately 175% of net assets in the highly bullish market state) or lower in other market states or when the Investment Manager otherwise believes conditions so warrant. A Fund’s actual allocations may differ from the glide path
when the Investment Manager makes tactical asset allocation changes. The Investment Manager intends to review the glide paths at least annually and may adjust the glide paths or change its asset categories or classes at any time.
Neutral
Glide Path
|
|
Bullish
Glide Path
|
|
|
|
Capital
Preservation Glide Path
|
|
Highly
Bullish Glide Path
|
|
|
|
Although the Target Date is not intended to represent the
retirement or other investment goal year of any specific investor, it is a factor in the construction of the glide path. The Investment Manager expects that most investors in the Fund plan to retire on or about the Target Date and that many
investors will cease making new investments in the Fund and begin withdrawing from their accounts on or about the Target Date. The Board of Trustees of the Fund has the authority to combine the Fund with another Columbia Adaptive Retirement Fund
once a Fund has reached its Landing Point, without obtaining shareholder approval.
The Fund is non-diversified, which means that it can invest a
greater percentage of its assets in the securities of fewer issuers than can a diversified fund.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
(continued)
Investment in Underlying Funds
Under normal circumstances, the Fund will gain exposure to
equity securities, rate assets, spread assets and inflation-hedging assets by investing in affiliated and unaffiliated funds (Underlying Funds). The glide paths shown above reflect the indirect exposure to the four asset categories gained through
investment in the Underlying Funds.
Under normal
circumstances, the Investment Manager expects that approximately 80% of each Fund’s net assets will be invested in Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio (the Solutions Series Funds), two mutual
funds managed by the Investment Manager through which the Fund expects to gain the desired amount of leverage regarding each of the asset categories. As illustrated in the glide path below, each Fund’s investment in the Solution Series Funds
will transition over time, with investments in Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio continuing to decrease until approximately 25 years after the Target Date, the entire 80% of the Fund invested in the Solution Series Funds will be allocated to
Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio. Under normal circumstances, Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio will have more leverage and exposure to equity securities than Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio; in certain market states, these
differences between these two Funds may be substantial.
Under normal circumstances,
the Investment Manager expects that approximately 20% of each Fund’s net assets will be invested in other mutual funds and ETFs. Currently, the Investment Manager intends to invest this portion of the Fund in Columbia Commodity Strategy Fund,
a mutual fund managed by the Investment Manager, and third party ETFs. The Investment Manager can modify the list of Underlying Funds and types of instruments in which the Fund invests, or the asset categories, at any time, without the approval of
or notice to Fund shareholders, including by adding Underlying Funds introduced after the date of this prospectus.
Summary of the Principal Investment Strategies of the Solution
Series Funds
The Solutions Series Funds (referred to
together as the Fund) are non-diversified funds that pursue consistent total returns by seeking to allocate risks across multiple asset classes.
Under normal circumstances, the Fund pursues its investment
objective by allocating portfolio risk across multiple asset classes in U.S. and non-U.S. markets with the goal of generating consistent risk-adjusted returns. The Investment Manager employs the same methods described above for the Columbia Adaptive
Retirement Funds to identify market states and create a strategic risk allocation for each state and to make tactical allocations.
The Investment Manager may use a variety of security and
instrument types to gain exposure to equity securities, inflation-hedging assets and fixed income securities. The equity securities in which the Fund may invest include direct or indirect investments in common stocks, preferred stocks and
convertible securities. The inflation-hedging assets in which the Fund may invest include direct or indirect investments in inflation-linked bonds and real estate investment trusts. The fixed-income assets in which the Fund may invest include direct
and indirect investments in corporate bonds, securities in the to-be-announced market, dollar rolls, exchange-traded notes (including both leveraged and inverse notes), sovereign debt obligations (including emerging market sovereign debt
obligations), U.S. Government securities, repurchase agreements and reverse repurchase agreements. These securities or instruments may be issued by U.S. or non-U.S. entities (including issuers in emerging market countries) and they may have
any
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
(continued)
maturity or credit rating. The Fund may also invest in currencies. Although
the Fund may invest directly in these securities and instruments, it is expected that the Fund will primarily gain exposure to such securities and instruments through derivatives. The Investment Manager will determine, in its discretion, the
categorization of any investment (or portion thereof) within one or more of the general asset class categories.
The Fund may invest in derivatives, such as forward
contracts, futures and swaps for both hedging and non-hedging purposes, including, for example, seeking to enhance returns or as a substitute for a position in an underlying asset. The Fund may invest in derivatives to manage the Fund's
overall risk exposure. The Fund also expects to use derivatives to obtain leverage (market exposure in excess of the Fund’s assets). The Fund may utilize leverage within certain asset classes and during certain market states in order to
maintain attractive expected risk-adjusted returns while adhering to the Fund's risk allocation framework. The Investment Manager anticipates that Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio’s net notional investment exposure will be approximately
199% of the net assets of the Fund and approximately 80% of the portfolio invested in equities in the market state that the Investment Manager expects to be the most frequent, although leverage and the level of equity investment will
vary in other market states or when the Investment Manager otherwise believes conditions warrant. The Investment Manager does not currently anticipate that Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio will be significantly leveraged and expects
the portfolio to be invested approximately 20% in equities in the market state that the Investment Manager expects to be the most frequent.
The Fund may also take short positions, for hedging or
investment purposes.
The Fund may invest in privately placed and
other securities or instruments that are purchased and sold pursuant to Rule 144A or other exemptions under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the 1933 Act), subject to liquidity determinations and certain regulatory restrictions.
The Fund may hold a significant amount of cash, money
market instruments (which may include investments in one or more affiliated or unaffiliated money market funds or similar vehicles), other high-quality, short-term investments, or other liquid assets for investment purposes or to meet its
segregation obligations as a result of its investments in derivatives. In certain market conditions, the Fund may have no market positions (i.e., the Fund may hold only cash and cash equivalents) when the Investment Manager believes it is in the
best interests of the Fund.
The Fund’s investment
strategy may involve the frequent trading of portfolio securities.
Principal Risks
An investment in the Fund involves risks, including specific
risks relating to the investment in the Fund based on its investment process and its "fund-of-funds" structure, as well as specific risks related to the underlying funds in which it invests that in the aggregate are principal risks to the Fund,
including among others, those described below. More information about underlying funds, including their principal risks, is available in their prospectuses, which are incorporated by reference into this prospectus. This prospectus is not an
offer for any of the underlying funds.
There is no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective and you may lose money
. The value of the Fund’s holdings may decline, and the Fund’s
net asset value (NAV) and share price may go down. An investment in the Fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency.
Active Management Risk.
While
security selection is driven by fundamental concepts, a quantitative process is used to construct the portfolio. Additionally, a qualitative review of the quantitative output is conducted by the portfolio managers. Therefore, the Fund’s
performance will reflect, in part, the ability of the portfolio managers to make active, qualitative decisions, including allocation decisions that seek to achieve the Fund’s investment objective. The Fund could underperform its benchmark
index and/or other funds with similar investment objectives and/or strategies.
Allocation Risk.
The Fund uses
asset and risk allocation strategies in pursuit of its investment objective. There is a risk that the Fund’s allocation among asset classes or investments will cause the Fund’s shares to lose value or cause the Fund to underperform other
funds with similar investment objectives and/or strategies, or that the investments themselves will not produce the returns expected. Although the Fund will pursue its objective by allocating investment risks (measured by volatility expectations)
across asset classes that may react differently to
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various environments, there is no guarantee that it will be successful. The
portfolio managers may not correctly estimate expected returns, volatility and correlations of various asset classes, causing the Fund’s risk allocation methodology to fail to meet the Fund’s investment objective.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
Regulatory Risk.
Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Commodity Strategy Fund do not qualify for an exemption from registration as a “commodity pool” under rules of the Commodity Exchange
Act (the CEA). Accordingly, the Funds are each a commodity pool under the CEA and the Investment Manager is registered as a “commodity pool operator” under the CEA. The Funds are subject to dual regulation by the SEC and the CFTC.
Compliance with the CFTC’s regulatory requirements could increase Fund expenses, adversely affecting the Funds’ total return.
Commodity-related Investment Risk.
The value of commodities investments will generally be affected by overall market movements and factors specific to a particular industry or commodity, which may include demand for the commodity, weather, embargoes,
tariffs, and economic health, political, international, regulatory and other developments. Exposure to commodities and commodities markets may subject the value of the Fund’s investments to greater volatility than other types of investments.
Commodities investments may also subject the Fund to counterparty risk and liquidity risk. The Fund may invest in one or more underlying funds that make commodity-related investments through one or more wholly-owned subsidiaries organized outside
the U.S. that are generally not subject to U.S. laws (including securities laws) and their protections.
Counterparty Risk.
Counterparty risk is the risk that a counterparty to a transaction in a financial instrument held by the Fund or by a special purpose or structured vehicle invested in by the Fund may become insolvent or otherwise fail to perform its obligations. As
a result, the Fund may obtain no or limited recovery of its investment, and any recovery may be significantly delayed.
Credit Risk.
Credit risk is
the risk that the value of debt instruments may decline if the issuer thereof defaults or otherwise becomes unable or unwilling, or is perceived to be unable or unwilling, to honor its financial obligations, such as making payments to the Fund when
due. Rating agencies assign credit ratings to certain debt instruments to indicate their credit risk. Unless otherwise provided in the Fund’s Principal Investment Strategies, investment grade debt instruments are those rated at or above BBB-
by Standard and Poor’s Ratings Services, or equivalently rated by Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. or Fitch, Inc., or, if unrated, determined to be of comparable quality. Conversely, below investment grade (commonly called
“high-yield” or “junk”) debt instruments are those rated below BBB- (or its equivalent) by such agencies or, if unrated, determined to be of comparable quality. A rating downgrade by such agencies can negatively impact the
value of such instruments. Lower quality or unrated instruments held by the Fund may present increased credit risk as compared to higher-rated instruments. Non-investment grade debt instruments may be subject to greater price fluctuations and are
more likely to experience a default than investment grade debt instruments and therefore may expose the Fund to increased credit risk. If the Fund purchases unrated instruments, or if the ratings of instruments held by the Fund are lowered after
purchase, the Fund will depend on analysis of credit risk more heavily than usual.
Derivatives Risk.
Derivatives
may involve significant risks. Derivatives are financial instruments with a value in relation to, or derived from, the value of an underlying asset(s) or other reference, such as an index, rate or other economic indicator (each an underlying
reference). Derivatives may include those that are privately placed or otherwise exempt from SEC registration, including certain Rule 144A eligible securities. Derivatives could result in Fund losses if the underlying reference does not perform as
anticipated. Use of derivatives is a highly specialized activity that can involve investment techniques, risks, and tax planning different from those associated with more traditional investment instruments. The Fund’s derivatives strategy may
not be successful and use of certain derivatives could result in substantial, potentially unlimited, losses to the Fund regardless of the Fund’s actual investment. A relatively small movement in the price, rate or other economic indicator
associated with the underlying reference may result in substantial loss for the Fund. Derivatives may be more volatile than other types of investments. The value of derivatives may be influenced by a variety of factors, including national and
international political and economic developments. Potential changes to the regulation of the derivatives markets may make derivatives more costly, may limit the market for derivatives, or may otherwise adversely affect the value or
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performance of derivatives. Derivatives can increase the Fund’s risk
exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk,
pricing risk and volatility risk.
Derivatives Risk –
Forward Contracts Risk.
A forward contract is an over-the-counter derivative transaction between two parties to buy or sell a specified amount of an underlying reference at a specified price (or rate) on a specified
date in the future. Forward contracts are negotiated on an individual basis and are not standardized or traded on exchanges. The market for forward contracts is substantially unregulated and can experience lengthy periods of illiquidity, unusually
high trading volume and other negative impacts, such as political intervention, which may result in volatility or disruptions in such markets. A relatively small price movement in a forward contract may result in substantial losses to the Fund,
exceeding the amount of the margin paid. Forward contracts can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also
exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
Derivatives Risk – Futures Contracts Risk.
A futures contract is an exchange-traded derivative transaction between two parties in which a buyer (holding the “long” position) agrees to pay a fixed price (or rate) at a specified future date for
delivery of an underlying reference from a seller (holding the “short” position). The seller hopes that the market price on the delivery date is less than the agreed upon price, while the buyer hopes for the contrary. Certain futures
contract markets are highly volatile, and futures contracts may be illiquid. Futures exchanges may limit fluctuations in futures contract prices by imposing a maximum permissible daily price movement. The Fund may be disadvantaged if it is
prohibited from executing a trade outside the daily permissible price movement. At or prior to maturity of a futures contract, the Fund may enter into an offsetting contract and may incur a loss to the extent there has been adverse movement in
futures contract prices. The liquidity of the futures markets depends on participants entering into offsetting transactions rather than making or taking delivery. To the extent participants make or take delivery, liquidity in the futures market
could be reduced. Because of the low margin deposits normally required in futures trading, it is possible that the Fund may employ a high degree of leverage in the portfolio. As a result, a relatively small price movement in a futures contract may
result in substantial losses to the Fund, exceeding the amount of the margin paid. For certain types of futures contracts, losses are potentially unlimited. Futures markets are highly volatile and the use of futures may increase the volatility of
the Fund’s NAV. Futures contracts executed (if any) on foreign exchanges may not provide the same protection as U.S. exchanges. Futures contracts can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks,
such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
Derivatives Risk – Swaps Risk.
In a typical swap transaction, two parties agree to exchange the return earned on a specified underlying reference for a fixed return or the return from another underlying reference during a specified period of time.
Swaps may be difficult to value and may be illiquid. Swaps could result in Fund losses if the underlying asset or reference does not perform as anticipated. Swaps create significant investment leverage such that a relatively small price movement in
a swap may result in immediate and substantial losses to the Fund. The Fund may only close out a swap with its particular counterparty, and may only transfer a position with the consent of that counterparty. Certain swaps, such as short swap
transactions and total return swaps, have the potential for unlimited losses, regardless of the size of the initial investment. Swaps can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit
risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, inflation risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
Emerging Market Securities Risk.
Securities issued by foreign governments or companies in emerging market countries, such as China, Russia and certain countries in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Latin America or Africa, are more
likely to have greater exposure to the risks of investing in foreign securities that are described in Foreign Securities Risk. In addition, emerging market countries are more likely to experience instability resulting, for example, from rapid
changes or developments in social, political, economic or other conditions. Their economies are usually less mature and their securities markets are typically less developed with more limited trading activity (i.e., lower trading volumes and less
liquidity) than more developed countries. Emerging market securities tend to be
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more volatile than securities in more developed markets. Many emerging market
countries are heavily dependent on international trade and have fewer trading partners, which makes them more sensitive to world commodity prices and economic downturns in other countries, and some have a higher risk of currency devaluations.
Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) Risk.
Investments in ETFs have unique characteristics, including, but not limited to, the expense structure and additional expenses associated with investing in ETFs. ETFs are subject to, among other risks, tracking risk and
passive and, in some cases, active investment risk. In addition, shareholders bear both their proportionate share of the Fund’s expenses, and indirectly the ETF’s expenses, incurred through the Fund’s ownership of the ETF. Because
the expenses and costs of an underlying ETF are shared by its investors, redemptions by other investors in the ETF could result in decreased economies of scale and increased operating expenses for such ETF. The ETFs may not achieve their investment
objective. The Fund, through its investment in ETFs, may not achieve its investment objective.
Foreign Currency-Related Tax Risk.
The Internal Revenue Service might issue regulations treating gains from some of the Fund’s foreign currency-denominated positions as not “qualifying income” and there is a possibility that such
regulations might be applied retroactively, in which case, the Fund might not qualify as a regulated investment company for one or more years. In the event the Internal Revenue Service issues such regulations, the Fund’s Board may authorize a
significant change in investment strategy or the Fund’s liquidation.
Foreign Securities Risk.
Investments in or exposure to foreign securities involve certain risks not associated with investments in or exposure to securities of U.S. companies. Foreign securities subject the Fund to the risks associated with investing in the particular
country of an issuer, including political, regulatory, economic, social, diplomatic and other conditions or events (including, for example, military confrontations, war and terrorism), occurring in the country or region, as well as risks associated
with less developed custody and settlement practices. Foreign securities may be more volatile and less liquid than securities of U.S. companies, and are subject to the risks associated with potential imposition of economic and other sanctions
against a particular foreign country, its nationals or industries or businesses within the country. In addition, foreign governments may impose withholding or other taxes on the Fund’s income, capital gains or proceeds from the disposition of
foreign securities, which could reduce the Fund’s return on such securities.
Forward Commitments on Mortgage-Backed Securities (including
Dollar Rolls) Risk.
When purchasing mortgage-backed securities in the “to be announced” (TBA) market (MBS TBAs), the seller agrees to deliver mortgage-backed securities for an agreed upon price on an
agreed upon date, but may make no guarantee as to the specific securities to be delivered. In lieu of taking delivery of mortgage-backed securities, the Fund could enter into dollar rolls, which are transactions in which the Fund sells securities to
a counterparty and simultaneously agrees to purchase those or similar securities in the future at a predetermined price. Dollar rolls involve the risk that the market value of the securities the Fund is obligated to repurchase may decline below the
repurchase price, or that the counterparty may default on its obligations. These transactions may also increase the Fund’s portfolio turnover rate. If the Fund reinvests the proceeds of the security sold, the Fund will also be subject to the
risk that the investments purchased with such proceeds will decline in value (a form of leverage risk). MBS TBAs and dollar rolls are subject to the risk that the counterparty to the transaction may not perform or be unable to perform in accordance
with the terms of the instrument.
Frequent
Trading Risk.
The portfolio managers may actively and frequently trade investments in the Fund's portfolio to carry out its investment strategies. Frequent trading of investments increases the possibility
that the Fund, as relevant, will realize taxable capital gains (including short-term capital gains, which are generally taxable to shareholders at higher rates than long-term capital gains for U.S. federal income tax purposes), which could reduce
the Fund's after-tax return. Frequent trading can also mean higher brokerage and other transaction costs, which could reduce the Fund's return. The trading costs and tax effects associated with portfolio turnover may adversely affect the
Fund’s performance.
Fund-of-Funds Risk.
Determinations regarding asset classes or underlying funds and the Fund’s allocations thereto may not successfully achieve the Fund’s investment objective, in whole or in part. The ability of the Fund to
realize its investment objective will depend, in large part, on the extent to which the underlying funds realize their investment objective. There is no guarantee that the underlying funds will achieve their respective investment objectives.
The
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Fund is exposed to the same risks as the underlying funds in direct
proportion to the allocation of its assets among the underlying funds. Therefore, to the extent that the Fund invests significantly in a particular underlying fund, the Fund’s performance would be significantly impacted by the performance of
such underlying fund. Generally, by investing in a combination of underlying funds, the Fund has exposure to the risks of many areas of the market. By concentrating its investments in relatively few underlying funds, the Fund may have more
concentrated market exposures, subjecting the Fund to greater risk of loss should those markets decline or fail to rise. The performance of underlying funds could be adversely affected if other entities that invest in the same underlying funds make
relatively large investments or redemptions in such underlying funds. The Fund, and its shareholders, indirectly bear a portion of the expenses of any funds in which the Fund invests. Because the expenses and costs of each underlying fund are shared
by its investors, redemptions by other investors in an underlying fund could result in decreased economies of scale and increased operating expenses for such fund. The Investment Manager may have potential conflicts of interest in selecting
affiliated funds (for which it receives management fees) over unaffiliated funds (for which it does not receive management fees) for investment by the Fund, and may also face potential conflicts of interest in selecting affiliated funds, because the
fees the Investment Manager receives from some underlying funds may be higher than the fees paid by other underlying funds. Also, to the extent that the Fund is constrained/restricted from investing (or investing further) in a particular underlying
fund for one or more reasons (e.g., underlying fund capacity constraints or regulatory restrictions) or if the Fund chooses to sell its investment in an underlying fund because of poor investment performance or for other reasons, the Fund may have
to invest in another underlying fund(s), including less desirable funds – from a strategy or investment performance standpoint – which could have a negative impact on Fund performance. In addition, Fund performance could be negatively
impacted if an appropriate alternate underlying fund(s) does not present itself in a timely manner or at all.
High-Yield Investments Risk.
Securities and other debt instruments held by the Fund that are rated below investment grade (commonly called “high-yield” or “junk” bonds) and unrated debt instruments of comparable quality
expose the Fund to a greater risk of loss of principal and income than a fund that invests solely or primarily in investment grade debt instruments. In addition, these investments have greater price fluctuations, are less liquid and are more likely
to experience a default than higher-rated debt instruments. High-yield debt instruments are considered to be predominantly speculative with respect to the issuer’s capacity to pay interest and repay principal.
Inflation Risk.
Inflation risk
is the uncertainty over the future real value (after inflation) of an investment. Inflation rates may change frequently and drastically as a result of various factors, including unexpected shifts in the domestic or global economy, and the
Fund’s investments may not keep pace with inflation, which may result in losses to Fund investors.
Inflation-Protected Securities Risk.
Inflation-protected debt securities tend to react to changes in real interest rates (i.e., nominal interest rates minus the expected impact of inflation). In general, the price of such securities falls when real
interest rates rise, and rises when real interest rates fall. Interest payments on these securities will vary and may be more volatile than interest paid on ordinary bonds. In periods of deflation, the Fund may have no income at all from such
investments.
Interest Rate Risk.
Interest rate risk is the risk of losses attributable to changes in interest rates. In general, if prevailing interest rates (which are currently near historic lows) rise, the values of debt instruments tend to fall,
and if interest rates fall, the values of debt instruments tend to rise. Changes in the value of a debt instrument usually will not affect the amount of income the Fund receives from it but will generally affect the value of your investment in the
Fund. Changes in interest rates may also affect the liquidity of the Fund’s investments in debt instruments. In general, the longer the maturity or duration of a debt instrument, the greater its sensitivity to changes in interest rates.
Interest rate declines also may increase prepayments of debt obligations, which, in turn, would increase prepayment risk. Similarly, a period of rising interest rates may negatively impact the Fund’s performance. Actions by governments and
central banking authorities can result in increases in interest rates. Such actions may negatively affect the value of debt instruments held by the Fund, resulting in a negative impact on the Fund's performance and NAV. Any interest rate increases
could cause the value of the Fund’s investments in debt instruments to decrease. Rising interest rates may prompt redemptions from the Fund, which may force the Fund to sell investments at a time when it is not advantageous to do so, which
could result in losses.
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Issuer Risk.
An issuer in
which the Fund invests or to which it has exposure may perform poorly, and the value of its securities may therefore decline, which would negatively affect the Fund’s performance. Poor performance may be caused by poor management decisions,
competitive pressures, breakthroughs in technology, reliance on suppliers, labor problems or shortages, corporate restructurings, fraudulent disclosures, natural disasters or other events, conditions or factors. The market capitalization of an
issuer may also impact its risk profile. Investments in larger, more established companies may involve certain risks associated with their larger size. For instance, larger, more established companies may be less able to respond quickly to new
competitive challenges, such as changes in consumer tastes or innovation from smaller competitors. Also, larger companies are sometimes less able to attain the high growth rates of successful smaller companies, especially during extended periods of
economic expansion.
Leverage Risk.
Leverage occurs when the Fund increases its assets available for investment using borrowings, short sales, derivatives, or similar instruments or techniques. Use of leverage can produce volatility and may exaggerate
changes in the NAV of Fund shares and in the return on the Fund’s portfolio, which may increase the risk that the Fund will lose more than it has invested. If the Fund uses leverage, through the purchase of particular instruments such as
derivatives, the Fund may experience capital losses that exceed the net assets of the Fund. Because short sales involve borrowing securities and then selling them, the Fund’s short sales effectively leverage the Fund’s assets. The Fund's
assets that are used as collateral to secure the Fund's obligations to return the securities sold short may decrease in value while the short positions are outstanding, which may force the Fund to use its other assets to increase the collateral.
Leverage can create an interest expense that may lower the Fund's overall returns. Leverage presents the opportunity for increased net income and capital gains, but may also exaggerate the Fund’s volatility and risk of loss. There can be no
guarantee that a leveraging strategy will be successful.
Liquidity Risk.
Liquidity risk
is the risk associated with any event, circumstance, or characteristic of an investment or market that negatively impacts the Fund’s ability to sell, or realize the proceeds from the sale of, an investment at a desirable time or price.
Liquidity risk may arise because of, for example, a lack of marketability of the investment, which means that when seeking to sell its portfolio investments, the Fund could find that selling is more difficult than anticipated, especially during
times of high market volatility. Decreases in the number of financial institutions, including banks and broker-dealers, willing to make markets (match up sellers and buyers) in the Fund’s investments or decreases in their capacity or
willingness to trade such investments may increase the Fund’s exposure to this risk. The debt market has experienced considerable growth, and financial institutions making markets in instruments purchased and sold by the Fund (e.g., bond
dealers) have been subject to increased regulation. The impact of that growth and regulation on the ability and willingness of financial institutions to engage in trading or “making a market” in such instruments remains unsettled.
Certain types of investments, such as lower-rated securities or those that are purchased and sold in over-the-counter markets, may be especially subject to liquidity risk. Securities or other assets in which the Fund invests may be traded in the
over-the-counter market rather than on an exchange and therefore may be more difficult to purchase or sell at a fair price, which may have a negative impact on the Fund’s performance. Market participants attempting to sell the same or a
similar instrument at the same time as the Fund could exacerbate the Fund’s exposure to liquidity risk. The Fund may have to accept a lower selling price for the holding, sell other liquid or more liquid investments that it might otherwise
prefer to hold (thereby increasing the proportion of the Fund’s investments in less liquid or illiquid securities), or forego another more appealing investment opportunity. Certain investments that were liquid when purchased by the Fund may
later become illiquid, particularly in times of overall economic distress. Changing regulatory, market or other conditions or environments (for example, the interest rate or credit environments) may also adversely affect the liquidity and the price
of the Fund's investments. Judgment plays a larger role in valuing illiquid or less liquid investments as compared to valuing liquid or more liquid investments. Price volatility may be higher for illiquid or less liquid investments as a result of,
for example, the relatively less frequent pricing of such securities (as compared to liquid or more liquid investments). Generally, the less liquid the market at the time the Fund sells a portfolio investment, the greater the risk of loss or decline
of value to the Fund. Overall market liquidity and other factors can lead to an increase in redemptions, which may negatively impact Fund performance and NAV, including, for example, if the Fund is forced to sell investments in a down market.
Foreign securities can present enhanced liquidity risks, including as a result of less developed custody, settlement or other practices of foreign markets. Floating rate loans generally are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale, may
trade infrequently, their value may be impaired when the Fund needs to liquidate such loans, and are typically subject to extended settlement periods, each of which gives rise to liquidity risk.
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Market Risk.
Market risk
refers to the possibility that the market values of securities or other investments that the Fund holds will fall, sometimes rapidly or unpredictably, or fail to rise. An investment in the Fund could lose money over short or long
periods.
Money Market Fund Investment Risk.
An investment in a money market fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by any bank, the FDIC or any other government agency. Certain money market funds float their NAV while others seek to preserve
the value of investments at a stable NAV (typically, $1.00 per share). An investment in a money market fund, even an investment in a fund seeking to maintain a stable NAV per share, is not guaranteed and it is possible for the Fund to lose money by
investing in these and other types of money market funds. If the liquidity of a money market fund’s portfolio deteriorates below certain levels, the money market fund may suspend redemptions (i.e., impose a redemption gate) and thereby prevent
the Fund from selling its investment in the money market fund or impose a fee of up to 2% on amounts the Fund redeems from the money market fund (i.e., impose a liquidity fee). These measures may result in an investment loss or prohibit the Fund
from redeeming shares when the Investment Manager would otherwise redeem shares. In addition to the fees and expenses that the Fund directly bears, the Fund indirectly bears the fees and expenses of any money market funds in which it invests,
including affiliated money market funds. By investing in a money market fund, the Fund will be exposed to the investment risks of the money market fund in direct proportion to such investment. To the extent the Fund invests in instruments such as
derivatives, the Fund may hold investments, which may be significant, in money market fund shares to cover its obligations resulting from the Fund’s investments in derivatives. Money market funds and the securities they invest in are subject
to comprehensive regulations. The enactment of new legislation or regulations, as well as changes in interpretation and enforcement of current laws, may affect the manner of operation, performance and/or yield of money market funds.
Mortgage- and Other Asset-Backed Securities Risk.
The value of any mortgage-backed and other asset-backed securities held by the Fund may be affected by, among other things, changes or perceived changes in: interest rates; factors concerning the interests in and
structure of the issuer or the originator of the mortgages or other assets; the creditworthiness of the entities that provide any supporting letters of credit, surety bonds or other credit enhancements; or the market's assessment of the quality
of underlying assets. Payment of principal and interest on some mortgage-backed securities (but not the market value of the securities themselves) may be guaranteed by the full faith and credit of a particular U.S. Government agency, authority,
enterprise or instrumentality, and some, but not all, are also insured or guaranteed by the U.S. Government. Mortgage-backed securities issued by non-governmental issuers (such as commercial banks, savings and loan institutions, private mortgage
insurance companies, mortgage bankers and other secondary market issuers) may entail greater risk than obligations guaranteed by the U.S. Government. Mortgage- and other asset-backed securities are subject to prepayment risk, which is the
possibility that the underlying mortgage or other asset may be refinanced or prepaid prior to maturity during periods of declining or low interest rates, causing the Fund to have to reinvest the money received in securities that have lower yields.
Rising or high interest rates tend to extend the duration of mortgage- and other asset-backed securities, making their prices more volatile and more sensitive to changes in interest rates.
New Fund Risk.
Investors in
newly formed funds bear the risk that the fund may not be successful in implementing its investment strategy, and may not employ a successful investment strategy, either of which could result in the fund being liquidated at any time without
shareholder approval and/or at a time that may not be favorable for certain shareholders. Such a liquidation could have negative tax consequences for shareholders.
Non-Diversified
Fund Risk.
The Fund is non-diversified, which generally means that it will invest a greater percentage of its total assets in the securities of fewer issuers than a “diversified” fund. This
increases the risk that a change in the value of any one investment held by the Fund could affect the overall value of the Fund more than it would affect that of a diversified fund holding a greater number of investments. Accordingly, the Fund's
value will likely be more volatile than the value of a more diversified fund.
Prepayment and Extension Risk.
Prepayment and extension risk is the risk that a bond or other security or investment might, in the case of prepayment risk, be called or otherwise converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity and, in the case of extension risk, that the
investment might not be called as expected. In the case of prepayment risk, if the investment is converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity, the portfolio managers may not be able to invest the proceeds in other investments providing as high a
level of income, resulting in a reduced
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yield to the Fund. In the case of mortgage- or asset-backed securities, as
interest rates decrease or spreads narrow, the likelihood of prepayment increases. Conversely, extension risk is the risk that an unexpected rise in interest rates will extend the life of a mortgage- or asset-backed security beyond the prepayment
time. If the Fund’s investments are locked in at a lower interest rate for a longer period of time, the portfolio managers may be unable to capitalize on securities with higher interest rates or wider spreads.
Quantitative Model Risk.
Investments selected using quantitative methods may perform differently from the market as a whole. There can be no assurance that these methodologies will enable the Fund to achieve its objective or that the models will perform as
expected.
Real Estate-Related Investment Risk.
Investments in real estate investment trusts (REITs) and in securities of other companies (wherever organized) principally engaged in the real estate industry subject the Fund to, among other things, risks similar to
those of direct investments in real estate and the real estate industry in general. These include risks related to general and local economic conditions, possible lack of availability of financing and changes in interest rates or property values.
REITs are entities that either own properties or make construction or mortgage loans, and also may include operating or finance companies. The value of interests in a REIT may be affected by, among other factors, changes in the value of the
underlying properties owned by the REIT, changes in the prospect for earnings and/or cash flow growth of the REIT itself, defaults by borrowers or tenants, market saturation, decreases in market rates for rents, and other economic, political, or
regulatory matters affecting the real estate industry, including REITs. REITs and similar non-U.S. entities depend upon specialized management skills, may have limited financial resources, may have less trading volume in their securities, and may be
subject to more abrupt or erratic price movements than the overall securities markets. REITs are also subject to the risk of failing to qualify for favorable tax treatment under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. Some REITs (especially
mortgage REITs) are affected by risks similar to those associated with investments in debt securities including changes in interest rates and the quality of credit extended.
Reinvestment Risk.
Reinvestment risk is the risk that the Fund will not be able to reinvest income or principal at the same return it is currently earning.
Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Repurchase agreements are agreements in which the seller of a security to the Fund agrees to repurchase that security from the Fund at a mutually agreed upon price and time. Repurchase agreements carry the risk that the
counterparty may not fulfill its obligations under the agreement. This could cause the Fund's income and the value of your investment in the Fund to decline.
Reverse Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Reverse repurchase agreements are agreements in which a Fund sells a security to a counterparty, such as a bank or broker-dealer, in return for cash and agrees to repurchase that security at a mutually agreed upon price
and time. Reverse repurchase agreements carry the risk that the market value of the security sold by the Fund may decline below the price at which the Fund must repurchase the security. Reverse repurchase agreements also may be viewed as a form of
borrowing, and borrowed assets used for investment creates leverage risk. Leverage can create an interest expense that may lower the Fund's overall returns. Leverage presents the opportunity for increased net income and capital gains, but may also
exaggerate the Fund’s volatility and risk of loss. There can be no guarantee that this strategy will be successful.
Rule 144A and Other Exempted Securities Risk.
The Fund may invest in privately placed and other securities or instruments exempt from SEC registration (collectively “private placements”), subject to liquidity and other regulatory restrictions. In the
U.S. market, private placements are typically sold only to qualified institutional buyers, or qualified purchasers, as applicable. An insufficient number of buyers interested in purchasing private placements at a particular time could adversely
affect the marketability of such investments and the Fund might be unable to dispose of them promptly or at reasonable prices, subjecting the Fund to liquidity risk. The Fund may invest in private placements determined to be liquid as well as those
determined to be illiquid. Even if determined to be liquid, the Fund’s holdings of private placements may increase the level of Fund illiquidity if eligible buyers are unable or unwilling to purchase them at a particular time. Issuers of Rule
144A eligible securities are required to furnish information to potential investors upon request. However, the required disclosure is much less extensive than that
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
(continued)
required of public companies and is not publicly available since the offering
is not filed with the SEC. Further, issuers of Rule 144A eligible securities can require recipients of the offering information (such as the Fund) to agree contractually to keep the information confidential, which could also adversely affect the
Fund’s ability to dispose of the security.
Short Positions Risk.
The Fund
may establish short positions which introduce more risk to the Fund than long positions (where the Fund owns the instrument or other asset) because the maximum sustainable loss on an instrument or other asset purchased (held long) is limited to the
amount paid for the instrument or other asset plus the transaction costs, whereas there is no maximum price of the shorted instrument or other asset when purchased in the open market. Therefore, in theory, short positions have unlimited risk. The
Fund’s use of short positions in effect “leverages” the Fund. Leverage potentially exposes the Fund to greater risks of loss due to unanticipated market movements, which may magnify losses and increase the volatility of returns. To
the extent the Fund takes a short position in a derivative instrument or other asset, this involves the risk of a potentially unlimited increase in the value of the underlying instrument or other asset.
Small- and Mid-Cap Company Securities Risk.
Investments in small- and mid-capitalization companies (small- and mid-cap companies) often involve greater risks than investments in larger, more established companies (larger companies) because small- and mid-cap
companies tend to have less predictable earnings and may lack the management experience, financial resources, product diversification and competitive strengths of larger companies. Securities of small- and mid-cap companies may be less liquid and
more volatile than the securities of larger companies.
Sovereign Debt Risk.
A
sovereign debtor’s willingness or ability to repay principal and pay interest in a timely manner may be affected by a variety of factors, including its cash flow situation, the extent of its reserves, the availability of sufficient foreign
exchange on the date a payment is due, the relative size of the debt service burden to the economy as a whole, the sovereign debtor’s policy toward international lenders, and the political constraints to which a sovereign debtor may be
subject.
Target Date Funds Risk.
The Fund is a target date fund, and the risks associated with a target date fund include the risk of loss, including losses near, at or after the target date, and there is no guarantee that the Fund will provide
adequate income at and through the investor’s retirement or other investment goal.
U.S. Government Obligations Risk.
While U.S. Treasury obligations are backed by the “full faith and credit” of the U.S. Government, such securities are nonetheless subject to credit risk (i.e., the risk that the U.S. Government may be, or be
perceived to be, unable or unwilling to honor its financial obligations, such as making payments). Securities issued or guaranteed by federal agencies or authorities and U.S. Government-sponsored instrumentalities or enterprises may or may not be
backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government.
Volatility Risk.
The Fund may
have investments that appreciate or decrease significantly in value over short periods of time. This may cause the Fund’s NAV per share to experience significant increases or declines in value over short periods of time, however, all
investments long- or short-term are subject to risk of loss.
Performance Information
The Fund is new as of the date of this prospectus and
therefore performance information is not available.
When
available, the Fund intends to compare its performance to the performance of Dow Jones Target 2045 Index.
When available, updated performance information can be
obtained by calling toll-free 800.345.6611 or visiting columbiathreadneedle.com/us.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
(continued)
Fund Management
Investment Manager:
Columbia
Management Investment Advisers, LLC
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
Title
|
|
Role
with Fund
|
|
Managed
Fund Since
|
Jeffrey
Knight, CFA
|
|
Senior
Portfolio Manager, Managing Director, Global Head of Solutions and Co-Head of Global Asset Allocation
|
|
Lead
Portfolio Manager
|
|
April 2018
|
Joshua
Kutin, CFA
|
|
Senior
Portfolio Manager
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
April 2018
|
Alexander
Wilkinson, CFA, CAIA
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
April
2018
|
Purchase and Sale of
Fund Shares
You may purchase or redeem shares of the
Fund on any business day by contacting the Fund in the ways described below:
Online
|
|
Regular
Mail
|
|
Express
Mail
|
|
By
Telephone
|
investor.columbiathreadneedle.com/us
|
|
Columbia
Funds,
c/o Columbia Management
Investment Services Corp.
P.O. Box 8081
Boston, MA 02266-8081
|
|
Columbia
Funds,
c/o Columbia Management
Investment Services Corp.
30 Dan Road, Suite 8081
Canton, MA 02021-2809
|
|
800.422.3737
|
You may purchase shares and receive
redemption proceeds by electronic funds transfer, by check or by wire. If you maintain your account with a broker-dealer or other financial intermediary, you must contact that financial intermediary to buy, sell or exchange shares of the Fund
through your account with the intermediary.
The minimum
initial investment amounts for the share class offered by the Fund are shown below:
Minimum Initial Investment
Class
|
Category
of eligible account
|
For
accounts other than
systematic investment
plan accounts
|
For
systematic investment
plan accounts
|
Class
Adv
|
All
eligible accounts
|
$0,
$1,000 or $2,000
depending upon the category
of eligible investor
|
$100
|
Class
Inst3
|
All
eligible accounts
|
$0,
$1,000, $2,000 or
$1 million depending
upon the category of
eligible investor
|
$100
(for certain eligible investors)
|
More information about these minimums can be
found in the
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares - Buying Shares
section of the prospectus. There is no minimum additional investment for any share class.
Tax Information
The Fund normally distributes net investment income and net
realized capital gains, if any, to shareholders. These distributions are generally taxable to you as ordinary income or capital gains, unless you are investing through a tax-advantaged account, such as a 401(k) plan or an IRA. The use of a
fund-of-funds structure could affect the timing, amount and character of distributions to you and therefore may increase the amount of taxes payable by you. If you are investing through a tax-advantaged account, you may be taxed upon withdrawals
from that account.
Payments to Broker-Dealers and Other
Financial Intermediaries
If you purchase the Fund
through a broker-dealer or other financial intermediary (such as a bank), the Fund and its related companies — including Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC (the Investment Manager), Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc.
(the Distributor) and Columbia Management Investment Services Corp. (the Transfer Agent) — may pay the intermediary for the sale of Fund shares and related services. These payments
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
(continued)
may create a conflict of interest by influencing the broker-dealer or other
intermediary and your financial advisor to recommend the Fund over another investment. Ask your financial advisor or visit your financial intermediary’s website for more information.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055
Fund
Investment Objective
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund (the 2055 Fund or the
Fund)
seeks capital appreciation and current income.
Fees and Expenses of the Fund
This table describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if
you buy and hold shares of the Fund. An investor transacting in a class of Fund shares without any front-end sales charge, contingent deferred sales charge, or other asset-based fee for sales or distribution may be required to pay a commission to
the financial intermediary for effecting such transactions. Such commission rates are set by the financial intermediary and are not reflected in the tables or the example below.
Shareholder
Fees (fees paid directly from your investment)
|
|
Class
Adv
|
Class
Inst3
|
Maximum
sales charge (load) imposed on purchases
|
None
|
None
|
Maximum
deferred sales charge (load) imposed on redemptions
|
None
|
None
|
Annual
Fund Operating Expenses (expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment)
|
|
Class
Adv
|
Class
Inst3
|
Management
fees
|
0.45%
|
0.45%
|
Distribution
and/or service (12b-1) fees
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
Other
expenses
(a)
|
8.28%
|
8.07%
|
Acquired
fund fees and expenses
(b)
|
0.06%
|
0.06%
|
Total
annual Fund operating expenses
|
8.79%
|
8.58%
|
Less:
Fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
(c)
|
(8.11%)
|
(8.08%)
|
Total
annual Fund operating expenses after fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements
|
0.68%
|
0.50%
|
(a)
|
Other expenses are based on
estimated amounts for the Fund's current fiscal year.
|
(b)
|
Acquired fund fees and
expenses are based on estimated amounts for the Fund's current fiscal year.
|
(c)
|
Columbia Management Investment
Advisers, LLC and certain of its affiliates have contractually agreed to waive fees and/or to reimburse expenses (excluding transaction costs and certain other investment related expenses, interest, taxes, and infrequent and/or unusual expenses)
through July 31, 2021, unless sooner terminated at the sole discretion of the Fund’s Board of Trustees. Under this agreement, the Fund’s net operating expenses, subject to applicable exclusions, will not exceed the annual rates of 0.68%
for Class Adv and 0.50% for Class Inst3.
|
The following example is intended to help
you compare the cost of investing in the Fund with the cost of investing in other mutual funds. The example illustrates the hypothetical expenses that you would incur over the time periods indicated, and assumes that:
■
|
you invest $10,000 in the
applicable class of Fund shares for the periods indicated,
|
■
|
your investment has a 5%
return each year, and
|
■
|
the
Fund’s total annual operating expenses remain the same as shown in the
Annual Fund Operating Expenses
table above.
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
Since the waivers and/or reimbursements
shown in the
Annual Fund Operating Expenses
table above expire as indicated in the preceding table, they are reflected in the 1 year example and the 3 year example. Although your actual costs may be
higher or lower, based on the assumptions listed above, your costs (based on estimated Fund expenses) would be:
|
1
year
|
3
years
|
Class
Adv
(whether or not shares are redeemed)
|
$69
|
$218
|
Class
Inst3
(whether or not shares are redeemed)
|
$51
|
$160
|
Portfolio Turnover
The Fund, underlying funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs)
pay transaction costs, such as commissions, when they buy and sell securities (or “turn over” their portfolios). The Fund will indirectly bear the expenses associated with portfolio turnover of the underlying funds and ETFs. A high
portfolio turnover rate may indicate higher transaction costs. These costs, which are not reflected in annual fund operating expenses or in the example, affect the Fund’s performance. Because the Fund is newly organized, portfolio turnover
information is not available as of the date of this prospectus.
Principal Investment Strategies
Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC (the Investment
Manager) manages the Fund using an adaptive risk allocation methodology. The Investment Manager employs quantitative and fundamental methods to identify distinct market states (capital preservation, neutral, bullish and highly bullish) and creates a
strategic risk allocation to four broad asset categories (equity securities, fixed income securities issued by governments (rate assets), other fixed income securities (spread assets) and inflation-hedging assets) for each market state that is
intended to generate attractive risk-adjusted returns in that market state. Allocations of risk to asset classes may differ significantly across market states. In addition to strategic risk allocations based on the market state, the Investment
Manager may make tactical adjustments within and among asset classes and pursue opportunistic strategies in response to changing market, economic or other conditions. For these purposes, risk is the expected volatility (i.e., dispersion of returns)
of a security, market, index or asset class, as determined by the Investment Manager.
The Investment Manager allocates the Fund’s risk across
global asset classes by reference to a specified “Target Date” (the year referenced in the name of the Fund), and periodically (generally monthly) reallocates risk across these asset classes as market or other conditions change, in an
effort to provide capital appreciation and current income consistent with retirement as of the Target Date. As a general matter, the Fund’s overall risk allocation is determined by the Fund’s proximity to its Target Date, with an
expectation that the further away the Target Date, the greater the Fund’s exposure to assets with greater expected risk, such as equities, that historically have tended to provide higher return potential relative to asset classes with
historically less risk, such as fixed income securities. As time passes, and the Target Date nears, the expectation is that the Fund’s overall risk allocation will become more conservative. Fund risk allocations are managed up to and 25 years
beyond the Target Date, and this gradual transition toward historically lower-risk assets over time is known as the “glide path.” Approximately 25 years past the Target Date (the Landing Point), the asset allocation for each market state
will become static although the Investment Manager will continue to assess market states and adjust the Fund’s asset allocation in accordance with the glide path for the applicable market state and may make tactical allocation changes as
well.
The charts below show the Fund’s expected
economic exposure (including leverage) to each of four broad asset categories. As the charts illustrate, the Fund’s economic exposure to the asset categories varies based on the current market state and proximity to the applicable Target Date.
The Fund may utilize leverage within certain asset classes and during certain market states in order to maintain attractive expected risk-adjusted returns while adhering to the risk allocation framework. The charts also show that, for each market
state, the Fund’s total economic exposure is expected to decline over time, although changes in the Investment Manager’s assessment of the market state may cause the Fund’s actual economic exposure to increase relative to its
historical exposure at a time when the Investment Manager’s assessment of the market state was more conservative. The Investment Manager anticipates that the Fund’s net notional investment exposure will be approximately 175% of the net
assets of the
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
Fund in the neutral market state, although leverage may be higher or lower in
other market states or when the Investment Manager otherwise believes conditions so warrant. A Fund’s actual allocations may differ from the glide path when the Investment Manager makes tactical asset allocation changes. The
Investment Manager intends to review the glide paths at least annually and may adjust the glide paths or change its asset categories or classes at any time.
Neutral
Glide Path
|
|
Bullish
Glide Path
|
|
|
|
Capital
Preservation Glide Path
|
|
Highly
Bullish Glide Path
|
|
|
|
Although the Target Date is not intended to represent the
retirement or other investment goal year of any specific investor, it is a factor in the construction of the glide path. The Investment Manager expects that most investors in the Fund plan to retire on or about the Target Date and that many
investors will cease making new investments in the Fund and begin withdrawing from their accounts on or about the Target Date. The Board of Trustees of the Fund has the authority to combine the Fund with another Columbia Adaptive Retirement Fund
once a Fund has reached its Landing Point, without obtaining shareholder approval.
The Fund is non-diversified, which means that it can invest a
greater percentage of its assets in the securities of fewer issuers than can a diversified fund.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
Investment in Underlying Funds
Under normal circumstances, the Fund will gain exposure to
equity securities, rate assets, spread assets and inflation-hedging assets by investing in affiliated and unaffiliated funds (Underlying Funds). The glide paths shown above reflect the indirect exposure to the four asset categories gained through
investment in the Underlying Funds.
Under normal
circumstances, the Investment Manager expects that approximately 80% of each Fund’s net assets will be invested in Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio (the Solutions Series Funds), two mutual
funds managed by the Investment Manager through which the Fund expects to gain the desired amount of leverage regarding each of the asset categories. As illustrated in the glide path below, each Fund’s investment in the Solution Series Funds
will transition over time, with investments in Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio continuing to decrease until approximately 25 years after the Target Date, the entire 80% of the Fund invested in the Solution Series Funds will be allocated to
Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio. Under normal circumstances, Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio will have more leverage and exposure to equity securities than Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio; in certain market states, these
differences between these two Funds may be substantial.
Under normal circumstances,
the Investment Manager expects that approximately 20% of each Fund’s net assets will be invested in other mutual funds and ETFs. Currently, the Investment Manager intends to invest this portion of the Fund in Columbia Commodity Strategy Fund,
a mutual fund managed by the Investment Manager, and third party ETFs. The Investment Manager can modify the list of Underlying Funds and types of instruments in which the Fund invests, or the asset categories, at any time, without the approval of
or notice to Fund shareholders, including by adding Underlying Funds introduced after the date of this prospectus.
Summary of the Principal Investment Strategies of the Solution
Series Funds
The Solutions Series Funds (referred to
together as the Fund) are non-diversified funds that pursue consistent total returns by seeking to allocate risks across multiple asset classes.
Under normal circumstances, the Fund pursues its investment
objective by allocating portfolio risk across multiple asset classes in U.S. and non-U.S. markets with the goal of generating consistent risk-adjusted returns. The Investment Manager employs the same methods described above for the Columbia Adaptive
Retirement Funds to identify market states and create a strategic risk allocation for each state and to make tactical allocations.
The Investment Manager may use a variety of security and
instrument types to gain exposure to equity securities, inflation-hedging assets and fixed income securities. The equity securities in which the Fund may invest include direct or indirect investments in common stocks, preferred stocks and
convertible securities. The inflation-hedging assets in which the Fund may invest include direct or indirect investments in inflation-linked bonds and real estate investment trusts. The fixed-income assets in which the Fund may invest include direct
and indirect investments in corporate bonds, securities in the to-be-announced market, dollar rolls, exchange-traded notes (including both leveraged and inverse notes), sovereign debt obligations (including emerging market sovereign debt
obligations), U.S. Government securities, repurchase agreements and reverse repurchase agreements. These securities or instruments may be issued by U.S. or non-U.S. entities (including issuers in emerging market countries) and they may have
any
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
maturity or credit rating. The Fund may also invest in currencies. Although
the Fund may invest directly in these securities and instruments, it is expected that the Fund will primarily gain exposure to such securities and instruments through derivatives. The Investment Manager will determine, in its discretion, the
categorization of any investment (or portion thereof) within one or more of the general asset class categories.
The Fund may invest in derivatives, such as forward
contracts, futures and swaps for both hedging and non-hedging purposes, including, for example, seeking to enhance returns or as a substitute for a position in an underlying asset. The Fund may invest in derivatives to manage the Fund's
overall risk exposure. The Fund also expects to use derivatives to obtain leverage (market exposure in excess of the Fund’s assets). The Fund may utilize leverage within certain asset classes and during certain market states in order to
maintain attractive expected risk-adjusted returns while adhering to the Fund's risk allocation framework. The Investment Manager anticipates that Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio’s net notional investment exposure will be approximately
199% of the net assets of the Fund and approximately 80% of the portfolio invested in equities in the market state that the Investment Manager expects to be the most frequent, although leverage and the level of equity investment will
vary in other market states or when the Investment Manager otherwise believes conditions warrant. The Investment Manager does not currently anticipate that Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio will be significantly leveraged and expects
the portfolio to be invested approximately 20% in equities in the market state that the Investment Manager expects to be the most frequent.
The Fund may also take short positions, for hedging or
investment purposes.
The Fund may invest in privately placed and
other securities or instruments that are purchased and sold pursuant to Rule 144A or other exemptions under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the 1933 Act), subject to liquidity determinations and certain regulatory restrictions.
The Fund may hold a significant amount of cash, money
market instruments (which may include investments in one or more affiliated or unaffiliated money market funds or similar vehicles), other high-quality, short-term investments, or other liquid assets for investment purposes or to meet its
segregation obligations as a result of its investments in derivatives. In certain market conditions, the Fund may have no market positions (i.e., the Fund may hold only cash and cash equivalents) when the Investment Manager believes it is in the
best interests of the Fund.
The Fund’s investment
strategy may involve the frequent trading of portfolio securities.
Principal Risks
An investment in the Fund involves risks, including specific
risks relating to the investment in the Fund based on its investment process and its "fund-of-funds" structure, as well as specific risks related to the underlying funds in which it invests that in the aggregate are principal risks to the Fund,
including among others, those described below. More information about underlying funds, including their principal risks, is available in their prospectuses, which are incorporated by reference into this prospectus. This prospectus is not an
offer for any of the underlying funds.
There is no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective and you may lose money
. The value of the Fund’s holdings may decline, and the Fund’s
net asset value (NAV) and share price may go down. An investment in the Fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency.
Active Management Risk.
While
security selection is driven by fundamental concepts, a quantitative process is used to construct the portfolio. Additionally, a qualitative review of the quantitative output is conducted by the portfolio managers. Therefore, the Fund’s
performance will reflect, in part, the ability of the portfolio managers to make active, qualitative decisions, including allocation decisions that seek to achieve the Fund’s investment objective. The Fund could underperform its benchmark
index and/or other funds with similar investment objectives and/or strategies.
Allocation Risk.
The Fund uses
asset and risk allocation strategies in pursuit of its investment objective. There is a risk that the Fund’s allocation among asset classes or investments will cause the Fund’s shares to lose value or cause the Fund to underperform other
funds with similar investment objectives and/or strategies, or that the investments themselves will not produce the returns expected. Although the Fund will pursue its objective by allocating investment risks (measured by volatility expectations)
across asset classes that may react differently to
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
various environments, there is no guarantee that it will be successful. The
portfolio managers may not correctly estimate expected returns, volatility and correlations of various asset classes, causing the Fund’s risk allocation methodology to fail to meet the Fund’s investment objective.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
Regulatory Risk.
Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Commodity Strategy Fund do not qualify for an exemption from registration as a “commodity pool” under rules of the Commodity Exchange
Act (the CEA). Accordingly, the Funds are each a commodity pool under the CEA and the Investment Manager is registered as a “commodity pool operator” under the CEA. The Funds are subject to dual regulation by the SEC and the CFTC.
Compliance with the CFTC’s regulatory requirements could increase Fund expenses, adversely affecting the Funds’ total return.
Commodity-related Investment Risk.
The value of commodities investments will generally be affected by overall market movements and factors specific to a particular industry or commodity, which may include demand for the commodity, weather, embargoes,
tariffs, and economic health, political, international, regulatory and other developments. Exposure to commodities and commodities markets may subject the value of the Fund’s investments to greater volatility than other types of investments.
Commodities investments may also subject the Fund to counterparty risk and liquidity risk. The Fund may invest in one or more underlying funds that make commodity-related investments through one or more wholly-owned subsidiaries organized outside
the U.S. that are generally not subject to U.S. laws (including securities laws) and their protections.
Counterparty Risk.
Counterparty risk is the risk that a counterparty to a transaction in a financial instrument held by the Fund or by a special purpose or structured vehicle invested in by the Fund may become insolvent or otherwise fail to perform its obligations. As
a result, the Fund may obtain no or limited recovery of its investment, and any recovery may be significantly delayed.
Credit Risk.
Credit risk is
the risk that the value of debt instruments may decline if the issuer thereof defaults or otherwise becomes unable or unwilling, or is perceived to be unable or unwilling, to honor its financial obligations, such as making payments to the Fund when
due. Rating agencies assign credit ratings to certain debt instruments to indicate their credit risk. Unless otherwise provided in the Fund’s Principal Investment Strategies, investment grade debt instruments are those rated at or above BBB-
by Standard and Poor’s Ratings Services, or equivalently rated by Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. or Fitch, Inc., or, if unrated, determined to be of comparable quality. Conversely, below investment grade (commonly called
“high-yield” or “junk”) debt instruments are those rated below BBB- (or its equivalent) by such agencies or, if unrated, determined to be of comparable quality. A rating downgrade by such agencies can negatively impact the
value of such instruments. Lower quality or unrated instruments held by the Fund may present increased credit risk as compared to higher-rated instruments. Non-investment grade debt instruments may be subject to greater price fluctuations and are
more likely to experience a default than investment grade debt instruments and therefore may expose the Fund to increased credit risk. If the Fund purchases unrated instruments, or if the ratings of instruments held by the Fund are lowered after
purchase, the Fund will depend on analysis of credit risk more heavily than usual.
Derivatives Risk.
Derivatives
may involve significant risks. Derivatives are financial instruments with a value in relation to, or derived from, the value of an underlying asset(s) or other reference, such as an index, rate or other economic indicator (each an underlying
reference). Derivatives may include those that are privately placed or otherwise exempt from SEC registration, including certain Rule 144A eligible securities. Derivatives could result in Fund losses if the underlying reference does not perform as
anticipated. Use of derivatives is a highly specialized activity that can involve investment techniques, risks, and tax planning different from those associated with more traditional investment instruments. The Fund’s derivatives strategy may
not be successful and use of certain derivatives could result in substantial, potentially unlimited, losses to the Fund regardless of the Fund’s actual investment. A relatively small movement in the price, rate or other economic indicator
associated with the underlying reference may result in substantial loss for the Fund. Derivatives may be more volatile than other types of investments. The value of derivatives may be influenced by a variety of factors, including national and
international political and economic developments. Potential changes to the regulation of the derivatives markets may make derivatives more costly, may limit the market for derivatives, or may otherwise adversely affect the value or
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
performance of derivatives. Derivatives can increase the Fund’s risk
exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk,
pricing risk and volatility risk.
Derivatives Risk –
Forward Contracts Risk.
A forward contract is an over-the-counter derivative transaction between two parties to buy or sell a specified amount of an underlying reference at a specified price (or rate) on a specified
date in the future. Forward contracts are negotiated on an individual basis and are not standardized or traded on exchanges. The market for forward contracts is substantially unregulated and can experience lengthy periods of illiquidity, unusually
high trading volume and other negative impacts, such as political intervention, which may result in volatility or disruptions in such markets. A relatively small price movement in a forward contract may result in substantial losses to the Fund,
exceeding the amount of the margin paid. Forward contracts can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also
exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
Derivatives Risk – Futures Contracts Risk.
A futures contract is an exchange-traded derivative transaction between two parties in which a buyer (holding the “long” position) agrees to pay a fixed price (or rate) at a specified future date for
delivery of an underlying reference from a seller (holding the “short” position). The seller hopes that the market price on the delivery date is less than the agreed upon price, while the buyer hopes for the contrary. Certain futures
contract markets are highly volatile, and futures contracts may be illiquid. Futures exchanges may limit fluctuations in futures contract prices by imposing a maximum permissible daily price movement. The Fund may be disadvantaged if it is
prohibited from executing a trade outside the daily permissible price movement. At or prior to maturity of a futures contract, the Fund may enter into an offsetting contract and may incur a loss to the extent there has been adverse movement in
futures contract prices. The liquidity of the futures markets depends on participants entering into offsetting transactions rather than making or taking delivery. To the extent participants make or take delivery, liquidity in the futures market
could be reduced. Because of the low margin deposits normally required in futures trading, it is possible that the Fund may employ a high degree of leverage in the portfolio. As a result, a relatively small price movement in a futures contract may
result in substantial losses to the Fund, exceeding the amount of the margin paid. For certain types of futures contracts, losses are potentially unlimited. Futures markets are highly volatile and the use of futures may increase the volatility of
the Fund’s NAV. Futures contracts executed (if any) on foreign exchanges may not provide the same protection as U.S. exchanges. Futures contracts can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks,
such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
Derivatives Risk – Swaps Risk.
In a typical swap transaction, two parties agree to exchange the return earned on a specified underlying reference for a fixed return or the return from another underlying reference during a specified period of time.
Swaps may be difficult to value and may be illiquid. Swaps could result in Fund losses if the underlying asset or reference does not perform as anticipated. Swaps create significant investment leverage such that a relatively small price movement in
a swap may result in immediate and substantial losses to the Fund. The Fund may only close out a swap with its particular counterparty, and may only transfer a position with the consent of that counterparty. Certain swaps, such as short swap
transactions and total return swaps, have the potential for unlimited losses, regardless of the size of the initial investment. Swaps can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit
risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, inflation risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
Emerging Market Securities Risk.
Securities issued by foreign governments or companies in emerging market countries, such as China, Russia and certain countries in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Latin America or Africa, are more
likely to have greater exposure to the risks of investing in foreign securities that are described in Foreign Securities Risk. In addition, emerging market countries are more likely to experience instability resulting, for example, from rapid
changes or developments in social, political, economic or other conditions. Their economies are usually less mature and their securities markets are typically less developed with more limited trading activity (i.e., lower trading volumes and less
liquidity) than more developed countries. Emerging market securities tend to be
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
more volatile than securities in more developed markets. Many emerging market
countries are heavily dependent on international trade and have fewer trading partners, which makes them more sensitive to world commodity prices and economic downturns in other countries, and some have a higher risk of currency devaluations.
Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) Risk.
Investments in ETFs have unique characteristics, including, but not limited to, the expense structure and additional expenses associated with investing in ETFs. ETFs are subject to, among other risks, tracking risk and
passive and, in some cases, active investment risk. In addition, shareholders bear both their proportionate share of the Fund’s expenses, and indirectly the ETF’s expenses, incurred through the Fund’s ownership of the ETF. Because
the expenses and costs of an underlying ETF are shared by its investors, redemptions by other investors in the ETF could result in decreased economies of scale and increased operating expenses for such ETF. The ETFs may not achieve their investment
objective. The Fund, through its investment in ETFs, may not achieve its investment objective.
Foreign Currency-Related Tax Risk.
The Internal Revenue Service might issue regulations treating gains from some of the Fund’s foreign currency-denominated positions as not “qualifying income” and there is a possibility that such
regulations might be applied retroactively, in which case, the Fund might not qualify as a regulated investment company for one or more years. In the event the Internal Revenue Service issues such regulations, the Fund’s Board may authorize a
significant change in investment strategy or the Fund’s liquidation.
Foreign Securities Risk.
Investments in or exposure to foreign securities involve certain risks not associated with investments in or exposure to securities of U.S. companies. Foreign securities subject the Fund to the risks associated with investing in the particular
country of an issuer, including political, regulatory, economic, social, diplomatic and other conditions or events (including, for example, military confrontations, war and terrorism), occurring in the country or region, as well as risks associated
with less developed custody and settlement practices. Foreign securities may be more volatile and less liquid than securities of U.S. companies, and are subject to the risks associated with potential imposition of economic and other sanctions
against a particular foreign country, its nationals or industries or businesses within the country. In addition, foreign governments may impose withholding or other taxes on the Fund’s income, capital gains or proceeds from the disposition of
foreign securities, which could reduce the Fund’s return on such securities.
Forward Commitments on Mortgage-Backed Securities (including
Dollar Rolls) Risk.
When purchasing mortgage-backed securities in the “to be announced” (TBA) market (MBS TBAs), the seller agrees to deliver mortgage-backed securities for an agreed upon price on an
agreed upon date, but may make no guarantee as to the specific securities to be delivered. In lieu of taking delivery of mortgage-backed securities, the Fund could enter into dollar rolls, which are transactions in which the Fund sells securities to
a counterparty and simultaneously agrees to purchase those or similar securities in the future at a predetermined price. Dollar rolls involve the risk that the market value of the securities the Fund is obligated to repurchase may decline below the
repurchase price, or that the counterparty may default on its obligations. These transactions may also increase the Fund’s portfolio turnover rate. If the Fund reinvests the proceeds of the security sold, the Fund will also be subject to the
risk that the investments purchased with such proceeds will decline in value (a form of leverage risk). MBS TBAs and dollar rolls are subject to the risk that the counterparty to the transaction may not perform or be unable to perform in accordance
with the terms of the instrument.
Frequent
Trading Risk.
The portfolio managers may actively and frequently trade investments in the Fund's portfolio to carry out its investment strategies. Frequent trading of investments increases the possibility
that the Fund, as relevant, will realize taxable capital gains (including short-term capital gains, which are generally taxable to shareholders at higher rates than long-term capital gains for U.S. federal income tax purposes), which could reduce
the Fund's after-tax return. Frequent trading can also mean higher brokerage and other transaction costs, which could reduce the Fund's return. The trading costs and tax effects associated with portfolio turnover may adversely affect the
Fund’s performance.
Fund-of-Funds Risk.
Determinations regarding asset classes or underlying funds and the Fund’s allocations thereto may not successfully achieve the Fund’s investment objective, in whole or in part. The ability of the Fund to
realize its investment objective will depend, in large part, on the extent to which the underlying funds realize their investment objective. There is no guarantee that the underlying funds will achieve their respective investment objectives.
The
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
Fund is exposed to the same risks as the underlying funds in direct
proportion to the allocation of its assets among the underlying funds. Therefore, to the extent that the Fund invests significantly in a particular underlying fund, the Fund’s performance would be significantly impacted by the performance of
such underlying fund. Generally, by investing in a combination of underlying funds, the Fund has exposure to the risks of many areas of the market. By concentrating its investments in relatively few underlying funds, the Fund may have more
concentrated market exposures, subjecting the Fund to greater risk of loss should those markets decline or fail to rise. The performance of underlying funds could be adversely affected if other entities that invest in the same underlying funds make
relatively large investments or redemptions in such underlying funds. The Fund, and its shareholders, indirectly bear a portion of the expenses of any funds in which the Fund invests. Because the expenses and costs of each underlying fund are shared
by its investors, redemptions by other investors in an underlying fund could result in decreased economies of scale and increased operating expenses for such fund. The Investment Manager may have potential conflicts of interest in selecting
affiliated funds (for which it receives management fees) over unaffiliated funds (for which it does not receive management fees) for investment by the Fund, and may also face potential conflicts of interest in selecting affiliated funds, because the
fees the Investment Manager receives from some underlying funds may be higher than the fees paid by other underlying funds. Also, to the extent that the Fund is constrained/restricted from investing (or investing further) in a particular underlying
fund for one or more reasons (e.g., underlying fund capacity constraints or regulatory restrictions) or if the Fund chooses to sell its investment in an underlying fund because of poor investment performance or for other reasons, the Fund may have
to invest in another underlying fund(s), including less desirable funds – from a strategy or investment performance standpoint – which could have a negative impact on Fund performance. In addition, Fund performance could be negatively
impacted if an appropriate alternate underlying fund(s) does not present itself in a timely manner or at all.
High-Yield Investments Risk.
Securities and other debt instruments held by the Fund that are rated below investment grade (commonly called “high-yield” or “junk” bonds) and unrated debt instruments of comparable quality
expose the Fund to a greater risk of loss of principal and income than a fund that invests solely or primarily in investment grade debt instruments. In addition, these investments have greater price fluctuations, are less liquid and are more likely
to experience a default than higher-rated debt instruments. High-yield debt instruments are considered to be predominantly speculative with respect to the issuer’s capacity to pay interest and repay principal.
Inflation Risk.
Inflation risk
is the uncertainty over the future real value (after inflation) of an investment. Inflation rates may change frequently and drastically as a result of various factors, including unexpected shifts in the domestic or global economy, and the
Fund’s investments may not keep pace with inflation, which may result in losses to Fund investors.
Inflation-Protected Securities Risk.
Inflation-protected debt securities tend to react to changes in real interest rates (i.e., nominal interest rates minus the expected impact of inflation). In general, the price of such securities falls when real
interest rates rise, and rises when real interest rates fall. Interest payments on these securities will vary and may be more volatile than interest paid on ordinary bonds. In periods of deflation, the Fund may have no income at all from such
investments.
Interest Rate Risk.
Interest rate risk is the risk of losses attributable to changes in interest rates. In general, if prevailing interest rates (which are currently near historic lows) rise, the values of debt instruments tend to fall,
and if interest rates fall, the values of debt instruments tend to rise. Changes in the value of a debt instrument usually will not affect the amount of income the Fund receives from it but will generally affect the value of your investment in the
Fund. Changes in interest rates may also affect the liquidity of the Fund’s investments in debt instruments. In general, the longer the maturity or duration of a debt instrument, the greater its sensitivity to changes in interest rates.
Interest rate declines also may increase prepayments of debt obligations, which, in turn, would increase prepayment risk. Similarly, a period of rising interest rates may negatively impact the Fund’s performance. Actions by governments and
central banking authorities can result in increases in interest rates. Such actions may negatively affect the value of debt instruments held by the Fund, resulting in a negative impact on the Fund's performance and NAV. Any interest rate increases
could cause the value of the Fund’s investments in debt instruments to decrease. Rising interest rates may prompt redemptions from the Fund, which may force the Fund to sell investments at a time when it is not advantageous to do so, which
could result in losses.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
Issuer Risk.
An issuer in
which the Fund invests or to which it has exposure may perform poorly, and the value of its securities may therefore decline, which would negatively affect the Fund’s performance. Poor performance may be caused by poor management decisions,
competitive pressures, breakthroughs in technology, reliance on suppliers, labor problems or shortages, corporate restructurings, fraudulent disclosures, natural disasters or other events, conditions or factors. The market capitalization of an
issuer may also impact its risk profile. Investments in larger, more established companies may involve certain risks associated with their larger size. For instance, larger, more established companies may be less able to respond quickly to new
competitive challenges, such as changes in consumer tastes or innovation from smaller competitors. Also, larger companies are sometimes less able to attain the high growth rates of successful smaller companies, especially during extended periods of
economic expansion.
Leverage Risk.
Leverage occurs when the Fund increases its assets available for investment using borrowings, short sales, derivatives, or similar instruments or techniques. Use of leverage can produce volatility and may exaggerate
changes in the NAV of Fund shares and in the return on the Fund’s portfolio, which may increase the risk that the Fund will lose more than it has invested. If the Fund uses leverage, through the purchase of particular instruments such as
derivatives, the Fund may experience capital losses that exceed the net assets of the Fund. Because short sales involve borrowing securities and then selling them, the Fund’s short sales effectively leverage the Fund’s assets. The Fund's
assets that are used as collateral to secure the Fund's obligations to return the securities sold short may decrease in value while the short positions are outstanding, which may force the Fund to use its other assets to increase the collateral.
Leverage can create an interest expense that may lower the Fund's overall returns. Leverage presents the opportunity for increased net income and capital gains, but may also exaggerate the Fund’s volatility and risk of loss. There can be no
guarantee that a leveraging strategy will be successful.
Liquidity Risk.
Liquidity risk
is the risk associated with any event, circumstance, or characteristic of an investment or market that negatively impacts the Fund’s ability to sell, or realize the proceeds from the sale of, an investment at a desirable time or price.
Liquidity risk may arise because of, for example, a lack of marketability of the investment, which means that when seeking to sell its portfolio investments, the Fund could find that selling is more difficult than anticipated, especially during
times of high market volatility. Decreases in the number of financial institutions, including banks and broker-dealers, willing to make markets (match up sellers and buyers) in the Fund’s investments or decreases in their capacity or
willingness to trade such investments may increase the Fund’s exposure to this risk. The debt market has experienced considerable growth, and financial institutions making markets in instruments purchased and sold by the Fund (e.g., bond
dealers) have been subject to increased regulation. The impact of that growth and regulation on the ability and willingness of financial institutions to engage in trading or “making a market” in such instruments remains unsettled.
Certain types of investments, such as lower-rated securities or those that are purchased and sold in over-the-counter markets, may be especially subject to liquidity risk. Securities or other assets in which the Fund invests may be traded in the
over-the-counter market rather than on an exchange and therefore may be more difficult to purchase or sell at a fair price, which may have a negative impact on the Fund’s performance. Market participants attempting to sell the same or a
similar instrument at the same time as the Fund could exacerbate the Fund’s exposure to liquidity risk. The Fund may have to accept a lower selling price for the holding, sell other liquid or more liquid investments that it might otherwise
prefer to hold (thereby increasing the proportion of the Fund’s investments in less liquid or illiquid securities), or forego another more appealing investment opportunity. Certain investments that were liquid when purchased by the Fund may
later become illiquid, particularly in times of overall economic distress. Changing regulatory, market or other conditions or environments (for example, the interest rate or credit environments) may also adversely affect the liquidity and the price
of the Fund's investments. Judgment plays a larger role in valuing illiquid or less liquid investments as compared to valuing liquid or more liquid investments. Price volatility may be higher for illiquid or less liquid investments as a result of,
for example, the relatively less frequent pricing of such securities (as compared to liquid or more liquid investments). Generally, the less liquid the market at the time the Fund sells a portfolio investment, the greater the risk of loss or decline
of value to the Fund. Overall market liquidity and other factors can lead to an increase in redemptions, which may negatively impact Fund performance and NAV, including, for example, if the Fund is forced to sell investments in a down market.
Foreign securities can present enhanced liquidity risks, including as a result of less developed custody, settlement or other practices of foreign markets. Floating rate loans generally are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale, may
trade infrequently, their value may be impaired when the Fund needs to liquidate such loans, and are typically subject to extended settlement periods, each of which gives rise to liquidity risk.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
Market Risk.
Market risk
refers to the possibility that the market values of securities or other investments that the Fund holds will fall, sometimes rapidly or unpredictably, or fail to rise. An investment in the Fund could lose money over short or long
periods.
Money Market Fund Investment Risk.
An investment in a money market fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by any bank, the FDIC or any other government agency. Certain money market funds float their NAV while others seek to preserve
the value of investments at a stable NAV (typically, $1.00 per share). An investment in a money market fund, even an investment in a fund seeking to maintain a stable NAV per share, is not guaranteed and it is possible for the Fund to lose money by
investing in these and other types of money market funds. If the liquidity of a money market fund’s portfolio deteriorates below certain levels, the money market fund may suspend redemptions (i.e., impose a redemption gate) and thereby prevent
the Fund from selling its investment in the money market fund or impose a fee of up to 2% on amounts the Fund redeems from the money market fund (i.e., impose a liquidity fee). These measures may result in an investment loss or prohibit the Fund
from redeeming shares when the Investment Manager would otherwise redeem shares. In addition to the fees and expenses that the Fund directly bears, the Fund indirectly bears the fees and expenses of any money market funds in which it invests,
including affiliated money market funds. By investing in a money market fund, the Fund will be exposed to the investment risks of the money market fund in direct proportion to such investment. To the extent the Fund invests in instruments such as
derivatives, the Fund may hold investments, which may be significant, in money market fund shares to cover its obligations resulting from the Fund’s investments in derivatives. Money market funds and the securities they invest in are subject
to comprehensive regulations. The enactment of new legislation or regulations, as well as changes in interpretation and enforcement of current laws, may affect the manner of operation, performance and/or yield of money market funds.
Mortgage- and Other Asset-Backed Securities Risk.
The value of any mortgage-backed and other asset-backed securities held by the Fund may be affected by, among other things, changes or perceived changes in: interest rates; factors concerning the interests in and
structure of the issuer or the originator of the mortgages or other assets; the creditworthiness of the entities that provide any supporting letters of credit, surety bonds or other credit enhancements; or the market's assessment of the quality
of underlying assets. Payment of principal and interest on some mortgage-backed securities (but not the market value of the securities themselves) may be guaranteed by the full faith and credit of a particular U.S. Government agency, authority,
enterprise or instrumentality, and some, but not all, are also insured or guaranteed by the U.S. Government. Mortgage-backed securities issued by non-governmental issuers (such as commercial banks, savings and loan institutions, private mortgage
insurance companies, mortgage bankers and other secondary market issuers) may entail greater risk than obligations guaranteed by the U.S. Government. Mortgage- and other asset-backed securities are subject to prepayment risk, which is the
possibility that the underlying mortgage or other asset may be refinanced or prepaid prior to maturity during periods of declining or low interest rates, causing the Fund to have to reinvest the money received in securities that have lower yields.
Rising or high interest rates tend to extend the duration of mortgage- and other asset-backed securities, making their prices more volatile and more sensitive to changes in interest rates.
New Fund Risk.
Investors in
newly formed funds bear the risk that the fund may not be successful in implementing its investment strategy, and may not employ a successful investment strategy, either of which could result in the fund being liquidated at any time without
shareholder approval and/or at a time that may not be favorable for certain shareholders. Such a liquidation could have negative tax consequences for shareholders.
Non-Diversified
Fund Risk.
The Fund is non-diversified, which generally means that it will invest a greater percentage of its total assets in the securities of fewer issuers than a “diversified” fund. This
increases the risk that a change in the value of any one investment held by the Fund could affect the overall value of the Fund more than it would affect that of a diversified fund holding a greater number of investments. Accordingly, the Fund's
value will likely be more volatile than the value of a more diversified fund.
Prepayment and Extension Risk.
Prepayment and extension risk is the risk that a bond or other security or investment might, in the case of prepayment risk, be called or otherwise converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity and, in the case of extension risk, that the
investment might not be called as expected. In the case of prepayment risk, if the investment is converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity, the portfolio managers may not be able to invest the proceeds in other investments providing as high a
level of income, resulting in a reduced
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
yield to the Fund. In the case of mortgage- or asset-backed securities, as
interest rates decrease or spreads narrow, the likelihood of prepayment increases. Conversely, extension risk is the risk that an unexpected rise in interest rates will extend the life of a mortgage- or asset-backed security beyond the prepayment
time. If the Fund’s investments are locked in at a lower interest rate for a longer period of time, the portfolio managers may be unable to capitalize on securities with higher interest rates or wider spreads.
Quantitative Model Risk.
Investments selected using quantitative methods may perform differently from the market as a whole. There can be no assurance that these methodologies will enable the Fund to achieve its objective or that the models will perform as
expected.
Real Estate-Related Investment Risk.
Investments in real estate investment trusts (REITs) and in securities of other companies (wherever organized) principally engaged in the real estate industry subject the Fund to, among other things, risks similar to
those of direct investments in real estate and the real estate industry in general. These include risks related to general and local economic conditions, possible lack of availability of financing and changes in interest rates or property values.
REITs are entities that either own properties or make construction or mortgage loans, and also may include operating or finance companies. The value of interests in a REIT may be affected by, among other factors, changes in the value of the
underlying properties owned by the REIT, changes in the prospect for earnings and/or cash flow growth of the REIT itself, defaults by borrowers or tenants, market saturation, decreases in market rates for rents, and other economic, political, or
regulatory matters affecting the real estate industry, including REITs. REITs and similar non-U.S. entities depend upon specialized management skills, may have limited financial resources, may have less trading volume in their securities, and may be
subject to more abrupt or erratic price movements than the overall securities markets. REITs are also subject to the risk of failing to qualify for favorable tax treatment under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. Some REITs (especially
mortgage REITs) are affected by risks similar to those associated with investments in debt securities including changes in interest rates and the quality of credit extended.
Reinvestment Risk.
Reinvestment risk is the risk that the Fund will not be able to reinvest income or principal at the same return it is currently earning.
Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Repurchase agreements are agreements in which the seller of a security to the Fund agrees to repurchase that security from the Fund at a mutually agreed upon price and time. Repurchase agreements carry the risk that the
counterparty may not fulfill its obligations under the agreement. This could cause the Fund's income and the value of your investment in the Fund to decline.
Reverse Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Reverse repurchase agreements are agreements in which a Fund sells a security to a counterparty, such as a bank or broker-dealer, in return for cash and agrees to repurchase that security at a mutually agreed upon price
and time. Reverse repurchase agreements carry the risk that the market value of the security sold by the Fund may decline below the price at which the Fund must repurchase the security. Reverse repurchase agreements also may be viewed as a form of
borrowing, and borrowed assets used for investment creates leverage risk. Leverage can create an interest expense that may lower the Fund's overall returns. Leverage presents the opportunity for increased net income and capital gains, but may also
exaggerate the Fund’s volatility and risk of loss. There can be no guarantee that this strategy will be successful.
Rule 144A and Other Exempted Securities Risk.
The Fund may invest in privately placed and other securities or instruments exempt from SEC registration (collectively “private placements”), subject to liquidity and other regulatory restrictions. In the
U.S. market, private placements are typically sold only to qualified institutional buyers, or qualified purchasers, as applicable. An insufficient number of buyers interested in purchasing private placements at a particular time could adversely
affect the marketability of such investments and the Fund might be unable to dispose of them promptly or at reasonable prices, subjecting the Fund to liquidity risk. The Fund may invest in private placements determined to be liquid as well as those
determined to be illiquid. Even if determined to be liquid, the Fund’s holdings of private placements may increase the level of Fund illiquidity if eligible buyers are unable or unwilling to purchase them at a particular time. Issuers of Rule
144A eligible securities are required to furnish information to potential investors upon request. However, the required disclosure is much less extensive than that
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
required of public companies and is not publicly available since the offering
is not filed with the SEC. Further, issuers of Rule 144A eligible securities can require recipients of the offering information (such as the Fund) to agree contractually to keep the information confidential, which could also adversely affect the
Fund’s ability to dispose of the security.
Short Positions Risk.
The Fund
may establish short positions which introduce more risk to the Fund than long positions (where the Fund owns the instrument or other asset) because the maximum sustainable loss on an instrument or other asset purchased (held long) is limited to the
amount paid for the instrument or other asset plus the transaction costs, whereas there is no maximum price of the shorted instrument or other asset when purchased in the open market. Therefore, in theory, short positions have unlimited risk. The
Fund’s use of short positions in effect “leverages” the Fund. Leverage potentially exposes the Fund to greater risks of loss due to unanticipated market movements, which may magnify losses and increase the volatility of returns. To
the extent the Fund takes a short position in a derivative instrument or other asset, this involves the risk of a potentially unlimited increase in the value of the underlying instrument or other asset.
Small- and Mid-Cap Company Securities Risk.
Investments in small- and mid-capitalization companies (small- and mid-cap companies) often involve greater risks than investments in larger, more established companies (larger companies) because small- and mid-cap
companies tend to have less predictable earnings and may lack the management experience, financial resources, product diversification and competitive strengths of larger companies. Securities of small- and mid-cap companies may be less liquid and
more volatile than the securities of larger companies.
Sovereign Debt Risk.
A
sovereign debtor’s willingness or ability to repay principal and pay interest in a timely manner may be affected by a variety of factors, including its cash flow situation, the extent of its reserves, the availability of sufficient foreign
exchange on the date a payment is due, the relative size of the debt service burden to the economy as a whole, the sovereign debtor’s policy toward international lenders, and the political constraints to which a sovereign debtor may be
subject.
Target Date Funds Risk.
The Fund is a target date fund, and the risks associated with a target date fund include the risk of loss, including losses near, at or after the target date, and there is no guarantee that the Fund will provide
adequate income at and through the investor’s retirement or other investment goal.
U.S. Government Obligations Risk.
While U.S. Treasury obligations are backed by the “full faith and credit” of the U.S. Government, such securities are nonetheless subject to credit risk (i.e., the risk that the U.S. Government may be, or be
perceived to be, unable or unwilling to honor its financial obligations, such as making payments). Securities issued or guaranteed by federal agencies or authorities and U.S. Government-sponsored instrumentalities or enterprises may or may not be
backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government.
Volatility Risk.
The Fund may
have investments that appreciate or decrease significantly in value over short periods of time. This may cause the Fund’s NAV per share to experience significant increases or declines in value over short periods of time, however, all
investments long- or short-term are subject to risk of loss.
Performance Information
The Fund is new as of the date of this prospectus and
therefore performance information is not available.
When
available, the Fund intends to compare its performance to the performance of Dow Jones Target 2055 Index.
When available, updated performance information can be
obtained by calling toll-free 800.345.6611 or visiting columbiathreadneedle.com/us.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
Fund Management
Investment Manager:
Columbia
Management Investment Advisers, LLC
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
Title
|
|
Role
with Fund
|
|
Managed
Fund Since
|
Jeffrey
Knight, CFA
|
|
Senior
Portfolio Manager, Managing Director, Global Head of Solutions and Co-Head of Global Asset Allocation
|
|
Lead
Portfolio Manager
|
|
April 2018
|
Joshua
Kutin, CFA
|
|
Senior
Portfolio Manager
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
April 2018
|
Alexander
Wilkinson, CFA, CAIA
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
April
2018
|
Purchase and Sale of
Fund Shares
You may purchase or redeem shares of the
Fund on any business day by contacting the Fund in the ways described below:
Online
|
|
Regular
Mail
|
|
Express
Mail
|
|
By
Telephone
|
investor.columbiathreadneedle.com/us
|
|
Columbia
Funds,
c/o Columbia Management
Investment Services Corp.
P.O. Box 8081
Boston, MA 02266-8081
|
|
Columbia
Funds,
c/o Columbia Management
Investment Services Corp.
30 Dan Road, Suite 8081
Canton, MA 02021-2809
|
|
800.422.3737
|
You may purchase shares and receive
redemption proceeds by electronic funds transfer, by check or by wire. If you maintain your account with a broker-dealer or other financial intermediary, you must contact that financial intermediary to buy, sell or exchange shares of the Fund
through your account with the intermediary.
The minimum
initial investment amounts for the share class offered by the Fund are shown below:
Minimum Initial Investment
Class
|
Category
of eligible account
|
For
accounts other than
systematic investment
plan accounts
|
For
systematic investment
plan accounts
|
Class
Adv
|
All
eligible accounts
|
$0,
$1,000 or $2,000
depending upon the category
of eligible investor
|
$100
|
Class
Inst3
|
All
eligible accounts
|
$0,
$1,000, $2,000 or
$1 million depending
upon the category of
eligible investor
|
$100
(for certain eligible investors)
|
More information about these minimums can be
found in the
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares - Buying Shares
section of the prospectus. There is no minimum additional investment for any share class.
Tax Information
The Fund normally distributes net investment income and net
realized capital gains, if any, to shareholders. These distributions are generally taxable to you as ordinary income or capital gains, unless you are investing through a tax-advantaged account, such as a 401(k) plan or an IRA. The use of a
fund-of-funds structure could affect the timing, amount and character of distributions to you and therefore may increase the amount of taxes payable by you. If you are investing through a tax-advantaged account, you may be taxed upon withdrawals
from that account.
Payments to Broker-Dealers and Other
Financial Intermediaries
If you purchase the Fund
through a broker-dealer or other financial intermediary (such as a bank), the Fund and its related companies — including Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC (the Investment Manager), Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc.
(the Distributor) and Columbia Management Investment Services Corp. (the Transfer Agent) — may pay the intermediary for the sale of Fund shares and related services. These payments
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Summary of Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
(continued)
may create a conflict of interest by influencing the broker-dealer or other
intermediary and your financial advisor to recommend the Fund over another investment. Ask your financial advisor or visit your financial intermediary’s website for more information.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
Investment Objectives
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund (the 2025 Fund or the
Fund)
seeks capital appreciation and current income.
The Fund’s investment objective is not a fundamental policy and may be changed by the Fund’s Board of
Trustees without shareholder approval.
Because any investment involves risk, there is no assurance the Fund’s investment objective will be achieved.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund (the 2035 Fund or the
Fund)
seeks capital appreciation and current income.
The Fund’s investment objective is not a fundamental policy and may be changed by the Fund’s Board of
Trustees without shareholder approval.
Because any investment involves risk, there is no assurance the Fund’s investment objective will be achieved.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund (the 2045 Fund or the
Fund)
seeks capital appreciation and current income.
The Fund’s investment objective is not a fundamental policy and may be changed by the Fund’s Board of
Trustees without shareholder approval.
Because any investment involves risk, there is no assurance the Fund’s investment objective will be achieved.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund (the 2055 Fund or the
Fund)
seeks capital appreciation and current income.
The Fund’s investment objective is not a fundamental policy and may be changed by the Fund’s Board of
Trustees without shareholder approval.
Because any investment involves risk, there is no assurance the Fund’s investment objective will be achieved.
The 2025 Fund, the 2035 Fund, the 2045 Fund and the 2055 Fund
are singularly and collectively, where the context requires, referred to as either “the Fund,” “each Fund” or “the Funds.” The funds in which the Funds invest are referred to as “underlying funds” or
“acquired funds.”
Principal Investment
Strategies
Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC
(the Investment Manager) manages the Fund using an adaptive risk allocation methodology. The Investment Manager employs quantitative and fundamental methods to identify distinct market states (capital preservation, neutral, bullish and highly
bullish) and creates a strategic risk allocation to four broad asset categories (equity securities, fixed income securities issued by governments (rate assets), other fixed income securities (spread assets) and inflation-hedging assets) for each
market state that is intended to generate attractive risk-adjusted returns in that market state. Allocations of risk to asset classes may differ significantly across market states. In addition to strategic risk allocations based on the market state,
the Investment Manager may make tactical adjustments within and among asset classes and pursue opportunistic strategies in response to changing market, economic or other conditions. For these purposes, risk is the expected volatility (i.e.,
dispersion of returns) of a security, market, index or asset class, as determined by the Investment Manager.
The Investment Manager allocates the Fund’s risk across
global asset classes by reference to a specified “Target Date” (the year referenced in the name of the Fund), and periodically (generally monthly) reallocates risk across these asset classes as market or other conditions change, in an
effort to provide capital appreciation and current income consistent with retirement as of the Target Date. As a general matter, the Fund’s overall risk allocation is determined by the Fund’s proximity to its Target Date, with an
expectation that the further away the Target Date, the greater the Fund’s exposure to assets with greater expected risk, such as equities, that historically have tended to provide higher return potential relative to asset classes with
historically less risk, such as fixed income securities. As time passes, and the Target Date nears, the expectation is that the Fund’s overall risk allocation will become more conservative. Fund risk allocations are managed up to and 25 years
beyond the Target Date, and this gradual transition toward historically lower-risk assets over time is known as the “glide path.” Approximately 25 years past the Target Date (the Landing Point), the asset allocation for each market state
will become static although the Investment Manager will continue to assess market states and adjust the Fund’s asset allocation in accordance with the glide path for the applicable market state and may make tactical allocation changes as
well.
The charts below show the Fund’s expected
economic exposure (including leverage) to each of four broad asset categories. As the charts illustrate, the Fund’s economic exposure to the asset categories varies based on the current market state and proximity to the applicable Target Date.
The Fund may utilize leverage within certain asset
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
classes and during certain market states in order to maintain attractive
expected risk-adjusted returns while adhering to the risk allocation framework. The charts also show that, for each market state, the Fund’s total economic exposure is expected to decline over time, although changes in the Investment
Manager’s assessment of the market state may cause the Fund’s actual economic exposure to increase relative to its historical exposure at a time when the Investment Manager’s assessment of the market state was more conservative.
The notional investment exposure will vary significantly across market states and the Investment Manager may also vary notional investment exposure when it believes conditions warrant. A Fund’s actual allocations may differ from the glide path
when the Investment Manager makes tactical asset allocation changes. The Investment Manager intends to review the glide paths at least annually and may adjust the glide paths or change its asset categories or classes at any time.
Neutral
Glide Path
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Bullish
Glide Path
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Capital
Preservation Glide Path
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Highly
Bullish Glide Path
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Although the Target Date is not intended to represent the
retirement or other investment goal year of any specific investor, it is a factor in the construction of the glide path. The Investment Manager expects that most investors in the Fund plan to retire on or about the Target Date and that many
investors will cease making new investments in the Fund and begin withdrawing from their accounts on or about the Target Date. The Board of Trustees of the Fund has the authority to combine the Fund with another Columbia Adaptive Retirement Fund
once a Fund has reached its Landing Point, without obtaining shareholder approval.
The Fund is non-diversified, which means that it can invest a
greater percentage of its assets in the securities of fewer issuers than can a diversified fund.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
Investment in Underlying Funds
Under normal circumstances, the Fund will gain exposure to
equity securities, rate assets, spread assets and inflation-hedging assets by investing in affiliated and unaffiliated funds (Underlying Funds). The glide paths shown above reflect the indirect exposure to the four asset categories gained through
investment in the Underlying Funds.
Under normal
circumstances, the Investment Manager expects that approximately 80% of each Fund’s net assets will be invested in Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio (the Solutions Series Funds), two mutual
funds managed by the Investment Manager through which the Fund expects to gain the desired amount of leverage regarding each of the asset categories. As illustrated in the glide path below, each Fund’s investment in the Solution Series Funds
will transition over time, with investments in Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio continuing to decrease until approximately 25 years after the Target Date, the entire 80% of the Fund invested in the Solution Series Funds will be allocated to
Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio. Under normal circumstances, Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio will have more leverage and exposure to equity securities than Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio; in certain market states, these
differences between these two Funds may be substantial.
Under normal circumstances,
the Investment Manager expects that approximately 20% of each Fund’s net assets will be invested in other mutual funds and ETFs. Currently, the Investment Manager intends to invest this portion of the Fund in Columbia Commodity Strategy Fund,
a mutual fund managed by the Investment Manager, and third party ETFs. The Investment Manager can modify the list of Underlying Funds and types of instruments in which the Fund invests, or the asset categories, at any time, without the approval of
or notice to Fund shareholders, including by adding Underlying Funds introduced after the date of this prospectus.
Summary of the Principal Investment Strategies of the Solution
Series Funds
The Solutions Series Funds (referred to
together as the Fund) are non-diversified funds that pursue consistent total returns by seeking to allocate risks across multiple asset classes.
Under normal circumstances, the Fund pursues its investment
objective by allocating portfolio risk across multiple asset classes in U.S. and non-U.S. markets with the goal of generating consistent risk-adjusted returns. The Investment Manager employs the same methods described above for the Columbia Adaptive
Retirement Funds to identify market states and create a strategic risk allocation for each state and to make tactical allocations.
The Investment Manager may use a variety of security and
instrument types to gain exposure to equity securities, inflation-hedging assets and fixed income securities. The equity securities in which the Fund may invest include direct or indirect investments in common stocks, preferred stocks and
convertible securities. The inflation-hedging assets in which the Fund may invest include direct or indirect investments in inflation-linked bonds and real estate investment trusts. The fixed-income assets in which the Fund may invest include direct
and indirect investments in corporate bonds, securities in the to-be-announced market, dollar rolls, exchange-traded notes (including both leveraged and inverse notes), sovereign debt obligations (including emerging market sovereign debt
obligations), U.S. Government securities, repurchase agreements and reverse repurchase agreements. These securities or instruments may be issued by U.S. or non-U.S. entities (including issuers in emerging market countries) and they may have
any
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
maturity or credit rating. The Fund may also invest in currencies. Although
the Fund may invest directly in these securities and instruments, it is expected that the Fund will primarily gain exposure to such securities and instruments through derivatives. The Investment Manager will determine, in its discretion, the
categorization of any investment (or portion thereof) within one or more of the general asset class categories.
The Fund may invest in derivatives, such as forward
contracts (including forward foreign currency contracts), futures (including currency, equity, index, interest rate, and other bond futures) and swaps (including credit default swaps, credit default swap indexes, interest rate
swaps, and total return swaps). The Fund may invest in derivatives for both hedging and non-hedging purposes, including, for example, seeking to enhance returns or as a substitute for a position in an underlying asset. The Fund may invest
in derivatives to manage the Fund's overall risk exposure. The Fund also expects to use derivatives to obtain leverage (market exposure in excess of the Fund’s assets). The Fund may utilize leverage within certain asset classes and during
certain market states in order to maintain attractive expected risk-adjusted returns while adhering to the Fund's risk allocation framework. The Investment Manager anticipates that Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio’s net notional
investment exposure will be approximately 199% of the net assets of the Fund and approximately 80% of the portfolio invested in equities in the market state that the Investment Manager expects to be the most frequent, although
leverage and the level of equity investment will vary in other market states or when the Investment Manager otherwise believes conditions warrant. The Investment Manager does not currently anticipate that Columbia Solutions
Conservative Portfolio will be significantly leveraged and expects the portfolio to be invested approximately 20% in equities in the market state that the Investment Manager expects to be the most frequent.
The Fund may also take short positions, for hedging or
investment purposes. When the Fund takes a short position, it typically sells a currency, security or other asset that it has borrowed in anticipation of a decline in the price of the asset. To close out a short position, the Fund buys back the same
security or other asset in the market and returns it to the lender. If the price of the security or other asset falls sufficiently, the Fund will make money. If it instead increases in price, the Fund will lose money.
The Fund may invest in privately placed and
other securities or instruments that are purchased and sold pursuant to Rule 144A or other exemptions under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the 1933 Act), subject to liquidity determinations and certain regulatory restrictions.
The Fund may hold a significant amount of cash, money
market instruments (which may include investments in one or more affiliated or unaffiliated money market funds or similar vehicles), other high-quality, short-term investments, or other liquid assets for investment purposes or to meet its
segregation obligations as a result of its investments in derivatives. In certain market conditions, the Fund may have no market positions (i.e., the Fund may hold only cash and cash equivalents) when the Investment Manager believes it is in the
best interests of the Fund.
The Fund’s investment
strategy may involve the frequent trading of portfolio securities.
More Information About Affiliated Underlying Funds
The prospectuses and statements of additional information for
the affiliated Underlying Funds are incorporated by reference into this prospectus and are available free of charge at columbiathreadneedle.com/us or by calling 800.345.6611.
Columbia
Funds Series Trust I
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Columbia
Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio
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Columbia
Funds Series Trust II
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Columbia
Commodity Strategy Fund
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Principal
Risks
An investment in the Fund involves risks,
including specific risks relating to the investment in the Fund based on its investment process and its "fund-of-funds" structure, as well as specific risks related to the underlying funds in which it invests that in the aggregate are principal
risks to the Fund, including among others, those described below. More information about underlying funds, including their principal risks, is available in their prospectuses, which are incorporated by reference into this prospectus. This
prospectus is not an offer for any of the underlying funds.
There is no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective and you may lose money
. The value of the Fund’s
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
holdings may decline, and the Fund’s net asset value (NAV) and share
price may go down. An investment in the Fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency.
Active Management Risk.
While
security selection is driven by fundamental concepts, a quantitative process is used to construct the portfolio. Additionally, a qualitative review of the quantitative output is conducted by the portfolio managers. Therefore, the Fund’s
performance will reflect, in part, the ability of the portfolio managers to make active, qualitative decisions, including allocation decisions that seek to achieve the Fund’s investment objective. The Fund could underperform its benchmark
index and/or other funds with similar investment objectives and/or strategies.
Allocation Risk.
The Fund uses
asset and risk allocation strategies in pursuit of its investment objective. There is a risk that the Fund’s allocation among asset classes or investments will cause the Fund’s shares to lose value or cause the Fund to underperform other
funds with similar investment objectives and/or strategies, or that the investments themselves will not produce the returns expected. Although the Fund will pursue its objective by allocating investment risks (measured by volatility expectations)
across asset classes that may react differently to various environments, there is no guarantee that it will be successful. The portfolio managers may not correctly estimate expected returns, volatility and correlations of various asset classes,
causing the Fund’s risk allocation methodology to fail to meet the Fund’s investment objective.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
Regulatory Risk.
Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Commodity Strategy Fund do not qualify for an exemption from registration as a “commodity pool” under rules of the Commodity Exchange
Act (the CEA). Accordingly, the Funds are each a commodity pool under the CEA and the Investment Manager is registered as a “commodity pool operator” under the CEA. The Funds are subject to dual regulation by the SEC and the CFTC.
Compliance with the CFTC’s regulatory requirements could increase Fund expenses, adversely affecting the Funds’ total return.
Commodity-related Investment Risk.
The value of commodities investments will generally be affected by overall market movements and factors specific to a particular industry or commodity, which may include demand for the commodity, weather, embargoes,
tariffs, and economic health, political, international, regulatory and other developments. Economic and other events (whether real or perceived) can reduce the demand for commodities, which may, in turn, reduce market prices and cause the value of
Fund shares to fall. The frequency and magnitude of such changes cannot be predicted. Exposure to commodities and commodities markets may subject the value of the underlying fund's investments to greater volatility than other types of investments.
No, or limited, active trading market may exist for certain commodities investments, which may impair the ability to sell or to realize the full value of such investments in the event of the need to liquidate such investments. In addition, adverse
market conditions may impair the liquidity of actively traded commodities investments. Certain types of commodities instruments are subject to the risk that the counterparty to the transaction may not perform or be unable to perform in accordance
with the terms of the instrument. The Fund may invest in one or more underlying funds that make commodity-related investments through one or more wholly-owned subsidiaries organized outside the U.S. that are generally not subject to U.S. laws
(including securities laws) and their protections. However, any such subsidiary is wholly owned and controlled by the underlying fund, making it unlikely that the subsidiary will take action contrary to the interests of the underlying fund and its
shareholders. Further, any such subsidiaries will be subject to the laws of a foreign jurisdiction, and can be adversely affected by developments in that jurisdiction.
Counterparty Risk.
The risk
exists that a counterparty to a transaction in a financial instrument held by the Fund or by a special purpose or structured vehicle in which the Fund invests may become insolvent or otherwise fail to perform its obligations due to financial
difficulties, including making payments to the Fund. The Fund may obtain no or limited recovery in a bankruptcy or other reorganizational proceedings, and any recovery may be significantly delayed. Transactions that the Fund enters into may involve
counterparties in the financial services sector and, as a result, events affecting the financial services sector may cause the Fund’s share value to fluctuate.
Credit Risk.
Credit risk is
the risk that the value of debt instruments may decline if the issuer thereof defaults or otherwise becomes unable or unwilling, or is perceived to be unable or unwilling, to honor its financial obligations, such as making payments to the Fund when
due. Various factors could affect the actual or perceived willingness or
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
ability of the issuer to make timely interest or principal payments,
including changes in the financial condition of the issuer or in general economic conditions. Rating agencies assign credit ratings to certain debt instruments to indicate their credit risk. Unless otherwise provided in the Fund’s Principal
Investment Strategies, investment grade debt instruments are those rated at or above BBB- by Standard and Poor’s Ratings Services, or equivalently rated by Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. or Fitch, Inc., or, if unrated, determined to be
of comparable quality by the investment manager or subadviser managing the debt instrument for the Fund. Conversely, below investment grade (commonly called “high-yield” or “junk”) debt instruments are those rated below BBB-
(or its equivalent) by such agencies or, if unrated, determined to be of comparable quality. A rating downgrade by such agencies can negatively impact the value of such instruments. Lower quality or unrated instruments held by the Fund may present
increased credit risk as compared to higher-rated instruments. Non-investment grade debt instruments may be subject to greater price fluctuations and are more likely to experience a default than investment grade debt instruments and therefore may
expose the Fund to increased credit risk. If the Fund purchases unrated debt instruments, or if the ratings of such instruments held by the Fund are lowered after purchase, the Fund will depend on analysis of credit risk more heavily than
usual.
Derivatives Risk.
Derivatives may involve significant risks. Derivatives are financial instruments, traded on an exchange or in the over-the-counter (OTC) markets, with a value in relation to, or derived from, the value of an
underlying asset(s) (such as a security, commodity or currency) or other reference, such as an index, rate or other economic indicator (each an underlying reference). Derivatives may include those that are privately placed or otherwise exempt from
SEC registration, including certain Rule 144A eligible securities. Derivatives could result in Fund losses if the underlying reference does not perform as anticipated. Use of derivatives is a highly specialized activity that can involve investment
techniques, risks, and tax planning different from those associated with more traditional investment instruments. The Fund’s derivatives strategy may not be successful and use of certain derivatives could result in substantial, potentially
unlimited, losses to the Fund regardless of the Fund’s actual investment. A relatively small movement in the price, rate or other economic indicator associated with the underlying reference may result in substantial loss for the Fund.
Derivatives may be more volatile than other types of investments. Derivatives can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, including the risk of an adverse credit event associated with the
underlying reference (credit risk), the risk of an adverse movement in the value, price or rate of the underlying reference (market risk), the risk of an adverse movement in the value of underlying currencies (foreign currency risk) and the risk of
an adverse movement in underlying interest rates (interest rate risk). Derivatives may expose the Fund to additional risks, including the risk of loss due to a derivative position that is imperfectly correlated with the underlying reference it is
intended to hedge or replicate (correlation risk), the risk that a counterparty will fail to perform as agreed (counterparty risk), the risk that a hedging strategy may fail to mitigate losses, and may offset gains (hedging risk), the risk that
losses may be greater than the amount invested (leverage risk), the risk that the Fund may be unable to sell an investment at an advantageous time or price (liquidity risk), the risk that the investment may be difficult to value (pricing risk), and
the risk that the price or value of the investment fluctuates significantly over short periods of time (volatility risk). The value of derivatives may be influenced by a variety of factors, including national and international political and economic
developments. Potential changes to the regulation of the derivatives markets may make derivatives more costly, may limit the market for derivatives, or may otherwise adversely affect the value or performance of derivatives.
Derivatives Risk – Forward Contracts Risk.
A forward contract is an over-the-counter derivative transaction between two parties to buy or sell a specified amount of an underlying reference at a specified price (or rate) on a specified date in the future. Forward
contracts are negotiated on an individual basis and are not standardized or traded on exchanges. The market for forward contracts is substantially unregulated (there is no limit on daily price movements and speculative position limits are not
applicable). The principals who deal in certain forward contract markets are not required to continue to make markets in the underlying references in which they trade and these markets can experience periods of illiquidity, sometimes of significant
duration. There have been periods during which certain participants in forward contract markets have refused to quote prices for certain underlying references or have quoted prices with an unusually wide spread between the price at which they were
prepared to buy and that at which they were prepared to sell. At or prior to maturity of a forward contract, the Fund may enter into an offsetting contract and may incur a loss to the extent there has been adverse movement in forward contract
prices. The liquidity of the
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
markets for forward contracts depends on participants entering into
offsetting transactions rather than making or taking delivery. To the extent participants make or take delivery, liquidity in the market for forwards could be reduced. A relatively small price movement in a forward contract may result in substantial
losses to the Fund, exceeding the amount of the margin paid. Forward contracts can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate
risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
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A
forward foreign currency contract
is a derivative (forward contract) in which the underlying reference is a country's or region’s currency. The Fund may agree to buy or sell a country's or region’s
currency at a specific price on a specific date in the future. These instruments may fall in value (sometimes dramatically) due to foreign market downswings or foreign currency value fluctuations, subjecting the Fund to foreign currency risk (the
risk that Fund performance may be negatively impacted by foreign currency strength or weakness relative to the U.S. dollar, particularly if the Fund exposes a significant percentage of its assets to currencies other than the U.S. dollar).
Unanticipated changes in the currency markets could result in reduced performance for the Fund. When the Fund converts its foreign currencies into U.S. dollars, it may incur currency conversion costs due to the spread between the prices at which it
may buy and sell various currencies in the market.
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Derivatives Risk – Futures Contracts Risk.
A futures contract is an exchange-traded derivative transaction between two parties in which a buyer (holding the “long” position) agrees to pay a fixed price (or rate) at a specified future date for delivery
of an underlying reference from a seller (holding the “short” position). The seller hopes that the market price on the delivery date is less than the agreed upon price, while the buyer hopes for the contrary. Certain futures contract
markets are highly volatile, and futures contracts may be illiquid. Futures exchanges may limit fluctuations in futures contract prices by imposing a maximum permissible daily price movement. The Fund may be disadvantaged if it is prohibited from
executing a trade outside the daily permissible price movement. At or prior to maturity of a futures contract, the Fund may enter into an offsetting contract and may incur a loss to the extent there has been adverse movement in futures contract
prices. The liquidity of the futures markets depends on participants entering into offsetting transactions rather than making or taking delivery. To the extent participants make or take delivery, liquidity in the futures market could be reduced.
Positions in futures contracts may be closed out only on the exchange on which they were entered into or through a linked exchange, and no secondary market exists for such contracts. Futures positions are marked to market each day and variation
margin payment must be paid to or by the Fund. Because of the low margin deposits normally required in futures trading, it is possible that the Fund may employ a high degree of leverage in the portfolio. As a result, a relatively small price
movement in a futures contract may result in substantial losses to the Fund, exceeding the amount of the margin paid. For certain types of futures contracts, losses are potentially unlimited. Futures markets are highly volatile and the use of
futures may increase the volatility of the Fund’s NAV. Futures contracts executed (if any) on foreign exchanges may not provide the same protection as U.S. exchanges. Futures contracts can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying
references and their attendant risks, such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and
volatility risk.
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A
bond (or debt instrument) future
is a derivative that is an agreement for the contract holder to buy or sell a bond or other debt instrument, a basket of bonds or other debt instrument, or the bonds or other debt
instruments in an index on a specified date at a predetermined price. The buyer (long position) of a bond future is obliged to buy the underlying reference at the agreed price on expiry of the future.
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A
currency future
, also an FX future or foreign exchange future, is a derivative that is an agreement to exchange one currency for another at a specified date in the future at a price (exchange rate) that is fixed on
the purchase date.
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An
equity future
is a derivative that is an agreement for the contract holder to buy or sell a specified amount of an individual equity, a basket of equities or the securities in an equity index on a specified date at
a predetermined price.
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An
interest rate future
is a derivative that is an agreement whereby the buyer and seller agree to the future delivery of an interest-bearing instrument on a specific date at a pre-determined price. Examples include
Treasury-bill futures, Treasury-bond futures and Eurodollar futures.
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Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
Derivatives Risk – Swaps Risk.
In a typical swap transaction, two parties agree to exchange the return earned on a specified underlying reference for a fixed return or the return from another underlying reference during a specified period of time.
Swaps may be difficult to value and may be illiquid. Swaps could result in Fund losses if the underlying asset or reference does not perform as anticipated. Swaps create significant investment leverage such that a relatively small price movement in
a swap may result in immediate and substantial losses to the Fund. The Fund may only close out a swap with its particular counterparty, and may only transfer a position with the consent of that counterparty. Certain swaps, such as short swap
transactions and total return swaps, have the potential for unlimited losses, regardless of the size of the initial investment. Swaps can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit
risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, inflation risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
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A
credit default swap
(including a swap on a credit default index, sometimes referred to as a credit default swap index) is a derivative and special type of swap where one party pays, in effect, an insurance premium
through a stream of payments to another party in exchange for the right to receive a specified return upon the occurrence of a particular credit event by one or more third parties, such as bankruptcy, default or a similar event. A credit default
swap may be embedded within a structured note or other derivative instrument. Credit default swaps enable an investor to buy or sell protection against such a credit event (such as an issuer’s bankruptcy, restructuring or failure to make
timely payments of interest or principal). Credit default swap indices are indices that reflect the performance of a basket of credit default swaps and are subject to the same risks as credit default swaps. If such a default were to occur, any
contractual remedies that the Fund may have may be subject to bankruptcy and insolvency laws, which could delay or limit the Fund's recovery. Thus, if the counterparty under a credit default swap defaults on its obligation to make payments
thereunder, as a result of its bankruptcy or otherwise, the Fund may lose such payments altogether, or collect only a portion thereof, which collection could involve costs or delays. The Fund’s return from investment in a credit default swap
index may not match the return of the referenced index. Further, investment in a credit default swap index could result in losses if the referenced index does not perform as expected. Unexpected changes in the composition of the index may also
affect performance of the credit default swap index. If a referenced index has a dramatic intraday move that causes a material decline in the Fund’s net assets, the terms of the Fund’s credit default swap index may permit the
counterparty to immediately close out the transaction. In that event, the Fund may be unable to enter into another credit default swap index or otherwise achieve desired exposure, even if the referenced index reverses all or a portion of its
intraday move.
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An
interest rate swap
is a derivative in which two parties agree to exchange interest rate cash flows, based on a specified notional amount from a fixed rate to a floating rate (or vice versa) or from one floating rate
to another. Interest rate swaps can be based on various measures of interest rates, including LIBOR, swap rates, treasury rates and foreign interest rates.
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Total return swaps
are derivative swap transactions in which one party agrees to pay the other party an amount equal to the total return of a defined underlying reference during a specified period of time. In return, the other party would
make periodic payments based on a fixed or variable interest rate or on the total return of a different underlying reference.
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Emerging Market Securities Risk.
Securities issued by foreign governments or companies in emerging market countries, such as China, Russia and certain countries in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Latin America or Africa, are more
likely to have greater exposure to the risks of investing in foreign securities that are described in Foreign Securities Risk. In addition, emerging market countries are more likely to experience instability resulting, for example, from rapid
changes or developments in social, political, economic or other conditions. Their economies are usually less mature and their securities markets are typically less developed with more limited trading activity (
i.e.
, lower trading volumes and less liquidity) than more developed countries. Emerging market securities tend to be more volatile than securities in more
developed markets. Many emerging market countries are heavily dependent on international trade and have fewer trading partners, which makes them more sensitive to world commodity prices and
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
economic downturns in other countries. Some emerging market countries have a
higher risk of currency devaluations, and some of these countries may experience periods of high inflation or rapid changes in inflation rates and may have hostile relations with other countries.
Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) Risk.
Investments in ETFs have unique characteristics, including, but not limited to, the expense structure and additional expenses associated with investing in ETFs. An ETF’s share price may not track its specified
market index (if any) and may trade below its NAV. Certain ETFs use a “passive” investment strategy and do not take defensive positions in volatile or declining markets. Other ETFs in which the Fund may invest are actively managed ETFs
(i.e., they do not track a particular benchmark), which indirectly subjects the Fund to active management risk. An active secondary market in ETF shares may not develop or be maintained and may be halted or interrupted due to actions by its listing
exchange, unusual market conditions or other reasons. There can be no assurance that an ETF’s shares will continue to be listed on an active exchange. In addition, shareholders bear both their proportionate share of the Fund’s expenses
and, indirectly, the ETF’s expenses, incurred through the Fund’s ownership of the ETF. Because the expenses and costs of an underlying ETF are shared by its investors, redemptions by other investors in the ETF could result in decreased
economies of scale and increased operating expenses for such ETF. These transactions might also result in higher brokerage, tax or other costs for the ETF. This risk may be particularly important when one investor owns a substantial portion of the
ETF. There is a risk that ETFs in which the Fund invests may terminate due to extraordinary events. For example, any of the service providers to ETFs, such as the trustee or sponsor, may close or otherwise fail to perform their obligations to the
ETF, and the ETF may not be able to find a substitute service provider. Also, certain ETFs may be dependent upon licenses to use various indexes as a basis for determining their compositions and/or otherwise to use certain trade names. If these
licenses are terminated, the ETFs may also terminate. In addition, an ETF may terminate if its net assets fall below a certain amount.
Foreign Currency-Related Tax Risk.
As a regulated investment company (RIC), the Fund must derive at least 90% of its gross income for each taxable year from sources treated as “qualifying income” under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended. The Fund may gain exposure to local currency markets through forward currency contracts. Although foreign currency gains currently constitute “qualifying income,” the Internal Revenue Service has the authority to issue
regulations excluding from the definition of “qualifying income” a RIC’s foreign currency gains not “directly related” to its “principal business” of investing in stock or securities (or options and futures
with respect thereto). Such regulations might treat gains from some of the Fund’s foreign currency-denominated positions as not qualifying income and there is a possibility that such regulations might be applied retroactively, in which case,
the Fund might not qualify as a RIC for one or more years. In the event the Internal Revenue Service issues such regulations, the Fund’s Board may authorize a significant change in investment strategy or the Fund’s
liquidation.
Foreign Securities Risk.
Investments in or exposure to foreign securities involve certain risks not associated with investments in or exposure to securities of U.S. companies. For example, foreign markets can be extremely volatile. Foreign
securities may also be less liquid than securities of U.S. companies so that the Fund may, at times, be unable to sell foreign securities at desirable times or prices. Brokerage commissions, custodial costs and other fees are also generally higher
for foreign securities. The Fund may have limited or no legal recourse in the event of default with respect to certain foreign securities, including those issued by foreign governments. In addition, foreign governments may impose withholding or
other taxes on the Fund’s income, capital gains or proceeds from the disposition of foreign securities, which could reduce the Fund’s return on such securities. In some cases, such withholding or other taxes could potentially be
confiscatory. Other risks include: possible delays in the settlement of transactions or in the payment of income; generally less publicly available information about foreign companies; the impact of economic, political, social, diplomatic or other
conditions or events (including, for example, military confrontations, war and terrorism), possible seizure, expropriation or nationalization of a company or its assets or the assets of a particular investor or category of investors; accounting,
auditing and financial reporting standards that may be less comprehensive and stringent than those applicable to domestic companies; the imposition of economic and other sanctions against a particular foreign country, its nationals or industries or
businesses within the country; and the generally less stringent standard of care to which local agents may be held in the local markets. In addition, it may be difficult to obtain reliable information about the securities and business operations of
certain foreign issuers. Governments or trade groups may compel local agents to hold securities in designated depositories that are
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not subject to independent evaluation. The less developed a country’s
securities market is, the greater the level of risks. The risks posed by sanctions against a particular foreign country, its nationals or industries or businesses within the country may be heightened to the extent the Fund invests significantly in
the affected country or region or in issuers from the affected country that depend on global markets. Additionally, investments in certain countries may subject the Fund to a number of tax rules, the application of which may be uncertain. Countries
may amend or revise their existing tax laws, regulations and/or procedures in the future, possibly with retroactive effect. Changes in or uncertainties regarding the laws, regulations or procedures of a country could reduce the after-tax profits of
the Fund, directly or indirectly, including by reducing the after-tax profits of companies located in such countries in which the Fund invests, or result in unexpected tax liabilities for the Fund.
Forward Commitments on Mortgage-Backed Securities (including
Dollar Rolls) Risk.
When purchasing mortgage-backed securities in the “to be announced” (TBA) market (MBS TBAs), the seller agrees to deliver mortgage-backed securities for an agreed upon price on an
agreed upon date, but may make no guarantee as to the specific securities to be delivered. In lieu of taking delivery of mortgage-backed securities, the Fund could enter into dollar rolls, which are transactions in which the Fund sells securities to
a counterparty and simultaneously agrees to purchase those or similar securities in the future at a predetermined price. Dollar rolls involve the risk that the market value of the securities the Fund is obligated to repurchase may decline below the
repurchase price, or that the counterparty may default on its obligations. These transactions may also increase the Fund’s portfolio turnover rate. If the Fund reinvests the proceeds of the security sold, the Fund will also be subject to the
risk that the investments purchased with such proceeds will decline in value (a form of leverage risk). MBS TBAs and dollar rolls are subject to the risk that the counterparty to the transaction may not perform or be unable to perform in accordance
with the terms of the instrument.
Frequent
Trading Risk.
The portfolio managers may actively and frequently trade investments in the Fund's portfolio to carry out its investment strategies. Frequent trading of investments increases the possibility
that the Fund, as relevant, will realize taxable capital gains (including short-term capital gains, which are generally taxable to shareholders at higher rates than long-term capital gains for U.S. federal income tax purposes), which could reduce
the Fund's after-tax return. Frequent trading can also mean higher brokerage and other transaction costs, which could reduce the Fund's return. The trading costs and tax effects associated with portfolio turnover may adversely affect the
Fund’s performance.
Fund-of-Funds Risk.
Determinations regarding asset classes or underlying funds and the Fund’s allocations thereto may not successfully achieve the Fund’s investment objective, in whole or in part. The selected underlying
funds’ performance may be lower than the performance of the asset class they were selected to represent or may be lower than the performance of alternative underlying funds that could have been selected to represent the asset class. The Fund
also is exposed to the same risks as the underlying funds in direct proportion to the allocation of its assets among the underlying funds. Therefore, to the extent that the Fund invests significantly in a particular underlying fund, the Fund’s
performance would be significantly impacted by the performance of such underlying fund. Generally, by investing in a combination of underlying funds, the Fund has exposure to the risks of many areas of the market. By concentrating its investments in
relatively few underlying funds, the Fund may have more concentrated market exposures, subjecting the Fund to greater risk of loss should those markets decline or fail to rise. The ability of the Fund to realize its investment objective will depend,
in large part, on the extent to which the underlying funds realize their investment objectives. There is no guarantee that the underlying funds will achieve their respective investment objectives. The performance of underlying funds could be
adversely affected if other entities that invest in the same underlying funds make relatively large investments or redemptions in such underlying funds. The Fund, and its shareholders, indirectly bear a portion of the expenses of any funds in which
the Fund invests. Because the expenses and costs of each underlying fund are shared by its investors, redemptions by other investors in an underlying fund could result in decreased economies of scale and increased operating expenses for such
underlying fund. These transactions might also result in higher brokerage, tax or other costs for an underlying fund. This risk may be particularly important when one investor owns a substantial portion of an underlying fund. The Investment Manager
may have potential conflicts of interest in selecting affiliated funds (for which it receives management fees) over unaffiliated funds (for which it does not receive management fees) for investment by the Fund, and may also face potential conflicts
of interest in selecting affiliated funds, because the fees the Investment Manager receives
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from some underlying funds may be higher than the fees paid by other
underlying funds. Also, to the extent that the Fund is constrained/restricted from investing (or investing further) in a particular underlying fund for one or more reasons (e.g., underlying fund capacity constraints or regulatory restrictions) or if
the Fund chooses to sell its investment in an underlying fund because of poor investment performance or for other reasons, the Fund may have to invest in another underlying fund(s), including less desirable funds – from a strategy or
investment performance standpoint – which could have a negative impact on Fund performance. In addition, Fund performance could be negatively impacted if an appropriate alternate underlying fund(s) does not present itself in a timely manner or
at all.
High-Yield Investments Risk.
Securities and other debt instruments held by the Fund that are rated below investment grade (commonly called “high-yield” or “junk” bonds) and unrated debt instruments of comparable quality tend
to be more sensitive to credit risk than higher-rated debt instruments and may experience greater price fluctuations in response to perceived changes in the ability of the issuing entity or obligor to pay interest and principal when due than to
changes in interest rates. These investments are generally more likely to experience a default than higher-rated debt instruments. High-yield debt instruments are considered to be predominantly speculative with respect to the issuer’s capacity
to pay interest and repay principal. These debt instruments typically pay a premium – a higher interest rate or yield – because of the increased risk of loss, including default. High-yield debt instruments may require a greater degree of
judgment to establish a price, may be difficult to sell at the time and price the Fund desires, may carry high transaction costs, and also are generally less liquid than higher-rated debt instruments. The ratings provided by third party rating
agencies are based on analyses by these ratings agencies of the credit quality of the debt instruments and may not take into account every risk related to whether interest or principal will be timely repaid. In adverse economic and other
circumstances, issuers of lower-rated debt instruments are more likely to have difficulty making principal and interest payments than issuers of higher-rated debt instruments.
Inflation Risk.
Inflation risk
is the uncertainty over the future real value (after inflation) of an investment. Inflation rates may change frequently and drastically as a result of various factors, including unexpected shifts in the domestic or global economy, and the
Fund’s investments may not keep pace with inflation, which may result in losses to Fund investors.
Inflation-Protected Securities Risk.
Inflation-protected debt securities tend to react to changes in real interest rates. Real interest rates can be described as nominal interest rates minus the expected impact of inflation. In general, the price of an
inflation-protected debt security falls when real interest rates rise, and rises when real interest rates fall. Interest payments on inflation-protected debt securities will vary as the principal and/or interest is adjusted for inflation and may be
more volatile than interest paid on ordinary bonds. In periods of deflation, the Fund may have no income at all from such investments. Income earned by a shareholder depends on the amount of principal invested, and that principal will not grow with
inflation unless the shareholder reinvests the portion of Fund distributions that comes from inflation adjustments.
Interest Rate Risk.
Interest rate risk is the risk of losses attributable to changes in interest rates. In general, if prevailing interest rates (which are currently near historic lows) rise, the values of debt instruments tend to fall,
and if interest rates fall, the values of debt instruments tend to rise. Changes in the value of a debt instrument usually will not affect the amount of income the Fund receives from it but will generally affect the value of your investment in the
Fund. Changes in interest rates may also affect the liquidity of the Fund’s investments in debt instruments. In general, the longer the maturity or duration of a debt instrument, the greater its sensitivity to changes in interest rates.
Interest rate declines also may increase prepayments of debt obligations, which, in turn, would increase prepayment risk. Similarly, a period of rising interest rates may negatively impact the Fund’s performance. Actions by governments and
central banking authorities can result in increases in interest rates. Such actions may negatively affect the value of debt instruments held by the Fund, resulting in a negative impact on the Fund's performance and NAV. Any interest rate increases
could cause the value of the Fund’s investments in debt instruments to decrease. Rising interest rates may prompt redemptions from the Fund, which may force the Fund to sell investments at a time when it is not advantageous to do so, which
could result in losses.
Issuer Risk.
An issuer in which the Fund invests or to which it has exposure may perform poorly, and the value of its securities may therefore decline, which would negatively affect the Fund’s performance. Poor performance may
be caused by poor management decisions, competitive pressures, breakthroughs in technology, reliance on suppliers, labor problems or shortages, corporate restructurings, fraudulent disclosures, natural disasters or other events,
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conditions or factors. The market capitalization of an issuer may also impact
its risk profile. Investments in larger, more established companies may involve certain risks associated with their larger size. For instance, larger, more established companies may be less able to respond quickly to new competitive challenges, such
as changes in consumer tastes or innovation from smaller competitors. Also, larger companies are sometimes less able to attain the high growth rates of successful smaller companies, especially during extended periods of economic expansion.
Leverage Risk.
Leverage occurs
when the Fund increases its assets available for investment using borrowings, short sales, derivatives, or similar instruments or techniques. Use of leverage can produce volatility and may exaggerate changes in the NAV of Fund shares and in the
return on the Fund’s portfolio, which may increase the risk that the Fund will lose more than it has invested. The use of leverage may cause the Fund to liquidate portfolio positions when it may not be advantageous to do so to satisfy its
obligations or to meet any required asset segregation or position coverage requirements. Futures contracts, options on futures contracts, forward contracts and other derivatives can allow the Fund to obtain large investment exposures in return for
meeting relatively small margin requirements. As a result, investments in those transactions may be highly leveraged. If the Fund uses leverage, through the purchase of particular instruments such as derivatives, the Fund may experience capital
losses that exceed the net assets of the Fund. Because short sales involve borrowing securities and then selling them, the Fund’s short sales effectively leverage the Fund’s assets. The Fund's assets that are used as collateral to secure
the Fund's obligations to return the securities sold short may decrease in value while the short positions are outstanding, which may force the Fund to use its other assets to increase the collateral. Leverage can create an interest expense that may
lower the Fund's overall returns. Leverage presents the opportunity for increased net income and capital gains, but may also exaggerate the Fund's volatility and risk of loss. There can be no guarantee that a leveraging strategy will be
successful.
Liquidity Risk.
Liquidity risk is the risk associated with any event, circumstance, or characteristic of an investment or market that negatively impacts the Fund’s ability to sell, or realize the proceeds from the sale of, an
investment at a desirable time or price. Liquidity risk may arise because of, for example, a lack of marketability of the investment, which means that when seeking to sell its portfolio investments, the Fund could find that selling is more difficult
than anticipated, especially during times of high market volatility. Decreases in the number of financial institutions, including banks and broker-dealers, willing to make markets (match up sellers and buyers) in the Fund’s investments or
decreases in their capacity or willingness to trade such investments may increase the Fund’s exposure to this risk. The debt market has experienced considerable growth, and financial institutions making markets in instruments purchased and
sold by the Fund (e.g., bond dealers) have been subject to increased regulation. The impact of that growth and regulation on the ability and willingness of financial institutions to engage in trading or “making a market” in such
instruments remains unsettled. Certain types of investments, such as lower-rated securities or those that are purchased and sold in over-the-counter markets, may be especially subject to liquidity risk. Securities or other assets in which the Fund
invests may be traded in the over-the-counter market rather than on an exchange and therefore may be more difficult to purchase or sell at a fair price, which may have a negative impact on the Fund’s performance. Market participants attempting
to sell the same or a similar instrument at the same time as the Fund could exacerbate the Fund’s exposure to liquidity risk. The Fund may have to accept a lower selling price for the holding, sell other liquid or more liquid investments that
it might otherwise prefer to hold (thereby increasing the proportion of the Fund’s investments in less liquid or illiquid securities), or forego another more appealing investment opportunity. Certain investments that were liquid when purchased
by the Fund may later become illiquid, particularly in times of overall economic distress. Changing regulatory, market or other conditions or environments (for example, the interest rate or credit environments) may also adversely affect the
liquidity and the price of the Fund's investments. Judgment plays a larger role in valuing illiquid or less liquid investments as compared to valuing liquid or more liquid investments. Price volatility may be higher for illiquid or less liquid
investments as a result of, for example, the relatively less frequent pricing of such securities (as compared to liquid or more liquid investments). Generally, the less liquid the market at the time the Fund sells a portfolio investment, the greater
the risk of loss or decline of value to the Fund. Overall market liquidity and other factors can lead to an increase in redemptions, which may negatively impact Fund performance and NAV, including, for example, if the Fund is forced to sell
investments in a down market. Foreign securities can present enhanced liquidity risks, including as a result of less developed custody, settlement or
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other practices of foreign markets. Floating rate loans generally are subject
to legal or contractual restrictions on resale, may trade infrequently, their value may be impaired when the Fund needs to liquidate such loans, and are typically subject to extended settlement periods, each of which gives rise to liquidity
risk.
Market Risk.
Market risk refers to the possibility that the market values of securities or other investments that the Fund holds will fall, sometimes rapidly or unpredictably, or fail to rise. An investment in the Fund could lose money over short or long
periods.
Money Market Fund Investment Risk.
An investment in a money market fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by any bank, the FDIC or any other government agency. Certain money market funds float their NAV while others seek to preserve
the value of investments at a stable NAV (typically $1.00 per share). An investment in a money market fund, even an investment in a fund seeking to maintain a stable NAV per share, is not guaranteed and it is possible for the Fund to lose money by
investing in these and other types of money market funds. If the liquidity of a money market fund’s portfolio deteriorates below certain levels, the money market fund may suspend redemptions (i.e., impose a redemption gate) and thereby prevent
the Fund from selling its investment in the money market fund or impose a fee of up to 2% on amounts the Fund redeems from the money market fund (i.e., impose a liquidity fee). These measures may result in an investment loss or prohibit the Fund
from redeeming shares when the Investment Manager would otherwise redeem shares. In addition to the fees and expenses that the Fund directly bears, the Fund indirectly bears the fees and expenses of any money market funds in which it invests,
including affiliated money market funds. To the extent these fees and expenses, along with the fees and expenses of any other funds in which the Fund may invest, are expected to equal or exceed 0.01% of the Fund’s average daily net assets,
they will be reflected in the Annual Fund Operating Expenses set forth in the table under “Fees and Expenses of the Fund.” By investing in a money market fund, the Fund will be exposed to the investment risks of the money market fund in
direct proportion to such investment. The money market fund may not achieve its investment objective. The Fund, through its investment in the money market fund, may not achieve its investment objective. To the extent the Fund invests in instruments
such as derivatives, the Fund may hold investments, which may be significant, in money market fund shares to cover its obligations resulting from the Fund’s investments in derivatives. Money market funds and the securities they invest in are
subject to comprehensive regulations. The enactment of new legislation or regulations, as well as changes in interpretation and enforcement of current laws, may affect the manner of operation, performance and/or yield of money market
funds.
Mortgage- and Other Asset-Backed
Securities Risk.
The value of any mortgage-backed and other asset-backed securities held by the Fund may be affected by, among other things, changes or perceived changes in: interest rates; factors concerning the
interests in and structure of the issuer or the originator of the mortgages or other assets; the creditworthiness of the entities that provide any supporting letters of credit, surety bonds or other credit enhancements; or the market's
assessment of the quality of underlying assets. Mortgage-backed securities represent interests in, or are backed by, pools of mortgages from which payments of interest and principal (net of fees paid to the issuer or guarantor of the securities) are
distributed to the holders of the mortgage-backed securities. Other types of asset-backed securities typically represent interests in, or are backed by, pools of receivables such as credit, automobile, student and home equity loans.
Mortgage- and other asset-backed securities can have a fixed or an adjustable rate. Mortgage- and other asset-backed securities are subject to prepayment risk, which is the possibility that the underlying mortgage or other asset may be
refinanced or prepaid prior to maturity during periods of declining or low interest rates, causing the Fund to have to reinvest the money received in securities that have lower yields. In addition, the impact of prepayments on the value of
mortgage- and other asset-backed securities may be difficult to predict and may result in greater volatility. Rising or high interest rates tend to extend the duration of mortgage- and other asset-backed securities, making them more
volatile and more sensitive to changes in interest rates. Payment of principal and interest on some mortgage-backed securities (but not the market value of the securities themselves) may be guaranteed (i) by the full faith and credit of the U.S.
Government (in the case of securities guaranteed by the Government National Mortgage Association) or (ii) by its agencies, authorities, enterprises or instrumentalities (in the case of securities guaranteed by the Federal National Mortgage
Association (FNMA) or the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC)), which are not insured or guaranteed by the U.S. Government (although FNMA and FHLMC may be able to access capital from the U.S. Treasury to meet their obligations under such
securities). Mortgage-backed securities issued by non-governmental issuers (such as
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commercial banks, savings and loan institutions, private mortgage insurance
companies, mortgage bankers and other secondary market issuers) may be supported by various credit enhancements, such as pool insurance, guarantees issued by governmental entities, letters of credit from a bank or senior/subordinated structures, and
may entail greater risk than obligations guaranteed by the U.S. Government, whether or not such obligations are guaranteed by the private issuer.
New Fund Risk.
Investors in
newly formed funds bear the risk that the fund may not be successful in implementing its investment strategy, and may not employ a successful investment strategy, either of which could result in the fund being liquidated at any time without
shareholder approval and/or at a time that may not be favorable for certain shareholders. Such a liquidation could have negative tax consequences for shareholders.
Non-Diversified
Fund Risk.
The Fund is non-diversified, which generally means that it will invest a greater percentage of its total assets in the securities of fewer issuers than a “diversified” fund. This
increases the risk that a change in the value of any one investment held by the Fund could affect the overall value of the Fund more than it would affect that of a diversified fund holding a greater number of investments. Accordingly, the Fund's
value will likely be more volatile than the value of a more diversified fund.
Prepayment and Extension Risk.
Prepayment and extension risk is the risk that a bond or other security or investment might, in the case of prepayment risk, be called or otherwise converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity and, in the case of extension risk, that the
investment might not be called as expected. In the case of prepayment risk, if the investment is converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity, the portfolio managers may not be able to invest the proceeds in other investments providing as high a
level of income, resulting in a reduced yield to the Fund. In the case of mortgage- or other asset-backed securities, as interest rates decrease or spreads narrow, the likelihood of prepayment increases. Conversely, extension risk is the risk that
an unexpected rise in interest rates will extend the life of a mortgage- or asset-backed security beyond the prepayment time. If the Fund's investments are locked in at a lower interest rate for a longer period of time, the portfolio managers may be
unable to capitalize on securities with higher interest rates or wider spreads.
Quantitative Model Risk.
The
Fund may use quantitative methods to select investments. Securities or other investments selected using quantitative methods may perform differently from the market as a whole or from their expected performance for many reasons, including factors
used in building the quantitative analytical framework, the weights placed on each factor, and changing sources of market returns, among others. Any errors or imperfections in the quantitative analyses or models, or in the data on which they are
based, could adversely affect the effective use of such analyses or models, which in turn could adversely affect the Fund’s performance. It is not possible or practicable for a quantitative manager to factor all relevant, available data into
quantitative model forecasts and/or trading decisions. Quantitative managers will use their discretion to determine what data to gather with respect to an investment strategy and what data the models will take into account to produce forecasts that
may have an impact on ultimate trading decisions. Shareholders should be aware that there is no guarantee that a quantitative manager will use any specific data or type of data in making trading decisions on behalf of the Fund, nor is there any
guarantee that the data actually utilized in generating forecasts or making trading decisions on behalf of the Fund will be the most accurate data available or free from errors. There can be no assurance that these methodologies will enable the Fund
to achieve its objective.
Real Estate-Related
Investment Risk.
Investments in real estate investment trusts (REITs) and in securities of other companies (wherever organized) principally engaged in the real estate industry subject the Fund to, among other
things, risks similar to those of direct investments in real estate and the real estate industry in general. These include risks related to general and local economic conditions, possible lack of availability of financing and changes in interest
rates or property values. REITs are entities that either own properties or make construction or mortgage loans, and also may include operating or finance companies. The value of interests in a REIT may be affected by, among other factors, changes in
the value of the underlying properties owned by the REIT, changes in the prospect for earnings and/or cash flow growth of the REIT itself, defaults by borrowers or tenants, market saturation, decreases in market rates for rents, and other economic,
political, or regulatory matters affecting the real estate industry, including REITs. REITs and similar non-U.S. entities depend upon specialized management skills, may have limited financial resources, may have less trading volume in their
securities, and may be subject to more abrupt or erratic price movements than the overall securities markets. REITs are also subject to the risk of failing to qualify for
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favorable tax treatment under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
Some REITs (especially mortgage REITs) are affected by risks similar to those associated with investments in debt securities including changes in interest rates and the quality of credit extended.
Reinvestment Risk.
Reinvestment risk is the risk that the Fund will not be able to reinvest income or principal at the same return it is currently earning.
Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Repurchase agreements are agreements in which the seller of a security to the Fund agrees to repurchase that security from the Fund at a mutually agreed upon price and time. Repurchase agreements carry the risk that the
counterparty may not fulfill its obligations under the agreement. This could cause the Fund's income and the value of your investment in the Fund to decline.
Reverse Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Reverse repurchase agreements are agreements in which a Fund sells a security to a counterparty, such as a bank or broker-dealer, in return for cash and agrees to repurchase that security at a mutually agreed upon price
and time. Reverse repurchase agreements carry the risk that the market value of the security sold by the Fund may decline below the price at which the Fund must repurchase the security. Reverse repurchase agreements also may be viewed as a form of
borrowing, and borrowed assets used for investment creates leverage risk. Leverage can create an interest expense that may lower the Fund's overall returns. Leverage presents the opportunity for increased net income and capital gains, but may also
exaggerate the Fund’s volatility and risk of loss. There can be no guarantee that this strategy will be successful.
Rule 144A and Other Exempted Securities Risk.
The Fund may invest in privately placed and other securities or instruments exempt from SEC registration (collectively “private placements”), subject to liquidity and other regulatory restrictions. In the
U.S. market, private placements are typically sold only to qualified institutional buyers, or qualified purchasers, as applicable. An insufficient number of buyers interested in purchasing private placements at a particular time could adversely
affect the marketability of such investments and the Fund might be unable to dispose of them promptly or at reasonable prices, subjecting the Fund to liquidity risk. The Fund may invest in private placements determined to be liquid as well as those
determined to be illiquid. Even if determined to be liquid, the Fund’s holdings of private placements may increase the level of Fund illiquidity if eligible buyers are unable or unwilling to purchase them at a particular time. The Fund may
also have to bear the expense of registering the securities for resale and the risk of substantial delays in effecting the registration. Additionally, the purchase price and subsequent valuation of private placements typically reflect a discount,
which may be significant, from the market price of comparable securities for which a more liquid market exists. Issuers of Rule 144A eligible securities are required to furnish information to potential investors upon request. However, the required
disclosure is much less extensive than that required of public companies and is not publicly available since the offering is not filed with the SEC. Further, issuers of Rule 144A eligible securities can require recipients of the offering information
(such as the Fund) to agree contractually to keep the information confidential, which could also adversely affect the Fund’s ability to dispose of the security.
Short Positions Risk.
The Fund
may establish short positions which introduce more risk to the Fund than long positions (where the Fund owns the instrument or other asset) because the maximum sustainable loss on an instrument or other asset purchased (held long) is limited to the
amount paid for the instrument or other asset plus the transaction costs, whereas there is no maximum price of the shorted instrument or other asset when purchased in the open market. Therefore, in theory, short positions have unlimited risk. The
Fund’s use of short positions in effect “leverages” the Fund. Leverage potentially exposes the Fund to greater risks of loss due to unanticipated market movements, which may magnify losses and increase the volatility of returns. To
the extent the Fund takes a short position in a derivative instrument or other asset, this involves the risk of a potentially unlimited increase in the value of the underlying instrument or other asset.
Small- and Mid-Cap Company Securities Risk.
Securities of small- and mid-capitalization companies (small- and mid-cap companies) can, in certain circumstances, have a higher potential for gains than securities of larger, more established companies (larger
companies) but may also have more risk. For example, small- and mid-cap companies may be more vulnerable to market downturns and adverse business or economic events than larger companies because they may have more limited financial
resources and business operations. Small- and mid-cap companies are also more likely than larger companies to have more limited product lines and operating histories and to depend on
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smaller and generally less experienced management teams. Securities of small-
and mid-cap companies may trade less frequently and in smaller volumes and may be less liquid and fluctuate more sharply in value than securities of larger companies. When the Fund takes significant positions in small- and mid-cap companies with
limited trading volumes, the liquidation of those positions, particularly in a distressed market, could be prolonged and result in Fund investment losses that would affect the value of your investment in the Fund. In addition, some small- and
mid-cap companies may not be widely followed by the investment community, which can lower the demand for their stocks.
Sovereign Debt Risk.
A
sovereign debtor’s willingness or ability to repay principal and pay interest in a timely manner may be affected by a variety of factors, including its cash flow situation, the extent of its reserves, the availability of sufficient foreign
exchange on the date a payment is due, the relative size of the debt service burden to the economy as a whole, the sovereign debtor’s policy toward international lenders, and the political constraints to which a sovereign debtor may be
subject.
Target Date Funds Risk.
The Fund is a target date fund, and the risks associated with a target date fund include the risk of loss, including losses near, at or after the target date, and there is no guarantee that the Fund will provide
adequate income at and through the investor’s retirement or other investment goal.
U.S. Government Obligations Risk.
While U.S. Treasury obligations are backed by the “full faith and credit” of the U.S. Government, such securities are nonetheless subject to credit risk (
i.e.
, the risk that the U.S. Government may be, or may be perceived to be, unable or unwilling to honor its financial obligations, such as making payments).
Securities issued or guaranteed by federal agencies or authorities and U.S. Government-sponsored instrumentalities or enterprises may or may not be backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government. For example, securities issued by the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, the Federal National Mortgage Association and the Federal Home Loan Banks are neither insured nor guaranteed by the U.S. Government. These securities may be supported by the ability to borrow from the U.S.
Treasury or only by the credit of the issuing agency, authority, instrumentality or enterprise and, as a result, are subject to greater credit risk than securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Treasury.
Volatility Risk.
The Fund may
have investments that appreciate or decrease significantly in value over short periods of time. This may cause the Fund’s NAV per share to experience significant increases or declines in value over short periods of time, however, all
investments long- or short-term are subject to risk of loss.
Additional Investment Strategies and Policies
This section describes certain investment strategies and
policies that the Fund may utilize in pursuit of its investment objective and some additional factors and risks involved with investing in the Fund.
References to “the Fund” throughout the remainder
of the prospectus refer to each Fund singularly or collectively as the context requires.
Investment Guidelines
As a general matter, and except as specifically described in
the discussion of the Fund's principal investment strategies in this prospectus or as otherwise required by the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act), the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief,
whenever an investment policy or limitation states a percentage of the Fund's assets that may be invested in any security or other asset or sets forth a policy regarding an investment standard, compliance with that percentage limitation or standard
will be determined solely at the time of the Fund's investment in the security or asset.
Holding Other Kinds of Investments
The Fund may hold other investments that are not part of its
principal investment strategies. These investments and their risks are described below and/or in the SAI. The Fund may choose not to invest in certain securities described in this prospectus and in the SAI, although it has the ability to do so.
Information on the Fund’s holdings can be found in the Fund’s shareholder reports or by visiting columbiathreadneedle.com/us.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
Transactions in Derivatives
The Fund may enter into derivative transactions or otherwise
have exposure to derivative transactions through underlying investments. Derivatives are financial contracts whose values are, for example, based on (or “derived” from) traditional securities (such as a stock or bond), assets (such as a
commodity like gold or a foreign currency), reference rates (such as the London Interbank Offered Rate (commonly known as LIBOR)) or market indices (such as the Standard & Poor's (S&P) 500
®
Index). The use of derivatives is a highly specialized activity which involves investment techniques and risks different from those associated with
ordinary portfolio securities transactions. Derivatives involve special risks and may result in losses or may limit the Fund's potential gain from favorable market movements. Derivative strategies often involve leverage, which may exaggerate a loss,
potentially causing the Fund to lose more money than it would have lost had it invested in the underlying security or other asset directly. The values of derivatives may move in unexpected ways, especially in unusual market conditions, and may
result in increased volatility in the value of the derivative and/or the Fund’s shares, among other consequences. The use of derivatives may also increase the amount of taxes payable by shareholders holding shares in a taxable account.
Other risks arise from the Fund's potential inability to terminate or to sell derivative positions. A liquid secondary market may not always exist for the Fund's derivative positions at times when the Fund might wish to terminate or to sell such
positions. Over-the-counter instruments (investments not traded on an exchange) may be illiquid, and transactions in derivatives traded in the over-the-counter market are subject to the risk that the other party will not meet its obligations. The
use of derivatives also involves the risks of mispricing or improper valuation and that changes in the value of the derivative may not correlate perfectly with the underlying security, asset, reference rate or index. The Fund also may not be able to
find a suitable derivative transaction counterparty, and thus may be unable to engage in derivative transactions when it is deemed favorable to do so, or at all. U.S. federal legislation has been enacted that provides for new clearing, margin,
reporting and registration requirements for participants in the derivatives market. These changes could restrict and/or impose significant costs or other burdens upon the Fund’s participation in derivatives transactions. For more information
on the risks of derivative investments and strategies, see the SAI.
Affiliated Fund Investing
The Investment Manager or an affiliate serves as investment
adviser to funds using the Columbia brand (Columbia Funds), including those that are structured as “fund-of-funds” (such as the Fund(s) offered in this prospectus), and provides asset-allocation services to (i) shareholders by
investing in shares of other Columbia Funds (collectively referred to in this section as Underlying Funds), and (ii) discretionary managed accounts (collectively referred to as affiliated products) that invest exclusively in Underlying Funds. These
affiliated products, individually or collectively, may own a significant percentage of the outstanding shares of one or more Underlying Funds, and the Investment Manager seeks to balance potential conflicts of interest between the affiliated
products and the Underlying Funds in which they invest. The affiliated products’ investment in the Underlying Funds may have the effect of creating economies of scale, possibly resulting in lower expense ratios for the Underlying Funds,
because the affiliated products may own substantial portions of the shares of Underlying Funds. However, redemption of Underlying Fund shares by one or more affiliated products could cause the expense ratio of an Underlying Fund to increase, as its
fixed costs would be spread over a smaller asset base. Because of large positions of certain affiliated products, the Underlying Funds may experience relatively large inflows and outflows of cash due to affiliated products’ purchases and sales
of Underlying Fund shares. Although the Investment Manager or its affiliate may seek to minimize the impact of these transactions where possible, for example, by structuring them over a reasonable period of time or through other measures, Underlying
Funds may experience increased expenses as they buy and sell portfolio securities to manage the cash flow effect related to these transactions. Further, when the Investment Manager or its affiliate structures transactions over a reasonable period of
time in order to manage the potential impact of the buy and sell decisions for the affiliated products, those affiliated products, including funds-of-funds, may pay more or less (for purchase activity), or receive more or less (for redemption
activity), for shares of the Underlying Funds than if the transactions were executed in one transaction. In addition, substantial redemptions by affiliated products within a short period of time could require the Underlying Fund to liquidate
positions more rapidly than would otherwise be desirable, which may have the effect of reducing or eliminating potential gain or causing it to realize a loss. In order to meet such redemptions, an Underlying Fund may be forced to sell its liquid (or
more liquid) positions, leaving the Underlying Fund holding, post-redemption, a relatively larger position in illiquid securities (securities that are not
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
readily marketable or that cannot be sold or disposed of in the ordinary
course of business, within seven days, at approximately the value at which the holder has valued the security) or less liquid securities. Substantial redemptions may also adversely affect the ability of the Underlying Fund to implement its
investment strategy. The Investment Manager or its affiliate also has an economic conflict of interest in determining the allocation of affiliated products’ assets among the Underlying Funds, as it earns different fees from the various
Underlying Funds.
Investing in Money Market Funds
The Fund may invest cash in, or hold as collateral for certain
investments, shares of registered or unregistered money market funds, including funds advised by the Investment Manager or its affiliates. These funds are not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) or any other
government agency. The Fund and its shareholders indirectly bear a portion of the expenses of any money market fund or other fund in which the Fund may invest.
Investing Defensively
The Fund may from time to time take temporary defensive
investment positions that may be inconsistent with the Fund’s principal investment strategies in attempting to respond to adverse market, economic, political, social or other conditions, including, without limitation, investing some or all of
its assets in money market instruments or shares of affiliated or unaffiliated money market funds or holding some or all of its assets in cash or cash equivalents. The Fund may take such defensive investment positions for as long a period as deemed
necessary.
The Fund may not achieve its investment
objective while it is investing defensively. Investing defensively may adversely affect Fund performance. During these times, the portfolio managers may make frequent portfolio holding changes, which could result in increased trading
expenses and taxes, and decreased Fund performance. See also
Investing in Money Market Funds
above for more information.
Other Strategic and Investment Measures
The Fund may also from time to time take temporary portfolio
positions that may or may not be consistent with the Fund’s principal investment strategies in attempting to respond to adverse market, economic, political, social or other conditions, including, without limitation, investing in derivatives,
such as forward contracts, futures contracts, options, structured investments and swaps, for various purposes, including among others, investing in particular derivatives in seeking to reduce investment exposures, or in seeking to achieve indirect
investment exposures, to a sector, country, region or currency where the Investment Manager believes such positioning is appropriate. The Fund may take such portfolio positions for as long a period as deemed necessary. While the Fund is so
positioned, derivatives could comprise a substantial portion of the Fund’s investments and the Fund may not achieve its investment objective. Investing in this manner may adversely affect Fund performance. During these times, the portfolio
managers may make frequent portfolio holding changes, which could result in increased trading expenses and taxes, and decreased Fund performance. For information on the risks of investing in derivatives, see
Transactions in Derivatives
above.
Portfolio Holdings Disclosure
The Board has adopted policies and procedures that govern the
timing and circumstances of disclosure to shareholders and third parties of information regarding the securities owned by the Fund. A description of these policies and procedures is included in the SAI. Fund policy generally permits the disclosure
of portfolio holdings information on the Fund's website (columbiathreadneedle.com/us) only after a certain amount of time has passed, as described in the SAI.
Purchases and sales of portfolio securities can take place at
any time, so the portfolio holdings information available on the Fund's website may not always be current.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
eDelivery and Mailings to Households
In order to reduce shareholder expenses, the Fund may, if
prior consent has been provided, mail only one copy of the Fund’s prospectus and each annual and semiannual report to those addresses shared by two or more accounts. If you wish to receive separate copies of these documents, call 800.345.6611
or, if your shares are held through a financial intermediary, contact your intermediary directly. Additionally, you may elect to enroll in eDelivery to receive electronic versions of these documents by logging into your account at
investor.columbiathreadneedle.com/us.
Cash Flows
The timing and magnitude of cash inflows from investors buying
Fund shares could prevent the Fund from always being fully invested. Conversely, the timing and magnitude of cash outflows to shareholders redeeming Fund shares could require the Fund to sell portfolio securities at less than opportune times or to
hold ready reserves of uninvested cash in amounts larger than might otherwise be the case to meet shareholder redemptions. Either situation could adversely impact the Fund’s performance.
Understanding Annual Fund Operating Expenses
The Fund’s annual operating expenses, as presented in
the
Annual Fund Operating Expenses
table in the
Fees and Expenses of the Fund
section of this prospectus, generally are based on estimated expenses for the Fund’s
current fiscal period, may vary by share class and are expressed as a percentage (expense ratio) of the Fund’s average net assets. The expense ratios reflect the Fund’s fee arrangements as of the date of this prospectus. In general, the
Fund’s expense ratios will increase as its net assets decrease, such that the Fund’s actual expense ratios may be higher than the expense ratios presented in the
Annual Fund Operating Expenses
table if assets fall. Any commitment by the Investment Manager and/or its affiliates to waive fees and/or cap (reimburse) expenses is expected, in part, to limit the impact of any increase in the Fund’s expense ratios that would otherwise
result because of a decrease in the Fund’s assets in the current fiscal period. The Fund’s annual operating expenses are comprised of (i) investment management fees, (ii) distribution and/or service fees, and (iii) other expenses.
Management fees do not vary by class, but distribution and/or service fees and other expenses may vary by class.
In addition to the total annual Fund operating expenses that
the Fund bears directly, the Fund’s shareholders indirectly bear the expenses of the underlying funds (or acquired funds) in which the Fund invests. The Fund’s “Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses” shown are based on its
allocations to the underlying funds as of the Fund’s fiscal year end. Because acquired funds will have varied expense and fee levels and the Fund may own different proportions of acquired funds at different times, the amount of fees and
expenses incurred by the Fund with respect to such investments will vary.
Other Expenses
“Other expenses” consist of the
fees the Fund pays to its custodian, transfer agent, auditors, lawyers and trustees, costs relating to compliance and miscellaneous expenses. Generally, these expenses are allocated on a pro rata basis across all share classes. Transfer agency fees
and certain shareholder servicing fees, however, are class specific. They differ by share class because the shareholder services provided to each share class may be different. Accordingly, the differences in “other expenses” among share
classes are primarily the result of the different transfer agency and shareholder servicing fees applicable to each share class. For more information on these fees, see
Choosing a Share Class — Financial
Intermediary Compensation.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
Fee Waiver/Expense Reimbursement Arrangements
The Investment Manager and certain of its affiliates have
contractually agreed to waive fees and/or reimburse expenses (excluding certain fees and expenses described below) through July 31, 2021, unless sooner terminated at the sole discretion of the Fund's Board, so that the Fund’s net
operating expenses, after giving effect to fees waived/expenses reimbursed and any balance credits and/or overdraft charges from the Fund’s custodian, do not exceed the annual rates of:
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
|
Class
Adv
|
0.68%
|
Class
Inst3
|
0.50%
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
|
Class
Adv
|
0.68%
|
Class
Inst3
|
0.50%
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
|
Class
Adv
|
0.68%
|
Class
Inst3
|
0.50%
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
|
Class
Adv
|
0.68%
|
Class
Inst3
|
0.50%
|
Under the agreement, the following
fees and expenses are excluded from the Fund’s operating expenses when calculating the waiver/reimbursement commitment, and therefore will be paid by the Fund, if applicable: taxes (including foreign transaction taxes), transaction costs and
brokerage commissions, costs related to any securities lending program, dividend expenses associated with securities sold short, inverse floater program fees and expenses, transaction charges and interest on borrowed money, interest, infrequent
and/or unusual expenses and any other expenses the exclusion of which is specifically approved by the Fund’s Board. This agreement may be modified or amended only with approval from all parties.
Primary Service Providers
The Fund enters into contractual arrangements (Service
Provider Contracts) with various service providers, including, among others, the Investment Manager, the Distributor, the Transfer Agent and the Fund’s custodian. The Fund’s Service Provider Contracts are solely among the parties
thereto. Shareholders are not parties to, or intended to be third-party beneficiaries of, any Service Provider Contracts. Further, this prospectus, the SAI and any Service Provider Contracts are not intended to give rise to any agreement, duty,
special relationship or other obligation between the Fund and any investor, or give rise to any contractual, tort or other rights in any individual shareholder, group of shareholders or other person, including any right to assert a fiduciary or
other duty, enforce the Service Provider Contracts against the parties or to seek any remedy thereunder, either directly or on behalf of the Fund. Nothing in the previous sentence should be read to suggest any waiver of any rights under federal or
state securities laws.
The Investment Manager, the Distributor, and
the Transfer Agent are all affiliates of Ameriprise Financial, Inc. (Ameriprise Financial). They and their affiliates currently provide key services, including investment advisory, administration, distribution, shareholder servicing and transfer
agency services, to the Fund and various other funds, including the Columbia Funds, and are paid for providing these services. These service relationships are described below.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
The Investment Manager
Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC is located at 225
Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02110 and serves as investment adviser and administrator to the Columbia Funds. The Investment Manager is a registered investment adviser and a wholly-owned subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial. The Investment
Manager’s management experience covers all major asset classes, including equity securities, debt instruments and money market instruments. In addition to serving as an investment adviser to traditional mutual funds, exchange-traded funds and
closed-end funds, the Investment Manager acts as an investment adviser for itself, its affiliates, individuals, corporations, retirement plans, private investment companies and financial intermediaries.
Subject to oversight by the Board, the Investment Manager
manages the day-to-day operations of the Fund, determining what securities and other investments the Fund should buy or sell and executing portfolio transactions. The Investment Manager may use the research and other capabilities of its affiliates
and third parties in managing the Fund’s investments. The Investment Manager is also responsible for overseeing the administrative operations of the Fund, including the general supervision of the Fund’s operations, the coordination of
the Fund’s other service providers and the provision of related clerical and administrative services.
The SEC has issued an order that permits the Investment
Manager, subject to the approval of the Board, to appoint an unaffiliated subadviser or to change the terms of a subadvisory agreement, including fees paid thereunder, for the Fund without first obtaining shareholder approval, thereby avoiding the
expense and delays typically associated with obtaining shareholder approval. The Investment Manager and the Columbia Funds have applied to amend this order. If issued, the updated order would permit the Investment Manager, subject to the approval of
the Board, to appoint for the Fund not only unaffiliated subadvisers but also affiliated subadvisers without first obtaining shareholder approval. The Investment Manager and its affiliates may have other relationships, including significant
financial relationships, with current or potential subadvisers or their affiliates, which may create certain conflicts of interest. When making recommendations to the Board to appoint or to change a subadviser, or to change the terms of a
subadvisory agreement, the Investment Manager discloses to the Board the nature of any such material relationships. At present, the Investment Manager has not engaged any investment subadviser for the Fund.
The Investment Manager has implemented a schedule for the
Fund’s management fees whereby the Fund pays (i) a management fee of 0.02% on its assets that are invested in affiliated Underlying Funds that pay a management or advisory fee to the Investment Manager; and (ii) a management fee of 0.47% on
its assets that are invested in securities, instruments and other assets not described above, including without limitation affiliated funds that do not pay a management or advisory fee to the Investment Manager (such as the Solutions Series Funds),
third party funds, derivatives and individual securities.
A discussion regarding the basis for the
Board’s approval of the adoption of the Fund's management agreement will be available in the Fund’s semiannual report to shareholders for the fiscal period ended September 30, 2018.
Portfolio Managers
Information about the portfolio managers primarily responsible
for overseeing the Fund’s investments is shown below. The SAI provides additional information about the portfolio managers, including information relating to compensation, other accounts managed by the portfolio managers, and ownership by the
portfolio managers of Fund shares.
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
Title
|
|
Role
with Fund
|
|
Managed
Fund Since
|
Jeffrey
Knight, CFA
|
|
Senior
Portfolio Manager, Managing Director, Global Head of Solutions and Co-Head of Global Asset Allocation
|
|
Lead
Portfolio Manager
|
|
April 2018
|
Joshua
Kutin, CFA
|
|
Senior
Portfolio Manager
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
April 2018
|
Alexander
Wilkinson, CFA, CAIA
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
|
April
2018
|
Mr. Knight
joined the Investment Manager in February 2013 as Head of Global Asset Allocation. Prior to joining the Investment Manager, Mr. Knight was at Putnam Investments from 1993 to 2013, most recently as head of global
asset allocation. Mr. Knight began his investment career in 1987 and earned a B.A. from Colgate University and an M.B.A. from Tuck School of Business.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
Mr. Kutin
joined the
Investment Manager in 2015 as a senior portfolio manager for the Global Investment Solutions Group. Prior to joining the Investment Manager, Mr. Kutin was a portfolio manager on the global asset allocation team at Putnam Investments. Mr. Kutin
began his investment career in 1998 and earned a B.S. from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a M.S. in finance from Princeton University.
Mr. Wilkinson
joined the
Investment Manager in 2006. Mr. Wilkinson began his investment career in 2006 and earned a B.A. in economics from the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
The Distributor
Shares of the Fund are distributed by Columbia Management
Investment Distributors, Inc., which is located at 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02110. The Distributor is a registered broker-dealer and an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial. The Distributor and its affiliates may pay
commissions, distribution and service fees and/or other compensation to entities, including Ameriprise Financial affiliates, for selling shares and providing services to investors.
The Transfer Agent
Columbia Management Investment Services Corp. is a registered
transfer agent and wholly-owned subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial. The Transfer Agent is located at 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02110, and its responsibilities include processing purchases, redemptions and exchanges of Fund shares, calculating
and paying distributions, maintaining shareholder records, preparing account statements and providing customer service. The Transfer Agent has engaged DST Asset Manager Solutions, Inc. to provide various shareholder or “sub-transfer
agency” services. In addition, the Transfer Agent enters into agreements with various financial intermediaries through which you may hold Fund shares, pursuant to which the Transfer Agent pays these financial intermediaries for providing
certain shareholder services. Depending on the type of account, the Fund pays the Transfer Agent a per account fee or a fee based on the assets invested through omnibus accounts, and reimburses the Transfer Agent for certain out-of-pocket
expenses, including certain payments to financial intermediaries through which shares are held.
Other Roles and Relationships of Ameriprise Financial and its
Affiliates — Certain Conflicts of Interest
The
Investment Manager, Distributor and Transfer Agent, all affiliates of Ameriprise Financial, provide various services to the Fund and other Columbia Funds for which they are compensated. Ameriprise Financial and its other affiliates may also provide
other services to these funds and be compensated for them.
The Investment Manager and its affiliates may provide
investment advisory and other services to other clients and customers substantially similar to those provided to the Columbia Funds. These activities, and other financial services activities of Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates, may present
actual and potential conflicts of interest and introduce certain investment constraints.
Ameriprise Financial is a major financial services company,
engaged in a broad range of financial activities beyond the mutual fund-related activities of the Investment Manager, including, among others, insurance, broker-dealer (sales and trading), asset management, banking and other financial activities.
These additional activities may involve multiple advisory, financial, insurance and other interests in securities and other instruments, and in companies that issue securities and other instruments, that may be bought, sold or held by the Columbia
Funds.
Conflicts of interest and limitations that could
affect a Columbia Fund may arise from, for example, the following:
■
|
compensation and other
benefits received by the Investment Manager and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates related to the management/administration of a Columbia Fund and the sale of its shares;
|
■
|
the allocation of, and
competition for, investment opportunities among the Fund, other funds and accounts advised/managed by the Investment Manager and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates, or Ameriprise Financial itself and its affiliates;
|
■
|
separate and potentially
divergent management of a Columbia Fund and other funds and accounts advised/managed by the Investment Manager and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates;
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
More Information About the Funds
(continued)
■
|
regulatory and other
investment restrictions on investment activities of the Investment Manager and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates and accounts advised/managed by them;
|
■
|
insurance and other
relationships of Ameriprise Financial affiliates with companies and other entities in which a Columbia Fund invests; and
|
■
|
regulatory and other
restrictions relating to the sharing of information between Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates, including the Investment Manager, and a Columbia Fund.
|
The Investment Manager and Ameriprise Financial have adopted
various policies and procedures that are intended to identify, monitor and address conflicts of interest. However, there is no assurance that these policies, procedures and disclosures will be effective.
Additional information about Ameriprise Financial and the
types of conflicts of interest and other matters referenced above is set forth in the
Investment Management and Other Services — Other Roles and Relationships of Ameriprise Financial and its Affiliates —
Certain Conflicts of Interest
section of the SAI. Investors in the Columbia Funds should carefully review these disclosures and consult with their financial advisor if they have any questions.
Certain Legal Matters
Ameriprise Financial and certain of its affiliates have
historically been involved in a number of legal, arbitration and regulatory proceedings, including routine litigation, class actions and governmental actions, concerning matters arising in connection with the conduct of their business activities.
Ameriprise Financial believes that the Fund is not currently the subject of, and that neither Ameriprise Financial nor any of its affiliates are the subject of, any pending legal, arbitration or regulatory proceedings that are likely to have a
material adverse effect on the Fund or the ability of Ameriprise Financial or its affiliates to perform under their contracts with the Fund. Information regarding certain pending and settled legal proceedings may be found in the Fund’s
shareholder reports and in the SAI. Additionally, Ameriprise Financial is required to make quarterly (10-Q), annual (10-K) and, as necessary, 8-K filings with the SEC on legal and regulatory matters that relate to Ameriprise Financial and its
affiliates. Copies of these filings may be obtained by accessing the SEC website at sec.gov.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
The
Funds
The Columbia Funds (referred to as the Funds)
generally share the same policies and procedures for investor services, as described below. Each Fund is a series of Columbia Funds Series Trust (CFST), Columbia Funds Series Trust I (CFST I) or Columbia Funds Series Trust II (CFST II), and certain
features of distribution and/or service plans may differ among these trusts. The Fund offered by this prospectus is a series of CFST I. Columbia Funds with names that include the words “Tax-Exempt,” “Municipal” or
“Muni” (the Tax-Exempt Funds) have certain policies that differ from other Columbia Funds (the Taxable Funds). The Fund offered by this prospectus is treated as a Taxable Fund for these purposes.
Funds Contact Information
Additional information about the Funds,
including sales charges and other class features and policies, can be obtained, free of charge, at columbiathreadneedle.com/us,* by calling toll-free 800.345.6611, or by writing (regular mail) to Columbia Management Investment Services Corp., P.O.
Box 8081, Boston, MA 02266-8081 or (express mail) Columbia Management Investment Services Corp., c/o DST Asset Manager Solutions, Inc., 30 Dan Road, Suite 8081, Canton, MA 02021-2809.
*The website references in this prospectus are inactive links
and information contained in or otherwise accessible through the referenced websites does not form a part of this prospectus.
Financial Intermediaries
The term “financial
intermediary” refers to the selling and servicing agents that are authorized to sell and/or service shares of the Funds. Financial intermediaries include broker-dealers and financial advisors as well as firms that employ broker-dealers and
financial advisors, including, for example, brokerage firms, banks, investment advisers, third party administrators and other firms in the financial services industry.
Omnibus Accounts
The term “omnibus account”
refers to a financial intermediary’s account with the Fund (held directly through the Transfer Agent) that represents the combined holdings of, and transactions in, Fund shares of one or more clients of the financial intermediary (beneficial
Fund shareholders). Omnibus accounts are held in the name of the financial intermediaries and not in the name of the beneficial Fund shareholders invested in the Fund through omnibus accounts.
Retirement Plans and Omnibus Retirement
Plans
The term “retirement
plan” refers to retirement plans created under Sections 401(a), 401(k), 457 and 403(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code), and non-qualified deferred compensation plans governed by Section 409A of the Code and similar
plans, but does not refer to individual retirement plans, such as traditional IRAs and Roth IRAs. The term “omnibus retirement plan” refers to a retirement plan that has a plan-level or omnibus account with the Transfer Agent.
Networked Accounts
Networking, offered by the Depository Trust
& Clearing Corporation’s Wealth Management Services (WMS), is the industry standard IT system for mutual fund account reconciliation and dividend processing.
Summary of Share Class Features
Each share class has its own investment eligibility criteria,
cost structure and other features. You may not be eligible to invest in every share class. Your financial intermediary may not make every share class available or may cease to make available one or more share classes of the Fund. The share class you
select through your financial intermediary may have higher fees and/or sales charges than other classes of shares available through other financial intermediaries. An investor transacting in a class of Fund shares without any front-end sales charge,
contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC), or other asset-based fee for sales or distribution, such as a Rule 12b-1
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
fee, may be required to pay a commission to the financial intermediary for
effecting such transactions. Each investor’s personal situation is different and you may wish to discuss with your financial intermediary the share classes the Fund offers, which share classes are available to you and which share class(es)
is/are appropriate for you. In all instances, it is your responsibility to notify your financial intermediary or (for Direct-at-Fund Accounts, as defined below) the Fund at the time of purchase of any relationship or other facts that may qualify you
for sales charge waivers or discounts. The Fund, the Distributor and the Transfer Agent do not provide investment advice or make recommendations regarding Fund share classes. Your financial intermediary may provide advice and recommendations to you,
such as which share class(es) is/are appropriate for you.
When deciding which class of shares to buy, you should
consider, among other things:
■
|
The amount you plan to
invest.
|
■
|
How long you intend to
remain invested in the Fund.
|
■
|
The fees (e.g., sales charge
or “load”) and expenses for each share class.
|
■
|
Whether you may be eligible
for a reduction or waiver of sales charges when you buy or sell shares.
|
Front-End Sales Charge Calculation
The front-end sales charge is calculated as
a percentage of the offering price.
■
|
The net asset value (NAV)
per share is the price of a share calculated by the Fund every business day.
|
■
|
The
offering price per share is the NAV per share plus any front-end sales charge (or load) that applies.
|
The dollar amount of any applicable
front-end sales charge is the difference between the offering price of the shares you buy and the NAV of those shares. To determine the front-end sales charge you will pay when you buy Class A and Class V shares, the Fund will add the amount of your
investment to the value of your account (and any other accounts eligible for aggregation of which you or your financial intermediary notifies the Fund) and base the sales charge on the aggregate amount. For information on account value aggregation,
sales charge waivers and other important information, see
Choosing a Share Class — Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges
.
Contingent Deferred Sales Charge
A contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC)
is a sales charge applied at the time you sell your shares, unlike a front-end sales charge that is applied at the time of purchase. A CDSC can vary based on the length of time that you have held your shares. A CDSC is applied to the NAV at the time
of your purchase or sale, whichever is lower, and will not be applied to any shares you receive through Fund distribution reinvestments or any amount that represents appreciation in the value of your shares. For purposes of calculating a CDSC, the
start of the holding period is generally the first day of the month in which your purchase was made.
When you place an order to sell shares of a
class that has a CDSC, the Fund will first redeem any shares that are not subject to a CDSC, followed by those you have held the longest. This means that if a CDSC is imposed, you cannot designate the individual shares being redeemed for U.S.
federal income tax purposes. You should consult your tax advisor about the tax consequences of investing in the Fund. In certain circumstances, the CDSC may not apply. See
Choosing a Share Class —
Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges
for details.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
Share Class Features
The following summarizes the primary
features of Class A, Class Adv, Class C, Class Inst, Class Inst2, Class Inst3, Class R, Class T and Class V shares.
Not all Funds offer every class of shares. The Fund offers the
class(es) of shares set forth on the cover of this prospectus and may offer other share classes through a separate prospectus. Although certain share classes are generally closed to new and/or existing investors, information relating to these share
classes is included in the table below because certain qualifying purchase orders are permitted, as described below.
The sales charge reductions and waivers available to investors
who purchase and hold their Fund shares through different financial intermediaries may vary.
Appendix A
describes financial intermediary-specific reductions and/or waiver policies. A shareholder transacting in
Fund shares through a financial intermediary identified in
Appendix A
should carefully read the terms and conditions of
Appendix A
. A reduction and/or waiver that is
specific to a particular financial intermediary is not available to Direct-at-Fund Accounts, as defined below, or through another financial intermediary. The information in
Appendix A
may be provided by, or
compiled from or based on information provided by the financial intermediaries identified in
Appendix A
. The Fund, the Investment Manager and the Distributor do not establish financial intermediary-specific
policies and are not responsible for ensuring that you receive any discounts or waivers that may be available to you in this regard. Please consult your financial intermediary with respect to any sales charge reduction and/or waiver described in
Appendix A
.
A Note
About Class T Shares
Class T shares are sold only
through financial intermediaries that, by written agreement with the Distributor, are specifically authorized to sell Class T shares (Class T Intermediaries).
Class T shares are capable of being offered by different
financial intermediaries with different front-end sales charge structures. Currently, Class T shares are offered with only one sales charge structure, which means that all Class T Intermediaries that are offering Class T shares are doing so with the
same pricing. For convenience, these Class T Intermediaries are referred to as
Category One Financial Intermediaries
. Financial intermediaries may in the future seek to offer Class T shares under a different
pricing structure and, as such, other categories of Class T Intermediaries may be added in the future. Note also that, unlike other classes of shares of the Fund with a front-end sales charge (i.e., Class A and Class V shares, as available), the
front-end sales charge applicable to Class T shares is a per-transaction charge, meaning that separate orders will not be aggregated for purposes of calculating the rate of the sales charge payable. Discounts are not available for Class T shares
(for example, under a right of accumulation, letter of intent or other such programs).
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
Share
Class
|
Eligible
Investors
(a)
;
Minimum Initial Investments
(b)
|
Front-End
Sales Charges
(c)
|
Contingent
Deferred
Sales Charges
(CDSCs)
(c)
|
Sales
Charge
Reductions/Waivers
|
Maximum
Distribution
and/or Service Fees
(d)
|
Class
A
|
Eligibility:
Available to the general public for investment
Minimum Initial Investment:
$2,000 ($1,000 for IRAs; $100 for systematic investment plan
accounts)
|
Taxable
Funds:
5.75% maximum, declining to 0.00% on investments of $1 million or more
Tax-Exempt Funds:
3.00% maximum, declining to 0.00% on
investments of $500,000 or more
None for Columbia Government Money Market Fund and certain other Funds
(e)
|
Taxable
Funds
(e)
:
CDSC on certain investments of between $1 million and $50 million redeemed within 18 months after purchase
charged as follows:
• 1.00% CDSC if redeemed within 12 months after purchase, and
• 0.50% CDSC if redeemed more than 12, but less than 18, months after purchase
Tax-Exempt Funds
(e)
:
Maximum CDSC of 0.75% on certain investments of $500,000
or more redeemed within 12 months after purchase
|
Reductions
: yes, see
Choosing a Share Class — Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges – Class A and Class V Shares Front-End Sales Charge Reductions
Waivers
: yes, on Fund distribution reinvestments. For additional waivers, see
Choosing a Share Class — Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges – Class A and Class V Shares Front-End Sales Charge Waivers
, as well as
Choosing a Share Class — CDSC Waivers – Class A, Class C and Class V
Financial intermediary-specific waivers are
also available, see
Appendix A
|
Distribution
and Service
Fees:
up to 0.25%
|
Class
Adv
|
Eligibility:
Available only to (i) omnibus retirement plans, including self-directed brokerage accounts within omnibus retirement plans that clear through institutional no transaction fee (NTF) platforms; (ii) trust companies or
similar institutions; (iii) broker-dealers, banks, trust companies and similar institutions that clear Fund share transactions for their client or customer investment advisory or similar accounts through designated financial intermediaries and their
mutual fund trading platforms that have been granted specific written authorization from the Transfer Agent with respect to Class Adv eligibility apart from selling, servicing or similar agreements; (iv) 501(c)(3) charitable organizations; (v) 529
plans; (vi) health savings accounts; (vii) investors participating in a fee-based advisory program sponsored by a financial intermediary or other entity that is not compensated by the Fund for those services, other than payments for shareholder
servicing or sub-accounting performed in place of the Transfer Agent; and (viii) commissionable brokerage platforms where the financial intermediary,
|
None
|
None
|
N/A
|
None
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
Share
Class
|
Eligible
Investors
(a)
;
Minimum Initial Investments
(b)
|
Front-End
Sales Charges
(c)
|
Contingent
Deferred
Sales Charges
(CDSCs)
(c)
|
Sales
Charge
Reductions/Waivers
|
Maximum
Distribution
and/or Service Fees
(d)
|
|
acting
as broker on behalf of its customer, charges the customer a commission for effecting transactions in Fund shares, provided that the financial intermediary has an agreement with the Distributor that specifically authorizes offering Class Adv shares
within such platform.
Minimum Initial Investment:
None, except in the case of (viii) above, which is $2,000 ($1,000 for IRAs; $100 for systematic investment plan
accounts)
|
|
|
|
|
Class
C
|
Eligibility:
Available to the general public for investment
Minimum Initial Investment:
$2,000 ($1,000 for IRAs; $100 for systematic investment plan
accounts)
Purchase Order Limit for Tax-Exempt Funds:
$499,999
(f)
, none
for omnibus retirement plans
Purchase Order Limit for Taxable Funds:
$999,999
(f)
; none for omnibus retirement plans
|
None
|
1.00%
on certain investments redeemed within one year of purchase
(g)
|
Waivers
: yes, on Fund distribution reinvestments. For additional waivers, see
Choosing a Share Class — CDSC Waivers – Class A, Class C and Class V
Financial intermediary-specific CDSC waivers are also available, see
Appendix A
|
Distribution
Fee:
0.75%
Service Fee:
0.25%
|
Class
Inst
|
Eligibility:
Available only to certain eligible investors, which are subject to different minimum investment requirements, ranging from $0 to $2,000, including investors who purchase Fund shares through commissionable brokerage
platforms where the financial intermediary holds the shares in an omnibus account and, acting as broker on behalf of its customer, charges the customer a commission for effecting transactions in Fund shares, provided that the financial intermediary
has an agreement with the Distributor that specifically authorizes offering Class Inst shares within such platform; closed to (i) accounts of financial intermediaries that clear Fund share transactions for their client or customer accounts through
designated financial intermediaries and their mutual fund trading platforms that have been given specific written notice from the Transfer Agent of the termination of their eligibility for new purchases of Class Inst shares and (ii) omnibus group
retirement plans, subject to certain exceptions
(h)
|
None
|
None
|
N/A
|
None
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
Share
Class
|
Eligible
Investors
(a)
;
Minimum Initial Investments
(b)
|
Front-End
Sales Charges
(c)
|
Contingent
Deferred
Sales Charges
(CDSCs)
(c)
|
Sales
Charge
Reductions/Waivers
|
Maximum
Distribution
and/or Service Fees
(d)
|
|
Minimum
Initial Investment:
See
Eligibility
above
|
|
|
|
|
Class
Inst2
|
Eligibility:
Available only to (i) certain registered investment advisers and family offices that clear Fund share transactions for their client or customer accounts through designated financial intermediaries and their mutual
fund trading platforms that have been granted specific written authorization from the Transfer Agent with respect to Class Inst2 eligibility apart from selling, servicing or similar agreements; (ii) omnibus retirement plans
(h)
; and (iii) institutional investors that are clients of the Columbia Threadneedle Global Institutional Distribution Team that invest in Class Inst2 shares
for their own account through platforms approved by the Distributor or an affiliate thereof to offer and/or service Class Inst2 shares within such platform.
Minimum Initial Investment:
None
|
None
|
None
|
N/A
|
None
|
Class
Inst3
|
Eligibility:
Available to (i) group retirement plans that maintain plan-level or omnibus accounts with the Fund
(h)
; (ii)
institutional investors that are clients of the Columbia Threadneedle Global Institutional Distribution Team that invest in Class Inst3 shares for their own account through platforms approved by the Distributor or an affiliate thereof to offer
and/or service Class Inst3 shares within such platform; (iii) collective trust funds; (iv) affiliated or unaffiliated mutual funds (e.g., funds operating as funds-of-funds); (v) fee-based platforms of financial intermediaries (or the clearing
intermediary they trade through) that have an agreement with the Distributor or an affiliate thereof that specifically authorizes the financial intermediary to offer and/or service Class Inst3 shares within such platform, provided also that Fund
shares are held in an omnibus account; (vi) commissionable brokerage platforms where the financial intermediary, acting as broker on behalf of its customer, charges the customer a commission for effecting transactions in Fund shares, provided that
the financial intermediary has an agreement with the Distributor that specifically
|
None
|
None
|
N/A
|
None
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
Share
Class
|
Eligible
Investors
(a)
;
Minimum Initial Investments
(b)
|
Front-End
Sales Charges
(c)
|
Contingent
Deferred
Sales Charges
(CDSCs)
(c)
|
Sales
Charge
Reductions/Waivers
|
Maximum
Distribution
and/or Service Fees
(d)
|
|
authorizes
offering Class Inst3 shares within such platform and that Fund shares are held in an omnibus account; and (vii) bank trust departments, subject to an agreement with the Distributor that specifically authorizes offering Class Inst3 shares and
provided that Fund shares are held in an omnibus account. In each case above where noted that Fund shares are required to be held in an omnibus account, the Distributor may, in its discretion, determine to waive this requirement.
Minimum Initial Investment:
No minimum for the eligible investors described in (i), (iii), (iv) and (v) above; $2,000 ($1,000 for IRAs; $100 for systematic investment plan
accounts) for the eligible investors described in (vi) above; and $1 million for all other eligible investors, unless waived in the discretion of the Distributor
|
|
|
|
|
Class
R
|
Eligibility:
Available only to eligible retirement plans, health savings accounts and, in the sole discretion of the Distributor, other types of retirement accounts held through platforms maintained by financial intermediaries
approved by the Distributor
Minimum Initial Investment:
None
|
None
|
None
|
N/A
|
Series
of CFST & CFST I:
distribution fee of 0.50%
Series of CFST II:
distribution and service fee of 0.50%, of which the service fee may
be up to 0.25%
|
Class
T
|
Eligibility
: Available to the general public (purchasing through a Class T Intermediary)
Minimum Initial Investment
: $2,000 ($1,000 for IRAs; $100
for systematic investment plan accounts)
|
Per
Transaction
:
$0–$249,999:
2.50%
$250,000–
$499,999:
2.00%
$500,000–
$999,999:
1.50%
$1,000,000 or more:
1.00%
|
None
|
Waivers
: yes,
(i) on Fund distribution reinvestments;
(ii) on exchanges of Class T shares of the Fund from, at the discretion of Class T Intermediaries, another class of shares of the same Fund held in accounts of
Class T Intermediaries, provided that (a) the other share class may only be exchanged for Class T shares if your financial intermediary does not offer that other share class on the intermediary’s commission-based platform, and (b) unless
waived in the Distributor’s discretion, shares of the class to be exchanged are held in a networked or omnibus account with the Fund; and
(iii) on purchases within fee-based accounts, provided that the Class T Intermediary has
|
Distribution
and/or Service Fees
: 0.25%
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
Share
Class
|
Eligible
Investors
(a)
;
Minimum Initial Investments
(b)
|
Front-End
Sales Charges
(c)
|
Contingent
Deferred
Sales Charges
(CDSCs)
(c)
|
Sales
Charge
Reductions/Waivers
|
Maximum
Distribution
and/or Service Fees
(d)
|
|
|
|
|
an
agreement with the Distributor that specifically authorizes offering Class T shares within the designated fee-based platform.
Financial intermediary-specific waivers are also available, see
Appendix A
|
|
Class
V
|
Eligibility:
Generally closed to new investors
(h)
Minimum Initial Investment:
N/A
|
5.75%
maximum, declining to 0.00% on investments of $1 million or more
|
CDSC
on certain investments of between $1 million and $50 million redeemed within 18 months after purchase, charged as follows:
• 1.00% CDSC if redeemed within 12 months after purchase
and
• 0.50% CDSC if redeemed more than 12, but less than 18, months after purchase
|
Reductions
: yes, see
Choosing a Share Class — Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges – Class A and Class V Shares Front-End Sales Charge Reductions
Waivers
: yes, on Fund distribution reinvestments.
For additional waivers, see
Choosing a Share Class — Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges – Class A and Class V Shares
Front-End Sales Charge Waivers
, as well as
Choosing a Share Class — CDSC Waivers – Class A, Class C and Class V
|
Service
Fee:
up to 0.50%
|
(a)
|
For Columbia Government Money
Market Fund, new investments must be made in Class A, Class Inst, Class Inst3, Class R or Class T shares, subject to eligibility. Class C shares of Columbia Government Money Market Fund are available as a new investment only to investors in the
Distributor's proprietary 401(k) products, provided that such investor is eligible to invest in the class and transact directly with the Fund or the Transfer Agent through a third party administrator or third party recordkeeper. Columbia Government
Money Market Fund offers Class Inst2 shares only to facilitate exchanges with other Funds offering such share class.
|
(b)
|
Certain share classes are
subject to minimum account balance requirements, as described in
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares — Transaction Rules and Policies.
|
(c)
|
Actual front-end sales charges
and CDSCs vary among the Funds. For more information on applicable sales charges, see
Choosing a Share Class — Sales Charges and Commissions,
and for information about certain exceptions to these sales
charges, see
Choosing a Share Class — Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges.
|
(d)
|
These are the maximum
applicable distribution and/or service fees. Except for Class V shares, these fees are paid under the Fund’s Rule 12b-1 plan. Fee rates and fee components (i.e., the portion of a combined fee that is a distribution or service fee) may vary
among Funds. Because these fees are paid out of Fund assets on an ongoing basis, over time these fees will increase the cost of your investment and may cost you more than paying other types of distribution and/or service fees. Although Class A
shares of certain series of CFST I are subject to a combined distribution and service fee of up to 0.35%, these Funds currently limit the combined fee to 0.25%. Columbia Government Money Market Fund pays a distribution and service fee of up to 0.10%
on Class A shares and up to 0.75% distribution fee on Class C shares. Columbia AMT-Free Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Columbia High Yield Municipal Fund and Columbia Tax-Exempt Fund each pay a service fee of up to 0.20% on Class A and Class C shares.
Columbia AMT-Free Intermediate Muni Bond Fund pays a distribution fee of up to 0.65% on Class C shares. For more information on distribution and service fees, see
Choosing a Share Class — Distribution and
Service Fees.
|
(e)
|
For Columbia Short Term
Municipal Bond Fund, a CDSC of 0.50% is charged on certain investments of $500,000 or more redeemed within 12 months after purchase. The following Funds are not subject to a front-end sales charge or a CDSC on Class A shares: Columbia Government
Money Market Fund, Columbia Large Cap Enhanced Core Fund, Columbia Large Cap Index Fund, Columbia Mid Cap Index Fund, Columbia Small Cap Index Fund and Columbia U.S. Treasury Index Fund.
|
(f)
|
If you are eligible to invest
in Class A shares without a front-end sales charge, you should discuss your options with your financial intermediary. For more information, see
Choosing a Share Class – Reductions/Waivers of Sales
Charges.
|
(g)
|
There is no CDSC on
redemptions from Class C shares of Columbia Government Money Market Fund.
|
(h)
|
These share classes are closed
to new accounts, or closed to previously eligible investors, subject to certain conditions, as summarized below and described in more detail under
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares — Buying Shares —
Eligible Investors:
|
•
Class Inst Shares
. Financial intermediaries that clear Fund share transactions through designated financial intermediaries and their mutual fund trading platforms that have been given specific written notice from
the Transfer Agent, effective March 29, 2013, of the termination of their eligibility for new purchases of Class Inst shares and omnibus retirement plans are not permitted to establish new Class Inst accounts, subject to certain exceptions. Omnibus
retirement plans that opened and, subject to exceptions, funded a Class Inst account as of close of
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
business on March 28, 2013, and have continuously held Class
Inst shares in such account after such date, may generally continue to make additional purchases of Class Inst shares, open new Class Inst accounts and add new participants. In certain circumstances and in the sole discretion of the Distributor,
omnibus retirement plans affiliated with a grandfathered plan may also open new Class Inst accounts. Accounts of financial intermediaries (other than omnibus retirement plans) that clear Fund share transactions for their client or customer accounts
through designated financial intermediaries and their mutual fund trading platforms are not permitted to establish new Class Inst accounts or make additional purchases of Class Inst shares (other than through Fund distribution reinvestments).
•
Class Inst2 Shares
. Shareholders with Class Inst2 accounts funded before November 8, 2012 who do not satisfy the current eligibility criteria for Class Inst2 shares may not establish new Class Inst2 accounts but
may continue to make additional purchases of Class Inst2 shares in existing accounts. In addition, investment advisory programs and similar programs that opened a Class Inst2 account as of May 1, 2010, and continuously hold Class Inst2 shares in
such account after such date, may generally not only continue to make additional purchases of Class Inst2 shares but also open new Class Inst2 accounts and add new shareholders in the program.
•
Class Inst3 Shares
. Shareholders with Class Inst3 accounts funded before November 8, 2012 who do not satisfy the current eligibility criteria for Class Inst3 shares may not establish new accounts for such share
class but may continue to make additional purchases of Class Inst3 shares in existing accounts.
•
Class V Shares.
Shareholders
with Class V accounts who received, and have continuously held, Class V shares (formerly named Class T shares, which have no relation to the
Fund’s current Class T shares) in connection with the merger of certain Galaxy funds into certain Funds that were then named Liberty funds may continue to make additional purchases of such share class.
Sales Charges and Commissions
Sales charges, commissions, and distribution fees compensate
financial intermediaries (typically your financial advisor) for selling shares to you, and service fees compensate financial intermediaries for maintaining and servicing the shares held in your account with them. Distribution and service fees are
discussed in a separate sub-section below. Depending on which share class you choose and the financial intermediary through which you purchase your shares, you may pay these charges at potentially different levels at the outset as a front-end sales
charge, at the time you sell your shares as a CDSC and/or over time in the form of distribution and/or service fees.
As described in more detail below, Class A, Class T and Class
V shares have a front-end sales charge, which is deducted from your purchase price when you buy your shares, and results in a smaller dollar amount being invested in the Fund than the purchase price you pay (unless you qualify for a waiver
or (Class A shares and Class V shares only) reduction of the sales charge). The Fund’s other share classes do not have a front-end sales charge, so the full amount of your purchase price is invested in those classes. Class A shares have
lower ongoing distribution and/or service fees than Class C and Class R shares of the Fund. Over time, Class C and Class R shares can incur distribution and/or service fees that are equal to or more than the front-end sales charge and the
distribution and/or service fees you would pay for Class A shares. Thus, although the full amount of your purchase price of Class C and Class R shares is invested in a Fund, your return on this money will be reduced by the expected higher annual
expenses of Class C and Class R shares. Class Adv, Class Inst, Class Inst2 and Class Inst3 shares of the Fund do not have distribution and/or service fees.
Whether the ultimate cost is higher for one class over another
depends on the amount you invest, how long you hold your shares, the amount of the sales charges, and whether you are eligible for reduced or waived sales charges, if available. The differential between classes also will vary depending on the actual
investment return for any given investment period. You are responsible for choosing the share class most appropriate for you after taking into account your share class eligibility, class-specific features, and any applicable reductions in, or
waivers of, sales charges. For more information, see
Choosing a Share Class – Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges
. We encourage you to consult with a financial advisor who can help you with your
investment decisions. Please contact your financial intermediary for more information about services, fees and expenses, and other important information about investing in the Fund, as well as with any questions you may have about your investing
options. In all instances, it is your responsibility to notify your financial intermediary or (for Direct-at-Fund Accounts, as defined below) the Fund at the time of purchase of any relationship or other facts that may qualify you for sales charge
waivers or discounts.
Class A Shares — Front-End
Sales Charge
Unless your purchase qualifies for a waiver
(e.g., you buy the shares through reinvested Fund distributions or subject to an applicable financial intermediary-specific waiver), you will pay a front-end sales charge when you buy Class A shares (other than shares of Columbia Government
Money Market Fund, Columbia Large Cap Enhanced Core Fund, Columbia Large Cap Index Fund, Columbia Mid Cap Index Fund, Columbia Small Cap Index Fund and Columbia U.S.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
Treasury Index Fund), resulting in a smaller dollar amount being invested in
a Fund than the purchase price you pay. For more information about sales charge waivers and reduction opportunities, see
Choosing a Share Class — Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges
and
Appendix A.
The
Distributor receives the sales charge and re-allows (or pays) a portion of the sales charge to the financial intermediary through which you purchased the shares. The Distributor retains the balance of the sales charge. The Distributor retains the
full sales charge you pay when you purchase shares of the Fund directly from the Fund (through the Transfer Agent, rather than through a financial intermediary).
The front-end sales charge you will pay on Class A
shares:
■
|
depends on the amount you
are investing (generally, the larger the investment, the smaller the percentage sales charge), and
|
■
|
is based on the total amount
of your purchase and the value of your account (and any other accounts eligible for aggregation of which you or your financial intermediary notifies the Fund).
|
The table below presents the front-end sales charge as a
percentage of both the offering price and the net amount invested.
Class
A Shares — Front-End Sales Charge — Breakpoint Schedule*
|
Breakpoint
Schedule For:
|
Dollar
amount of
shares bought
(a)
|
Sales
charge
as a
% of the
offering
price
(b)
|
Sales
charge
as a
% of the
net
amount
invested
(b)
|
Amount
retained by
or paid to
financial
intermediaries as
a % of the
offering price
|
Equity
Funds,
Columbia Adaptive Risk Allocation Fund,
Columbia Alternative Beta Fund,
Columbia Commodity Strategy Fund,
Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund
and Funds-of-Funds (equity)*
|
$
0–$49,999
|
5.75%
|
6.10%
|
5.00%
|
$
50,000–$99,999
|
4.50%
|
4.71%
|
3.75%
|
$100,000–$249,999
|
3.50%
|
3.63%
|
3.00%
|
$250,000–$499,999
|
2.50%
|
2.56%
|
2.15%
|
$500,000–$999,999
|
2.00%
|
2.04%
|
1.75%
|
$
1,000,000 or more
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
(c)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fixed
Income Funds (except those listed below),
Columbia Multi-Asset Income Fund
and Funds-of-Funds (fixed income)*
|
$
0-$49,999
|
4.75%
|
4.99%
|
4.00%
|
$
50,000–$99,999
|
4.25%
|
4.44%
|
3.50%
|
$100,000–$249,999
|
3.50%
|
3.63%
|
3.00%
|
$250,000–$499,999
|
2.50%
|
2.56%
|
2.15%
|
$500,000–$999,999
|
2.00%
|
2.04%
|
1.75%
|
$
1,000,000 or more
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
(c)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tax-Exempt
Funds (other than Columbia Short Term Municipal Bond Fund)
|
$
0-$99,999
|
3.00%
|
3.09%
|
2.50%
|
$100,000–$249,999
|
2.50%
|
2.56%
|
2.15%
|
$250,000–$499,999
|
1.50
%
|
1.53%
|
1.25%
|
$
500,000 or more
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
(c)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
Class
A Shares — Front-End Sales Charge — Breakpoint Schedule*
|
Breakpoint
Schedule For:
|
Dollar
amount of
shares bought
(a)
|
Sales
charge
as a
% of the
offering
price
(b)
|
Sales
charge
as a
% of the
net
amount
invested
(b)
|
Amount
retained by
or paid to
financial
intermediaries as
a % of the
offering price
|
Columbia
Absolute Return Currency and Income Fund,
Columbia Floating Rate Fund,
Columbia Inflation Protected Securities Fund,
Columbia Limited Duration Credit Fund,
Columbia Mortgage Opportunities Fund,
Columbia Total Return Bond
Fund,
and Columbia U.S. Government Mortgage Fund
|
$
0-$99,999
|
3.00%
|
3.09%
|
2.50%
|
$100,000–$249,999
|
2.50%
|
2.56%
|
2.15%
|
$250,000–$499,999
|
2.00%
|
2.04%
|
1.75%
|
$500,000–$999,999
|
1.50%
|
1.52%
|
1.25%
|
$
1,000,000 or more
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
(c)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Columbia
Short Term Bond Fund
|
$
0-$99,999
|
1.00%
|
1.01%
|
0.75%
|
$100,000–$249,999
|
0.75%
|
0.76%
|
0.50%
|
$250,000–$999,999
|
0.50%
|
0.50%
|
0.40%
|
$
1,000,000 or more
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
(c)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Columbia
Short Term Municipal Bond Fund
|
$
0-$99,999
|
1.00%
|
1.01%
|
0.75%
|
$100,000–$249,999
|
0.75%
|
0.76%
|
0.50%
|
$250,000–$499,999
|
0.50%
|
0.50%
|
0.40%
|
$
500,000 or more
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
(c)
|
|
|
|
|
|
*
|
The following Funds are not
subject to a front-end sales charge or CDSC on Class A shares: Columbia Government Money Market Fund, Columbia Large Cap Enhanced Core Fund, Columbia Large Cap Index Fund, Columbia Mid Cap Index Fund, Columbia Small Cap Index Fund and Columbia U.S.
Treasury Index Fund.
"Funds-of-Funds (equity)"
includes Columbia Capital Allocation Aggressive Portfolio, Columbia Capital Allocation Moderate Aggressive Portfolio, Columbia Capital Allocation Moderate
Conservative Portfolio, Columbia Capital Allocation Moderate Portfolio and Columbia Global Strategic Equity Fund
. "Funds-of-Funds (fixed income)"
includes Columbia Capital Allocation Conservative Portfolio
and Columbia Income Builder Fund. Columbia Balanced Fund, Columbia Flexible Capital Income Fund and Columbia Global Opportunities Fund are treated as equity Funds for purposes of the table.
|
(a)
|
Purchase amounts and account
values may be aggregated among all eligible Fund accounts for the purposes of this table. See
Choosing a Share Class — Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges
for a discussion of account value aggregation.
|
(b)
|
Because the offering price is
calculated to two decimal places, the dollar amount of the sales charge as a percentage of the offering price and your net amount invested for any particular purchase of Fund shares may be higher or lower depending on whether downward or upward
rounding was required during the calculation process. Purchase price includes the sales charge.
|
(c)
|
For information regarding
cumulative commissions paid to your financial intermediary when you buy $1 million or more of Class A shares of a Taxable Fund or $500,000 or more of Class A shares of a Tax-Exempt Fund, see
Class A Shares —
Commissions
below.
|
Class A
Shares — CDSC
In some cases, you'll pay a CDSC if
you sell Class A shares that you purchased without a front-end sales charge.
Tax-Exempt Funds
■
|
If you purchased Class A
shares of any Tax-Exempt Fund (other than Columbia Short Term Municipal Bond Fund and Columbia U.S. Social Bond Fund) without paying a front-end sales charge because your eligible accounts aggregated $500,000 or more at the time of purchase, you
will incur a CDSC of 0.75% if you redeem those shares within 12 months after purchase. Subsequent Class A share purchases that bring your aggregate account value to $500,000 or more will also be subject to a CDSC of 0.75% if you redeem those shares
within 12 months after purchase.
|
■
|
If you purchased Class A
shares of Columbia Short Term Municipal Bond Fund without paying a front-end sales charge because your eligible accounts aggregated $500,000 or more at the time of purchase, you will incur a
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
|
CDSC of 0.50% if you redeem
those shares within 12 months after purchase. Subsequent Class A share purchases that bring your aggregate account value to $500,000 or more will also be subject to a CDSC of 0.50% if you redeem those shares within 12 months after purchase.
|
■
|
If you purchased Class A
shares of Columbia U.S. Social Bond Fund on or after August 8, 2016 without paying a front-end sales charge because your eligible accounts aggregated $500,000 or more at the time of purchase, you will incur a CDSC of 0.75% if you redeem those shares
within 12 months after purchase. Subsequent Class A share purchases made on or after August 8, 2016 that bring your aggregate account value to $500,000 or more will also be subject to a CDSC of 0.75% if you redeem those shares within 12 months after
purchase. If you purchased Class A shares of Columbia U.S. Social Bond Fund prior to August 8, 2016 without paying a front-end sales charge because your eligible accounts aggregated between $1 million and $50 million at the time of purchase, you
will incur a CDSC if you redeem those shares within 18 months after purchase, which is charged as follows: 1.00% CDSC if shares are redeemed within 12 months after purchase; and 0.50% CDSC if shares are redeemed more than 12, but less than 18,
months after purchase. Subsequent Class A share purchases made prior to August 8, 2016 that bring your aggregate account value to $1 million or more (but less than $50 million) will also be subject to a CDSC if you redeem them within 18 months after
purchase as described in this paragraph.
|
Taxable Funds
■
|
If you purchased Class A
shares of any Taxable Fund without paying a front-end sales charge because your eligible accounts aggregated between $1 million and $50 million at the time of purchase, you will incur a CDSC if you redeem those shares within 18 months after
purchase, which is charged as follows: 1.00% CDSC if shares are redeemed within 12 months after purchase; and 0.50% CDSC if shares are redeemed more than 12, but less than 18, months after purchase. Subsequent Class A share purchases that bring your
aggregate account value to $1 million or more (but less than $50 million) will also be subject to a CDSC if you redeem them within 18 months after purchase as described in the previous sentence.
|
Class A Shares — Commissions
The Distributor may pay your financial intermediary an
up-front commission when you buy Class A shares. The Distributor generally funds the commission through the applicable sales charge paid by you. For more information, see
Class A Shares — Front-End Sales
Charge
above
.
The Distributor may also pay your financial intermediary a
cumulative commission when you buy Class A shares in amounts not subject to a front-end sales charge, according to the following schedule:
Class
A Shares of Tax-Exempt Funds — Commission Schedule (Paid by the Distributor to Financial Intermediaries)
|
Purchase
Amount
|
Commission
Level*
(as a % of net asset
value per share)
|
$500,000
– $3,999,999
|
0.75%**
|
$4
million – $19,999,999
|
0.50%
|
$20
million or more
|
0.25%
|
*
|
The commission level applies to
the applicable asset level; therefore, for example, for a purchase of $5 million, the Distributor would pay a commission of 0.75% on the first $3,999,999 and 0.50% on the balance.
|
**
|
The commission level on
purchases of Class A shares of Columbia Short Term Municipal Bond Fund is: 0.50% on purchases of $500,000 to $19,999,999 and 0.25% on purchases of $20 million or more.
|
Class
A Shares of Taxable Funds — Commission Schedule (Paid by the Distributor to Financial Intermediaries)*
|
Purchase
Amount
|
Commission
Level**
(as a % of net asset
value per share)
|
$1
million – $2,999,999
|
1.00%
|
$3
million – $49,999,999
|
0.50%
|
$50
million or more
|
0.25%
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
*
|
Not applicable to Funds that do
not assess a front-end sales charge.
|
**
|
The commission level applies to
the applicable asset level; therefore, for example, for a purchase of $5 million, the Distributor would pay a commission of 1.00% on the first $2,999,999 and 0.50% on the balance.
|
Class C Shares — Front-End Sales Charge
You do not pay a front-end sales charge when you buy Class C
shares, but you may pay a CDSC when you sell Class C shares. Although Class C shares do not have a front-end sales charge, over time Class C shares can incur distribution and/or service fees that are equal to or more than the front-end sales charge
and distribution and/or service fees you would pay for Class A shares. Thus, although the full amount of your purchase of Class C shares is invested in a Fund, any positive investment return on this money may be partially or fully offset by the
expected higher annual expenses of Class C shares. If you are eligible to invest in Class A shares without a front-end sales charge, you should discuss your options with your financial intermediary. For more information, see
Choosing a Share Class – Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges.
Class C Shares — CDSC
You will pay a CDSC of 1.00% if you redeem Class C shares
within 12 months of buying them unless you qualify for a waiver of the CDSC (e.g., the shares you are selling were purchased with reinvested Fund distributions). Redemptions of Class C shares are not subject to a CDSC if redeemed after 12
months. Class C shares of Columbia Government Money Market Fund are not subject to a CDSC. For more information, see
Choosing a Share Class — Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges
.
Class C Shares — Commissions
Although there is no front-end sales charge when you buy Class
C shares, the Distributor pays an up-front commission directly to your financial intermediary of up to 1.00% of the NAV per share when you buy Class C shares (except on purchases of Class C shares of Columbia Government Money Market Fund). A
portion of this commission may be paid to your financial advisor. The Distributor seeks to recover this commission through distribution fees it receives under the Fund's distribution and/or service plan and any applicable CDSC applied when you sell
your shares. For more information, see
Choosing a Share Class — Distribution and Service Fees.
Class T Shares — Front-End Sales Charge
Different financial intermediaries may offer Class T shares
with different front-end sales charge structures. This differs from other Fund share classes, which have fixed sales charge structures. As of the date of this prospectus, Class T shares are offered with only one sales charge structure, which means
that all financial intermediaries that are offering Class T shares (Class T Intermediaries) are offering the same pricing. For convenience, these Class T Intermediaries are referred to as Category One Financial Intermediaries. Financial
intermediaries may seek to offer Class T shares under a different pricing structure and, as a result, other categories of Class T Intermediaries may be added in the future.
The front-end sales charge applicable to Class T shares is a
per-transaction charge, meaning that the separate orders will not be aggregated for purposes of calculating the rate of the sales charge payable, which is different from other Fund share classes with a front-end sales charge. Unless your purchase
qualifies for a waiver, you will pay a front-end sales charge on each purchase of Class T shares based on the amount of each purchase transaction. As with all front-end sales charges, this will result in a smaller dollar amount being invested in the
Fund than the purchase price you pay. No discounts (for example, under a right of accumulation, letter of intent, or other such programs) are available for Class T shares. For information about sales charge waivers, see
Choosing a Share Class — Reductions/Waivers — Class T Sales Charge Waivers
below.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
Class
T Shares — Front-End Sales Charge (Per Transaction)
|
Breakpoint
Schedule For:
|
Dollar
amount of
shares bought
|
Sales
charge
as a
% of the
offering
price
(a)
|
Sales
charge
as a
% of the
net
amount
invested
(a)
|
Amount
retained by
or paid to
Financial
Intermediaries
as a % of the
offering price
|
Class
T Shares
(Purchasing through a Category One Financial Intermediary)
|
$
0–$249,999
|
2.50%
|
2.56%
|
2.50%
|
$250,000–$499,999
|
2.00%
|
2.04%
|
2.00%
|
$500,000–$999,999
|
1.50%
|
1.53%
|
1.50%
|
$
1,000,000 or more
|
1.00%
|
1.01%
|
1.00%
|
|
|
|
|
|
(a)
|
Because the offering price is
calculated to two decimal places, the dollar amount of the sales charge as a percentage of the offering price and your net amount invested for any particular purchase of Fund shares may be higher or lower depending on whether downward or upward
rounding was required during the calculation process. Purchase price includes the sales charge.
|
Class V Shares — Front-End Sales Charge
Unless you qualify for a waiver (e.g., you purchase shares
through reinvested Fund distributions), you will pay a front-end sales charge when you buy Class V shares, resulting in a smaller dollar amount being invested in a Fund than the purchase price you pay. For more information about sales charge waivers
(as well as sales charge reduction opportunities), see
Choosing a Share Class — Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges.
The front-end sales charge you will pay on Class V
shares:
■
|
depends on the amount you
are investing (generally, the larger the investment, the smaller the percentage sales charge), and
|
■
|
is based on the total amount
of your purchase and the value of your account (and any other accounts eligible for aggregation of which you notify your financial intermediary or, in the case of Direct-at-Fund Accounts (as defined below), you notify the Fund).
|
Class
V Shares — Front-End Sales Charge — Breakpoint Schedule
|
Breakpoint
Schedule For:
|
Dollar
amount of
shares bought
(a)
|
Sales
charge
as a
% of the
offering
price
(b)
|
Sales
charge
as a
% of the
net
amount
invested
(b)
|
Amount
retained by
or paid to
Financial
Intermediaries
as a % of the
offering price
|
Equity
Funds
|
$
0–$49,999
|
5.75%
|
6.10%
|
5.00%
|
$
50,000–$99,999
|
4.50%
|
4.71%
|
3.75%
|
$100,000–$249,999
|
3.50%
|
3.63%
|
2.75%
|
$250,000–$499,999
|
2.50%
|
2.56%
|
2.00%
|
$500,000–$999,999
|
2.00%
|
2.04%
|
1.75%
|
$
1,000,000 or more
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
(c)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fixed
Income Funds
|
$
0–$49,999
|
4.75%
|
4.99%
|
4.25%
|
$
50,000–$99,999
|
4.50%
|
4.71%
|
3.75%
|
$100,000–$249,999
|
3.50%
|
3.63%
|
2.75%
|
$250,000–$499,999
|
2.50%
|
2.56%
|
2.00%
|
$500,000–$999,999
|
2.00%
|
2.04%
|
1.75%
|
$
1,000,000 or more
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
(c)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
(a)
|
Purchase amounts and account
values are aggregated among all eligible Fund accounts for the purposes of this table.
|
(b)
|
Because the offering price is
calculated to two decimal places, the dollar amount of the sales charge as a percentage of the offering price and your net amount invested for any particular purchase of Fund shares may be higher or lower depending on whether downward or upward
rounding was required during the calculation process.
|
(c)
|
For more information regarding
cumulative commissions paid to your financial intermediary when you buy $1 million or more of Class V shares, see
Class V Shares — Commissions
below.
|
Class V Shares — CDSC
In some cases, you will pay a CDSC if you sell Class V shares
that you bought without a front-end sales charge.
■
|
If you purchased Class V
shares without a front-end sales charge because your eligible accounts aggregated between $1 million and $50 million at the time of purchase, you will incur a CDSC if you redeem those shares within 18 months after purchase, which is charged as
follows: 1.00% CDSC if shares are redeemed within 12 months after purchase, and 0.50% CDSC if shares are redeemed more than 12, but less than 18, months after purchase.
|
■
|
Subsequent Class V share
purchases that bring your aggregate account value to $1 million or more (but less than $50 million) will also be subject to a CDSC if you redeem them within the time periods noted above.
|
Class V Shares — Commissions
The Distributor may pay your financial intermediary an
up-front commission when you buy Class V shares (a portion of this commission may, in turn, be paid to your financial advisor). For more information, see
Class V Shares — Front-End Sales Charge.
The Distributor may also pay your financial intermediary a
cumulative commission when you buy $1 million or more of Class V shares, according to the following schedule:
Class
V Shares
—
Commission Schedule (Paid by the Distributor to Financial Intermediaries)
|
Purchase
Amount
|
Commission
Level*
(as a % of net asset
value per share)
|
$1
million – $2,999,999
|
1.00%
|
$3
million – $49,999,999
|
0.50%
|
$50
million or more
|
0.25%
|
*
|
The commission level applies to
the applicable asset level; therefore, for example, for a purchase of $5 million, the Distributor would pay a commission of 1.00% on the first $2,999,999 and 0.50% on the balance.
|
Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges
The availability of certain sales charge waivers and discounts
will depend on whether you purchase your shares directly from the Fund (i.e., a Direct-at-Fund Account, as defined below) or through a financial intermediary. Financial intermediaries may have different policies and procedures regarding the
availability of front-end sales charge and/or CDSC waivers. In all instances, it is your responsibility to notify your financial intermediary or (for Direct-at-Fund Accounts, as defined below) the Fund at the time of purchase of any relationship or
other facts that may qualify you for sales charge waivers or discounts. In order to obtain waivers and discounts not available through a particular financial intermediary, shareholders will have to purchase Fund shares directly from the Fund (if
permitted) or through a different financial intermediary. For a description of financial intermediary-specific sales charge reductions and/or waivers, see
Appendix A
.
Class A and Class V Shares Front-End Sales Charge
Reductions
The Fund makes available two means of
reducing the front-end sales charge that you may pay when you buy Class A shares or Class V shares of a Fund. These types of sales charge reductions are also referred to as breakpoint discounts.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
First, through the right of accumulation (ROA), you may
combine the value of eligible accounts (as described in the
Eligible Accounts
section below) maintained by you and members of your immediate family to reach a breakpoint discount level and apply a lower
front-end sales charge to your purchase. To calculate the combined value of your eligible Fund accounts in the particular class of shares, the Fund will use the current public offering price per share. For purposes of obtaining a breakpoint discount
through ROA, you may aggregate your and your “immediate family” members' ownership (as described in the
FUNDamentals
box below) of certain classes of shares held in certain account types, as
described in the
Eligible Accounts
section below.
Second, by making a statement of intent to purchase additional
shares (commonly referred to as a letter of intent (LOI)), you may pay a lower sales charge on all purchases of Class A shares or Class V shares made within 13 months after the date of your LOI. Your LOI must state the aggregate amount of
purchases you intend to make in that 13-month period, which must be at least enough to reach the first (or next) breakpoint of the Fund. The required form of LOI may vary by financial intermediary, so please contact them directly for more
information. Five percent of the purchase commitment amount will be placed in escrow. At the end of the 13-month period, the shares will be released from escrow, provided that you have invested the commitment amount. If you do not invest the
commitment amount by the end of the 13 months, the remaining amount of the unpaid sales charge will be redeemed from the escrowed shares and the remaining balance released from escrow. To calculate the total value of the purchases you've made under
an LOI, the Fund will use the historic cost (i.e., dollars invested and not current market value) of the shares held in each eligible account; reinvested dividends or capital gains, or purchases made through the reinstatement privilege do not count
as purchases made under an LOI. For purposes of making an LOI to purchase additional shares, you may aggregate eligible shares owned by you or your immediate family members in eligible accounts, valued as of the day immediately before the initiation
of your LOI.
You must request the reduced sales charge
(whether through ROA or an LOI) when you buy shares. If you do not complete and file an LOI, or do not request the reduced sales charge at the time of purchase, you will not be eligible for the reduced sales charge. To obtain a breakpoint discount,
you must notify your financial intermediary in writing at the time you buy your shares of each eligible account maintained by you and members of your immediate family, including accounts maintained through different financial intermediaries. You and
your financial intermediary are responsible for ensuring that you receive discounts for which you are eligible. The Fund is not responsible for a financial intermediary's failure to apply the eligible discount to your account. You may be asked by
your financial intermediary (or by the Fund if you hold your account directly with the Fund) for account statements or other records to verify your discount eligibility for new and subsequent purchases, including, when applicable, records for
accounts opened with a different financial intermediary and records of accounts established by members of your immediate family.
The sales charge reductions available to investors who
purchase and hold their Fund shares through different financial intermediaries may vary. For a description of such financial intermediary-specific sales charge reductions, see
Appendix A
.
Your “Immediate Family” and
Account Value Aggregation
For
purposes of obtaining a breakpoint discount for Class A shares or Class V shares, the value of your account will be deemed to include the value of all applicable shares in eligible Fund accounts that are held by you and your “immediate
family,” which includes your spouse, domestic partner, parent, step-parent, legal guardian, child under 21, step-child under 21, father-in-law and mother-in-law, provided that you and your immediate family members share the same mailing
address. Any Fund accounts linked together for account value aggregation purposes as of the close of business on September 3, 2010 will be permitted to remain linked together. Group retirement plan accounts are valued at the retirement plan
level.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
Eligible Accounts
The following accounts are eligible for account value
aggregation as described above, provided that they are invested in Class A, Class C, Class E, Class Inst or Class V shares of a Fund, or non-retirement plan accounts invested in Class Adv or Class Inst2 shares of a Fund: individual or joint
accounts; Roth and traditional Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs); Simplified Employee Pension accounts (SEPs), Savings Investment Match Plans for Employees of Small Employers accounts (SIMPLEs) and Tax Sheltered Custodial Accounts (TSCAs);
Uniform Gifts to Minors Act (UGMA)/Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA) accounts for which you, your spouse, or your domestic partner is parent or guardian of the minor child; revocable trust accounts for which you or an immediate family member,
individually, is the beneficial owner/grantor; accounts held in the name of your, your spouse’s, or your domestic partner’s sole proprietorship or single owner limited liability company or S corporation; qualified retirement plan assets,
provided that you are the sole owner of the business sponsoring the plan, are the sole participant (other than a spouse) in the plan, and have no intention of adding participants to the plan; and investments in wrap accounts.
The following accounts are
not eligible
for account value aggregation as described above: accounts of pension and retirement plans with multiple participants, such as 401(k) plans (which are combined to reduce the sales charge for the entire
pension or retirement plan and therefore are not used to reduce the sales charge for your individual accounts); investments in 529 plans, donor advised funds, variable annuities, variable insurance products or managed separate accounts; charitable
and irrevocable trust accounts; accounts holding shares of money market funds that used the Columbia brand before May 1, 2010; accounts invested in Class Inst3, Class R or Class T shares of a Fund; and retirement plan accounts invested in Class Adv
or Class Inst2 shares of a Fund.
Additionally,
direct purchases of shares of Columbia Government Money Market Fund may not be aggregated for account value aggregation purposes; however, shares of Columbia Government Money Market Fund acquired by exchange from other Funds may be included in
account value aggregation.
Class A and Class V Shares
Front-End Sales Charge Waivers
There are no front-end sales charges on
reinvested Fund distributions. The Distributor may waive front-end sales charges on purchases of Class A and Class V shares of the Funds by certain categories of investors, including Board members, certain employees of financial intermediaries, Fund
portfolio managers, certain partners and employees of outside legal counsel to the funds or the Board, separate accounts of an insurance company exempt from registration as an investment company under Section 3(c)(11) of the 1940 Act, registered
broker-dealer firms that have an agreement with the Distributor purchasing fund shares for their investment account only, and qualified employee benefit plan rollovers to Class A shares in the same Fund (see the SAI’s Appendix S for details).
For a more complete description of categories of investors who may purchase Class A and Class V shares of the Funds at NAV, without payment of any front-end sales charge that would otherwise apply, see Appendix S to the SAI.
In addition, certain types of purchases of Class A and Class V
shares may be made at NAV. The Distributor may waive front-end sales charges on (i) purchases (including exchanges) of Class A shares in accounts of financial intermediaries that have entered into agreements with the Distributor to offer Fund shares
to self-directed investment brokerage accounts that may or may not charge a transaction fee to customers; (ii) exchanges of Class Inst shares of a Fund for Class A shares of the Fund; (iii) purchases of Class A shares on brokerage mutual fund-only
platforms of financial intermediaries that have an agreement with the Distributor that specifically authorizes the offering of Class A shares within such platform; (iv) purchases through certain wrap fee or other products or programs that involve
fee-based compensation arrangements that have, or clear trades through a financial intermediary that has, a selling agreement with the Distributor; (v) purchases through state sponsored 529 Plans; (vi) purchases through banks, trust companies, and
thrift institutions acting as fiduciaries; and (vii) purchases through certain employee benefit plans and certain qualified deferred compensation plans. For a more complete description of these eligible transactions, see Appendix S to the SAI.
The sales charge waivers available to investors who
purchase and hold their Fund shares through different financial intermediaries may vary. For a description of such financial intermediary-specific sales charge waivers, see
Appendix A
.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
Class T Sales Charge Waivers
There is no front-end sales charge on (i) reinvested Fund
distributions; (ii) exchanges of Class T shares of the Fund from, at the discretion of Class T Intermediaries, another class of shares of the same Fund held in accounts of Class T Intermediaries, provided that (a) the other share class may only be
exchanged for Class T shares if your financial intermediary does not offer that other share class on the financial intermediary’s commission-based platform and (b), unless waived in the Distributor’s discretion, shares of the class to be
exchanged are held in a networked or omnibus account with the Fund; and (iii) purchases within fee-based accounts, provided that the Class T Intermediary has an agreement with the Distributor that specifically contemplates offering Class T shares
within the designated fee-based platform.
The sales
charge waivers available to investors who purchase and hold their Fund shares through different financial intermediaries may vary. For a description of such financial intermediary-specific sales charge waivers, see
Appendix A
.
CDSC Waivers – Class A, Class C
and Class V
You may be able to avoid an otherwise
applicable CDSC when you sell Class A, Class C or Class V shares of the Fund. This could happen because of the way in which you originally invested in the Fund, because of your relationship with the Funds or for other reasons. For example, the CDSC
will be waived on redemptions of shares in the event of the shareholder's death; that result from required minimum distributions taken from retirement accounts when the shareholder reaches age 70½; in connection with the Fund's Small Account
Policy (which is described in
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares — Transaction Rules and Policies
); and by certain other investors and in certain other types of transactions or situations. For a more
complete description of the available waivers of the CDSC on redemptions of Class A, Class C or Class V shares, see Appendix S to the SAI.
The sales charge waivers available to investors who purchase
and hold their Fund shares through different financial intermediaries may vary. For a description of such financial intermediary-specific sales charge waivers, see
Appendix A
.
Repurchases (Reinstatements)
As noted in the table below, you can redeem shares of certain
classes (see Redeemed Share Class below) and use such redemption proceeds to buy shares of the Corresponding Repurchase Class without paying an otherwise applicable sales charge and/or CDSC (other than redemptions from Columbia Government Money
Market Fund unless purchased via an exchange from another Fund) within 90 days, up to the amount of the redemption proceeds.
Repurchases
(Reinstatements)
|
Redeemed
Share Class
|
Corresponding
Repurchase Class
|
Class
A
|
Class
A
|
Class
C
|
Class
C
|
Class
V
|
Class
V
|
Any CDSC paid upon redemption of
your Class A, Class C or Class V shares of a Fund will not be reimbursed.
To be eligible for the repurchase (or reinstatement)
privilege, the purchase must be made into an account for the same owner, but does not need to be into the same Fund from which the shares were sold. The Transfer Agent, Distributor or their agents must receive a written reinstatement request from
you or your financial intermediary within 90 days after the shares are redeemed. The purchase of the Corresponding Repurchase Class (as noted in the table above) through this repurchase (or reinstatement) privilege will be made at the NAV of such
shares next calculated after the request is received in “good form.” Systematic withdrawals and purchases are excluded from this policy.
Restrictions and Changes in Terms and Conditions
Restrictions may apply to certain accounts and certain
transactions. The Funds and/or the Distributor may change or cancel these terms and conditions at any time. Unless you provide your financial intermediary with information in writing about all of the factors that may count toward available
reductions or waivers of an applicable sales charge,
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
there can be no assurance that you will receive all of the reductions and
waivers for which you may be eligible. To the extent your Fund account is held directly with the Fund, you should provide this information to the Fund when placing your purchase or redemption order. Please see
Appendix A
to this prospectus and Appendix S of the SAI for more information about sales charge waivers.
Distribution and Service Fees
The Board has approved, and the Funds have adopted,
distribution and/or shareholder service plans which set the distribution and/or service fees that are periodically deducted from the Funds’ assets. These fees are calculated daily, may vary by share class and are intended to compensate the
Distributor and/or eligible financial intermediaries for, with regard to distribution fees, selling Fund shares and, with regard to service fees, directly or indirectly providing services to shareholders. Because the fees are paid out of the Fund's
assets on an ongoing basis, they will increase the cost of your investment over time.
The table below shows the maximum annual distribution and/or
service fees (as an annual percentage of average daily net assets) and the combined amount of such fees applicable to each share class:
|
Distribution
Fee
|
Service
Fee
|
Combined
Total
|
Class
A
|
up
to 0.25%
|
up
to 0.25%
|
up
to 0.35%
(a)(b)(c)
|
Class
Adv
|
None
|
None
|
None
|
Class
C
|
0.75%
(c)(d)
|
0.25%
|
1.00%
(b)
|
Class
Inst
|
None
|
None
|
None
|
Class
Inst2
|
None
|
None
|
None
|
Class
Inst3
|
None
|
None
|
None
|
Class
R (series of CFST and CFST I)
|
0.50%
|
—
(e)
|
0.50%
|
Class
R (series of CFST II)
|
up
to 0.50%
(c)
|
up
to 0.25%
|
0.50%
(e)
|
Class
T
|
up
to 0.25%
(c)
|
up
to 0.25%
|
0.25%
(f)
|
Class
V
|
None
|
up
to 0.50%
(g)
|
up
to 0.50%
(g)
|
(a)
|
The maximum distribution and
service fees of Class A shares varies among the Funds, as shown in the table below:
|
Funds
|
Maximum
Class A
Distribution Fee
|
Maximum
Class A
Service Fee
|
Maximum
Class A
Combined Total
|
Series
of CFST and CFST II (other than Columbia
Government Money Market Fund)
|
—
|
—
|
0.25%;
these Funds pay a
combined distribution and
service fee
|
Columbia
Government Money Market Fund
|
—
|
—
|
0.10%
|
Columbia
AMT-Free Oregon Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Columbia Balanced Fund, Columbia Contrarian Core Fund, Columbia Disciplined Small Core Fund, Columbia Dividend Income Fund, Columbia Global Technology Growth Fund, Columbia Large Cap Growth Fund,
Columbia Mid Cap Growth Fund, Columbia Real Estate Equity Fund, Columbia Small Cap Growth Fund I, Columbia Total Return Bond Fund
|
up
to 0.10%
|
up
to 0.25%
|
up
to 0.35%; these Funds may
pay distribution and service fees
up to a maximum of 0.35% of their
average daily net assets
attributable to Class A shares
(comprised of up to 0.10% for
distribution services and up to
0.25%
for shareholder liaison
services) but currently limit such
fees to an aggregate fee of not
more than 0.25% for
Class A shares
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
Funds
|
Maximum
Class A
Distribution Fee
|
Maximum
Class A
Service Fee
|
Maximum
Class A
Combined Total
|
Columbia
Adaptive Risk Allocation Fund, Columbia Alternative Beta Fund, Columbia AMT-Free Connecticut Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Columbia AMT-Free Massachusetts Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Columbia AMT-Free New York Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Columbia
Bond Fund, Columbia Corporate Income Fund, Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund, Columbia Diversified Real Return Fund, Columbia Emerging Markets Fund, Columbia Global Dividend Opportunity Fund, Columbia Global Energy and Natural Resources
Fund, Columbia Greater China Fund, Columbia Multi-Asset Income Fund, Columbia Pacific/Asia Fund, Columbia Select Large Cap Growth Fund, Columbia Small Cap Value Fund I, Columbia Strategic California Municipal Income Fund, Columbia Strategic Income
Fund, Columbia Strategic New York Municipal Income Fund, Columbia U.S. Social Bond Fund, Columbia U.S. Treasury Index Fund
|
—
|
0.25%
|
0.25%
|
Columbia
AMT-Free Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Columbia High Yield Municipal Fund, Columbia Tax-Exempt Fund
|
—
|
0.20%
|
0.20%
|
(b)
|
The service fees for Class A
and Class C shares of certain Funds vary. The annual service fee for Class A and Class C shares of Columbia AMT-Free Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Columbia High Yield Municipal Fund and Columbia Tax-Exempt Fund may equal up to 0.20% of the average
daily NAV of all shares of such Fund class. The annual distribution fee for Class C shares for Columbia AMT-Free Intermediate Muni Bond Fund shall be 0.65% of the average daily net assets of the Fund's Class C shares. The Distributor has voluntarily
agreed to waive the service fee for Class A and Class C shares of Columbia U.S. Treasury Index Fund so that the service fee does not exceed 0.15% annually. This arrangement may be modified or terminated by the Distributor at any time.
|
(c)
|
Fee amounts noted apply to all
Funds other than Columbia Government Money Market Fund, which, for each of Class A and Class T shares, pays distribution and service fees of 0.10%, and for Class C shares pays distribution fees of 0.75%. The Distributor has currently agreed not to
be reimbursed by the Fund for 0.25% of the 0.50% fee for Class R shares of Columbia Government Money Market Fund. The Distributor has voluntarily agreed to waive the Rule 12b-1 fees it receives from Class A, Class C, Class R and Class T shares of
Columbia Government Money Market Fund. This arrangement may be modified or terminated by the Distributor at any time. Compensation paid to financial intermediaries may be suspended to the extent of the Distributor's waiver of the Rule 12b-1 fees on
these specific share classes of these Funds.
|
(d)
|
The Distributor has voluntarily
agreed to waive a portion of the distribution fee for Class C shares of the following Funds so that the distribution fee does not exceed the specified percentage annually: 0.45% for Columbia AMT-Free Connecticut Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Columbia
AMT-Free Massachusetts Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Columbia AMT-Free New York Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Columbia AMT-Free Oregon Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Columbia Strategic California Municipal Income Fund and Columbia Strategic New York
Municipal Income Fund; 0.60% for Columbia Corporate Income Fund and Columbia Short Term Bond Fund; 0.65% for Columbia High Yield Municipal Fund and Columbia Tax-Exempt Fund; and 0.70% for Columbia U.S. Treasury Index Fund. These arrangements may be
modified or terminated by the Distributor at any time.
|
(e)
|
Class R shares of series of
CFST and CFST I pay a distribution fee pursuant to a Rule 12b-1 plan for Class R shares. The Funds do not have a shareholder service plan for Class R shares. Series of CFST II have a distribution and shareholder service plan for Class R shares,
which, prior to the close of business on September 3, 2010, were known as Class R2 shares. For Class R shares of series of CFST II, the maximum fee under the plan reimbursed for distribution expenses is equal on an annual basis to 0.50% of the
average daily net assets of the Fund attributable to Class R shares. Of that amount, up to 0.25% may be reimbursed for shareholder service expenses.
|
(f)
|
The combined distribution fee
and service fee for Class T shares of series of CFST and CFST I shall not exceed 0.25%. Class T shares of series of CFST II pay a combined distribution and service fee of 0.25%.
|
(g)
|
The shareholder servicing fees
for Class V shares are up to 0.50% of average daily net assets attributable to Class V shares for equity Funds and 0.40% for fixed income Funds. In general, the Funds currently limit such fees to a maximum of 0.25% for equity Funds and 0.15% for
fixed-income Funds. These fees for Class V shares are not paid pursuant to a Rule 12b-1 plan. See
Class V Shareholder Service Fees
below for more information.
|
The distribution and/or service fees for Class A, Class
C, Class R and Class T shares, as applicable, are subject to the requirements of Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act. The Distributor may retain these fees otherwise payable to financial intermediaries if the amounts due are below an amount
determined by the Distributor in its sole discretion.
For Class A (with the exception noted in the next sentence),
Class R and Class T shares, the Distributor begins to pay these fees immediately after purchase. For Class A shares (if purchased as part of a purchase of shares of $1 million or more for Taxable Funds or $500,000 or more for Tax-Exempt Funds)
and for Class C shares (with the exception noted in the next sentence), the Distributor begins to pay these fees 12 months after purchase. For Class C shares, financial intermediaries may opt to decline payment of a sales commission and instead may
receive
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
these fees immediately after purchase. For the first 12 months following the
sale of Class C shares, the Distributor retains the distribution fee of up to 0.75% in order to finance the payment of sales commissions to financial intermediaries and to pay for other distribution related expenses.
Series of CFST II.
The
maximum fee for services under the distribution and/or shareholder servicing plan for series of CFST II is the lesser of the amount of reimbursable expenses and the fee rates in the table above. If a share class of a series of CFST II has no
reimbursable distribution or shareholder servicing expenses, it will suspend the payment of any such fee.
If you maintain shares of the Fund directly with the Fund,
without working with a financial advisor or other financial intermediary, distribution and service fees may be retained by the Distributor as payment or reimbursement for incurring certain distribution and shareholder service related expenses.
Over time, these distribution and/or service fees will reduce
the return on your investment and may cost you more than paying other types of sales charges. The Fund will pay these fees to the Distributor and/or to eligible financial intermediaries for as long as the distribution plan and/or shareholder
servicing plans continue in effect, which is expected to be indefinitely. However, the Fund may reduce or discontinue payments at any time. Your financial intermediary may also charge you other additional fees for providing services to your account,
which may be different from those described here.
Class V Shareholder Services Fees
The Funds that offer Class V shares have adopted a shareholder
services plan that permits them to pay for certain services provided to Class V shareholders by their financial intermediaries. Equity Funds may pay shareholder servicing fees up to an aggregate annual rate of 0.50% of the Fund's average daily net
assets attributable to Class V shares (comprised of up to 0.25% for shareholder liaison services and up to 0.25% for administrative support services). Fixed income Funds may pay shareholder servicing fees up to an aggregate annual rate of 0.40% of
the Fund's average daily net assets attributable to Class V shares (comprised of up to 0.20% for shareholder liaison services and up to 0.20% for administrative support services). These fees are currently limited to an aggregate annual rate of not
more than 0.25% for equity Funds and not more than 0.15% for fixed income Funds. The Distributor begins to pay these fees immediately after purchase for purchases up to $1 million, for purchases of $1 million or more the Distributor will begin to
pay these fees 12 months after purchase. These fees for Class V shares are not paid pursuant to a Rule 12b-1 plan. With respect to those Funds that declare dividends on a daily basis, the shareholder servicing fee shall be waived by the financial
intermediaries to the extent necessary to prevent net investment income from falling below 0% on a daily basis. If you maintain shares of the Fund directly with the Fund, without working with a financial advisor or other intermediary, shareholder
services fees may be retained by the Distributor as payment or reimbursement for incurring certain shareholder service related expenses.
Financial Intermediary Compensation
The Distributor, the Investment Manager and their affiliates
make payments, from their own resources, to financial intermediaries, including other Ameriprise Financial affiliates, for marketing/sales support services relating to the Funds (Marketing Support Payments). Such payments are generally based upon
one or more of the following factors: average net assets of the Funds attributable to that financial intermediary; gross sales of the Funds attributable to that financial intermediary; reimbursement of ticket charges (fees that a financial
intermediary charges its representatives for effecting transactions in Fund shares); or a negotiated lump sum payment. While the financial arrangements may vary for each financial intermediary, Marketing Support Payments to any one financial
intermediary are generally between 0.05% and 0.40% on an annual basis for payments based on average net assets of the Fund attributable to the financial intermediary, and between 0.05% and 0.25% on an annual basis for firms receiving a payment based
on gross sales of the Funds attributable to the financial intermediary. The Distributor, the Investment Manager and their affiliates may at times make payments with respect to a Fund or the Columbia Funds generally on a basis other than those
described above, or in larger amounts, when dealing with certain financial intermediaries. Not all financial intermediaries receive Marketing Support Payments. The Distributor, the Investment Manager and their affiliates do not make Marketing
Support Payments with respect to Class Inst3 shares.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Choosing a Share Class
(continued)
In addition, the Transfer Agent has certain arrangements in
place to compensate financial intermediaries, including other Ameriprise Financial affiliates, that hold Fund shares through networked and omnibus accounts, including omnibus retirement plans, for services that they provide to beneficial Fund
shareholders (Shareholder Services). Shareholder Services and related fees vary by financial intermediary and according to distribution channel and may include sub-accounting, sub-transfer agency, participant recordkeeping, shareholder or
participant reporting, shareholder or participant transaction processing, maintenance of shareholder records, preparation of account statements and provision of customer service, and are not intended to include services that are primarily intended
to result in the sale of Fund shares. Payments for Shareholder Services generally are not expected, with certain limited exceptions, to exceed 0.40% of the average aggregate value of the Fund’s shares. Generally, each Fund pays the Transfer
Agent a per account fee or a percentage of the average aggregate value of shares per annum maintained in omnibus accounts up to the lesser of the amount charged by the financial intermediary or a channel-specific or share class-specific cap
established by the Board from time to time. Fee amounts in excess of the amount paid by the Fund are borne by the Transfer Agent, the Investment Manager and/or their affiliates. For Class Inst3 shares, the Transfer Agent does not pay financial
intermediaries for Shareholder Services, and the Fund does not compensate the Transfer Agent for any Shareholder Services provided by financial intermediaries.
In addition to the payments described above, the Distributor,
the Investment Manager and their affiliates typically make other payments or allow promotional incentives to certain broker-dealers to the extent permitted by the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) and Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority (FINRA) rules and by other applicable laws and regulations.
Amounts paid by the Distributor, the Investment Manager and
their affiliates are paid out of their own resources and do not increase the amount paid by you or the Fund. You can find further details in the SAI about the payments made by the Distributor, the Investment Manager and their affiliates, as well as
a list of the financial intermediaries, including Ameriprise Financial affiliates, to which the Distributor, the Investment Manager or their affiliates have agreed to make Marketing Support Payments and pay Shareholder Services fees.
Your financial intermediary may charge you
fees and commissions in addition to those described in this prospectus. You should consult with your financial intermediary and review carefully any disclosure your financial intermediary provides regarding its services and compensation. Depending
on the financial arrangement in place at any particular time, a financial intermediary and its financial advisors may have a conflict of interest or financial incentive for recommending the Fund or a particular share class over others.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
Share Price Determination
The price you pay or receive when you buy, sell or exchange
shares is the Fund's next determined net asset value (or NAV) per share for a given share class. The Fund calculates the NAV per share for each class of shares of the Fund at the end of each business day, with the value of the Fund's shares based on
the total value of all of the securities and other assets that it holds as of a specified time.
NAV Calculation
Each of the Fund's share classes calculates
its NAV per share as follows:
NAV per share
=
(Value of assets of the share class) – (Liabilities of the share class)
Number of outstanding shares of the class
Business Days
A business day is any day that the New York
Stock Exchange (NYSE) is open. A business day typically ends at the close of regular trading on the NYSE, usually at 4:00 p.m. Eastern time. If the NYSE is scheduled to close early, the business day will be considered to end as of the time of the
NYSE’s scheduled close. The Fund will not treat an intraday unscheduled disruption in NYSE trading or an intraday unscheduled closing as a close of regular trading on the NYSE for these purposes and will price its shares as of the regularly
scheduled closing time for that day (typically, 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). Notwithstanding the foregoing, the NAV of Fund shares may be determined at such other time or times (in addition to or in lieu of the time set forth above) as the Fund’s
Board may approve or ratify. On holidays and other days when the NYSE is closed, the Fund’s NAV is not calculated and the Fund does not accept buy or sell orders. However, the value of the Fund’s assets may still be affected on such days
to the extent that the Fund holds foreign securities that trade on days that foreign securities markets are open.
Equity securities are valued primarily on the basis of market
quotations reported on stock exchanges and other securities markets around the world. If an equity security is listed on a national exchange, the security is valued at the closing price or, if the closing price is not readily available, the mean of
the closing bid and asked prices. Certain equity securities, debt securities and other assets are valued differently. For instance, bank loans trading in the secondary market are valued primarily on the basis of indicative bids, fixed income
investments maturing in 60 days or less are valued primarily using the amortized cost method, unless this methodology results in a valuation that does not approximate the market value of these securities, and those maturing in excess of 60 days are
valued primarily using a market-based price obtained from a pricing service, if available. Investments in other open-end funds are valued at their published NAVs. Both market quotations and indicative bids are obtained from outside pricing services
approved and monitored pursuant to a policy approved by the Fund's Board.
If a market price is not readily available or is deemed not to
reflect market value, the Fund will determine the price of a portfolio security based on a determination of the security's fair value pursuant to a policy approved by the Fund’s Board. In addition, the Fund may use fair valuation to price
securities that trade on a foreign exchange when a significant event has occurred after the foreign exchange closes but before the time at which the Fund’s share price is calculated. Foreign exchanges typically close before the time at which
Fund share prices are calculated, and may be closed altogether on days when the Fund is open. Such significant events affecting a foreign security may include, but are not limited to: (1) corporate actions, earnings announcements, litigation or
other events impacting a single issuer; (2) governmental action that affects securities in one sector or country; (3) natural disasters or armed conflicts affecting a country or region; or (4) significant domestic or foreign market fluctuations. The
Fund uses various criteria, including an evaluation of U.S. market moves after the close of foreign markets, in determining whether a foreign security's market price is readily available and reflective of market value and, if not, the fair
value
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
of the security. To the extent the Fund has significant holdings of small cap
stocks, high-yield bonds, floating rate loans, or tax-exempt, foreign or other securities that may trade infrequently, fair valuation may be used more frequently than for other funds.
Fair valuation may have the effect of reducing stale pricing
arbitrage opportunities presented by the pricing of Fund shares. However, when the Fund uses fair valuation to price securities, it may value those securities higher or lower than another fund would have priced the security. Also, the use of fair
valuation may cause the Fund's performance to diverge to a greater degree from the performance of various benchmarks used to compare the Fund's performance because benchmarks generally do not use fair valuation techniques. Because of the judgment
involved in fair valuation decisions, there can be no assurance that the value ascribed to a particular security is accurate. The Fund has retained one or more independent fair valuation pricing services to assist in the fair valuation process for
foreign securities.
Transaction Rules and Policies
The Fund, the Distributor or the Transfer Agent may refuse any
order to buy or exchange shares. If this happens, the Fund will return any money it received, but no interest will be paid on that money. Your financial intermediary may have rules and policies in place that are in addition to or different than
those described below.
Order Processing
Orders to buy, sell or exchange Fund shares are processed on
business days. Depending upon the class of shares, orders can be made by mail, by telephone or online. Orders received in “good form” by the Transfer Agent or your financial intermediary before the end of a business day are priced at the
NAV per share of the Fund's applicable share class on that day. Orders received after the end of a business day will receive the next business day's NAV per share. When a written order to buy, sell or exchange shares is sent to the Transfer Agent,
the share price used to fill the order is the next price calculated by the Fund after the Transfer Agent receives the order at its transaction processing center in Canton, Massachusetts, not the P.O. Box provided for regular mail delivery. The
market value of the Fund's investments may change between the time you submit your order and the time the Fund next calculates its NAV per share. The business day that applies to your order is also called the trade date.
“Good Form”
An order is in “good form” if the Transfer Agent
or your financial intermediary has all of the information and documentation it deems necessary to effect your order. For example, when you sell shares, “good form” means that your request (i) has complete instructions and written
requests include the signatures of all account owners, (ii) is for an amount that is less than or equal to the shares in your account for which payment has been received and collected, (iii) has a Medallion Signature Guarantee for amounts greater
than $100,000 and certain other transactions, as described below, and (iv) includes any other required documents completed and attached. For the documents required for sales by corporations, agents, fiduciaries, surviving joint owners and other
legal entities, call 800.345.6611.
Medallion Signature
Guarantees
The Transfer Agent may require a Medallion
Signature Guarantee for your signature in order to process certain transactions, including if: (i) the transaction amount is over $100,000; (ii) you want your check made payable to someone other than the registered account owner(s); (iii) the
address of record has changed within the last 30 days; (iv) you want the check mailed to an address other than the address of record; (v) you want proceeds to be sent according to existing bank account instructions not coded for outgoing Automated
Clearing House (ACH) or wire, or to a bank account not on file; or (vi) you are changing legal ownership of your account.
A Medallion Signature Guarantee helps assure that a signature
is genuine and not a forgery. A Medallion Signature Guarantee must be provided by an eligible guarantor institution including, but not limited to, the following: a bank, credit union, savings association, broker or dealer that participates in the
Securities Transfer Association Medallion Program (STAMP), the Stock Exchange Medallion Program (SEMP) or the New York Stock Exchange Medallion
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
Signature Program (MSP). For other transactions, the Transfer Agent may
require a signature guarantee. Notarization by a notary public is not an acceptable signature guarantee. The Transfer Agent reserves the right to reject a signature guarantee and to request additional documentation for any transaction.
Customer Identification Program
Federal law requires the Fund to obtain and record specific
personal information to verify your identity when you open an account. This information may include your name, address, date of birth (for individuals) and taxpayer or other government issued identification (e.g., social security number (SSN) or
other taxpayer identification number (TIN)). If you fail to provide the requested information, the Fund may need to delay the date of your purchase or may be unable to open your account, which may result in a return of your investment monies. In
addition, if the Fund is unable to verify your identity after your account is open, the Fund reserves the right to close your account or take other steps as deemed reasonable. The Fund will not be liable for any loss resulting from any purchase
delay, application rejection or account closure due to a failure to provide proper identifying information.
Small Account Policy — Class A, Class C, Class Inst, Class
T and Class V Share Accounts Below the Minimum Account Balance
The Funds generally will automatically sell your shares if the
value of your Fund account (treating each account of the Fund you own separately from any other account of the Fund you may own) falls below the applicable minimum account balance. Any otherwise applicable CDSC will not be imposed on such an
automatic sale of your shares. Generally, you may avoid such an automatic sale by raising your account balance to at least $250 or consolidating your multiple accounts you may have with the Funds through an exchange (so as to maintain at least $250
in each of your accounts). The minimum account balance varies among share classes and types of accounts, as follows:
Minimum
Account Balance
|
|
|
Minimum
Account
Balance
|
For
all classes and account types except those listed below
|
$250
(None for accounts with
Systematic Investment Plans)
|
Individual
Retirement Accounts for all classes except those listed below
|
None
|
Class
Adv, Class Inst2, Class Inst3 and Class R
|
None
|
For shares held directly
with the Funds’ Transfer Agent, if your shares are sold, the Transfer Agent will remit the sale proceeds to you. The Transfer Agent will send you written notification in advance of any automatic sale, which will provide details on how you may
avoid such an automatic sale. Generally, you may avoid such an automatic sale by raising your account balance to at least $250, consolidating your multiple accounts you may have with the Funds through an exchange (so as to maintain at least $250 in
each of your accounts), or setting up a Systematic Investment Plan (described below). For more information, contact the Transfer Agent or your financial intermediary. The Transfer Agent's contact information (toll-free number and mailing addresses)
as well as the Funds’ website address can be found at the beginning of the section
Choosing a Share Class
.
For shares purchased and held for your benefit through a
financial intermediary, the Funds may instruct the intermediary to automatically sell your Fund shares if the transaction can be operationally administered by the intermediary.
Small Account Policy — Class A, Class C, Class Inst, Class
T and Class V Share Accounts Minimum Balance Fee
If
the value of your Fund account (treating each account of the Fund you own separately from any other account of the Fund you may own) falls below the minimum initial investment requirement applicable to you for any reason, including as a result of
market decline, your account generally could be subject to a $20 annual fee. The Transfer Agent will reduce the expenses paid by the Fund by any amounts it collects from the assessment of this fee. For Funds that do not have transfer agency expenses
against which to offset the amount collected through assessment of this fee, the
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
fee will be paid directly to the Fund. The Funds reserve the right to lower
the account size trigger point for the minimum balance fee in any year or for any class of shares when we believe it is appropriate to do so in light of declines in the market value of Fund shares or for other reasons.
For shares held directly with the Funds’ Transfer Agent,
this fee will be assessed through the automatic sale of Fund shares in your account. Any otherwise applicable CDSC will not be imposed on such an automatic sale of your shares. The Transfer Agent will send you written notification in advance of
assessing any fee, which will provide details on how you can avoid the imposition of such fee. Generally, you may avoid the imposition of such fee by raising your Fund account balance, consolidating your multiple accounts you may have with the
Funds, or setting up a Systematic Investment Plan that invests at least monthly. For more information, contact the Transfer Agent or your financial intermediary. The Transfer Agent's contact information (toll-free number and mailing addresses) as
well as the Funds’ website address can be found at the beginning of the section
Choosing a Share Class
.
For shares purchased and held for your benefit through a
financial intermediary, this fee could be assessed through the automatic sale of Fund shares in your account if instructed by the Fund and the transaction can be operationally administered by the intermediary.
Exceptions to the Small Account Policy (Accounts Below Minimum
Account Balance) and Minimum Balance Fee
The automatic sale of Fund shares in
accounts under $250 and the annual minimum balance fee described above do not apply to shareholders of Class Adv, Class Inst2, Class Inst3 and Class R shares; shareholders holding their shares through financial intermediary networked accounts;
wrap fee and omnibus accounts; accounts with active Systematic Investment Plans; certain qualified retirement plans; and health savings accounts. The automatic sale of Fund shares of accounts under the applicable minimum account balance does not
apply to individual retirement plans.
Small
Account Policy — Financial Intermediary Networked and Wrap Fee Accounts
The Funds may automatically redeem, at any time, financial
intermediary networked accounts and wrap fee accounts that have account balances of $20 or less or have less than one share.
For shares purchased and held for your benefit through a
financial intermediary, the Funds may instruct the intermediary to automatically sell your Fund shares if the transaction can be operationally administered by the intermediary.
Information Sharing Agreements
As required by Rule 22c-2 under the 1940 Act, the Funds or
certain of their service providers will enter into information sharing agreements with financial intermediaries, including participating life insurance companies and financial intermediaries that sponsor or offer retirement plans through which
shares of the Funds are made available for purchase. Pursuant to Rule 22c-2, financial intermediaries are required, upon request, to: (i) provide shareholder account and transaction information; and (ii) execute instructions from the Fund to
restrict or prohibit further purchases of Fund shares by shareholders who have been identified by the Fund as having engaged in transactions that violate the Fund's excessive trading policies and procedures.
Excessive Trading Practices Policy of Non-Money Market
Funds
Right to Reject or Restrict Share Transaction
Orders—
The Fund is intended for investors with long-term investment purposes and is not intended as a vehicle for frequent trading activity (market timing) that is excessive. Investors should transact in Fund
shares primarily for investment purposes. The Board has adopted excessive trading policies and procedures that are designed to deter excessive trading by investors (the Excessive Trading Policies and Procedures).
The Fund discourages and does not accommodate excessive trading.
The Fund reserves the right to reject, without any prior
notice, any purchase or exchange order for any reason, and will not be liable for any loss resulting from rejected orders. For example, the Fund may in its sole discretion restrict or reject a purchase or exchange order even if the transaction is
not subject to the specific limitation described below if the Fund or its agents determine that accepting the order could interfere with efficient management of the Fund's
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
portfolio or is otherwise contrary to the Fund's best interests. The
Excessive Trading Policies and Procedures apply equally to purchase or exchange transactions communicated directly to the Transfer Agent and to those received by financial intermediaries.
Specific Buying and Exchanging Limitations
— If a Fund detects that an investor has made two “material round trips” in any 28-day period, it will generally reject the investor's future purchase orders, including exchange purchase orders,
involving any Fund.
For these purposes, a
“round trip” is a purchase or exchange into the Fund followed by a sale or exchange out of the Fund, or a sale or exchange out of the Fund followed by a purchase or exchange into the Fund. A “material” round trip is one that
is deemed by the Fund to be material in terms of its amount or its potential detrimental impact on the Fund. Independent of this limit, the Fund may, in its sole discretion, reject future purchase orders by any person, group or account that appears
to have engaged in any type of excessive trading activity.
These limits generally do not apply to automated transactions
or transactions by registered investment companies in a “fund-of-funds” structure. These limits do not apply to payroll deduction contributions by retirement plan participants, transactions initiated by a retirement plan sponsor or
certain other retirement plan transactions consisting of rollover transactions, loan repayments and disbursements, and required minimum distribution redemptions. They may be modified or rescinded for accounts held by certain retirement plans to
conform to plan limits, for considerations relating to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 or regulations of the Department of Labor, and for certain asset allocation or wrap programs. Accounts known to be under common ownership or
control generally will be counted together, but accounts maintained or managed by a common intermediary generally will not be considered to be under common ownership or control. The Fund retains the right to modify these restrictions at any time
without prior notice to shareholders. In addition, the Fund may, in its sole discretion, reinstate trading privileges that have been revoked under the Fund's Excessive Trading Policies and Procedures.
Limitations on the Ability to Detect and Prevent Excessive
Trading Practices—
The Fund takes various steps designed to detect and prevent excessive trading, including daily review of available shareholder transaction information. However, the Fund receives buy, sell or
exchange orders through financial intermediaries, and cannot always know of or reasonably detect excessive trading that may be facilitated by financial intermediaries or by the use of the omnibus account arrangements they offer. Omnibus account
arrangements are common forms of holding shares of mutual funds, particularly among certain financial intermediaries such as broker-dealers, retirement plans and variable insurance products. These arrangements often permit financial intermediaries
to aggregate their clients' transactions and accounts, and in these circumstances, the identities of the financial intermediary clients that beneficially own Fund shares are often not known to the Fund.
Some financial intermediaries apply their own restrictions or
policies to their clients’ transactions and accounts, which may be more or less restrictive than those described here. This may impact the Fund's ability to curtail excessive trading, even where it is identified. For these and other reasons,
it is possible that excessive trading may occur despite the Fund's efforts to detect and prevent it.
Although these restrictions and policies involve judgments
that are inherently subjective and may involve some selectivity in their application, the Fund seeks to act in a manner that it believes is consistent with the best interests of Fund shareholders in making any such judgments.
Risks of Excessive Trading —
Excessive trading creates certain risks to the Fund's long-term shareholders and may create the following adverse effects:
■
|
negative impact on the
Fund's performance;
|
■
|
potential dilution of the
value of the Fund's shares;
|
■
|
interference with the
efficient management of the Fund's portfolio, such as the need to maintain undesirably large cash positions, the need to use its line of credit or the need to buy or sell securities it otherwise would not have bought or sold;
|
■
|
losses on the sale of
investments resulting from the need to sell securities at less favorable prices;
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
■
|
increased taxable gains to
the Fund's remaining shareholders resulting from the need to sell securities to meet sell orders; and
|
■
|
increased brokerage and
administrative costs.
|
To the extent
that the Fund invests significantly in foreign securities traded on markets that close before the Fund's valuation time, it may be particularly susceptible to dilution as a result of excessive trading. Because events may occur after the close of
foreign markets and before the Fund's valuation time that influence the value of foreign securities, investors may seek to trade Fund shares in an effort to benefit from their understanding of the value of foreign securities as of the Fund's
valuation time. This is often referred to as price arbitrage. The Fund has adopted procedures designed to adjust closing market prices of foreign securities under certain circumstances to reflect what the Fund believes to be the fair value of those
securities as of its valuation time. To the extent the adjustments do not work fully, investors engaging in price arbitrage may cause dilution in the value of the Fund's shares held by other shareholders.
Similarly, to the extent that the
Fund invests significantly in thinly traded securities and other debt instruments that are rated below investment grade (commonly called “high-yield” or “junk” bonds), equity securities of small-capitalization companies,
floating rate loans, or tax-exempt or other securities that may trade infrequently, because
these securities are often traded infrequently, investors may seek to trade
Fund shares in an effort to benefit from their understanding of the value of these securities as of the Fund's valuation time. This is also a type of price arbitrage. Any such frequent trading strategies may interfere with efficient management of
the Fund's portfolio to a greater degree than would be the case for mutual funds that invest only, or significantly, in highly liquid securities, in part because the Fund may have difficulty selling these particular investments at advantageous times
or prices to satisfy large and/or frequent sell orders. Any successful price arbitrage may also cause dilution in the value of Fund shares held by non-redeeming shareholders. The risks of excessive trading described above also apply to any
Underlying Funds in which the Fund invests.
Excessive
Trading Practices Policy of Columbia Government Money Market Fund
A money market fund is designed to offer investors a liquid
cash option that they may buy and sell as often as they wish. Accordingly, the Board has not adopted policies and procedures designed to discourage excessive or short-term trading of Columbia Government Money Market Fund shares. However, since
frequent purchases and sales of Columbia Government Money Market Fund shares could in certain instances harm shareholders in various ways, including reducing the returns to long-term shareholders by increasing costs (such as spreads paid to dealers
who trade money market instruments with Columbia Government Money Market Fund) and disrupting portfolio management strategies, Columbia Government Money Market Fund reserves the right, but has no obligation, to reject any purchase or exchange
transaction at any time. Except as expressly described in this prospectus (such as minimum purchase amounts), Columbia Government Money Market Fund has no limits on purchase or exchange transactions. In addition, Columbia Government Money Market
Fund reserves the right to impose or modify restrictions on purchases, exchanges or trading of Fund shares at any time.
Opening an Account and Placing Orders
We encourage you to consult with a financial advisor who can
help you with your investment decisions and who can help you open an account. Once you have an account, you can buy, sell or exchange shares by contacting your financial advisor who will send your order to the Transfer Agent or your financial
intermediary. As described below, once you have an account you can also communicate your orders directly to the Transfer Agent by mail, by telephone or online (except that purchases of Class T shares must be made through a Class T
Intermediary).
The Funds are generally available
directly (except for Class T shares) and through broker-dealers, banks and other financial intermediaries or institutions, and through certain qualified and non-qualified plans, wrap fee products or other investment products sponsored by
financial intermediaries. You may sell or exchange shares through your financial intermediary. If you maintain your account directly with your financial intermediary, you must contact that agent to process your transaction.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
Not all financial intermediaries offer the Funds (or all classes
of Fund shares) and certain financial intermediaries that offer the Funds may not offer all Funds on all investment platforms or programs.
Please consult with your financial intermediary to determine the
availability of the Funds. If you set up an account at a financial intermediary that does not have, and is unable to obtain, a selling agreement with the Distributor, you will not be able to transfer Fund holdings to that account. In that event, you
must either maintain your Fund holdings with your current financial intermediary or find another financial intermediary with a selling agreement.
Financial intermediaries that offer the Funds may charge you
additional fees for the services they provide and they may have different policies that are not described in this prospectus.
An investor transacting in a class of Fund shares without any front-end sales charge,
CDSC, or other asset-based fee for sales or distribution, such as a Rule 12b-1 fee, may be required to pay a commission to the financial intermediary for effecting such transactions. The Funds are offered in a number of different share classes that
have different fees and expenses and other features. Some differences in the policies of different financial intermediaries may include different minimum investment amounts, exchange privileges, Fund/class choices and cutoff times for investments.
Additionally, recordkeeping, transaction processing and payments of distributions relating to your account may be performed by the financial intermediaries through which your shares of the Fund are held. Since the Fund (and its service providers)
may not have a record of your account transactions, you should always contact the financial intermediary through which you purchased or at which you maintain your shares of the Fund to make changes to your account, to give instructions concerning
your account, or to obtain information about your account. The Fund and its service providers, including the Distributor and the Transfer Agent, are not responsible for the failure of any financial intermediary to carry out its obligations to its
customers.
The Fund may engage financial
intermediaries to receive purchase, exchange and sell orders on its behalf. Accounts established directly with the Fund will be serviced by the Transfer Agent. The Funds, the Transfer Agent and the Distributor do not provide investment advice.
Direct-At-Fund Accounts (Accounts Established Directly with the
Fund)
You can hold Fund shares through an account
established and held through the financial intermediary through which you purchased Fund shares or, with the exception of Class T shares, you or your financial intermediary may establish an account directly with the Fund, in which case you will
receive Fund account transaction confirmations and statements from the Transfer Agent, and not your financial intermediary (Direct-at-Fund Accounts).
To open a Direct-at-Fund Account, complete a Fund account
application with your financial advisor or investment professional, and mail the account application to the Transfer Agent. Account applications may be obtained at columbiathreadneedle.com/us or may be requested by calling 800.345.6611. Make your
check payable to the Fund. You will be assessed a $15 fee for any checks rejected by your financial institution due to insufficient funds or other reasons. The Funds do not accept cash, credit card convenience checks, money orders, traveler's
checks, starter checks, third or fourth party checks, or other cash equivalents.
Mail your check and completed application to the Transfer
Agent at its regular or express mail address that can be found at the beginning of the section
Choosing a Share Class
. You may also use these addresses to request an exchange or redemption of Fund shares. When
a written order to buy, sell or exchange shares is sent to the Transfer Agent, the share price used to fill the order is the next price calculated by the Fund after the Transfer Agent receives your transaction request in “good form” at
its transaction processing center in Canton, Massachusetts, not the P.O. Box provided for regular mail delivery.
You will be sent a statement confirming your purchase and any
subsequent transactions in your account. You will also be sent quarterly and annual statements detailing your transactions in the Fund and the other Funds you own under the same account. Duplicate quarterly account statements for the current year
and duplicate annual statements for the most recent prior calendar year will be sent to you free of charge. Copies of year-end statements for prior years are available for a fee. Please contact the Transfer Agent for more information.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
Written Transactions – Direct-at-Fund Accounts
If you have a Direct-at-Fund Account, you can communicate
written buy, sell or exchange orders to the Transfer Agent at its address that can be found at the beginning of the section
Choosing a Share Class
. When a written order to buy, sell or exchange shares is sent
to the Transfer Agent, the share price used to fill the order is the next price calculated by the Fund after the Transfer Agent receives your transaction request in “good form” at its transaction processing center in Canton,
Massachusetts, not the P.O. Box provided for regular mail delivery.
Include in your transaction request letter: your name; the
name of the Fund(s); your account number; the class of shares to be purchased, exchanged or sold; your SSN or other TIN; the dollar amount or number of shares you want to purchase, exchange or sell; specific instructions regarding delivery of any
redemption proceeds or exchange destination (i.e., the Fund/class to be exchanged into); signature(s) of all registered account owner(s); and any special documents the Transfer Agent may require in order to process your order.
Corporate, trust or partnership accounts may need to send
additional documents. Payment will be mailed to the address of record and made payable to the names listed on the account, unless your request specifies differently and is signed by all owners.
Telephone Transactions – Direct-at-Fund Accounts
For Class A, Class C, Class Inst, Class Inst3, Class R and
Class V shares, if you have a Direct-at-Fund Account, you may place orders to buy, sell or exchange shares by telephone through the Transfer Agent. To place orders by telephone, call 800.422.3737. Have your account number and SSN or TIN available
when calling.
You can sell Fund shares via the telephone
and receive redemption proceeds: by electronic funds transfer via ACH or by check to the address of record, subject to a maximum of $100,000 of shares per day, per Fund account; or by wire, subject to a maximum of $3 million of shares per day, per
Fund account. You can buy Fund shares via the telephone by electronic funds transfer via ACH from your bank account up to a maximum of $100,000 of shares per day, per Fund account. Certain restrictions apply, so please call the Transfer Agent at
800.422.3737 for this and other information in advance of any need to transact via telephone.
Telephone orders may not be as secure as written orders. The
Fund will take reasonable steps to confirm that telephone instructions are genuine. For example, we require proof of your identification before we will act on instructions received by telephone and may record telephone conversations. However, the
Fund and its agents will not be responsible for any losses, costs or expenses resulting from an unauthorized telephone instruction when reasonable steps have been taken to confirm that telephone instructions are genuine. Telephone orders may be
difficult to complete during periods of significant economic or market change or business interruption.
Online Transactions – Direct-at-Fund Accounts
For Class A, Class C, Class Inst, Class
Inst3, Class R and Class V shares, if you have a Direct-at-Fund Account, you may be able to place orders to buy, sell, or exchange shares online. Contact the Transfer Agent at 800.345.6611 for more information on certain account trading restrictions
and the special sign-up procedures required for online transactions. You can also go to www.investor.columbiathreadneedleus.com to sign up for online transactions. The Transfer Agent has procedures in place to authenticate electronic orders you send
through the internet. You will be required to accept the terms of an online agreement and to establish an online account and utilize a password in order to access online account services. You can sell a maximum of $100,000 of shares per day, per
Fund account through your online account if you qualify for internet orders. Wire transactions are not permitted online.
Wire Transactions – Direct-at-Fund Accounts
If you hold a Direct-at-Fund Account, you
may purchase or redeem Class A, Class C, Class Inst, Class Inst3 and Class V shares of a Fund by wiring money from (or to) your bank account to (or from) your Fund account. You must set up this feature prior to your request unless you are submitting
your request in writing with a Medallion Signature Guarantee. Please contact the Transfer Agent by calling 800.422.3737 to obtain the necessary forms and requirements. The Transfer Agent charges a fee for shares sold by Fedwire. The Transfer Agent
may waive the fee for
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
certain accounts. In the case of a redemption, the receiving bank may charge
an additional fee. The minimum amount that can be redeemed by wire is $500. When selling Fund shares via a telephone request, the maximum amount that can be redeemed via wire transfer is $3 million per day, per Fund account.
Electronic Funds Transfer via ACH –
Direct-at-Fund Accounts
If you hold a Direct-at-Fund
Account, you may purchase or redeem Class A, Class C, Class Inst, Class Inst3 and Class V shares of a Fund by electronically transferring money via Automated Clearing House (ACH) from (or to) your bank account to (or from) your Fund account subject
to a maximum of $100,000 of shares per day, per Fund account. You must set up this feature prior to your request, unless you are submitting your request in writing with a Medallion Signature Guarantee. Please contact the Transfer Agent by calling
800.422.3737 to obtain the necessary forms and requirements Your bank may take up to three business days to post an electronic funds transfer to (or from) your Fund account.
Buying Shares
Eligible Investors
Class A Shares
Class A shares are available to the general public for
investment.
Class Adv Shares
Class Adv shares are available only to (i) omnibus retirement
plans, including self-directed brokerage accounts within omnibus retirement plans that clear through institutional no transaction fee (NTF) platforms, (ii) trust companies or similar institutions, (iii) broker-dealers, banks, trust companies and
similar institutions that clear Fund share transactions for their client or customer investment advisory or similar accounts through designated financial intermediaries and their mutual fund trading platforms that have been granted specific written
authorization from the Transfer Agent with respect to Class Adv eligibility apart from selling, servicing or similar agreements, (iv) 501(c)(3) charitable organizations, (v) 529 plans, (vi) health savings accounts, (vii) investors participating in a
fee-based advisory program sponsored by a financial intermediary or other entity that is not compensated by the Fund for those services, other than payments for shareholder servicing or sub-accounting performed in place of the Transfer Agent, and
(viii) commissionable brokerage platforms where the financial intermediary, acting as broker on behalf of its customer, charges the customer a commission for effecting transactions in Fund shares, provided that the financial intermediary has an
agreement with the Distributor that specifically authorizes offering Class Adv shares within such platform.
Class C Shares
Class C shares are available to the general public for
investment.
Class Inst Shares
Class Inst shares are available only to the categories of
eligible investors described below under
Class Inst Shares Minimum Initial Investments
.
Financial intermediaries that clear Fund share transactions through designated financial
intermediaries and their mutual fund trading platforms that were given specific written notice from the Transfer Agent of the termination, effective March 29, 2013, of their eligibility for new purchases of Class Inst shares and omnibus retirement
plans are not permitted to establish new Class Inst accounts, subject to certain exceptions described below.
Omnibus retirement plans that opened and, subject to certain
exceptions, funded a Class Inst account with the Fund as of the close of business on March 28, 2013 and have continuously held Class Inst shares in such account after such date (each, a grandfathered plan), may generally continue to make additional
purchases of Class Inst shares, open new Class Inst accounts and add new participants. In addition, an omnibus retirement plan affiliated with a grandfathered plan may, in the sole discretion of the Distributor, open new Class Inst accounts in a
Fund if the affiliated plan opened a Class Inst account on or before March 28, 2013. If an omnibus retirement plan invested in
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
Class Inst shares changes recordkeepers after March 28, 2013, any new
accounts established for that plan may not be established in Class Inst shares, but such a plan may establish new accounts in a different share class for which the plan is eligible.
Accounts of financial intermediaries (other than omnibus
retirement plans, which are discussed above) that clear Fund share transactions for their client or customer accounts through designated financial intermediaries and their mutual fund trading platforms that received specific written notice from the
Transfer Agent of the termination, effective March 29, 2013, of their eligibility for new purchases of Class Inst shares will not be permitted to establish new Class Inst accounts or make additional purchases of Class Inst shares (other than through
reinvestment of distributions). Any such account may, at its holder’s option, exchange Class Inst shares of a Fund, without the payment of a sales charge, for Class A shares of the same Fund.
Class Inst2 Shares
Class Inst2 shares are available only to (i) certain
registered investment advisers and family offices that clear Fund share transactions for their client or customer accounts through designated financial intermediaries and their mutual fund trading platforms that have been granted specific written
authorization from the Transfer Agent with respect to Class Inst2 eligibility apart from selling, servicing or similar agreements; (ii) omnibus retirement plans; and (iii) institutional investors that are clients of the Columbia Threadneedle Global
Institutional Distribution Team that invest in Class Inst2 shares for their own account through platforms approved by the Distributor or an affiliate thereof to offer and/or service Class Inst2 shares within such platform. Prior to November 8, 2012,
Class Inst2 shares were closed to new investors and new accounts, subject to certain exceptions. Existing shareholders who do not satisfy the new eligibility requirements for investment in Class Inst2 may not establish new Class Inst2 accounts but
may continue to make additional purchases of Class Inst2 shares in accounts opened and funded prior to November 8, 2012; provided, however, that investment advisory programs and similar programs that opened a Class Inst2 account as of May 1, 2010,
and continuously hold Class Inst2 shares in such account after such date, may generally not only continue to make additional purchases of Class Inst2 shares but also open new Class Inst2 accounts for such pre-existing programs and add new
shareholders in the program.
Class Inst3 Shares
Class Inst3 shares are available to: (i) group retirement
plans that maintain plan-level or omnibus accounts with the Fund (through the Transfer Agent); (ii) institutional investors that are clients of the Columbia Threadneedle Global Institutional Distribution Team that invest in Class Inst3 shares for
their own account through platforms approved by the Distributor or an affiliate thereof to offer and/or service Class Inst3 shares within such platform; (iii) collective trust funds; (iv) affiliated or unaffiliated mutual funds (e.g., funds
operating as funds-of-funds); (v) fee-based platforms of financial intermediaries (or the clearing intermediary that they trade through) that have an agreement with the Distributor or an affiliate thereof that specifically authorizes the financial
intermediary to offer and/or service Class Inst3 shares within such platform, provided also that Fund shares are held in an omnibus account; (vi) commissionable brokerage platforms where the financial intermediary, acting as broker on behalf of its
customer, charges the customer a commission for effecting transactions in Fund shares, provided that the financial intermediary has an agreement with the Distributor that specifically authorizes offering Class Inst3 shares within such platform and
that Fund shares are held in an omnibus account; and (vii) bank trust departments, subject to an agreement with the Distributor that specifically authorizes offering Class Inst3 shares and provided that Fund shares are held in an omnibus account. In
each case above where noted that Fund shares are required to be held in an omnibus account, the Distributor may, in its discretion, determine to waive this requirement.
Class R Shares
Class R shares are available only to eligible health savings
accounts sponsored by third party platforms, including those sponsored by Ameriprise Financial affiliates, eligible retirement plans and, in the sole discretion of the Distributor, other types of retirement accounts held through platforms maintained
by financial intermediaries approved by the Distributor. Eligible retirement plans include any retirement plan other than individual 403(b) plans.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
Class R shares are generally not available for investment through retail
nonretirement accounts, traditional and Roth IRAs, Coverdell Education Savings Accounts, SEPs, SAR-SEPs, Simple IRAs or 529 tuition programs. Contact the Transfer Agent or your retirement plan or health savings account administrator for more
information about investing in Class R shares.
Class T
Shares
Class T shares are available to the general
public. Class T shares must be purchased through a Class T Intermediary (as defined above).
Class V Shares
Class V shares are available only to investors who received
(and who have continuously held) Class V shares (formerly named Class T shares, which have no relation to a Fund’s current Class T shares) in connection with the merger of certain Galaxy funds into certain Funds that were then named Liberty
funds.
Additional Eligible Investors
In addition, the Distributor, in its sole discretion, may
accept investments in any share class from investors other than those listed in this prospectus, and may also waive certain eligibility requirements for operational and other reasons, including but not limited to any requirement to maintain Fund
shares in networked or omnibus accounts.
Minimum Initial
Investments
The table below shows the Fund’s
minimum initial investment requirements, which may vary by class and type of account.
The Fund reserves the right to redeem your shares if your
account falls below the Fund’s minimum initial investment requirement.
Minimum
Initial Investments
|
|
Minimum
Initial
Investment
(a)
|
Minimum
Initial Investment
for Accounts
with Systematic
Investment Plans
|
For
all classes and account types except those listed below
|
$2,000
|
$100
(b)
|
Individual
Retirement Accounts for all classes except those listed below
|
$1,000
|
$100
(c)
|
Group
retirement plans
|
None
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv and Class Inst
|
$0,
$1,000 or $2,000
(d)
|
$100
(d)
|
Class
Inst2 and Class R
|
None
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst3
|
$0,
$1,000, $2,000 or $1 million
(e)
|
$100
(e)
|
(a)
|
If your Class A, Class Adv,
Class C, Class Inst, Class Inst3 or Class V shares account balance falls below the minimum initial investment amount for any reason, including a market decline, you may be asked to increase it to the minimum initial investment amount or establish a
monthly Systematic Investment Plan. If you do not do so, your account will be subject to a $20 annual low balance fee and/or shares may be automatically redeemed and the proceeds mailed to you if the account falls below the minimum account balance.
See
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares — Transaction Rules and Policies
above. There is no minimum initial investment in Class A shares for accounts held in an omnibus account on a mutual fund only
platform offered through your financial intermediary.
|
(b)
|
Columbia Government Money
Market Fund
—
$2,000
|
(c)
|
Columbia Government Money
Market Fund
—
$1,000
|
(d)
|
The minimum initial investment
in Class Adv shares is $2,000 ($1,000 for IRAs; $100 for systematic investment plan accounts) for commissionable brokerage platforms where the financial intermediary, acting as broker on behalf of its customers, charges the customer a commission for
effecting transactions in Fund shares, provided that the financial intermediary has an agreement with the Distributor that specifically authorizes offering Class Adv shares within such platform; for all other eligible Class Adv share investors (see
Buying Shares – Eligible Investors – Class Adv Shares
above), there is no minimum initial investment. The minimum initial investment amount for Class Inst shares is $0, $1,000 or $2,000 depending upon
the category of eligible investor. See —
Class Inst Shares Minimum Initial Investments
below. The minimum initial investment amount for systematic investment plan accounts is the same as the amount set
forth in the first two rows of the table, as applicable.
|
(e)
|
There is no minimum initial
investment in Class Inst3 shares for: group retirement plans that maintain plan-level or omnibus accounts with the Fund; collective trust funds; affiliated or unaffiliated mutual funds (e.g., funds operating as funds-of-funds); and fee-based
platforms of financial
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
|
intermediaries (or the
clearing intermediary that they trade through) that have an agreement with the Distributor or an affiliate thereof that specifically authorizes the financial intermediary to offer and/or service Class Inst3 shares within such platform and Fund
shares are held in an omnibus account. The minimum initial investment in Class Inst3 shares is $2,000 ($1,000 for IRAs; $100 for systematic investment plan accounts) for commissionable brokerage platforms where the financial intermediary, acting as
broker on behalf of its customer, charges the customer a commission for effecting transactions in Fund shares, provided that the financial intermediary has an agreement with the Distributor that specifically authorizes offering Class Inst3 shares
within such platform and Fund shares are held in an omnibus account. The minimum initial investment in Class Inst3 shares is $1 million, unless waived in the discretion of the Distributor, for the following investors: institutional investors that
are clients of the Columbia Threadneedle Global Institutional Distribution Team that invest in Class Inst3 shares for their own account through platforms approved by the Distributor or an affiliate thereof to offer and/or service Class Inst3 shares
within such platform; and bank trust departments, subject to an agreement with the Distributor that specifically authorizes offering Class Inst3 shares and provided that Fund shares are held in an omnibus account. The Distributor may, in its
discretion, waive the $1 million minimum initial investment required for these Class Inst3 investors. In each case above where noted that Fund shares are required to be held in an omnibus account, the Distributor may, in its discretion, determine to
waive this requirement.
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Additional
Information about Minimum Initial Investments
The
minimum initial investment requirements may be waived for accounts that are managed by an investment professional, or for accounts held in approved discretionary or non-discretionary wrap programs. The Distributor, in its sole discretion, may also
waive minimum initial investment requirements for other account types.
Minimum investment and related requirements may be modified at
any time, with or without prior notice. If your account is closed and then re-opened with a systematic investment plan, your account must meet the then-current applicable minimum initial investment.
Class Inst Shares Minimum Initial Investments
There is no minimum initial investment in Class Inst shares
for the following categories of eligible investors:
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Any health savings account
sponsored by a third party platform.
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Any investor participating
in an account sponsored by a financial intermediary or other entity (that provides services to the account) that is paid a fee-based advisory fee by the investor and that is not compensated by the Fund for those services, other than payments for
shareholder servicing or sub-accounting performed in place of the Transfer Agent.
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The minimum initial investment in Class Inst shares for the
following categories of eligible investors is $1,000:
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Individual retirement
accounts (IRAs) on commissionable brokerage platforms where the financial intermediary, acting as broker on behalf of its customer, charges the customer a commission for effecting transactions in Fund shares, provided that the financial intermediary
has an agreement with the Distributor that specifically authorizes offering Class Inst shares within such platform.
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Any current employee of
Columbia Management Investment Advisers LLC, the Distributor or the Transfer Agent and immediate family members of any of the foregoing who share the same address are eligible to invest in Class Inst shares through an individual retirement account
(IRA). If you maintain your account with a financial intermediary, you must contact that financial intermediary each time you seek to purchase shares to notify them that you qualify for Class Inst shares. If Class Inst shares are not available at
your financial intermediary, you may consider opening a Direct-at-Fund Account. It is your obligation to advise your financial intermediary or (in the case of Direct-at-Fund Accounts) the Transfer Agent that you qualify for Class Inst shares; be
prepared to provide proof thereof.
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The minimum initial investment in Class Inst shares for the
following categories of eligible investors is $2,000:
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Investors (except investors
in individual retirement accounts (IRAs)) who purchase Fund shares through commissionable brokerage platforms where the financial intermediary holds the shares in an omnibus account and, acting as broker on behalf of its customer, charges the
customer a commission for effecting transactions in Fund shares provided that the financial intermediary has an agreement with the Distributor that specifically authorizes offering Class Inst shares within such platform.
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Any current employee of
Columbia Management Investment Advisers LLC, the Distributor or the Transfer Agent and immediate family members of any of the foregoing who share the same address are eligible to invest in Class Inst shares (other than individual retirement accounts
(IRAs), for which the minimum initial investment is $1,000). If you maintain your account with a financial intermediary, you must contact that financial intermediary each time you seek to purchase shares to notify them that you qualify for Class
Inst shares. If Class Inst shares are not available
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Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
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at your financial
intermediary, you may consider opening a Direct-at-Fund Account. It is your obligation to advise your financial intermediary or (in the case of Direct-at-Fund Accounts) the Transfer Agent that you qualify for Class Inst shares; be prepared to
provide proof thereof.
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Certain financial
institutions and intermediaries, such as insurance companies, trust companies, banks, endowments, investment companies or foundations, buying shares for their own account, including Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates and/or subsidiaries.
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Bank trust departments that
assess their clients an asset-based fee.
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Certain other investors as
set forth in more detail in the SAI.
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Systematic Investment Plan
The Systematic Investment Plan allows you to schedule regular
purchases via automatic transfers from your bank account to the Fund on a monthly, quarterly or semiannual basis. Contact the Transfer Agent or your financial intermediary to set up the plan. Systematic Investment Plans may not be available for all
share classes. With the exception of Columbia Government Money Market Fund, the Systematic Investment Plan is confirmed on your quarterly account statement.
Dividend Diversification
Generally, you may automatically invest Fund distributions
into the same class of shares (and in some cases certain other classes of shares, but not Class T shares) of another Fund without paying any applicable front-end sales charge. Call the Transfer Agent at 800.345.6611 for details. The ability to
invest distributions from one Fund to another Fund may not be available to accounts held at all financial intermediaries.
Other Purchase Rules You Should Know
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Once the Transfer Agent or
your financial intermediary receives your purchase order in “good form,” your purchase will be made at the Fund’s next calculated public offering price per share, which is the NAV per share plus any sales charge that applies (i.e.,
the trade date).
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Once the Fund receives your
purchase request in “good form,” you cannot cancel it after the market closes.
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You generally buy Class A,
Class T and Class V shares at the public offering price per share because purchases of these share classes are generally subject to a front-end sales charge.
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You buy Class Adv, Class C,
Class Inst, Class Inst2, Class Inst3 and Class R shares at NAV per share because no front-end sales charge applies to purchases of these share classes.
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The Distributor and the
Transfer Agent reserve the right to cancel your order if the Fund does not receive payment within two business days of receiving your purchase order. The Fund will return any payment received for orders that have been cancelled, but no interest will
be paid on that money.
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Financial intermediaries are
responsible for sending your purchase orders to the Transfer Agent and ensuring that the Fund receives your money on time.
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Shares purchased are
recorded on the books of the Fund. The Fund does not issue certificates.
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Please also read
Appendix A
and contact your financial intermediary for more information regarding any reductions and/or waivers described therein.
Selling Shares
When you sell shares, the amount you receive may be more or
less than the amount you invested. Your sale price will be the next NAV calculated after your request is received in “good form,” (i.e., the trade date) minus any applicable CDSC.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
Systematic Withdrawal Plan
The Systematic Withdrawal Plan allows you to schedule regular
redemptions from your account any business day on a monthly, quarterly or semiannual basis. Currently, Systematic Withdrawal Plans are generally available for Class A, Class Adv, Class C, Class Inst, Class Inst2, Class Inst3, Class T and Class
V share accounts. Contact the Transfer Agent or your financial intermediary to set up the plan. To set up the plan, your account balance must meet the class minimum initial investment amount. A Systematic Withdrawal Plan cannot be set up on an
account that already has a Systematic Investment Plan established. Note that a Medallion Signature Guarantee may be required if this service is established after your Fund account is opened.
You can choose to receive your withdrawals via check or direct
deposit into your bank account. The Fund will deduct any applicable CDSC from the withdrawals before sending redemption proceeds to you. You can cancel the plan by giving the Fund 30 days’ notice in writing or by calling the Transfer Agent at
800.422.3737. It’s important to remember that if you withdraw more than your investment in the Fund is earning, you'll eventually withdraw your entire investment.
Check Redemption Service (for Columbia Government Money Market
Fund)
Class A and Class Inst shares of Columbia
Government Money Market Fund (which is not offered in this prospectus) offer check writing privileges. If you have $2,000 in Columbia Government Money Market Fund, you may request checks which may be drawn against your account. The amount of any
check drawn against your Columbia Government Money Market Fund must be at least $100 and not more than $100,000 per day. You can elect this service when you initially establish your account or thereafter. Call 800.345.6611 for the appropriate forms
to establish this service. If you own Class A shares that were originally purchased in another Fund at NAV because of the size of the purchase, and then exchanged into Columbia Government Money Market Fund, check redemptions may be subject to a
CDSC. A $15 charge will be assessed for any stop payment order requested by you or any overdraft in connection with checks written against your Columbia Government Money Market Fund account. Note that a Medallion Signature Guarantee may be required
if this service is established after your Fund account is opened.
Satisfying Fund Redemption Requests
When you sell your Fund shares, the Fund is effectively buying
them back from you. This is called a redemption. Except as noted below with respect to newly purchased shares, the Fund typically expects to send you payment for your shares within two business days after your trade date. The Fund can suspend
redemptions and/or delay payment of redemption proceeds for up to seven days. The Fund can also suspend redemptions and/or delay payment of redemption proceeds in excess of seven days under certain circumstances, including when the NYSE is closed or
trading thereon is restricted or during emergency or other circumstances, including as determined by the SEC.
The Fund typically seeks to satisfy
redemption requests from cash or cash equivalents held by the Fund, from the proceeds of orders to purchase Fund shares or from the proceeds of sales of Fund holdings effected in the normal course of managing the Fund. However, the Fund may have to
sell Fund holdings, including in down markets, to meet heavier than usual redemption requests. For example, under stressed or abnormal market conditions or circumstances, including circumstances adversely affecting the liquidity of the Fund’s
investments, the Fund may be more likely to be forced to sell Fund holdings to meet redemptions than under normal market circumstances. In these situations, the Fund’s portfolio managers may have to sell Fund holdings that would not otherwise
be sold because, among other reasons, the current price to be received is less than the value of the holdings perceived by the Fund’s portfolio managers. The Fund may also, under certain circumstances (but more likely under stressed or
abnormal market conditions or circumstances), borrow money under a credit facility to which the Fund and certain other Columbia Funds are parties or from other Columbia Funds under an interfund lending program (except for closed-end funds and money
market funds, which are not eligible to borrow under the program). The Fund and the other Columbia Funds are limited as to the amount that each may individually and collectively borrow under the credit facility and the interfund lending program. As
a result, borrowings available to the Fund under the credit facility and the interfund lending program might be insufficient, alone or in combination with the other strategies described herein, to satisfy Fund redemption requests. Please see
About Fund Investments – Borrowings – Interfund Lending
in the SAI for more information about the credit facility and interfund lending program. The Fund is also limited in the
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
total amount it may borrow. The Fund may only borrow to the extent permitted
by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder, and any exemptive relief available to the Fund, which currently limit Fund borrowings to 33 1/3% of total assets (including any amounts borrowed) less liabilities (other than borrowings), plus
an additional 5% of its total assets for temporary purposes (to be repaid within 60 days without extension or renewal), in each case determined at the time the borrowing is made.
In addition, the Fund reserves the right to
honor redemption orders in whole or in part with in-kind distributions of Fund portfolio securities instead of cash. Such in-kind distributions typically represent a pro-rata portion of Fund portfolio assets subject to adjustments (e.g., for
non-transferable securities, round lots, and derivatives). In the event the Fund distributes portfolio securities in kind, you may incur brokerage and other transaction costs associated with converting the portfolio securities you receive into cash.
Also, the portfolio securities you receive may increase or decrease in value after they are distributed but before you convert them into cash. For U.S. federal income tax purposes, redemptions paid in securities are generally treated the same as
redemptions paid in cash.
While the Fund is not
required (and may refuse in its discretion) to pay a redemption with an in-kind distribution of Fund portfolio securities and reserves the right to pay the redemption proceeds in cash, if you wish to request an in-kind redemption, please call the
Transfer Agent at 800.345.6611. As a result of the operational steps needed to coordinate with the redeeming shareholder’s custodian, in-kind redemptions typically take several weeks to complete after a redemption request is received. The Fund
and the redeeming shareholder will typically agree upon a redemption date. Since the Fund’s NAV may fluctuate during this time, the Fund’s NAV may be lower on the agreed-upon redemption date than on an earlier date on which the
investment could have been redeemed for cash.
Redemption
of Newly Purchased Shares
You may not redeem shares for
which the Fund has not yet received payment. If you pay for shares by check or electronically by ACH and your purchase payment is not guaranteed, it may take up to 10 calendar days to clear. Only shares that have been held in your account for 10
calendar days after the trade date of the purchase will be considered to be in “good form” for redemption (Collected Shares). If you request a redemption for an amount that, based on the NAV next calculated after your redemption request
is received, includes any shares that are not yet Collected Shares, the Fund will only process the redemption up to the amount of the value of Collected Shares available in your account. You must submit a new redemption request if you wish to redeem
those shares that were not yet Collected Shares at the time the original redemption request was received by the Fund.
Other Redemption Rules You Should Know
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Once the Transfer Agent or
your financial intermediary receives your redemption order in “good form,” your shares will be sold at the Fund’s next calculated NAV per share (i.e., the trade date). Any applicable CDSC will be deducted from the amount you're
selling and the balance will be remitted to you.
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Once the Fund receives your
redemption request in “good form,” you cannot cancel it after the market closes.
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If you sell your shares that
are held in a Direct-at-Fund Account, we will normally send the redemption proceeds by mail or electronically transfer them to your bank account the next business day after the trade date. Note that your bank may take up to three business days to
post an electronic funds transfer from your account.
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If you sell your shares
through a financial intermediary, the Funds will normally send the redemption proceeds to your financial intermediary within two business days after the trade date.
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No interest will be paid on
uncashed redemption checks.
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Other restrictions may apply
to retirement accounts. For information about these restrictions, contact your retirement plan administrator.
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For broker-dealer and wrap
fee accounts: The Fund reserves the right to redeem your shares if your account falls below the Fund's minimum initial investment requirement. The Fund will notify your broker-dealer prior to redeeming shares, and will provide details on how to
avoid such redemption.
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Also keep in mind the Funds'
Small Account Policy, which is described above in
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares — Transaction Rules and Policies.
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Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
Exchanging Shares
Except for Class T shares, which are not exchangeable for
another share class of any Fund (including with Class T shares of another Fund), you can generally sell shares of your Fund to buy shares of another Fund (subject to eligibility requirements), in what is called an exchange. You should read the
prospectus of, and make sure you understand the investment objective, principal investment strategies, risks, fees and expenses of, the Fund into which you are exchanging. Although the Funds allow certain exchanges from one share class to another
share class with higher expenses, you should consider the expenses of each class before making such an exchange. Please see
Same-Fund Exchange Privilege
below for more information.
You may be subject to a sales charge if you exchange from
Columbia Government Money Market Fund or any other Fund that does not charge a front-end sales charge into a non-money market Fund.
If you hold your Fund shares through certain financial intermediaries, you may have
limited exchangeability among the Funds.
Please contact your financial intermediary for more information.
Systematic Exchanges
You may buy Class A, Class C, Class Inst, Class Inst3 and
Class V shares of a Fund by exchanging each month from another Fund for shares of the same class of the Fund at no additional cost, subject to the following exchange amount minimums: $50 each month for individual retirement accounts (i.e., tax
qualified accounts); and $100 each month for non-retirement accounts. Contact the Transfer Agent or your financial intermediary to set up the plan.
Exchanges will continue as long as your balance in the Fund
you are exchanging shares from is sufficient to complete the systematic monthly exchange, subject to the Funds' Small Account Policy described above in
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares — Transaction Rules
and Policies.
You may terminate the program or change the amount you would like to exchange (subject to the $50 and $100 minimum requirements noted immediately above) by calling the Transfer Agent at 800.345.6611.
Other Exchange Rules You Should Know
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Exchanges are made at the
NAV next calculated (plus any applicable sales charge) after your exchange order is received in “good form” (i.e., the trade date).
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Once the Fund receives your
exchange request in “good form,” you cannot cancel it after the market closes.
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The rules for buying shares
of a Fund generally apply to exchanges into that Fund, including, if your exchange creates a new Fund account, it must satisfy the minimum investment amount, unless a waiver applies.
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Shares of the purchased Fund
may not be used on the same day for another exchange or sale.
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If you exchange shares from
Class A shares of Columbia Government Money Market Fund to a non-money market Fund, any further exchanges must be between shares of the same class. For example, if you exchange from Class A shares of Columbia Government Money Market Fund into Class
C shares of a non-money market Fund, you may not exchange from Class C shares of that non-money market Fund back to Class A shares of Columbia Government Money Market Fund or Class A shares of any other Fund.
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A sales charge may apply when
you exchange shares of a Fund that were not assessed a sales charge at the time you purchased such shares. For example, if you invest in Columbia Government Money Market Fund (or any other Fund that does not impose a front-end sales charge) and then
you exchange into a non-money market Fund, your transaction is subject to a front-end sales charge if you exchange into Class A shares and to a CDSC if you exchange into Class C shares of the Funds.
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If you purchased Class A
shares of a non-money market Fund (and paid any applicable sales charge) and you then exchange those shares into Columbia Government Money Market Fund, you may exchange that amount to Class A of another Fund, including dividends earned on that
amount, without paying a sales charge.
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Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares
(continued)
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If your shares are subject
to a CDSC, you will not be charged a CDSC upon the exchange of those shares. Any CDSC will be deducted when you sell the shares you received from the exchange. The CDSC imposed at that time will be based on the period that begins when you bought
shares of the original Fund and ends when you sell the shares of the Fund you received from the exchange. Any applicable CDSC charged will be the CDSC of the original Fund.
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You may make exchanges only
into a Fund that is legally offered and sold in your state of residence. Contact the Transfer Agent or your financial intermediary for more information.
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You generally may make an
exchange only into a Fund that is accepting investments.
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The Fund may change or
cancel your right to make an exchange by giving the amount of notice required by regulatory authorities (generally 60 days for a material change or cancellation).
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Unless your account is part
of a tax-advantaged arrangement, an exchange for shares of another Fund is a taxable event, and you may recognize a gain or loss for tax purposes.
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Changing your investment to
a different Fund will be treated as a sale and purchase, and you will be subject to applicable taxes on the sale and sales charges on the purchase of the new Fund.
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Class Inst shares of a Fund
may be exchanged for Class A or Class Inst shares of another Fund. In certain circumstances, the front-end sales charge applicable to Class A shares may be waived on exchanges of Class Inst shares for Class A shares. See
Buying, Selling and Exchanging Shares — Buying Shares — Eligible Investors — Class Inst Shares
for details.
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You may generally exchange
Class V shares of a Fund for Class A shares of another Fund if the other Fund does not offer Class V shares. Class V shares exchanged into Class A shares cannot be exchanged back into Class V shares.
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Same-Fund Exchange Privilege
Shareholders may be eligible to invest in other classes of
shares of the same Fund, and may exchange their current shares for another share class if deemed eligible and offered by the Fund. Such same-Fund exchanges could include an exchange of one class for another with higher expenses. Before making such
an exchange, you should consider the expenses of each class. Shareholders should contact their financial intermediaries to learn more about the details of the same-Fund exchange privilege. Exchanges out of Class A, Class C and Class V shares will be
subject to any applicable CDSC. Financial intermediaries that have a customized arrangement with regard to CDSCs are detailed in
Appendix A
.
Exchanges out of Class C shares to another share class of the
same Fund are not permissible on Direct-at-Fund Accounts. Exchanges out of Class C shares to another share class of the same Fund within commissionable brokerage accounts are permitted only (1) by shareholders moving from a commissionable brokerage
account to a fee-based advisory program or (2) when the exchange is part of a share class conversion (or a similar multiple shareholder transaction event) instituted by a financial intermediary and such conversion or similar type event is
preapproved by the Distributor.
Ordinarily, shareholders
will not recognize a gain or loss for U.S. federal income tax purposes upon a same-Fund exchange. You should consult your tax advisor about your particular exchanges.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Distributions to Shareholders
A mutual fund can make money two ways:
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It can earn income on its
investments. Examples of fund income are interest paid on money market instruments and bonds, and dividends paid on common stocks.
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A mutual fund can also have
capital gains if the value of its investments increases. While a fund continues to hold an investment, any gain is generally unrealized. If the fund sells an investment, it generally will realize a capital gain if it sells that investment for a
higher price than its adjusted cost basis, and will generally realize a capital loss if it sells that investment for a lower price than its adjusted cost basis. Capital gains and losses are either short-term or long-term, depending on whether the
fund holds the securities for one year or less (short-term) or more than one year (long-term).
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Mutual funds make payments of fund earnings to shareholders,
distributing them among all shareholders of the fund. As a shareholder, you are entitled to your portion of a fund's distributed income, including capital gains. Reinvesting your distributions buys you more shares of a fund
—
which lets you take advantage of the potential for compound growth. Putting the money you earn back into your investment means it, in turn, may earn even more money (or be exposed to additional losses, if
the Fund earns a negative return). Over time, the power of compounding has the potential to significantly increase the value of your investment. There is no assurance, however, that you'll earn more money if you reinvest your distributions rather
than receive them in cash.
The Fund intends to pay out,
in the form of distributions to shareholders, a sufficient amount of its income and gains so that the Fund will qualify for treatment as a regulated investment company and generally will not have to pay any federal excise tax. The Fund generally
intends to distribute any net realized capital gain (whether long-term or short-term gain) at least once a year. Normally, the Fund will declare and pay distributions of net investment income according to the following schedule:
Declaration
and Distribution Schedule
|
Declarations
|
Annually
|
Distributions
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Annually
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The Fund may declare or pay
distributions of net investment income more frequently.
Different share classes of the Fund usually pay different net
investment income distribution amounts, because each class has different expenses. Each time a distribution is made, the NAV per share of the share class is reduced by the amount of the distribution.
The Fund generally pays cash distributions within five
business days after the distribution was declared (or, if the Fund declares distributions daily, within five business days after the end of the month in which the distribution was declared). If you sell all of your shares after the record date, but
before the payment date, for a distribution, you'll normally receive that distribution in cash within five business days after the sale was made.
The Fund will automatically reinvest distributions in
additional shares of the same share class of the Fund unless you inform us you want to receive your distributions in cash (the financial intermediary through which you purchased shares may have different policies). You can do this by contacting the
Funds at the addresses and telephone numbers listed at the beginning of the section entitled
Choosing a Share Class
. No sales charges apply to the purchase or sale of such shares.
For accounts held directly with the Fund (through the Transfer
Agent), distributions of $10 or less will automatically be reinvested in additional Fund shares only. If you elect to receive distributions by check and the check is returned as undeliverable, all subsequent distributions will be reinvested in
additional shares of the Fund.
Unless you are a
tax-exempt investor or holding Fund shares through a tax-advantaged account (such as a 401(k) plan or IRA), you should consider avoiding buying Fund shares shortly before the Fund makes a distribution (other than distributions of net investment
income that are declared daily) of net investment income or net realized capital gain, because doing so can cost you money in taxes to the extent the distribution consists of taxable income or gains. This is because you will, in effect, receive part
of your purchase price back in the distribution. This is known as
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Distributions and Taxes
(continued)
“buying a dividend.” To avoid “buying a dividend,”
before you invest check the Fund's distribution schedule, which is available at the Funds' website and/or by calling the Funds' telephone number listed at the beginning of the section entitled
Choosing a Share
Class
.
Taxes
You should be aware of the following considerations applicable
to the Funds:
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The Fund intends to qualify
and to be eligible for treatment each year as a regulated investment company. A regulated investment company generally is not subject to tax at the fund level on income and gains from investments that are distributed to shareholders. However, the
Fund's failure to qualify for treatment as a regulated investment company would result in Fund-level taxation, and consequently, a reduction in income available for distribution to you and in the NAV of your shares. Even if the Fund qualifies for
treatment as a regulated investment company, the Fund may be subject to federal excise tax on certain undistributed income or gains.
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Otherwise taxable
distributions generally are taxable to you when paid, whether they are paid in cash or automatically reinvested in additional Fund shares. Dividends paid in January are deemed paid on December 31 of the prior year if the dividend was declared and
payable to shareholders of record in October, November, or December of such prior year.
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Distributions of the Fund's
ordinary income and net short-term capital gain, if any, generally are taxable to you as ordinary income. Distributions of the Fund's net long-term capital gain, if any, generally are taxable to you as long-term capital gain. Whether capital gains
are long-term or short-term is determined by how long the Fund has owned the investments that generated them, rather than how long you have owned your shares.
For taxable fixed income Funds:
The Fund expects
that distributions will consist primarily of ordinary income.
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From time to time, a
distribution from the Fund could constitute a return of capital, which is not taxable to you so long as the amount of the distribution does not exceed your tax basis in your Fund shares. A return of capital reduces your tax basis in your Fund
shares, with any amounts exceeding such basis generally taxable as capital gain.
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If you are an individual and
you meet certain holding period and other requirements for your Fund shares, a portion of your distributions may be treated as “qualified dividend income” taxable at the lower net long-term capital gain rates instead of the higher
ordinary income rates. Qualified dividend income is income attributable to the Fund's dividends received from certain U.S. and foreign corporations, as long as the Fund meets certain holding period and other requirements for the stock producing such
dividends. The Fund does not expect a significant portion of Fund distributions to be eligible for treatment as qualified dividend income.
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Certain high-income
individuals (as well as estates and trusts) are subject to a 3.8% tax on net investment income. For individuals, the 3.8% tax applies to the lesser of (1) the amount (if any) by which the taxpayer's modified adjusted gross income exceeds certain
threshold amounts or (2) the taxpayer's “net investment income.”
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Net investment income
generally includes for this purpose dividends, including any capital gain dividends, paid by the Fund, and net gains recognized on the sale, redemption or exchange of shares of the Fund.
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Certain derivative
instruments when held in the Fund's portfolio subject the Fund to special tax rules, the effect of which may be to, among other things, accelerate income to the Fund, defer Fund losses, cause adjustments in the holding periods of Fund portfolio
securities, or convert capital gains into ordinary income, short-term capital losses into long-term capital losses or long-term capital gains into short-term capital gains. These rules could therefore affect the amount, timing and/or character of
distributions to shareholders.
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Generally, a Fund realizes a
capital gain or loss on an option when the option expires, or when it is exercised, sold or otherwise terminated. However, if an option is a “section 1256 contract,” which includes most traded options on a broad-based index, and the Fund
holds such option at the end of its taxable year, the Fund is deemed to sell such option at fair market value at such time and recognize any gain or loss thereon, which is generally deemed to be 60% long-term and 40% short-term capital gain or loss,
as described further in the SAI.
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Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Distributions and Taxes
(continued)
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Income and proceeds received
by the Fund from sources within foreign countries may be subject to foreign taxes. If at the end of the taxable year more than 50% of the value of the Fund's assets consists of securities of foreign corporations, and the Fund makes a special
election, you will generally be required to include in your income for U.S. federal income tax purposes your share of the qualifying foreign income taxes paid by the Fund in respect of its foreign portfolio securities. You may be able to claim a
foreign tax credit or deduction in respect of this amount, subject to certain limitations. There is no assurance that the Fund will make this election for a taxable year, even if it is eligible to do so.
For a Fund
organized as a fund of funds:
The Fund may also be eligible to make this special election, regardless of the overall share of the value of its assets that is invested in the securities of foreign corporations, if, at the close of each quarter
of the Fund’s taxable year, at least 50% of its total assets consist of interests in underlying regulated investment companies.
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|
It is possible that because
most of the Fund's investments are shares of Underlying Funds, and in such a case, the tax treatment of the Fund's gains, losses, and distributions may differ from the tax treatment that would apply if either the Fund invested directly in the
types of securities held by the Underlying Funds or the Fund shareholders invested directly in the Underlying Funds. As a result, you may receive taxable distributions earlier and recognize higher amounts of capital gain or ordinary income than you
otherwise would.
|
■
|
A sale, redemption or
exchange of Fund shares is a taxable event. This includes redemptions where you are paid in securities. Your sales, redemptions and exchanges of Fund shares (including those paid in securities) usually will result in a taxable capital gain or
loss to you, equal to the difference between the amount you receive for your shares (or are deemed to have received in the case of exchanges) and your adjusted tax basis in the shares, which is generally the amount you paid (or are deemed to have
paid in the case of exchanges) for them. Any such capital gain or loss generally will be long-term capital gain or loss if you have held your Fund shares for more than one year at the time of sale or exchange. In certain circumstances, capital
losses may be converted from short-term to long-term; in other circumstances, capital losses may be disallowed under the “wash sale” rules.
|
■
|
For sales, redemptions and
exchanges of shares that were acquired in a non-qualified account after 2011, the Fund generally is required to report to shareholders and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) cost basis information with respect to those shares. The Fund uses average
cost basis as its default method of calculating cost basis. For more information regarding average cost basis reporting, other available cost basis methods, and selecting or changing to a different cost basis method, please see the SAI,
columbiathreadneedle.com/us, or contact the Fund at 800.345.6611. If you hold Fund shares through a financial intermediary (e.g., a brokerage firm), you should contact your financial intermediary to learn about its cost basis reporting default
method and the reporting elections available to your account.
|
■
|
The Fund is required by
federal law to withhold tax on any taxable or tax-exempt distributions and redemption proceeds paid to you (including amounts paid to you in securities and amounts deemed to be paid to you upon an exchange of shares) if: you have not provided a
correct TIN or have not certified to the Fund that withholding does not apply, the IRS has notified us that the TIN listed on your account is incorrect according to its records, or the IRS informs the Fund that you are otherwise subject to backup
withholding.
|
Taxes
The information provided above is only a
summary of how U.S. federal income taxes may affect your investment in the Fund. It is not intended as a substitute for careful tax planning. Your investment in the Fund may have other tax implications. It does not apply to certain types of
investors who may be subject to special rules, including foreign or tax-exempt investors or those holding Fund shares through a tax-advantaged account, such as a 401(k) plan or IRA. Please see the SAI for more detailed tax information. You should
consult with your own tax advisor about the particular tax consequences to you of an investment in the Fund, including the effect of any foreign, state and local taxes, and the effect of possible changes in applicable tax laws.
[This page intentionally left blank]
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
Because the Fund had not
commenced operations prior to the date of this prospectus, no financial highlights are provided.
[This page intentionally left blank]
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Financial Highlights
(continued)
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
Because the Fund had not commenced operations prior to the
date of this prospectus, no financial highlights are provided.
[This page intentionally left blank]
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Financial Highlights
(continued)
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
Because the Fund had not commenced operations prior to the
date of this prospectus, no financial highlights are provided.
[This page intentionally left blank]
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Financial Highlights
(continued)
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
Because the Fund had not commenced operations prior to the
date of this prospectus, no financial highlights are provided.
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Appendix A: Financial Intermediary-Specific
Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges
As noted in the
Choosing a
Share Class
section of the prospectus, the sales charge reductions and waivers available to investors who purchase and hold their Fund shares through different financial intermediaries may vary. This
Appendix
A
describes financial intermediary-specific reductions and/or waiver policies applicable to Fund shares purchased and held through the particular financial intermediary. A reduction and/or waiver that is specific to a particular financial
intermediary is not available to Direct-at-Fund Accounts or through another financial intermediary. These reductions and/or waivers may apply to purchases, sales, and exchanges of Fund shares. A shareholder transacting in Fund shares through a
financial intermediary identified below should carefully read the terms and conditions of the reductions and/or waivers. Please consult your financial intermediary with respect to any sales charge reduction/waiver described below.
The financial intermediary-specific
information below may be provided by, or compiled from or based on, information provided by the financial intermediaries noted. The Funds, the Investment Manager and the Distributor do not establish these financial intermediary-specific policies and
are not responsible for ensuring that you receive any discounts or waivers that may be available to you.
Merrill Lynch Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated
(Merrill Lynch)
The following
information has been provided by Merrill Lynch:
Shareholders purchasing Fund shares through
a Merrill Lynch platform or account are eligible for the following sales charge waivers and discounts, which may differ from those disclosed elsewhere in the Fund’s prospectus or SAI:
Class A Shares Front-End Sales Charge
Discounts:
Merrill Lynch makes
available breakpoint discounts on Class A shares of the Fund through:
■
|
Rights of Accumulation (ROA)
which entitle shareholders to breakpoint discounts will be automatically calculated based on the aggregated holding of fund family assets held by accounts within the purchaser’s household at Merrill Lynch. Eligible fund family assets not held
at Merrill Lynch may be included in the ROA calculation only if the shareholder notifies his or her financial advisor about such assets.
|
■
|
Letters
of Intent (LOI) which allow for breakpoint discounts based on anticipated purchases within a fund family, through Merrill Lynch, over a 13-month period of time (if applicable).
|
Class A Shares Front-End Sales Charge
Waivers:
■
|
Employer-sponsored
retirement, deferred compensation and employee benefit plans (including health savings accounts) and trusts used to fund those plans, provided that the plan is a group plan (more than one participant), the shares are not held in a commission-based
brokerage account and shares are held in the name of the plan through an omnibus account
|
■
|
Shares purchased by or
through a 529 Plan
|
■
|
Shares purchased through a
Merrill Lynch affiliated investment advisory program
|
■
|
Shares purchased by third
party investment advisors on behalf of their advisory clients through Merrill Lynch’s platform
|
■
|
Shares of funds purchased
through the Merrill Edge Self-Directed platform
|
■
|
Shares purchased through
reinvestment of capital gains distributions and dividend reinvestment when purchasing shares of the same Fund (but not any other fund within the same fund family)
|
■
|
Shares exchanged from Class
C (i.e., level-load) shares of the same fund in the month of or following the 10-year anniversary of the purchase date
|
■
|
Employees and registered
representatives of Merrill Lynch or its affiliates and their family members
|
■
|
Directors
or Trustees of the Fund, and employees of the Fund’s investment adviser or any of its affiliates, as described in this prospectus
|
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
Appendix A: Financial Intermediary-Specific
Reductions/Waivers of Sales Charges
(continued)
■
|
Shares purchased from the
proceeds of redemptions within the same fund family, provided (1) the repurchase occurs within 90 days following the redemption, (2) the redemption and purchase occur in the same account, and (3) redeemed shares were subject to a front-end or
deferred sales load (known as Rights of Reinstatement)
|
CDSC Waivers on Class A and C Shares:
■
|
Shares redeemed following
the death or disability of the shareholder
|
■
|
Shares sold as part of a
systematic withdrawal plan as described in this prospectus
|
■
|
Redemptions that constitute
a return of excess contributions from an IRA
|
■
|
Shares sold as part of a
required minimum distribution for IRA and retirement accounts due to the shareholder reaching age 70½
|
■
|
Shares sold to pay Merrill
Lynch fees but only if the transaction is initiated by Merrill Lynch
|
■
|
There will be no CDSC
charged on the sale of Fund shares acquired through a right of reinstatement
|
■
|
The
redemption of shares held in retirement brokerage accounts, that are exchanged for a lower cost share class due to transfer to a fee based account or platform (applicable to Class A and Class C shares only)
|
Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, LLC (Morgan Stanley
Wealth Management)
The
following information has been provided by Morgan Stanley Wealth Management:
Class T Shares Front-End Sales Charge Waivers
Available Through a Transactional Brokerage Account:
■
|
Employer-sponsored
retirement plans (e.g., 401(k) plans, 457 plans, employer-sponsored 403(b) plans, profit sharing and money purchase pension plans and defined benefit plans). For purposes of this provision, employer-sponsored retirement plans do not include SEP
IRAs, Simple IRAs, SAR-SEPs or Keogh plans; however these plans are eligible to purchase Class T shares through a transactional brokerage account.
|
■
|
Morgan Stanley Wealth
Management employee and employee-related accounts according to Morgan Stanley’s account linking rules.
|
■
|
Mutual
fund shares exchanged from an existing position in the same fund as part of a share class conversion instituted by Morgan Stanley Wealth Management.
|
Additional Sales Charge Reductions and/or Waivers
Available at Certain Financial Intermediaries
Shareholders purchasing Fund shares through
a platform or account of Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc., Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, LLC or RBC Capital Markets, LLC are eligible for the following sales charge waiver:
Class A Shares Front-End Sales Charge
Waiver:
■
|
For employer-sponsored
retirement plans held through a commissionable brokerage account, Class A shares are available at NAV (i.e., without a sales charge). For this purpose, employer-sponsored retirement plans include, but are not limited to, 401(k) plans, 457 plans,
employer-sponsored 403(b) plans, profit sharing and money purchase pension plans and defined benefit plans. For purposes of this provision, employer-sponsored retirement plans do not include SEP IRAs, Simple IRAs, SAR-SEPs or Keogh plans.
|
[This page intentionally left blank]
[This page
intentionally left blank]
Columbia Adaptive Retirement Funds
P.O. Box 8081
Boston, MA 02266-8081
Additional
Information About the Fund
Additional information about the
Fund’s investments will be available in the Fund’s annual and semiannual reports to shareholders. In the annual report, you will find a discussion of the market conditions and investment strategies that significantly affected the
Fund’s performance during its last fiscal year. The SAI also provides additional information about the Fund and its policies. The SAI, which has been filed with the SEC, is legally part of this prospectus (incorporated by reference). To obtain
these documents free of charge, to request other information about the Fund and to make shareholder inquiries, please contact the Fund as follows:
By Mail:
Columbia Funds
c/o Columbia Management Investment Services Corp.
P.O. Box 8081
Boston, MA 02266-8081
By Telephone:
800.345.6611
Online:
columbiathreadneedle.com/us
You can review and copy information about the Fund
(including this prospectus, the SAI and shareholder reports when available) at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. To find out more about the operation of the Public Reference Room, call the SEC at 202.551.8090. Reports and
other information about the Fund are also available in the EDGAR Database on the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. You can receive copies of this information, for a fee, by electronic request at the following e-mail address:
publicinfo@sec.gov or by writing the Public Reference Section, Securities and Exchange Commission, Washington, D.C. 20549-1520.
The investment company registration number of Columbia
Funds Series Trust I, of which the Fund is a series, is 811-04367.
Columbia Threadneedle Investments is the global brand
name of the Columbia and Threadneedle group of companies.
© 2018 Columbia Management Investment
Distributors, Inc.
225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02110
800.345.6611
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
April 2, 2018
Columbia Funds Series Trust I
CMG
Ultra Short Term Bond Fund
|
CMGUX
|
|
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2020 Fund
|
Class
Adv: CARGX
|
Class
Inst3: CARHX
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
|
Class
Adv: CAAHX
|
Class
Inst3: CAIDX
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2030 Fund
|
Class
Adv: CARLX
|
Class
Inst3: CARMX
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
|
Class
Adv: CARJX
|
Class
Inst3: CAIEX
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2040 Fund
|
Class
Adv: CAROX
|
Class
Inst3: CARQX
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
|
Class
Adv: CARPX
|
Class
Inst3: CAIHX
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2050 Fund
|
Class
Adv: CARSX
|
Class
Inst3: CARUX
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
|
Class
Adv: CARFX
|
Class
Inst3: CAIJX
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2060 Fund
|
Class
Adv: CARKX
|
Class
Inst3: CARVX
|
Columbia
Adaptive Risk Allocation Fund
|
Class
A: CRAAX
|
Class
Adv: CARRX
|
Class C:
CRACX
|
Class
Inst: CRAZX
|
Class
Inst2: CRDRX
|
Class
Inst3: CARYX
|
Class
R: CRKRX
|
Class
T: CRAWX
|
|
Columbia
Alternative Beta Fund
|
Class
A: CLAAX
|
Class
Adv: CLFUX
|
Class C:
CLABX
|
Class
Inst: CLAZX
|
Class
Inst2: CLIVX
|
Class
Inst3: CLAYX
|
Class
R: CRRLX
|
Class
T: CLAWX
|
Class V:
GCBAX
|
Columbia
AMT-Free Connecticut Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
Class
A: LCTAX
|
Class
Adv: CCTMX
|
Class C:
LCTCX
|
Class
Inst: SCTEX
|
Class
Inst3: CCTYX
|
Class V:
GCBAX
|
Columbia
AMT-Free Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
Class
A: LITAX
|
Class
Adv: CIMRX
|
Class C:
LITCX
|
Class
Inst: SETMX
|
Class
Inst2: CTMRX
|
Class
Inst3: CIMYX
|
Class
T: CAFTX
|
Class
V: GIMAX
|
|
Columbia
AMT-Free Massachusetts Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
Class
A: LMIAX
|
Class
Adv: CMANX
|
Class C:
LMICX
|
Class
Inst: SEMAX
|
Class
Inst2: CMAUX
|
Class
Inst3: CMMYX
|
Class
V: GMBAX
|
|
|
Columbia
AMT-Free New York Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
Class
A: LNYAX
|
Class
Adv: CNYIX
|
Class C:
LNYCX
|
Class
Inst: GNYTX
|
Class
Inst2: CNYUX
|
Class
Inst3: CNYYX
|
Class
V: GANYX
|
|
|
Columbia
AMT-Free Oregon Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
Class
A: COEAX
|
Class
Adv: CORMX
|
Class C:
CORCX
|
Class
Inst: CMBFX
|
Class
Inst2: CODRX
|
Class
Inst3: CORYX
|
Columbia
Balanced Fund
|
Class
A: CBLAX
|
Class
Adv: CBDRX
|
Class C:
CBLCX
|
Class
Inst: CBALX
|
Class
Inst2: CLREX
|
Class
Inst3: CBDYX
|
Class
R: CBLRX
|
Class
T: CBDTX
|
|
Columbia
Bond Fund
|
Class
A: CNDAX
|
Class
Adv: CNDRX
|
Class C:
CNDCX
|
Class
Inst: UMMGX
|
Class
Inst2: CNFRX
|
Class
Inst3: CBFYX
|
Class
R: CBFRX
|
Class
T: CBDWX
|
Class V:
CNDTX
|
Columbia
Contrarian Core Fund
|
Class
A: LCCAX
|
Class
Adv: CORRX
|
Class C:
LCCCX
|
Class
Inst: SMGIX
|
Class
Inst2: COFRX
|
Class
Inst3: COFYX
|
Class
R: CCCRX
|
Class
T: CTRWX
|
Class V:
SGIEX
|
Columbia
Corporate Income Fund
|
Class
A: LIIAX
|
Class
Adv: CIFRX
|
Class C:
CIOCX
|
Class
Inst: SRINX
|
Class
Inst2: CPIRX
|
Class
Inst3: CRIYX
|
Class
T: CPIWX
|
|
|
Columbia
Disciplined Small Core Fund
|
Class
A: LSMAX
|
Class
Adv: CFFRX
|
Class C:
LSMCX
|
Class
Inst: SMCEX
|
Class
Inst2: CLLRX
|
Class
Inst3: CPFRX
|
Class
T: CSCWX
|
Class
V: SSCEX
|
|
Columbia
Diversified Absolute Return Fund
|
Class
A: CDUAX
|
Class
Adv: CDUFX
|
Class C:
CDUCX
|
Class
Inst: CDUZX
|
Class
Inst2: CDUGX
|
Class
Inst3: CDAYX
|
Class
T: CDUWX
|
|
|
Columbia
Diversified Real Return Fund
|
Class
A: CDRAX
|
Class
Adv: CDRRX
|
Class C:
CDRCX
|
Class
Inst: CDRZX
|
Class
Inst2: CDRFX
|
Class
Inst3: CDRYX
|
Class
T: CDTWX
|
|
|
Columbia
Dividend Income Fund
|
Class
A: LBSAX
|
Class
Adv: CVIRX
|
Class C:
LBSCX
|
Class
Inst: GSFTX
|
Class
Inst2: CDDRX
|
Class
Inst3: CDDYX
|
Class
R: CDIRX
|
Class
T: CDVWX
|
Class V:
GEQAX
|
Columbia
Emerging Markets Fund
|
Class
A: EEMAX
|
Class
Adv: CEMHX
|
Class C:
EEMCX
|
Class
Inst: UMEMX
|
Class
Inst2: CEKRX
|
Class
Inst3: CEKYX
|
Class
R: CEMRX
|
Class
T: CEMWX
|
|
Columbia
Global Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
Class
A: CSVAX
|
Class
Adv: CGOLX
|
Class C:
CSRCX
|
Class
Inst: CSVFX
|
Class
Inst2: CADPX
|
Class
Inst3: CLSYX
|
Class
R: CSGRX
|
Class
T: CTVWX
|
|
Columbia
Global Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
Class
A: EENAX
|
Class
Adv: CENRX
|
Class C:
EENCX
|
Class
Inst: UMESX
|
Class
Inst2: CNRRX
|
Class
Inst3: CGEYX
|
Class
R: CETRX
|
Class
T*: —
|
|
Columbia
Global Technology Growth Fund
|
Class
A: CTCAX
|
Class
Adv: CTYRX
|
Class C:
CTHCX
|
Class
Inst: CMTFX
|
Class
Inst2: CTHRX
|
Class
Inst3: CGTUX
|
Class
T*: —
|
|
|
Columbia
Greater China Fund
|
Class
A: NGCAX
|
Class
Adv: CGCHX
|
Class C:
NGCCX
|
Class
Inst: LNGZX
|
Class
Inst2: CGCRX
|
Class
Inst3: CGCYX
|
Class
T: CGCWX
|
|
|
Columbia
High Yield Municipal Fund
|
Class
A: LHIAX
|
Class
Adv: CHIYX
|
Class C:
CHMCX
|
Class
Inst: SRHMX
|
Class
Inst2: CHMYX
|
Class
Inst3: CHHYX
|
Columbia
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
Class
A: LEGAX
|
Class
Adv: CCGRX
|
Class C:
LEGCX
|
Class
E: CLGEX
|
Class
Inst: GEGTX
|
Class
Inst2: CLWFX
|
Class
Inst3: CGFYX
|
Class
R: CGWRX
|
Class T:
CLGWX
|
Class
V: GAEGX
|
|
|
Columbia
Mid Cap Growth Fund
|
Class
A: CBSAX
|
Class
Adv: CPGRX
|
Class C:
CMCCX
|
Class
Inst: CLSPX
|
Class
Inst2: CMGVX
|
Class
Inst3: CMGYX
|
Class
R: CMGRX
|
Class
T: CMRWX
|
Class V:
CBSTX
|
Columbia
Multi-Asset Income Fund
|
Class
A: CLNAX
|
Class
Adv: CLNFX
|
Class C:
CLCNX
|
Class
Inst: CLNZX
|
Class
Inst2: CLNVX
|
Class
Inst3: CMUYX
|
Class
T: CLNWX
|
|
|
Columbia
Pacific/Asia Fund
|
Class
A: CASAX
|
Class
Adv: CPRAX
|
Class C:
CASCX
|
Class
Inst: USPAX
|
Class
Inst3: CPAYX
|
Class T:
CPAWX
|
Columbia
Real Estate Equity Fund
|
Class
A: CREAX
|
Class
Adv: CRERX
|
Class C:
CRECX
|
Class
Inst: CREEX
|
Class
Inst2: CRRVX
|
Class
Inst3: CREYX
|
Class
R: CRSRX
|
Class
T: CREWX
|
|
Columbia
Select Large Cap Growth Fund
|
Class
A: ELGAX
|
Class
Adv: CSRRX
|
Class C:
ELGCX
|
Class
Inst: UMLGX
|
Class
Inst2: CGTRX
|
Class
Inst3: CCWRX
|
Class
R: URLGX
|
Class
T: CSLWX
|
|
Columbia
Small Cap Growth Fund I
|
Class
A: CGOAX
|
Class
Adv: CHHRX
|
Class C:
CGOCX
|
Class
Inst: CMSCX
|
Class
Inst2: CSCRX
|
Class
Inst3: CSGYX
|
Class
R: CCRIX
|
Class
T*: —
|
|
Columbia
Small Cap Value Fund I
|
Class
A: CSMIX
|
Class
Adv: CVVRX
|
Class C:
CSSCX
|
Class
Inst: CSCZX
|
Class
Inst2: CUURX
|
Class
Inst3: CSVYX
|
Class
R: CSVRX
|
Class
T*: —
|
|
Columbia
Solutions Aggressive Portfolio
|
Columbia
Solutions Conservative Portfolio
|
Columbia
Strategic California Municipal Income Fund
|
Class
A: CLMPX
|
Class
Adv: CCARX
|
Class C:
CCAOX
|
Class
Inst: CCAZX
|
Class
Inst2: CCAUX
|
Class
Inst3: CCXYX
|
Columbia
Strategic Income Fund
|
Class
A: COSIX
|
Class
Adv: CMNRX
|
Class C:
CLSCX
|
Class
Inst: LSIZX
|
Class
Inst2: CTIVX
|
Class
Inst3: CPHUX
|
Class
R: CSNRX
|
Class
T: CTTWX
|
|
Columbia
Strategic New York Municipal Income Fund
|
Class
A: COLNX
|
Class
Adv: CNYEX
|
Class C:
CNYCX
|
Class
Inst: CNYZX
|
Class
Inst2: CNYRX
|
Class
Inst3: CNTYX
|
Columbia
Tax-Exempt Fund
|
Class
A: COLTX
|
Class
Adv: CTERX
|
Class C:
COLCX
|
Class
Inst: CTEZX
|
Class
Inst2: CADMX
|
Class
Inst3: CTEYX
|
Columbia
Total Return Bond Fund
|
Class
A: LIBAX
|
Class
Adv: CBNRX
|
Class C:
LIBCX
|
Class
Inst: SRBFX
|
Class
Inst2: CTBRX
|
Class
Inst3: CTBYX
|
Class
R: CIBRX
|
Class
T: CIBWX
|
|
Columbia
U.S. Social Bond Fund
|
Class
A: CONAX
|
Class
Adv: CONFX
|
Class C:
CONCX
|
Class
Inst: CONZX
|
Class
Inst2: COVNX
|
Class
Inst3: CONYX
|
Columbia
U.S. Treasury Index Fund
|
Class
A: LUTAX
|
Class
C: LUTCX
|
Class
Inst: IUTIX
|
Class
Inst2: CUTRX
|
Class
Inst3: CUTYX
|
Class
Inst2: CUTRX
|
Multi-Manager
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
Class
A: CPASX
|
Class
Inst: CZAMX
|
|
Multi-Manager
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
Class
A: CDAAX
|
Class
Inst: CDAZX
|
|
Multi-Manager
Growth Strategies Fund
|
Class
A: CSLGX
|
Class
Inst: CZMGX
|
|
Multi-Manager
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
Class
A: CSCEX
|
Class
Inst: CZMSX
|
|
Multi-Manager
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
Class
A: CMCPX
|
Class
Inst: CTRZX
|
|
*
|
This share class is not
currently available for purchase.
|
Certain share classes in the table above, and
throughout this SAI, are referred to using their abbreviated form. These full share class names are as follows: Advisor Class (Class Adv); Institutional Class (Class Inst); Institutional 2 Class (Class Inst2); and Institutional 3 Class (Class
Inst3). Prior to November 1, 2017, Class Adv was known as Class R4, Class Inst was known as Class Z, Class Inst2 was known as Class R5, and Class Inst3 was known as Class Y.
Unless the context indicates otherwise, references
herein to “each Fund,” “the Fund,” “a Fund,” “the Funds” or “Funds” refers to each Fund listed above.
This Statement of Additional Information (SAI) is not
a prospectus, is not a substitute for reading any prospectus and is intended to be read in conjunction with each Fund’s current prospectus (as amended or supplemented), the date of which may be found in the section of this SAI entitled
About the Trust
.
The most recent annual report for each Fund (as applicable), which includes the Fund’s audited financial statements for its most recent fiscal period, is
incorporated by reference into this SAI.
Copies of the Funds' current prospectuses and
annual and semiannual reports (once available, as applicable) may be obtained without charge by writing Columbia Management Investment Services Corp., P.O. Box 8081, Boston, MA 02266-8081, by calling Columbia Funds at 800.345.6611 or by visiting the
Columbia Funds’ website at www.columbiathreadneedle.com/us.
Table of Contents
|
2
|
|
8
|
|
11
|
|
19
|
|
19
|
|
56
|
|
83
|
|
84
|
|
84
|
|
86
|
|
86
|
|
114
|
|
129
|
|
136
|
|
138
|
|
140
|
|
144
|
|
146
|
|
148
|
|
152
|
|
152
|
|
156
|
|
156
|
|
167
|
|
173
|
|
173
|
|
176
|
|
178
|
|
180
|
|
186
|
|
186
|
|
186
|
|
187
|
|
194
|
|
195
|
|
198
|
|
198
|
|
199
|
|
201
|
|
201
|
|
202
|
|
204
|
|
221
|
|
259
|
|
A-1
|
|
B-1
|
|
C-1
|
|
D-1
|
|
S-1
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
1
|
SAI PRIMER
The SAI is a part of the Funds' registration
statement that is filed with the SEC. The registration statement includes the Funds' prospectuses, the SAI and certain exhibits. The SAI, and any supplements to it, can be found online at www.columbiathreadneedle.com/us and/or by accessing the
SEC’s website at www.sec.gov.
For
purposes of any electronic version of this SAI, all references to websites or universal resource locators (URLs), are intended to be inactive and are not meant to incorporate the contents of any such website or URL into this SAI.
The SAI generally provides additional information
about the Funds that is not required to be in the Funds' prospectuses. The SAI expands discussions of certain matters described in the Funds' prospectuses and provides certain additional information about the Funds that may be of interest to some
investors. Among other things, the SAI provides information about:
■
|
the organization
of the Trust;
|
■
|
the Funds'
investments;
|
■
|
the Funds'
investment adviser, investment subadviser(s) (if any) and other service providers, including roles and relationships of Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates, and conflicts of interest;
|
■
|
the governance of
the Funds;
|
■
|
the Funds'
brokerage practices;
|
■
|
the share classes
offered by the Funds;
|
■
|
the purchase,
redemption and pricing of Fund shares; and
|
■
|
the
application of U.S. federal income tax laws.
|
Investors may find this information important and
helpful. If you have any questions about the Funds, please call Columbia Funds at 800.345.6611 or contact your financial advisor.
Throughout this SAI, the term “financial
intermediary” may refer, generally, to one or more of the selling agents and/or servicing agents that are authorized to sell and/or service shares of the Funds, which may include broker-dealers and financial advisors as well as firms that
employ such broker-dealers and financial advisors, including, for example, brokerage firms, banks, investment advisers, third party administrators and other financial intermediaries, including Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates.
Each Fund typically updates its registration
statement approximately four months after the end of its fiscal year, although in certain circumstances a Fund may update its registration statement sooner. Some of the information in this SAI is reported for a Fund as of the end of the Fund’s
last fiscal year (or period) or during the Fund’s last fiscal year (or period). This is a reference to the fiscal year (or period) ending prior to the Fund’s last annual update, which may be fifteen months or more prior to the date of
the SAI. See
About the Trusts
for each Fund’s fiscal year end and most recent prospectus date (i.e., the date of the Fund’s last annual update).
Columbia Threadneedle Investments is the global
brand name of the Columbia and Threadneedle group of companies.
Before reading the SAI, you should consult the
prospectus for the Fund as well as the Glossary below, which defines certain of the terms used in the SAI. Terms not defined in the Glossary below generally have the same meaning as otherwise ascribed in a Fund’s prospectus.
Glossary
1933
Act
|
Securities
Act of 1933, as amended
|
1934
Act
|
Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended
|
1940
Act
|
Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended
|
Adaptive
Retirement Funds
|
The
Funds within the Columbia Funds Complex that include “Adaptive Retirement” within the fund name.
|
Analytic
Investors
|
Analytic
Investors, LLC
|
Administrative
Services Agreement
|
The
Administrative Services Agreement, as amended, if applicable, between the Trust, on behalf of the Funds, and the Investment Manager
|
Ameriprise
Financial
|
Ameriprise
Financial, Inc.
|
AQR
|
AQR
Capital Management, LLC
|
BANA
|
Bank
of America, National Association
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
2
|
Bank
of America
|
Bank
of America Corporation
|
BMO
|
BMO
Asset Management Corp.
|
Board
|
The
Trust’s Board of Trustees
|
Boston
Partners
|
Boston
Partners, a d.b.a. of Boston Partners Global Investors, Inc.
|
Business
Day
|
Any
day on which the NYSE is open for business. A business day typically ends at the close of regular trading on the NYSE, usually at 4:00 p.m. Eastern time. If the NYSE is scheduled to close early, the business day will be considered to end as of the
time of the NYSE’s scheduled close. The Fund will not treat an intraday unscheduled disruption in NYSE trading or an intraday unscheduled closing as a close of regular trading on the NYSE for these purposes and will price its shares as of the
regularly scheduled closing time for that day (typically, 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). Notwithstanding the foregoing, the NAV of Fund shares may be determined at such other time or times (in addition to or in lieu of the time set forth above) as the
Fund’s Board may approve or ratify. On holidays and other days when the NYSE is closed, the Fund's NAV is not calculated and the Fund does not accept buy or sell orders. However, the value of the Fund's assets may still be affected on such
days to the extent that the Fund holds foreign securities that trade on days that foreign securities markets are open.
|
CEA
|
Commodity
Exchange Act
|
CFST
|
Columbia
Funds Series Trust
|
CFST
I
|
Columbia
Funds Series Trust I
|
CFST
II
|
Columbia
Funds Series Trust II
|
CFTC
|
The
United States Commodities Futures Trading Commission
|
CMOs
|
Collateralized
mortgage obligations
|
Code
|
Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended
|
Codes
of Ethics
|
The
codes of ethics adopted by the Funds, the Investment Manager, Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc. and/or any sub-adviser, as applicable, pursuant to Rule 17j-1 under the 1940 Act
|
Columbia
Funds or Columbia Funds Complex
|
The
fund complex, including the Funds, that is comprised of the registered investment companies, including traditional mutual funds, closed-end funds, and ETFs, advised by the Investment Manager or its affiliates
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management Investment Advisers, LLC
|
Conestoga
|
Conestoga
Capital Advisors, LLC
|
Custodian
|
JPMorgan
Chase Bank, N.A.
|
DGHM
|
Dalton,
Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC
|
Distribution
Agreement
|
The
Distribution Agreement between the Trust, on behalf of its Funds, and the Distributor
|
Distribution
Plan(s)
|
One
or more of the plans adopted by the Board pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act for the distribution of the Funds’ shares
|
Distributor
|
Columbia
Management Investment Distributors, Inc.
|
DST
|
DST
Asset Manager Solutions, Inc.
|
EAM
|
EAM
Investors, LLC
|
FDIC
|
Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation
|
Federated
|
Federated
Investment Management Company
|
FHLMC
|
The
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
|
Fitch
|
Fitch,
Inc.
|
FNMA
|
Federal
National Mortgage Association
|
The
Fund(s) or a Fund
|
One
or more of the open-end management investment companies listed on the front cover of this SAI
|
GNMA
|
Government
National Mortgage Association
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
3
|
Independent
Trustees
|
The
Trustees of the Board who are not “interested persons” (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the Funds
|
Interested
Trustees
|
The
Trustees of the Board who are currently deemed to be “interested persons” (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the Funds
|
Investment
Management Services Agreement
|
The
Investment Management Services Agreement, as amended, if applicable, between the Trust, on behalf of its Funds, and the Investment Manager
|
Investment
Manager
|
Columbia
Management Investment Advisers, LLC
|
IRS
|
United
States Internal Revenue Service
|
JPMorgan
|
JPMorgan
Chase Bank, N.A., the Funds' custodian
|
LIBOR
|
London
Interbank Offered Rate
|
Loomis
Sayles
|
Loomis,
Sayles & Company, L.P.
|
Los
Angeles Capital
|
Los
Angeles Capital Management and Equity Research, Inc.
|
Manulife
|
Manulife
Asset Management (US) LLC
|
Management
Agreement
|
The
Management Agreements, as amended, if applicable, between the Trust, on behalf of the Funds, and the Investment Manager
|
Moody’s
|
Moody’s
Investors Service, Inc.
|
Multi-Manager
Strategies Funds
|
Multi-Manager
Alternative Strategies Fund, Multi-Manager Directional Alternative Strategies Fund, Multi-Manager Growth Strategies Fund, Multi-Manager Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund, Multi-Manager Total Return Bond Strategies Fund and Multi-Manager Value
Strategies Fund. Shares of the Multi-Manager Strategies Funds are offered only through certain wrap fee programs sponsored and/or managed by Ameriprise Financial, Inc. or its affiliates.
|
NASDAQ
|
National
Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations system
|
|
|
NAV
|
Net
asset value per share of a Fund
|
NRSRO
|
Nationally
recognized statistical ratings organization (such as, for example, Moody’s, Fitch or S&P)
|
NSCC
|
National
Securities Clearing Corporation
|
NYSE
|
New
York Stock Exchange
|
Previous
Adviser
|
Columbia
Management Advisors, LLC, the investment adviser of certain Columbia Funds prior to May 1, 2010 when Ameriprise Financial acquired the long-term asset management business of the Previous Adviser, which was an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of
Bank of America.
|
Previous
Distributor
|
Columbia
Management Distributors, Inc., the distributor of certain Columbia Funds prior to May 1, 2010 when Ameriprise Financial acquired the long-term asset management business of the Previous Adviser, which was an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Bank
of America.
|
Previous
Transfer Agent
|
Columbia
Management Services, Inc., the transfer agent of certain Columbia Funds prior to May 1, 2010 when Ameriprise Financial acquired the long-term asset management business of the Previous Adviser, which was an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Bank
of America.
|
PGIM
|
PGIM,
Inc., the asset management arm of Prudential Financial, Inc.
|
PwC
|
PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLP
|
REIT
|
Real
estate investment trust
|
REMIC
|
Real
estate mortgage investment conduit
|
RIC
|
A
“regulated investment company,” as such term is used in the Code
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
4
|
S&P
|
Standard
& Poor’s, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. (“Standard & Poor’s” and “S&P” are trademarks of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. and have been licensed for use by the Investment Manager. The
Columbia Funds are not sponsored, endorsed, sold or promoted by Standard & Poor’s and Standard & Poor’s makes no representation regarding the advisability of investing in the Columbia Funds)
|
SAI
|
This
Statement of Additional Information, as amended and supplemented from time-to-time
|
SEC
|
United
States Securities and Exchange Commission
|
Shares
|
Shares
of a Fund
|
Solution
Series Funds
|
Columbia
Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio
|
Subadvisory
Agreement
|
The
Subadvisory Agreement among the Trust on behalf of the Fund(s), the Investment Manager and a Fund’s investment subadviser(s), as the context may require
|
Subsidiary
|
One
or more wholly-owned subsidiaries of a Fund
|
TCW
|
TCW
Investment Management Company LLC
|
Threadneedle
|
Threadneedle
International Limited
|
Transfer
Agency Agreement
|
The
Transfer and Dividend Disbursing Agent Agreement between the Trust, on behalf of its Funds, and the Transfer Agent
|
Transfer
Agent
|
Columbia
Management Investment Services Corp.
|
Trustee(s)
|
One
or more members of the Board
|
Trust
|
Columbia
Funds Series Trust I, the registered investment company in the Columbia Funds Complex to which this SAI relates
|
VP
– Managed Volatility Funds
|
Any
variable portfolio fund that includes the words “Managed Risk,” “Managed Volatility,” or “U.S. Flexible” as part of the Fund’s name
|
Wasatch
|
Wasatch
Advisors Inc
|
Water
Island
|
Water
Island Capital, LLC
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
5
|
Throughout this SAI, the Funds are referred to as
follows:
Fund
Name:
|
|
Referred
to as:
|
CMG
Ultra Short Term Bond Fund
|
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2020 Fund
|
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
|
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2030 Fund
|
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
|
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2040 Fund
|
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
|
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2050 Fund
|
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
|
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
|
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2060 Fund
|
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
|
Columbia
Adaptive Risk Allocation Fund
|
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
Columbia
Alternative Beta Fund
|
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
Columbia
AMT-Free Connecticut Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
Columbia
AMT-Free Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
Columbia
AMT-Free Massachusetts Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
Columbia
AMT-Free New York Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
Columbia
AMT-Free Oregon Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
Columbia
Balanced Fund
|
|
Balanced
Fund
|
Columbia
Bond Fund
|
|
Bond
Fund
|
Columbia
Contrarian Core Fund
|
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
Columbia
Corporate Income Fund
|
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
Columbia
Disciplined Small Core Fund
|
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
Columbia
Diversified Absolute Return Fund
|
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
Columbia
Diversified Real Return Fund
|
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
Columbia
Dividend Income Fund
|
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
Columbia
Emerging Markets Fund
|
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
Columbia
Global Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
Columbia
Global Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
Columbia
Global Technology Growth Fund
|
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
Columbia
Greater China Fund
|
|
Greater
China Fund
|
Columbia
High Yield Municipal Fund
|
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
Columbia
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
Columbia
Mid Cap Growth Fund
|
|
Mid Cap
Growth Fund
|
Columbia
Multi-Asset Income Fund
|
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
Columbia
Pacific/Asia Fund
|
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
Columbia
Real Estate Equity Fund
|
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
Columbia
Select Large Cap Growth Fund
|
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
Columbia
Small Cap Growth Fund I
|
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
Columbia
Small Cap Value Fund I
|
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
Columbia
Solutions Aggressive Portfolio
|
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
|
Columbia
Solutions Conservative Portfolio
|
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
|
Columbia
Strategic California Municipal Income Fund
|
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
Columbia
Strategic Income Fund
|
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
6
|
Fund
Name:
|
|
Referred
to as:
|
Columbia
Strategic New York Municipal Income Fund
|
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
Columbia
Tax-Exempt Fund
|
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
Columbia
Total Return Bond Fund
|
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
Columbia
U.S. Social Bond Fund
|
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
Columbia
U.S. Treasury Index Fund
|
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
Multi-Manager
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
Multi-Manager
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
Multi-Manager
Growth Strategies Fund
|
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
Multi-Manager
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
Multi-Manager
Total Return Bond Fund
|
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
7
|
ABOUT THE Trust
The Trust is an open-end management investment
company registered with the SEC under the 1940 Act with an address at 225 Franklin Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110.
The Trust was organized as a Massachusetts business
trust on October 6, 1987. On October 13, 2003, the Trust changed its name from Liberty-Stein Roe Funds Municipal Trust to Columbia Funds Trust IX. On September 19, 2005, the Trust changed its name from Columbia Funds Trust IX to its current name.
The offering of the shares is registered under the 1933 Act.
Fund
|
Fiscal
Year End
|
Prospectus
Date
|
Date
Began
Operations*
|
Diversified**
|
Fund
Investment Category***
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
|
March
31
|
10/23/2017
|
10/24/2017
|
No
|
Fund-of-funds
– alternative
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
|
March
31
|
4/2/2018
|
4/5/2018
†
|
No
|
Fund-of-funds
– alternative
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
|
March
31
|
10/23/2017
|
10/24/2017
|
No
|
Fund-of-funds
– alternative
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
|
March
31
|
4/2/2018
|
4/5/2018
†
|
No
|
Fund-of-funds
– alternative
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
|
March
31
|
10/23/2017
|
10/24/2017
|
No
|
Fund-of-funds
– alternative
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
|
March
31
|
4/2/2018
|
4/5/2018
†
|
No
|
Fund-of-funds
– alternative
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
|
March
31
|
10/23/2017
|
10/24/2017
|
No
|
Fund-of-funds
– alternative
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
|
March
31
|
4/2/2018
|
4/5/2018
†
|
No
|
Fund-of-funds
– alternative
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
|
March
31
|
10/23/2017
|
10/24/2017
|
No
|
Fund-of-funds
– alternative
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
May
31
|
8/1/2017
|
6/19/2012
|
No
|
Alternative
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
May
31
|
10/1/2017
|
1/28/2015
|
No
|
Alternative
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
October
31
|
3/1/2018
|
8/1/1994
|
No
|
Tax-exempt
fixed-income
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
October
31
|
3/1/2018
|
6/14/1993
|
Yes
|
Tax-exempt
fixed-income
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
October
31
|
3/1/2018
|
6/14/1993
|
No
|
Tax-exempt
fixed-income
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
October
31
|
3/1/2018
|
12/31/1991
|
No
|
Tax-exempt
fixed-income
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
July
31
|
11/1/2017
|
7/2/1984
|
Yes
|
Tax-exempt
fixed-income
|
Balanced
Fund
|
August
31
|
1/1/2018
|
10/1/1991
|
Yes
|
Equity/Taxable
fixed-income
|
Bond
Fund
|
April
30
|
9/1/2017
|
1/9/1986
|
Yes
|
Taxable
fixed-income
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
August
31
|
1/1/2018
|
12/14/1992
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
April
30
|
9/1/2017
|
3/5/1986
|
Yes
|
Taxable
fixed-income
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
August
31
|
1/1/2018
|
12/14/1992
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
May
31
|
10/1/2017
|
2/19/2015
|
Yes
|
Alternative
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
January
31
|
6/1/2017
|
3/11/2014
|
Yes
|
Fund-of-funds-fixed
income
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
May
31
|
10/1/2017
|
3/4/1998
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
August
31
|
1/1/2018
|
1/2/1998
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
August
31
|
1/1/2018
|
11/9/2000
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
August
31
|
1/1/2018
|
12/31/1992
|
No
|
Equity
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
August
31
|
1/1/2018
|
11/9/2000
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
Greater
China Fund
|
August
31
|
1/1/2018
|
5/16/1997
|
No
|
Equity
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
May
31
|
10/1/2017
|
3/5/1984
|
Yes
|
Tax-exempt
fixed-income
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
July
31
|
11/1/2017
|
12/14/1990
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
August
31
|
1/1/2018
|
11/20/1985
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
August
31
|
1/1/2018
|
4/23/2012
|
No
|
Alternative
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
8
|
Fund
|
Fiscal
Year End
|
Prospectus
Date
|
Date
Began
Operations*
|
Diversified**
|
Fund
Investment Category***
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
April
30
|
9/1/2017
|
10/17/2016
|
No
|
Alternative
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
March
31
|
8/1/2017
|
4/20/2012
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
August
31
|
1/1/2018
|
4/20/2012
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
August
31
|
1/1/2018
|
4/20/2012
|
Yes
|
Taxable
fixed-income
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
April
30
|
9/1/2017
|
3/27/2015
|
Yes
|
Flexible
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
March
31
|
8/1/2017
|
12/31/1992
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
December
31
|
5/1/2017
|
4/1/1994
|
No
|
Equity
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
March
31
|
8/1/2017
|
10/1/1997
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
August
31
|
1/1/2018
|
10/1/1996
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
April
30
|
9/1/2017
|
7/25/1986
|
Yes
|
Equity
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
|
March
31
|
10/23/2017
|
10/24/2017
|
No
|
Alternative
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
|
March
31
|
10/23/2017
|
10/24/2017
|
No
|
Alternative
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
October
31
|
3/1/2018
|
6/16/1986
|
No
|
Tax-exempt
fixed-income
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
August
31
(a)
|
1/1/2018
|
4/21/1977
|
Yes
|
Taxable
fixed-income
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
October
31
|
3/1/2018
|
9/26/1986
|
No
|
Tax-exempt
fixed-income
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
July
31
|
11/1/2017
|
11/21/1978
|
Yes
|
Tax-exempt
fixed-income
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
April
30
|
9/1/2017
|
12/5/1978
|
Yes
|
Taxable
fixed-income
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
July
31
|
11/1/2017
|
3/26/2015
|
No
|
Tax-exempt
fixed-income
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
April
30
|
9/1/2017
|
6/4/1991
|
Yes
|
Taxable
fixed-income
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
July
31
|
11/1/2017
|
3/8/2004
|
Yes
|
Taxable
fixed-income
|
†
The Fund is expected to commence operations on or about April 5, 2018.
*
|
Certain Funds reorganized into
series of the Trust. The date of operations for these Funds represents the date on which the predecessor funds began operation.
|
**
|
A “diversified”
Fund may not, with respect to 75% of its total assets, invest more than 5% of its total assets in securities of any one issuer or purchase more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of any one issuer, except obligations issued or guaranteed
by the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities and except securities of other investment companies. A “non-diversified” Fund may invest a greater percentage of its total assets in the securities of fewer issuers than a
“diversified” fund, which increases the risk that a change in the value of any one investment held by the Fund could affect the overall value of the Fund more than it would affect that of a “diversified” fund holding a
greater number of investments. Accordingly, a “non-diversified” Fund’s value will likely be more volatile than the value of a more diversified fund.
|
***
|
The Fund Investment Category is
used as a convenient way to describe Funds in this SAI and should not be deemed a description of the Fund’s principal investment strategies, which are described in the Fund’s prospectus.
|
(a) The Fund changed its fiscal year end in 2017 from October 31
to August 31.
Name Changes.
The table below identifies the Funds whose names have changed in the past five years, the effective date of the name change and the former name.
Fund
|
Effective
Date of Name Change
|
Previous
Fund Name
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation
|
October
1, 2014
|
Columbia
Risk Allocation Fund
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
October
1, 2016
|
Columbia
Adaptive Alternatives Fund
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
July
7, 2014
|
Columbia
Connecticut Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
July
7, 2014
|
Columbia
Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
July
7, 2014
|
Columbia
Massachusetts Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
9
|
Fund
|
Effective
Date of Name Change
|
Previous
Fund Name
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
July
7, 2014
|
Columbia
New York Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
July
7, 2014
|
Columbia
Oregon Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
April
18, 2016
|
Columbia
Small Cap Core Fund
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
August
5, 2013
|
Columbia
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
July
7, 2014
|
Columbia
Technology Fund
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
February
28, 2017
October 12, 2016
|
Active
Portfolios
®
Multi-Manager Alternatives Fund
Active Portfolios
®
Multi-Manager Alternative Strategies Fund
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
February
28, 2017
|
Active
Portfolios
®
Multi-Manager Directional Alternatives Fund
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
February
28, 2017
December 11, 2013
|
Active
Portfolios
®
Multi-Manager Growth Fund
Columbia
Active Portfolios
®
– Select Large Cap Growth Fund
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
February
28, 2017
|
Active
Portfolios
®
Multi-Manager Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
February
28, 2017
April 11, 2016
|
Active
Portfolios
®
Multi-Manager Total Return Bond Fund
Active Portfolios
®
Multi-Manager Core Plus Bond Fund
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
January
22, 2018
|
Columbia
California Tax-Exempt Fund
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
January
22, 2018
|
Columbia
New York Tax-Exempt Fund
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
February
19, 2016
|
Columbia
Intermediate Bond Fund
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
10
|
FUNDAMENTAL AND NON-FUNDAMENTAL
INVESTMENT POLICIES
The following
discussion of “fundamental” and “non-fundamental” investment policies and limitations for each Fund supplements the discussion of investment policies in the Funds' prospectuses. A fundamental policy may be changed only with
Board and shareholder approval. A non-fundamental policy may be changed only with Board approval and does not require shareholder approval.
Unless otherwise noted in a Fund’s prospectus
or this SAI, whenever an investment policy or limitation states a maximum percentage of a Fund’s assets that may be invested in any security or other asset, or sets forth a policy regarding an investment standard, compliance with such
percentage limitation or standard will be determined solely at the time of the Fund’s acquisition of such security or asset (Time of Purchase Standard). Thus, a Fund may continue to hold a security even though it causes the Fund to exceed a
percentage limitation because of fluctuation in the value of the Fund’s assets.
Notwithstanding any of a Fund’s other
investment policies, the Fund, subject to certain limitations, may invest its assets in another investment company. These underlying funds have adopted their own investment policies that may be more or less restrictive than those of the Fund. Unless
a Fund has a policy to consider the policies of underlying funds, the Fund may engage in investment strategies indirectly that would otherwise be prohibited under the Fund’s investment policies.
In adhering to the fundamental and non-fundamental
investment restrictions and policies applicable to each of Alternative Beta Fund, MM Alternative Strategies Fund and Diversified Absolute Return Fund, each Fund will, to the extent possible, treat any assets of its Subsidiary generally as if the
assets were held directly by the Fund.
Fundamental
Policies
The table below shows Fund-specific
policies that may be changed only with a “vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities” of the Fund, which means the affirmative vote of the lesser of (1) more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the Fund, or (2) 67% or more
of the shares present at a meeting if more than 50% of the outstanding shares are represented at the meeting in person or by proxy. The table indicates whether or not a fund has a policy on a particular topic. A dash indicates that the Fund does not
have a Fundamental policy on a particular topic. The specific policy is stated in the paragraphs that follow the table.
Fund
|
A
Buy or
sell real
estate
|
B
Buy or sell
commodities
|
C
Issuer
Diversification
|
D
Concentrate
in any one
industry
|
E
Invest
80%
|
F
Act as an
underwriter
|
G
Lending
|
H
Borrow
money
|
I
Issue
senior
securities
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
|
A2
|
B5
|
—
|
D7
|
—
|
F2
|
G3
|
H3
|
I3
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
|
A2
|
B5
|
—
|
D7
|
—
|
F2
|
G3
|
H3
|
I3
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
|
A2
|
B5
|
—
|
D7
|
—
|
F2
|
G3
|
H3
|
I3
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
|
A2
|
B5
|
—
|
D7
|
—
|
F2
|
G3
|
H3
|
I3
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
|
A2
|
B5
|
—
|
D7
|
—
|
F2
|
G3
|
H3
|
I3
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
|
A2
|
B5
|
—
|
D7
|
—
|
F2
|
G3
|
H3
|
I3
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
|
A2
|
B5
|
—
|
D7
|
—
|
F2
|
G3
|
H3
|
I3
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
|
A2
|
B5
|
—
|
D7
|
—
|
F2
|
G3
|
H3
|
I3
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
|
A2
|
B5
|
—
|
D7
|
—
|
F2
|
G3
|
H3
|
I3
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
—
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
A2
|
B4
|
—
|
D6
|
—
|
F2
|
G2
|
H2
|
I2
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
—
|
D1
|
E2
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
E3
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
—
|
D1
|
E4
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
—
|
D1
|
E5
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C3
|
D1
|
E6
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Balanced
Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Bond
Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
11
|
Fund
|
A
Buy or
sell real
estate
|
B
Buy or sell
commodities
|
C
Issuer
Diversification
|
D
Concentrate
in any one
industry
|
E
Invest
80%
|
F
Act as an
underwriter
|
G
Lending
|
H
Borrow
money
|
I
Issue
senior
securities
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
A2
|
B4
|
C4
|
D6
|
—
|
F2
|
G2
|
H2
|
I2
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
A1
|
B3
|
C1
|
D5
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
—
|
D2
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
—
|
D4
|
E9
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Greater
China Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C2
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
A1
|
B2
|
—
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
A2
|
B5
|
—
|
D7
|
—
|
F2
|
G3
|
H3
|
I3
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
A2
|
B4
|
C4
|
D6
|
—
|
F2
|
G2
|
H2
|
I2
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
—
|
D3
|
E7
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
|
A2
|
B5
|
—
|
D7
|
—
|
F2
|
G3
|
H3
|
I3
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
|
A2
|
B5
|
—
|
D7
|
—
|
F2
|
G3
|
H3
|
I3
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
—
|
D1
|
E1
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
—
|
D1
|
E1
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
E8
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
A2
|
B4
|
—
|
D6
|
—
|
F2
|
G2
|
H2
|
I2
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
A1
|
B1
|
C1
|
D1
|
—
|
F1
|
G1
|
H1
|
I1
|
A.
|
Buy or sell real
estate
|
A1 –
|
The Fund may not
purchase or sell real estate, except each Fund may: (i) purchase securities of issuers which deal or invest in real estate, (ii) purchase securities which are secured by real estate or interests in real estate and (iii) hold and dispose of real
estate or interests in real estate acquired through the exercise of its rights as a holder of securities which are secured by real estate or interests therein.
|
A2
–
|
The
Fund will not buy or sell real estate, unless acquired as a result of ownership of securities or other instruments, except this shall not prevent the Fund from investing in: (i) securities or other instruments backed by real estate or interests in
real estate, (ii) securities or other instruments of issuers or entities that deal in real estate or are engaged in the real estate business, (iii) real estate investment trusts (REITs) or entities similar to REITs formed under the laws of non-U.S.
countries or (iv) real estate or interests in real estate acquired through the exercise of its rights as a holder of securities secured by real estate or interests therein.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
12
|
B.
|
Buy or sell physical
commodities
|
B1 –
|
The Fund may not
purchase or sell commodities, except that each Fund may to the extent consistent with its investment objective: (i) invest in securities of companies that purchase or sell commodities or which invest in such programs, (ii) purchase and sell options,
forward contracts, futures contracts, and options on futures contracts and (iii) enter into swap contracts and other financial transactions relating to commodities.
(a)
This limitation does not apply to foreign currency transactions including without limitation forward currency contracts.
|
B2 –
|
The Fund may
invest up to 25% of its total assets in one or more wholly-owned subsidiaries that may invest in commodities, thereby indirectly gaining exposure to commodities, and may, to the extent consistent with its investment objective, (i) invest in
securities of companies that purchase or sell commodities or which invest in such programs, (ii) purchase and sell options, forward contracts, futures contracts, and options on futures contracts and (iii) enter into swap contracts and other
financial transactions relating to commodities.
(a)
This policy does not limit foreign currency transactions including without limitation forward currency
contracts.
|
B3 –
|
The Fund will not
purchase or sell commodities, except to the extent permitted by applicable law from time to time.
|
B4 –
|
The Fund will not
purchase or sell commodities, except to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief, as interpreted or modified by regulatory authority having jurisdiction, from time to time.
|
B5
–
|
The
Fund will not purchase or sell commodities, except to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief.
|
(a)
|
For purposes of the fundamental
investment policy on buying and selling physical commodities above, at the time of the establishment of the restriction for certain Funds, swap contracts on financial instruments or rates were not within the understanding of the term
“commodities.” Notwithstanding any federal legislation or regulatory action by the CFTC that subjects such swaps to regulation by the CFTC, these Funds will not consider such instruments to be commodities for purposes of this
restriction.
|
C.
|
Issuer
Diversification*
|
C1 –
|
The Fund may not
purchase securities (except securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities) of any one issuer if, as a result, more than 5% of its total assets will be invested in the securities of such issuer or it would
own more than 10% of the voting securities of such issuer, except that: (i) up to 25% of its total assets may be invested without regard to these limitations and (ii) a Fund’s assets may be invested in the securities of one or more management
investment companies to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder, or any applicable exemptive relief.
|
C2 –
|
The Fund may not,
as a matter of fundamental policy, purchase securities (except securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities) of any one issuer if, as a result, more than 5% of its total assets will be invested in the
securities of such issuer or it would own more than 10% of the voting securities of such issuer, except that: (i) up to 50% of its total assets may be invested without regard to these limitations and (ii) the Fund’s assets may be invested in
the securities of one or more management investment companies to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder, or any applicable exemptive relief.
|
C3 –
|
The Fund will not
make any investment inconsistent with its classification as a diversified company under the 1940 Act.
|
C4
–
|
The
Fund will not purchase securities (except securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities) of any one issuer if, as a result, more than 5% of its total assets will be invested in the securities of such
issuer or it would own more than 10% of the voting securities of such issuer, except that: (a) up to 25% of its total assets may be invested without regard to these limitations; and (b) a Fund’s assets may be invested in the securities of one
or more management investment companies to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder, or any applicable exemptive relief, as interpreted or modified by regulatory authority having jurisdiction, from time to time.
|
*
|
For purposes of applying the
limitation set forth in its issuer diversification policy above, a Fund does not consider futures or swaps central counterparties, where the Fund has exposure to such central counterparties in the course of making investments in futures and
securities, to be issuers.
|
D1 –
|
The Fund may not
purchase any securities which would cause 25% or more of the value of its total assets at the time of purchase to be invested in the securities of one or more issuers conducting their principal business activities in the same industry, provided
that: (i) there is no limitation with respect to obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, any state or territory of the United States or any of their agencies, instrumentalities or political
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
13
|
|
subdivisions; and
(ii) notwithstanding this limitation or any other fundamental investment limitation, assets may be invested in the securities of one or more management investment companies or subsidiaries to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and
regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief.
|
D2 –
|
The Fund may not
purchase any securities which would cause 25% or more of the value of its total assets at the time of purchase to be invested in the securities of one or more issuers conducting their principal business activities in the same industry, provided
that: (i) there is no limitation with respect to obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, any state or territory of the United States or any of their agencies, instrumentalities or political subdivisions; (ii) notwithstanding this
limitation or any other fundamental investment limitation, assets may be invested in the securities of one or more management investment companies or subsidiaries to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any
applicable exemptive relief; and (iii) under normal market conditions, the Fund will invest at least 25% of the value of its total assets at the time of purchase in the securities of issuers conducting their principal business activities in the
energy and other natural resources groups of industries.
(a)
|
D3 –
|
The Fund will
invest at least 65% of the value of its total assets in securities of companies principally engaged in the real estate industry.
|
D4 –
|
The Fund will,
under normal market conditions, invest at least 25% of the value of its total assets at the time of purchase in the securities of issuers conducting their principal business activities in the technology and related group of industries, provided
that: (i) there is no limitation with respect to obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, any state or territory of the United States or any of their agencies, instrumentalities or political subdivisions; and (ii) notwithstanding
this limitation or any other fundamental investment limitation, assets may be invested in the securities of one or more management investment companies or subsidiaries to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and
any applicable exemptive relief.
|
D5 –
|
The Fund may not
purchase any securities which would cause 25% or more of the value of its total assets at the time of purchase to be invested in the securities of one or more issuers conducting their principal business activities in the same industry, provided
that: (i) there is no limitation with respect to obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, any state, municipality or territory of the United States, or any of their agencies, instrumentalities or political subdivisions; and (ii)
notwithstanding this limitation or any other fundamental investment limitation, assets may be invested in the securities of one or more management investment companies or subsidiaries to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and
regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief. The Fund will consider the concentration policies of any underlying funds in which it invests when evaluating compliance with its concentration policy.
|
D6 –
|
The Fund will not
purchase any securities which would cause 25% or more of the value of its total assets at the time of purchase to be invested in the securities of one or more issuers conducting their principal business activities in the same industry, provided
that: (i) there is no limitation with respect to obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, any state, municipality or territory of the United States or any of their agencies, instrumentalities or political subdivisions; and (ii)
notwithstanding this limitation or any other fundamental investment limitation, assets may be invested in the securities of one or more investment companies or subsidiaries to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations
thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief, as interpreted or modified by regulatory authority having jurisdiction, from time to time. The Fund will consider the concentration policies of any underlying funds in which it invests when evaluating
compliance with its concentration policy.
|
D7
–
|
The
Fund will not purchase any securities which would cause 25% or more of the value of its total assets at the time of purchase to be invested in the securities of one or more issuers conducting their principal business activities in the same
industry, provided that: (i) there is no limitation with respect to obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, any state or territory of the United States or any of their agencies, instrumentalities or political subdivisions; and (ii)
notwithstanding this limitation or any other fundamental investment limitation, assets may be invested in the securities of one or more investment companies or subsidiaries to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations
thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief.
|
*
|
For purposes of applying the
limitation set forth in its concentration policy, above, a Fund will generally use the industry classifications provided by the Global Industry Classification System (GICS) for classification of issuers of equity securities and the classifications
provided by the Barclays Capital Aggregate Bond Index for classification of issues of fixed-income securities. To the extent that a Fund’s concentration policy requires the Fund to consider the concentration policies of any underlying funds in
which it invests, the Fund will consider the portfolio positions at the time of purchase, which in the case of unaffiliated underlying funds is based on portfolio information made publicly available by them. A Fund does not consider futures or swaps
clearinghouses or securities clearinghouses, where the Fund has exposure to such clearinghouses in the course of making investments in futures and securities, to be part of any industry.
|
(a)
|
In determining whether Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund has invested at least 25% of the value of its total assets in the securities of one or more issuers conducting their principal business activities in the energy and other natural resources groups of industries, the
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
14
|
|
Investment Manager currently
uses the GICS produced by S&P and MSCI Inc. The Investment Manager currently considers companies in each of the indicated GICS industry groups to be within the energy and other natural resources groups of industries: (i) Energy, (ii) Utilities,
and (iii) Materials, but limited to companies in the following GICS industries and sub-industries: the Chemicals industry (companies that primarily produce or distribute industrial and basic chemicals, including the Commodity Chemicals, Diversified
Chemicals, Fertilizers & Agriculture Chemicals, Industrial Gases, and Specialty Chemicals sub-industries), the Metals & Mining industry (companies that primarily produce, process, extract, or distribute precious or basic metals or minerals,
including the Aluminum, Diversified Metals & Mining, Gold, Precious Metals & Minerals, and Steel sub-industries), and the Paper & Forest Products industry (companies that primarily cultivate or manufacture timber or wood-related products
or paper products, including the Forest Products and Paper Products sub-industries).
|
E1 –
|
The Fund will,
under normal circumstances, invest at least 80% of its total assets in state bonds, subject to applicable state requirements.
|
E2 –
|
Under normal
circumstances, the Fund invests at least 80% of net assets in municipal securities that pay interest exempt from federal income tax (including the federal alternative minimum tax) and Connecticut individual income tax. These securities are issued by
the State of Connecticut and its political subdivisions, agencies, authorities and instrumentalities, by other qualified issuers (such as Guam, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands) and by mutual funds that invest in such securities. Dividends
derived from interest on municipal securities other than such securities will generally be exempt from regular federal income tax (including the federal alternative minimum tax) but subject to Connecticut personal income tax. The Fund may comply
with this 80% policy by investing in a partnership, trust or regulated investment company which invests in such securities, in which case the Fund’s investment in such entity shall be deemed to be an investment in the underlying securities in
the same proportion as such entity’s investment in such securities bears to its net assets.
|
E3 –
|
As a matter of
fundamental policy, under normal circumstances, the Fund invests at least 80% of net assets in municipal securities that pay interest exempt from federal income tax (including the federal alternative minimum tax). These securities are issued by
states and their political subdivisions, agencies, authorities and instrumentalities, by other qualified issuers (such as Guam, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands) and by mutual funds that invest in such securities. The Fund may comply with
this 80% policy by investing in a partnership, trust, or regulated investment company which invests in such securities, in which case the Fund’s investment in such entity shall be deemed to be an investment in the underlying securities in the
same proportion as such entity’s investment in such securities bears to its net assets.
|
E4 –
|
Under normal
circumstances, the Fund invests at least 80% of net assets in municipal securities that pay interest exempt from federal income tax (including the federal alternative minimum tax) and Massachusetts individual income tax. These securities are issued
by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and its political subdivisions, agencies, authorities and instrumentalities, by other qualified issuers (such as Guam, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands) and by mutual funds that invest in such securities.
Dividends derived from interest on municipal securities other than such securities will generally be exempt from regular federal income tax (including the federal alternative minimum tax) but may be subject to Massachusetts personal income tax. The
Fund may comply with this 80% policy by investing in a partnership, trust, or regulated investment company which invests in such securities, in which case the Fund’s investment in such entity shall be deemed to be an investment in the
underlying securities in the same proportion as such entity’s investment in such securities bears to its net assets.
|
E5 –
|
As a matter of
fundamental policy, under normal circumstances, the Fund invests at least 80% of net assets in municipal securities that pay interest exempt from federal income tax (including the federal alternative minimum tax) and New York State individual income
tax. These securities are issued by the State of New York and its political subdivisions, agencies, authorities and instrumentalities and by other qualified issuers (such as Guam, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands). Dividends derived from
interest on municipal securities other than such securities will generally be exempt from regular federal income tax (including the federal alternative minimum tax) but may be subject to New York State and New York City personal income tax. The Fund
may comply with this 80% policy by investing in a partnership, trust or regulated investment company which invests in such securities, in which case the Fund’s investment in such entity shall be deemed to be an investment in the underlying
securities in the same proportion as such entity’s investment in such securities bears to its net assets.
|
E6 –
|
Under normal
circumstances, the Fund invests at least 80% of its net assets in municipal securities issued by the State of Oregon and its political subdivisions, agencies, authorities and instrumentalities.
|
E7 –
|
Under normal
circumstances, the Fund invests at least 80% of its net assets in equity securities of companies principally engaged in the real estate industry, including REITs.
|
E8
–
|
Under
normal circumstances, the Fund invests at least 80% of its total assets in tax-exempt bonds.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
15
|
E9 –
|
Under normal
circumstances, the Fund invests at least 80% of net assets in equity securities (including, but not limited to, common stocks, preferred stocks and securities convertible into common or preferred stocks) of technology companies that may benefit from
technological improvements, advancements or developments.
|
F1 –
|
The Fund may not
underwrite any issue of securities issued by other persons within the meaning of the 1933 Act except when it might be deemed to be an underwriter either: (i) in connection with the disposition of a portfolio security; or (ii) in connection with the
purchase of securities directly from the issuer thereof in accordance with the Fund’s investment objective. This restriction shall not limit the Fund’s ability to invest in securities issued by other registered investment companies.
|
F2
–
|
The
Fund will not underwrite any issue of securities issued by other persons within the meaning of the 1933 Act except when it might be deemed to be an underwriter either: (i) in connection with the disposition of a portfolio security; or (ii) in
connection with the purchase of securities directly from the issuer where the Fund later resells such securities. This restriction shall not limit the Fund’s ability to invest in securities issued by other registered investment companies.
|
G1 –
|
The Fund may not
make loans, except to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief.
|
G2 –
|
The Fund will not
make loans, except to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief, as interpreted or modified by regulatory authority having jurisdiction, from time to time.
|
G3
–
|
The
Fund will not make loans, except to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief.
|
H1 –
|
The Fund may not
borrow money except to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief.
|
H2 –
|
The Fund will not
borrow money except to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief, as interpreted or modified by regulatory authority having jurisdiction, from time to time.
|
H3
–
|
The
Fund will not borrow money except to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief.
|
I.
|
Issue senior
securities
|
I1 –
|
The Fund may not
issue senior securities, except as permitted under the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief.
|
I2 –
|
The Fund will not
issue senior securities, except as permitted under the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief, as interpreted or modified by regulatory authority having jurisdiction, from time to time.
|
I3
–
|
The
Fund will not issue senior securities, except as permitted under the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief.
|
Non-fundamental Policies
The following non-fundamental policies may be
changed by the Board at any time and may be in addition to those described in the Funds' prospectus.
Investment in Illiquid Securities
No more than 15% of the net assets of any Fund will be held in
securities and other instruments that are illiquid. “Illiquid Securities” are defined in accordance with the SEC staff’s current guidance and interpretations which provide that an illiquid security is a security which may not be
sold or disposed of in the ordinary course of business within seven days at approximately the value at which the Fund has valued the security. Compliance with this limitation is not measured under the Time of Purchase Standard.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
16
|
Investment in Other Investment Companies
The Funds may not purchase securities of other investment companies
except to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief.
Investment in Foreign Securities
■
|
Bond Fund may
invest up to 25% of its assets in dollar-denominated debt securities issued by foreign governments, companies or other entities.
|
■
|
Balanced Fund,
Contrarian Core Fund and Dividend Income Fund each may invest up to 20% of its net assets in foreign securities.
|
■
|
Disciplined Small
Core Fund, Large Cap Growth Fund, Mid Cap Growth Fund, Small Cap Growth Fund I and Small Cap Value Fund I
each may invest up to 20% of its total assets in foreign securities.
|
■
|
Up to 25% of the
net assets of MM Total Return Bond Strategies Fund may be invested in foreign investments, which may include investments in non-U.S. dollar denominated securities, as well as investments in emerging markets securities.
|
■
|
MM Small Cap
Equity Strategies Fund may invest up to 25% of its net assets in foreign investments.
|
■
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund may invest up to 20% of its total assets in dollar-denominated foreign debt securities.
|
Selling Securities Short
■
|
Each Fund (other
than those Funds listed below) may not sell securities short, except as permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief.
|
■
|
The following
Funds may not sell securities short: AMT-Free OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Balanced Fund, Bond Fund, Emerging Markets Fund, Global Dividend Opportunity Fund, Global Energy and Natural Resources Fund, Global Technology Growth Fund, Mid Cap Growth
Fund, MM Growth Strategies Fund, MM Total Return Bond Strategies Fund Pacific/Asia Fund, Real Estate Equity Fund, Select Large Cap Growth Fund and Small Cap Growth Fund I.
|
■
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund may not have a short position, unless the Fund owns, or owns rights (exercisable without payment) to acquire, an equal amount of such securities.
|
Purchasing on Margin
■
|
Tax-Exempt Fund
may not purchase securities on margin, but may receive short-term credit to clear securities transactions and may make initial or maintenance margin deposits in connection with futures transactions.
|
Additional Information About
Concentration
The Adaptive Retirement Funds have adopted a
policy to not concentrate their investments in any particular industry or group of industries. However, because these Funds invest principally in underlying funds, they may indirectly concentrate in a particular industry or group of industries
through investments in the underlying funds.
Names Rule Policy
To the extent a Fund is subject to Rule 35d-1 under the 1940 Act
(the Names Rule), and does not otherwise have a fundamental policy in place to comply with the Names Rule, such Fund has adopted the following non-fundamental policy: Shareholders will receive at least 60 days’ notice of any change to the
Fund’s investment objective or principal investment strategies made in order to comply with the Names Rule. The notice will be provided in plain English in a separate written document, and will contain the following prominent statement or
similar statement in bold-face type: “Important Notice Regarding Change in Investment Policy.” This statement will appear on both the notice and the envelope in which it is delivered, unless it is delivered separately from other
communications to investors, in which case the statement will appear either on the notice or the envelope in which the notice is delivered. A Fund subject to a fundamental policy in place to comply with the Names Rule will disclose in the
More Information About the Fund
section of its prospectus that its 80% policy cannot be changed without shareholder approval.
Summary of 1940 Act Restrictions on Certain
Activities
Certain of the Fund’s fundamental and, if
any, non-fundamental policies set forth above prohibit transactions “except to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any applicable exemptive relief.” The following discussion summarizes the
flexibility that the Fund currently gains from these exceptions. To the extent the 1940 Act or the rules and regulations thereunder may, in the future, be amended to provide greater flexibility, or to the extent the SEC may in the future grant
exemptive relief providing greater flexibility, the Fund will be able to use that flexibility without seeking shareholder approval of its fundamental policies.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
17
|
Borrowing money – The 1940 Act permits a Fund
to borrow up to 33
1
⁄
3
% of its total assets (including the amounts borrowed) from banks,
plus an additional 5% of its total assets for temporary purposes, which may be borrowed from banks or other sources. The exception in the fundamental policy allows the Funds to borrow money subject to these conditions. Compliance with this
limitation is not measured under the Time of Purchase Standard (meaning, a Fund may not exceed these thresholds including if, after borrowing, the Fund’s net assets decrease due to market fluctuations).
Buy or sell physical commodities – The 1940
Act does not directly limit a Fund’s ability to invest directly in physical commodities. However, a Fund’s direct and indirect investments in physical commodities may be limited by the Fund’s intention to qualify as a RIC, and can
limit the Fund’s ability to so qualify. One of the requirements for favorable tax treatment as a RIC under the Code is that a Fund derive at least 90 percent of its gross income from certain qualifying sources of income. Income and gains from
direct commodities investments, and from certain indirect investments therein, do not constitute qualifying income for this purpose. A Fund that qualifies for an exclusion from the definition of a commodity pool under the CEA and has on file a
notice of exclusion under CFTC Rule 4.5 is limited in its ability to use certain financial instruments regulated under the CEA (“commodity interests”).
Investing in other investment companies – The
1940 Act, in summary, provides that a fund generally may not: (i) purchase more than 3% of the outstanding voting stock of another investment company; (ii) purchase securities issued by another investment company in an amount representing more than
5% of the investing fund’s total assets; or (iii) purchase securities issued by investment companies that in the aggregate represent more than 10% of the acquiring fund’s total assets (the “3, 5 and 10 Rule”). Affiliated
funds-of-funds (i.e., those funds that invest in other funds within the same fund family), with respect to investments in such affiliated underlying funds, are not subject to the 3, 5 and 10 Rule and, therefore, may invest in affiliated underlying
funds without restriction. A fund-of-funds may also invest its assets in unaffiliated funds, but the fund-of-funds generally may not purchase more than 3% of the outstanding voting stock of any one unaffiliated fund. Additionally, certain exceptions
to these limitations apply to investments in money market open-end funds. If shares of the Fund are purchased by an affiliated fund beyond the 3, 5 and 10 Rule in reliance on Section 12(d)(1)(G) of the 1940 Act, for so long as shares of the Fund are
held by such other affiliated fund beyond the 3, 5 and 10 Rule, the Fund will not purchase securities of a registered open-end investment company or registered unit investment trust in reliance on Section 12(d)(1)(F) or Section 12(d)(1)(G) of the
1940 Act.
Issuing senior securities – A
“senior security” is an obligation with respect to the earnings or assets of a company that takes precedence over the claims of that company’s common stock with respect to the same earnings or assets. The 1940 Act prohibits an
open-end fund from issuing senior securities other than certain borrowings from a bank, but SEC staff interpretations allow a Fund to engage in certain types of transactions that otherwise might raise senior security concerns (such as short sales,
buying and selling financial futures contracts and other derivative instruments and selling put and call options), provided that the Fund segregates or designates on the Fund’s books and records liquid assets, or, as permitted in accordance
with SEC staff interpretations, otherwise covers the transaction with offsetting portfolio securities, in amounts sufficient to offset any liability associated with the transaction. The exception in the fundamental policy allows the Fund to operate
in reliance upon these staff interpretations.
Making loans (Lending) – Under the 1940 Act,
an open-end fund may loan money or property to persons who do not control and are not under common control with the Fund, except that a Fund may make loans to a wholly-owned subsidiary. In addition, the SEC staff takes the position that a Fund may
not lend portfolio securities representing more than one-third of the Fund’s total value. A Fund must receive from the borrower collateral at least equal in value to the loaned securities, marked to market daily. The exception in the
fundamental policy allows the Fund to make loans to third parties, including loans of its portfolio securities, subject to these conditions.
Selling securities short – A Fund may sell a
security short by borrowing the security, then selling it to a third party. The Fund will eventually need to close out the short sale by buying the security and returning it, together with interest, to the party from whom the Fund borrowed the
security. The SEC staff takes the position that, as described under “Issuing senior securities” above, a mutual fund must segregate or designate on the Fund’s books and records liquid assets with a value equal to, or otherwise
cover the obligation to return, the security. The exception in the fundamental policy allows the Fund to sell securities short provided it designates liquid assets with a value equal to, or otherwise covers the obligation to return, the
security.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
18
|
ABOUT FUND INVESTMENTS
Each Fund’s investment objective, principal
investment strategies and related principal risks are discussed in each Fund’s prospectus. Each Fund’s prospectus identifies the types of securities in which the Fund invests principally and summarizes the principal risks to the
Fund’s portfolio as a whole associated with such investments. Unless otherwise indicated in the prospectus or this SAI, the investment objective and policies of a Fund may be changed without shareholder approval.
To the extent that a type of security identified in
the table below for a Fund is not described in the Fund’s prospectus (or as a sub-category of such security type in this SAI), the Fund generally invests in such security type, if at all, as part of its non-principal investment
strategies.
Information about individual types
of securities (including certain of their associated risks) in which some or all of the Funds may invest is set forth below. Each Fund may invest in these types of securities, subject to its investment objective and fundamental and non-fundamental
investment policies. A Fund is not required to invest in any or all of the types of securities listed below.
Funds-of-funds invest in a combination of underlying
funds, although they may also invest directly in stocks, bonds and other securities. These underlying funds have their own investment strategies and types of investments they are allowed to engage in and purchase. Funds-of-funds may invest directly
or indirectly through investments in underlying funds, in securities and other instruments and may engage in the investment strategies indicated in the table below.
Certain Investment Activity Limits.
The overall investment and other activities of the Investment Manager and its affiliates may limit the investment opportunities for each Fund in certain markets, industries or transactions or in
individual issuers where limitations are imposed upon the aggregate amount of investment by the Funds and other accounts managed by the Investment Manager and accounts of its affiliates (collectively, affiliated investors). From time to time, each
Fund’s activities also may be restricted because of regulatory restrictions applicable to the Investment Manager and its affiliates and/or because of their internal policies. See
Investment Management and Other Services – Other
Roles and Relationships of Ameriprise Financial and its Affiliates – Certain Conflicts of Interest
.
Temporary Defensive Positions.
Each Fund may from time to time take temporary defensive investment positions that may be inconsistent with the Fund’s principal investment strategies in attempting to respond to adverse market,
economic, political, social or other conditions, including, without limitation investing some or all of its assets in money market instruments or shares of affiliated or unaffiliated money market funds or holding some or all of its assets in cash or
cash equivalents. The Fund may take such defensive investment positions for as long a period as deemed necessary.
Other Strategic and Investment Measures.
A Fund may also from time to time take temporary portfolio positions that may or may not be consistent with the Fund’s principal investment strategies in
attempting to respond to adverse market, economic, political, social or other conditions, including, without limitation, investing in derivatives, such as forward contracts, futures contracts, options, structured investments and swaps, for various
purposes, including among others, investing in particular derivatives in seeking to reduce investment exposure, or in seeking to achieve indirect investment exposure, to a sector, country, region or currency where the Investment Manager (or Fund
subadviser, if applicable) believes such defensive positioning is appropriate. Each Fund may do so without limit and for as long a period as deemed necessary, when the Investment Manager or the Fund’s subadviser, if applicable: (i) believes
that market conditions are not favorable for profitable investing or to avoid losses, (ii) is unable to locate favorable investment opportunities; or (iii) determines that a temporary defensive position is advisable or necessary in order to meet
anticipated redemption requests, or for other reasons. While the Fund is so positioned, derivatives could comprise a substantial portion of the Fund’s investments and the Fund may not achieve its investment objective. Investing in this manner
may adversely affect Fund performance. During these times, the portfolio managers may make frequent portfolio holding changes, which could result in increased trading expenses and taxes, and decreased Fund performance.
Types of Investments
A black circle indicates that the investment
strategy or type of investment generally is authorized for a category of Funds. Exceptions are noted following the table. See
About the Trust
for fund investment categories.
Type
of Investment
|
Alternative
and Fund-of-Funds – Alternative
|
Equity
and
Flexible
|
Funds-of-Funds
– Equity and
Fixed Income
|
Taxable
Fixed
Income
(a)
|
Tax-Exempt
Fixed
Income
|
Asset-Backed
Securities
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Bank
Obligations (Domestic and Foreign)
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Collateralized
Bond Obligations
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Commercial
Paper
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
19
|
Type
of Investment
|
Alternative
and Fund-of-Funds – Alternative
|
Equity
and
Flexible
|
Funds-of-Funds
– Equity and
Fixed Income
|
Taxable
Fixed
Income
(a)
|
Tax-Exempt
Fixed
Income
|
Common
Stock
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
—
|
Convertible
Securities
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Corporate
Debt Securities
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Custody
Receipts and Trust Certificates
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Debt
Obligations
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Depositary
Receipts
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
—
|
Derivatives
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Dollar
Rolls
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Exchange-Traded
Notes
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Foreign
Currency Transactions
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Foreign
Securities
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Guaranteed
Investment Contracts (Funding Agreements)
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
High-Yield
Securities
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Illiquid
Securities
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Inflation
Protected Securities
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Initial
Public Offerings
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Inverse
Floaters
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Investments
in Other Investment Companies (Including ETFs)
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Listed
Private Equity Funds
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Money
Market Instruments
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Mortgage-Backed
Securities
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Municipal
Securities
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Participation
Interests
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Partnership
Securities
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Preferred
Stock
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Private
Placement and Other Restricted Securities
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Real
Estate Investment Trusts
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Repurchase
Agreements
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Reverse
Repurchase Agreements
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Short
Sales
(b)
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Sovereign
Debt
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Standby
Commitments
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
U.S.
Government and Related Obligations
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Variable
and Floating Rate Obligations
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
Warrants
and Rights
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
•
|
(a)
|
Total Return Bond Fund is not
authorized to purchase common stock or bank obligations. U.S. Treasury Index Fund is not authorized to purchase asset-backed securities, bank obligations, convertible securities, corporate debt obligations (other than money market instruments),
depositary receipts, dollar rolls, foreign currency transactions, foreign securities, guaranteed investment contracts, inverse floaters, high-yield securities, mortgage-backed securities, municipal securities, participation interests, partnership
securities, REITs, reverse repurchase agreements, short sales, sovereign debt and standby commitments. Ultra Short Term Bond is not authorized to purchase common stock, foreign currency transactions and short sales.
|
(b)
|
See
Fundamental and Non-Fundamental Investment Policies
for Funds that are not permitted to sell securities short.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
20
|
Asset-Backed Securities
Asset-backed securities represent interests in, or debt instruments
that are backed by, pools of various types of assets that generate cash payments generally over fixed periods of time, such as, among others, motor vehicle installment sales, contracts, installment loan contracts, leases of various types of real and
personal property, and receivables from revolving (credit card) agreements. Such securities entitle the security holders to receive distributions (
i.e.
, principal and interest) that are tied to the payments
made by the borrower on the underlying assets (less fees paid to the originator, servicer, or other parties, and fees paid for credit enhancement), so that the payments made on the underlying assets effectively pass through to such security holders.
Asset-backed securities typically are created by an originator of loans or owner of accounts receivable that sells such underlying assets to a special purpose entity in a process called a securitization. The special purpose entity issues securities
that are backed by the payments on the underlying assets, and have a minimum denomination and specific term. Asset-backed securities may be structured as fixed-, variable- or floating-rate obligations or as zero-coupon, pay-in-kind and step-coupon
securities and may be privately placed or publicly offered. Collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) are but one example of an asset-backed security. See
Types of Investments – Variable- and
Floating-Rate Obligations, – Debt Obligations – Zero-Coupon, Pay-in-Kind and Step-Coupon Securities
and
– Private Placement and Other Restricted Securities
for more
information.
Although one or more of the other
risks described in this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with asset-backed securities include: Credit Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Liquidity Risk and Prepayment and Extension Risk.
Bank Obligations (Domestic and Foreign)
Bank obligations include certificates of deposit, bankers’
acceptances, time deposits and promissory notes that earn a specified rate of return and may be issued by (i) a domestic branch of a domestic bank, (ii) a foreign branch of a domestic bank, (iii) a domestic branch of a foreign bank or (iv) a foreign
branch of a foreign bank. Bank obligations may be structured as fixed-, variable- or floating-rate obligations. See
Types of Investments – Variable- and Floating-Rate Obligations
for
more information.
Certificates of deposit, or
so-called CDs, typically are interest-bearing debt instruments issued by banks and have maturities ranging from a few weeks to several years. Yankee dollar certificates of deposit are negotiable CDs issued in the United States by branches and
agencies of foreign banks. Eurodollar certificates of deposit are CDs issued by foreign banks with interest and principal paid in U.S. dollars. Eurodollar and Yankee Dollar CDs typically have maturities of less than two years and have interest rates
that typically are pegged to the London Interbank Offered Rate or LIBOR. Bankers’ acceptances are time drafts drawn on and accepted by banks, are a customary means of effecting payment for merchandise sold in import-export transactions and are
a general source of financing. A time deposit can be either a savings account or CD that is an obligation of a financial institution for a fixed term. Typically, there are penalties for early withdrawals of time deposits. Promissory notes are
written commitments of the maker to pay the payee a specified sum of money either on demand or at a fixed or determinable future date, with or without interest.
Bank investment contracts are issued by banks.
Pursuant to such contracts, a Fund may make cash contributions to a deposit fund of a bank. The bank then credits to the Fund payments at floating or fixed interest rates. A Fund also may hold funds on deposit with its custodian for temporary
purposes.
Certain bank obligations, such as
some CDs, are insured by the FDIC up to certain specified limits. Many other bank obligations, however, are neither guaranteed nor insured by the FDIC or the U.S. Government. These bank obligations are “backed” only by the
creditworthiness of the issuing bank or parent financial institution. Domestic and foreign banks are subject to different governmental regulation. Accordingly, certain obligations of foreign banks, including Eurodollar and Yankee dollar obligations,
involve different and/or heightened investment risks than those affecting obligations of domestic banks, including, among others, the possibilities that: (i) their liquidity could be impaired because of political or economic developments; (ii) the
obligations may be less marketable than comparable obligations of domestic banks; (iii) a foreign jurisdiction might impose withholding and other taxes at high levels on interest income; (iv) foreign deposits may be seized or nationalized; (v)
foreign governmental restrictions such as exchange controls may be imposed, which could adversely affect the payment of principal and/or interest on those obligations; (vi) there may be less publicly available information concerning foreign banks
issuing the obligations; and (vii) the reserve requirements and accounting, auditing and financial reporting standards, practices and requirements applicable to foreign banks may differ (including, less stringent) from those applicable to domestic
banks. Foreign banks generally are not subject to examination by any U.S. Government agency or instrumentality. See
Types of Investments – Foreign Securities
.
Although
one or more of the other risks described in this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with bank obligations include: Counterparty Risk, Credit Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Issuer Risk, Liquidity Risk, and Prepayment and Extension
Risk.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
21
|
Collateralized Bond Obligations
Collateralized bond obligations (CBOs) are investment grade bonds
backed by a pool of bonds, which may include junk bonds (which are considered speculative investments). CBOs are similar in concept to collateralized mortgage obligations (CMOs), but differ in that CBOs represent different degrees of credit quality
rather than different maturities. (See
Types of Investments – Mortgage-Backed Securities
and
– Asset-Backed Securities
.
) CBOs are often privately offered and sold, and thus not registered under the federal securities laws.
Underwriters of CBOs package a large and diversified
pool of high-risk, high-yield junk bonds, which is then structured into “tranches.” Typically, the first tranche represents a senior claim on collateral and pays the lowest interest rate; the second tranche is junior to the first tranche
and therefore subject to greater risk and pays a higher rate; the third tranche is junior to both the first and second tranche, represents the lowest credit quality and instead of receiving a fixed interest rate receives the residual interest
payments — money that is left over after the higher tranches have been paid. CBOs, like CMOs, are substantially overcollateralized and this, plus the diversification of the pool backing them, may earn certain of the tranches investment-grade
bond ratings. Holders of third-tranche CBOs stand to earn higher or lower yields depending on the rate of defaults in the collateral pool. See
Types of Investments – High-Yield
Securities
.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with CBOs include: Credit Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Liquidity Risk, High-Yield Securities Risk and Prepayment and Extension Risk.
Commercial Paper
Commercial paper is a short-term debt obligation, usually sold on a
discount basis, with a maturity ranging from 2 to 270 days issued by banks, corporations and other borrowers. It is sold to investors with temporary idle cash as a way to increase returns on a short-term basis. These instruments are generally
unsecured, which increases the credit risk associated with this type of investment. See
Types of Investments — Debt Obligations and — Illiquid Securities. See Appendix A for a discussion
of securities ratings.
Although one or
more of the other risks described in this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with commercial paper include: Credit Risk and Liquidity Risk.
Common Stock
Common stock represents a unit of equity ownership of a
corporation. Owners typically are entitled to vote on the selection of directors and other important corporate governance matters, and to receive dividend payments, if any, on their holdings. However, ownership of common stock does not entitle
owners to participate in the day-to-day operations of the corporation. Common stocks of domestic and foreign public corporations can be listed, and their shares traded, on domestic stock exchanges, such as the NYSE or the NASDAQ Stock Market.
Domestic and foreign corporations also may have their shares traded on foreign exchanges, such as the London Stock Exchange or Tokyo Stock Exchange. See
Types of Investments – Foreign
Securities
. Common stock may be privately placed or publicly offered. The price of common stock is generally determined by corporate earnings, type of products or services offered, projected growth rates, experience of management, liquidity,
and market conditions generally. In the event that a corporation declares bankruptcy or is liquidated, the claims of secured and unsecured creditors and owners of bonds and preferred stock take precedence over the claims of those who own common
stock. See
Types of Investments – Private Placement and Other Restricted Securities, – Preferred Stock
and
– Convertible
Securities
for more information.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with common stock include: Issuer Risk and Market Risk.
Convertible Securities
Convertible securities include bonds, debentures, notes, preferred
stocks or other securities that may be converted or exchanged (by the holder or by the issuer) into shares of the underlying common stock (or cash or securities of equivalent value) at a stated exchange ratio or predetermined price (the conversion
price). As such, convertible securities combine the investment characteristics of debt securities and equity securities. A holder of convertible securities is entitled to receive the income of a bond, debenture or note or the dividend of a preferred
stock until the conversion privilege is exercised. The market value of convertible securities generally is a function of, among other factors, interest rates, the rates of return of similar nonconvertible securities and the financial strength of the
issuer. The market value of convertible securities tends to decline as interest rates rise and, conversely, to rise as interest rates decline. However, a convertible security’s market value tends to reflect the market price of the common stock
of the issuing company when that stock price approaches or is greater than its conversion price. As the market price of the underlying common stock declines, the price of the convertible security tends to be influenced more by the rate of return of
the convertible security. Because both interest rate and common stock’s market movements can influence their value, convertible securities generally are not as sensitive to changes in interest rates as similar non-convertible debt securities
nor generally as sensitive to changes in share price as the underlying common stock. Convertible securities may be structured as
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
22
|
fixed-, variable- or floating-rate obligations or as zero-coupon,
pay-in-kind and step-coupon securities and may be privately placed or publicly offered. See
Types of Investments — Variable- and Floating-Rate Obligations, —Debt Obligations -
Zero-Coupon, Pay-in-Kind and Step-Coupon Securities, — Common Stock, — Corporate Debt Securities and — Private Placement and Other Restricted Securities for more information.
Certain convertible securities may have a mandatory
conversion feature, pursuant to which the securities convert automatically into common stock or other equity securities (of the same or a different issuer) at a specified date and at a specified exchange ratio. Certain convertible securities may be
convertible at the option of the issuer, which may require a holder to convert the security into the underlying common stock, even at times when the value of the underlying common stock or other equity security has declined substantially. In
addition, some convertible securities may be rated below investment grade or may not be rated and, therefore, may be considered speculative investments. Companies that issue convertible securities frequently are small- and mid-capitalization
companies and, accordingly, carry the risks associated with such companies. In addition, the credit rating of a company’s convertible securities generally is lower than that of its conventional debt securities. Convertible securities are
senior to equity securities and have a claim to the assets of an issuer prior to the holders of the issuer’s common stock in the event of liquidation but generally are subordinate to similar non-convertible debt securities of the same issuer.
Some convertible securities are particularly sensitive to changes in interest rates when their predetermined conversion price is much higher than the price for the issuing company’s common stock.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with convertible securities include: Convertible Securities Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Issuer Risk, Market Risk, Prepayment and Extension Risk, and Reinvestment Risk.
Corporate Debt Securities
Corporate debt securities are long and short term fixed income
securities typically issued by businesses to finance their operations. Corporate debt securities are issued by public or private companies, as distinct from debt securities issued by a government or its agencies. The issuer of a corporate debt
security often has a contractual obligation to pay interest at a stated rate on specific dates and to repay principal periodically or on a specified maturity date. Corporate debt securities typically have four distinguishing features: (1) they are
taxable; (2) they have a par value of $1,000; (3) they have a term maturity, which means they come due at a specified time period; and (4) many are traded on major securities exchanges. Notes, bonds, debentures and commercial paper are the most
common types of corporate debt securities, with the primary difference being their interest rates, maturity dates and secured or unsecured status. Commercial paper has the shortest term and usually is unsecured, as are debentures. The broad category
of corporate debt securities includes debt issued by domestic or foreign companies of all kinds, including those with small-, mid- and large-capitalizations. The category also includes bank loans, as well as assignments, participations and other
interests in bank loans. Corporate debt securities may be rated investment grade or below investment grade and may be structured as fixed-, variable or floating-rate obligations or as zero-coupon, pay-in-kind and step-coupon securities and may be
privately placed or publicly offered. They may also be senior or subordinated obligations. See Appendix A for a discussion of securities ratings. See
Types of Investments — Variable- and
Floating-Rate Obligations, — Private Placement and Other Restricted Securities, — Debt Obligations, — Commercial Paper
and —
High-Yield Securities
for more
information.
Extendible commercial notes
(ECNs) are very similar to commercial paper except that, with ECNs, the issuer has the option to extend the notes’ maturity. ECNs are issued at a discount rate, with an initial redemption of not more than 90 days from the date of issue. If
ECNs are not redeemed by the issuer on the initial redemption date, the issuer will pay a premium (step-up) rate based on the ECN’s credit rating at the time.
Because of the wide range of types and maturities of
corporate debt securities, as well as the range of creditworthiness of issuers, corporate debt securities can have widely varying risk/return profiles. For example, commercial paper issued by a large established domestic corporation that is rated by
an NRSRO as investment grade may have a relatively modest return on principal but present relatively limited risk. On the other hand, a long-term corporate note issued, for example, by a small foreign corporation from an emerging market country that
has not been rated by an NRSRO may have the potential for relatively large returns on principal but carries a relatively high degree of risk.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with corporate debt securities include: Credit Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Issuer Risk, High-Yield Securities Risk, Prepayment and Extension Risk and Reinvestment Risk.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
23
|
Custody Receipts and Trust Certificates
Custody receipts and trust certificates are derivative products
that evidence direct ownership in a pool of securities. Typically, a sponsor will deposit a pool of securities with a custodian in exchange for custody receipts evidencing interests in those securities. The sponsor generally then will sell the
custody receipts or trust certificates in negotiated transactions at varying prices. Each custody receipt or trust certificate evidences the individual securities in the pool and the holder of a custody receipt or trust certificate generally will
have all the rights and privileges of owners of those securities.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with custody receipts and trust certificates include: Liquidity Risk and Counterparty Risk. In addition, custody receipts and trust certificates generally are subject to the same risks as the
securities evidenced by the receipts or certificates.
Debt Obligations
Many different types of debt obligations exist (for example, bills,
bonds, and notes). Issuers of debt obligations have a contractual obligation to pay interest at a fixed, variable or floating rate on specified dates and to repay principal by a specified maturity date. Certain debt obligations (usually intermediate
and long-term bonds) have provisions that allow the issuer to redeem or “call” a bond before its maturity. Issuers are most likely to call these securities during periods of falling interest rates. When this happens, an investor may have
to replace these securities with lower yielding securities, which could result in a lower return.
The market value of debt obligations is affected
primarily by changes in prevailing interest rates and the issuer’s perceived ability to repay the debt. The market value of a debt obligation generally reacts inversely to interest rate changes. When prevailing interest rates decline, the
market value of the bond usually rises, and when prevailing interest rates rise, the market value of the bond usually declines.
In general, the longer the maturity of a debt
obligation, the higher its yield and the greater the sensitivity to changes in interest rates. Conversely, the shorter the maturity, the lower the yield and the lower the sensitivity to changes in interest rates.
As noted, the values of debt obligations also may be
affected by changes in the credit rating or financial condition of their issuers. Generally, the lower the quality rating of a security, the higher the degree of risk as to the payment of interest and return of principal. To compensate investors for
taking on such increased risk, those issuers deemed to be less creditworthy generally must offer their investors higher interest rates than do issuers with better credit ratings. See
Types of
Investments — Corporate Debt Securities, — High-Yield Securities
and
— Preferred Stock - Trust-Preferred Securities
for information.
Event-Linked Instruments/Catastrophe Bonds.
A Fund may obtain event-linked exposure by investing in “event-linked bonds” or “event-linked swaps” or by implementing “event-linked strategies.” Event-linked
exposure results in gains or losses that typically are contingent on, or formulaically related to, defined trigger events. Examples of trigger events include hurricanes, earthquakes, weather-related phenomena or statistics relating to such events.
Some event-linked bonds are commonly referred to as “catastrophe bonds.” If a trigger event occurs, the principal amount of the bond is reduced (potentially to zero), and a Fund may lose all or a portion of its entire principal invested
in the bond or the entire notional amount on a swap.
Stripped Securities.
Stripped securities are the separate income or principal payments of a debt security and evidence ownership in either the future interest or principal payments on an instrument. There are many different
types and variations of stripped securities. For example, Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal Securities (STRIPS) can be component parts of a U.S. Treasury security where the principal and interest components are traded
independently through DTC, a clearing agency registered pursuant to Section 17A of the 1934 Act and created to hold securities for its participants, and to facilitate the clearance and settlement of securities transactions between participants
through electronic computerized book-entries, thereby eliminating the need for physical movement of certificates. Treasury Investor Growth Receipts (TIGERs) are U.S. Treasury securities stripped by brokers. Stripped mortgage-backed securities,
(SMBS) also can be issued by the U.S. Government or its agencies. Stripped securities may be structured as fixed-, variable- or floating-rate obligations.
SMBS usually are structured with two or more classes
that receive different proportions of the interest and principal distributions from a pool of mortgage-backed assets. Common types of SMBS will be structured so that one class receives some of the interest and most of the principal from the
mortgage-backed assets, while another class receives most of the interest and the remainder of the principal.
See
Types of Investments – Mortgage-Backed Securities, – Variable- and Floating-Rate Obligations
and
– U.S. Government and Related
Obligations
for more information.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with stripped securities include: Credit Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Liquidity Risk, Prepayment and Extension Risk and Stripped Securities Risk
When-Issued, Delayed Delivery and Forward Commitment
Transactions.
When-issued, delayed delivery and forward commitment transactions involve the purchase or sale of securities by a Fund, with payment and delivery taking place in the future after the
customary settlement period for that type of security. Normally, the settlement date occurs within 45 days of the
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
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24
|
purchase although in some cases settlement may take longer. The
investor does not pay for the securities or receive dividends or interest on them until the contractual settlement date. When engaging in when-issued, delayed delivery and forward commitment transactions, a Fund typically will designate liquid
assets in an amount equal to or greater than the purchase price. The payment obligation and, if applicable, the interest rate that will be received on the securities, are fixed at the time that a Fund agrees to purchase the securities. A Fund
generally will enter into when-issued, delayed delivery and forward commitment transactions only with the intention of completing such transactions.
However, a Fund’s portfolio manager may
determine not to complete a transaction if he or she deems it appropriate to close out the transaction prior to its completion. In such cases, a Fund may realize short-term gains or losses. See
Types
of Investments — Asset-Backed Securities
and
— Mortgage-Backed Securities
for more information.
To Be Announced Securities (“TBAs”).
As with other delayed delivery transactions, a seller agrees to issue a TBA security at a future date. However, the seller does not specify the particular securities to be delivered. Instead, the Fund
agrees to accept any security that meets specified terms. For example, in a TBA mortgage-backed security transaction, the Fund and the seller would agree upon the issuer, interest rate and terms of the underlying mortgages. The seller would not
identify the specific underlying mortgages until it issues the security. TBA mortgage-backed securities increase market risks because the underlying mortgages may be less favorable than anticipated by the Fund. See
Types of Investments
— Asset-Backed Securities
and
— Mortgage-Backed Securities
for more information.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with when-issued, delayed delivery and forward commitment transactions include: Counterparty Risk, Credit Risk and Market Risk.
Zero-Coupon, Pay-in-Kind and Step-Coupon Securities.
Zero-coupon, pay-in-kind and step-coupon securities are types of debt instruments that do not necessarily make payments of interest in fixed amounts or at fixed intervals. Asset-backed securities,
convertible securities, corporate debt securities, foreign securities, high-yield securities, mortgage-backed securities, municipal securities, participation interests, stripped securities, U.S. Government and related obligations and other types of
debt instruments may be structured as zero-coupon, pay-in-kind and step-coupon securities.
Zero-coupon securities do not pay interest on a
current basis but instead accrue interest over the life of the security. These securities include, among others, zero-coupon bonds, which either may be issued at a discount by a corporation or government entity or may be created by a brokerage firm
when it strips the coupons from a bond or note and then sells the bond or note and the coupon separately. This technique is used frequently with U.S. Treasury bonds, and zero-coupon securities are marketed under such names as CATS (Certificate of
Accrual on Treasury Securities), TIGERs or STRIPS. Zero-coupon bonds also are issued by municipalities. Buying a municipal zero-coupon bond frees its purchaser of the obligation to pay regular federal income tax on imputed interest, since the
interest is exempt for regular federal income tax purposes. Zero-coupon certificates of deposit and zero-coupon mortgages are generally structured in the same fashion as zero-coupon bonds; the certificate of deposit holder or mortgage holder
receives face value at maturity and no payments until then.
Pay-in-kind securities normally give the issuer an
option to pay cash at a coupon payment date or to give the holder of the security a similar security with the same coupon rate and a face value equal to the amount of the coupon payment that would have been made.
Step-coupon securities trade at a discount from
their face value and pay coupon interest that gradually increases over time. The coupon rate is paid according to a schedule for a series of periods, typically lower for an initial period and then increasing to a higher coupon rate thereafter. The
discount from the face amount or par value depends on the time remaining until cash payments begin, prevailing interest rates, liquidity of the security and the perceived credit quality of the issue.
Zero-coupon, pay-in-kind and step-coupon securities
holders generally have substantially all the rights and privileges of holders of the underlying coupon obligations or principal obligations. Holders of these securities typically have the right upon default on the underlying coupon obligations or
principal obligations to proceed directly and individually against the issuer and are not required to act in concert with other holders of such securities.
See Appendix A for a discussion of securities
ratings. See
Types of Investments — Asset-Backed Securities
and
— Mortgage-Backed Securities
for more information.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with zero-coupon, step-coupon, and pay-in-kind securities include: Credit Risk, Interest Rate Risk and Zero-Coupon Bonds Risk.
Determining Investment Grade for Purposes of
Investment Policies.
Unless otherwise stated in the Fund’s prospectus, when determining, under a Fund’s investment policies, whether a debt instrument is investment grade or below
investment grade for purposes of purchase by the Fund, the Fund will apply a particular credit quality rating methodology, as described within the
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Fund’s shareholder reports, when available. These
methodologies typically make use of credit quality ratings assigned by a third-party rating agency or agencies, when available. Credit quality ratings assigned by a rating agency are subjective opinions, not statements of fact, and are subject to
change, including daily. Credit quality ratings apply to the Fund’s debt instrument investments and not the Fund itself.
Ratings limitations under a Fund’s investment
policies are applied at the time of purchase by a Fund. Subsequent to purchase, a debt instrument may cease to be rated by a rating agency or its rating may be reduced by a rating agency(ies) below the minimum required for purchase by a Fund.
Neither event will require the sale of such debt instrument, but it may be a factor in considering whether to continue to hold the instrument. Unless otherwise stated in a Fund’s prospectus or in this SAI, a Fund may invest in debt instruments
that are not rated by a rating agency. When a debt instrument is not rated by a rating agency, the Investment Manager or, as applicable, a Fund subadviser determines, at the time of purchase, whether such debt instrument is of investment grade or
below investment grade (e.g., junk bond) quality. A Fund’s debt instrument holdings that are not rated by a rating agency are typically referred to as “Not Rated” within the Fund’s shareholder reports.
See Appendix A for a discussion of securities
ratings.
Although one or more of the other
risks described in this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with debt obligations include: Confidential Information Access Risk, Credit Risk, Highly Leveraged Transactions Risk, Impairment of Collateral Risk, Interest Rate Risk,
Issuer Risk, Liquidity Risk, Prepayment and Extension Risk and Reinvestment Risk.
Determining Average Maturity.
When determining the average maturity of a Fund's portfolio, the Fund may use the effective maturity of a portfolio security by, among other things, adjusting for interest rate reset dates, call dates
or “put” dates.
Depositary
Receipts
See
Types of Investments – Foreign Securities
below.
Derivatives
General
Derivatives are financial instruments whose values are based on (or
“derived” from) traditional securities (such as a stock or a bond), assets (such as a commodity, like gold), reference rates (such as LIBOR), market indices (such as the S& P 500
®
Index) or customized baskets of securities or instruments. Some forms of derivatives, such as exchange-traded futures and options on securities,
commodities, or indices, are traded on regulated exchanges. These types of derivatives are standardized contracts that can easily be bought and sold, and whose market values are determined and published daily. Non-standardized derivatives, on the
other hand, tend to be more specialized or complex, and may be harder to value. Many derivative instruments often require little or no initial payment and therefore often create inherent economic leverage. Derivatives, when used properly, can
enhance returns and be useful in hedging portfolios and managing risk. Some common types of derivatives include futures; options; options on futures; forward foreign currency exchange contracts; forward contracts on securities and securities
indices; linked securities and structured products; CMOs; swap agreements and swaptions.
A Fund may use derivatives for a variety of reasons,
including, for example: (i) to enhance its return; (ii) to attempt to protect against possible unfavorable changes in the market value of securities held in or to be purchased for its portfolio resulting from securities markets or currency exchange
rate fluctuations (
i.e.
, to hedge); (iii) to protect its unrealized gains reflected in the value of its portfolio securities; (iv) to facilitate the sale of such securities for investment purposes; (v) to
reduce transaction costs; (vi) to manage the effective maturity or duration of its portfolio; and/or (vii) to maintain cash reserves while remaining fully invested.
Certain Funds may employ portfolio margining with
respect to derivatives investments, which creates leverage in a Fund’s portfolio (subjecting the Fund to Leverage Risk). Portfolio margining is a methodology that computes margin requirements for an account based on the greatest projected net
loss of all positions in a product class or group, and uses computer modeling to perform risk analysis using multiple pricing scenarios. The pricing scenarios are designed to measure the theoretical loss of the positions, given changes in the
underlying price and implied volatility inputs to the model. Accordingly, the margin required is based on the greatest loss that would be incurred in a portfolio if the value of its components move up or down by a predetermined amount.
A Fund may use any or all of the above investment
techniques and may purchase different types of derivative instruments at any time and in any combination. The use of derivatives is a function of numerous variables, including market conditions. See also
Types of Investments — Warrants and Rights
and
— Debt Obligations - When Issued, Delayed Delivery and Forward Commitment
Transactions.
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Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with transactions in derivatives (including the derivatives instruments discussed below) include: Counterparty Risk, Credit Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Leverage Risk, Liquidity Risk, Market Risk,
Derivatives Risk, Derivatives Risk – Forward Contracts Risk, Derivatives Risk – Futures Contracts Risk, Derivatives Risk – Inverse Floaters Risk, Derivatives Risk – Options Risk, Derivatives Risk – Structured
Investments Risk and/or Derivatives Risk – Swaps Risk.
Structured Investments (Indexed or Linked
Securities)
General
.
Indexed or linked securities, also often referred to as “structured products,” are instruments that may have varying combinations of equity and debt characteristics. These instruments are
structured to recast the investment characteristics of the underlying security or reference asset. If the issuer is a unit investment trust or other special purpose vehicle, the structuring will typically involve the deposit with or purchase by such
issuer of specified instruments (such as commercial bank loans or securities) and/or the execution of various derivative transactions, and the issuance by that entity of one or more classes of securities (structured securities) backed by, or
representing interests in, the underlying instruments. The cash flow on the underlying instruments may be apportioned among the newly issued structured securities to create securities with different investment characteristics, such as varying
maturities, payment priorities and interest rate provisions, and the extent of such payments made with respect to structured securities is dependent on the extent of the cash flow on the underlying instruments.
Indexed and Inverse Floating Rate Securities.
A Fund may invest in securities that provide a potential return based on a particular index or interest rates. For example, a Fund may invest in debt securities that pay interest based on an index of
interest rates. The principal amount payable upon maturity of certain securities also may be based on the value of the index. To the extent a Fund invests in these types of securities, a Fund’s return on such securities will rise and fall with
the value of the particular index: that is, if the value of the index falls, the value of the indexed securities owned by a Fund will fall. Interest and principal payable on certain securities may also be based on relative changes among particular
indices.
A Fund may also invest in
so-called “inverse floaters” or “residual interest bonds” on which the interest rates vary inversely with a floating rate (which may be reset periodically by a dutch auction, a remarketing agent, or by reference to a
short-term tax-exempt interest rate index). A Fund may purchase synthetically-created inverse floating rate bonds evidenced by custodial or trust receipts. A trust funds the purchase of a bond by issuing two classes of certificates: short-term
floating rate notes (typically sold to third parties) and the inverse floaters (also known as residual certificates). No additional income beyond that provided by the trust’s underlying bond is created; rather, that income is merely divided-up
between the two classes of certificates. Generally, income on inverse floating rate bonds will decrease when interest rates increase, and will increase when interest rates decrease. Such securities can have the effect of providing a degree of
investment leverage, since they may increase or decrease in value in response to changes in market interest rates at a rate that is a multiple of the actual rate at which fixed-rate securities increase or decrease in response to such changes. As a
result, the market values of such securities will generally be more volatile than the market values of fixed-rate securities. To seek to limit the volatility of these securities, a Fund may purchase inverse floating obligations that have
shorter-term maturities or that contain limitations on the extent to which the interest rate may vary. Certain investments in such obligations may be illiquid. Furthermore, where such a security includes a contingent liability, in the event of an
adverse movement in the underlying index or interest rate, a Fund may be required to pay substantial additional margin to maintain the position.
Credit-Linked Securities.
Among the income-producing securities in which a Fund may invest are credit linked securities. The issuers of these securities frequently are limited purpose trusts or other special purpose vehicles
that, in turn, invest in a derivative instrument or basket of derivative instruments, such as credit default swaps, interest rate swaps and other securities, in order to provide exposure to certain fixed income markets. For instance, a Fund may
invest in credit-linked securities as a cash management tool in order to gain exposure to a certain market and/or to remain fully invested when more traditional income-producing securities are not available. Like an investment in a bond, investments
in these credit linked securities represent the right to receive periodic income payments (in the form of distributions) and payment of principal at the end of the term of the security. However, these payments are conditioned on or linked to the
issuer’s receipt of payments from, and the issuer’s potential obligations to, the counterparties to the derivative instruments and other securities in which the issuer invests. For instance, the issuer may sell one or more credit default
swaps, under which the issuer would receive a stream of payments over the term of the swap agreements provided that no event of default has occurred with respect to the referenced debt obligation upon which the swap is based. If a default occurs,
the stream of payments may stop and the issuer would be obligated to pay the counterparty the par (or other agreed upon value) of the referenced debt obligation. This, in turn, would reduce the amount of income and/or principal that a Fund would
receive. A Fund’s investments in these securities are indirectly subject to the risks associated with derivative instruments. These securities generally are exempt from registration under the 1933 Act. Accordingly, there may be no established
trading market for the securities and they may constitute illiquid investments.
Equity-Linked Notes.
An equity-linked note (ELN) is a debt instrument whose value is based on the value of a single equity security, basket of equity securities or an index of equity securities (each, an
Underlying Equity). An ELN typically provides interest income, thereby offering a yield advantage over investing directly in an Underlying Equity. The Fund may purchase
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ELNs that trade on a securities exchange or those that trade on the
over-the-counter markets, including Rule 144A securities. The Fund may also purchase ELNs in a privately negotiated transaction with the issuer of the ELNs (or its broker-dealer affiliate). The Fund may or may not hold an ELN until its
maturity.
Equity-linked securities also
include issues such as Structured Yield Product Exchangeable for Stock (STRYPES), Trust Automatic Common Exchange Securities (TRACES), Trust Issued Mandatory Exchange Securities (TIMES) and Trust Enhanced Dividend Securities (TRENDS). The issuers of
these equity-linked securities generally purchase and hold a portfolio of stripped U.S. Treasury securities maturing on a quarterly basis through the conversion date, and a forward purchase contract with an existing shareholder of the company
relating to the common stock. Quarterly distributions on such equity-linked securities generally consist of the cash received from the U.S. Treasury securities and such equity-linked securities generally are not entitled to any dividends that may be
declared on the common stock.
ELNs also
include participation notes issued by a bank or broker-dealer that entitles the Fund to a return measured by the change in value of an Underlying Equity. Participation notes are typically used when a direct investment in the Underlying Equity is
restricted due to country-specific regulations. Investment in a participation note is not the same as investment in the constituent shares of the company (or other issuer type) to which the Underlying Equity is economically tied. A participation
note represents only an obligation of the company or other issuer type to provide the Fund the economic performance equivalent to holding shares of the Underlying Equity. A participation note does not provide any beneficial or equitable entitlement
or interest in the relevant Underlying Equity. In other words, shares of the Underlying Equity are not in any way owned by the Fund.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with equity-linked notes include: Counterparty Risk, Credit Risk, Liquidity Risk and Market Risk.
Index-, Commodity- and Currency-Linked Securities.
“Index-linked” or “commodity-linked” notes are debt securities of companies that call for interest payments and/or payment at maturity in different terms than the typical note
where the borrower agrees to make fixed interest payments and to pay a fixed sum at maturity. Principal and/or interest payments on an index-linked or commodity-linked note depend on the performance of one or more market indices, such as the S&P
500
®
Index, a weighted index of commodity futures such as crude oil, gasoline and natural gas or the market prices of a particular commodity or
basket of commodities or securities. Currency-linked debt securities are short-term or intermediate-term instruments having a value at maturity, and/or an interest rate, determined by reference to one or more foreign currencies. Payment of principal
or periodic interest may be calculated as a multiple of the movement of one currency against another currency, or against an index.
Index-, commodity- and currency-linked securities
may entail substantial risks. Such instruments may be subject to significant price volatility. The company issuing the instrument may fail to pay the amount due on maturity. The underlying investment may not perform as expected by a Fund’s
portfolio manager. Markets and underlying investments and indexes may move in a direction that was not anticipated by a Fund’s portfolio manager. Performance of the derivatives may be influenced by interest rate and other market changes in the
United States and abroad, and certain derivative instruments may be illiquid.
Linked securities are often issued by unit
investment trusts. Examples of this include such index-linked securities as S&P Depositary Receipts (SPDRs), which is an interest in a unit investment trust holding a portfolio of securities linked to the S&P 500
®
Index, and a type of exchange-traded fund (ETF). Because a unit investment trust is an investment company under the 1940 Act, a Fund’s
investments in SPDRs are subject to the limitations set forth in Section 12(d)(1)(A) of the 1940 Act, although the SEC has issued exemptive relief permitting investment companies such as the Funds to invest beyond the limits of Section 12(d)(1)(A)
subject to certain conditions. SPDRs generally closely track the underlying portfolio of securities, trade like a share of common stock and pay periodic dividends proportionate to those paid by the portfolio of stocks that comprise the S&P 500
®
Index. As a holder of interests in a unit investment trust, a Fund would indirectly bear its ratable share of that unit investment trust’s
expenses. At the same time, a Fund would continue to pay its own management and advisory fees and other expenses, as a result of which a Fund and its shareholders in effect would be absorbing levels of fees with respect to investments in such unit
investment trusts.
Because linked securities
typically involve no credit enhancement, their credit risk generally will be equivalent to that of the underlying instruments. Investments in structured products may be structured as a class that is either subordinated or unsubordinated to the right
of payment of another class. Subordinated linked securities typically have higher rates of return and present greater risks than unsubordinated structured products. Structured products sometimes are sold in private placement transactions and often
have a limited trading market.
Investments in
linked securities have the potential to lead to significant losses because of unexpected movements in the underlying financial asset, index, currency or other investment. The ability of a Fund to utilize linked securities successfully will depend on
its ability correctly to predict pertinent market movements, which cannot be assured. Because currency-linked securities usually relate to foreign currencies, some of which may be currencies from emerging market countries, there are certain
additional risks associated with such investments.
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Futures Contracts and Options on Futures
Contracts
Futures Contracts.
A futures contract sale creates an obligation by the seller to deliver the type of security or other asset called for in the contract at a specified delivery time for a stated price. A futures contract
purchase creates an obligation by the purchaser to take delivery of the type of security or other asset called for in the contract at a specified delivery time for a stated price. The specific security or other asset delivered or taken at the
settlement date is not determined until on or near that date. The determination is made in accordance with the rules of the exchange on which the futures contract was made. A Fund may enter into futures contracts which are traded on national or
foreign futures exchanges and are standardized as to maturity date and underlying security or other asset. Futures exchanges and trading in the United States are regulated under the CEA by the CFTC, a U.S. Government agency. See
CFTC
Regulation
below for information on CFTC regulation.
Traders in futures contracts may be broadly
classified as either “hedgers” or “speculators.” Hedgers use the futures markets primarily to offset unfavorable changes (anticipated or potential) in the value of securities or other assets currently owned or expected to be
acquired by them. Speculators less often own the securities or other assets underlying the futures contracts which they trade, and generally use futures contracts with the expectation of realizing profits from fluctuations in the value of the
underlying securities or other assets.
Upon
entering into futures contracts, in compliance with regulatory requirements, cash or liquid securities, at least equal in value to the amount of a Fund’s obligation under the contract (less any applicable margin deposits and any assets that
constitute “cover” for such obligation), will be designated in a Fund’s books and records.
Unlike when a Fund purchases or sells a security, no
price is paid or received by a Fund upon the purchase or sale of a futures contract, although a Fund is required to deposit with its custodian in a segregated account in the name of the futures broker an amount of cash and/or U.S. Government
securities in order to initiate and maintain open positions in futures contracts. This amount is known as “initial margin.” The nature of initial margin in futures transactions is different from that of margin in security transactions,
in that futures contract margin does not involve the borrowing of funds by a Fund to finance the transactions. Rather, initial margin is in the nature of a performance bond or good faith deposit intended to assure completion of the contract
(delivery or acceptance of the underlying security or other asset) that is returned to a Fund upon termination of the futures contract, assuming all contractual obligations have been satisfied. Minimum initial margin requirements are established by
the relevant futures exchange and may be changed. Brokers may establish deposit requirements which are higher than the exchange minimums. Futures contracts are customarily purchased and sold on margin which may range upward from less than 5% of the
value of the contract being traded. Subsequent payments, called “variation margin,” to and from the broker (or the custodian) are made on a daily basis as the price of the underlying security or other asset fluctuates, a process known as
“marking to market.” If the futures contract price changes to the extent that the margin on deposit does not satisfy margin requirements, payment of additional variation margin will be required. Conversely, a change in the contract value
may reduce the required margin, resulting in a repayment of excess margin to the contract holder. Variation margin payments are made for as long as the contract remains open. A Fund expects to earn interest income on its margin deposits.
Although futures contracts by their terms call for
actual delivery or acceptance of securities or other assets (stock index futures contracts or futures contracts that reference other intangible assets do not permit delivery of the referenced assets), the contracts usually are closed out before the
settlement date without the making or taking of delivery. A Fund may elect to close some or all of its futures positions at any time prior to their expiration. The purpose of taking such action would be to reduce or eliminate the position then
currently held by a Fund. Closing out an open futures position is done by taking an opposite position (“buying” a contract which has previously been “sold,” “selling” a contract previously “purchased”)
in an identical contract (
i.e.
, the same aggregate amount of the specific type of security or other asset with the same delivery date) to terminate the position. Final determinations are made as to whether the
price of the initial sale of the futures contract exceeds or is below the price of the offsetting purchase, or whether the purchase price exceeds or is below the offsetting sale price. Final determinations of variation margin are then made,
additional cash is required to be paid by or released to a Fund, and a Fund realizes a loss or a gain. Brokerage commissions are incurred when a futures contract is bought or sold.
Successful use of futures contracts by a Fund is
subject to its portfolio manager’s ability to predict correctly movements in the direction of interest rates and other factors affecting securities and commodities markets. This requires different skills and techniques than those required to
predict changes in the prices of individual securities. A Fund, therefore, bears the risk that future market trends will be incorrectly predicted.
The risk of loss in trading futures contracts in
some strategies can be substantial, due both to the relatively low margin deposits required and the potential for an extremely high degree of leverage involved in futures contracts. As a result, a relatively small price movement in a futures
contract may result in an immediate and substantial loss to the investor. For example, if at the time of purchase, 10% of the value of the futures contract is deposited as margin, a subsequent 10% decrease in the value of the
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futures contract would result in a total loss of the margin
deposit, before any deduction for the transaction costs, if the account were then closed out. A 15% decrease would result in a loss equal to 150% of the original margin deposit if the contract were closed out. Thus, a purchase or sale of a futures
contract may result in losses in excess of the amount posted as initial margin for the contract.
In the event of adverse price movements, a Fund
would continue to be required to make daily cash payments in order to maintain its required margin. In such a situation, if a Fund has insufficient cash, it may have to sell portfolio securities in order to meet daily margin requirements at a time
when it may be disadvantageous to do so. The inability to close the futures position also could have an adverse impact on the ability to hedge effectively.
To reduce or eliminate a hedge position held by a
Fund, a Fund may seek to close out a position. The ability to establish and close out positions will be subject to the development and maintenance of a liquid secondary market. It is not certain that this market will develop or continue to exist for
a particular futures contract, which may limit a Fund’s ability to realize its profits or limit its losses. Reasons for the absence of a liquid secondary market on an exchange include the following: (i) there may be insufficient trading
interest in certain contracts; (ii) restrictions may be imposed by an exchange on opening transactions, closing transactions or both; (iii) trading halts, suspensions or other restrictions may be imposed with respect to particular classes or series
of contracts, or underlying securities; (iv) unusual or unforeseen circumstances, such as volume in excess of trading or clearing capability, may interrupt normal operations on an exchange; (v) the facilities of an exchange or a clearing corporation
may not at all times be adequate to handle current trading volume; or (vi) one or more exchanges could, for economic or other reasons, decide or be compelled at some future date to discontinue the trading of contracts (or a particular class or
series of contracts), in which event the secondary market on that exchange (or in the class or series of contracts) would cease to exist, although outstanding contracts on the exchange that had been issued by a clearing corporation as a result of
trades on that exchange would continue to be exercisable in accordance with their terms.
Interest Rate Futures Contracts.
Bond prices are established in both the cash market and the futures market. In the cash market, bonds are purchased and sold with payment for the full purchase price of the bond being made in cash,
generally within five business days after the trade. In the futures market, a contract is made to purchase or sell a bond in the future for a set price on a certain date. Historically, the prices for bonds established in the futures markets have
tended to move generally in the aggregate in concert with the cash market prices and have maintained fairly predictable relationships. Accordingly, a Fund may use interest rate futures contracts as a defense, or hedge, against anticipated interest
rate changes. A Fund presently could accomplish a similar result to that which it hopes to achieve through the use of interest rate futures contracts by selling bonds with long maturities and investing in bonds with short maturities when interest
rates are expected to increase, or conversely, selling bonds with short maturities and investing in bonds with long maturities when interest rates are expected to decline. However, because of the liquidity that is often available in the futures
market, the protection is more likely to be achieved, perhaps at a lower cost and without changing the rate of interest being earned by a Fund, through using futures contracts.
Interest rate futures contracts are traded in an
auction environment on the floors of several exchanges — principally, the Chicago Board of Trade, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the New York Futures Exchange. Each exchange guarantees performance under contract provisions through a
clearing corporation, a nonprofit organization managed by the exchange membership. A public market exists in futures contracts covering various financial instruments including long-term U.S. Treasury Bonds and Notes; GNMA modified pass-through
mortgage backed securities; three-month U.S. Treasury Bills; and ninety-day commercial paper. A Fund may also invest in exchange-traded Eurodollar contracts, which are interest rate futures on the forward level of LIBOR. These contracts are
generally considered liquid securities and trade on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. Such Eurodollar contracts are generally used to “lock-in” or hedge the future level of short-term rates. A Fund may trade in any interest rate futures
contracts for which there exists a public market, including, without limitation, the foregoing instruments.
Index Futures Contracts.
An index futures contract is a contract to buy or sell units of an index at a specified future date at a price agreed upon when the contract is made. Entering into a contract to buy units of an index
is commonly referred to as buying or purchasing a contract or holding a long position in the index. Entering into a contract to sell units of an index is commonly referred to as selling a contract or holding a short position in the index. A unit is
the current value of the index. A Fund may enter into stock index futures contracts, debt index futures contracts, or other index futures contracts appropriate to its objective(s).
Municipal Bond Index Futures Contracts.
Municipal bond index futures contracts may act as a hedge against changes in market conditions. A municipal bond index assigns values daily to the municipal bonds included in the index based on the
independent assessment of dealer-to-dealer municipal bond brokers. A municipal bond index futures contract represents a firm commitment by which two parties agree to take or make delivery of an amount equal to a specified dollar amount multiplied by
the difference between the municipal bond index value on the last trading date of the contract and the price at which the futures contract is originally struck. No physical delivery of the underlying securities in the index is made.
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Commodity-Linked Futures Contracts.
Commodity-linked futures contracts are traded on futures exchanges. These futures exchanges offer a central marketplace in which to transact in futures contracts, a clearing corporation to process
trades, and standardization of expiration dates and contract sizes. Futures markets also specify the terms and conditions of delivery as well as the maximum permissible price movement during a trading session. Additionally, the commodity futures
exchanges may have position limit rules that limit the amount of futures contracts that any one party may hold in a particular commodity at any point in time. These position limit rules are designed to prevent any one participant from controlling a
significant portion of the market.
Commodity-linked futures contracts are generally
based upon commodities within six main commodity groups: (1) energy, which includes, among others, crude oil, brent crude oil, gas oil, natural gas, gasoline and heating oil; (2) livestock, which includes, among others, feeder cattle, live cattle
and hogs; (3) agriculture, which includes, among others, wheat (Kansas wheat and Chicago wheat), corn and soybeans; (4) industrial metals, which includes, among others, aluminum, copper, lead, nickel and zinc; (5) precious metals, which includes,
among others, gold and silver; and (6) softs, which includes cotton, coffee, sugar and cocoa. A Fund may purchase commodity futures contracts, swaps on commodity futures contracts, options on futures contracts and options and futures on commodity
indices with respect to these six main commodity groups and the individual commodities within each group, as well as other types of commodities.
The price of a commodity futures contract will
reflect the storage costs of purchasing the physical commodity. These storage costs include the time value of money invested in the physical commodity plus the actual costs of storing the commodity less any benefits from ownership of the physical
commodity that are not obtained by the holder of a futures contract (this is sometimes referred to as the “convenience yield”). To the extent that these storage costs change for an underlying commodity while a Fund is long futures
contracts on that commodity, the value of the futures contract may change proportionately.
In the commodity futures markets, if producers of
the underlying commodity wish to hedge the price risk of selling the commodity, they will sell futures contracts today to lock in the price of the commodity at delivery tomorrow. In order to induce speculators to take the corresponding long side of
the same futures contract, the commodity producer must be willing to sell the futures contract at a price that is below the expected future spot price. Conversely, if the predominant hedgers in the futures market are the purchasers of the underlying
commodity who purchase futures contracts to hedge against a rise in prices, then speculators will only take the short side of the futures contract if the futures price is greater than the expected future spot price of the commodity.
The changing nature of the hedgers and speculators
in the commodity markets will influence whether futures contract prices are above or below the expected future spot price. This can have significant implications for a Fund when it is time to replace an existing contract with a new contract. If the
nature of hedgers and speculators in futures markets has shifted such that commodity purchasers are the predominant hedgers in the market, a Fund might open the new futures position at a higher price or choose other related commodity-linked
investments.
The values of commodities which
underlie commodity futures contracts are subject to additional variables which may be less significant to the values of traditional securities such as stocks and bonds. Variables such as drought, floods, weather, livestock disease, embargoes and
tariffs may have a larger impact on commodity prices and commodity-linked investments, including futures contracts, commodity-linked structured notes, commodity-linked options and commodity-linked swaps, than on traditional securities. These
additional variables may create additional investment risks which subject a Fund’s commodity-linked investments to greater volatility than investments in traditional securities.
Options on Futures Contracts.
A Fund may purchase and write call and put options on those futures contracts that it is permitted to buy or sell. A Fund may use such options on futures contracts in lieu of writing options directly
on the underlying securities or other assets or purchasing and selling the underlying futures contracts. Such options generally operate in the same manner as options purchased or written directly on the underlying investments. A futures option gives
the holder, in return for the premium paid, the right, but not the obligation, to buy from (call) or sell to (put) the writer of the option a futures contract at a specified price at any time during the period of the option. Upon exercise, the
writer of the option is obligated to pay the difference between the cash value of the futures contract and the exercise price. Like the buyer or seller of a futures contract, the holder or writer of an option has the right to terminate its position
prior to the scheduled expiration of the option by selling or purchasing an option of the same series, at which time the person entering into the closing purchase transaction will realize a gain or loss. There is no guarantee that such closing
purchase transactions can be effected.
A Fund will enter into written options on futures
contracts only when, in compliance with regulatory requirements, it has designated cash or liquid securities at least equal in value to the underlying security’s or other asset’s value (less any applicable margin deposits). A Fund will
be required to deposit initial margin and maintenance margin with respect to put and call options on futures contracts written by it pursuant to brokers’ requirements similar to those described above.
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Options on Index Futures Contracts.
A Fund may also purchase and sell options on index futures contracts. Options on index futures give the purchaser the right, in return for the premium paid, to assume a position in an index futures
contract (a long position if the option is a call and a short position if the option is a put), at a specified exercise price at any time during the period of the option. Upon exercise of the option, the delivery of the futures position by the
writer of the option to the holder of the option will be accompanied by delivery of the accumulated balance in the writer’s futures margin account, which represents the amount by which the market price of the index futures contract, at
exercise, exceeds (in the case of a call) or is less than (in the case of a put) the exercise price of the option on the index future. If an option is exercised on the last trading day prior to the expiration date of the option, the settlement will
be made entirely in cash equal to the difference between the exercise price of the option and the closing level of the index on which the future is based on the expiration date. Purchasers of options who fail to exercise their options prior to the
exercise date suffer a loss of the premium paid.
Use by Tax-Exempt Funds of Interest Rate and U.S.
Treasury Security Futures Contracts and Options.
If a Fund invests in tax-exempt securities, it may purchase and sell futures contracts and related options on interest rate and U.S. Treasury
securities when, in the opinion of a Fund’s portfolio manager, price movements in these security futures and related options will correlate closely with price movements in the tax-exempt securities which are the subject of the hedge. Interest
rate and U.S. Treasury securities futures contracts require the seller to deliver, or the purchaser to take delivery of, the type of security called for in the contract at a specified date and price. Options on interest rate and U.S. Treasury
security futures contracts give the purchaser the right in return for the premium paid to assume a position in a futures contract at the specified option exercise price at any time during the period of the option.
Eurodollar and Yankee Dollar Futures Contracts and
Options Thereon.
Eurodollar futures contracts enable purchasers to obtain a fixed rate for the lending of funds and sellers to obtain a fixed rate for borrowings. A Fund may use Eurodollar futures
contracts and options thereon to hedge against changes in the LIBOR, to which many interest rate swaps and fixed income instruments are linked.
Options
Options on Stocks, Stock Indices and Other Indices.
A Fund may purchase and write (
i.e.
, sell) put and call options. Such options may relate to
particular stocks or stock indices, and may or may not be listed on a domestic or foreign securities exchange and may or may not be issued by the Options Clearing Corporation (OCC). Stock index options are put options and call options on various
stock indices. In most respects, they are identical to listed options on common stocks.
There is a key difference between stock options and
index options in connection with their exercise. In the case of stock options, the underlying security, common stock, is delivered. However, upon the exercise of an index option, settlement does not occur by delivery of the securities comprising the
index. The option holder who exercises the index option receives an amount of cash if the closing level of the stock index upon which the option is based is greater than (in the case of a call) or less than (in the case of a put) the exercise price
of the option. This amount of cash is equal to the difference between the closing price of the stock index and the exercise price of the option expressed in dollars times a specified multiple. A stock index fluctuates with changes in the market
value of the securities included in the index. For example, some stock index options are based on a broad market index, such as the S&P 500
®
Index or a narrower market index, such as the S&P 100
®
Index. Indices may also be based on an industry or market segment.
A Fund may, for the purpose of hedging its
portfolio, subject to applicable securities regulations, purchase and write put and call options on foreign stock indices listed on foreign and domestic stock exchanges.
As an alternative to purchasing call and put options
on index futures, a Fund may purchase call and put options on the underlying indices themselves. Such options could be used in a manner identical to the use of options on index futures. Options involving securities indices provide the holder with
the right to make or receive a cash settlement upon exercise of the option based on movements in the relevant index. Such options must be listed on a national securities exchange and issued by the OCC. Such options may relate to particular
securities or to various stock indices, except that a Fund may not write covered options on an index.
Writing Covered Options.
A Fund may write covered call options and covered put options on securities held in its portfolio. Call options written by a Fund give the purchaser the right to buy the underlying securities from a
Fund at the stated exercise price at any time prior to the expiration date of the option, regardless of the security’s market price; put options give the purchaser the right to sell the underlying securities to a Fund at the stated exercise
price at any time prior to the expiration date of the option, regardless of the security’s market price.
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A Fund may write covered options, which means that,
so long as a Fund is obligated as the writer of a call option, it will own the underlying securities subject to the option (or comparable securities satisfying the cover requirements of securities exchanges). In the case of put options, a Fund will
hold liquid assets equal to the price to be paid if the option is exercised. In addition, a Fund will be considered to have covered a put or call option if and to the extent that it holds an option that offsets some or all of the risk of the option
it has written. A Fund may write combinations of covered puts and calls (straddles) on the same underlying security.
A Fund will receive a premium from writing a put or
call option, which increases a Fund’s return on the underlying security if the option expires unexercised or is closed out at a profit. The amount of the premium reflects, among other things, the relationship between the exercise price and the
current market value of the underlying security, the volatility of the underlying security, the amount of time remaining until expiration, current interest rates, and the effect of supply and demand in the options market and in the market for the
underlying security. By writing a call option, a Fund limits its opportunity to profit from any increase in the market value of the underlying security above the exercise price of the option but continues to bear the risk of a decline in the value
of the underlying security. By writing a put option, a Fund assumes the risk that it may be required to purchase the underlying security for an exercise price higher than the security’s then-current market value, resulting in a potential
capital loss unless the security subsequently appreciates in value.
A Fund’s obligation to sell an instrument
subject to a call option written by it, or to purchase an instrument subject to a put option written by it, may be terminated prior to the expiration date of the option by a Fund’s execution of a closing purchase transaction, which is effected
by purchasing on an exchange an offsetting option of the same series (
i.e.
, same underlying instrument, exercise price and expiration date) as the option previously written. A closing purchase transaction will
ordinarily be effected in order to realize a profit on an outstanding option, to prevent an underlying instrument from being called, to permit the sale of the underlying instrument or to permit the writing of a new option containing different terms
on such underlying instrument. A Fund realizes a profit or loss from a closing purchase transaction if the cost of the transaction (option premium plus transaction costs) is less or more than the premium received from writing the option. Because
increases in the market price of a call option generally reflect increases in the market price of the security underlying the option, any loss resulting from a closing purchase transaction may be offset in whole or in part by unrealized appreciation
of the underlying security.
If a Fund writes a
call option but does not own the underlying security, and when it writes a put option, a Fund may be required to deposit cash or securities with its broker as “margin” or collateral for its obligation to buy or sell the underlying
security. As the value of the underlying security varies, a Fund may also have to deposit additional margin with the broker. Margin requirements are complex and are fixed by individual brokers, subject to minimum requirements currently imposed by
the Federal Reserve Board and by stock exchanges and other self-regulatory organizations.
Purchasing Put Options.
A Fund may purchase put options to protect its portfolio holdings in an underlying security against a decline in market value. Such hedge protection is provided during the life of the put option since
a Fund, as holder of the put option, is able to sell the underlying security at the put exercise price regardless of any decline in the underlying security’s market price. For a put option to be profitable, the market price of the underlying
security must decline sufficiently below the exercise price to cover the premium and transaction costs. By using put options in this manner, a Fund will reduce any profit it might otherwise have realized from appreciation of the underlying security
by the premium paid for the put option and by transaction costs.
Purchasing Call Options.
A Fund may purchase call options, including call options to hedge against an increase in the price of securities that a Fund wants ultimately to buy. Such hedge protection is provided during the life
of the call option since a Fund, as holder of the call option, is able to buy the underlying security at the exercise price regardless of any increase in the underlying security’s market price. In order for a call option to be profitable, the
market price of the underlying security must rise sufficiently above the exercise price to cover the premium and transaction costs. These costs will reduce any profit a Fund might have realized had it bought the underlying security at the time it
purchased the call option.
Over-the-Counter (OTC) Options.
OTC options (options not traded on exchanges) are generally established through negotiation with the other party to the options contract. A Fund will enter into OTC options transactions only with
primary dealers in U.S. Government securities and, in the case of OTC options written by a Fund, only pursuant to agreements that will assure that a Fund will at all times have the right to repurchase the option written by it from the dealer at a
specified formula price. A Fund will treat the amount by which such formula price exceeds the amount, if any, by which the option may be “in-the-money” as an illiquid investment. It is the present policy of a Fund not to enter into any
OTC option transaction if, as a result, more than 15% (10% in some cases; refer to your Fund’s prospectuses) of a Fund’s net assets would be invested in (i) illiquid investments (determined under the foregoing formula) relating to OTC
options written by a Fund, (ii) OTC options purchased by a Fund, (iii) securities which are not readily marketable, and (iv) repurchase agreements maturing in more than seven days.
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Swap Agreements
General
. Swap
agreements are derivative instruments that can be individually negotiated and structured to include exposure to a variety of different types of investments or market factors. Depending on their structure, swap agreements may increase or decrease a
Fund’s exposure to long- or short-term interest rates, foreign currency values, mortgage securities, corporate borrowing rates, or other factors such as security prices or inflation rates. A Fund may enter into a variety of swap agreements,
including interest rate, index, commodity, commodity futures, equity, equity index, credit default, bond futures, total return, currency exchange rate, and other types of swap agreements such as caps, collars and floors. A Fund also may enter into
swaptions, which are options to enter into a swap agreement.
Swap agreements are usually entered into without an
upfront payment because the value of each party’s position is the same. The market values of the underlying commitments will change over time, resulting in one of the commitments being worth more than the other and the net market value
creating a risk exposure for one party or the other.
In a typical interest rate swap, one party agrees to
make regular payments equal to a floating interest rate times a “notional principal amount,” in return for payments equal to a fixed rate times the same amount, for a specified period of time. If a swap agreement provides for payments in
different currencies, the parties might agree to exchange notional principal amounts as well. In a total return swap agreement, the non-floating rate side of the swap is based on the total return of an individual security, a basket of securities, an
index or another reference asset. Swaps may also depend on other prices or rates, such as the value of an index or mortgage prepayment rates.
In a typical cap or floor agreement, one party
agrees to make payments only under specified circumstances, usually in return for payment of a fee by the other party. For example, the buyer of an interest rate cap obtains the right to receive payments to the extent that a specified interest rate
exceeds an agreed-upon level, while the seller of an interest rate floor is obligated to make payments to the extent that a specified interest rate falls below an agreed-upon level. Caps and floors have an effect similar to buying or writing
options. A collar combines elements of buying a cap and selling a floor. In interest rate collar transactions, one party sells a cap and purchases a floor, or vice versa, in an attempt to protect itself against interest rate movements exceeding
given minimum or maximum levels or collar amounts.
Swap agreements will tend to shift a Fund’s
investment exposure from one type of investment to another. For example, if a Fund agreed to pay fixed rates in exchange for floating rates while holding fixed-rate bonds, the swap would tend to decrease a Fund’s exposure to long-term interest
rates. Another example is if a Fund agreed to exchange payments in dollars for payments in foreign currency. In that case, the swap agreement would tend to decrease a Fund’s exposure to U.S. interest rates and increase its exposure to foreign
currency and interest rates.
Because swaps are
two-party contracts that may be subject to contractual restrictions on transferability and termination and because they may have terms of greater than seven days, swap agreements may be considered to be illiquid. If a swap is not liquid, it may not
be possible to initiate a transaction or liquidate a position at an advantageous time or price, which may result in significant losses.
Moreover, a Fund bears the risk of loss of the
amount expected to be received under a swap agreement in the event of the default or bankruptcy of a swap agreement counterparty. When a counterparty’s obligations are not fully secured by collateral, then the Fund is essentially an unsecured
creditor of the counterparty. If the counterparty defaults, the Fund will have contractual remedies, but there is no assurance that a counterparty will be able to meet its obligations pursuant to such contracts or that, in the event of default, the
Fund will succeed in enforcing contractual remedies. Counterparty risk still exists even if a counterparty’s obligations are secured by collateral because the Fund’s interest in collateral may not be perfected or additional collateral
may not be promptly posted as required. Counterparty risk also may be more pronounced if a counterparty’s obligations exceed the amount of collateral held by the Fund (if any), the Fund is unable to exercise its interest in collateral upon
default by the counterparty, or the termination value of the instrument varies significantly from the marked-to-market value of the instrument.
Counterparty risk with respect to derivatives will
be affected by new rules and regulations affecting the derivatives market. Some derivatives transactions are required to be centrally cleared, and a party to a cleared derivatives transaction is subject to the credit risk of the clearing house and
the clearing member through which it holds its cleared position, rather than the credit risk of its original counterparty to the derivative transaction. Credit risk of market participants with respect to derivatives that are centrally cleared is
concentrated in a few clearing houses, and it is not clear how an insolvency proceeding of a clearing house would be conducted and what impact an insolvency of a clearing house would have on the financial system. A clearing member is obligated by
contract and by applicable regulation to segregate all funds received from customers with respect to cleared derivatives transactions from the clearing member’s proprietary assets. However, all funds and other property received by a clearing
broker from its customers are generally held by the clearing broker on a commingled basis in an omnibus account, and the clearing member may invest those funds in certain instruments permitted under the applicable regulations. The assets of a Fund
might not be fully protected in the event of the bankruptcy of a Fund’s clearing member, because the Fund would be limited to recovering only a pro rata share of all available funds segregated on behalf of the clearing broker’s customers
for a
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relevant account class. Also, the clearing member is required to
transfer to the clearing organization the amount of margin required by the clearing organization for cleared derivatives, which amounts are generally held in an omnibus account at the clearing organization for all customers of the clearing member.
Regulations promulgated by the CFTC require that the clearing member notify the clearing house of the amount of initial margin provided by the clearing member to the clearing organization that is attributable to each customer. However, if the
clearing member does not provide accurate reporting, the Funds are subject to the risk that a clearing organization will use a Fund’s assets held in an omnibus account at the clearing organization to satisfy payment obligations of a defaulting
customer of the clearing member to the clearing organization. In addition, clearing members generally provide to the clearing organization the net amount of variation margin required for cleared swaps for all of its customers in the aggregate,
rather than the gross amount of each customer. The Funds are therefore subject to the risk that a clearing organization will not make variation margin payments owed to a Fund if another customer of the clearing member has suffered a loss and is in
default, and the risk that a Fund will be required to provide additional variation margin to the clearing house before the clearing house will move the Fund’s cleared derivatives transactions to another clearing member. In addition, if a
clearing member does not comply with the applicable regulations or its agreement with the Funds, or in the event of fraud or misappropriation of customer assets by a clearing member, a Fund could have only an unsecured creditor claim in an
insolvency of the clearing member with respect to the margin held by the clearing member.
Interest Rate Swaps.
Interest rate swap agreements are often used to obtain or preserve a desired return or spread at a lower cost than through a direct investment in an instrument that yields the desired return or spread.
They are financial instruments that involve the exchange of one type of interest rate cash flow for another type of interest rate cash flow on specified dates in the future. In a standard interest rate swap transaction, two parties agree to exchange
their respective commitments to pay fixed or floating interest rates on a predetermined specified (notional) amount. The swap agreement’s notional amount is the predetermined basis for calculating the obligations that the swap counterparties
have agreed to exchange. Under most swap agreements, the obligations of the parties are exchanged on a net basis. The two payment streams are netted out, with each party receiving or paying, as the case may be, only the net amount of the two
payments. Interest rate swaps can be based on various measures of interest rates, including LIBOR, swap rates, Treasury rates and foreign interest rates.
Credit Default Swap Agreements.
A Fund may enter into credit default swap agreements, which may have as reference obligations one or more securities or a basket of securities that are or are not currently held by a Fund. The
protection “buyer” in a credit default contract is generally obligated to pay the protection “seller” an upfront or a periodic stream of payments over the term of the contract provided that no credit event, such as a default,
on a reference obligation has occurred. If a credit event occurs, the seller generally must pay the buyer the “par value” (full notional value) of the swap in exchange for an equal face amount of deliverable obligations of the reference
entity described in the swap, or the seller may be required to deliver the related net cash amount, if the swap is cash settled. A Fund may be either the buyer or seller in a credit default swap. If a Fund is a buyer and no credit event occurs, a
Fund may recover nothing if the swap is held through its termination date. However, if a credit event occurs, the buyer generally may elect to receive the full notional value of the swap in exchange for an equal face amount of deliverable
obligations of the reference entity whose value may have significantly decreased. As a seller, a Fund generally receives an upfront payment or a fixed rate of income throughout the term of the swap provided that there is no credit event. As the
seller, a Fund would effectively add leverage to its portfolio because, in addition to its total net assets, a Fund would be subject to investment exposure on the notional amount of the swap.
Credit default swap agreements may involve greater
risks than if a Fund had invested in the reference obligation directly since, in addition to risks relating to the reference obligation, credit default swaps are subject to illiquidity risk, counterparty risk and credit risk. A Fund will enter into
credit default swap agreements generally with counterparties that meet certain standards of creditworthiness. A buyer generally will lose its investment and recover nothing if no credit event occurs and the swap is held to its termination date. If a
credit event were to occur, the value of any deliverable obligation received by the seller, coupled with the upfront or periodic payments previously received, may be less than the full notional value it pays to the buyer, resulting in a loss of
value to the seller.
A Fund’s
obligations under a credit default swap agreement will be accrued daily (offset against any amounts owing to the Fund). For bilateral credit default swaps (CDS) where the Fund is the seller of protection, the Fund will cover the full notional amount
of the swap minus any collateral on deposit. In connection with credit default swaps in which a Fund is the buyer, the Fund will segregate or designate cash or other liquid assets in accordance with its policies and procedures. Such segregation or
designation will ensure that a Fund has assets available to satisfy its obligations with respect to the transaction. Such segregation or designation will not limit a Fund’s exposure to loss.
Equity Swaps.
A Fund may engage in equity swaps. Equity swaps allow the parties to the swap agreement to exchange components of return on one equity investment (
e.g.
, a basket of equity securities or an index) for a component of return on another non-equity or equity investment, including an exchange of differential rates of return. Equity swaps may be used
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invest in a market without owning or taking physical custody of
securities in circumstances where direct investment may be restricted for legal reasons or is otherwise impractical. Equity swaps also may be used for other purposes, such as hedging or seeking to increase total return.
Total Return Swap Agreements.
Total return swap agreements are contracts in which one party agrees to make periodic payments to another party based on the change in market value of the assets underlying the contract, which may
include a specified security, basket of securities or securities indices during the specified period, in return for periodic payments based on a fixed or variable interest rate or the total return from other underlying assets. Total return swap
agreements may be used to obtain exposure to a security or market without owning or taking physical custody of such security or investing directly in such market. Total return swap agreements may effectively add leverage to a Fund’s portfolio
because, in addition to its total net assets, a Fund would be subject to investment exposure on the notional amount of the swap.
Total return swap agreements are subject to the risk
that a counterparty will default on its payment obligations to a Fund thereunder, and conversely, that a Fund will not be able to meet its obligation to the counterparty. Generally, a Fund will enter into total return swaps on a net basis (
i.e.
, the two payment streams are netted against one another with a Fund receiving or paying, as the case may be, only the net amount of the two payments). The net amount of the excess, if any, of a Fund’s
obligations over its entitlements with respect to each total return swap will be accrued on a daily basis, and an amount of liquid assets having an aggregate net asset value at least equal to the accrued excess will be designated by a Fund in its
books and records. If the total return swap transaction is entered into on other than a net basis, the full amount of a Fund’s obligations will be accrued on a daily basis, and the full amount of a Fund’s obligations will be designated
by a Fund in an amount equal to or greater than the market value of the liabilities under the total return swap agreement or the amount it would have cost a Fund initially to make an equivalent direct investment, plus or minus any amount a Fund is
obligated to pay or is to receive under the total return swap agreement.
Variance, Volatility and Correlation Swap Agreements.
Variance and volatility swaps are contracts that provide exposure to increases or decreases in the volatility of certain referenced assets. Correlation swaps are contracts that provide exposure to
increases or decreases in the correlation between the prices of different assets or different market rates.
Commodity-Linked Swaps.
Commodity-linked swaps are two-party contracts in which the parties agree to exchange the return or interest rate on one instrument for the return of a particular commodity, commodity index or
commodities futures or options contract. The payment streams are calculated by reference to an agreed upon notional amount. A one-period swap contract operates in a manner similar to a forward or futures contract because there is an agreement to
swap a commodity for cash at only one forward date. A Fund may engage in swap transactions that have more than one period and therefore more than one exchange of commodities.
A Fund may invest in total return commodity swaps to
gain exposure to the overall commodity markets. In a total return commodity swap, a Fund will receive the price appreciation of a commodity index, a portion of the index, or a single commodity in exchange for paying an agreed-upon fee. If the
commodity swap is for one period, the Fund will pay a fixed fee, established at the outset of the swap. However, if the term of the commodity swap is more than one period, with interim swap payments, the Fund will pay an adjustable or floating fee.
With a “floating” rate, the fee is pegged to a base rate such as LIBOR, and is adjusted each period. Therefore, if interest rates increase over the term of the swap contract, a Fund may be required to pay a higher fee at each swap reset
date.
Cross Currency Swaps.
Cross currency swaps are similar to interest rate swaps, except that they involve multiple currencies. A Fund may enter into a cross currency swap when it has exposure to one currency and desires
exposure to a different currency. Typically, the interest rates that determine the currency swap payments are fixed, although occasionally one or both parties may pay a floating rate of interest. Unlike an interest rate swap, however, the principal
amounts are exchanged at the beginning of the contract and returned at the end of the contract. In addition to paying and receiving amounts at the beginning and termination of the agreements, both sides will have to pay in full periodically based
upon the currency they have borrowed. Changes in foreign exchange currency rates and changes in interest rates, as described above, may negatively affect currency swaps.
Contracts for Differences.
Contracts for differences are swap arrangements in which the parties agree that their return (or loss) will be based on the relative performance of two different groups or baskets of securities. Often,
one or both baskets will be an established securities index. A Fund’s return will be based on changes in value of theoretical long futures positions in the securities comprising one basket (with an aggregate face value equal to the notional
amount of the contract for differences) and theoretical short futures positions in the securities comprising the other basket. A Fund also may use actual long and short futures positions and achieve similar market exposure by netting the payment
obligations of the two contracts. A Fund typically enters into contracts for differences (and analogous futures positions) when its portfolio manager believes that the basket of securities constituting the long position will outperform the basket
constituting the short position. If the short basket outperforms the long basket, a Fund will realize a loss — even in circumstances when the securities in both the long and short baskets appreciate in value.
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Swaptions.
A swaption is an options contract on a swap agreement. These transactions give a party the right (but not the obligation) to enter into new swap agreements or to shorten, extend, cancel or otherwise
modify an existing swap agreement (which are described herein) at some designated future time on specified terms, in return for payment of the purchase price (the “premium”) of the option. A Fund may write (sell) and purchase put and
call swaptions to the same extent it may make use of standard options on securities or other instruments. The writer of the contract receives the premium and bears the risk of unfavorable changes in the market value on the underlying swap agreement.
Swaptions can be bundled and sold as a package. These are commonly called interest rate caps, floors and collars (which are described herein).
Many swaps are complex and often valued
subjectively. Many over-the-counter derivatives are complex and their valuation often requires modeling and judgment, which increases the risk of mispricing or incorrect valuation. The pricing models used may not produce valuations that are
consistent with the values the Fund realizes when it closes or sells an over-the-counter derivative. Valuation risk is more pronounced when the Fund enters into over-the-counter derivatives with specialized terms because the market value of those
derivatives in some cases is determined in part by reference to similar derivatives with more standardized terms. Incorrect valuations may result in increased cash payment requirements to counterparties, undercollateralization and/or errors in
calculation of the Fund’s net asset value.
Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act (the “Dodd-Frank Act”) established a framework for the regulation of OTC swap markets; the framework outlined the joint responsibility of the CFTC and the SEC in regulating swaps. The CFTC is responsible for the
regulation of swaps, the SEC is responsible for the regulation of security-based swaps and they are both jointly responsible for the regulation of mixed swaps.
Risk of Potential Governmental Regulation of
Derivatives
It is possible that government regulation of
various types of derivative instruments, including futures and swap agreements, may limit or prevent the Funds from using such instruments as a part of their investment strategy, and could ultimately prevent the Funds from being able to achieve
their investment objectives. The effects of present or future legislation and regulation in this area are not known, but the effects could be substantial and adverse.
The futures markets are subject to comprehensive
statutes, regulations, and margin requirements. In addition, the SEC, CFTC and the exchanges are authorized to take extraordinary actions in the event of a market emergency, including, for example, the implementation or reduction of speculative
position limits, the implementation of higher margin requirements, the establishment of daily price limits and the suspension of trading.
The regulation of swaps and futures transactions in
the U.S. is a rapidly changing area of law and is subject to modification by government and judicial action. There is a possibility of future regulatory changes altering, perhaps to a material extent, the nature of an investment in a Fund or the
ability of a Fund to continue to implement its investment strategies. In particular, the Dodd-Frank Act, which was signed into law in July 2010, has changed the way in which the U.S. financial system is supervised and regulated. Title VII of the
Dodd-Frank Act sets forth a new legislative framework for OTC derivatives, such as swaps, in which the Funds may invest. Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act makes broad changes to the OTC derivatives market, grants significant new authority to the SEC
and the CFTC to regulate OTC derivatives and market participants, and will require clearing of many OTC derivatives transactions.
Recent U.S. and non-U.S. legislative and regulatory
reforms, including those related to the Dodd-Frank Act, have resulted in, and may in the future result in, new regulation of derivative instruments and the Fund's use of such instruments. New regulations could, among other things, restrict the
Fund's ability to engage in derivative transactions (for example, by making certain types of derivative instruments or transactions no longer available to the Fund) and/or increase the costs of such transactions, and the Fund may as a result be
unable to execute its investment strategies in a manner the Investment Manager might otherwise choose.
Additional Risk Factors in Cleared Derivatives
Transactions
Under recently adopted rules and regulations,
transactions in some types of swaps (including interest rate swaps and credit default swaps on North American and European indices) are required to be centrally cleared. In a transaction involving those swaps (“cleared derivatives”), a
Fund’s counterparty is a clearing house, rather than a bank or broker. Since the Funds are not members of clearing houses and only members of a clearing house (“clearing members”) can participate directly in the clearing house, the
Funds will hold cleared derivatives through accounts at clearing members. In a cleared derivatives transaction, the Funds will make payments (including margin payments) to and receive payments from a clearing house through their accounts at clearing
members. Clearing members guarantee performance of their clients’ obligations to the clearing house.
In many ways, centrally cleared derivative
arrangements are less favorable to open-end funds than bilateral arrangements. For example, the Funds may be required to provide greater amounts of margin for cleared derivatives positions than for bilateral derivatives transactions. Also, in
contrast to a bilateral derivatives position, following a period of notice to a Fund, a clearing member generally can require termination of an existing cleared derivatives position at any time or increases in margin requirements above the margin
that the clearing member required at the beginning of a transaction. Clearing houses also have
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broad rights to increase margin requirements for existing positions
or to terminate those positions at any time. Any increase in margin requirements or termination of existing cleared derivatives positions by the clearing member or the clearing house could interfere with the ability of a Fund to pursue its
investment strategy. Further, any increase in margin requirements by a clearing member could also expose a Fund to greater credit risk to its clearing member, because margin for cleared derivatives transactions in excess of clearing house’s
margin requirements typically is held by the clearing member. Also, a Fund is subject to risk if it enters into a derivatives transaction that is required to be cleared (or that the Investment Manager expects to be cleared), and no clearing member
is willing or able to clear the transaction on the Fund’s behalf. While the documentation in place between the Funds and their clearing members generally provides that the clearing members will accept for clearing all transactions submitted
for clearing that are within credit limits (specified in advance) for each Fund, the Funds are still subject to the risk that no clearing member will be willing or able to clear a transaction. In those cases, the position might have to be
terminated, and the Fund could lose some or all of the benefit of the position, including loss of an increase in the value of the position and/or loss of hedging protection. In addition, the documentation governing the relationship between the Funds
and clearing members is developed by the clearing members and generally is less favorable to the Funds than typical bilateral derivatives documentation. For example, documentation relating to cleared derivatives generally includes a one-way
indemnity by the Funds in favor of the clearing member for losses the clearing member incurs as the Funds’ clearing member and typically does not provide the Funds any remedies if the clearing member defaults or becomes insolvent. While
futures contracts entail similar risks, the risks likely are more pronounced for cleared swaps due to their more limited liquidity and market history.
Some types of cleared derivatives are required to be
executed on an exchange or on a swap execution facility. A swap execution facility is a trading platform where multiple market participants can execute derivatives by accepting bids and offers made by multiple other participants in the platform.
While this execution requirement is designed to increase transparency and liquidity in the cleared derivatives market, trading on a swap execution facility can create additional costs and risks for the Funds. For example, swap execution facilities
typically charge fees, and if a Fund executes derivatives on a swap execution facility through a broker intermediary, the intermediary may impose fees as well. Also, a Fund may indemnify a swap execution facility, or a broker intermediary who
executes cleared derivatives on a swap execution facility on the Fund’s behalf, against any losses or costs that may be incurred as a result of the Fund’s transactions on the swap execution facility.
These and other new rules and regulations could,
among other things, further restrict a Fund’s ability to engage in, or increase the cost to the Fund of, derivatives transactions, for example, by making some types of derivatives no longer available to the Fund, increasing margin or capital
requirements, or otherwise limiting liquidity or increasing transaction costs. These regulations are new and evolving, so their potential impact on the Funds and the financial system are not yet known. While the new regulations and the central
clearing of some derivatives transactions are designed to reduce systemic risk (
i.e.
, the risk that the interdependence of large derivatives dealers could cause a number of those dealers to suffer liquidity,
solvency or other challenges simultaneously), there is no assurance that the new clearing mechanisms will achieve that result, and in the meantime, as noted above, central clearing and related requirements expose the Funds to new kinds of risks and
costs.
CFTC Regulation
Pursuant to Rule 4.5 under the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA), each
of Alternative Beta Fund, MM Alternative Strategies Fund, MM Directional Alternative Strategies Fund, Adaptive Risk Allocation Fund and Diversified Absolute Return Fund do not qualify for an exclusion from the definition of a commodity pool.
Accordingly, each of these Funds is registered as a "commodity pool" and the Investment Manager is registered as a "commodity pool operator" with respect to these Funds under the CEA.
Each of the other Funds listed on the cover of this
SAI qualifies for an exclusion from the definition of a commodity pool under the CEA and has on file a notice of exclusion under CFTC Rule 4.5. Accordingly, the Investment Manager is not subject to registration or regulation as a “commodity
pool operator” under the CEA with respect to these Funds, although the Investment Manager is a registered “commodity pool operator” and “commodity trading advisor”. To remain eligible for the exclusion, each of these
Funds is limited in its ability to use certain financial instruments regulated under the CEA (“commodity interests”), including futures and options on futures and certain swaps transactions. In the event that a Fund’s investments
in commodity interests are not within the thresholds set forth in the exclusion, one or more Funds not currently registered as a “commodity pool” may be required to register as such, which could increase Fund expenses, adversely
affecting the Fund’s total return.
Dollar
Rolls
Dollar rolls involve selling securities (
e.g.
, mortgage-backed securities or U.S. Treasury securities) and simultaneously entering into a commitment to purchase those or similar securities on a specified future date and price from the same party. Mortgage
dollar rolls and U.S. Treasury rolls are types of dollar rolls. A Fund foregoes principal and interest paid on the securities during the “roll” period. A Fund is compensated by the difference between the current sales price and the lower
forward price for the
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future purchase of the securities, as well as the interest earned
on the cash proceeds of the initial sale. The investor also could be compensated through the receipt of fee income equivalent to a lower forward price. Dollar roll transactions may result in higher transaction costs for a Fund.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with mortgage dollar rolls include: Counterparty Risk, Credit Risk and Interest Rate Risk.
Exchange-traded notes (ETNs)
ETNs are instruments that combine aspects of bonds and
exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and are designed to provide investors with access to the returns, less investor fees and expenses, of various market benchmarks or strategies to which they are usually linked. When an investor buys an ETN, the issuer,
typically an underwriting bank, promises to pay upon maturity the amount reflected in the benchmark or strategy (minus fees and expenses). Some ETNs make periodic coupon payments. Like ETFs, ETNs are traded on an exchange, but ETNs have additional
risks compared to ETFs, including the risk that if the credit of the ETN issuer becomes suspect, the investment might lose some or all of its value. Though linked to the performance, for example, of a market benchmark, ETNs are not equities or index
funds, but they do share several characteristics. Similar to equities, ETNs are traded on an exchange and can be sold short. Similar to index funds, ETNs may be linked to the return of a benchmark or strategy, but ETNs do not have an ownership
interest in the instruments underlying the benchmark or strategy the ETN is tracking.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with exchange-traded notes include: Counterparty Risk, Credit Risk and Market Risk.
Foreign Currency Transactions
Because investments in foreign securities usually involve
currencies of foreign countries and because a Fund may hold cash and cash equivalent investments in foreign currencies, the value of a Fund’s assets as measured in U.S. dollars may be affected favorably or unfavorably by changes in currency
exchange rates and exchange control regulations. Also, a Fund may incur costs in connection with conversions between various currencies. Currency exchange rates may fluctuate significantly over short periods of time, causing a Fund’s NAV to
fluctuate. Currency exchange rates are generally determined by the forces of supply and demand in the foreign exchange markets, actual or anticipated changes in interest rates, and other complex factors. Currency exchange rates also can be affected
by the intervention of U.S. or foreign governments or central banks, or the failure to intervene, or by currency controls or political developments.
Spot Rates and Derivative Instruments
.
A Fund may conduct its foreign currency exchange transactions either at the spot (cash) rate prevailing in the foreign currency exchange market or by entering
into forward foreign currency exchange contracts (forward contracts). (See
Types of Investments – Derivatives
.) These contracts are traded in the interbank market conducted directly
between currency traders (usually large commercial banks) and their customers. Because foreign currency transactions occurring in the interbank market might involve substantially larger amounts than those involved in the use of such derivative
instruments, a Fund could be disadvantaged by having to deal in the odd lot market for the underlying foreign currencies at prices that are less favorable than for round lots.
A Fund may enter into forward contracts for a
variety of reasons, including for risk management (hedging) or for investment purposes.
When a Fund enters into a contract for the purchase
or sale of a security denominated in a foreign currency or has been notified of a dividend or interest payment, it may desire to lock in the price of the security or the amount of the payment, usually in U.S. dollars, although it could desire to
lock in the price of the security in another currency. By entering into a forward contract, a Fund would be able to protect itself against a possible loss resulting from an adverse change in the relationship between different currencies from the
date the security is purchased or sold to the date on which payment is made or received or when the dividend or interest is actually received.
A Fund may enter into forward contracts when
management of the Fund believes the currency of a particular foreign country may decline in value relative to another currency. When selling currencies forward in this fashion, a Fund may seek to hedge the value of foreign securities it holds
against an adverse move in exchange rates. The precise matching of forward contract amounts and the value of securities involved generally will not be possible since the future value of securities in foreign currencies more than likely will change
between the date the forward contract is entered into and the date it matures. The projection of short-term currency market movements is extremely difficult and successful execution of a short-term hedging strategy is highly uncertain.
This method of protecting the value of a
Fund’s securities against a decline in the value of a currency does not eliminate fluctuations in the underlying prices of the securities. It simply establishes a rate of exchange that can be achieved at some point in time. Although forward
contracts can be used to minimize the risk of loss due to a decline in value of hedged currency, they will also limit any potential gain that might result should the value of such currency increase.
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A Fund may also enter into forward contracts when
the Fund’s portfolio manager believes the currency of a particular country will increase in value relative to another currency. A Fund may buy currencies forward to gain exposure to a currency without incurring the additional costs of
purchasing securities denominated in that currency.
For example, the combination of U.S.
dollar-denominated instruments with long forward currency exchange contracts creates a position economically equivalent to a position in the foreign currency, in anticipation of an increase in the value of the foreign currency against the U.S.
dollar. Conversely, the combination of U.S. dollar-denominated instruments with short forward currency exchange contracts is economically equivalent to borrowing the foreign currency for delivery at a specified date in the future, in anticipation of
a decrease in the value of the foreign currency against the U.S. dollar.
Unanticipated changes in the currency exchange
results could result in poorer performance for Funds that enter into these types of transactions.
A Fund may designate cash or securities in an amount
equal to the value of the Fund’s total assets committed to consummating forward contracts entered into under the circumstance set forth above. If the value of the securities declines, additional cash or securities will be designated on a daily
basis so that the value of the cash or securities will equal the amount of the Fund’s commitments on such contracts.
At maturity of a forward contract, a Fund may either
deliver (if a contract to sell) or take delivery of (if a contract to buy) the foreign currency or terminate its contractual obligation by entering into an offsetting contract with the same currency trader, having the same maturity date, and
covering the same amount of foreign currency.
If a Fund engages in an offsetting transaction, it
will incur a gain or loss to the extent there has been movement in forward contract prices. If a Fund engages in an offsetting transaction, it may subsequently enter into a new forward contract to buy or sell the foreign currency.
Although a Fund values its assets each business day
in terms of U.S. dollars, it may not intend to convert its foreign currencies into U.S. dollars on a daily basis. However, it will do so from time to time, and such conversions involve certain currency conversion costs. Although foreign exchange
dealers do not charge a fee for conversion, they do realize a profit based on the difference (spread) between the prices at which they buy and sell various currencies. Thus, a dealer may offer to sell a foreign currency to a Fund at one rate, while
offering a lesser rate of exchange should a Fund desire to resell that currency to the dealer.
It is possible, under certain circumstances,
including entering into forward currency contracts for investment purposes, that a Fund will be required to limit or restructure its forward contract currency transactions to qualify as a “regulated investment company” under the
Code.
Options on Foreign Currencies.
A Fund may buy put and call options and write covered call and cash-secured put options on foreign currencies for hedging purposes and to gain exposure to foreign currencies. For example, a decline in
the dollar value of a foreign currency in which securities are denominated will reduce the dollar value of such securities, even if their value in the foreign currency remains constant. In order to protect against the diminutions in the value of
securities, a Fund may buy put options on the foreign currency. If the value of the currency does decline, a Fund would have the right to sell the currency for a fixed amount in dollars and would thereby offset, in whole or in part, the adverse
effect on its portfolio that otherwise would have resulted.
Conversely, where a change in the dollar value of a
currency would increase the cost of securities a Fund plans to buy, or where a Fund would benefit from increased exposure to the currency, a Fund may buy call options on the foreign currency, giving it the right to purchase the currency for a fixed
amount in dollars. The purchase of the options could offset, at least partially, the changes in exchange rates.
As in the case of other types of options, however,
the benefit to a Fund derived from purchases of foreign currency options would be reduced by the amount of the premium and related transaction costs. In addition, where currency exchange rates do not move in the direction or to the extent
anticipated, a Fund could sustain losses on transactions in foreign currency options that would require it to forego a portion or all of the benefits of advantageous changes in rates.
A Fund may write options on foreign currencies for
similar purposes. For example, when a Fund anticipates a decline in the dollar value of foreign-denominated securities due to adverse fluctuations in exchange rates, it could, instead of purchasing a put option, write a call option on the relevant
currency, giving the option holder the right to purchase that currency from the Fund for a fixed amount in dollars. If the expected decline occurs, the option would most likely not be exercised and the diminution in value of securities would be
offset, at least partially, by the amount of the premium received.
Similarly, instead of purchasing a call option when
a foreign currency is expected to appreciate, a Fund could write a put option on the relevant currency, giving the option holder the right to that currency from the Fund for a fixed amount in dollars. If rates move in the manner projected, the put
option would expire unexercised and allow the Fund to hedge increased cost up to the amount of the premium.
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As in the case of other types of options, however,
the writing of a foreign currency option will constitute only a partial hedge up to the amount of the premium, and only if rates move in the expected direction. If this does not occur, the option may be exercised and the Fund would be required to
buy or sell the underlying currency at a loss that may not be offset by the amount of the premium. Through the writing of options on foreign currencies, the Fund also may be required to forego all or a portion of the benefits that might otherwise
have been obtained from favorable movements on exchange rates.
An option written on foreign currencies is covered
if a Fund holds currency sufficient to cover the option or has an absolute and immediate right to acquire that currency without additional cash consideration upon conversion of assets denominated in that currency or exchange of other currency held
in its portfolio. An option writer could lose amounts substantially in excess of its initial investments, due to the margin and collateral requirements associated with such positions.
Options on foreign currencies are traded through
financial institutions acting as market-makers, although foreign currency options also are traded on certain national securities exchanges, such as the Philadelphia Stock Exchange and the Chicago Board Options Exchange, subject to SEC regulation. In
an over-the-counter trading environment, many of the protections afforded to exchange participants will not be available. For example, there are no daily price fluctuation limits, and adverse market movements could therefore continue to an unlimited
extent over a period of time. Although the purchaser of an option cannot lose more than the amount of the premium plus related transaction costs, this entire amount could be lost.
Foreign currency option positions entered into on a
national securities exchange are cleared and guaranteed by the OCC, thereby reducing the risk of counterparty default. Further, a liquid secondary market in options traded on a national securities exchange may be more readily available than in the
over-the-counter market, potentially permitting a Fund to liquidate open positions at a profit prior to exercise or expiration, or to limit losses in the event of adverse market movements.
Foreign Currency Futures and Related Options.
A Fund may enter into currency futures contracts to buy or sell currencies. It also may buy put and call options and write covered call and cash-secured put options on currency futures. Currency
futures contracts are similar to currency forward contracts, except that they are traded on exchanges (and have margin requirements) and are standardized as to contract size and delivery date. Most currency futures call for payment of delivery in
U.S. dollars. A Fund may use currency futures for the same purposes as currency forward contracts, subject to CFTC limitations.
Currency futures and options on futures values can
be expected to correlate with exchange rates, but will not reflect other factors that may affect the value of the Fund’s investments. A currency hedge, for example, should protect a Yen-denominated bond against a decline in the Yen, but will
not protect a Fund against price decline if the issuer’s creditworthiness deteriorates. Because the value of a Fund’s investments denominated in foreign currency will change in response to many factors other than exchange rates, it may
not be possible to match the amount of a forward contract to the value of a Fund’s investments denominated in that currency over time.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with foreign currency transactions include: Foreign Currency Risk, Derivatives Risk, Interest Rate Risk, and Liquidity Risk.
Foreign Securities
Unless otherwise stated in a Fund’s prospectus, stocks, bonds
and other securities or investments are deemed to be “foreign” based primarily on the issuer’s place of organization/incorporation, but the Fund may also consider the issuer’s domicile, its principal place of business, its
primary stock exchange listing, the source of its revenue or other factors. A Fund’s investments in foreign markets, may include issuers in emerging markets, as well as frontier markets, each of which carry heightened risks as compared with
investments in other typical foreign markets. Unless otherwise stated in a Fund’s prospectus, emerging market countries are generally those either defined by World Bank-defined per capita income brackets or determined to be an emerging market
based on the Fund portfolio manager’s qualitative judgments about a country’s level of economic and institutional development, among other factors. Frontier market countries generally have smaller economies and even less developed
capital markets than typical emerging market countries (which themselves have increased investment risk relative to investing in more developed markets) and, as a result, the risks of investing in emerging market countries are magnified in frontier
market countries. Foreign securities may be structured as fixed-, variable- or floating-rate obligations or as zero-coupon, pay-in-kind and step-coupon securities and may be privately placed or publicly offered. See
Types of Investments — Variable- and Floating-Rate Obligations, — Debt Obligations - Zero-Coupon, Pay-in-Kind and Step-Coupon Securities
and
— Private Placement and Other Restricted Securities
for more information.
Due to the potential for foreign withholding taxes,
MSCI publishes two versions of its indices reflecting the reinvestment of dividends using two different methodologies: gross dividends and net dividends. While both versions reflect reinvested dividends, they differ with respect to the manner in
which taxes associated with dividend payments are treated. In calculating the net dividends version, MSCI incorporates reinvested dividends applying the withholding tax rate applicable to foreign non-resident institutional investors that do not
benefit from double taxation treaties. The Investment Manager believes that the net dividends version of MSCI indices better reflects the returns U.S. investors might expect were they to invest directly in the component securities of an MSCI
index.
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There is a practice in certain foreign markets under
which an issuer’s securities are blocked from trading at the custodian or sub-custodian level for a specified number of days before and, in certain instances, after a shareholder meeting where such shares are voted. This is referred to as
“share blocking.” The blocking period can last up to several weeks. Share blocking may prevent a Fund from buying or selling securities during this period, because during the time shares are blocked, trades in such securities will not
settle. It may be difficult or impossible to lift blocking restrictions, with the particular requirements varying widely by country. As a consequence of these restrictions, the Investment Manager, on behalf of a Fund, may abstain from voting proxies
in markets that require share blocking.
Foreign securities may include depositary receipts,
such as American Depositary Receipts (ADRs), European Depositary Receipts (EDRs) and Global Depositary Receipts (GDRs). ADRs are U.S. dollar-denominated receipts issued in registered form by a domestic bank or trust company that evidence ownership
of underlying securities issued by a foreign issuer. EDRs are foreign currency-denominated receipts issued in Europe, typically by foreign banks or trust companies and foreign branches of domestic banks, that evidence ownership of foreign or
domestic securities. GDRs are receipts structured similarly to ADRs and EDRs and are marketed globally. Depositary receipts will not necessarily be denominated in the same currency as their underlying securities. In general, ADRs, in registered
form, are designed for use in the U.S. securities markets, and EDRs, in bearer form, are designed for use in European securities markets. GDRs are tradable both in the United States and in Europe and are designed for use throughout the world. A Fund
may invest in depositary receipts through “sponsored” or “unsponsored” facilities. A sponsored facility is established jointly by the issuer of the underlying security and a depositary, whereas a depositary may establish an
unsponsored facility without participation by the issuer of the deposited security. Holders of unsponsored depositary receipts generally bear all the costs of such facilities and the depositary of an unsponsored facility frequently is under no
obligation to distribute interest holder communications received from the issuer of the deposited security or to pass through voting rights to the holders of such receipts in respect of the deposited securities. The issuers of unsponsored depositary
receipts are not obligated to disclose material information in the United States, and, therefore, there may be limited information available regarding such issuers and/or limited correlation between available information and the market value of the
depositary receipts.
Although one or more of
the other risks described in this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with foreign securities include: Emerging Markets Securities Risk, Foreign Currency Risk, Foreign Securities Risk, Frontier Market Risk, Geographic Focus Risk,
Issuer Risk and Market Risk.
Guaranteed
Investment Contracts (Funding Agreements)
Guaranteed
investment contracts, or funding agreements, are short-term, privately placed debt instruments issued by insurance companies. Pursuant to such contracts, a Fund may make cash contributions to a deposit fund of the insurance company’s general
account. The insurance company then credits to a Fund payments at negotiated, floating or fixed interest rates. A Fund will purchase guaranteed investment contracts only from issuers that, at the time of purchase, meet certain credit and quality
standards. In general, guaranteed investment contracts are not assignable or transferable without the permission of the issuing insurance companies, and an active secondary market does not exist for these investments. In addition, the issuer may not
be able to pay the principal amount to a Fund on seven days’ notice or less, at which time the investment may be considered illiquid under applicable SEC regulatory guidance and subject to certain restrictions. See
Types of Investments – Illiquid Securities
.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with guaranteed investment contracts (funding agreements) include: Credit Risk and Liquidity Risk.
High-Yield Securities
High-yield, or low and below investment grade securities (below
investment grade securities are also known as “junk bonds”) are debt securities with the lowest investment grade rating (
e.g.
, BBB by S&P and Fitch or Baa by Moody’s), that are below
investment grade (
e.g.
, lower than BBB by S&P and Fitch or Baa by Moody’s) or that are unrated but determined by a Fund’s portfolio manager to be of comparable quality. These types of
securities may be issued to fund corporate transactions or restructurings, such as leveraged buyouts, mergers, acquisitions, debt reclassifications or similar events, are more speculative in nature than securities with higher ratings and tend to be
more sensitive to credit risk, particularly during a downturn in the economy. These types of securities generally are issued by unseasoned companies without long track records of sales and earnings, or by companies or municipalities that have
questionable credit strength. High-yield securities and comparable unrated securities: (i) likely will have some quality and protective characteristics that, in the judgment of one or more NRSROs, are outweighed by large uncertainties or major risk
exposures to adverse conditions; (ii) are speculative with respect to the issuer’s capacity to pay interest and repay principal in accordance with the terms of the obligation; and (iii) may have a less liquid secondary market, potentially
making it difficult to value or sell such securities. Credit ratings issued by credit rating agencies are designed to evaluate the safety of principal and interest payments of rated securities. They do not, however, evaluate the market value risk of
lower-quality securities and, therefore, may not fully reflect the true risks of an investment. In addition, credit rating agencies may or may not make timely changes in a rating to reflect changes in the economy or in the condition of
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the issuer that affect the market value of the securities.
Consequently, credit ratings are used only as a preliminary indicator of investment quality. High-yield securities may be structured as fixed-, variable- or floating-rate obligations or as zero-coupon, pay-in-kind and step-coupon securities and may
be privately placed or publicly offered. See
Types of Investments – Variable- and Floating-Rate Obligations, – Debt Obligations – Zero-Coupon, Pay-in-Kind and Step-Coupon Securities
and
– Private Placement and Other Restricted Securities
for more information.
The rates of return on these types of securities
generally are higher than the rates of return available on more highly rated securities, but generally involve greater volatility of price and risk of loss of principal and income, including the possibility of default by or insolvency of the issuers
of such securities. Accordingly, a Fund may be more dependent on the Investment Manager’s (or, if applicable, a subadviser’s) credit analysis with respect to these types of securities than is the case for more highly rated
securities.
The market values of certain
high-yield securities and comparable unrated securities tend to be more sensitive to individual corporate developments and changes in economic conditions than are the market values of more highly rated securities. In addition, issuers of high-yield
and comparable unrated securities often are highly leveraged and may not have more traditional methods of financing available to them, so that their ability to service their debt obligations during an economic downturn or during sustained periods of
rising interest rates may be impaired.
The
risk of loss due to default is greater for high-yield and comparable unrated securities than it is for higher rated securities because high-yield securities and comparable unrated securities generally are unsecured and frequently are subordinated to
more senior indebtedness. A Fund may incur additional expenses to the extent that it is required to seek recovery upon a default in the payment of principal or interest on its holdings of such securities. The existence of limited markets for
lower-rated debt securities may diminish a Fund’s ability to: (i) obtain accurate market quotations for purposes of valuing such securities and calculating portfolio net asset value; and (ii) sell the securities at fair market value either to
meet redemption requests or to respond to changes in the economy or in financial markets.
Many lower-rated securities are not registered for
offer and sale to the public under the 1933 Act. Investments in these restricted securities may be determined to be liquid (able to be sold within seven days at approximately the price at which they are valued by a Fund) pursuant to policies
approved by the Fund’s Trustees. Investments in illiquid securities, including restricted securities that have not been determined to be liquid, may not exceed 15% of a Fund’s net assets. A Fund is not otherwise subject to any limitation
on its ability to invest in restricted securities. Restricted securities may be less liquid than other lower-rated securities, potentially making it difficult to value or sell such securities.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with high-yield securities include: Credit Risk, Interest Rate Risk, High-Yield Securities Risk and Prepayment and Extension Risk.
Illiquid Securities
Illiquid securities are defined by a Fund consistent with the SEC
staff’s current guidance and interpretations which provide that an illiquid security is an asset which may not be sold or disposed of in the ordinary course of business within seven days at approximately the value at which a Fund has valued
the investment on its books. Some securities, such as those not registered under U.S. securities laws, cannot be sold in public transactions. Some securities are deemed to be illiquid because they are subject to contractual or legal restrictions on
resale. Subject to its investment policies, a Fund may invest in illiquid investments and may invest in certain restricted securities that are deemed to be illiquid securities at the time of purchase.
In October 2016, the SEC adopted a new rule relating
to the management of liquidity risk by certain investment companies registered under the 1940 Act, such as the Funds. The new rule may impact the Funds' performance and ability to achieve their respective investment objectives. The Investment
Manager continues to evaluate the potential impact of this new rule, which has a compliance date of December 1, 2018 as it relates to the Funds.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risk typically associated with illiquid securities include: Liquidity Risk.
Inflation-Protected Securities
Inflation is a general rise in prices of goods and services.
Inflation erodes the purchasing power of an investor’s assets. For example, if an investment provides a total return of 7% in a given year and inflation is 3% during that period, the inflation-adjusted, or real, return is 4%.
Inflation-protected securities are debt securities whose principal and/or interest payments are adjusted for inflation, unlike debt securities that make fixed principal and interest payments. One type of inflation-protected debt security is issued
by the U.S. Treasury. The principal of these securities is adjusted for inflation as indicated by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for urban consumers and interest is paid on the adjusted amount. The CPI is a measurement of changes in the cost of
living, made up of components such as housing, food, transportation and energy.
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If the CPI falls, the principal value of
inflation-protected securities will be adjusted downward, and consequently the interest payable on these securities (calculated with respect to a smaller principal amount) will be reduced. Conversely, if the CPI rises, the principal value of
inflation-protected securities will be adjusted upward, and consequently the interest payable on these securities will be increased. Repayment of the original bond principal upon maturity is guaranteed in the case of U.S. Treasury
inflation-protected securities, even during a period of deflation. However, the current market value of the inflation-protected securities is not guaranteed and will fluctuate. Other inflation-indexed securities include inflation-related bonds,
which may or may not provide a similar guarantee. If a guarantee of principal is not provided, the adjusted principal value of the bond repaid at maturity may be less than the original principal.
Other issuers of inflation-protected debt securities
include other U.S. government agencies or instrumentalities, corporations and foreign governments. There can be no assurance that the CPI or any foreign inflation index will accurately measure the real rate of inflation in the prices of goods and
services. Moreover, there can be no assurance that the rate of inflation in a foreign country will be correlated to the rate of inflation in the United States. If interest rates rise due to reasons other than inflation (for example, due to changes
in currency exchange rates), investors in these securities may not be protected to the extent that the increase is not reflected in the bond’s inflation measure.
Any increase in principal for an inflation-protected
security resulting from inflation adjustments is considered by IRS regulations to be taxable income in the year it occurs. For direct holders of an inflation-protected security, this means that taxes must be paid on principal adjustments even though
these amounts are not received until the bond matures. Similarly, a Fund treated as a regulated investment company (RIC) under the Code that holds these securities distributes both interest income and the income attributable to principal adjustments
in the form of cash or reinvested shares, which are taxable to shareholders.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with inflation-protected securities include: Inflation-Protected Securities Risk, Interest Rate Risk and Market Risk. In addition, inflation-protected securities issued by non-U.S. government
agencies or instrumentalities are subject to Credit Risk.
Initial Public Offerings
A Fund may invest in initial public offerings (IPOs) of common
stock or other primary or secondary syndicated offerings of equity or debt securities issued by a corporate issuer. Fixed income funds frequently invest in these types of offerings of debt securities. A purchase of IPO securities often involves
higher transaction costs than those associated with the purchase of securities already traded on exchanges or markets. A Fund may hold IPO securities for a period of time, or may sell them soon after the purchase. Investments in IPOs could have a
magnified impact — either positive or negative — on a Fund’s performance while the Fund’s assets are relatively small. The impact of an IPO on a Fund’s performance may tend to diminish as the Fund’s assets grow.
In circumstances when investments in IPOs make a significant contribution to a Fund’s performance, there can be no assurance that similar contributions from IPOs will continue in the future.
Although one or more risks described in this SAI may
also apply, the risks typically associated with IPOs include: IPO Risk, Issuer Risk, Liquidity Risk, Market Risk and Small Company Securities Risk.
Inverse Floaters
See
Types of
Investments – Derivatives – Indexed or Linked Securities (Structured Products)
above.
Investments in Other Investment Companies (Including
ETFs)
Investing in other investment companies may be a means
by which a Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective. A Fund may invest in securities issued by other investment companies within the limits prescribed by the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder and any exemptive relief currently or
in the future available to a Fund. These securities include shares of other affiliated or unaffiliated open-end investment companies (
i.e.
, mutual funds), closed-end funds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), UCITS
funds (pooled investment vehicles established in accordance with the Undertaking for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities adopted by European Union member states) and business development companies.
Except with respect to funds structured as
funds-of-funds or so-called master/feeder funds or other funds whose strategies otherwise allow such investments, the 1940 Act generally requires that a fund limit its investments in another investment company or series thereof so that, as
determined at the time a securities purchase is made: (i) no more than 5% of the value of its total assets will be invested in the securities of any one investment company; (ii) no more than 10% of the value of its total assets will be invested in
the aggregate in securities of other investment companies; and (iii) no more than 3% of the outstanding voting stock of any one investment company or series thereof will be owned by a fund or by companies controlled by a fund. Such other investment
companies may include ETFs, which are shares of publicly traded unit investment trusts, open-end funds or depositary receipts that may be passively managed (e.g., they seek to track the performance of specific indexes or companies in related
industries) or they may be actively managed. The SEC has granted orders for exemptive relief to certain ETFs that permit investments in those ETFs by certain other registered investment companies in excess of these limits.
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ETFs are listed on an exchange and trade in the
secondary market on a per-share basis, which allows investors to purchase and sell ETF shares at their market price throughout the day. Certain ETFs, such as passively managed ETFs, hold portfolios of securities that are designed to replicate, as
closely as possible before expenses, the price and yield of a specified market index. The performance results of these ETFs will not replicate exactly the performance of the pertinent index due to transaction and other expenses, including fees to
service providers borne by ETFs. ETF shares are sold and redeemed at net asset value only in large blocks called creation units. The Funds’ ability to redeem creation units may be limited by the 1940 Act, which provides that ETFs will not be
obligated to redeem shares held by the Funds in an amount exceeding one percent of their total outstanding securities during any period of less than 30 days.
Although a Fund may derive certain advantages from
being able to invest in shares of other investment companies, such as to be fully invested, there may be potential disadvantages. Investing in other investment companies may result in higher fees and expenses for a Fund and its shareholders. A
shareholder may be charged fees not only on Fund shares held directly but also on the investment company shares that a Fund purchases. Because these investment companies may invest in other securities, they are also subject to the risks associated
with a variety of investment instruments as described in this SAI.
Under the 1940 Act and rules and regulations
thereunder, a Fund may purchase shares of affiliated funds, subject to certain conditions. Investing in affiliated funds may present certain actual or potential conflicts of interest. For more information about such actual and potential conflicts of
interest, see
Investment Management and Other Services – Other Roles and Relationships of Ameriprise Financial and its Affiliates – Certain Conflicts of Interest
.
Although
one or more of the other risks described in this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with the securities of other investment companies include: Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) Risk, Investing in Other Funds Risk, Issuer Risk and Market
Risk.
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Listed Private Equity Funds
A Fund may invest directly in listed private equity
funds, which may include, among others, business development companies, investment holding companies, publicly traded limited partnership interests (common units), publicly traded venture capital funds, publicly traded venture capital trusts,
publicly traded private equity funds, publicly traded private equity investment trusts, publicly traded closed-end funds, publicly traded financial institutions that lend to or invest in privately held companies and any other publicly traded vehicle
whose purpose is to invest in privately held companies.
A Fund may invest in listed private equity funds
that hold investments in a wide array of businesses and industries at various stages of development, from early stage to later stage to fully mature businesses. A Fund may invest in listed private equity funds that emphasize making equity and
equity-like (preferred stock, convertible stock and warrants) investments in later stage to mature businesses, or may invest in listed private equity funds making debt investments or investments in companies at other stages of development. In
addition, a Fund may invest in the common stock of closed-end management investment companies, including business development companies that invest in securities of listed private equity companies.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with investment in listed private equity funds include: Credit Risk, Liquidity Risk, Market Risk, Sector Risk, and Valuation Risk.
Money Market Instruments
Money market instruments include cash equivalents and short-term
debt obligations which include: (i) bank obligations, including certificates of deposit (CDs), time deposits and bankers’ acceptances, and letters of credit of banks or savings and loan associations having capital surplus and undivided profits
(as of the date of its most recently published annual financial statements) in excess of $100 million (or the equivalent in the instance of a foreign branch of a U.S. bank) at the date of investment; (ii) funding agreements; (iii) repurchase
agreements; (iv) obligations of the United States, foreign countries and supranational entities, and each of their subdivisions, agencies and instrumentalities; (v) certain corporate debt securities, such as commercial paper, short-term corporate
obligations and extendible commercial notes; (vi) participation interests; and (vii) municipal securities. Money market instruments may be structured as fixed-, variable- or floating-rate obligations and may be privately placed or publicly offered.
A Fund may also invest in affiliated and unaffiliated money market mutual funds, which invest primarily in money market instruments. See
Types of Investments — Variable- and Floating-Rate
Obligations
and
— Private Placement and Other Restricted Securities
for more information.
With respect to money market securities, certain
U.S. Government obligations are backed or insured by the U.S. Government, its agencies or its instrumentalities. Other money market securities are backed only by the claims paying ability or creditworthiness of the issuer.
Bankers’ acceptances
are marketable short-term credit instruments used to finance the import, export, transfer or storage of goods. They are termed “accepted” when a bank unconditionally guarantees their payment at
maturity.
A Fund may invest its daily
cash balance in Columbia Short-Term Cash Fund, a money market fund established for the exclusive use of the funds in the Columbia Fund Complex and other institutional clients of the Investment Manager.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with money market instruments include: Credit Risk, Inflation Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Issuer Risk and Money Market Fund Risk.
Mortgage-Backed Securities
Mortgage-backed securities are a type of asset-backed security that
represent interests in, or debt instruments backed by, pools of underlying mortgages. In some cases, these underlying mortgages may be insured or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or its agencies. Mortgage-backed securities entitle the security
holders to receive distributions that are tied to the payments made on the underlying mortgage collateral (less fees paid to the originator, servicer, or other parties, and fees paid for credit enhancement), so that the payments made on the
underlying mortgage collateral effectively pass through to such security holders. Mortgage-backed securities are created when mortgage originators (or mortgage loan sellers who have purchased mortgage loans from mortgage loan originators) sell the
underlying mortgages to a special purpose entity in a process called a securitization. The special purpose entity issues securities that are backed by the payments on the underlying mortgage loans, and have a minimum denomination and specific term.
Mortgage-backed securities may be structured as fixed-, variable- or floating-rate obligations or as zero-coupon, pay-in-kind and step-coupon securities and may be privately placed or publicly offered. See
Types of Investments — Variable- and Floating-Rate Obligations, — Debt Obligations - Zero-Coupon, Pay-in-Kind and Step-Coupon Securities
and
— Private Placement and Other Restricted Securities
for more information.
Mortgage-backed securities may be issued or
guaranteed by GNMA (also known as Ginnie Mae), FNMA (also known as Fannie Mae), or FHLMC (also known as Freddie Mac), but also may be issued or guaranteed by other issuers, including private companies. GNMA is a government-owned corporation that is
an agency of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. It guarantees, with the full faith and credit of the United States, full and timely payment of all monthly principal and interest on its mortgage-backed securities. Until recently,
FNMA and FHLMC were government-sponsored corporations
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owned entirely by private stockholders. Both issue mortgage-related
securities that contain guarantees as to timely payment of interest and principal but that are not backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government. The value of the companies’ securities fell sharply in 2008 due to concerns that the
firms did not have sufficient capital to offset losses. The U.S. Treasury has historically had the authority to purchase obligations of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. In addition, in 2008, due to capitalization concerns, Congress provided the U.S.
Treasury with additional authority to lend Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac emergency funds and to purchase the companies’ stock, as described below. In September 2008, the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) announced that
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had been placed in conservatorship.
In the past Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have received
significant capital support through U.S. Treasury preferred stock purchases and Federal Reserve purchases of their mortgage-backed securities. There can be no assurance that these or other agencies of the government will provide such support in the
future. The future status of Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac could be impacted by, among other things, the actions taken and restrictions placed on Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac by the FHFA in its role as conservator, the restrictions placed on Fannie
Mae’s or Freddie Mac’s operations and activities under the senior stock purchase agreements, market responses to developments at Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, and future legislative and regulatory action that alters the operations,
ownership structure and/or mission of Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, each of which may, in turn, impact the value of, and cash flows on, any securities guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Stripped mortgage-backed securities are a type of
mortgage-backed security that receives differing proportions of the interest and principal payments from the underlying assets. Generally, there are two classes of stripped mortgage-backed securities: Interest Only (IO) and Principal Only (PO). IOs
entitle the holder to receive distributions consisting of all or a portion of the interest on the underlying pool of mortgage loans or mortgage-backed securities. POs entitle the holder to receive distributions consisting of all or a portion of the
principal of the underlying pool of mortgage loans or mortgage-backed securities. See
Types of Investments — Debt Obligations - Stripped Securities
for more information.
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (CMOs) are
hybrid mortgage-related instruments issued by special purpose entities secured by pools of mortgage loans or other mortgage-related securities, such as mortgage pass-through securities or stripped mortgage-backed securities. CMOs may be structured
into multiple classes, often referred to as “tranches,” with each class bearing a different stated maturity and entitled to a different schedule for payments of principal and interest, including prepayments. Principal prepayments on
collateral underlying a CMO may cause it to be retired substantially earlier than its stated maturity or final distribution dates, resulting in a loss of all or part of the premium if any has been paid. The yield characteristics of mortgage-backed
securities differ from those of other debt securities. Among the differences are that interest and principal payments are made more frequently on mortgage-backed securities, usually monthly, and principal may be repaid at any time. These factors may
reduce the expected yield. Interest is paid or accrues on all classes of the CMOs on a periodic basis. The principal and interest payments on the underlying mortgage assets may be allocated among the various classes of CMOs in several ways.
Typically, payments of principal, including any prepayments, on the underlying mortgage assets are applied to the classes in the order of their respective stated maturities or final distribution dates, so that no payment of principal is made on CMOs
of a class until all CMOs of other classes having earlier stated maturities or final distribution dates have been paid in full.
Commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) are a
specific type of mortgage-backed security collateralized by a pool of mortgages on commercial real estate.
CMO residuals are mortgage securities issued by
agencies or instrumentalities of the U.S. Government or by private originators of, or investors in, mortgage loans, including savings and loan associations, homebuilders, mortgage banks, commercial banks, investment banks and special purpose
entities of the foregoing. The cash flow generated by the mortgage assets underlying a series of CMOs is applied first to make required payments of principal and interest on the CMOs and second to pay the related administrative expenses and any
management fee of the issuer. The residual in a CMO structure generally represents the interest in any excess cash flow remaining after making the foregoing payments. Each payment of such excess cash flow to a holder of the related CMO residual
represents income and/or a return of capital. The amount of residual cash flow resulting from a CMO will depend on, among other things, the characteristics of the mortgage assets, the coupon rate of each class of CMO, prevailing interest rates, the
amount of administrative expenses and the pre-payment experience on the mortgage assets. In particular, the yield to maturity on CMO residuals is extremely sensitive to pre-payments on the related underlying mortgage assets, in the same manner as an
interest-only (“IO”) class of stripped mortgage-backed securities. In addition, if a series of a CMO includes a class that bears interest at an adjustable rate, the yield to maturity on the related CMO residual will also be extremely
sensitive to changes in the level of the index upon which interest rate adjustments are based. As described below with respect to stripped mortgage-backed securities, in certain circumstances an ETF may fail to recoup fully its initial investment in
a CMO residual. CMO residuals are generally purchased and sold by institutional investors through several investment banking firms acting as brokers or dealers. Transactions in CMO residuals are generally completed only after careful review of the
characteristics of the securities in question. In addition, CMO residuals may, or pursuant to an exemption therefrom, may not have been registered under the 1933 Act. CMO residuals, whether or not registered under the 1933 Act, may be subject to
certain restrictions on transferability, and may be deemed “illiquid” and subject to a Fund’s limitations on investment in illiquid securities.
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Mortgage pass-through securities are interests in
pools of mortgage-related securities that differ from other forms of debt securities, which normally provide for periodic payment of interest in fixed amounts with principal payments at maturity or specified call dates. Instead, these securities
provide a monthly payment which consists of both interest and principal payments. In effect, these payments are a “pass-through” of the monthly payments made by the individual borrowers on their residential or commercial mortgage loans,
net of any fees paid to the issuer or guarantor of such securities. Additional payments are caused by repayments of principal resulting from the sale of the underlying property, refinancing or foreclosure, net of fees or costs which may be incurred.
Some mortgage-related securities (such as securities issued by the GNMA) are described as “modified pass-through.” These securities entitle the holder to receive all interest and principal payments owed on the mortgage pool, net of
certain fees, at the scheduled payment dates regardless of whether or not the mortgagor actually makes the payment.
REMICs are entities that own mortgages and elect
REMIC status under the Code and, like CMOs, issue debt obligations collateralized by underlying mortgage assets that have characteristics similar to those issued by CMOs.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with mortgage- and asset-backed securities include: Credit Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Issuer Risk, Liquidity Risk, Mortgage- and Other Asset-Backed Securities Risk, Prepayment and Extension Risk
and Reinvestment Risk.
Municipal
Securities
Municipal securities include debt obligations
issued by governmental entities, including states, political subdivisions, agencies, instrumentalities, and authorities, as well as U.S. territories, commonwealths and possessions (such as Guam, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands) and their
political subdivisions, agencies, instrumentalities, and authorities, to obtain funds for various public purposes, including the construction of a wide range of public facilities, the refunding of outstanding obligations, the payment of general
operating expenses, and the extension of loans to public institutions and facilities.
Municipal securities may include municipal bonds,
municipal notes and municipal leases, which are described below. Municipal bonds are debt obligations of a governmental entity that obligate the municipality to pay the holder a specified sum of money at specified intervals and to repay the
principal amount of the loan at maturity. Municipal securities can be classified into two principal categories, including “general obligation” bonds and other securities and “revenue” bonds and other securities. General
obligation bonds are secured by the issuer’s full faith, credit and taxing power for the payment of principal and interest. Revenue securities are payable only from the revenues derived from a particular facility or class of facilities or, in
some cases, from the proceeds of a special excise tax or other specific revenue source, such as the user of the facility being financed. Municipal securities also may include “moral obligation” securities, which normally are issued by
special purpose public authorities. If the issuer of moral obligation securities is unable to meet its debt service obligations from current revenues, it may draw on a reserve fund, the restoration of which is a moral commitment but not a legal
obligation of the governmental entity that created the special purpose public authority. Municipal securities may be structured as fixed-, variable- or floating-rate obligations or as zero-coupon, pay-in-kind and step-coupon securities and may be
privately placed or publicly offered. See
Types of Investments – Variable- and Floating-Rate Obligations, – Debt Obligations – Zero-Coupon, Pay-in-Kind and Step-Coupon Securities
and
– Private Placement and Other Restricted Securities
for more information.
Municipal notes may be issued by governmental
entities and other tax-exempt issuers in order to finance short-term cash needs or, occasionally, to finance construction. Most municipal notes are general obligations of the issuing entity payable from taxes or designated revenues expected to be
received within the relevant fiscal period. Municipal notes generally have maturities of one year or less. Municipal notes can be subdivided into two sub-categories: (i) municipal commercial paper and (ii) municipal demand obligations.
Municipal commercial paper typically consists of
very short-term unsecured negotiable promissory notes that are sold, for example, to meet seasonal working capital or interim construction financing needs of a governmental entity or agency. While these obligations are intended to be paid from
general revenues or refinanced with long-term debt, they frequently are backed by letters of credit, lending agreements, note repurchase agreements or other credit facility agreements offered by banks or institutions. See
Types of Investments – Commercial Paper
for more information.
Municipal demand obligations can be subdivided into
two general types: variable rate demand notes and master demand obligations. Variable rate demand notes are tax-exempt municipal obligations or participation interests that provide for a periodic adjustment in the interest rate paid on the notes.
They permit the holder to demand payment of the notes, or to demand purchase of the notes at a purchase price equal to the unpaid principal balance, plus accrued interest either directly by the issuer or by drawing on a bank letter of credit or
guaranty issued with respect to such note. The issuer of the municipal obligation may have a corresponding right to prepay at its discretion the outstanding principal of the note plus accrued interest upon notice comparable to that required for the
holder to demand payment. The variable rate demand notes in which a Fund may invest are payable, or are subject to purchase, on demand, usually on notice of seven calendar days or less. The terms of the notes generally provide that interest rates
are adjustable at intervals ranging from daily to six months.
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Master demand obligations are tax-exempt municipal
obligations that provide for a periodic adjustment in the interest rate paid and permit daily changes in the amount borrowed. The interest on such obligations is, in the opinion of counsel for the borrower, excluded from gross income for U.S.
federal income tax purposes (but not necessarily for alternative minimum tax purposes). Although there is no secondary market for master demand obligations, such obligations are considered by a Fund to be liquid because they are payable upon
demand.
Municipal lease obligations are
participations in privately arranged loans to state or local government borrowers and may take the form of a lease, an installment purchase, or a conditional sales contract. They are issued by state and local governments and authorities to acquire
land, equipment, and facilities. An investor may purchase these obligations directly, or it may purchase participation interests in such obligations. In general, municipal lease obligations are unrated, in which case they will be determined by a
Fund’s portfolio manager to be of comparable quality at the time of purchase to rated instruments that may be acquired by a Fund. Frequently, privately arranged loans have variable interest rates and may be backed by a bank letter of credit.
In other cases, they may be unsecured or may be secured by assets not easily liquidated.
Moreover, such loans in most cases are not backed by
the taxing authority of the issuers and may have limited marketability or may be marketable only by virtue of a provision requiring repayment following demand by the lender.
Municipal leases may be subject to greater risks
than general obligation or revenue bonds. State constitutions and statutes set forth requirements that states or municipalities must meet in order to issue municipal obligations. Municipal leases may contain a covenant by the state or municipality
to budget for and make payments due under the obligation. Certain municipal leases may, however, provide that the issuer is not obligated to make payments on the obligation in future years unless funds have been appropriated for this purpose each
year.
Although lease obligations do not
constitute general obligations of the municipal issuer to which the government’s taxing power is pledged, a lease obligation ordinarily is backed by the government’s covenant to budget for, appropriate, and make the payments due under
the lease obligation. However, certain lease obligations contain “non-appropriation” clauses that provide that the government has no obligation to make lease or installment purchase payments in future years unless money is appropriated
for such purpose on a periodic basis. In the case of a “non-appropriation” lease, a Fund’s ability to recover under the lease in the event of non-appropriation or default likely will be limited to the repossession of the leased
property in the event that foreclosure proves difficult.
Tender option bonds are municipal securities having
relatively long maturities and bearing interest at a fixed interest rate substantially higher than prevailing short-term tax-exempt rates that is coupled with the agreement of a third party, such as a bank, broker-dealer or other financial
institution, to grant the security holders the option, at periodic intervals, to tender their securities to the institution and receive the face value thereof. The financial institution receives periodic fees equal to the difference between the
municipal security’s coupon rate and the rate that would cause the security to trade at face value on the date of determination.
There are variations in the quality of municipal
securities, both within a particular classification and between classifications, and the rates of return on municipal securities can depend on a variety of factors, including general money market conditions, the financial condition of the issuer,
general conditions of the municipal bond market, the size of a particular offering, the maturity of the obligation, and the rating of the issue. The ratings of NRSROs represent their opinions as to the quality of municipal securities. It should be
emphasized, however, that these ratings are general and are not absolute standards of quality, and municipal securities with the same maturity, interest rate, and rating may have different rates of return while municipal securities of the same
maturity and interest rate with different ratings may have the same rate of return. The municipal bond market is characterized by a large number of different issuers, many having smaller sized bond issues, and a wide choice of different maturities
within each issue. For these reasons, most municipal bonds do not trade on a daily basis and many trade only rarely. Because many of these bonds trade infrequently, the spread between the bid and offer may be wider and the time needed to develop a
bid or an offer may be longer than for other security markets. See Appendix A for a discussion of securities ratings. (See
Types of Investments – Debt Obligations
.)
Standby Commitments.
Standby commitments are securities under which a purchaser, usually a bank or broker-dealer, agrees to purchase, for a fee, an amount of a Fund’s municipal obligations. The amount payable by a
bank or broker-dealer to purchase securities subject to a standby commitment typically will be substantially the same as the value of the underlying municipal securities. A Fund may pay for standby commitments either separately in cash or by paying
a higher price for portfolio securities that are acquired subject to such a commitment.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with standby commitments include: Counterparty Risk, Market Risk and Municipal Securities Risk.
Taxable Municipal Obligations.
Interest or other investment return is subject to federal income tax for certain types of municipal obligations for a variety of reasons. These municipal obligations do not qualify for the federal
income tax exemption because (a) they did not receive necessary authorization for tax-exempt treatment from state or local government authorities,
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(b) they exceed certain regulatory limitations on the cost of
issuance for tax-exempt financing or (c) they finance public or private activities that do not qualify for the federal income tax exemption. These non-qualifying activities might include, for example, certain types of multi-family housing, certain
professional and local sports facilities, refinancing of certain municipal debt, and borrowing to replenish a municipality’s underfunded pension plan.
For more information about the key risks associated
with investments in municipal securities of particular states, see Appendix C. See Appendix A for a discussion of securities ratings. (See
Types of Investments – Debt Obligations
.)
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with municipal securities include: Credit Risk, Inflation Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Market Risk and Municipal Securities Risk.
Participation Interests
Participation interests (also called pass-through certificates or
securities) represent an interest in a pool of debt obligations, such as municipal bonds or notes that have been “packaged” by an intermediary, such as a bank or broker-dealer. Participation interests typically are issued by partnerships
or trusts through which a Fund receives principal and interest payments that are passed through to the holder of the participation interest from the payments made on the underlying debt obligations. The purchaser of a participation interest receives
an undivided interest in the underlying debt obligations. The issuers of the underlying debt obligations make interest and principal payments to the intermediary, as an initial purchaser, which are passed through to purchasers in the secondary
market, such as a Fund. Mortgage-backed securities are a common type of participation interest. Participation interests may be structured as fixed-, variable- or floating-rate obligations or as zero-coupon, pay-in- kind and step-coupon securities
and may be privately placed or publicly offered. See
Types of Investments – Variable- and Floating-Rate Obligations, – Debt Obligations – Zero-Coupon, Pay-in-Kind and Step-Coupon
Securities
and
– Private Placement and Other Restricted Securities
for more information.
Loan participations also are a type of participation
interest. Loans, loan participations, and interests in securitized loan pools are interests in amounts owed by a corporate, governmental, or other borrower to a lender or consortium of lenders (typically banks, insurance companies, investment banks,
government agencies, or international agencies).
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with loan participations include: Confidential Information Access Risk, Credit Risk and Interest Rate Risk.
Partnership Securities
The Fund may invest in securities issued by publicly traded
partnerships or master limited partnerships or limited liability companies (together referred to as “PTPs/MLPs”). These entities are limited partnerships or limited liability companies that may be publicly traded on stock exchanges or
markets such as the NYSE, the NYSE Alternext US LLC (“NYSE Alternext”) (formerly the American Stock Exchange) and NASDAQ. PTPs/MLPs often own businesses or properties relating to energy, natural resources or real estate, or may be
involved in the film industry or research and development activities. Generally PTPs/MLPs are operated under the supervision of one or more managing partners or members. Limited partners, unit holders, or members (such as a fund that invests in a
partnership) are not involved in the day-to-day management of the company. Limited partners, unit holders, or members are allocated income and capital gains associated with the partnership project in accordance with the terms of the partnership or
limited liability company agreement.
At times
PTPs/MLPs may potentially offer relatively high yields compared to common stocks. Because PTPs/MLPs are generally treated as partnerships or similar limited liability “pass-through” entities for tax purposes, they do not ordinarily pay
income taxes, but pass their earnings on to unit holders (except in the case of some publicly traded firms that may be taxed as corporations). For tax purposes, unit holders may initially be deemed to receive only a portion of the distributions
attributed to them because certain other portions may be attributed to the repayment of initial investments and may thereby lower the cost basis of the units or shares owned by unit holders. As a result, unit holders may effectively defer taxation
on the receipt of some distributions until they sell their units. These tax consequences may differ for different types of entities.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with partnership securities include: Interest Rate Risk, Issuer Risk, Liquidity Risk and Market Risk.
Preferred Stock
Preferred stock represents units of ownership of a corporation that
frequently have dividends that are set at a specified rate. Preferred stock has preference over common stock in the payment of dividends and the liquidation of assets. Preferred stock shares some of the characteristics of both debt and equity.
Preferred stock ordinarily does not carry voting rights. Most preferred stock is cumulative; if dividends are passed (
i.e.
, not paid for any reason), they accumulate and must be paid before common stock
dividends. Participating preferred stock entitles its holders to share in profits above and beyond the declared dividend, along with common shareholders, as distinguished from nonparticipating preferred stock, which is limited to the stipulated
dividend. Convertible preferred stock is exchangeable for a given number of shares of common stock and thus tends to be more volatile than nonconvertible preferred stock, which generally behaves more like a fixed income bond. Preferred stock may
be
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privately placed or publicly offered. The price of a preferred
stock is generally determined by earnings, type of products or services, projected growth rates, experience of management, liquidity, and general market conditions of the markets on which the stock trades. See
Types of Investments – Private Placement and Other Restricted Securities
for more information.
Auction preferred stock (APS) is a type of
adjustable-rate preferred stock with a dividend determined periodically in a Dutch auction process by corporate bidders. An APS is distinguished from standard preferred stock because its dividends change from time to time. Shares typically are
bought and sold at face values generally ranging from $100,000 to $500,000 per share. Holders of APS may not be able to sell their shares if an auction fails, such as when there are more shares of APS for sale at an auction than there are purchase
bids.
Although one or more of the other risks
described in this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with preferred stock include: Convertible Securities Risk, Issuer Risk, Liquidity Risk and Market Risk.
Trust-Preferred Securities.
Trust-preferred securities, also known as trust-issued securities, are securities that have characteristics of both debt and equity instruments and are typically treated by the Funds as debt
investments.
Generally, trust-preferred
securities are cumulative preferred stocks issued by a trust that is created by a financial institution, such as a bank holding company. The financial institution typically creates the trust with the objective of increasing its capital by issuing
subordinated debt to the trust in return for cash proceeds that are reflected on the financial institutions balance sheet.
The primary asset owned by the trust is the
subordinated debt issued to the trust by the financial institution. The financial institution makes periodic interest payments on the debt as discussed further below. The financial institution will subsequently own the trust’s common
securities, which may typically represent a small percentage of the trust’s capital structure. The remainder of the trust’s capital structure typically consists of trust-preferred securities which are sold to investors. The trust uses
the sales proceeds to purchase the subordinated debt issued by the financial institution. The financial institution uses the proceeds from the subordinated debt sale to increase its capital while the trust receives periodic interest payments from
the financial institution for holding the subordinated debt.
The trust uses the interest received to make
dividend payments to the holders of the trust-preferred securities. The dividends are generally paid on a quarterly basis and are often higher than other dividends potentially available on the financial institution’s common stocks. The
interests of the holders of the trust-preferred securities are senior to those of common stockholders in the event that the financial institution is liquidated, although their interests are typically subordinated to those of other holders of other
debt issued by the institution.
The primary
benefit for the financial institution in using this particular structure is that the trust-preferred securities issued by the trust are treated by the financial institution as debt securities for tax purposes (as a consequence of which the expense
of paying interest on the securities is tax deductible), but are treated as more desirable equity securities for purposes of the calculation of capital requirements.
In certain instances, the structure involves more
than one financial institution and thus, more than one trust. In such a pooled offering, an additional separate trust may be created. This trust will issue securities to investors and use the proceeds to purchase the trust-preferred securities
issued by other trust subsidiaries of the participating financial institutions. In such a structure, the trust-preferred securities held by the investors are backed by other trust-preferred securities issued by the trust subsidiaries.
If a financial institution is financially unsound
and defaults on interest payments to the trust, the trust will not be able to make dividend payments to holders of the trust-preferred securities such as the Fund, as the trust typically has no business operations other than holding the subordinated
debt issued by the financial institution(s) and issuing the trust-preferred securities and common stock backed by the subordinated debt.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with trust-preferred securities include: Credit Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Liquidity Risk and Prepayment and Extension Risk.
Private Placement and Other Restricted
Securities
Private placement securities are securities that
have been privately placed and are not registered under the 1933 Act. They are generally eligible for sale only to certain eligible investors. Private placements often may offer attractive opportunities for investment not otherwise available on the
open market. Private placement and other “restricted” securities often cannot be sold to the public without registration under the 1933 Act or the availability of an exemption from registration (such as Rules 144 or 144A), or they are
“not readily marketable” because they are subject to other legal or contractual delays in or restrictions on resale. Asset-backed securities, common stock, convertible securities, corporate debt securities, foreign securities, high-yield
securities, money market instruments, mortgage-backed securities, municipal securities, participation interests, preferred stock and other types of equity and debt instruments may be privately placed or restricted securities.
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Private placements typically may be sold only to
qualified institutional buyers or, in the case of the initial sale of certain securities, such as those issued in collateralized debt obligations or collateralized loan obligations, to accredited investors (as defined in Rule 501(a) under the 1933
Act), or in a privately negotiated transaction or to a limited number of qualified purchasers, or in limited quantities after they have been held for a specified period of time and other conditions are met pursuant to an exemption from
registration.
Although one or more of the
other risks described in this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with private placement and other restricted securities include: Issuer Risk, Liquidity Risk, Market Risk and Confidential Information Access Risk.
Real Estate Investment Trusts
Real estate investment trusts (REITs) are pooled investment
vehicles that manage a portfolio of real estate or real estate related loans to earn profits for their shareholders. REITs are generally classified as equity REITs, mortgage REITs or a combination of equity and mortgage REITs. Equity REITs invest
the majority of their assets directly in real property, such as shopping centers, nursing homes, office buildings, apartment complexes, and hotels, and derive income primarily from the collection of rents. Equity REITs can also realize capital gains
by selling properties that have appreciated in value. Mortgage REITs invest the majority of their assets in real estate mortgages and derive income from the collection of interest payments. REITs can be subject to extreme volatility due to
fluctuations in the demand for real estate, changes in interest rates, and adverse economic conditions.
Partnership units of real estate and other types of
companies sometimes are organized as master limited partnerships in which ownership interests are publicly traded.
Similar to regulated investment companies, REITs are
not taxed on income distributed to shareholders provided they comply with certain requirements under the Code. The failure of a REIT to continue to qualify as a REIT for tax purposes can materially affect its value. A Fund will indirectly bear its
proportionate share of any expenses paid by a REIT in which it invests. REITs often do not provide complete tax information until after the calendar year-end. Consequently, because of the delay, it may be necessary for a Fund investing in REITs to
request permission to extend the deadline for issuance of Forms 1099-DIV beyond January 31. In the alternative, amended Forms 1099-DIV may be sent.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with REITs include: Interest Rate Risk, Issuer Risk, Market Risk and Real Estate-Related Investment Risk.
Repurchase Agreements
Repurchase agreements are agreements under which a Fund acquires a
security for a relatively short period of time (usually within seven days) subject to the obligation of a seller to repurchase and a Fund to resell such security at a fixed time and price (representing the Fund’s cost plus interest). The
repurchase agreement specifies the yield during the purchaser’s holding period. Repurchase agreements also may be viewed as loans made by a Fund that are collateralized by the securities subject to repurchase, which may consist of a variety of
security types. A Fund typically will enter into repurchase agreements only with commercial banks, registered broker-dealers and the Fixed Income Clearing Corporation. Such transactions are monitored to ensure that the value of the underlying
securities will be at least equal at all times to the total amount of the repurchase obligation, including any accrued interest.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with repurchase agreements include: Counterparty Risk, Credit Risk, Issuer Risk, Market Risk and Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Reverse Repurchase Agreements
Reverse repurchase agreements are agreements under which a Fund
temporarily transfers possession of a portfolio instrument to another party, such as a bank or broker-dealer, in return for cash. At the same time, the Fund agrees to repurchase the instrument at an agreed-upon time (normally within 7 days) and
price which reflects an interest payment. A Fund generally retains the right to interest and principal payments on the security. Reverse repurchase agreements also may be viewed as borrowings made by a Fund.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with reverse repurchase agreements include: Credit Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Issuer Risk, Leverage Risk, Market Risk and Reverse Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Short Sales
A Fund may sometimes sell securities short when it owns an equal
amount of the securities sold short. This is a technique known as selling short “against the box.” If a Fund makes a short sale “against the box,” it would not immediately deliver the securities sold and would not receive the
proceeds from the sale. The seller is said to have a short position in the securities sold until it delivers the securities sold, at which time it receives the proceeds of the sale. To secure its obligation to deliver securities sold
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short, a Fund will deposit in escrow in a separate account with the
custodian an equal amount of the securities sold short or securities convertible into or exchangeable for such securities. A Fund can close out its short position by purchasing and delivering an equal amount of the securities sold short, rather than
by delivering securities already held by a Fund, because a Fund might want to continue to receive interest and dividend payments on securities in its portfolio that are convertible into the securities sold short.
Short sales “against the box” entail
many of the same risks and considerations described below regarding short sales not “against the box.” However, when a Fund sells short “against the box” it typically limits the amount of its effective leverage. A
Fund’s decision to make a short sale “against the box” may be a technique to hedge against market risks when a Fund’s portfolio manager believes that the price of a security may decline, causing a decline in the value of a
security owned by a Fund or a security convertible into or exchangeable for such security. In such case, any future losses in a Fund’s long position would be reduced by a gain in the short position. The extent to which such gains or losses in
the long position are reduced will depend upon the amount of securities sold short relative to the amount of the securities a Fund owns, either directly or indirectly, and, in the case where a Fund owns convertible securities, changes in the
investment values or conversion premiums of such securities. Short sales may have adverse tax consequences to a Fund and its shareholders.
Subject to its fundamental and non-fundamental
investment policies, a Fund may engage in short sales that are not “against the box,” which are sales by a Fund of securities, contracts or instruments that it does not own in hopes of purchasing the same security, contract or instrument
at a later date at a lower price. The technique is also used to protect a profit in a long-term position in a security, commodity futures contract or other instrument. To make delivery to the buyer, a Fund must borrow or purchase the security. If
borrowed, a Fund is then obligated to replace the security borrowed from the third party, so a Fund must purchase the security at the market price at a later time. If the price of the security has increased during this time, then a Fund will incur a
loss equal to the increase in price of the security from the time of the short sale plus any premiums and interest paid to the third party. (Until the security is replaced, a Fund is required to pay to the lender amounts equal to any dividends or
interest which accrue during the period of the loan. To borrow the security, a Fund also may be required to pay a premium, which would increase the cost of the security sold. The proceeds of the short sale will be retained by the broker, to the
extent necessary to meet the margin requirements, until the short position is closed out.) Short sales of forward commitments and derivatives do not involve borrowing a security. These types of short sales may include futures, options, contracts for
differences, forward contracts on financial instruments and options such as contracts, credit-linked instruments, and swap contracts.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with short sales include: Leverage Risk, Market Risk and Short Positions Risk.
Sovereign Debt
Sovereign debt obligations are issued or guaranteed by foreign
governments or their agencies. It may be in the form of conventional securities or other types of debt instruments such as loans or loan participations. A sovereign debtor’s willingness or ability to repay principal and pay interest in a
timely manner may be affected by a variety of factors, including its cash flow situation, the extent of its reserves, the availability of sufficient foreign exchange on the date a payment is due, the relative size of the debt service burden to the
economy as a whole, the sovereign debtor’s policy toward international lenders, and the political constraints to which a sovereign debtor may be subject. (See also
Types of Investments –
Foreign Securities
.) In addition, there may be no legal recourse against a sovereign debtor in the event of a default.
Sovereign debt includes Brady Bonds, which are
securities issued under the framework of the Brady Plan, an initiative announced by former U.S. Treasury Secretary Nicholas F. Brady in 1989 as a mechanism for debtor nations to restructure their outstanding external commercial bank
indebtedness.
Although one or more of the
other risks described in this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with sovereign debt include: Credit Risk, Emerging Markets Securities Risk, Foreign Securities Risk, Issuer Risk and Market Risk.
Standby Commitments
See
Types of
Investments – Municipal Securities
above.
U.S. Government and Related Obligations
U.S. Government obligations include U.S. Treasury obligations and
securities issued or guaranteed by various agencies of the U.S. Government or by various agencies or instrumentalities established or sponsored by the U.S. Government. U.S. Treasury obligations and securities issued or guaranteed by various agencies
or instrumentalities of the U.S. Government differ in their interest rates, maturities and time of issuance, as well as with respect to whether they are guaranteed by the U.S. Government. U.S. Government and related obligations may be structured as
fixed-, variable- or floating-rate obligations. See
Types of Investments – Variable- and Floating-Rate Obligations
for more information.
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Investing in U.S. Government and related obligations
is subject to certain risks. While U.S. Treasury obligations are backed by the “full faith and credit” of the U.S. Government, such securities are nonetheless subject to credit risk (
i.e.
, the risk
that the U.S. Government may be, or be perceived to be, unable or unwilling to honor its financial obligations, such as making payments). Securities issued or guaranteed by federal agencies and U.S. Government-sponsored instrumentalities may or may
not be backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government. These securities may be supported by the ability to borrow from the U.S. Treasury or only by the credit of the issuing agency or instrumentality and, as a result, may be subject to
greater credit risk than securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Treasury. Obligations of U.S. Government agencies, authorities, instrumentalities and sponsored enterprises historically have involved limited risk of loss of principal if held to
maturity. However, no assurance can be given that the U.S. Government would provide financial support to any of these entities if it is not obligated to do so by law.
Government-sponsored entities issuing securities
include privately owned, publicly chartered entities created to reduce borrowing costs for certain sectors of the economy, such as farmers, homeowners, and students. They include the Federal Farm Credit Bank System, Farm Credit Financial Assistance
Corporation, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Student Loan Marketing Association (SLMA), and Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC). Government-sponsored entities may issue discount notes (with maturities ranging from overnight to 360 days) and bonds. On
September 7, 2008, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), an agency of the U.S. Government, placed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into conservatorship, a statutory process with the objective of returning the entities to normal business operations.
FHFA will act as the conservator to operate the enterprises until they are stabilized.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with U.S. Government and related obligations include: Credit Risk, Inflation Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Prepayment and Extension Risk, Reinvestment Risk and U.S. Government Obligations
Risk.
Variable- and Floating-Rate
Obligations
Variable- and floating-rate obligations are debt
instruments that provide for periodic adjustments in the interest rate and, under certain circumstances, varying principal amounts. Unlike a fixed interest rate, a variable, or floating, rate is one that rises and declines based on the movement of
an underlying index of interest rates and may pay interest at rates that are adjusted periodically according to a specified formula. Variable- or floating-rate securities frequently include a demand feature enabling the holder to sell the securities
to the issuer at par. In many cases, the demand feature can be exercised at any time. Some securities that do not have variable or floating interest rates may be accompanied by puts producing similar results and price characteristics. Variable-rate
demand notes include master demand notes that are obligations that permit the investor to invest fluctuating amounts, which may change daily without penalty, pursuant to direct arrangements between the investor (as lender), and the borrower. The
interest rates on these notes fluctuate. The issuer of such obligations normally has a corresponding right, after a given period, to prepay in its discretion the outstanding principal amount of the obligations plus accrued interest upon a specified
number of days’ notice to the holders of such obligations. Because these obligations are direct lending arrangements between the lender and borrower, it is not contemplated that such instruments generally will be traded. There generally is not
an established secondary market for these obligations. Accordingly, where these obligations are not secured by letters of credit or other credit support arrangements, the lender’s right to redeem is dependent on the ability of the borrower to
pay principal and interest on demand. Such obligations frequently are not rated by credit rating agencies and may involve heightened risk of default by the issuer. Asset-backed securities, bank obligations, convertible securities, corporate debt
securities, foreign securities, high-yield securities, money market instruments, mortgage-backed securities, municipal securities, participation interests, stripped securities, U.S. Government and related obligations and other types of debt
instruments may be structured as variable- and floating-rate obligations.
Most floating rate loans are acquired directly from
the agent bank or from another holder of the loan by assignment. Most such loans are secured, and most impose restrictive covenants on the borrower. These loans are typically made by a syndicate of banks and institutional investors, represented by
an agent bank which has negotiated and structured the loan and which is responsible generally for collecting interest, principal, and other amounts from the borrower on its own behalf and on behalf of the other lending institutions in the syndicate,
and for enforcing its rights and the rights of the syndicate against the borrower. Each of the lending institutions, including the agent bank, lends to the borrower a portion of the total amount of the loan, and retains the corresponding interest in
the loan. Floating rate loans may include delayed draw term loans and prefunded or synthetic letters of credit.
A Fund’s ability to receive payments of
principal and interest and other amounts in connection with loans held by it will depend primarily on the financial condition of the borrower. The failure by the Fund to receive scheduled interest or principal payments on a loan would adversely
affect the income of the Fund and would likely reduce the value of its assets, which would be reflected in a reduction in the Fund’s NAV. Banks and other lending institutions generally perform a credit analysis of the borrower before
originating a loan or purchasing an assignment in a loan. In selecting the loans in which the Fund will invest, however, the Investment Manager will not rely on that credit analysis of the agent bank, but will perform its own investment analysis of
the borrowers. The Investment Manager’s analysis may include consideration of the borrower’s financial strength and managerial
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experience, debt coverage, additional borrowing requirements or
debt maturity schedules, changing financial conditions, and responsiveness to changes in business conditions and interest rates. Investments in loans may be of any quality, including “distressed” loans, and will be subject to the
Fund’s credit quality policy.
Loans may
be structured in different forms, including assignments and participations. In an assignment, a Fund purchases an assignment of a portion of a lender’s interest in a loan. In this case, the Fund may be required generally to rely upon the
assigning bank to demand payment and enforce its rights against the borrower, but would otherwise be entitled to all of such bank’s rights in the loan.
The borrower of a loan may, either at its own
election or pursuant to terms of the loan documentation, prepay amounts of the loan from time to time. There is no assurance that a Fund will be able to reinvest the proceeds of any loan prepayment at the same interest rate or on the same terms as
those of the original loan.
Corporate loans in
which a Fund may purchase a loan assignment are made generally to finance internal growth, mergers, acquisitions, recapitalizations, stock repurchases, leveraged buy-outs, dividend payments to sponsors and other corporate activities. The highly
leveraged capital structure of certain borrowers may make such loans especially vulnerable to adverse changes in economic or market conditions. The Fund may hold investments in loans for a very short period of time when opportunities to resell the
investments that a Fund’s Portfolio Manager believes are attractive arise.
Certain of the loans acquired by a Fund may involve
revolving credit facilities under which a borrower may from time to time borrow and repay amounts up to the maximum amount of the facility. In such cases, the Fund would have an obligation to advance its portion of such additional borrowings upon
the terms specified in the loan assignment. To the extent that the Fund is committed to make additional loans under such an assignment, it will at all times designate cash or securities in an amount sufficient to meet such commitments.
Notwithstanding its intention in certain situations
to not receive material, non-public information with respect to its management of investments in floating rate loans, the Investment Manager may from time to time come into possession of material, non-public information about the issuers of loans
that may be held in a Fund’s portfolio. Possession of such information may in some instances occur despite the Investment Manager’s efforts to avoid such possession, but in other instances the Investment Manager may choose to receive
such information (for example, in connection with participation in a creditors’ committee with respect to a financially distressed issuer). As, and to the extent, required by applicable law, the Investment Manager’s ability to trade in
these loans for the account of the Fund could potentially be limited by its possession of such information. Such limitations on the Investment Manager’s ability to trade could have an adverse effect on the Fund by, for example, preventing the
Fund from selling a loan that is experiencing a material decline in value. In some instances, these trading restrictions could continue in effect for a substantial period of time.
In some instances, other accounts managed by the
Investment Manager may hold other securities issued by borrowers whose floating rate loans may be held in a Fund’s portfolio. These other securities may include, for example, debt securities that are subordinate to the floating rate loans held
in the Fund’s portfolio, convertible debt or common or preferred equity securities.
In certain circumstances, such as if the credit
quality of the issuer deteriorates, the interests of holders of these other securities may conflict with the interests of the holders of the issuer’s floating rate loans. In such cases, the Investment Manager may owe conflicting fiduciary
duties to the Fund and other client accounts. The Investment Manager will endeavor to carry out its obligations to all of its clients to the fullest extent possible, recognizing that in some cases certain clients may achieve a lower economic return,
as a result of these conflicting client interests, than if the Investment Manager’s client accounts collectively held only a single category of the issuer’s securities.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with variable- or floating-rate obligations include: Counterparty Risk, Credit Risk, Interest Rate Risk, Liquidity Risk and Prepayment and Extension Risk.
Warrants and Rights
Warrants and rights are types of securities that give a holder a
right to purchase shares of common stock. Warrants usually are issued together with a bond or preferred stock and entitle a holder to purchase a specified amount of common stock at a specified price typically for a period of years. Rights usually
have a specified purchase price that is lower than the current market price and entitle a holder to purchase a specified amount of common stock typically for a period of only weeks. Warrants may be used to enhance the marketability of a bond or
preferred stock. Warrants do not carry with them the right to dividends or voting rights and they do not represent any rights in the assets of the issuer. Warrants may be considered to have more speculative characteristics than certain other types
of investments. In addition, the value of a warrant does not necessarily change with the value of the underlying securities, and a warrant ceases to have value if it is not exercised prior to its expiration date, if any.
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The potential exercise price of warrants or rights
may exceed their market price, such as when there is no movement in the market price or the market price of the common stock declines.
Although one or more of the other risks described in
this SAI may also apply, the risks typically associated with warrants and rights include: Convertible Securities Risk, Counterparty Risk, Credit Risk, Issuer Risk and Market Risk.
Information Regarding Risks
The following is a summary of risks of investing in
the Funds and the risk characteristics associated with the various investment instruments available to the Funds for investment. A Fund’s risk profile is largely defined by the Fund’s primary portfolio holdings and principal investment
strategies (for the description of a Fund’s principal investment strategies and principal risks, please see that Fund’s prospectus). However, the Funds are allowed to use securities, instruments, other assets and investments, strategies
and techniques other than those described in the Fund’s principal investment strategies, subjecting the Fund to the risks associated with these securities, instruments, other assets and investments, strategies and techniques.
An investment in the Funds is not a bank deposit and
is not insured or guaranteed by any bank, the FDIC or any other government agency. One or more of the following risks may be associated with an investment in a Fund at any time:
Active Management Risk.
The Fund is actively managed and its performance therefore will reflect, in part, the ability of the portfolio managers to make investment decisions that will achieve the Fund’s investment objective. Due to its
active management, the Fund could underperform its benchmark index and/or other funds with similar investment objectives and/or strategies.
Activist Strategies Risk.
The Fund may purchase securities of a company that is the subject of a proxy contest or which activist investors are attempting to influence, in the expectation that new management or a change in business strategies
will cause the price of the company’s securities to increase. If the proxy contest, or the new management, is not successful, the market price of the company’s securities will typically fall.
In addition, where an acquisition or restructuring
transaction or proxy fight is opposed by the subject company’s management, the transaction often becomes the subject of litigation. Such litigation involves substantial uncertainties and may impose substantial cost and expense on the
Fund.
Allocation Risk.
For any Fund that uses an asset allocation strategy in pursuit of its investment objective, there is a risk that the Fund's allocation among asset classes, investments, managers, strategies and/or investment styles will
cause the Fund's shares to lose value or cause the Fund to underperform other funds with similar investment objectives and/or strategies, or that the investments themselves will not produce the returns expected.
Alternative Strategies Investment Risk.
An investment in alternative investment strategies (Alternative Strategies), whether through direct investment or through one or more underlying funds that use Alternative Strategies, involves risks, which may be
significant. Alternative Strategies may include strategies, instruments or other assets, such as derivatives, that seek investment returns uncorrelated with the broad equity and fixed income/debt markets, as well as those providing exposure to other
markets (such as commodity markets), including but not limited to absolute (positive) return strategies. Alternative Strategies may fail to achieve their desired performance, market or other exposure, or their returns (or lack thereof) may be more
correlated with the broad equity and/or fixed income/debt markets than was anticipated, and the Fund may lose money. Some Alternative Strategies may be considered speculative.
To the extent that an underlying fund is charged a
performance (or incentive) fee (which would indirectly be borne by the Fund’s shareholders), such fees may create incentives for the underlying fund’s manager to make investments that are riskier or more speculative than in the absence
of these fees. Because these fees are often based on both realized and unrealized appreciation, the fee may be greater than if it were based only on realized gains. In addition, underlying fund managers may receive compensation for relative
performance of the underlying fund even if the underlying fund’s overall returns are negative.
Arbitrage Strategies Risk.
The Fund may purchase securities at prices only slightly below the anticipated value to be paid or exchanged for such securities in a merger, exchange offer or cash tender offer, and substantially above the prices at
which such securities traded immediately prior to announcement of the transaction. If there is a perception that the proposed transaction will not be consummated or will be delayed, the market price of the security may decline sharply, which would
result in a loss to the Fund. In addition, if the manager determines that the offer is likely to be increased, either by the original bidder or by another party, the Fund may purchase securities above the offer price; such purchases are subject to a
high degree of risk.
The consummation
of mergers and tender and exchange offers can be prevented or delayed by a variety of factors, including opposition by the management or shareholders of the target company, private litigation or litigation involving regulatory agencies, and approval
or non-action of regulatory agencies. The likelihood of occurrence of these and other factors, and their impact on an investment, can be very difficult to evaluate.
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Asset-Backed Securities Risk.
The value of the Fund's asset-backed securities may be affected by, among other things, changes in interest rates, factors concerning the interests in and structure of the issuer or the originator of the receivables,
the creditworthiness of the entities that provide any supporting letters of credit, surety bonds or other credit enhancements, or the market's assessment of the quality of underlying assets. Asset-backed securities represent interests in, or are
backed by, pools of receivables such as credit card, auto, student and home equity loans. They may also be backed by securities backed by these types of loans and others, such as mortgage loans. Asset-backed securities can have a fixed or an
adjustable rate. Most asset-backed securities are subject to prepayment risk, which is the possibility that the underlying debt may be refinanced or prepaid prior to maturity during periods of declining or low interest rates, causing the Fund to
have to reinvest the money received in securities that have lower yields. In addition, the impact of prepayments on the value of asset-backed securities may be difficult to predict and may result in greater volatility. Rising or high interest rates
tend to extend the duration of asset-backed securities, resulting in valuations that are volatile and sensitive to changes in interest rates.
Bankruptcy Process and Trade Claims Risk.
The Fund may purchase bankruptcy claims. There are a number of significant risks inherent in the bankruptcy process. The effect of a bankruptcy filing on a company may adversely and permanently affect the company and
cause it to be incapable of restoring itself as a viable business. Many events in a bankruptcy are the product of contested matters and adversarial proceedings. The duration of a bankruptcy proceeding is difficult to predict and a creditor’s
return on investment can be adversely affected by delays while the plan of reorganization is being finalized. The administrative costs in connection with a bankruptcy proceeding are frequently high and are paid out of the debtor’s estate
before any return to creditors. The Fund may also purchase trade claims against companies, including companies in bankruptcy or reorganization proceedings, which include claims of suppliers for unpaid goods delivered, claims for unpaid services
rendered, claims for contract rejection damages and claims related to litigation. An investment in trade claims is very speculative, illiquid, and carries a high degree of risk. The markets in trade claims are generally not regulated by U.S. federal
securities laws or the SEC.
Changing
Distribution Level Risk.
The Fund will normally receive income which may include interest, dividends and/or capital gains, depending upon its investments. The amount of the distributions the Fund pays will vary and
generally depends on the amount of income the Fund earns (less expenses) on its portfolio holdings, and capital gains or losses it recognizes. A decline in the Fund’s income or net capital gains from its investments may reduce its distribution
level.
Closed-End Investment Company
Risk.
Closed-end investment companies frequently trade at a discount to their NAV, which may affect whether the Fund will realize gain or loss upon its sale of the closed-end investment company’s shares.
Closed-end investment companies may employ leverage, which also subjects the closed-end investment company to increased risks such as increased volatility.
Commodity-related Investment Risk.
The value of commodities investments will generally be affected by overall market movements and factors specific to a particular industry or commodity, which may include demand for the commodity, weather, embargoes,
tariffs, and economic health, political, international, regulatory and other developments. Economic and other events (whether real or perceived) can reduce the demand for commodities, which may, in turn, reduce market prices and cause the value of
Fund shares to fall. The frequency and magnitude of such changes cannot be predicted. Exposure to commodities and commodities markets may subject the value of the Fund's investments to greater volatility than other types of investments. No, or
limited, active trading market may exist for certain commodities investments, which may impair the ability to sell or to realize the full value of such investments in the event of the need to liquidate such investments. In addition, adverse market
conditions may impair the liquidity of actively traded commodities investments. Certain types of commodities instruments are subject to the risk that the counterparty to the transaction may not perform or be unable to perform in accordance with the
terms of the instrument. The Fund may make commodity-related investments through, and may invest in one or more underlying funds that make commodity-related investments through, one or more wholly-owned subsidiaries organized outside the U.S. that
are generally not subject to U.S. laws (including securities laws) and their protections. However, any such subsidiary is wholly owned and controlled by the Fund and any underlying fund subsidiary is wholly-owned and controlled by the underlying
fund, making it unlikely that the subsidiary will take action contrary to the interests of the Fund or the underlying fund and their shareholders. Further, any such subsidiaries will be subject to the laws of a foreign jurisdiction, and can be
adversely affected by developments in that jurisdiction.
Concentration Risk.
To the extent that the Fund concentrates its investment in particular issuers, countries, geographic regions, industries or sectors, the Fund may be subject to greater risks of adverse developments in such areas of focus than a fund that invests in
a wider variety of issuers, countries, geographic regions, industries, sectors or investments.
Confidential Information Access Risk.
In many instances, issuers of floating rate loans offer to furnish material, non-public information (Confidential Information) to prospective purchasers or holders of the issuer’s floating rate loans to help
potential investors assess the value of the loan. Portfolio managers may avoid the receipt of Confidential Information about the issuers of floating rate loans being considered for acquisition by the Fund, or held in the Fund. A decision not to
receive Confidential Information from these issuers may disadvantage the Fund as compared to other floating rate loan investors, and may adversely affect the price the Fund pays for the loans it purchases, or the price at which the Fund sells the
loans. Further, in situations when
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holders of floating rate loans are asked, for example, to grant
consents, waivers or amendments, the ability to assess the desirability of such consents, waivers or amendments may be compromised. For these and other reasons, it is possible that the decision not to receive Confidential Information could adversely
affect the Fund’s performance.
Convertible
Securities Risk.
Convertible securities are subject to the usual risks associated with debt instruments, such as interest rate risk (the risk of losses attributable to changes in interest rates) and credit risk (the
risk that the issuer of a debt instrument will default or otherwise become unable, or be perceived to be unable or unwilling, to honor a financial obligation, such as making payments to the Fund when due). Convertible securities also react to
changes in the value of the common stock into which they convert, and are thus subject to market risk (the risk that the market values of securities or other investments that the Fund holds will fall, sometimes rapidly or unpredictably, or fail to
rise). Because the value of a convertible security can be influenced by both interest rates and the common stock's market movements, a convertible security generally is not as sensitive to interest rates as a similar debt instrument, and generally
will not vary in value in response to other factors to the same extent as the underlying common stock. In the event of a liquidation of the issuing company, holders of convertible securities would typically be paid before the company's common
stockholders but after holders of any senior debt obligations of the company. The Fund may be forced to convert a convertible security before it otherwise would choose to do so, which may decrease the Fund's return.
Counterparty Risk.
The risk exists that a counterparty to a transaction in a financial instrument held by the Fund or by a special purpose or structured vehicle in which the Fund invests may become insolvent or otherwise fail to perform its obligations due to
financial difficulties, including making payments to the Fund. The Fund may obtain no or limited recovery in a bankruptcy or other reorganizational proceedings, and any recovery may be significantly delayed. Transactions that the Fund enters into
may involve counterparties in the financial services sector and, as a result, events affecting the financial services sector may cause the Fund’s share value to fluctuate.
Credit Risk.
Credit
risk is the risk that the value of loans or other debt instruments may decline if the borrower or the issuer thereof defaults or otherwise becomes unable or unwilling, or is perceived to be unable or unwilling, to honor its financial obligations,
such as making payments to the Fund when due. Various factors could affect the actual or perceived willingness or ability of the borrower or the issuer to make timely interest or principal payments, including changes in the financial condition of
the borrower or the issuer or in general economic conditions. Debt instruments backed by an issuer's taxing authority may be subject to legal limits on the issuer's power to increase taxes or otherwise to raise revenue, or may be dependent on
legislative appropriation or government aid. Certain debt instruments are backed only by revenues derived from a particular project or source, rather than by an issuer's taxing authority, and thus may have a greater risk of default. Rating agencies
assign credit ratings to certain loans and debt instruments to indicate their credit risk. Unless otherwise provided in the Fund’s Principal Investment Strategies, investment grade debt instruments are those rated at or above BBB- by Standard
and Poor’s Ratings Services, or equivalently rated by Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. or Fitch, Inc., or, if unrated, determined to be of comparable quality by the investment manager or subadviser managing the debt instrument for the
Fund. Conversely, below investment grade (commonly called “high-yield” or “junk”) debt instruments are those rated below BBB- (or its equivalent) by such agencies or, if unrated, determined to be of comparable quality. A
rating downgrade by such agencies can negatively impact the value of such instruments. Lower quality or unrated loans or instruments held by the Fund may present increased credit risk as compared to higher-rated loans or instruments. Non-investment
grade loans or debt instruments may be subject to greater price fluctuations and are more likely to experience a default than investment grade loans or debt instruments and therefore may expose the Fund to increased credit risk. If the Fund
purchases unrated loans or debt instruments, or if the ratings of such instruments held by the Fund are lowered after purchase, the Fund will depend on analysis of credit risk more heavily than usual. If the issuer of a loan declares bankruptcy or
is declared bankrupt, there may be a delay before the Fund can act on the collateral securing the loan, which may adversely affect the Fund. Further, there is a risk that a court could take action with respect to a loan that is adverse to the
holders of the loan. Such actions may include invalidating the loan, the lien on the collateral, the priority status of the loan, or ordering the refund of interest previously paid by the borrower. Any such actions by a court could adversely affect
the Fund’s performance. A default or expected default of a loan could also make it difficult for the Fund to sell the loan at a price approximating the value previously placed on it. In order to enforce its rights in the event of a default,
bankruptcy or similar situation, the Fund may be required to retain legal or similar counsel. This may increase the Fund’s operating expenses and adversely affect its NAV. Loans that have a lower priority for repayment in an issuer’s
capital structure may involve a higher degree of overall risk than more senior loans of the same borrower.
Cybersecurity Breaches and Technology and Related
Systems Failure Risk.
The Funds and their service providers, including but not limited to the Investment Manager (in its role as investment adviser and/or administrator to the Funds), Ameriprise Financial (the
Investment Manager’s parent company), any investment subadvisers, the Distributor, the Transfer Agent, the Custodian, and other service providers, as well as their underlying service providers (collectively, the Service Providers), are heavily
dependent on proprietary and third-party technology and infrastructure and related operational and information systems, networks, computers, devices, programs, applications, data and functions (collectively, Systems) to perform necessary business
activities. The Systems that the Funds and the Service Providers (referred to herein as we, us and our) rely upon may be
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vulnerable to many threats, breaches and failures, some of which
may be outside of our control, including significant damage and disruption arising from Systems failures or cybersecurity breaches. Systems failures include malfunctions, user error, conduct (or misconduct) of or arising from employees and agents,
and failures arising from cybersecurity breaches, natural disasters, or other actions or events (whether foreseeable or unforeseeable). Cybersecurity breaches include intentional (e.g., cyber-attacks, hacking, phishing scams, unauthorized payment
requests) and unintentional events or activity (e.g., user errors arising from or caused by us or our agents). Systems failures and cybersecurity breaches may result in (i) proprietary or confidential information or data being lost, withheld for
ransom, misused, destroyed, stolen, released, corrupted or rendered unavailable, including personal investor information (and that of beneficial owners of investors), (ii) unauthorized access to Systems and loss of operational capacity, including
from, for example, denial-of-service attacks (i.e., efforts to make network services unavailable to intended users), and (iii) the misappropriation of Fund or investor assets or sensitive information. Any such events could negatively impact our
Systems and may have significant adverse impacts on the Funds and their shareholders.
Systems failures and cybersecurity breaches may
cause delays or mistakes in materials provided to shareholders and may also interfere with or negatively impact the processing of Fund investor transactions, pricing of Fund investments, calculating Fund NAVs, and trading within a Fund’s
portfolio, while causing or subjecting us to reputational damage, violations of law, legal claims, regulatory fines, penalties, financial losses and reimbursement, expenses or other compensation and remediation costs, as well as additional
compliance, legal, and operational costs. Such events could negatively impact the Fund, its shareholders and affect our business, financial condition and performance or results of operations.
The trend toward broad consumer and general public
notification of Systems failures and cybersecurity breaches could exacerbate the harm to the Fund, its shareholders and our business, financial condition and performance or results of operations. Even if we successfully protect our Systems from
failures or cybersecurity breaches, we may incur significant expenses in connection with our responses to any such events, as well as the need for adoption, implementation and maintenance of appropriate security measures. We could also suffer harm
to our business and reputation if attempted or actual cybersecurity breaches are publicized. We cannot be certain that evolving threats from cyber-criminals and other cyber-threat actors, exploitation of new vulnerabilities in our Systems, or other
developments, or data thefts, System break-ins or inappropriate access will not compromise or breach the technology or other security measures protecting our Systems.
To date, we have not experienced any material
Systems failures or cybersecurity breaches, however, we routinely encounter and address such threats. For example, in 2015 the then-available Columbia ETFs were for a period unable to price their portfolios due to a technology issue impacting the
ETFs’ third-party administrator. In another case, in 2014, Ameriprise Financial and other financial institutions experienced distributed denial-of-service attacks intended to disrupt clients’ online access. While Ameriprise Financial was
able to detect and respond to this incident without loss of client assets or information, Ameriprise Financial has since enhanced its security capabilities and will continue to assess its ability to monitor and respond to such threats. In addition
to the foregoing, the experiences of Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates with Systems failures, cybersecurity breaches and technology threats have included, as examples, phishing scams, introductions of malware, attempts at electronic break-ins,
and unauthorized payment requests. Systems failures and cybersecurity breaches may be difficult to detect, may go undetected for long periods or may never be detected. The impact of such events may be compounded over time. Although the Funds and the
Service Providers evaluate the materiality of Systems failures and cybersecurity breaches that it detects, the Funds and the Service Providers may conclude that some such events are not material and may choose not to address them. Such conclusions
may not prove to be correct.
Although we have
established business continuity/disaster recovery plans and systems (Continuity and Recovery Plans) designed to prevent or mitigate the effects of Systems failures and cybersecurity breaches, there are inherent limitations in Continuity and Recovery
Plans. These limitations include the possibility that certain risks have not been identified or that Continuity and Recovery Plans might not – despite testing and monitoring – operate as designed, be sufficient to stop or mitigate losses
or otherwise be unable to achieve their objectives. The Funds and their shareholders could be negatively impacted as a result. In addition, the Fund cannot control the Continuity and Recovery Plans of the Service Providers. As a result, there can be
no assurance that the Funds will not suffer losses relating to Systems failures or cybersecurity breaches affecting us in the future, particularly third-party service providers, as the Funds cannot control any Continuity and Recovery Plans or
cybersecurity defenses implemented by such parties.
Systems failures and cybersecurity breaches may
necessitate significant investment to repair or replace impacted Systems. In addition, we, including the Funds, may incur substantial costs for Systems failure risk management and cybersecurity risk management in order to attempt to prevent any such
events or incidents in the future.
Insurance
and other traditional risk-shifting tools may be held by or available to us in order to manage or mitigate the risks associated with Systems failures and cybersecurity breaches, but they are subject to terms and limitations such as deductibles,
coinsurance, limits and policy exclusions, as well as risk of counterparty denial of coverage, default or insolvency. While Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates maintain cyber liability insurance that provides both third-party liability and
first-party
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liability coverages, this insurance does not cover the Funds and,
with regard to covered entities, may not be sufficient to protect us against all losses. In addition, contractual remedies may not be available with respect to Service Providers or may prove inadequate if available (e.g., because of limits on the
liability of the Service Providers) to protect the Funds against all losses.
Stock and other market exchanges, financial
intermediaries and issuers of, and counterparties to, the Funds’ investments and, in the case of ETFs, market makers and authorized participants, also may be adversely impacted by Systems failures and cybersecurity breaches in their own
businesses, subjecting them to the risks described herein, as well as other additional or enhanced risks particular to their businesses, which could result in losses to the Funds and their shareholders. Issuers of securities or other instruments in
which the Funds invest may also experience Systems failures or cybersecurity breaches, which could result in material adverse consequences for such issuers, and may cause the Funds’ investment in such issuers to lose money.
Depositary Receipts Risk.
Depositary receipts are receipts issued by a bank or trust company reflecting ownership of underlying securities issued by foreign companies. Some foreign securities are traded in the form of American Depositary Receipts
and/or Global Depositary Receipts. Depositary receipts involve risks similar to the risks associated with investments in foreign securities, including those associated with investing in the particular country of an issuer, which may be related to
the particular political, regulatory, economic, social and other conditions or events, including, for example, military confrontations, war and terrorism, occurring in the country and fluctuations in such country’s currency, as well as market
risk tied to the underlying foreign company. In addition, holders of depositary receipts may have limited voting rights, may not have the same rights afforded to stockholders of a typical company in the event of a corporate action, such as an
acquisition, merger or rights offering, and may experience difficulty in receiving company stockholder communications. There is no guarantee that a financial institution will continue to sponsor a depositary receipt, or that the depositary receipts
will continue to trade on an exchange, either of which could adversely affect the liquidity, availability and pricing of the depositary receipt. Changes in foreign currency exchange rates will affect the value of depositary receipts and, therefore,
may affect the value of your investment in the Fund. A potential conflict of interest exists to the extent that the Fund invests in ADRs for which the Fund's custodian serves as depository bank.
Derivatives Risk.
Derivatives may involve significant risks. Derivatives are financial instruments, traded on an exchange or in the over-the-counter (OTC) markets, with a value in relation to, or derived from, the value of an
underlying asset(s) (such as a security, commodity or currency) or other reference, such as an index, rate or other economic indicator (each an underlying reference). Derivatives may include those that are privately placed or otherwise exempt from
SEC registration, including certain Rule 144A eligible securities. Derivatives could result in Fund losses if the underlying reference does not perform as anticipated. Use of derivatives is a highly specialized activity that can involve investment
techniques, risks, and tax planning different from those associated with more traditional investment instruments. The Fund’s derivatives strategy may not be successful and use of certain derivatives could result in substantial, potentially
unlimited, losses to the Fund regardless of the Fund’s actual investment. A relatively small movement in the price, rate or other economic indicator associated with the underlying reference may result in substantial loss for the Fund.
Derivatives may be more volatile than other types of investments. Derivatives can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, including the risk of an adverse credit event associated with the
underlying reference (credit risk), the risk of an adverse movement in the value, price or rate of the underlying reference (market risk), the risk of an adverse movement in the value of underlying currencies (foreign currency risk) and the risk of
an adverse movement in underlying interest rates (interest rate risk). Derivatives may expose the Fund to additional risks, including the risk of loss due to a derivative position that is imperfectly correlated with the underlying reference it is
intended to hedge or replicate (correlation risk), the risk that a counterparty will fail to perform as agreed (counterparty risk), the risk that a hedging strategy may fail to mitigate losses, and may offset gains (hedging risk), the risk that
losses may be greater than the amount invested (leverage risk), the risk that the Fund may be unable to sell an investment at an advantageous time or price (liquidity risk), the risk that the investment may be difficult to value (pricing risk), and
the risk that the price or value of the investment fluctuates significantly over short periods of time (volatility risk). The value of derivatives may be influenced by a variety of factors, including national and international political and economic
developments. Potential changes to the regulation of the derivatives markets may make derivatives more costly, may limit the market for derivatives, or may otherwise adversely affect the value or performance of derivatives.
Derivatives Risk – Forward Contracts Risk.
A forward contract is an over-the-counter derivative transaction between two parties to buy or sell a specified amount of an underlying reference at a specified price (or rate) on a specified date in the future. Forward
contracts are negotiated on an individual basis and are not standardized or traded on exchanges. The market for forward contracts is substantially unregulated (there is no limit on daily price movements and speculative position limits are not
applicable). The principals who deal in certain forward contract markets are not required to continue to make markets in the underlying references in which they trade and these markets can experience periods of illiquidity, sometimes of significant
duration. There have been periods during which certain participants in forward contract markets have refused to quote prices for certain underlying references or have quoted prices with an unusually wide spread between the price at which they were
prepared to buy and that at which they were prepared to sell. At or prior to maturity of a forward contract, the Fund may enter
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into an offsetting contract and may incur a loss to the extent
there has been adverse movement in forward contract prices. The liquidity of the markets for forward contracts depends on participants entering into offsetting transactions rather than making or taking delivery. To the extent participants make or
take delivery, liquidity in the market for forwards could be reduced. A relatively small price movement in a forward contract may result in substantial losses to the Fund, exceeding the amount of the margin paid. Forward contracts can increase the
Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk,
leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
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forward foreign currency contract
is a derivative (forward contract) in which the underlying reference is a country's or region’s currency. The Fund may agree to buy or sell a country's or region’s
currency at a specific price on a specific date in the future. These instruments may fall in value (sometimes dramatically) due to foreign market downswings or foreign currency value fluctuations, subjecting the Fund to foreign currency risk (the
risk that Fund performance may be negatively impacted by foreign currency strength or weakness relative to the U.S. dollar, particularly if the Fund exposes a significant percentage of its assets to currencies other than the U.S. dollar). The
effectiveness of any currency hedging strategy by a Fund may be reduced by the Fund’s inability to precisely match forward contract amounts and the value of securities involved. Forward foreign currency contracts used for hedging may also
limit any potential gain that might result from an increase or decrease in the value of the currency. The Fund may use these instruments to gain leveraged exposure to currencies, which is a speculative investment practice that increases the Fund's
risk exposure and the possibility of losses. Unanticipated changes in the currency markets could result in reduced performance for the Fund. When the Fund converts its foreign currencies into U.S. dollars, it may incur currency conversion costs due
to the spread between the prices at which it may buy and sell various currencies in the market.
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A
forward interest rate agreement
is a derivative whereby the buyer locks in an interest rate at a future settlement date. If the interest rate on the settlement date exceeds the lock rate, the buyer pays the seller
the difference between the two rates (based on the notional value of the agreement). If the lock rate exceeds the interest rate on the settlement date, the seller pays the buyer the difference between the two rates (based on the notional value of
the agreement). The Fund may act as a buyer or a seller.
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Derivatives Risk – Futures Contracts Risk.
A futures contract is an exchange-traded derivative transaction between two parties in which a buyer (holding the “long” position) agrees to pay a fixed price (or rate) at a specified future date for delivery
of an underlying reference from a seller (holding the “short” position). The seller hopes that the market price on the delivery date is less than the agreed upon price, while the buyer hopes for the contrary. Certain futures contract
markets are highly volatile, and futures contracts may be illiquid. Futures exchanges may limit fluctuations in futures contract prices by imposing a maximum permissible daily price movement. The Fund may be disadvantaged if it is prohibited from
executing a trade outside the daily permissible price movement. At or prior to maturity of a futures contract, the Fund may enter into an offsetting contract and may incur a loss to the extent there has been adverse movement in futures contract
prices. The liquidity of the futures markets depends on participants entering into offsetting transactions rather than making or taking delivery. To the extent participants make or take delivery, liquidity in the futures market could be reduced.
Positions in futures contracts may be closed out only on the exchange on which they were entered into or through a linked exchange, and no secondary market exists for such contracts. Futures positions are marked to market each day and variation
margin payment must be paid to or by the Fund. Because of the low margin deposits normally required in futures trading, it is possible that the Fund may employ a high degree of leverage in the portfolio. As a result, a relatively small price
movement in a futures contract may result in substantial losses to the Fund, exceeding the amount of the margin paid. For certain types of futures contracts, losses are potentially unlimited. Futures markets are highly volatile and the use of
futures may increase the volatility of the Fund’s NAV. Futures contracts executed (if any) on foreign exchanges may not provide the same protection as U.S. exchanges. Futures contracts can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying
references and their attendant risks, such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and
volatility risk.
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bond (or debt instrument) future
is a derivative that is an agreement for the contract holder to buy or sell a bond or other debt instrument, a basket of bonds or other debt instrument, or the bonds or other debt
instruments in an index on a specified date at a predetermined price. The buyer (long position) of a bond future is obliged to buy the underlying reference at the agreed price on expiry of the future.
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commodity-linked future
is a derivative that is an agreement to buy or sell one or more commodities (such as crude oil, gasoline and natural gas), basket of commodities or indices of commodity futures at a specific
date in the future at a specific price.
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A
currency future
, also an FX future or foreign exchange future, is a derivative that is an agreement to exchange one currency for another at a specified date in the future at a price (exchange rate) that is fixed on
the purchase date.
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An
equity future
is a derivative that is an agreement for the contract holder to buy or sell a specified amount of an individual equity, a basket of equities or the securities in an equity index on a specified date at
a predetermined price.
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An
interest rate future
is a derivative that is an agreement whereby the buyer and seller agree to the future delivery of an interest-bearing instrument on a specific date at a pre-determined price. Examples include
Treasury-bill futures, Treasury-bond futures and Eurodollar futures.
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Derivatives Risk – Inverse Floaters Risk.
Inverse variable or floating rate obligations, sometimes referred to as inverse floaters, are a type of over-the-counter derivative debt instrument with a variable or floating coupon rate that moves in the opposite
direction of an underlying reference, typically short-term interest rates. As short-term interest rates go down, the holders of the inverse floaters receive more income and, as short-term interest rates go up, the holders of the inverse floaters
receive less income. Variable rate securities provide for a specified periodic adjustment in the coupon rate, while floating rate securities have a coupon rate that changes whenever there is a change in a designated benchmark index or the
issuer’s credit rating. While inverse floaters tend to provide more income than similar term and credit quality fixed-rate bonds, they also exhibit greater volatility in price movement, which could result in significant losses for the Fund. An
inverse floater may have the effect of investment leverage to the extent that its coupon rate varies by a magnitude that exceeds the magnitude of the change in the index or reference rate of interest, which could result in increased losses for the
Fund. There is a risk that the current interest rate on variable and floating rate instruments may not accurately reflect current market interest rates or adequately compensate the holder for the current creditworthiness of the issuer. Some inverse
floaters are structured with liquidity features and may include market-dependent liquidity features that may expose the Fund to greater liquidity risk. Inverse floaters can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their
attendant risks, such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility
risk.
Derivatives Risk – Options
Risk.
Options are derivatives that give the purchaser the option to buy (call) or sell (put) an underlying reference from or to a counterparty at a specified price (the strike price) on or before an expiration date.
The Fund may purchase or write (i.e., sell) put and call options on an underlying reference it is otherwise permitted to invest in. By investing in options, the Fund is exposed to the risk that it may be required to buy or sell the underlying
reference at a disadvantageous price on or before the expiration date. If the Fund sells a put option, the Fund may be required to buy the underlying reference at a strike price that is above market price, resulting in a loss. If the Fund sells a
call option, the Fund may be required to sell the underlying reference at a strike price that is below market price, resulting in a loss. If the Fund sells a call option that is not covered (it does not own the underlying reference), the Fund's
losses are potentially unlimited. Options may involve economic leverage, which could result in greater volatility in price movement. Options may be traded on a securities exchange or in the over-the-counter market. At or prior to maturity of an
options contract, the Fund may enter into an offsetting contract and may incur a loss to the extent there has been adverse movement in options prices. Options can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant
risks such as credit risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
Derivatives Risk – Structured Investments Risk.
Structured investments are over-the-counter derivatives that provide principal and/or interest payments based on the value of an underlying reference(s). Structured investments typically provide interest income, thereby
offering a potential yield advantage over investing directly in an underlying reference. Structured investments may lack a liquid secondary market and their prices or value can be volatile which could result in significant losses for the Fund. In
some cases, depending on its terms, a structured investment may provide that principal and/or interest payments may be adjusted below zero resulting in a potential loss of principal and/or interest payments. Additionally, the particular terms of a
structured investment may create economic leverage by requiring payment by the issuer of an amount that is a multiple of the price change of the underlying reference. Economic leverage will increase the volatility of structured investment prices,
and could result in increased losses for the Fund. The Fund’s use of structured instruments may not work as intended. If structured investments are used to reduce the duration of the Fund’s portfolio, this may limit the Fund’s
return when having a longer duration would be beneficial (for instance, when interest rates decline). Structured investments can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit risk, market
risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
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commodity-linked structured note
is a derivative (structured investment) that has principal and/or interest payments based on the market price of one or more particular commodities (such as crude oil, gasoline and
natural gas), a basket of commodities, indices of commodity futures or other economic variable. If payment of interest on a commodity-linked structured note is linked to the value of a particular commodity, basket of commodities, commodity index or
other economic variable, the Fund might receive lower interest payments (or not receive any of the interest due) on its investments if there is a loss of value in the underlying reference. Further, to the extent that the amount of principal to be
repaid upon maturity is
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linked to the
value of a particular commodity, basket of commodities, commodity index or other economic variable, the Fund might not receive a portion (or any) of the principal at maturity of the investment or upon earlier exchange. At any time, the risk of loss
associated with a particular structured note in the Fund’s portfolio may be significantly higher than the value of the note. A liquid secondary market may not exist for the commodity-linked structured notes held in the Fund’s portfolio,
which may make it difficult for the notes to be sold at a price acceptable to the portfolio manager(s) or for the Fund to accurately value them.
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Structured
investments include
collateralized debt obligations
which are debt instruments that are collateralized by the underlying cash flows of a pool of financial assets or receivables.
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An
equity-linked note (ELN)
is a derivative (structured investment) that has principal and/or interest payments based on the value of a single equity security, a basket of equity securities or an index of equity
securities, and generally has risks similar to these underlying equity securities. ELNs may be leveraged or unleveraged. An ELN typically provides interest income, thereby offering a yield advantage over investing directly in an underlying equity.
The Fund may purchase ELNs that trade on a securities exchange or those that trade on the over-the-counter markets, as well as in privately negotiated transactions with the issuer of the ELN. Investments in ELNs are also subject to liquidity risk,
which may make ELNs difficult to sell and value. The liquidity of unlisted ELNs is normally determined by the willingness of the issuer to make a market in the ELN. While the Fund will seek to purchase ELNs only from issuers that it believes to be
willing and able to repurchase the ELN at a reasonable price, there can be no assurance that the Fund will be able to sell at such a price. Furthermore, such inability to sell may impair the Fund’s ability to enter into other transactions at a
time when doing so might be advantageous. The Fund’s investments in ELNs have the potential to lead to significant losses, including the amount the Fund invested in the ELN, because ELNs are subject to the market and volatility risks
associated with their underlying equity. In addition, because ELNs often take the form of unsecured notes of the issuer, the Fund would be subject to the risk that the issuer may default on its obligations under the ELN, thereby subjecting the Fund
to the further risk of being too concentrated in the securities (including ELNs) of that issuer. However, the Fund typically considers ELNs alongside other securities of the issuer in its assessment of issuer concentration risk. In addition, ELNs
may exhibit price behavior that does not correlate with the underlying securities. ELNs may also be subject to leverage risk (the risk that losses may be greater than the amount invested). The Fund may or may not hold an ELN until its maturity. ELNs
also include participation notes.
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Derivatives Risk – Swaps Risk.
In a typical swap transaction, two parties agree to exchange the return earned on a specified underlying reference for a fixed return or the return from another underlying reference during a specified period of time.
Swaps may be difficult to value and may be illiquid. Swaps could result in Fund losses if the underlying asset or reference does not perform as anticipated. Swaps create significant investment leverage such that a relatively small price movement in
a swap may result in immediate and substantial losses to the Fund. The Fund may only close out a swap with its particular counterparty, and may only transfer a position with the consent of that counterparty. Certain swaps, such as short swap
transactions and total return swaps, have the potential for unlimited losses, regardless of the size of the initial investment. Swaps can increase the Fund’s risk exposure to underlying references and their attendant risks, such as credit
risk, market risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk, while also exposing the Fund to correlation risk, counterparty risk, hedging risk, inflation risk, leverage risk, liquidity risk, pricing risk and volatility risk.
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commodity-linked swap
is a derivative (swap) that is an agreement where the underlying reference is the market price of one or more particular commodities (such as crude oil, gasoline and natural gas), basket of
commodities or indices of commodity futures.
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credit default swap
(including a swap on a credit default index, sometimes referred to as a credit default swap index) is a derivative and special type of swap where one party pays, in effect, an insurance premium
through a stream of payments to another party in exchange for the right to receive a specified return upon the occurrence of a particular credit event by one or more third parties, such as bankruptcy, default or a similar event. A credit default
swap may be embedded within a structured note or other derivative instrument. Credit default swaps enable an investor to buy or sell protection against such a credit event (such as an issuer’s bankruptcy, restructuring or failure to make
timely payments of interest or principal). Credit default swap indices are indices that reflect the performance of a basket of credit default swaps and are subject to the same risks as credit default swaps. If such a default were to occur, any
contractual remedies that the Fund may have may be subject to bankruptcy and insolvency laws, which could delay or limit the Fund's recovery. Thus, if the counterparty under a credit default swap defaults on its obligation to make payments
thereunder, as a result of its bankruptcy or otherwise, the Fund may lose such payments altogether, or collect only a portion thereof, which collection could involve costs or delays. The Fund’s return from investment in a credit default swap
index may not match the return of the referenced index. Further, investment in a credit default swap index could result in losses if the referenced index does not perform as expected. Unexpected changes in the composition of the index may also
affect performance of the credit default swap index. If a referenced index has a dramatic intraday move that causes a material decline in the Fund’s net assets, the terms of the Fund’s credit default swap
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index may permit
the counterparty to immediately close out the transaction. In that event, the Fund may be unable to enter into another credit default swap index or otherwise achieve desired exposure, even if the referenced index reverses all or a portion of its
intraday move.
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An
inflation rate swap
is a derivative typically used to transfer inflation risk from one party to another through an exchange of cash flows. In an inflation rate swap, one party pays a fixed rate on a notional
principal amount, while the other party pays a floating rate linked to an inflation index, such as the Consumer Price Index (CPI).
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An
interest rate swap
is a derivative in which two parties agree to exchange interest rate cash flows, based on a specified notional amount from a fixed rate to a floating rate (or vice versa) or from one floating rate
to another. Interest rate swaps can be based on various measures of interest rates, including LIBOR, swap rates, treasury rates and foreign interest rates.
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Total return swaps
are derivative swap transactions in which one party agrees to pay the other party an amount equal to the total return of a defined underlying reference during a specified period of time. In return, the other party would
make periodic payments based on a fixed or variable interest rate or on the total return of a different underlying reference.
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Contracts for
differences
are swap arrangements in which the parties agree that their return (or loss) will be based on the relative performance of two different groups or baskets of securities or other instruments. Often, one or
both baskets will be an established securities index. The Fund’s return will be based on changes in value of theoretical long futures positions in the securities comprising one basket (with an aggregate face value equal to the notional amount
of the contract for differences) and theoretical short futures positions in the securities comprising the other basket. The Fund also may use actual long and short futures positions and achieve similar market exposure by netting the payment
obligations of the two contracts. If the short basket outperforms the long basket, the Fund will realize a loss – even in circumstances when the securities in both the long and short baskets appreciate in value.
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Derivatives Risk – Swaptions Risk.
A swaption is an options contract on a swap agreement. These transactions give a party the right (but not the obligation) to enter into new swap agreements or to shorten, extend, cancel or otherwise modify an existing
swap agreement at some designated future time on specified terms, in return for payment of the purchase price (the “premium”) of the option. A Fund may write (sell) and purchase put and call swaptions to the same extent it may make use
of standard options on securities or other instruments. The writer of the contract receives the premium and bears the risk of unfavorable changes in the market value on the underlying swap agreement. Swaptions can be bundled and sold as a package.
These are commonly called interest rate caps, floors and collars.
Distressed Securities Risk.
The Fund may purchase distressed securities of business enterprises involved in workouts, liquidations, reorganizations, bankruptcies and similar situations. Since there is typically substantial uncertainty concerning
the outcome of transactions involving business enterprises in these situations, there is a high degree of risk of loss, including loss of the entire investment.
In bankruptcy, there can be considerable delay in
reaching accord on a restructuring plan acceptable to a bankrupt company’s lenders, bondholders and other creditors and then obtaining the approval of the bankruptcy court. Such delays could result in substantial losses to the investments in
such company’s securities or obligations. Moreover, there is no assurance that a plan favorable to the class of securities held by the Fund will be adopted or that the subject company might not eventually be liquidated rather than
reorganized.
In liquidations (both in and out
of bankruptcy) and other forms of corporate reorganization, there exists the risk that the reorganization either will be unsuccessful, will be delayed or will result in a distribution of cash or a new security, the value of which will be less than
the purchase price of the security in respect of which such distribution is received. It may be difficult to obtain accurate information concerning a company in financial distress, with the result that the analysis and valuation are especially
difficult. The market for securities of such companies tends to be illiquid and sales may be possible only at substantial discounts.
Dollar Rolls Risk.
Dollar rolls are transactions in which the Fund sells securities to a counterparty and simultaneously agrees to purchase those or similar securities in the future at a predetermined price. Dollar rolls involve the risk that the market value of the
securities the Fund is obligated to repurchase may decline below the repurchase price, or that the counterparty may default on its obligations. These transactions may also increase the Fund’s portfolio turnover rate and may result in higher
transactions costs for the Fund. If the Fund reinvests the proceeds of the security sold, the Fund will also be subject to the risk that the investments purchased with such proceeds will decline in value (a form of leverage risk).
Emerging Market Securities Risk.
Securities issued by foreign governments or companies in emerging market countries, such as China, Russia and certain countries in Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Latin America or Africa, are more likely to have
greater exposure to the risks of investing in foreign securities that are described in Foreign Securities Risk. In addition, emerging market countries are more likely to experience instability resulting, for example, from rapid changes or
developments in social, political, economic or other conditions. Their economies are usually less mature and their securities markets are typically less developed with more limited trading activity (
i.e.
, lower trading volumes and less liquidity) than more developed countries.
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Emerging market securities tend to be more volatile than securities
in more developed markets. Many emerging market countries are heavily dependent on international trade and have fewer trading partners, which makes them more sensitive to world commodity prices and economic downturns in other countries. Some
emerging market countries have a higher risk of currency devaluations, and some of these countries may experience periods of high inflation or rapid changes in inflation rates and may have hostile relations with other countries.
Operational and Settlement Risks of Securities in
Emerging Markets.
In addition to having less developed securities markets, banks in emerging markets that are eligible foreign sub-custodians may be recently organized, lack extensive operating experience or lack
effective government oversight or regulation. In addition, there may be legal restrictions or limitations on the ability of the Fund to recover assets held in custody by a foreign sub-custodian in the event of the bankruptcy of the sub-custodian.
Because settlement systems may be less organized than in developed markets and because delivery versus payment settlement may not be possible or reliable, there may be a greater risk that settlement may be delayed and that cash or securities of the
Fund may be lost because of failures of or defects in the system, including fraud or corruption. Settlement systems in emerging markets also have a higher risk of failed trades.
Risks Related to Currencies and Corporate Actions in
Emerging Markets.
Risks related to currencies and corporate actions are also greater in emerging market countries than in developed countries. For example, some emerging market countries may have fixed or managed
currencies that are not free-floating against the U.S. dollar. Further, certain currencies may not have an active trading market internationally, or countries may have varying exchange rates. Some emerging market countries have a higher risk of
currency devaluations, and some of these countries may experience sustained periods of high inflation or rapid changes in inflation rates which can have negative effects on a country’s economy and securities markets. Corporate action
procedures in emerging market countries may be less reliable and have limited or no involvement by the depositories and central banks. Lack of standard practices and payment systems can lead to significant delays in payment.
Risks Related to Corporate and Securities Laws in
Emerging Markets.
Securities laws in emerging markets may be relatively new and unsettled and, consequently, there is a risk of rapid and unpredictable change in laws regarding foreign investment, securities
regulation, title to securities and shareholder rights. Accordingly, foreign investors may be adversely affected by new or amended laws and regulations. In addition, the systems of corporate governance to which issuers in certain emerging markets
are subject may be less advanced than the systems to which issuers located in more developed countries are subject, and therefore, shareholders of such issuers may not receive many of the protections available to shareholders of issuers located in
more developed countries. These risks may be heightened in China and Russia.
China Stock Connect Risk.
The risks noted here are in addition to the risks described under
Emerging Market Securities Risk
. A Fund may, directly or
indirectly (through, for example, participation notes or other types of equity-linked notes), purchase shares in mainland China-based companies that trade on Chinese stock exchanges such as the Shanghai Stock Exchange and the Shenzhen Stock Exchange
(China A-Shares) through the Shanghai and Shenzhen – Hong Kong Stock Connect (Stock Connect), or that may be available in the future through additional stock connect programs, a mutual market access program designed to, among other things,
enable foreign investment in the People’s Republic of China (PRC) via brokers in Hong Kong. There are significant risks inherent in investing in China A-Shares through Stock Connect. The underdeveloped state of PRC’s investment and
banking systems subjects the settlement, clearing, and registration of China A-Shares transactions to heightened risks. Stock Connect can only operate when both PRC and Hong Kong markets are open for trading and when banking services are available
in both markets on the corresponding settlement days. As such, if either or both markets are closed on a U.S. trading day, a Fund may not be able to dispose of its China A-Shares in a timely manner, which could adversely affect the Fund’s
performance. Additionally, Stock Connect is subject to daily quota limitations on purchases of China A-Shares. Once the daily quota is reached, orders to purchase additional China A-Shares through Stock Connect will be rejected. A Fund’s
investment in China A-Shares may only be traded through Stock Connect and is not otherwise transferable. Stock Connect utilizes an omnibus clearing structure, and the Fund’s shares will be registered in its custodian’s name on the
Central Clearing and Settlement System. This may limit the ability of the Investment Manager (and/or any subadviser, as the case may be) to effectively manage a Fund, and may expose the Fund to the credit risk of its custodian or to greater risk of
expropriation. Investment in China A-Shares through Stock Connect may be available only through a single broker that is an affiliate of the Fund’s custodian, which may affect the quality of execution provided by such broker. Stock Connect
restrictions could also limit the ability of a Fund to sell its China A-Shares in a timely manner, or to sell them at all. Further, different fees, costs and taxes are imposed on foreign investors acquiring China A-Shares acquired through Stock
Connect, and these fees, costs and taxes may be higher than comparable fees, costs and taxes imposed on owners of other securities providing similar investment exposure.
EuroZone-Related Risk.
A number of countries in the European Union (EU) have experienced, and may continue to experience, severe economic and financial difficulties. Additional EU member countries may also fall subject to such difficulties.
These events could negatively affect the value and liquidity of the Fund’s investments in euro-denominated securities and derivatives contracts, securities of issuers located in the EU or with significant exposure to EU issuers or countries.
If the euro is dissolved entirely, the legal and contractual consequences for holders of euro-denominated obligations and derivative
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contracts would be determined by laws in effect at such time. Such
investments may continue to be held, or purchased, to the extent consistent with the Fund’s investment objective and permitted under applicable law. These potential developments, or market perceptions concerning these and related issues, could
adversely affect the value of your investment in the Fund.
Certain countries in the EU have had to accept
assistance from supra-governmental agencies such as the International Monetary Fund, the European Stability Mechanism (the ESM) or other supra-governmental agencies. The European Central Bank has also been intervening to purchase Eurozone debt in an
attempt to stabilize markets and reduce borrowing costs.
There can be no assurance that these agencies will
continue to intervene or provide further assistance and markets may react adversely to any expected reduction in the financial support provided by these agencies. Responses to the financial problems by European governments, central banks and others
including austerity measures and reforms, may not work, may result in social unrest and may limit future growth and economic recovery or have other unintended consequences. In addition, one or more countries may abandon the euro and/or withdraw from
the EU. The impact of these actions, especially if they occur in a disorderly fashion, could be significant and far-reaching.
Event-Driven Trading Risk.
The Fund may seek to profit from the occurrence of specific corporate or other events. A delay in the timing of these events, or the failure of these events to occur at all, may have a significant negative effect on the
Fund’s performance.
Event-driven
investing requires the relevant manager to make predictions about (i) the likelihood that an event will occur and (ii) the impact such event will have on the value of a company’s securities. If the event fails to occur or it does not have the
effect foreseen, losses can result. For example, the adoption of new business strategies, a meaningful change in management or the sale of a division or other significant assets by a company may not be valued as highly by the market as the manager
had anticipated, resulting in losses. In addition, a company may announce a plan of restructuring which promises to enhance value and fail to implement it, resulting in losses to investors.
Event-Linked Instruments Risk.
The Fund may seek to profit from investment in debt securities whose performance is linked to the occurrence of specific “trigger” events, such as a hurricane, earthquake, or other physical or
weather-related phenomena. If a trigger event causes losses exceeding a specific amount in the geographic region and time period specified in a bond, the Fund may lose a portion or all of its principal invested in the bond or suffer a reduction in
credited interest. Some event-linked bonds have features that delay the return of capital upon the occurrence of a specified event; in these cases, whether or not there is loss of capital or interest, the return on the investment may be
significantly lower during the extension period. Bonds commonly referred to as “catastrophe bonds” are a type of event-linked instrument in which the Fund may invest. Catastrophe bonds may be issued by government agencies, insurance
companies, reinsurers, special purpose corporations or other on-shore or off-shore entities (such special purpose entities are created to accomplish a narrow and well-defined objective, such as the issuance of a note in connection with a reinsurance
transaction). The return on these securities is tied primarily to property insurance risk and is analogous to underwriting insurance in certain circumstances. By isolating insurance risk, these securities are largely uncorrelated to other more
traditional investments. Risks associated with investment in catastrophe bonds would include, for example, a major hurricane or similar catastrophe striking a heavily populated area of the East Coast of the United States or a major earthquake with
an epicenter in an urban area on the West Coast of the United States. In addition to specified trigger events, catastrophe bonds may expose the Fund to other risks, such as credit risk, counterparty risk, adverse regulatory or jurisdictional
interpretations, adverse tax consequences, liquidity risk, and foreign exchange risk. Event-linked exposure often provides for an extension of maturity to process and audit loss claims where a trigger event has, or possibly has, occurred. An
extension of maturity may increase volatility. From time to time, the volume of catastrophe bonds available in the market may be insufficient to enable the Fund to invest as great a percentage of its assets in catastrophe bonds as it would
like.
Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) Risk.
Investments in ETFs have unique characteristics, including, but not limited to, the expense structure and additional expenses associated with investing in ETFs. An ETF’s share price may not track its specified
market index (if any) and may trade below its NAV. Certain ETFs use a “passive” investment strategy and do not take defensive positions in volatile or declining markets. Other ETFs in which the Fund may invest are actively managed ETFs
(i.e., they do not track a particular benchmark), which indirectly subjects the Fund to active management risk. An active secondary market in an ETF’s shares may not develop or be maintained and may be halted or interrupted due to actions by
its listing exchange, unusual market conditions or other reasons. There can be no assurance an ETF’s shares will continue to be listed on an active exchange. In addition, shareholders bear both their proportionate share of the Fund’s
expenses and, indirectly, the ETF’s expenses, incurred through the Fund’s ownership of the ETF. Because the expenses and costs of an underlying ETF are shared by its investors, redemptions by other investors in the ETF could result in
decreased economies of scale and increased operating expenses for such ETF. These transactions might also result in higher brokerage, tax or other costs for the ETF. This risk may be particularly important when one investor owns a substantial
portion of the ETF.
The Funds generally
expect to purchase shares of ETFs through broker-dealers in transactions on a securities exchange, and in such cases the Funds will pay customary brokerage commissions for each purchase and sale. Shares of an ETF may also be acquired by depositing a
specified portfolio of the ETF’s underlying securities, as well as a cash payment generally equal to
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accumulated dividends of the securities (net of expenses) up to the
time of deposit, with the ETF’s custodian, in exchange for which the ETF will issue a quantity of new shares sometimes referred to as a “creation unit.” Similarly, shares of an ETF purchased on an exchange may be accumulated until
they represent a creation unit, and the creation unit may be redeemed in kind for a portfolio of the underlying securities (based on the ETF’s NAV) together with a cash payment generally equal to accumulated dividends as of the date of
redemption. The Funds may redeem creation units for the underlying securities (and any applicable cash), and may assemble a portfolio of the underlying securities (and any required cash) to purchase creation units. The Funds’ ability to redeem
creation units may be limited by the 1940 Act, which provides that ETFs, the shares of which are purchased in reliance on Section 12(d)(1)(F) of the 1940 Act, will not be obligated to redeem such shares in an amount exceeding one percent of their
total outstanding securities during any period of less than 30 days.
Exchange-Traded Notes Risk.
Exchange-traded notes (ETNs) are unsecured, unsubordinated debt securities that expose the Fund to the risk that an ETN’s issuer may be unable to pay, which means that the Fund is subject to issuer credit risk,
including that the value of the ETN may drop due to a downgrade in the issuer’s credit rating, despite the underlying benchmark or strategy remaining unchanged. ETNs do not typically offer principal protection, so the Fund may lose some or all
of its investment. The returns of ETNs are usually linked to the performance of a market benchmark or strategy, less investor fees and expenses. The Fund will bear its proportionate share of the fees and expenses of the ETN, which may cause the
Fund’s returns to be lower. The return on ETNs will typically be lower than the total return on a direct investment in the components of the underlying index or strategy because of the ETN’s investor fees and expenses. The value of an
ETN may also be influenced by time to maturity, level of supply and demand for the ETN, volatility and lack of liquidity in the underlying market, changes in the applicable interest rates, and economic, legal, political, or geographic events that
affect the referenced underlying benchmark or strategy.
Foreign Currency Risk.
The performance of the Fund may be materially affected positively or negatively by foreign currency strength or weakness relative to the U.S. dollar, particularly if the Fund invests a significant percentage of its
assets in foreign securities or other assets denominated in currencies other than the U.S. dollar. Currency rates in foreign countries may fluctuate significantly over short or long periods of time for a number of reasons, including changes in
interest rates, imposition of currency controls and economic or political developments in the U.S. or abroad. The Fund may also incur currency conversion costs when converting foreign currencies into U.S. dollars and vice versa. Restrictions on
currency trading may be imposed by foreign countries, which may adversely affect the value of your investment in the Fund. Even though the currencies of some countries may be pegged to the U.S. dollar, the conversion rate may be controlled by
government regulation or intervention at levels significantly different than what would prevail in a free market. Significant revaluations of the U.S. dollar exchange rate of these currencies could cause substantial reductions in the Fund’s
NAV.
Foreign Currency-Related Tax Risk.
As a regulated investment company (RIC), the Fund must derive at least 90% of its gross income for each taxable year from sources treated as “qualifying income” under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended. The Fund may gain exposure to local currency markets through forward currency contracts. Although foreign currency gains currently constitute “qualifying income,” the Internal Revenue Service has the authority to issue
regulations excluding from the definition of “qualifying income” a RIC’s foreign currency gains not “directly related” to its “principal business” of investing in stock or securities (or options and futures
with respect thereto). Such regulations might treat gains from some of the Fund’s foreign currency-denominated positions as not qualifying income and there is a possibility that such regulations might be applied retroactively, in which case,
the Fund might not qualify as a RIC for one or more years. In the event the Internal Revenue Service issues such regulations, the Fund’s Board may authorize a significant change in investment strategy or the Fund’s
liquidation.
Foreign Securities Risk.
Investments in or exposure to foreign securities involve certain risks not associated with investments in or exposure to securities of U.S. companies. For example, foreign markets can be extremely volatile. Foreign
securities may also be less liquid than securities of U.S. companies so that the Fund may, at times, be unable to sell foreign securities at desirable times or prices. Brokerage commissions, custodial costs and other fees are also generally higher
for foreign securities. The Fund may have limited or no legal recourse in the event of default with respect to certain foreign securities, including those issued by foreign governments. In addition, foreign governments may impose withholding or
other taxes on the Fund’s income, capital gains or proceeds from the disposition of foreign securities, which could reduce the Fund’s return on such securities. In some cases, such withholding or other taxes could potentially be
confiscatory. Other risks include: possible delays in the settlement of transactions or in the payment of income; generally less publicly available information about foreign companies; the impact of economic, political, social, diplomatic or other
conditions or events (including, for example, military confrontations, war and terrorism), possible seizure, expropriation or nationalization of a company or its assets or the assets of a particular investor or category of investors; accounting,
auditing and financial reporting standards that may be less comprehensive and stringent than those applicable to domestic companies; the imposition of economic and other sanctions against a particular foreign country, its nationals or industries or
businesses within the country; and the generally less stringent standard of care to which local agents may be held in the local markets. In addition, it may be difficult to obtain reliable information about the securities and business operations of
certain foreign issuers. Governments or trade groups may compel local agents to hold securities in designated depositories that are not subject to independent evaluation. The less developed a country’s securities market is, the greater
the
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level of risks. The risks posed by sanctions against a particular
foreign country, its nationals or industries or businesses within the country may be heightened to the extent the Fund invests significantly in the affected country or region or in issuers from the affected country that depend on global markets.
Additionally, investments in certain countries may subject the Fund to a number of tax rules, the application of which may be uncertain. Countries may amend or revise their existing tax laws, regulations and/or procedures in the future, possibly
with retroactive effect. Changes in or uncertainties regarding the laws, regulations or procedures of a country could reduce the after-tax profits of the Fund, directly or indirectly, including by reducing the after-tax profits of companies located
in such countries in which the Fund invests, or result in unexpected tax liabilities for the Fund. The performance of the Fund may also be negatively affected by fluctuations in a foreign currency's strength or weakness relative to the U.S. dollar,
particularly to the extent the Fund invests a significant percentage of its assets in foreign securities or other assets denominated in currencies other than the U.S. dollar. Currency rates in foreign countries may fluctuate significantly over short
or long periods of time for a number of reasons, including changes in interest rates, imposition of currency exchange controls and economic or political developments in the U.S. or abroad. The Fund may also incur currency conversion costs when
converting foreign currencies into U.S. dollars and vice versa.
Operational and Settlement Risks of Foreign
Securities.
The Fund’s foreign securities are generally held outside the United States in the primary market for the securities in the custody of certain eligible foreign banks and trust companies
(“foreign sub-custodians”), as permitted under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the 1940 Act). Settlement practices for foreign securities may differ from those in the United States. Some countries have limited governmental oversight
and regulation of industry practices, stock exchanges, depositories, registrars, brokers and listed companies, which increases the risk of corruption and fraud and the possibility of losses to the Fund. In particular, under certain circumstances,
foreign securities may settle on a delayed delivery basis, meaning that the Fund may be required to make payment for securities before the Fund has actually received delivery of the securities or deliver securities prior to the receipt of payment.
Typically, in these cases, the Fund will receive evidence of ownership in accordance with the generally accepted settlement practices in the local market entitling the Fund to delivery or payment at a future date, but there is a risk that the
security will not be delivered to the Fund or that payment will not be received, although the Fund and its foreign sub-custodians take reasonable precautions to mitigate this risk. Losses can also result from lost, stolen or counterfeit securities;
defaults by brokers and banks; failures or defects of the settlement system; or poor and improper record keeping by registrars and issuers.
Share Blocking.
Share blocking refers to a practice in certain foreign markets under which an issuer’s securities are blocked from trading at the custodian or sub-custodian level for a specified number of days before and, in certain instances, after a
shareholder meeting where a vote of shareholders takes place. The blocking period can last up to several weeks. Share blocking may prevent the Fund from buying or selling securities during this period, because during the time shares are blocked,
trades in such securities will not settle. It may be difficult or impossible to lift blocking restrictions, with the particular requirements varying widely by country. As a consequence of these restrictions, the Investment Manager, on behalf of the
Fund, may abstain from voting proxies in markets that require share blocking.
Forward Commitments on Mortgage-Backed Securities
(including Dollar Rolls) Risk.
When purchasing mortgage-backed securities in the “to be announced” (TBA) market (MBS TBAs), the seller agrees to deliver mortgage-backed securities for an agreed upon
price on an agreed upon date, but may make no guarantee as to the specific securities to be delivered. In lieu of taking delivery of mortgage-backed securities, the Fund could enter into dollar rolls, which are transactions in which the Fund sells
securities to a counterparty and simultaneously agrees to purchase those or similar securities in the future at a predetermined price. Dollar rolls involve the risk that the market value of the securities the Fund is obligated to repurchase may
decline below the repurchase price, or that the counterparty may default on its obligations. These transactions may also increase the Fund’s portfolio turnover rate. If the Fund reinvests the proceeds of the security sold, the Fund will also
be subject to the risk that the investments purchased with such proceeds will decline in value (a form of leverage risk). MBS TBAs and dollar rolls are subject to the risk that the counterparty to the transaction may not perform or be unable to
perform in accordance with the terms of the instrument.
Frontier Market
Risk.
Frontier market countries generally have smaller economies and even less developed capital markets than typical emerging market countries (which themselves have increased investment risk relative to more
developed market countries) and, as a result, the Fund’s exposure to risks associated with investing in emerging market countries are magnified when the Fund invests in frontier market countries. The increased risks include: the potential for
extreme price volatility and illiquidity in frontier market countries; government ownership or control of parts of the private sector and of certain companies; trade barriers, exchange controls, managed adjustments in relative currency values and
other protectionist measures imposed or negotiated by the countries with which frontier market countries trade; and the relatively new and unsettled securities laws in many frontier market countries. Securities issued by foreign governments or
companies in frontier market countries are even more likely than emerging markets securities to have greater exposure to the risks of investing in foreign securities that are described in
Foreign Securities Risk
.
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Fund-of-Funds Risk.
Determinations regarding asset classes or underlying funds and the Fund’s allocations thereto may not successfully achieve the Fund’s investment objective, in whole or in part. The selected underlying funds’ performance may be
lower than the performance of the asset class they were selected to represent or may be lower than the performance of alternative underlying funds that could have been selected to represent the asset class. The Fund also is exposed to the same risks
as the underlying funds in direct proportion to the allocation of its assets among the underlying funds. Therefore, to the extent that the Fund invests significantly in a particular underlying fund, the Fund’s performance would be
significantly impacted by the performance of such underlying fund. Generally, by investing in a combination of underlying funds, the Fund has exposure to the risks of many areas of the market. By concentrating its investments in relatively few
underlying funds, the Fund may have more concentrated market exposures, subjecting the Fund to greater risk of loss should those markets decline or fail to rise. The ability of the Fund to realize its investment objective will depend, in large part,
on the extent to which the underlying funds realize their investment objectives. There is no guarantee that the underlying funds will achieve their respective investment objectives. The performance of underlying funds could be adversely affected if
other entities that invest in the same underlying funds make relatively large investments or redemptions in such underlying funds. The Fund, and its shareholders, indirectly bear a portion of the expenses of any funds in which the Fund invests.
Because the expenses and costs of each underlying fund are shared by its investors, redemptions by other investors in an underlying fund could result in decreased economies of scale and increased operating expenses for such underlying fund. These
transactions might also result in higher brokerage, tax or other costs for an underlying fund. This risk may be particularly important when one investor owns a substantial portion of an underlying fund. The Investment Manager may have potential
conflicts of interest in selecting affiliated funds (for which it receives management fees) over unaffiliated funds (for which it does not receive management fees) for investment by the Fund, and may also face potential conflicts of interest in
selecting affiliated funds, because the fees the Investment Manager receives from some underlying funds may be higher than the fees paid by other underlying funds. Also, to the extent that the Fund is constrained/restricted from investing (or
investing further) in a particular underlying fund for one or more reasons (e.g., underlying fund capacity constraints or regulatory restrictions) or if the Fund chooses to sell its investment in an underlying fund because of poor investment
performance or for other reasons, the Fund may have to invest in another underlying fund(s), including less desirable funds – from a strategy or investment performance standpoint – which could have a negative impact on Fund performance.
In addition, Fund performance could be negatively impacted if an appropriate alternate underlying fund(s) does not present itself in a timely manner or at all.
Geographic Focus Risk.
The Fund may be particularly susceptible to economic, political, regulatory or other events or conditions affecting issuers and countries within the specific geographic regions in which the Fund invests. Currency
devaluations could occur in countries that have not yet experienced currency devaluation to date, or could continue to occur in countries that have already experienced such devaluations. As a result, the Fund’s NAV may be more volatile than
the NAV of a more geographically diversified fund.
Global Economic
Risk.
Global economies and financial markets are increasingly interconnected, which increases the possibility that conditions in one country or region might adversely impact issuers in a different country or region
or across the globe. For instance, a significant slowdown in China’s economy is adversely affecting worldwide commodity prices and the economies of many countries, especially those that depend heavily on commodity production and/or trade with
China. The severity or duration of adverse economic conditions may also be affected by policy changes made by governments or quasi-governmental organizations. The imposition of sanctions by the United States or another government on a country could
cause disruptions to the country’s financial system and economy, which could negatively impact the value of securities.
At a referendum in June 2016, the United Kingdom
(the UK) voted to leave the European Union (EU), thereby initiating the British exit from the EU (commonly known as “Brexit”). In March 2017, the UK formally invoked Article 50 of the Treaty of Lisbon to begin the process under which the
UK shall withdraw from the EU in due course. Upon invoking Article 50, the UK triggered a two-year period for negotiation of the terms of the withdrawal from the EU. However, there remains a significant degree of uncertainty about how negotiations
relating to the UK’s withdrawal from the EU and new trade agreements will be conducted, as well as the potential consequences and precise timeframe for Brexit. During the negotiating period and beyond, the impact of Brexit on the UK and
European economies and the broader global economy could be significant, resulting in negative impacts on currency and financial markets generally, such as increased volatility and illiquidity, and potentially lower economic growth in markets in the
UK, Europe and globally, which may adversely affect the value of your investment in the Fund.
The UK has one of the largest economies in Europe,
and member countries of the EU are substantial trading partners of the UK. The City of London’s economy is dominated by financial services, some of which may have to move outside of the UK post-referendum (e.g., currency trading, international
settlement). Under the terms of Brexit, banks may be forced to move staff and comply with two separate sets of rules or lose business to banks in Europe. Furthermore, Brexit creates the potential for decreased trade, the possibility of capital
outflows from the UK, devaluation of the pound sterling, the cost of higher corporate bond spreads due to uncertainty, and the risk that all the above could damage business and consumer spending as well as foreign
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direct investment. As a result of Brexit, the British economy and
its currency may be negatively impacted by changes to its economic and political relations with the EU and other countries. Any further exits from the EU, or the possibility of such exits, would likely cause additional market disruption globally and
introduce new legal and regulatory uncertainties.
The impact of Brexit in the near- and long-term is
still unknown and could have additional adverse effects on economies, financial markets, currencies and asset valuations around the world. Any attempt by the Fund to hedge against or otherwise protect its portfolio or to profit from such
circumstances may fail and, accordingly, an investment in the Fund could lose money over short or long periods.
Growth Securities Risk.
Growth securities typically trade at a higher multiple of earnings than other types of equity securities. Accordingly, the market values of growth securities may never reach their expected market value and may decline
in price. In addition, growth securities, at times, may not perform as well as value securities or the stock market in general, and may be out of favor with investors for varying periods of time.
Hedging Transactions Risk.
The Fund may invest in securities and utilize financial instruments for a variety of hedging purposes. Hedging transactions may limit the opportunity for gain if the value of the portfolio position should increase.
There can be no assurance that the Fund will engage in hedging transactions at any given time, even under volatile market conditions, or that any hedging transactions the Fund engages in will be successful. Moreover, it may not be possible for the
Fund to enter into a hedging transaction at a price sufficient to protect its assets. The Fund may not anticipate a particular risk so as to hedge against it.
Hedging against a decline in the value of a
portfolio position does not eliminate fluctuations in the values of portfolio positions or prevent losses if the values of such positions decline, but establishes other positions designed to gain from those same developments, thus moderating the
decline in the portfolio positions’ value. Such hedging transactions also limit the opportunity for gain if the value of the portfolio position should increase. Moreover, it may not be possible for the Fund to hedge against an exchange rate,
interest rate or security price fluctuation that is so generally anticipated that the Fund is not able to enter into a hedging transaction at a price sufficient to protect its assets from the decline in value of the portfolio positions anticipated
as a result of such fluctuations.
The Fund is
not required to attempt to hedge portfolio positions and, for various reasons, may determine not to do so. Furthermore, the Fund may not anticipate a particular risk so as to hedge against it. While the Fund may enter into hedging transactions to
seek to reduce risk, such transactions may result in a poorer overall performance for the Fund than if the Fund had not engaged in any such hedging transaction. In addition, the degree of correlation between price movements of the instruments used
in a hedging strategy and price movements in the portfolio position being hedged may vary. For a variety of reasons, the Fund may not seek to establish a perfect correlation between such hedging instruments and the portfolio holdings being hedged.
Such imperfect correlation may prevent the Fund from achieving the intended hedge or expose the Fund to risk of loss. The successful utilization of hedging and risk management transactions requires skills complementary to those needed in the
selection of the Fund’s portfolio holdings. Moreover, it should be noted that a portfolio will always be exposed to certain risks that cannot be hedged, such as credit risk (relating both to particular securities and counterparties) and
liquidity risk.
High-Yield Investments Risk.
Securities and other debt instruments held by the Fund that are rated below investment grade (commonly called “high-yield” or “junk” bonds) and unrated debt instruments of comparable quality tend
to be more sensitive to credit risk than higher-rated debt instruments and may experience greater price fluctuations in response to perceived changes in the ability of the issuing entity or obligor to pay interest and principal when due than to
changes in interest rates. These investments are generally more likely to experience a default than higher-rated debt instruments. High-yield debt instruments are considered to be predominantly speculative with respect to the issuer’s capacity
to pay interest and repay principal. These debt instruments typically pay a premium – a higher interest rate or yield – because of the increased risk of loss, including default. High-yield debt instruments may require a greater degree of
judgment to establish a price, may be difficult to sell at the time and price the Fund desires, may carry high transaction costs, and also are generally less liquid than higher-rated debt instruments. The ratings provided by third party rating
agencies are based on analyses by these ratings agencies of the credit quality of the debt instruments and may not take into account every risk related to whether interest or principal will be timely repaid. In adverse economic and other
circumstances, issuers of lower-rated debt instruments are more likely to have difficulty making principal and interest payments than issuers of higher-rated debt instruments.
Highly Leveraged Transactions Risk.
The loans or other debt instruments in which the Fund invests may consist of transactions involving refinancings, recapitalizations, mergers and acquisitions and other financings for general corporate purposes. The
Fund’s investments also may include senior obligations of a borrower issued in connection with a restructuring pursuant to Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (commonly known as “debtor-in-possession” financings), provided that
such senior obligations are determined by the Fund’s portfolio managers to be a suitable investment for the Fund. In such highly leveraged transactions, the borrower assumes large amounts of debt in order to have the financial resources to
attempt to achieve its business objectives. Such business objectives may include but are not limited to: management’s taking over control of a company
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(leveraged buy-out); reorganizing the assets and liabilities of a
company (leveraged recapitalization); or acquiring another company. Loans or other debt instruments that are part of highly leveraged transactions involve a greater risk (including default and bankruptcy) than other investments.
Impairment of Collateral Risk.
The value of collateral, if any, securing a loan can decline, and may be insufficient to meet the borrower’s obligations or difficult or costly to liquidate. In addition, the Fund’s access to collateral may
be limited by bankruptcy or other insolvency laws. Further, certain floating rate and other loans may not be fully collateralized and may decline in value.
Inflation Risk.
Inflation risk is the uncertainty over the future real value (after inflation) of an investment. Inflation rates may change frequently and drastically as a result of various factors, including unexpected shifts in
the domestic or global economy, and the Fund’s investments may not keep pace with inflation, which may result in losses to Fund investors.
Inflation-Protected Securities Risk.
Inflation-protected debt securities tend to react to changes in real interest rates. Real interest rates can be described as nominal interest rates minus the expected impact of inflation. In general, the price of an
inflation-protected debt security falls when real interest rates rise, and rises when real interest rates fall. Interest payments on inflation-protected debt securities will vary as the principal and/or interest is adjusted for inflation and may be
more volatile than interest paid on ordinary bonds. In periods of deflation, the Fund may have no income at all from such investments. Income earned by a shareholder depends on the amount of principal invested, and that principal will not grow with
inflation unless the shareholder reinvests the portion of Fund distributions that comes from inflation adjustments. A Fund’s investment in certain inflation-protected debt securities may generate taxable income in excess of the interest they
pay to the Fund, which may cause the Fund to sell investments to obtain cash to make income distributions to shareholders, including at times when it may not be advantageous to do so.
IPO Risk.
IPOs are
subject to many of the same risks as investing in companies with smaller market capitalizations. To the extent the Fund determines to invest in IPOs, it may not be able to invest to the extent desired, because, for example, only a small portion (if
any) of the securities being offered in an IPO are available to the Fund. The investment performance of the Fund during periods when it is unable to invest significantly or at all in IPOs may be lower than during periods when the Fund is able to do
so. In addition, as the Fund increases in size, the impact of IPOs on the Fund’s performance will generally decrease. IPOs sold within 12 months of purchase may result in increased short-term capital gains, which will be taxable to the
Fund’s shareholders as ordinary income.
Interest Rate Risk.
Interest rate risk is the risk of losses attributable to changes in interest rates. In general, if prevailing interest rates rise, the values of loans and other debt instruments tend to fall, and if interest rates fall, the values of loans and other
debt instruments tend to rise. Changes in the value of a debt instrument usually will not affect the amount of income the Fund receives from it but will generally affect the value of your investment in the Fund. Changes in interest rates may also
affect the liquidity of the Fund’s investments in debt instruments. In general, the longer the maturity or duration of a debt instrument, the greater its sensitivity to changes in interest rates. Interest rate declines also may increase
prepayments of debt obligations, which, in turn, would increase prepayment risk. Similarly, a period of rising interest rates may negatively impact the Fund’s performance. Actions by governments and central banking authorities can result in
increases in interest rates. Such actions may negatively affect the value of debt instruments held by the Fund, resulting in a negative impact on the Fund's performance and NAV. Debt instruments with floating coupon rates are typically less
sensitive to interest rate changes, but these debt instruments may decline in value if their coupon rates do not rise as much as, or keep pace with, yields on such types of debt instruments. Because rates on certain floating rate loans and other
debt instruments reset only periodically, changes in prevailing interest rates (and particularly sudden and significant changes) can be expected to cause fluctuations in the Fund’s NAV. Any interest rate increases could cause the value of the
Fund’s investments in debt instruments to decrease. Rising interest rates may prompt redemptions from the Fund, which may force the Fund to sell investments at a time when it is not advantageous to do so, which could result in
losses.
Investing in Other Funds Risk.
The Fund’s investment in other funds (affiliated and/or unaffiliated funds, including exchange-traded funds (ETFs)) subjects the Fund to the investment performance (positive or negative) and risks of the
underlying funds in direct proportion to the Fund’s investment therein. In addition, investments in ETFs have unique characteristics, including, but not limited to, the expense structure and additional expenses associated with investing in
ETFs. The performance of the underlying funds could be adversely affected if other investors in the same underlying funds make relatively large investments or redemptions in such underlying funds. The Fund, and its shareholders, indirectly bear a
portion of the expenses of any funds in which the Fund invests. Because the expenses and costs of an underlying fund are shared by its investors, redemptions by other investors in the underlying funds could result in decreased economies of scale and
increased operating expenses for such underlying fund. These transactions might also result in higher brokerage, tax or other costs for the underlying funds. This risk may be particularly important when one investor owns a substantial portion of the
underlying funds. The Investment Manager may have potential conflicts of interest in selecting affiliated underlying funds for investment by the Fund because the fees paid to it by some underlying funds are higher than the fees paid by other
underlying funds, as well as a potential conflict in selecting affiliated funds over unaffiliated funds. Also, to the extent that the Fund is constrained/restricted from investing (or investing
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further) in a particular underlying fund for one or more reasons
(e.g., underlying fund capacity constraints or regulatory restrictions) or if the Fund chooses to sell its investment in an underlying fund because of poor investment performance or for other reasons, the Fund may have to invest in other underlying
funds, including less desirable funds – from a strategy or investment performance standpoint – which could have a negative impact on Fund performance. In addition, Fund performance could be negatively impacted if an appropriate alternate
underlying fund does not present itself in a timely manner or at all.
Issuer Risk.
An
issuer in which the Fund invests or to which it has exposure may perform poorly, and the value of its loans or securities may therefore decline, which would negatively affect the Fund’s performance. Poor performance may be caused by poor
management decisions, competitive pressures, breakthroughs in technology, reliance on suppliers, labor problems or shortages, corporate restructurings, fraudulent disclosures, natural disasters or other events, conditions or factors. The market
capitalization of an issuer may also impact its risk profile. Investments in larger, more established companies may involve certain risks associated with their larger size. For instance, larger, more established companies may be less able to respond
quickly to new competitive challenges, such as changes in consumer tastes or innovation from smaller competitors. Also, larger companies are sometimes less able to attain the high growth rates of successful smaller companies, especially during
extended periods of economic expansion.
Large Fund Investor Risk.
The Fund may from time to time sell a substantial amount of its shares to relatively few investors or a single investor, including other funds advised by the Investment Manager, or third parties. Sales to and
redemptions from large investors may be very substantial relative to the size of the Fund and carry potentially adverse effects. While it is not possible to predict the overall effect of such sales and redemptions, such transactions may adversely
affect the Fund’s performance to the extent that the Fund is required to invest cash received in connection with a sale or to sell a substantial amount of its portfolio securities to facilitate a redemption, in either case, a time when the
Fund would otherwise prefer not to invest or sell, such as in an up market or down market, respectively. Such transactions may also increase the Fund’s transaction costs, which would also detract from Fund performance, while also having
potentially negative tax consequences to investors. The Fund, because of a large redemption, may be forced to sell its liquid or more liquid positions, resulting in the Fund holding a higher percentage of less liquid or illiquid securities
(securities that may be unable to sell at a favorite time or price). Because the expenses and costs of the Fund are shared by its investors, large redemptions in the Fund could result in decreased economies of scale and increased operating expenses
for non-redeeming Fund shareholders. In addition, in the event of a Fund proxy proposal, a large investor(s) could dictate with its/their vote the results of the proposal, which may have a less favorable impact on minority-stake
shareholders.
Leverage Risk.
Leverage occurs when the Fund increases its assets available for investment using borrowings, short sales, derivatives, or similar instruments or techniques. Use of leverage can produce volatility and may exaggerate
changes in the NAV of Fund shares and in the return on the Fund’s portfolio, which may increase the risk that the Fund will lose more than it has invested. The use of leverage may cause the Fund to liquidate portfolio positions when it may not
be advantageous to do so to satisfy its obligations or to meet any required asset segregation or position coverage requirements. Futures contracts, options on futures contracts, forward contracts and other derivatives can allow the Fund to obtain
large investment exposures in return for meeting relatively small margin requirements. As a result, investments in those transactions may be highly leveraged. If the Fund uses leverage, through the purchase of particular instruments such as
derivatives, the Fund may experience capital losses that exceed the net assets of the Fund. Because short sales involve borrowing securities and then selling them, the Fund’s short sales effectively leverage the Fund’s assets. The
Fund’s assets that are used as collateral to secure the Fund’s obligations to return the securities sold short may decrease in value while the short positions are outstanding, which may force the Fund to use its other assets to increase
the collateral. Leverage can create an interest expense that may lower the Fund's overall returns. Leverage presents the opportunity for increased net income and capital gains, but may also exaggerate the Fund's volatility and risk of loss. There
can be no guarantee that a leveraging strategy will be successful.
Liquidity Risk.
Liquidity risk is the risk associated with any event, circumstance, or characteristic of an investment or market that negatively impacts the Fund’s ability to sell, or realize the proceeds from the sale of, an investment at a desirable time or
price. Liquidity risk may arise because of, for example, a lack of marketability of the investment. Decreases in the number of financial institutions, including banks and broker-dealers willing to make markets (match up sellers and buyers) in the
Fund’s investments or decreases in their capacity or willingness to trade such investments may increase the Fund’s exposure to this risk. The debt market has experienced considerable growth, and financial institutions making markets in
instruments purchased and sold by the Fund (e.g., bond dealers) have been subject to increased regulation. The impact of that growth and regulation on the ability and willingness of financial institutions to engage in trading or “making a
market” in such instruments remains unsettled. As a result, the Fund, when seeking to sell its portfolio investments, could find that selling is more difficult than anticipated, especially during times of high market volatility. Market
participants attempting to sell the same or a similar instrument at the same time as the Fund could exacerbate the Fund’s exposure to liquidity risk. The Fund may have to accept a lower selling price for the holding, sell other investments
that it might otherwise prefer to hold, or forego another more appealing investment opportunity. Certain investments that were liquid when purchased by the Fund may later become illiquid, particularly in times of overall economic distress. Changing
regulatory, market or other conditions or environments (for example, the interest rate or
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credit environments) may also adversely affect the liquidity and
the price of the Fund's investments. Certain types of investments, such as structured notes and non-investment grade debt instruments, as an example, may be especially subject to liquidity risk. Floating rate loans also generally are subject to
legal or contractual restrictions on resale and may trade infrequently on the secondary market. The value of the loan to the Fund may be impaired in the event that the Fund needs to liquidate such loans. The inability to purchase or sell floating
rate loans and other debt instruments at a fair price may have a negative impact on the Fund’s performance. Securities or other assets in which the Fund invests may be traded in the over-the-counter market rather than on an exchange and
therefore may be more difficult to purchase or sell at a fair price. Judgment plays a larger role in valuing illiquid or less liquid investments as compared to valuing liquid or more liquid investments. Price volatility may be higher for illiquid or
less liquid investments as a result of, for example, the relatively less frequent pricing of such securities (as compared to liquid or more liquid investments). Generally, the less liquid the market at the time the Fund sells a portfolio investment,
the greater the risk of loss or decline of value to the Fund. Overall market liquidity and other factors can lead to an increase in Fund redemptions, which may negatively impact Fund performance and NAV, including, for example, if the Fund is forced
to sell investments in a down market.
Governments and their regulatory agencies and
self-regulatory organizations may take actions that affect the regulation of the instruments in which the Fund invests, or the issuers of such instruments, in ways that are unforeseeable. Legislation or regulation may also change the way in which
the Fund or the Investment Manager or any Fund subadviser, as the case may be, are regulated or supervised. Such legislation or regulation could affect or preclude a Fund’s ability to achieve its investment objective.
Governments and their regulatory agencies and
self-regulatory organizations may also acquire distressed assets from financial institutions and acquire ownership interests in those institutions. The implications of government ownership and disposition of these assets are unclear, and such a
program may have positive or negative effects on the liquidity, valuation and performance of a Fund’s portfolio holdings. Furthermore, volatile financial markets can expose the Funds to greater market and liquidity risk and potential
difficulty in valuing portfolio instruments held by the Funds.
While the Investment Manager and any subadvisers can
endeavor to take various preventative measures to address liquidity risk, including conducting periodic portfolio risk analysis/management and stress-testing, such measures may not be successful and may not have fully accounted for the specific
circumstances that ultimately impact a Fund and its holdings.
Listed Private Equity Fund Investment Risk.
Private equity funds include financial institutions or vehicles whose principal business is to invest in and lend capital to privately held companies. The Fund is subject to the underlying risks that affect private
equity funds in which it invests, which may include increased liquidity risk, valuation risk, sector risk and credit risk. Limited or incomplete information about the companies in which private equity funds invest, and relatively concentrated
investment portfolios of private equity funds, may expose the Fund to greater volatility and risk of loss. Fund investment in private equity funds subjects Fund shareholders indirectly to the fees and expenses incurred by private equity
funds.
Loan Assignment/Loan Participation
Risk.
If a bank loan is acquired through an assignment, the Fund may not be able to unilaterally enforce all rights and remedies under the loan and with regard to any associated collateral. If a bank loan is
acquired through a participation, the Fund generally will have no right to enforce compliance by the borrower with the terms of the loan agreement, and the Fund may not benefit from the collateral supporting the debt obligation in which it has
purchased the participation. As a result, the Fund will be exposed to the credit risk of both the borrower and the institution selling the participation.
Loan Interests Risk.
Loan interests may not be considered “securities,” and purchasers, such as the Fund, therefore may not be entitled to rely on the anti-fraud protections of the federal securities laws. Loan interests
generally are subject to restrictions on transfer, and the Fund may be unable to sell loan interests at a time when it may otherwise be desirable to do so or may be able to sell them only at prices that are less than what the Fund regards as their
fair market value. Accordingly, loan interests may at times be illiquid. Loan interests may be difficult to value and typically have extended settlement periods (generally greater than 7 days), which expose the Fund to the risk that the receipt of
principal and interest payments may be delayed until the loan interest settles. Extended settlement periods during significant Fund redemption activity could potentially cause short-term liquidity demands within the Fund. In seeking to meet
liquidity demands, the Fund could be forced to sell investments at unfavorable prices, or borrow money or effect short settlements when possible (at a cost to the Fund), in an effort to generate sufficient cash to pay redeeming shareholders. The
Fund’s actions in this regard may not be successful. Interests in loans made to finance highly leveraged companies or transactions, such as corporate acquisitions, may be especially vulnerable to adverse changes in economic or market
conditions.
Interests in secured loans
have the benefit of collateral and, typically, of restrictive covenants limiting the ability of the borrower to further encumber its assets, although many covenants may be waived or modified with the consent of a certain percentage of the holders of
the loans even if the Fund does not consent. There is a risk that the value of any collateral securing a loan in which the Fund has an interest may decline and that the collateral may not be sufficient to cover the amount owed on the loan. In most
loan agreements there is no formal requirement to pledge additional collateral. In the event the borrower defaults, the Fund’s
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access to the collateral may be limited or delayed by bankruptcy or
other insolvency laws. Further, there is a risk that a court could take action with respect to a loan that is adverse to the holders of the loan, including the Fund. Such actions may include invalidating the loan, the lien on the collateral, the
priority status of the loan, or ordering the refund of interest previously paid by the borrower. Any such actions by a court could adversely affect the Fund’s performance. A default or expected default of a loan could also make it difficult
for the Fund to sell the loan at a price approximating the value previously placed on it. In order to enforce its rights in the event of a default, bankruptcy or similar situation, the Fund may be required to retain legal or similar counsel. This
may increase the Fund’s operating expenses and adversely affect its NAV. Loans that have a lower priority for repayment in an issuer’s capital structure may involve a higher degree of overall risk than more senior loans of the same
borrower. In the event of a default, second lien secured loans will generally be paid only if the value of the collateral exceeds the amount of the borrower’s obligations to the first lien secured lenders. The remaining collateral may not be
sufficient to cover the full amount owed on the loan in which the Fund has an interest. In addition, if a secured loan is foreclosed, the Fund would likely bear the costs and liabilities associated with owning and disposing of the collateral. The
collateral may be difficult to sell and the Fund would bear the risk that the collateral may decline in value while the Fund is holding it. From time to time, disagreements may arise amongst the holders of loans and debt in the capital structure of
an issuer, which may give rise to litigation risks, including the risk that a court could take action adverse to the holders of the loan, which could negatively impact the Fund’s performance.
The Fund may acquire a loan interest by obtaining an
assignment of all or a portion of the interests in a particular loan that are held by an original lender or a prior assignee. As an assignee, the Fund normally will succeed to all rights and obligations of its assignor with respect to the portion of
the loan that is being assigned. However, the rights and obligations acquired by the purchaser of a loan assignment may differ from, and be more limited than, those held by the original lenders or the assignor. Alternatively, the Fund may acquire a
participation interest in a loan that is held by another party. When the Fund’s loan interest is a participation, the Fund may have less control over the exercise of remedies than the party selling the participation interest, and the Fund
normally would not have any direct rights against the borrower. As a participant, the Fund also would be subject to the risk that the party selling the participation interest would not remit the Fund’s pro rata share of loan payments to the
Fund. It may also be difficult for the Fund to obtain an accurate picture of a lending bank’s financial condition.
Macro Strategy Risk.
The profitability of any macro program depends primarily on the ability of its manager to predict derivative contract price movements to implement investment ideas regarding macroeconomic trends. Price movements for commodity interests are
influenced by, among other things: changes in interest rates; governmental, agricultural, trade, fiscal, monetary and exchange control programs and policies; weather and climate conditions; natural disasters, such as hurricanes; changing supply and
demand relationships; changes in balances of payments and trade; U.S. and international rates of inflation and deflation; currency devaluations and revaluations; U.S. and international political and economic events; and changes in philosophies and
emotions of market participants. The manager’s trading methods may not take all of these factors into account.
The global macro programs to which the Fund’s
investments are exposed typically use derivative financial instruments that are actively traded using a variety of strategies and investment techniques that involve significant risks. The derivative financial instruments traded include commodities,
currencies, futures, options and forward contracts and other derivative instruments that have inherent leverage and price volatility that result in greater risk than instruments used by typical mutual funds, and the systematic programs used to trade
them may rely on proprietary investment strategies that are not fully disclosed, which may in turn result in risks that are not anticipated.
Market Risk.
Market
risk refers to the possibility that the market values of securities or other investments that the Fund holds will fall, sometimes rapidly or unpredictably, or fail to rise. The value of Fund investments may fall or fail to rise because of a variety
of actual or perceived factors affecting an issuer (e.g., an unfavorable earnings report), the industry or sector in which it operates, or the market as a whole, which may reduce the value of an investment in the Fund. Accordingly, an investment in
the Fund could lose money over short or long periods. The market values of the investments the Fund holds can be affected by changes or potential or perceived changes in U.S. or foreign economies, financial markets, interest rates and the liquidity
of these investments, among other factors. In addition, as the share of assets invested in passive index-based strategies increases, price correlations among the securities included in an index may increase and the market value of securities,
including those included in one or more market indices, may become less correlated with their underlying values. Because index-based strategies generally buy or sell securities based solely on their inclusion in an index, securities prices may rise
or fall based on whether money is flowing into or out of these strategies rather than based on an analysis of the securities’ underlying values. This valuation disparity could lead to increased price volatility for individual securities, and
the market as a whole, which may result in Fund losses.
Master Limited Partnership Risk.
Investments in securities (units) of master limited partnerships involve risks that differ from an investment in common stock. Holders of these units have more limited rights to vote on matters affecting the
partnership. These units may be subject to cash flow and dilution risks. There are also certain tax risks associated with such an investment. In particular, the Fund’s investment in master limited partnerships can be limited by the
Fund’s intention to qualify as a regulated
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investment company for U.S. federal income tax purposes, and can
limit the Fund’s ability to so qualify. In addition, conflicts of interest may exist between common unit holders, subordinated unit holders and the general partner of a master limited partnership, including a conflict arising as a result of
incentive distribution payments. In addition, there are risks related to the general partner’s right to require unit holders to sell their common units at an undesirable time or price.
Mid-Cap Company Securities Risk.
Securities of mid-capitalization companies (mid-cap companies) can, in certain circumstances, have more risk than securities of larger capitalization companies (larger companies). For example, mid-cap companies may be
more vulnerable to market downturns and adverse business or economic events than larger companies because they may have more limited financial resources and business operations. Mid-cap companies are also more likely than larger companies to have
more limited product lines and operating histories and to depend on smaller and generally less experienced management teams. Securities of mid-cap companies may trade less frequently and in smaller volumes and may fluctuate more sharply in value
than securities of larger companies. When the Fund takes significant positions in mid-cap companies with limited trading volumes, the liquidation of those positions, particularly in a distressed market, could be difficult and result in Fund
investment losses that would affect the value of your investment in the Fund. In addition, some mid-cap companies may not be widely followed by the investment community, which can lower the demand for their stocks.
Model and Technology Risk.
Investment strategies or programs that are fundamentally dependent on proprietary or licensed technology, such as, among other things, hardware, software, model-based strategies, data gathering systems, order execution,
and trade allocation systems, and/or risk management systems may not be successful on an ongoing basis or could contain errors, omissions, imperfections, or malfunctions. Any such errors, imperfections or limitations in a model could affect the
ability of the manager to implement strategies. Despite testing, monitoring and independent safeguards, these errors may result in, among other things, execution and allocation failures and failures to properly gather, organize and analyze amounts
of data from third parties and other external sources. More specifically, as it is not possible or practicable for a manager to factor all relevant, available data into quantitative model forecasts and/or trading decisions, managers (and/or
affiliated licensors of such data) will use their discretion to determine what data to gather with respect to an investment strategy and what subset of that data the models will take into account to produce forecasts that may have an impact on
ultimate trading decisions, all of which may have a negative effect on the Fund.
Errors are often extremely difficult to detect and
some may go undetected for long periods of time and some may never be detected. The adverse impact caused by these errors can compound over time. A manager (and/or the licensor of the models or technology) may detect certain errors that it chooses,
in its sole discretion, not to address or fix. By necessity, models make simplifying assumptions that limit their efficacy. Models that appear to explain prior market data can fail to predict future market events. Moreover, an increasing number of
market participants may rely on models that are similar to those used by a manager (or an affiliate of a manager), which may result in a substantial number of market participants taking the same action with respect to an investment. Should one or
more of these other market participants begin to divest themselves of one or more portfolio investments, the Fund could suffer losses. Additionally, shareholders should be aware that there is no guarantee that a manager that uses quantitative
techniques will use any specific data or type of data in generating forecasts or making trading decisions on behalf of the Fund, nor is there any guarantee that the data actually utilized in generating forecasts or making trading decisions on behalf
of the Fund will be (i) the most accurate data available or (ii) free from errors.
Money Market Fund Investment Risk.
An investment in a money market fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by any bank, the FDIC or any other government agency. Certain money market funds float their NAV while others seek to preserve
the value of investments at a stable NAV (typically $1.00 per share). An investment in a money market fund, even an investment in a fund seeking to maintain a stable NAV per share, is not guaranteed and it is possible for the Fund to lose money by
investing in these and other types of money market funds. If the liquidity of a money market fund’s portfolio deteriorates below certain levels, the money market fund may suspend redemptions (i.e., impose a redemption gate) and thereby prevent
the Fund from selling its investment in the money market fund or impose a fee of up to 2% on amounts the Fund redeems from the money market fund (i.e., impose a liquidity fee). These measures may result in an investment loss or prohibit the Fund
from redeeming shares when the Investment Manager would otherwise redeem shares. In addition to the fees and expenses that the Fund directly bears, the Fund indirectly bears the fees and expenses of any money market funds in which it invests,
including affiliated money market funds. To the extent these fees and expenses, along with the fees and expenses of any other funds in which the Fund may invest, are expected to equal or exceed 0.01% of the Fund’s average daily net assets,
they will be reflected in the Annual Fund Operating Expenses set forth in the table under “Fees and Expenses of the Fund.” By investing in a money market fund, the Fund will be exposed to the investment risks of the money market fund in
direct proportion to such investment. The money market fund may not achieve its investment objective. The Fund, through its investment in the money market fund, may not achieve its investment objective. To the extent the Fund invests in instruments
such as derivatives, the Fund may hold investments, which may be significant, in money market fund shares to cover its obligations resulting from the Fund’s investments in derivatives. Money market funds and the securities they invest in are
subject to comprehensive regulations. The enactment of new legislation or regulations, as well as changes in interpretation and enforcement of current laws, may affect the manner of operation, performance and/or yield of money market
funds.
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Because a decision to impose or not impose such
liquidity fees and/or redemption gates on an affiliated money market fund may negatively impact any Funds that invest in it, all to which the Investment Manager and Board may also owe a fiduciary duty, any recommendation by the Investment Manager or
decision by the Board with respect to such fees or gates on the affiliated money market fund may present potential conflicts of interest to the Investment Manager and the Board. The Board of the affiliated money market fund, for example, could be
conflicted by a determination to not impose such fees and/or gates at a time when, if implemented, the other Columbia Funds could potentially experience negative impacts, while not imposing such fees and/or gates could potentially result in a
negative impact to the affiliated money market fund. Any decisions by the Board to favor such fees and/or gates could result in reduced or limited investments in the affiliated money market fund by the other Columbia Funds, which may lead to
increased affiliated money market fund expenses (which would be borne by the remaining Fund investors).
If a liquidity fee or redemption gate is imposed, an
investing Columbia Fund may have to sell other investments at less than opportune times rather than using the cash invested in the money market fund to meet shareholder redemptions. The Investment Manager, as a result of any such fees and/or gates
on an affiliated money market fund (or the potential imposition thereof, recognizing that the Investment Manager will be aware of the affiliated money market fund’s liquid assets position), may determine to not invest the other Columbia
Funds’ assets in the affiliated money market fund, and potentially be forced to invest in more expensive, lower-performing investments.
Mortgage- and Other Asset-Backed Securities Risk.
The value of any mortgage-backed and other asset-backed securities held by the Fund may be affected by, among other things, changes or perceived changes in: interest rates; factors concerning the interests in and
structure of the issuer or the originator of the mortgages or other assets; the creditworthiness of the entities that provide any supporting letters of credit, surety bonds or other credit enhancements; or the market's assessment of the quality of
underlying assets. Mortgage-backed securities represent interests in, or are backed by, pools of mortgages from which payments of interest and principal (net of fees paid to the issuer or guarantor of the securities) are distributed to the holders
of the mortgage-backed securities. Other types of asset-backed securities typically represent interests in, or are backed by, pools of receivables such as credit, automobile, student and home equity loans. Mortgage- and other asset-backed securities
can have a fixed or an adjustable rate. Mortgage- and other asset-backed securities are subject to prepayment risk, which is the possibility that the underlying mortgage or other asset may be refinanced or prepaid prior to maturity during periods of
declining or low interest rates, causing the Fund to have to reinvest the money received in securities that have lower yields. In addition, the impact of prepayments on the value of mortgage- and other asset-backed securities may be difficult to
predict and may result in greater volatility. Rising or high interest rates tend to extend the duration of mortgage- and other asset-backed securities, making them more volatile and more sensitive to changes in interest rates. Payment of principal
and interest on some mortgage-backed securities (but not the market value of the securities themselves) may be guaranteed (i) by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government (in the case of securities guaranteed by the Government National
Mortgage Association) or (ii) by its agencies, authorities, enterprises or instrumentalities (in the case of securities guaranteed by the Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA) or the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC)), which are
not insured or guaranteed by the U.S. Government (although FNMA and FHLMC may be able to access capital from the U.S. Treasury to meet their obligations under such securities). Mortgage-backed securities issued by non-governmental issuers (such as
commercial banks, savings and loan institutions, private mortgage insurance companies, mortgage bankers and other secondary market issuers) may be supported by various credit enhancements, such as pool insurance, guarantees issued by governmental
entities, letters of credit from a bank or senior/subordinated structures, and may entail greater risk than obligations guaranteed by the U.S. Government, whether or not such obligations are guaranteed by the private issuer.
Multi-Strategy Risk.
The multi-strategy approach employed by the Fund involves special risks, which include the risk that investment decisions, at the Fund or the underlying fund level, may conflict with each other; for example, at any particular time, one manager may
be purchasing shares of an issuer whose shares are being sold by another manager. Consequently, the Fund could indirectly incur transaction costs without accomplishing any net investment result. Also, managers may use proprietary or licensed
investment strategies that are based on considerations and factors that are not fully disclosed to the Fund or other investors.
Moreover, consistent with the Fund’s
investment objectives, these proprietary or licensed investment strategies, which may include quantitative mathematical models or systems, may be changed or refined over time. A manager (or the licensor of the strategies used by the manager) may
make certain changes to the strategies the manager has previously used, may not use such strategies at all (or the manager’s license may be revoked), or may use additional strategies, where such changes or discretionary decisions, and the
reasons for such changes or decisions, are also not disclosed to the Fund or other investors. These strategies may involve risks under some market conditions that are not anticipated by the Investment Manager or the Fund.
Municipal Securities Risk.
Municipal securities are debt obligations generally issued to obtain funds for various public purposes, including general financing for state and local governments, or financing for a specific project or public
facility, and include obligations of the governments of the U.S. territories, commonwealths and possessions such as Guam, Puerto Rico and
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the U.S. Virgin Islands to the extent such obligations are exempt
from state and U.S. federal income taxes. The value of municipal securities can be significantly affected by actual or expected political and legislative changes at the federal or state level. Municipal securities may be fully or partially backed by
the taxing authority of the local government, by the credit of a private issuer, by the current or anticipated revenues from a specific project or specific assets or by domestic or foreign entities providing credit support, such as letters of
credit, guarantees or insurance, and are generally classified into general obligation bonds and special revenue obligations. General obligation bonds are backed by an issuer's taxing authority and may be vulnerable to limits on a government's power
or ability to raise revenue or increase taxes. They may also depend for payment on legislative appropriation and/or funding or other support from other governmental bodies. Revenue obligations are payable from revenues generated by a particular
project or other revenue source, and are typically subject to greater risk of default than general obligation bonds because investors can look only to the revenue generated by the project or other revenue source backing the project, rather than to
the general taxing authority of the state or local government issuer of the obligations. Because many municipal securities are issued to finance projects in sectors such as education, health care, transportation and utilities, conditions in those
sectors can affect the overall municipal market. The amount of publicly available information for municipal issuers is generally less than for corporate issuers.
Issuers in a state, territory, commonwealth or
possession in which the Fund invests may experience significant financial difficulties for various reasons, including as the result of events that cannot be reasonably anticipated or controlled such as social conflict or unrest, labor disruption and
natural disasters. Such financial difficulties may lead to credit rating downgrade(s) of such issuers which, in turn, could affect the market values and marketability of many or all municipal obligations of issuers in such state, territory,
commonwealth or possession. The value of the Fund’s shares will be negatively impacted to the extent it invests in such securities. Securities issued by Puerto Rico and its agencies and instrumentalities have been subject to multiple credit
downgrades as a result of Puerto Rico's ongoing fiscal challenges and uncertainty about its ability to make full repayment on these obligations. These challenges and uncertainties have been exacerbated by hurricane Maria and the resulting natural
disaster in Puerto Rico. Additionally, recent statements by government officials regarding management of the recovery burden may increase price volatility and the risk that Puerto Rican municipal securities held by the Fund will lose value. Even
prior to the recent natural disaster, certain issuers of Puerto Rican municipal securities had failed to make payments on obligations when due, and additional missed payments or defaults are likely to occur in the future. In May 2017, Puerto Rico
filed in U.S. federal court to commence a debt restructuring process similar to that of a traditional municipal bankruptcy under a new federal law for insolvent U.S. territories, called Promesa. However, Puerto Rico's case will be the first ever
heard under Promesa for which there is no existing body of court precedent. Accordingly, Puerto Rico's debt restructuring process could take significantly longer than recent municipal bankruptcy proceedings adjudicated pursuant to Chapter 9 of the
U.S. Bankruptcy Code. It is not clear whether a debt restructuring process will ultimately be approved or, if so, the extent to which it will apply to Puerto Rico municipal securities sold by an issuer other than the Commonwealth. A debt
restructuring could reduce the principal amount due, the interest rate, the maturity and other terms of Puerto Rico municipal securities, which could adversely affect the value of Puerto Rico municipal securities. To the extent a Fund invests in
these securities, such developments could adversely impact the Fund's performance. The Fund’s annual and semiannual reports show the Fund’s investment exposures at a point in time. The risk of investing in the Fund is directly correlated
to the Fund’s investment exposures.
The
Fund’s investments in municipal securities may include securities of issuers in the health care sector, which subjects the Fund’s investments to the risks associated with that sector, including the risk of regulatory action or policy
changes by numerous governmental agencies and bodies, including federal, state, and local governmental agencies, as well as requirements imposed by private entities, such as insurance companies. A major source of revenue for the health care industry
is payments from the Medicare and Medicaid programs. As a result, the industry is sensitive to legislative changes and reductions in governmental spending for such programs. Numerous other factors may affect the industry, such as general and local
economic conditions, demand for services, expenses (including, among others, malpractice insurance premiums) and competition among health care providers. Additional factors also may adversely affect health care facility operations, such as adoption
of legislation proposing a national health insurance program, other state or local health care reform measures, medical and technological advances that alter the need for or cost of health services or the way in which such services are delivered,
changes in medical coverage that alter the traditional fee-for-service revenue stream, and efforts by employers, insurers, and governmental agencies to reduce the costs of health insurance and health care services.
The Fund’s investments in municipal securities
may include transportation-related municipal bonds which may be used to finance projects including construction, maintenance and operations of non-toll and toll-backed roads, bridges, tunnels, railways, airports, seaports and other transportation
systems. Transportation-related municipal bonds may be fully or partially backed by taxes, fees, tolls, or other sources of revenue. Investment in transportation-related municipal bonds may subject the Fund to the certain risks, including, but not
limited to, the risk of insufficient or declining revenues from the sources backing the bonds, contractor non-performance or underperformance and unexpectedly higher construction, fuel or other costs.
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Opportunistic Investing Risk.
Undervalued securities involve the risk that they may never reach their expected full market value, either because the market fails to recognize the security's intrinsic worth or the expected value was misgauged.
Undervalued securities also may decline in price even though the Investment Manager believes they are already undervalued. Turnaround companies may never improve their fundamentals, may take much longer than expected to improve, or may improve much
less than expected. Development stage companies could fail to develop and deplete their assets, resulting in large percentage losses.
Preferred Stock
Risk.
Preferred stock is a type of stock that generally pays dividends at a specified rate and that has preference over common stock in the payment of dividends and the liquidation of assets. Preferred stock does
not ordinarily carry voting rights. The price of a preferred stock is generally determined by earnings, type of products or services, projected growth rates, experience of management, liquidity, and general market conditions of the markets on which
the stock trades. The most significant risks associated with investments in preferred stock include issuer risk, market risk and interest rate risk (
i.e.
, the risk of losses attributable to changes in interest rates).
Prepayment and Extension Risk.
Prepayment and extension risk is the risk that a loan, bond or other security or investment might, in the case of prepayment risk, be called or otherwise converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity and, in the case
of extension risk, that the investment might not be called as expected. In the case of prepayment risk, if the investment is converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity, the portfolio managers may not be able to invest the proceeds in other
investments providing as high a level of income, resulting in a reduced yield to the Fund. In the case of mortgage- or other asset-backed securities, as interest rates decrease or spreads narrow, the likelihood of prepayment increases. Conversely,
extension risk is the risk that an unexpected rise in interest rates will extend the life of a mortgage- or asset-backed security beyond the prepayment time. If the Fund's investments are locked in at a lower interest rate for a longer period of
time, the portfolio managers may be unable to capitalize on securities with higher interest rates or wider spreads.
Quantitative Model Risk.
The Fund may use quantitative methods to select investments. Securities or other investments selected using quantitative methods may perform differently from the market as a whole or from their expected performance for
many reasons, including factors used in building the quantitative analytical framework, the weights placed on each factor, and changing sources of market returns, among others. Any errors or imperfections in the quantitative analyses or models, or
in the data on which they are based, could adversely affect the effective use of such analyses or models, which in turn could adversely affect the Fund’s performance. It is not possible or practicable for a quantitative manager to factor all
relevant, available data into quantitative model forecasts and/or trading decisions. Quantitative managers will use their discretion to determine what data to gather with respect to an investment strategy and what data the models will take into
account to produce forecasts that may have an impact on ultimate trading decisions. Shareholders should be aware that there is no guarantee that a quantitative manager will use any specific data or type of data in making trading decisions on behalf
of the Fund, nor is there any guarantee that the data actually utilized in generating forecasts or making trading decisions on behalf of the Fund will be the most accurate data available or free from errors. There can be no assurance that these
methodologies will enable the Fund to achieve its objective.
Real Estate-Related Investment Risk.
Investments in real estate investment trusts (REITs) and in securities of other companies (wherever organized) principally engaged in the real estate industry subject the Fund to, among other things, risks similar to
those of direct investments in real estate and the real estate industry in general. These include risks related to general and local economic conditions, possible lack of availability of financing and changes in interest rates or property values.
REITs are entities that either own properties or make construction or mortgage loans, and also may include operating or finance companies. The value of interests in a REIT may be affected by, among other factors, changes in the value of the
underlying properties owned by the REIT, changes in the prospect for earnings and/or cash flow growth of the REIT itself, defaults by borrowers or tenants, market saturation, decreases in market rates for rents, and other economic, political, or
regulatory matters affecting the real estate industry, including REITs. REITs and similar non-U.S. entities depend upon specialized management skills, may have limited financial resources, may have less trading volume in their securities, and may be
subject to more abrupt or erratic price movements than the overall securities markets. REITs are also subject to the risk of failing to qualify for favorable tax treatment under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. Some REITs (especially
mortgage REITs) are affected by risks similar to those associated with investments in debt securities including changes in interest rates and the quality of credit extended.
Redemption Risk.
The
Fund may need to sell portfolio securities to meet redemption requests. The Fund could experience a loss when selling portfolio securities to meet redemption requests if there is (i) significant redemption activity by shareholders, including, for
example, when a single investor or few large investors make a significant redemption of Fund shares, (ii) a disruption in the normal operation of the markets in which the Fund buys and sells portfolio securities or (iii) the inability of the Fund to
sell portfolio securities because such securities are illiquid. In such events, the Fund could be forced to sell portfolio securities at unfavorable prices in an effort to generate sufficient cash to pay redeeming shareholders. The Fund may suspend
redemptions or the payment of redemption proceeds when permitted by applicable regulations.
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Regulatory Risk — Alternative Investments.
Legal, tax, and regulatory developments may adversely affect the Fund and its investments. The regulatory environment for the Fund and certain of its investments is evolving, and changes in the regulation of investment
funds, their managers, and their trading activities and capital markets, or a regulator’s disagreement with the Fund’s or others’ interpretation of the application of certain regulations, may adversely affect the ability of the
Fund to pursue its investment strategy, its ability to obtain leverage and financing, and the value of investments held by the Fund. There has been an increase in governmental, as well as self-regulatory, scrutiny of the investment industry in
general and the alternative investment industry in particular. It is impossible to predict what, if any, changes in regulations may occur, but any regulation that restricts the ability of the Fund or any underlying funds or other investments to
trade in securities or other instruments or the ability of the Fund or underlying funds to employ, or brokers and other counterparties to extend, credit in their trading (as well as other regulatory changes that result) could have a material adverse
impact on the Fund’s performance.
Shareholders should understand that the Fund’s
business is dynamic and is expected to change over time. Therefore, the Fund and its underlying investments may be subject to new or additional regulatory constraints in the future. Such regulations may have a significant impact on shareholders or
the operations of the Fund, including, without limitation, restricting the types of investments the Fund may make, preventing the Fund from exercising its voting rights with regard to certain financial instruments, requiring the Fund to disclose the
identity of its investors or otherwise. To the extent the Fund or its underlying investments are subject to such regulation, such regulations may have a detrimental effect on one or more shareholders. Prospective investors are encouraged to consult
their own advisors regarding an investment in the Fund.
Regulatory Risk — Money Market Funds.
Money market funds and the securities they invest in are subject to comprehensive regulations. The enactment of new legislation or regulations, as well as changes in interpretation and enforcement of current laws, may
affect the manner of operation, performance and/or yield of money market funds.
Reinvestment Risk.
Reinvestment risk is the risk that the Fund will not be able to reinvest income or principal at the same return it is currently earning.
Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Repurchase agreements are agreements in which the seller of a security to the Fund agrees to repurchase that security from the Fund at a mutually agreed upon price and time. Repurchase agreements carry the risk that the
counterparty may not fulfill its obligations under the agreement. This could cause the Fund's income and the value of your investment in the Fund to decline.
Reverse Repurchase Agreements Risk.
Reverse repurchase agreements are agreements in which a Fund sells a security to a counterparty, such as a bank or broker-dealer, in return for cash and agrees to repurchase that security at a mutually agreed upon price
and time. Reverse repurchase agreements carry the risk that the market value of the security sold by the Fund may decline below the price at which the Fund must repurchase the security. Reverse repurchase agreements also may be viewed as a form of
borrowing, and borrowed assets used for investment creates leverage risk. Leverage can create an interest expense that may lower the Fund's overall returns. Leverage presents the opportunity for increased net income and capital gains, but may also
exaggerate the Fund’s volatility and risk of loss. There can be no guarantee that this strategy will be successful.
Rule 144A and Other Exempted Securities Risk.
The Fund may invest in privately placed and other securities or instruments exempt from SEC registration (collectively “private placements”), subject to liquidity and other regulatory restrictions. In the
U.S. market, private placements are typically sold only to qualified institutional buyers, or qualified purchasers, as applicable. An insufficient number of buyers interested in purchasing private placements at a particular time could adversely
affect the marketability of such investments and the Fund might be unable to dispose of them promptly or at reasonable prices, subjecting the Fund to liquidity risk. The Fund may invest in private placements determined to be liquid as well as those
determined to be illiquid. Even if determined to be liquid, the Fund’s holdings of private placements may increase the level of Fund illiquidity if eligible buyers are unable or unwilling to purchase them at a particular time. The Fund may
also have to bear the expense of registering the securities for resale and the risk of substantial delays in effecting the registration. Additionally, the purchase price and subsequent valuation of private placements typically reflect a discount,
which may be significant, from the market price of comparable securities for which a more liquid market exists. Issuers of Rule 144A eligible securities are required to furnish information to potential investors upon request. However, the required
disclosure is much less extensive than that required of public companies and is not publicly available since the offering is not filed with the SEC. Further, issuers of Rule 144A eligible securities can require recipients of the offering information
(such as the Fund) to agree contractually to keep the information confidential, which could also adversely affect the Fund’s ability to dispose of the security.
Sector Risk.
At
times, the Fund may have a significant portion of its assets invested in securities of companies conducting business in a related group of industries within a sector. Companies in the same sector may be similarly affected by economic, regulatory,
political or market events or conditions, which may make the Fund more vulnerable to unfavorable developments in that sector than funds that invest more broadly. Generally, the more broadly the Fund invests, the more it spreads risk and potentially
reduces the risks of loss and volatility.
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Sector Risk — Consumer Discretionary/Staples
Sector Investments.
To the extent a Fund concentrates its investments in companies in the consumer discretionary and staples sectors, it may be more susceptible to the particular risks that may affect companies in
that sector than if it were invested in a wider variety of companies in unrelated sectors. Companies in the consumer discretionary and staples sectors are subject to certain risks, including fluctuations in the performance of the overall domestic
and international economy, interest rate changes, currency exchange rates, increased competition and consumer confidence. Performance of such companies may be affected by factors including reduced disposable household income, reduced consumer
spending, changing demographics and consumer tastes. Companies in these sectors may be subject to competitive forces (including competition brought by an influx of foreign brands), which may also have an adverse impact on their profitability. These
sectors may be strongly affected by fads, marketing campaigns, changes in demographics and consumer preferences, and other economic or social factors affecting consumer demand. Governmental regulation, including price controls and regulations on
packaging, labeling, competition, and certification, may affect the profitability of certain companies invested in by the Fund. Companies operating in these sectors may also be adversely affected by government and private litigation.
Sector Risk — Energy Sector Investments.
To the extent a Fund concentrates its investments in companies in the energy sector, it may be more susceptible to the particular risks that may affect companies in that sector than if it were invested in a wider
variety of companies in unrelated sectors. Companies in the energy sector are subject to certain risks, including legislative or regulatory changes, adverse market conditions and increased competition. Performance of such companies may be affected
by factors including, among others, fluctuations in energy prices and supply and demand of energy fuels, energy conservation, the success of exploration projects, local and international politics, and events occurring in nature. For instance,
natural events (such as earthquakes, hurricanes or fires in prime natural resources areas) and political events (such as government instability or military confrontations) can affect the value of companies involved in business activities in the
energy sector. Other risks may include liabilities for environmental damage and general civil liabilities, depletion of resources, and mandated expenditures for safety and pollution control. The energy sector may also be affected by economic cycles,
rising interest rates, high inflation, technical progress, labor relations, legislative or regulatory changes, local and international politics, and adverse market conditions.
Sector Risk — Financial Services Sector
Investments.
To the extent a Fund concentrates its investments in companies in the financial services sector, it may be more susceptible to the particular risks that may affect companies in that sector than if it
were invested in a wider variety of companies in unrelated sectors. Companies in the financial services sector are subject to certain risks, including the risk of regulatory change, decreased liquidity in credit markets and unstable interest rates.
Such companies may have concentrated portfolios, such as a high level of loans to real estate developers, which makes them vulnerable to economic conditions that affect that industry. Performance of such companies may be affected by competitive
pressures and exposure to investments or agreements that, under certain circumstances, may lead to losses (
e.g.
, subprime loans). Companies in the
financial services sector are subject to extensive governmental regulation that may limit the amount and types of loans and other financial commitments they can make, and interest rates and fees that they may charge. In addition, profitability of
such companies is largely dependent upon the availability and the cost of capital.
Sector Risk — Health Care Sector Investments.
To the extent a Fund concentrates its investments in companies in the health care sector, it may be more susceptible to the particular risks that may affect companies in that sector than if it were invested in a wider
variety of companies in unrelated sectors. Companies in the health care sector are subject to certain risks, including restrictions on government reimbursement for medical expenses, government approval of medical products and services, competitive
pricing pressures, and the rising cost of medical products and services (especially for companies dependent upon a relatively limited number of products or services). Performance of such companies may be affected by factors including, government
regulation, obtaining and protecting patents (or the failure to do so), product liability and other similar litigation as well as product obsolescence.
Sector Risk — Industrials Sector Investments.
To the extent a Fund concentrates its investments in companies in the industrials sector, it may be more susceptible to the particular risks that may affect companies in that sector than if it were invested in a wider
variety of companies in unrelated sectors. Companies in the industrials sector are subject to certain risks, including changes in supply and demand for their specific product or service and for industrial sector products in general, including
decline in demand for such products due to rapid technological developments and frequent new product introduction. Performance of such companies may be affected by factors including government regulation, world events and economic conditions and
risks for environmental damage and product liability claims.
Sector Risk — Materials Investments.
To the extent a Fund concentrates its investments in companies in the materials sector, it may be more susceptible to the particular risks that may affect companies in the materials sector than if it were invested in a
wider variety of companies in unrelated sectors. Companies in the materials sector are subject to certain risks, including that many materials companies are significantly affected by the level and volatility of commodity prices, exchange rates,
import controls, increased competition, environmental policies, consumer demand, and events occurring in nature. For instance, natural events (such as earthquakes, hurricanes or fires in prime natural resource areas) and political events (such as
government
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instability or military confrontations) can affect the value of
companies involved in business activities in the materials sector. Performance of such companies may be affected by factors including, among others, that at times worldwide production of industrial materials has exceeded demand as a result of
over-building or economic downturns, leading to poor investment returns or losses. Other risks may include liabilities for environmental damage and general civil liabilities, depletion of resources, and mandated expenditures for safety and pollution
control. The materials sector may also be affected by economic cycles, rising interest rates, high inflation, technical progress, labor relations, legislative or regulatory changes, local and international politics, and adverse market conditions. In
addition, prices of, and thus the Fund’s investments in, precious metals are considered speculative and are affected by a variety of worldwide and economic, financial and political factors. Prices of precious metals may fluctuate
sharply.
Sector Risk — Technology and
Technology-Related Sector Investment Risk.
To the extent a Fund concentrates its investments in companies in technology and technology related sectors, it may be more susceptible to the particular risks that may
affect companies in those sectors, as well as other technology-related sectors (collectively, the technology sectors) than if it were invested in a wider variety of companies in unrelated sectors. Companies in the technology sectors are subject to
certain risks, including the risk that new services, equipment or technologies will not be accepted by consumers and businesses or will become rapidly obsolete. Performance of such companies may be affected by factors including obtaining and
protecting patents (or the failure to do so) and significant competitive pressures, including aggressive pricing of their products or services, new market entrants, competition for market share and short product cycles due to an accelerated rate of
technological developments. Such competitive pressures may lead to limited earnings and/or falling profit margins. As a result, the value of their securities may fall or fail to rise. In addition, many technology sector companies have limited
operating histories and prices of these companies’ securities historically have been more volatile than other securities, especially over the short term.
Short Positions
Risk.
A Fund that establishes short positions introduces more risk to the Fund than a fund that only takes long positions (where the Fund owns the instrument or other asset) because the maximum sustainable loss on
an instrument or other asset purchased (held long) is limited to the amount paid for the instrument or other asset plus the transaction costs, whereas there is no maximum price of the shorted instrument or other asset when purchased in the open
market. Therefore, in theory, short positions have unlimited risk. The Fund’s use of short positions in effect “leverages” the Fund. Leverage potentially exposes the Fund to greater risks of loss due to unanticipated market
movements, which may magnify losses and increase the volatility of returns. To the extent the Fund takes a short position in a derivative instrument or other asset, this involves the risk of a potentially unlimited increase in the value of the
underlying instrument or other asset.
Small- and Mid-Cap Company Securities Risk.
Securities of small- and mid-capitalization companies (small- and mid-cap companies) can, in certain circumstances, have a higher potential for gains than securities of larger, more established companies (larger
companies) but may also have more risk. For example, small- and mid-cap companies may be more vulnerable to market downturns and adverse business or economic events than larger companies because they may have more limited financial resources and
business operations. Small- and mid-cap companies are also more likely than larger companies to have more limited product lines and operating histories and to depend on smaller and generally less experienced management teams. Securities of small-
and mid-cap companies may trade less frequently and in smaller volumes and may be less liquid and fluctuate more sharply in value than securities of larger companies. When the Fund takes significant positions in small- and mid-cap companies with
limited trading volumes, the liquidation of those positions, particularly in a distressed market, could be prolonged and result in Fund investment losses that would affect the value of your investment in the Fund. In addition, some small- and
mid-cap companies may not be widely followed by the investment community, which can lower the demand for their stocks.
Sovereign Debt Risk.
A sovereign debtor’s willingness or ability to repay principal and pay interest in a timely manner may be affected by a variety of factors, including its cash flow situation, the extent of its reserves, the availability of sufficient foreign
exchange on the date a payment is due, the relative size of the debt service burden to the economy as a whole, the sovereign debtor’s policy toward international lenders, and the political constraints to which a sovereign debtor may be
subject.
With respect to sovereign debt
of emerging market issuers, investors should be aware that certain emerging market countries are among the largest debtors to commercial banks and foreign governments. At times, certain emerging market countries have declared moratoria on the
payment of principal and interest on external debt. Certain emerging market countries have experienced difficulty in servicing their sovereign debt on a timely basis and that has led to defaults and the restructuring of certain indebtedness to the
detriment of debtholders. Sovereign debt risk is increased for emerging market issuers.
Special Situations Risk.
Securities of companies that are involved in an initial public offering or a major corporate event, such as a business consolidation or restructuring, may be exposed to heightened risk because of the high degree of
uncertainty that can be associated with such events. Securities issued in initial public offerings often are issued by companies that are in the early stages of development, have a history of little or no revenues and may operate at a loss following
the offering. It is possible that there will be no active trading market for the securities after the offering, and that the market price of the securities may be subject to significant and unpredictable fluctuations. Initial public offerings are
subject to many of the same risks as investing in
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companies with smaller market capitalizations. To the extent the
Fund determines to invest in initial public offerings, it may not be able to invest to the extent desired, because, for example, only a small portion (if any) of the securities being offered in an initial public offering are available to the Fund.
The investment performance of the Fund during periods when it is unable to invest significantly or at all in initial public offerings may be lower than during periods when the Fund is able to do so. Securities purchased in initial public offerings
which are sold within 12 months after purchase may result in increased short-term capital gains, which will be taxable to the Fund’s shareholders as ordinary income. Certain “special situation” investments are investments in
securities or other instruments that are determined to be illiquid or lacking a readily ascertainable fair value. Certain special situation investments prevent ownership interests therein from being withdrawn until the special situation investment,
or a portion thereof, is realized or deemed realized, which may negatively impact Fund performance. Investing in special situations may have a magnified effect on the performance of funds with small amounts of assets.
Stripped Securities Risk.
Stripped securities are the separate income or principal components of debt securities. These securities are particularly sensitive to changes in interest rates, and therefore subject to greater fluctuations in price
than typical interest bearing debt securities. For example, stripped mortgage-backed securities have greater interest rate risk than mortgage-backed securities with like maturities, and stripped treasury securities have greater interest rate risk
than traditional government securities with identical credit ratings.
Systems and Technology Risk.
The Investment Manager and, as the case may be, any Fund subadvisers, use various technology in managing the Fund, consistent with its investment objective and strategy described in the Fund’s prospectus. For
example, proprietary and third-party data and systems may be utilized to support decision making for the Fund. Data imprecision, software or other technology malfunctions, programming inaccuracies and similar circumstances may impair the performance
of these systems, which may negatively affect Fund performance.
Terrorism, War, Natural Disaster and Epidemic Risk.
Terrorism, war, military confrontations and related geopolitical events (and their aftermath) have led, and in the future may lead, to increased short-term market volatility and may have adverse long-term effects on
U.S. and world economies and markets generally. Likewise, natural and environmental disasters, such as, for example, earthquakes, fires, floods, hurricanes, tsunamis and weather-related phenomena generally, as well as widespread disease and virus
epidemics, can be highly disruptive to economies and markets, adversely affecting individual companies, sectors, industries, markets, currencies, interest and inflation rates, credit ratings, investor sentiment, and other factors affecting the value
of the Funds’ investments.
U.S.
Government Obligations Risk.
While U.S. Treasury obligations are backed by the “full faith and credit” of the U.S. Government, such securities are nonetheless subject to credit risk (
i.e.
, the risk that the U.S. Government may be, or may be perceived to be, unable or unwilling to honor its financial obligations, such as making payments).
Securities issued or guaranteed by federal agencies or authorities and U.S. Government-sponsored instrumentalities or enterprises may or may not be backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government. For example, securities issued by the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, the Federal National Mortgage Association and the Federal Home Loan Banks are neither insured nor guaranteed by the U.S. Government. These securities may be supported by the ability to borrow from the U.S.
Treasury or only by the credit of the issuing agency, authority, instrumentality or enterprise and, as a result, are subject to greater credit risk than securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Treasury.
Valuation Risk.
The
sales price the Fund (or an underlying fund or other investment vehicle) could receive for any particular investment may differ from the Fund’s (or an underlying fund’s or other investment vehicle’s) valuation of the investment,
particularly for securities that trade in thin or volatile markets or that are valued using a fair value methodology that produces an estimate of the fair value of the security/instrument, which may prove to be inaccurate. Investors who purchase or
redeem Fund shares on days when the Fund is holding securities or other instruments (or holding shares of underlying funds or other investment vehicles that have fair-valued securities or other instruments in their portfolios) may receive fewer or
more shares or lower or higher redemption proceeds than they would have received if the Fund (or underlying fund or other investment vehicle) had not fair-valued the security or instrument or had used a different valuation methodology. The value of
foreign securities, certain fixed-income securities and currencies, as applicable, may be materially affected by events after the close of the market on which they are valued, but before the Fund determines its NAV.
Warrants and Rights Risk.
Warrants are securities giving the holder the right, but not the obligation, to buy the stock of an issuer at a given price (generally higher than the value of the stock at the time of issuance) during a specified
period or perpetually. Warrants may be acquired separately or in connection with the acquisition of securities. Warrants do not carry with them the right to dividends or voting rights and they do not represent any rights in the assets of the issuer.
Warrants are subject to the risks associated with the security underlying the warrant, including market risk. Warrants may expire unexercised and subject the Fund to liquidity risk (the risk that it may not be possible for the Fund to liquidate the
instrument at an advantageous time or price), which may result in Fund losses. Rights are available to existing shareholders of an issuer to enable them to maintain proportionate ownership in the issuer by being able to buy newly issued shares.
Rights allow shareholders to buy the shares
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below the current market price. Rights are typically short-term
instruments that are valued separately and trade in the secondary market during a subscription (or offering) period. Holders can exercise the rights and purchase the stock, sell the rights or let them expire. Their value, and their risk of
investment loss, is a function of that of the underlying security.
Zero-Coupon Bonds Risk.
Zero-coupon bonds are bonds that do not pay interest in cash on a current basis, but instead accrue interest over the life of the bond. As a result, these securities are issued at a discount and their values may
fluctuate more than the values of similar securities that pay interest periodically. Although these securities pay no interest to holders prior to maturity, interest accrued on these securities is reported as income to the Fund and affects the
amounts distributed to its shareholders, which may cause the Fund to sell investments to obtain cash to make income distributions to shareholders, including at times when it may not be advantageous to do so.
Auditor Independence Risk.
The Fund prepares financial statements in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles and has engaged PwC to serve as the independent accountant to the Fund. As the Fund’s independent accountant,
PwC must meet regulatory requirements relating to independence, including the SEC’s auditor independence rules which prohibit accounting firms from having certain financial relationships with their audit clients and affiliated entities.
Specifically, as interpreted by SEC staff, under Rule 2-01(c)(1)(ii)(A) of Regulation S-X (the Loan Rule), an accounting firm would not be considered independent if it receives a loan from a lender or an affiliate of a lender that is a “record
or beneficial owner of more than ten percent of the audit client’s equity securities.” PwC has advised the Audit Committee of the Board that PwC and certain of its affiliates have loans from lenders who are also record owners of more
than 10% of the shares issued by several funds in the Columbia Funds Complex or certain other entities within the Ameriprise Financial investment company complex.
On June 20, 2016, the SEC staff issued a
“no-action” letter (the First Loan Rule No-Action Letter) confirming that it would not recommend that the SEC commence enforcement action against a fund that continues to fulfill its regulatory requirements under the federal securities
laws by using audit services performed by an audit firm that is not in compliance with the Loan Rule, provided that: (1) the audit firm has complied with Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) Rule 3526(b)(1) and 3526(b)(2) or, with
respect to any fund or entity to which Rule 3526 does not apply, has provided substantially equivalent communications; (2) the audit firm’s non-compliance under the First Loan Rule is limited to certain lending relationships; and (3)
notwithstanding such non-compliance, the audit firm has concluded that it is objective and impartial with respect to the issues encompassed within its engagement. Although the First Loan Rule No-Action Letter was issued to one fund complex, it is
generally available to other fund complexes. On September 22, 2017, the SEC staff issued a second “no-action” letter (together with the First Loan Rule No-Action Letter, the “Loan Rule No Action Letter”) extending the relief
under the Loan Rule No-Action Letter indefinitely.
After evaluating the facts and circumstances related
to the Loan Rule and PwC’s lending relationships, PwC advised the Audit Committee of the Board that (1) PwC is independent with respect to the Fund, within the meaning of PCAOB Rule 3520, (2) PwC has concluded that it is objective and
impartial with respect to the issues encompassed within its engagement, including the audit of the Fund’s financial statements, and (3) PwC believes that it can continue to serve as the Fund’s independent registered public accounting
firm. It is the Fund’s understanding that issues under the Loan Rule affect other major accounting firms and many mutual fund complexes. It is anticipated that an ultimate resolution of the issues under the Loan Rule will be achieved; however,
if PwC were determined not to be independent or the Fund were unable to rely on the Loan Rule No-Action Letter or some form of exemptive relief, among other things, the financial statements audited by PwC may have to be audited by another
independent registered public accounting firm and the Fund could incur additional expense and other burdens on its operations.
Certain of the risks described above in this SAI may
also apply, directly or indirectly, to the Investment Manager and any investment subadviser and their affiliates, which may negatively impact their respective abilities to provide services to the Funds, potentially resulting in losses to the Fund or
other consequences.
Borrowings
In general, pursuant to the 1940 Act, a Fund may
borrow money only from banks in an amount not exceeding 33
1
⁄
3
% of its total assets
(including the amount borrowed) less liabilities (other than borrowings). Any borrowings that come to exceed this amount must be reduced within three days (not including Sundays and holidays) to the extent necessary to comply with the 33
1
⁄
3
% limitation.
The Trust, on behalf of the Funds, has entered into
a revolving credit facility agreement (the Credit Agreement) with a syndicate of banks led by JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., Citibank N.A. and HSBC Bank USA, N.A. whereby the Funds may borrow for the temporary funding of shareholder redemptions or for
other temporary or emergency purposes. Pursuant to a December 8, 2015 amendment, the Credit Agreement, which is a collective agreement between the Funds and certain other funds managed by the Investment Manager (collectively, the Participating
Funds), severally and not jointly, permits the Participating Funds to borrow up to an aggregate commitment amount of $1 billion (the Commitment Limit) at any time outstanding, subject to asset coverage and other limitations as specified in the
Credit Agreement. A Fund may borrow up to the maximum amount allowable under its
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current Prospectus and this SAI, subject to various other legal,
regulatory or contractual limits. Borrowing results in interest expense and other fees and expenses for a Fund that may impact that Fund’s expenses, including any net expense ratios. The costs of borrowing may reduce a Fund's return. If a Fund
borrows pursuant to the Credit Agreement, that Fund is charged interest at a variable rate. Each Fund also pays a commitment fee equal to its pro rata share of the amount of the credit facility. The availability of assets under the Credit Agreement
can be affected by other Participating Funds’ borrowings under the agreement. As such, a Fund may be unable to borrow (or borrow further) under the Credit Agreement if the Commitment Limit has been reached.
Lending of Portfolio Securities
To generate additional income, a Fund may lend up to
33%, or such lower percentage specified by the Fund or Investment Manager, of the value of its total assets (including securities out on loan) to broker-dealers, banks or other institutional borrowers of securities. JPMorgan serves as lending agent
(the Lending Agent) to the Funds pursuant to a securities lending agreement (the Securities Lending Agreement) approved by the Board. Under the Securities Lending Agreement, the Lending Agent loans Fund securities to approved borrowers pursuant to
borrower agreements in exchange for collateral at least equal in value to the loaned securities, marked to market daily. Collateral may consist of cash, securities issued by the U.S. Government or its agencies or instrumentalities (collectively,
“U.S. Government securities”) or such other collateral as may be approved by the Board. For loans secured by cash, the Fund retains the interest earned on cash collateral, but the Fund is required to pay the borrower a rebate for the use
of the cash collateral. For loans secured by U.S. Government securities, the borrower pays a borrower fee to the Lending Agent on behalf of the Fund.
If the market value of the loaned securities goes
up, the Fund will require additional collateral from the borrower. If the market value of the loaned securities goes down, the borrower may request that some collateral be returned. During the existence of the loan, the Fund will receive from the
borrower amounts equivalent to any dividends, interest or other distributions on the loaned securities, as well as interest on such amounts.
Loans are subject to termination by a Fund or a
borrower at any time. A Fund may choose to terminate a loan in order to vote in a proxy solicitation, as described in this SAI under
Investment Management and Other Services – Proxy Voting
Policies and Procedures – General.
Securities lending involves counterparty risk,
including the risk that a borrower may not provide sufficient or any collateral when required or may not return the loaned securities, timely or at all. Counterparty risk also includes a potential loss of rights in the collateral if the borrower or
the Lending Agent defaults or fails financially. This risk is increased if a Fund’s loans are concentrated with a single borrower or limited number of borrowers. There are no limits on the number of borrowers a Fund may use and a Fund may lend
securities to only one or a small group of borrowers. Funds participating in securities lending also bear the risk of loss in connection with investments of cash collateral received from the borrowers. Cash collateral may only be invested in
short-term, highly liquid obligations, and in accordance with investment guidelines contained in the Securities Lending Agreement and approved by the Board. Some or all of the cash collateral received in connection with the securities lending
program may be invested in one or more pooled investment vehicles, including, among other vehicles, money market funds managed by the Lending Agent (or its affiliates). The Lending Agent shares in any income resulting from the investment of such
cash collateral, and an affiliate of the Lending Agent may receive asset-based fees for the management of such pooled investment vehicles, which may create a conflict of interest between the Lending Agent (or its affiliates) and the Fund with
respect to the management of such cash collateral. To the extent that the value or return of a Fund’s investments of the cash collateral declines below the amount owed to a borrower, a Fund may incur losses that exceed the amount it earned on
lending the security. The Lending Agent will indemnify a fund from losses resulting from a borrower’s failure to return a loaned security when due, but such indemnification does not extend to losses associated with declines in the value of
cash collateral investments. The Investment Manager is not responsible for any loss incurred by the Funds in connection with the securities lending program.
The Funds currently do not participate in the
securities lending program, but the Board may determine to renew participation in the future.
Interfund Lending
Pursuant to an exemptive order granted by the SEC
(the “Lending Order”), the Funds are authorized to enter into a master interfund lending agreement (the “Interfund Program”) with each other and certain other funds advised by the Investment Manager or its affiliates. For
purposes of this subsection only, the term “Participating Fund” includes the Funds and any other fund advised by the Investment Manager that is subject to the Lending Order. The Interfund Program allows each Participating Fund to lend
money directly to and, other than closed-end funds and money market funds, borrow money directly from other Participating Funds for temporary purposes through the Interfund Program (each an “Interfund Loan”). Participating Funds issuing
Interfund Loans are referred to below as “Borrowing Funds,” and Participating Funds acquiring Interfund Loans are
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referred to below as “Lending Funds.” All Interfund
Loans would consist only of uninvested cash reserves that the Lending Fund otherwise would invest directly or indirectly in short-term repurchase agreements or other short-term instruments. Although any existing or future series of money market
funds or existing or future closed-end funds may, to the extent permitted by their investment policies, participate in the Interfund Program, they will not participate as borrowers because they are not expected to need to borrow cash to meet
redemptions.
If a Participating Fund has
outstanding bank borrowings, any Interfund Loan to the Participating Fund will: (i) be at an interest rate equal to or lower than the interest rate of any outstanding bank loan; (ii) be secured at least on an equal priority basis with at least an
equivalent percentage of collateral to loan value as any outstanding bank loan that requires collateral; (iii) have a maturity no longer than any outstanding bank loan (and in any event not longer than seven days); and (iv) provide that, if an event
of default occurs under any agreement evidencing an outstanding bank loan to the Participating Fund, that event of default will automatically (without need for action or notice by the Lending Fund) constitute an immediate event of default under the
interfund lending agreement, entitling the Lending Fund to call the Interfund Loan (and exercise all rights with respect to any collateral), and that such call will be made if the lending bank exercises its right to call its loan under its agreement
with the Borrowing Fund.
A Participating Fund
may make an unsecured borrowing under the Interfund Program if its outstanding borrowings from all sources immediately after the borrowing under the Interfund Program are equal to or less than 10% of its total assets, provided that if the
Participating Fund has a secured loan outstanding from any other lender, including but not limited to another Participating Fund, the Participating Fund’s borrowing under the Interfund Program will be secured on at least an equal priority
basis with at least an equivalent percentage of collateral to loan value as any outstanding loan that requires collateral. If a Participating Fund’s total outstanding borrowings immediately after borrowing under the Interfund Program exceed
10% of its total assets, the Participating Fund may borrow under the Interfund Program on a secured basis only. A Participating Fund may not borrow under the Interfund Program or from any other source if its total outstanding borrowings immediately
after the borrowing would be more than 33 1/3% of its total assets or any lower threshold provided for by a Participating Fund’s fundamental restriction or non-fundamental policy.
No Participating Fund may lend to another
Participating Fund through the Interfund Program if the loan would cause the Lending Fund’s aggregate outstanding loans under the Interfund Program to exceed 15% of its current net assets at the time of the loan. A Participating Fund’s
Interfund Loans to any one Participating Fund may not exceed 5% of the Lending Fund’s net assets at the time of the loan. The duration of Interfund Loans will be limited to the time required to receive payment for securities sold, but in no
event more than seven days. Loans effected within seven days of each other will be treated as separate loan transactions for purposes of this limitation. Each Interfund Loan may be called on one business day’s notice by a Lending Fund and may
be repaid on any day by a Borrowing Fund.
The
limitations described above and the other conditions of the Lending Order are designed to minimize the risks associated with Interfund Lending for both the Lending Fund and the Borrowing Fund. However, no borrowing or lending activity is without
risk. When a Participating Fund borrows money from another Participating Fund under the Interfund Program, there is a risk that the Interfund Loan could be called on one day’s notice, in which case the Borrowing Fund may have to borrow from a
bank at higher rates if an Interfund Loan is not available from another Participating Fund. Interfund Loans are subject to the risk that the Borrowing Fund could be unable to repay the loan when due, and a delay in repayment to a Lending Fund could
result in a lost opportunity or additional lending costs. No Participating Fund may borrow more than the amount permitted by its investment restrictions. Because the Investment Manager provides investment management services to both the Lending Fund
and the Borrowing Fund, the Investment Manager may have a potential conflict of interest in determining that an Interfund Loan is comparable in credit quality to other high quality money market instruments. The Funds have adopted policies and
procedures that are designed to manage potential conflicts of interest, but the administration of the Interfund Program may be subject to such conflicts.
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INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AND OTHER
SERVICES
The Investment Manager and
Subadvisers
Columbia Management Investment
Advisers, LLC, located at 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02110, is the investment manager of the Funds as well as for other funds in the Columbia Funds Complex. The Investment Manager is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial, which is
located at 1099 Ameriprise Financial Center, Minneapolis, MN 55474. Ameriprise Financial is a holding company, which primarily conducts business through its subsidiaries to provide financial planning, products and services that are designed to be
utilized as solutions for clients’ cash and liquidity, asset accumulation, income, protection and estate and wealth transfer needs.
The Investment Manager and its investment advisory
affiliates (Participating Affiliates) around the world may coordinate in providing services to their clients. Such coordination may include functional leadership of the business (the “Global” business). From time to time the Investment
Manager (or any affiliated investment subadviser to the Funds, as the case may be) may engage its Participating Affiliates to provide a variety of services such as investment research, investment monitoring, trading,
and discretionary investment management (including portfolio management) to certain accounts managed by the Investment Manager, including the Funds. These Participating Affiliates will provide services to the Investment Manager (or any
affiliated investment subadviser to the Funds as the case may be) either pursuant to subadvisory agreements, personnel-sharing agreements or similar inter-company arrangements and the Funds will pay no additional fees and expenses as a result of any
such arrangements. These Participating Affiliates, like the Investment Manager, are direct or indirect subsidiaries of Ameriprise Financial and are registered with the appropriate respective regulators in their home jurisdictions and, where
required, the SEC and the CFTC in the United States.
Pursuant to some of these arrangements, certain
employees of these Participating Affiliates may serve as “associated persons” of the Investment Manager and, in this capacity, subject to the oversight and supervision of the Investment Manager and consistent with the investment
objectives, policies and limitations set forth in the Funds' prospectuses and this SAI may provide such services to the Funds on behalf of the Investment Manager.
Services Provided
Each Fund has entered into the Management Agreement with the
Investment Manager, effective as of the date set forth in the Management Agreement Fee Schedule table in the
Management Agreement Fee Rates
section
below (the Management Agreement Effective Date). Under the Management Agreement, the Investment Manager has contracted to, subject to general oversight by the Board, manage and supervise the day-to-day operations and business affairs of the Funds.
In this role, the Investment Manager furnishes each such Fund with investment research and advice and all of the services necessary for, or appropriate to, the business and effective operation of each Fund that are not (a) provided by employees or
other agents engaged by the Fund or (b) required to be provided by any person pursuant to any other agreement or arrangement with the Fund. Under the Management Agreement, any liability of the Investment Manager to the Trust, a Fund and/or its
shareholders is limited to situations involving the Investment Manager’s own willful misfeasance, bad faith, negligence in the performance of its duties or reckless disregard of its obligations and duties.
The Management Agreement may be terminated with
respect to a Fund at any time on 60 days’ written notice by the Investment Manager or by the Board or by a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of a Fund. The Management Agreement will automatically terminate upon any
assignment thereof, will continue in effect for two years from its initial effective date and thereafter will continue from year to year with respect to a Fund only so long as such continuance is approved at least annually (i) by the Board or by a
vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of a Fund and (ii) by vote of a majority of the Trustees who are not interested persons (as such term is defined in the 1940 Act) of the Investment Manager or the Trust, cast in person at a
meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval.
The Investment Manager pays all compensation of the
Trustees and officers of the Trust who are employees of the Investment Manager or its affiliates, except for the Chief Compliance Officer, a portion of whose salary is paid by the Columbia Funds (excluding those Funds that pay a Unitary Fee, as
defined below). Except to the extent expressly assumed by the Investment Manager and except to the extent required by law to be paid or reimbursed by the Investment Manager, the Investment Manager does not have a duty to pay any Fund operating
expenses incurred in the organization and operation of a Fund, including, but not limited to, auditing, legal, custodial, investor servicing and shareholder reporting expenses. The Fund pays the cost of printing and mailing Fund prospectuses to
shareholders.
The Investment Manager, at its
own expense, provides office space, facilities and supplies, equipment and personnel for the performance of its functions under each Fund’s Management Agreement.
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Management Agreement Fee Rates
Each Fund set forth in the table below, unless otherwise noted,
pays the Investment Manager an annual fee for its management services, as set forth in the Management Agreement and the table below, as of the date specified in the Management Agreement Effective Date column. The fee is calculated as a percentage of
the daily net assets of each Fund and is paid monthly. The Investment Manager and/or its affiliates may from time to time waive fees and/or reimburse certain Fund expenses. See the Funds’ prospectuses for more information.
Management Agreement Fee Schedule
Fund
|
Assets
(millions)
|
Annual
rate at
each asset level
|
Management
Agreement
Effective Date
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
(a)
|
$0
- $500
|
0.960%
|
10/1/2016
|
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.955%
|
|
|
>$1,000
- $3,000
|
0.950%
|
|
|
>$3,000
- $12,000
|
0.940%
|
|
|
>$12,000
|
0.930%
|
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
$0
- $500
|
0.480%
|
3/1/2016
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.475%
|
12/1/2015
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
(b)
|
>$1,000
- $2,000
|
0.445%
|
12/1/2015
|
|
>$2,000
- $3,000
|
0.420%
|
|
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.385%
|
|
|
>$6,000
- $9,000
|
0.360%
|
|
|
>$9,000
- $10,000
|
0.350%
|
|
|
>$10,000
- $12,000
|
0.340%
|
|
|
>$12,000
- $15,000
|
0.330%
|
|
|
>$15,000
- $24,000
|
0.320%
|
|
|
>$24,000
- $50,000
|
0.300%
|
|
|
>$50,000
|
0.290%
|
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
$0
- $250
|
0.470%
|
12/1/2015
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
>$250
- $500
|
0.465%
|
3/1/2016
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.415%
|
3/1/2016
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
>$1,000
- $3,000
|
0.380%
|
3/1/2016
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.340%
|
3/1/2016
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
>$6,000
- $7,500
|
0.330%
|
3/1/2016
|
|
>$7,500
- $12,000
|
0.320%
|
|
|
>$12,000
|
0.310%
|
|
Balanced
Fund
|
$0
- $500
|
0.720%
|
1/1/2016
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.670%
|
10/1/2015
|
|
>$1,000
- $1,500
|
0.620%
|
|
|
>$1,500
- $3,000
|
0.570%
|
|
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.550%
|
|
|
>$6,000
- $12,000
|
0.530%
|
|
|
>$12,000
|
0.520%
|
|
Bond
Fund
|
$0
- $500
|
0.500%
|
9/1/2015
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.495%
|
9/1/2015
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
>$1,000
- $2,000
|
0.480%
|
9/1/2015
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
>$2,000
- $3,000
|
0.460%
|
9/1/2015
|
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.450%
|
|
|
>$6,000
- $7,500
|
0.430%
|
|
|
>$7,500
- $9,000
|
0.415%
|
|
|
>$9,000
- $12,000
|
0.410%
|
|
|
>$12,000
- $20,000
|
0.390%
|
|
|
>$20,000
- $24,000
|
0.380%
|
|
|
>$24,000
- $50,000
|
0.360%
|
|
|
>$50,000
|
0.340%
|
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
$0
- $500
|
0.770%
|
1/1/2016
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.720%
|
1/1/2016
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
>$1,000
- $1,500
|
0.670%
|
12/1/2015
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
>$1,500
- $3,000
|
0.620%
|
12/1/2015
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.600%
|
8/1/2015
|
|
>$6,000
- $12,000
|
0.580%
|
|
|
>$12,000
|
0.570%
|
|
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|
Fund
|
Assets
(millions)
|
Annual
rate at
each asset level
|
Management
Agreement
Effective Date
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
(c)
|
$0
- $500
|
0.850%
|
7/1/2017
|
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.800%
|
|
|
>$1,000
- $3,000
|
0.750%
|
|
|
>$3,000
- $12,000
|
0.740%
|
|
|
>$12,000
|
0.730%
|
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
(a)
|
$0
- $500
|
1.180%
|
10/1/2015
|
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
1.130%
|
|
|
>$1,000
- $3,000
|
1.100%
|
|
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
1.070%
|
|
|
>$6,000
- $12,000
|
1.040%
|
|
|
>$12,000
|
1.030%
|
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
(c)
|
$0
- $500
|
1.100%
|
7/1/2017
|
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
1.060%
|
|
|
>$1,000
- $1,500
|
0.870%
|
|
|
>$1,500
- $3,000
|
0.820%
|
|
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.770%
|
|
|
>$6,000
- $12,000
|
0.720%
|
|
|
>$12,000
|
0.700%
|
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
$0
- $1,000
|
0.750%
|
1/1/2016
|
|
>$1,000
- $1,500
|
0.670%
|
|
|
>$1,500
- $3,000
|
0.620%
|
|
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.600%
|
|
|
>$6,000
|
0.580%
|
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
$0
- $500
|
0.870%
|
1/1/2016
|
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.820%
|
|
|
>$1,000
|
0.770%
|
|
Greater
China Fund
|
$0
- $1,000
|
0.950%
|
1/1/2016
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
>$1,000
- $1,500
|
0.870%
|
8/1/2015
|
|
>$1,500
- $3,000
|
0.820%
|
|
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.770%
|
|
|
>$6,000
|
0.720%
|
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
$0
- $500
|
0.540%
|
10/1/2015
|
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.535%
|
|
|
>$1,000
- $2,000
|
0.505%
|
|
|
>$2,000
- $3,000
|
0.480%
|
|
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.445%
|
|
|
>$6,000
- $7,500
|
0.420%
|
|
|
>$7,500
- $10,000
|
0.410%
|
|
|
>$10,000
- $12,000
|
0.400%
|
|
|
>$12,000
- $15,000
|
0.390%
|
|
|
>$15,000
- $24,000
|
0.380%
|
|
|
>$24,000
- $50,000
|
0.360%
|
|
|
>$50,000
|
0.340%
|
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
$0
- $500
|
0.820%
|
1/1/2016
|
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.770%
|
|
|
>$1,000
- $1,500
|
0.720%
|
|
|
>$1,500
- $3,000
|
0.670%
|
|
|
>$3,000
- $12,000
|
0.660%
|
|
|
>$12,000
|
0.650%
|
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
(a)
|
$0
- $500
|
1.100%
|
1/1/2016
|
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
1.050%
|
|
|
>$1,000
- $3,000
|
1.020%
|
|
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.990%
|
|
|
>$6,000
- $12,000
|
0.960%
|
|
|
>
$12,000
|
0.950%
|
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
All
assets
|
1.60%
|
8/17/2016
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
88
|
Fund
|
Assets
(millions)
|
Annual
rate at
each asset level
|
Management
Agreement
Effective Date
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
(c)
|
$0
- $500
|
0.870%
|
7/1/2017
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.820%
|
1/1/2016
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
>$1,000
- $3,000
|
0.770%
|
9/1/2015
|
|
>$3,000
- $12,000
|
0.760%
|
|
|
>$12,000
|
0.750%
|
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
$0
- $500
|
0.660%
|
9/1/2015
|
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.625%
|
|
|
>$1,000
- $1,500
|
0.610%
|
|
|
>$1,500
- $3,000
|
0.600%
|
|
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.570%
|
|
|
>$6,000
- $12,000
|
0.545%
|
|
|
>$12,000
|
0.510%
|
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
$0
- $500
|
0.750%
|
5/1/2016
|
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.745%
|
|
|
>$1,000
- $1,500
|
0.720%
|
|
|
>$1,500
- $3,000
|
0.670%
|
|
|
>$3,000
|
0.660%
|
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
|
All
assets
|
0.00%
|
8/16/2017
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
|
|
|
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
$0
- $500
|
0.600%
|
3/1/2016
|
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.590%
|
|
|
>$1,000
- $2,000
|
0.575%
|
|
|
>$2,000
- $3,000
|
0.555%
|
|
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.530%
|
|
|
>$6,000
- $7,500
|
0.505%
|
|
|
>$7,500
- $9,000
|
0.490%
|
|
|
>$9,000
- $10,000
|
0.481%
|
|
|
>$10,000
- $12,000
|
0.469%
|
|
|
>$12,000
- $15,000
|
0.459%
|
|
|
>$15,000
- $20,000
|
0.449%
|
|
|
>$20,000
- $24,000
|
0.433%
|
|
|
>$24,000
- $50,000
|
0.414%
|
|
|
>$50,000
|
0.393%
|
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
(d)
|
All
assets
|
0.400%
|
9/1/2015
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
(e)
|
All
assets
|
0.250%
|
12/1/2015
|
(a) When calculating asset levels for
purposes of determining fee breakpoints, asset levels are based on net assets of the Fund, including assets invested in any wholly-owned subsidiary advised by the Investment Manager (“Subsidiaries”). Fees payable by the Fund under this
agreement shall be reduced by any management services fees paid to the Investment Manager by any Subsidiaries under separate management agreements with the Subsidiaries.
(b) Effective December 1, 2016, the fee schedule changed
resulting in a fee rate decrease for all asset levels.
(c)
Effective July 1, 2017, the fee schedule changed resulting in a fee rate decrease for all asset levels.
(d) The Investment Manager, from the management services fee it
receives from the Fund, pays all operating expenses of the Fund, with the exception of brokerage fees and commissions, taxes, interest, fees and expenses of Trustees who are not officers, directors or employees of the Investment Manager or its
affiliates, Rule 12b-1 and/or shareholder servicing fees and any extraordinary non-recurring expenses that may arise, including litigation expenses.
(e) In return for the management services fee, the Investment
Manager has agreed to pay all of the operating costs and expenses of the Fund other than Independent Trustees fees and expenses, including their legal counsel, auditing expenses, interest incurred on borrowing by the Fund, if any, portfolio
transaction expenses, taxes and extraordinary expenses. This fee is sometimes referred to herein as the “Unitary Fee.” Any custody credits are applied to offset Fund expenses prior to determining the expenses the Investment Manager is
required to bear; however, the Investment Manager bears any custodian overdraft charges. The Fund does not pay custodian or transfer agent fees because payment for such services is included in its Unitary Fee.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
89
|
Adaptive Risk Allocation Fund.
The Fund pays the Investment Manager a management services fee according to the following schedules:
Asset
Category
|
Assets
(millions)
|
Annual
rate at
each asset level
|
Management
Agreement
Effective Date
|
|
|
|
|
Category 1
: Assets invested in affiliated mutual funds, exchange- traded funds and closed-end funds that pay a management services fee (or an investment management
services fee, as applicable) to the Investment Manager.
|
$0
- $500
|
0.060%
|
10/1/2015
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.055%
|
>$1,000
- $3,000
|
0.050%
|
>$3,000
- $12,000
|
0.040%
|
>$12,000
|
0.030%
|
Category 2
: Assets invested in exchange-traded funds and mutual funds that are not managed by the Investment Manager or its affiliates.
|
$0
- $500
|
0.160%
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.155%
|
>$1,000
- $3,000
|
0.150%
|
>$3,000
- $12,000
|
0.140%
|
>$12,000
|
0.130%
|
Category 3
: Securities, instruments and other assets not described above, including without limitation affiliated mutual funds, exchange-traded funds and closed-end
funds that do not pay a management services fee (or an investment management services fee, as applicable) to the Investment Manager, third party closed-end funds, derivatives and individual securities.
|
$0
- $500
|
0.760%
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.745%
|
>$1,000
- $1,500
|
0.730%
|
>$1,500
- $3,000
|
0.720%
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.690%
|
>$6,000
- $12,000
|
0.665%
|
>$12,000
|
0.630%
|
In no event shall the
management services fee be negative even if the value of one of the categories is a negative amount (for instance, if the Fund’s liabilities exceed the value of assets in Category 3). Although the fee for each category is calculated separately
and there is no negative management services fee, the Investment Manager currently intends to calculate the management services fee by reducing (but not below $0) any management services fee payable on one category by any negative management
services fee in another category. The Investment Manager may change this calculation methodology at any time.
Adaptive Retirement Funds.
The Investment Manager has implemented a schedule for the Adaptive Retirement Funds’ management services fees whereby each Fund pays (i) a 0.02% management services fee on its assets invested in
affiliated underlying funds (including ETFs and closed-end funds) that pay a management services fee (or advisory services fee, as applicable) to the Investment Manager; and (ii) a 0.47% management services fee on its assets invested in any other
securities or instruments, including any underlying fund that does not pay a management services fee (or advisory services fee) to the Investment Manager, such as the Solutions Series Funds.
Diversified Real Return Fund.
The Investment Manager has implemented a schedule for Diversified Real Return Fund’s management services fees whereby the Fund pays (i) a 0.02% management services fee on its assets invested in
affiliated funds (including ETFs and closed-end funds) that pay a management services fee (or investment advisory services fee, as applicable) to the Investment Manager; and (ii) a 0.76% management services fee on its assets invested in ETFs and
mutual funds that are not managed by the Investment Manager or its affiliates, securities, instruments and other assets not described above, including without limitation affiliated mutual funds, ETFs and closed-end mutual funds that do not pay a
management services fee to the Investment Manager, third party closed-end funds, derivatives and individual securities.
Under the Management Agreement, each Fund that does
not pay a Unitary Fee also pays taxes, brokerage commissions and nonadvisory expenses, which include custodian fees and charges; fidelity bond premiums; certain legal fees; registration fees for shares; consultants’ fees; compensation of Board
members, officers and employees not employed by the Investment Manager or its affiliates; corporate filing fees; organizational expenses; expenses incurred in connection with lending securities; interest and fee expense related to a Fund’s
participation in inverse floater structures; and expenses properly payable by a Fund, approved by the Board.
Management Services Fees Paid.
The table below shows the total management services fees paid by each Fund, as applicable, under the Management Agreement for the last three fiscal periods (net of management services fee waivers).
Amounts shown for the first period that management services fees were paid for each Fund are for the period from the Fund’s Management Agreement Effective Date through the applicable fiscal year end. The table is organized by fiscal year end.
For more information about fees waived or Fund expenses reimbursed by the Investment Manager, see
Expense Limitations
.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
90
|
Management Services Fees
|
Management
Services Fees
|
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending January 31
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
$1,750
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending March 31
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
(a)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
(a)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
(a)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
(a)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
(a)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
15,336,414
|
$10,774,541
|
N/A
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
2,101,261
|
1,466,562
|
N/A
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
32,224,821
|
27,503,236
|
N/A
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30
|
Bond
Fund
|
2,601,726
|
1,850,973
|
N/A
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
5,913,133
|
4,120,977
|
N/A
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
8,637,630
(d)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
767,760
|
387,936
|
N/A
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
5,104,454
|
4,030,575
|
N/A
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
13,987,904
|
10,476,193
|
N/A
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
3,182,138
|
1,480,882
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending May 31
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
8,000,497
|
2,017,753
|
N/A
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
2,938,737
|
1,360,397
|
N/A
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
1,158,838
|
1,189,076
|
N/A
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
54,720,306
|
31,592,477
|
N/A
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
4,668,440
|
3,193,770
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending July 31
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
2,152,358
|
1,434,255
|
N/A
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
22,327,952
|
14,487,605
|
N/A
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
17,289,123
|
11,938,008
|
N/A
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
177,410
|
98,416
|
N/A
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
4,331,299
|
2,387,448
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31
|
Balanced
Fund
|
37,000,407
|
18,729,563
|
N/A
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
62,449,221
|
32,688,864
|
N/A
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
2,120,260
|
1,772,071
|
N/A
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
13,852,430
|
8,354,982
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
91
|
|
Management
Services Fees
|
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
$4,563,064
|
$3,221,310
|
N/A
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
1,792,602
|
1,170,361
|
N/A
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
5,448,440
|
2,823,794
|
N/A
|
Greater
China Fund
|
1,044,824
|
727,251
|
N/A
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
13,635,837
|
9,262,706
|
N/A
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
6,656,052
|
5,482,144
|
N/A
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
8,560,553
|
7,075,706
|
N/A
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
30,955,796
|
18,227,573
|
N/A
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
3,547,326
|
2,314,637
|
N/A
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
15,719,912
(e)
|
10,820,358
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending October 31
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
629,541
|
505,837
|
N/A
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
9,519,597
|
7,342,461
|
N/A
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
1,209,330
|
933,954
|
N/A
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
1,183,001
|
920,201
|
N/A
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
2,411,432
|
1,731,638
|
N/A
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
1,028,510
|
713,605
|
N/A
|
|
2016
|
2015
|
2014
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending December 31
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
2,757,449
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
(a)
|
The Fund commenced operations
on October 24, 2017, and therefore has no reporting information for periods prior to such date.
|
(b)
|
No historical information is
given for the Fund because the Fund had not commenced operations as of the date of this SAI.
|
(c)
|
The Fund commenced operations
on October 24, 2017. The Solutions Series Funds do not pay a management services fee.
|
(d)
|
For the period from October 17,
2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017.
|
(e)
|
The Fund changed its fiscal
year end in 2017 from October 31 to August 31. For the fiscal year ended in 2017, the information shown is for the period from November 1, 2016 to August 31, 2017.
|
Investment Management Services Agreement
Prior to the Management Agreement Effective Date listed for each
Fund in the
Management Agreement Fee Rates
section above, each Fund, except MM Directional Alternative Strategies Fund, the Adaptive Retirement Funds and the Solution Series Funds, unless
otherwise noted, was party to the Investment Management Services Agreement and the Administrative Services Agreement with the Investment Manager for advisory and administrative services, respectively. Each Fund party to these agreements paid the
Investment Manager an annual fee for advisory services, as set forth in the Investment Management Services Agreement, and a separate fee for administrative services under the Administrative Services Agreement. See
Investment Management and Other Services – The Administrator
for information with respect to the Administrative Services Agreement. As of the Management Agreement Effective Date listed for
each Fund, these services have been combined under the Management Agreement as described above.
Services Provided Under the Investment Management
Services Agreement
Under the Investment Management Services
Agreement, the Investment Manager was contracted to furnish each Fund with investment research and advice. For these services, unless otherwise noted, each Fund paid a monthly fee to the Investment Manager based on the daily closing value of the
total net assets of a Fund. Under the Investment Management Services Agreement, any liability of the Investment Manager to the Trusts, a Fund and/or its shareholders is limited to situations involving the Investment Manager’s own willful
misfeasance, bad faith, negligence in the performance of its duties or reckless disregard of its obligations and duties.
Investment Advisory Services Fee
Prior to the Management Agreement Effective Date,
the investment advisory services fee was calculated as a percentage of the daily net assets of each Fund and was paid monthly at the annual rates set forth in the Investment Management Services Agreement.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
92
|
Investment Advisory Services Fees Paid.
The table below shows the total investment advisory services fees paid by each Fund under the Investment Management Services Agreement for the last three fiscal periods (net of investment advisory
services fee waivers). Beginning with the fiscal year ended March 31, 2016, amounts shown are for the period from the first day of the applicable fiscal year through the Fund's Management Agreement Effective Date (see
Management Agreement Fee
Schedule
). As of each Fund's Management Agreement Effective Date, the Fund no longer paid these fees. The table is organized by fiscal year end. For more information about fees waived or Fund
expenses reimbursed by the Investment Manager, see
Expense Limitations
.
Investment Advisory Services Fees
|
Investment
Advisory Services Fees
|
Fund
|
|
|
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending January 31
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
$2,260
|
$6,504
|
$6,813
(a)
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending March 31
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
N/A
|
$4,662,175
|
$11,264,268
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
N/A
|
$772,948
|
$2,337,343
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
N/A
|
$14,071,760
|
$40,020,937
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
Bond
Fund
|
N/A
|
$890,053
|
$3,091,167
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
N/A
|
$2,057,083
|
$6,174,639
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
N/A
|
$184,801
|
$47,483
(b)
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
N/A
|
$2,410,692
|
$9,230,465
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
$4,803,822
|
$15,122,287
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
N/A
|
$134,417
|
$325,652
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending May 31
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
N/A
|
$869,670
|
$1,474,567
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
N/A
|
$674,446
|
$642,780
(c)
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
N/A
|
$402,600
|
$320,186
(d)
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
N/A
|
$15,277,338
|
$47,320,865
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
N/A
|
$1,326,979
|
$3,742,648
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending July 31
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
$599,072
|
$1,802,859
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
N/A
|
$6,999,213
|
$20,114,401
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
N/A
|
$5,125,319
|
$15,029,336
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
$33,567
|
$26,951
(e)
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
$1,224,265
|
$4,102,773
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
Balanced
Fund
|
N/A
|
$6,697,690
|
$15,376,747
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
N/A
|
$12,844,105
|
$33,944,896
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
N/A
|
$1,296,456
|
$7,204,789
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
N/A
|
$3,910,352
|
$14,725,495
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
N/A
|
$1,654,873
|
$5,854,673
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
N/A
|
$555,215
|
$2,082,111
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
N/A
|
$1,315,278
|
$2,604,481
|
Greater
China Fund
|
N/A
|
$405,805
|
$1,277,028
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
N/A
|
$4,700,583
|
$15,395,981
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
N/A
|
$2,594,022
|
$7,820,583
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
93
|
|
Investment
Advisory Services Fees
|
Fund
|
|
|
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
N/A
|
$3,830,983
|
$6,947,679
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
N/A
|
$7,029,420
|
$19,958,476
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
N/A
|
$1,248,693
|
$5,347,823
|
Strategic
Income Fund
(f)
|
N/A
|
$4,071,702
|
$10,818,719
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending October 31
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
$211,065
|
$634,771
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
$2,934,748
|
$8,483,272
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
$391,155
|
$1,171,729
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
$370,479
|
$1,072,538
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
N/A
|
$701,751
|
$1,959,863
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
N/A
|
$256,900
|
$709,903
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending December 31
|
2016
|
2015
|
2014
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
$1,126,073
|
$3,776,529
|
$3,762,944
|
(a)
|
For the period from March 11,
2014 (commencement of operations) to January 31, 2015.
|
(b)
|
For the period from March 27,
2015 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2015.
|
(c)
|
For the period from January 27,
2015 (commencement of operations) to May 31, 2015.
|
(d)
|
For the period from February
19, 2015 (commencement of operations) to May 31, 2015.
|
(e)
|
For the period from March 26,
2015 (commencement of operations) to July 31, 2015.
|
(f)
|
The Fund changed its fiscal
year end in 2017 from October 31 to August 31.
|
Manager of Managers Exemption
The SEC has issued an order that permits the Investment Manager,
subject to the approval of the Board, to appoint an unaffiliated subadviser or to change the terms of a subadvisory agreement for a Fund without first obtaining shareholder approval. The order permits a Fund to add or to change unaffiliated
subadvisers or to change the fees paid to such subadvisers from time to time without the expense and delays associated with obtaining shareholder approval of the change. The Investment Manager and the Columbia Funds have applied to amend this order.
If issued, the updated order would permit the Investment Manager, subject to the approval of the Board, to appoint not only unaffiliated subadvisers but also affiliated subadvisers without first obtaining shareholder approval.
The Investment Manager and its affiliates may have
other relationships, including significant financial relationships, with current or potential subadvisers or their affiliates, which may create certain conflicts of interest. When making recommendations to the Board to appoint or to change a
subadviser, or to change the terms of a subadvisory agreement, the Investment Manager discloses to the Board the nature of any such material relationships
.
Subadvisory Agreements
The assets of certain Funds are managed by subadvisers that have
been selected by the Investment Manager, subject to the review and approval of the Board. Generally, the Investment Manager recommends a subadviser to the Board based upon its assessment of the skills of the subadvisers in managing other assets in
accordance with objectives and investment strategies substantially similar to those of the applicable Fund. Among other responsibilities, the Investment Manager (i) monitors on a daily basis the compliance of the subadviser with the investment
objectives and related policies of the Fund, (ii) assesses changes to the subadvisers' business brought to the Investment Manager’s attention by subadviser or otherwise publicly announced, (iii) performs due diligence reviews of the
subadviser, (iv) monitors the performance of each subadviser and (v) regularly provides reports on such performance to the Board. However, short-term investment performance is not the only factor in selecting or terminating a subadviser, and the
Investment Manager does not expect to make frequent changes of subadvisers. Subadvisers affiliated with the Investment Manager must be approved by shareholders.
The Investment Manager allocates the assets of a
Fund with multiple subadvisers among the subadvisers. Each subadviser has discretion, subject to oversight by the Board and the Investment Manager, to purchase and sell portfolio assets, consistent with the Fund’s investment objectives,
policies, and restrictions. Generally, the services that a subadviser provides to the Fund are limited to asset management and related recordkeeping services.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
94
|
The Investment Manager has entered into a
subadvisory agreement with each subadviser under which the subadviser provides investment advisory and portfolio management assistance to some or all of the Fund’s portfolio, as well as investment research and statistical information, subject
to the oversight by the Investment Manager. A subadviser may also serve as a discretionary or non-discretionary investment adviser to management or advisory accounts that are unrelated in any manner to the Investment Manager or its affiliates.
With respect to each of Alternative Beta Fund,
Diversified Absolute Return Fund, Diversified Real Return Fund, MM Directional Alternative Strategies Fund, Multi-Asset Income Fund and U.S. Social Bond Fund, the Funds' Board of Trustees and initial shareholder have approved a subadvisory agreement
between the Investment Manager and Threadneedle, an affiliate of the Investment Manager and an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial. As of the date of this SAI, Threadneedle is not providing services to the Funds pursuant to the
subadvisory agreement and therefore has not received any fees thereunder. To the extent Threadneedle begins to provide services to the Funds pursuant to the subadvisory agreement, subadvisory fees will be paid at the rates included in the following
table.
The following table shows the
subadvisory fee schedules for fees paid by the Investment Manager to subadvisers for Funds that have subadvisers. The fee is calculated as a percentage of the daily net assets of the applicable Fund (or portion thereof subadvised by the applicable
subadviser), subject to any exceptions as noted in the table below, and is paid monthly. The table is organized by fiscal year end.
Subadvisers and Subadvisory Agreement Fee Schedules
Fund
|
Subadviser
|
Parent
Company/Other
Information
|
Fee
Schedule
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending January 31
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
Threadneedle
(since commencement of operations)
|
A
|
0.00%
for all assets
(a)
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending March 31
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
Loomis
Sayles
(effective December 11, 2013)
|
B
|
0.27%
for all assets
|
Los
Angeles Capital
(effective February 7, 2017)
|
M
|
0.30%
on the first $100 million declining to 0.13% as assets increase
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
Boston
Partners
(since commencement of operations)
|
K
|
0.95%
for all assets
|
AQR
(since commencement of operations)
|
C
|
0.90%
on the first $100 million declining to 0.85% as assets increase
|
Analytic
Investors
(since commencement of operations)
|
L
|
0.750%
on the first $20 million declining to 0.625% as assets increase
|
Threadneedle
(since commencement of operations)
|
A
|
0.72%
for all assets
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
Threadneedle
(since commencement of operations)
|
A
|
0.16%
for all assets
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending May 31
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
Threadneedle
(since commencement of operations)
|
A
|
0.45%
for all assets
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
Threadneedle
(since commencement of operations)
|
A
|
0.45%
for all assets
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
95
|
Fund
|
Subadviser
|
Parent
Company/Other
Information
|
Fee
Schedule
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending July 31
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
Threadneedle
(since commencement of operations)
|
A
|
0.16%
for all assets
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
AQR
(since commencement of operations)
|
C
|
0.65%
on the first $500 million declining to 0.50% as assets increase
(b)
|
Manulife
(effective September 13, 2017)
|
N
|
0.35%
on the first $20 million declining to 0.25% as assets increase
|
TCW
(effective March 29, 2017)
|
E
|
0.30%
on the first $500 million declining to 0.15% as assets increase
|
Water
Island
(since commencement of operations)
|
D
|
0.70%
on the first $50 million declining to 0.60% as assets increase
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
BMO
(c)
(effective May 1, 2017)
|
I
|
0.30%
on the first $200 million, declining to 0.20% as assets increase
(b)
|
Conestoga
(effective October 1, 2012)
|
F
|
0.48%
on all assets
|
DGHM
(since commencement of operations)
|
G
|
0.65%
of the first $50 million declining to 0.35% as assets increase up to $200 million, thereafter 0.45%
|
EAM
(since commencement of operations)
|
H
|
0.50%
of the first $100 million declining to 0.40% as assets increase
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
Loomis
Sayles
(effective April 11, 2016)
|
B
|
0.15%
on the first $500 million and 0.08% as assets increase
|
PGIM
Fixed Income
(effective May 16, 2016)
|
J
|
0.20%
on the first $300 million declining to 0.09% as assets increase
|
TCW
(since commencement of operations)
|
E
|
0.18%
on the first $500 million declining to 0.05% as assets increase
(b)
|
(a)
|
The Fund invests substantially
all of its assets in affiliated underlying funds, for which the Investment Manager is not paid management services fees and, therefore, the subadvisory fee rate is 0.00%.
|
(b)
|
The fee is calculated based on
the combined net assets of certain Columbia Funds subject to the subadviser’s investment management.
|
(c) Effective May 1, 2017, the subadvisory fee schedule changed
resulting in a fee rate decrease for certain asset levels.
A – Threadneedle is a direct subsidiary of
Threadneedle Asset Management Holdings Limited and an affiliate of the Investment Manager, and an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial. Threadneedle and Threadneedle Asset Management Holdings Limited are located at Cannon Place,
78 Cannon Street, London EC4N 6AG, United Kingdom.
B – Loomis Sayles is a subsidiary of Natixis
Investment Managers, L.P. (“Natixis US”), which is part of Natixis Investment Managers (formerly Natixis Global Asset Management), an international asset management group based in Paris, France, that is in turn owned by Natixis, a French
investment banking and financial services firm. It is located at One Financial Center, Boston, MA 02111.
C – AQR is a Delaware limited liability
company formed in 1998 and is located at Two Greenwich Plaza, Greenwich, Connecticut 06830. AQR is a wholly-owned subsidiary of AQR Capital Management Holdings, LLC (AQR Holdings), which has no activities other than holding the interest of AQR.
Clifford S. Asness, Ph.D., M.B.A. may be deemed to control AQR through his voting control of the Board of Members of AQR Holdings. Affiliated Managers Group, Inc., a publicly traded holding company, holds a minority interest in AQR Holdings.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
96
|
D – Water Island is located at 41 Madison
Avenue, 42nd Floor, New York, New York 10010. John S. Orrico, President of Water Island, controls Water Island.
E – TCW, which is located at 865 South
Figueroa Street, Suite 1800, Los Angeles, California 90017, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of The TCW Group, Inc. The Carlyle Group, LP (“
Carlyle
”), a global alternative asset manager, may be deemed
to be a control person of the Adviser by reason of its control of certain investment funds that indirectly control more than 25% of the voting stock of TCW. Carlyle also controls various other pooled investment vehicles and, indirectly, many of the
portfolio companies owned by those funds.
F
– Conestoga is a Delaware limited liability company located at 550 East Swedesford Road, Suite 120, Wayne, PA 19087. Conestoga is an employee-owned independent registered investment adviser. Conestoga was organized in 2001 and provides
investment management services to institutional and individual clients.
G – DGHM is a Delaware limited liability
company located at 565 Fifth Avenue, Suite 2101, New York, New York 10017. DGHM is 80% owned by Boston Private Financial Holdings, Inc., which is organized as a bank holding company focusing on wealth management through private banking and
investment services. The remaining 20% interest in DGHM is employee owned. REMS provides advisory services with respect to investments that the portion of the MM Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund managed by DGHM may make in REITs. REMS is located at
1100 Fifth Avenue South, Suite 305, Naples, Florida 34102. The principal owners of REMS are Edward W. Turville, John E. Webster, John S. Whitaker, Michael H. Shelly and Beach Investment Management, LLC.
H – EAM is located at 2533 South Coast Highway
101, Suite 240, Cardiff-by-the-Sea, California 92007. Prior to June 13, 2011, the firm was named Eudaimonia Asset Management, LLC. EAM employees/members own approximately 56% of EAM and Bryon C. Roth, through a majority ownership of CR Financial
Holdings, Inc., indirectly owns the remaining 44% interest in the firm.
I – BMO, which is located at 115 South LaSalle
Street, 11th Floor, Chicago, Illinois 60603, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of BMO Financial Corp., which is in turn a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Bank of Montréal, a publicly held Canadian diversified financial services company.
J – PGIM, which is located at 655 Broad
Street, Newark, New Jersey 07102, is an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Prudential Financial, Inc. (PGIM Fixed Income). PGIM is the global investment management business of Prudential Financial, Inc.
K – Boston Partners, which is located at 909
Third Avenue, New York, New York 10022, is an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of ORIX Corporation.
L – Analytic Investors is located at 555 West
Fifth Street, Los Angeles, California 90013. Analytic Investors is an employee owned and controlled independent registered investment adviser. Analytic Investors was organized in 1970 and provides investment management services to institutional and
individual clients. On October 1, 2016, Wells Capital Management, Inc., a subsidiary of Wells Fargo & Company, acquired Analytic Investors.
M – Los Angeles Capital is located at 11150
Santa Monica Blvd. Suite 200, Los Angeles, CA 90025. Los Angeles Capital is an employee owned, independent registered investment adviser. Los Angeles Capital was formed in 2002 and provides investment management and subadvisory services to
institutional investors globally, mutual funds and pooled funds.
N – Manulife is located at 197 Clarendon
Street, Boston, MA 02116.
The following table
shows the subadvisory fees paid by the Investment Manager to subadvisers in the last three fiscal periods or, if shorter, since the Fund’s commencement of operations.
With respect to each of Alternative Beta Fund,
Diversified Absolute Return Fund, Diversified Real Return Fund, MM Directional Alternative Strategies Fund, Multi-Asset Income Fund and U.S. Social Bond Fund, as of the date of this SAI, Threadneedle is not providing services to the Funds pursuant
to the subadvisory agreement; accordingly, payments to Threadneedle from these Funds are not included in the following table.
|
|
Subadvisory
Fees Paid
|
Fund
|
Subadviser
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending March 31
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
LA
Capital
|
$109,687
(a)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Loomis
Sayles
|
2,801,226
|
$2,082,561
|
$713,550
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
97
|
|
|
Subadvisory
Fees Paid
|
Fund
|
Subadviser
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
Analytic
Investors
|
$1,049,495
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
AQR
|
1,461,835
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Boston
Partners
|
2,079,058
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
AQR
|
1,645,635
|
$1,935,948
|
$1,855,699
|
TCW
(c)
|
186,845
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Wasatch
|
194,138
|
1,433,722
|
1,546,847
|
Water
Island
|
1,672,157
|
1,558,201
|
1,549,211
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
BMO
|
557,267
|
601,312
|
N/A
|
Conestoga
|
878,850
|
1,210,731
|
894,675
|
DGHM
|
857,735
|
1,156,275
|
907,318
|
EAM
|
854,606
|
1,022,250
|
875,997
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
Former
subadviser:
Federated
(through May 13, 2016)
|
N/A
|
972,639
|
1,321,671
|
Loomis
Sayles
|
1,413,796
|
506,365
(d)
|
N/A
|
PGIM
|
2,193,440
|
613,465
(e)
|
N/A
|
TCW
|
1,419,650
|
1,540,587
|
1,577,344
|
(a)
|
For the period from February 7,
2017 to March 31, 2017.
|
(b)
|
For the period from October 17,
2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017.
|
(c)
|
The subadviser began managing
the Fund after its last fiscal year end; therefore there are no fees to report.
|
(d)
|
For the period from April 11,
2016 to August 31, 2016.
|
(e)
|
For the period from May 16,
2016 to August 31, 2016.
|
Portfolio Managers.
The following table provides information about the portfolio managers of each Fund. The references in the Potential Conflicts of Interest and the Structure of Compensation columns in the table below
refer, respectively, to the descriptions in the
Potential Conflicts of Interest
and
Structure of Compensation
subsections
immediately following the table. The table is organized by fiscal year end.
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
For
Funds with fiscal year ending January 31 – Information is as of January 31, 2017, unless otherwise noted
|
Diversified
Real Return
Fund
|
Jeffrey
Knight
|
26
RICs
2 PIVs
6 other
accounts
|
$68.61
billion
$16.31 million
$16.09 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Anwiti
Bahuguna
|
22
RICs
22 PIVs
16 other accounts
|
$66.29
billion
$2.43 billion
$97.77 million
|
None
|
None
|
Joshua
Kutin
|
12
RICs
4 PIVs
8 other accounts
|
$8.32
billion
$0.47 million
$47.36 million
|
None
|
None
|
Dan
Boncarosky
|
10
RICs
2 other accounts
|
$6.02
million
$0.19 million
|
None
|
None
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
98
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
For
Funds with fiscal year ending March 31 – Information is as of March 31, 2017, unless otherwise noted
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
|
Jeffrey
Knight
(e)
|
26
RICs
1 PIV
9 other accounts
|
$72.43
billion
$10.98 million
$4.87 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Joshua
Kutin
(e)
|
14
RICs
1 PIV
8 other accounts
|
$9.50
billion
$10.98 million
$40.68 million
|
None
|
None
|
Alex
Wilkinson
(e)
|
2
RICs
1 other account
|
$351.82
million
$0.004 million
|
None
|
None
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
|
Jeffrey
Knight
(k)
|
35
RICs
1 PIV
5 other accounts
|
$77.43
billion
$11.72 million
$1.66 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Joshua
Kutin
(k)
|
21
RICs
1 PIV
8 other accounts
|
$10.46
billion
$11.72 million
$36.65 million
|
None
|
None
|
Alex
Wilkinson
(k)
|
9
RICs
1 other account
|
$390.94
million
$0.008 million
|
None
|
None
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
|
Jeffrey
Knight
(e)
|
26
RICs
1 PIV
9 other accounts
|
$72.43
billion
$10.98 million
$4.87 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Joshua
Kutin
(e)
|
14
RICs
1 PIV
8 other accounts
|
$9.50
billion
$10.98 million
$40.68 million
|
None
|
None
|
Alex
Wilkinson
(e)
|
2
RICs
1 other account
|
$351.82
million
$0.004 million
|
None
|
None
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
|
Jeffrey
Knight
(k)
|
35
RICs
1 PIV
5 other accounts
|
$77.43
billion
$11.72 million
$1.66 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Joshua
Kutin
(k)
|
21
RICs
1 PIV
8 other accounts
|
$10.46
billion
$11.72 million
$36.65 million
|
None
|
None
|
Alex
Wilkinson
(k)
|
9
RICs
1 other account
|
$390.94
million
$0.008 million
|
None
|
None
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
|
Jeffrey
Knight
(e)
|
26
RICs
1 PIV
9 other accounts
|
$72.43
billion
$10.98 million
$4.87 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Joshua
Kutin
(e)
|
14
RICs
1 PIV
8 other accounts
|
$9.50
billion
$10.98 million
$40.68 million
|
None
|
None
|
Alex
Wilkinson
(e)
|
2
RICs
1 other account
|
$351.82
million
$0.004 million
|
None
|
None
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
|
Jeffrey
Knight
(k)
|
35
RICs
1 PIV
5 other accounts
|
$77.43
billion
$11.72 million
$1.66 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Joshua
Kutin
(k)
|
21
RICs
1 PIV
8 other accounts
|
$10.46
billion
$11.72 million
$36.65 million
|
None
|
None
|
Alex
Wilkinson
(k)
|
9
RICs
1 other account
|
$390.94
million
$0.008 million
|
None
|
None
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
99
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
|
Jeffrey
Knight
(e)
|
26
RICs
1 PIV
9 other accounts
|
$72.43
billion
$10.98 million
$4.87 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Joshua
Kutin
(e)
|
14
RICs
1 PIV
8 other accounts
|
$9.50
billion
$10.98 million
$40.68 million
|
None
|
None
|
Alex
Wilkinson
(e)
|
2
RICs
1 other account
|
$351.82
million
$0.004 million
|
None
|
None
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
|
Jeffrey
Knight
(k)
|
35
RICs
1 PIV
5 other accounts
|
$77.43
billion
$11.72 million
$1.66 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Joshua
Kutin
(k)
|
21
RICs
1 PIV
8 other accounts
|
$10.46
billion
$11.72 million
$36.65 million
|
None
|
None
|
Alex
Wilkinson
(k)
|
9
RICs
1 other account
|
$390.94
million
$0.008 million
|
None
|
None
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
|
Jeffrey
Knight
(e)
|
26
RICs
1 PIV
9 other accounts
|
$72.43
billion
$10.98 million
$4.87 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Joshua
Kutin
(e)
|
14
RICs
1 PIV
8 other accounts
|
$9.50
billion
$10.98 million
$40.68 million
|
None
|
None
|
Alex
Wilkinson
(e)
|
2
RICs
1 other account
|
$351.82
million
$0.004 million
|
None
|
None
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
100
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
MM
Growth Strategies
Fund
|
Columbia
Management:
Thomas M. Galvin
|
6 RICs
3 PIVs
1332 other
accounts
|
$5.05 billion
$494.09 million
$4.34 billion
|
3 other accounts
($0.89 B)
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Richard
A. Carter
|
6
RICs
3 PIVs
1333 other accounts
|
$5.05
billion
$494.09 million
$4.33 billion
|
3
other
accounts
($0.89 B)
|
None
|
Todd
D. Herget
|
6
RICs
3 PIVs
1336 other accounts
|
$5.05
billion
$494.09 million
$4.33 billion
|
3
other
accounts
($0.89 B)
|
None
|
Loomis
Sayles:
Aziz
Hamzaogullari
|
16 RICs
13 PIVs
95 other
accounts
|
$17.05 billion
$2.66 billion
$12.29 billion
|
1 PIV
($543 M)
|
None
|
Loomis
Sayles
|
Loomis
Sayles
|
Los
Angeles Capital:
Thomas Stevens
|
14 RICs
12 PIVs
38 other accounts
|
$4.95 billion
$4.88 billion
$14.47 billion
|
1 RIC ($2.38 B)
4 PIVs ($2.87 B)
5 other accounts
($8.31 B)
|
None
|
Los Angeles
Capital
|
Los Angeles
Capital
|
Hal
Reynolds
|
13
RICs
12 PIVs
38 other accounts
|
$4.87
billion
$4.88 billion
$14.47 billion
|
1
RIC ($2.38 B)
4 PIVs ($2.87 B)
5 other accounts
($8.31 B)
|
None
|
Daniel
Allen
|
10
RICs
12 PIVs
38 other accounts
|
$1.77
billion
$4.88 billion
$14.47 billion
|
4
PIVs ($2.87 B)
5 other accounts
($8.31 B)
|
None
|
Daniel
Arche
|
1
RIC
5 PIVs
14 other accounts
|
$536.24
million
$3.1 billion
$1.86 billion
|
2
PIVs ($2.21 B)
|
None
|
Pacific/
Asia
Fund
|
Jasmine
(Weili)
Huang
|
4
RICs
1 PIV
12 other
accounts
|
$2.05
billion
$608.28 million
$103.09 million
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Daisuke
Nomoto
|
2
RICs
1 PIV
3 other
accounts
|
$763.19
million
$114.68 million
$0.89 million
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(b)
$50,001 –
$100,000
(a)
|
Christine
Seng
|
1
PIV
1 other account
|
$46.94
million
$25.46 million
|
None
|
None
(c)
|
Threadneedle
|
Threadneedle
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
101
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
Select
Large
Cap Growth
Fund
|
Thomas
M. Galvin
|
6
RICs
3 PIVs
1332 other
accounts
|
$1.26
billion
$494.09 million
$4.34 billion
|
3
other
accounts
($0.89 B)
|
Over
$1,000,000
(a)
$100,001 –
$500,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Richard
A. Carter
|
6
RICs
3 PIVs
1333 other
accounts
|
$1.26
billion
$494.09 million
$4.33 billion
|
3
other
accounts
($0.89 B)
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(a)
$100,001 –
$500,000
(b)
|
Todd
D. Herget
|
6
RICs
3 PIVs
1336 other
accounts
|
$1.26
billion
$494.09 million
$4.33 billion
|
3
other
accounts
($0.89 B)
|
$500,001
–
$1,000,000
(b)
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
|
Jeffrey
Knight
(e)
|
26
RICs
1 PIV
9 other accounts
|
$72.43
billion
$10.98 million
$4.87 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Joshua
Kutin
(e)
|
14
RICs
1 PIV
8 other accounts
|
$9.50
billion
$10.98 million
$40.68 million
|
None
|
None
|
Alex
Wilkinson
(e)
|
2
RICs
1 other account
|
$351.82
million
$4,316.14
|
None
|
None
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
|
Jeffrey
Knight
(e)
|
26
RICs
1 PIV
9 other accounts
|
$72.43
billion
$10.98 million
$4.87 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Joshua
Kutin
(e)
|
14
RICs
1 PIV
8 other accounts
|
$9.50
billion
$10.98 million
$40.68 million
|
None
|
None
|
Alex
Wilkinson
(e)
|
2
RICs
1 other account
|
$351.82
million
$4,316.14
|
None
|
None
|
For
Funds with fiscal year ending April 30 – Information is as of April 30, 2017, unless otherwise noted
|
Bond
Fund
|
Gene
Tannuzzo
(f)
|
7
RICs
74 other accounts
|
$5.37
billion
$1.24 billion
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Jason
Callan
|
9
RICs
7 PIVs
4 other
accounts
|
$14.39
billion
$15.42 billion
$0.95 million
|
None
|
None
|
Corporate
Income
Fund
|
Tom
Murphy
|
12
RICs
29 PIVs
35 other
accounts
|
$1.92
billion
$34.67 billion
$5.18 billion
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Tim
Doubek
|
10
RICs
1 PIV
34 other
accounts
|
$1.89
billion
$0.62 million
$4.85 billion
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(b)
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
102
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
MM
Directional
Alternative Strategies
Fund
|
Boston
Partners:
Joseph Feeney
|
5 RICs
2 other accounts
|
$8.49 billion
$57.29 million
|
None
|
None
|
Boston
Partners
|
Boston
Partners
|
Eric
Connerly
|
2
RICs
|
$6.62
billion
|
None
|
None
|
AQR:
Michele Aghassi
|
21 RICs
22 PIVs
18 other
accounts
|
$9.51 billion
$12.19 billion
$6.12 billion
|
16 PIVs
($7.84 B)
6 other
accounts
($2.04 B)
|
None
|
AQR
|
AQR
|
Andrea
Frazzini
|
39
RICs
34 PIVs
40 other
accounts
|
$19.69
billion
$18.95 billion
$18.18 billion
|
26
PIVs
($15.27 B)
12 other
accounts
($2.84 B)
|
None
|
Jacques
Friedman
|
48
RICs
51 PIVs
121 other
accounts
|
$29.51
billion
$26.37 billion
$62.5 billion
|
39
PIVs
($20.62 B)
40 other
accounts
($17.52 B)
|
None
|
Hoon
Kim
|
12
RICs
15 PIVs
21 other
accounts
|
$6.86
billion
$6.81 billion
$9.6 billion
|
11
PIVs
($4.08 B)
4 other
accounts
($661.84 M)
|
None
|
Analytic
Investors:
Harindra de Silva
|
15 RICs
18 PIVs
31 other
accounts
|
$7.11 billion
$2.18 billion
$7.58 billion
|
3 PIVs
($244.30 M)
2 other
accounts
($293.80 M)
|
None
|
Analytic
Investors
|
Analytic
Investors
|
Dennis
Bein
|
12
RICs
17 PIVs
30 other
accounts
|
$3.23
billion
$2.18 billion
$7.25 billion
|
3
PIVs
($244.30 M)
2 other
accounts
($293.80 M)
|
None
|
David
Krider
|
3
RICs
11 PIVs
11 other
accounts
|
$1.21
billion
$1.73 billion
$2.15 billion
|
1
PIV
($169.30 M)
1 other
account
($32.70 M)
|
None
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
103
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
Multi-Asset
Income
Fund
|
Jeffrey
Knight
|
25
RICs
2 PIVs
7 other
accounts
|
$70.35
billion
$16.85 million
$4.21 million
|
None
|
$500,001
–
$1,000,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Anwiti
Bahuguna
|
20
RICs
22 PIVs
16 other
accounts
|
$67.57
billion
$2.59 billion
$100 million
|
None
|
None
|
Dan
Boncarosky
|
8
RICs
7 other
accounts
|
$5.93
billion
$3.06 million
|
None
|
$1
–
$10,000
(b)
|
Joshua
Kutin
|
13
RICs
2 PIVs
8 other
accounts
|
$8.71
billion
$16.85 million
$37.82 million
|
None
|
None
|
Small
Cap
Value Fund I
|
Jeremy
Javidi
|
1
RIC
1 PIV
9 other
accounts
|
$372.42
million
$163.46 million
$42.51 million
|
None
|
$500,001
–
$1,000,000
(a)
$50,001 –
$100,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Total
Return
Bond Fund
|
Gene
Tannuzzo
(f)
|
7
RICs
74 other accounts
|
$5.37
billion
$1.24 billion
|
None
|
$1
–
$10,000
(a)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Jason
Callan
|
9
RICs
7 PIVs
4 other
accounts
|
$12.41
billion
$15.42 billion
$0.95 million
|
None
|
None
|
U.S.
Treasury
Index Fund
|
Alan
Erickson
|
38
other accounts
|
$942.60
million
|
None
|
$1–$10,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
For
Funds with fiscal year ending May 31 – Information is as of May 31, 2017, unless otherwise noted
|
Adaptive
Risk
Allocation
Fund
|
Jeffrey
L. Knight
|
25
RICs
1 PIV
7 other
accounts
|
$69.30
billion
$13.86 million
$4.30 million
|
None
|
$500,001
–
$1,000,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management;
Columbia
Management –
FoF
|
Columbia
Management
|
Joshua
Kutin
|
13
RICS
1 PIV
8 other
accounts
|
$7.02
billion
$13.86 million
$38.99 million
|
None
|
$50,001
–
$100,000
(b)
|
Alternative
Beta
Fund
|
Jeffrey
L. Knight
|
25
RICs
1 PIV
7 other
accounts
|
$70.78
billion
$13.86 million
$4.30 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
William
Landes
|
4
other
accounts
|
$42.75
million
|
None
|
over
$1,000,000
(a)
|
Marc
Khalamayzer
|
6
RICs
4 other
accounts
|
$40.33
million
$38.41 million
|
None
|
$1-$10,000
(b)
|
Joshua
Kutin
|
13
RICs
1 PIV
8 other
accounts
|
$8.50
billion
$13.86 million
$38.99 million
|
None
|
$50,001
–
$100,000
(b)
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
104
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
Diversified
Absolute
Return
Fund
|
Jeffrey
L. Knight
|
25
RICs
1 PIV
7 other
accounts
|
$71.25
billion
$13.86 million
$4.30 million
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(a)
$100,001 –
$500,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Brian
Virginia
|
13
RICs
8 other
accounts
|
$62.55
billion
$2.41 million
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(b)
|
Joshua
Kutin
|
13
RICs
1 PIV
8 other
accounts
|
$8.97
billion
$13.86 million
$38.99 million
|
None
|
None
|
Alex
Wilkinson
|
1
RIC
2 other
accounts
|
$272.95
million
$4,163.00
|
None
|
None
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
Michael
S.
Barclay
|
2
RICs
2 PIVs
65 other
accounts
|
$776.48
million
$741.75 million
$1.31 billion
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(a)
$50,001 –
$100,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Scott
L. Davis
|
2
RICs
2 PIVs
68 other
accounts
|
$776.48
million
$741.75 million $1.38 billion
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(a)
$100,001 –
$500,000
(b)
|
Peter
Santoro
|
6
RICs
2 PIVs
61 other
accounts
|
$2.62
billion
$741.75 million
$1.78 billion
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(a)
$10,001 –
$50,000
(b)
|
High
Yield
Municipal
Fund
|
Chad
H.
Farrington
|
2
RICs
10 other
accounts
|
$994.64
million
$185.19 million
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(a)
$10,001 –
$50,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Catherine
Stienstra
|
5
RICs
2 PIVs
3 other
accounts
|
$3.77
billion
$1.76 billion
$0.72 million
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(b)
|
For
Funds with fiscal year ending July 31 – Information is as of July 31, 2017, unless otherwise noted
|
AMT-Free
OR
Intermediate
Muni Bond
Fund
|
Paul
Fuchs
|
10
RICs
6 other accounts
|
$3.67
billion
$1.69 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Deborah
Vargo
(d)
|
126
other accounts
|
$1.66
billion
|
None
|
None
|
Large
Cap
Growth Fund
|
Peter
R.
Deininger
|
2
RICs
8 other
accounts
|
$3.51
billion
$285.09 million
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
John
T. Wilson
|
2
RICs
10 other
accounts
|
$3.51
billion
$299.46 million
|
None
|
over
$1,000,000
(a)
$100,001 –
$500,000
(b)
|
Tchintcia
S. Barros
|
2
RICs
7 other
accounts
|
$3.51
billion
$284.66 million
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(b)
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
105
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
Kimberly
A.
Campbell
|
19
other
accounts
|
$31.28
million
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(a)
$10,001 –
$50,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
James
Dearborn
|
1
RIC
5 other
accounts
|
$41.75
million
$1.27 million
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(a)
$10,001 –
$50,000
(b)
|
U.S.
Social
Bond Fund
|
James
Dearborn
|
1
RIC
5 other
accounts
|
$3.80
billion
$1.27 million
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(a)
$50,001 –
$100,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Chad
Farrington
|
2
RICs
10 other
accounts
|
$1.78
billion
$175.43 million
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(b)
|
Tom
Murphy
|
12
RICs
28 PIVs
37 other
accounts
|
$3.12
billion
$34.94 billion
$5.32 billion
|
None
|
None
|
Ultra
Short
Term Bond
Fund
|
Leonard
A. Aplet
|
6
RICs
14 PIVs
64 other
accounts
|
$18.98
billion
$2.10 billion
$6.24 billion
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Ronald
Stahl
|
3
RICs
14 PIVs
48 other
accounts
|
$4.53
billion
$2.10 billion
$5.11 billion
|
None
|
None
|
Greg
Liechty
|
3
RICs
14 PIVs
45 other
accounts
|
$4.53
billion
$2.10 billion
$5.15 billion
|
None
|
None
|
For
Funds with fiscal year ending August 31 – Information is as of August 31, 2017, unless otherwise noted
|
Balanced
Fund
|
Leonard
A. Aplet
|
6
RICs
14 PIVs
64 other
accounts
|
$17.98
billion
$2.13 billion
$6.26 billion
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(a)
$10,001 –
$50,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Brian
Lavin
|
13
RICs
1 PIV
10 other
accounts
|
$19.22
billion
$63.28 million
$638.38 million
|
None
|
None
|
Gregory
S.
Liechty
|
3
RICs
14 PIVs
46 other
accounts
|
$3.59
billion
$2.13 billion
$5.16 billion
|
None
|
$50,001
–
$100,000
(b)
|
Guy
W. Pope
|
8
RICs
7 PIVs
65 other
accounts
|
$15.00
billion
$1.77 billion
$5.59 billion
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(a)
$50,001 -
$100,000
(b)
|
Ronald
B. Stahl
|
3
RICs
14 PIVs
48 other
accounts
|
$3.59
billion
$2.13 billion
$5.13 billion
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(a)
$10,001 –
$50,000
(b)
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
Guy
W. Pope
|
8
RICs
7 PIVs
65 other
accounts
|
$8.56
billion
$1.77 billion
$5.59 billion
|
None
|
Over
$1,000,000
(a)
$100,001 –
$500,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
106
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
Disciplined
Small
Core Fund
|
Brian
Condon
|
24
RICs
4 PIVs
55 other
accounts
|
$13.51
billion
$131.92 million
$6.30 billion
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(a)
$100,001 –
$500,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Peter
Albanese
|
18
RICs
4 PIVs
50 other accounts
|
$13.45
billion
$131.92 million
$6.29 billion
|
None
|
$10,001-$50,000
(b)
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
Robert
B.
Cameron
|
2
RICs
1 PIV
9 other
accounts
|
$828.09
million
$652.61 million
$127.51 million
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Jasmine
(Weili)
Huang
|
4
RICs
1 PIV
12 other
accounts
|
$1.17
billion
$652.61 million
$127.02 million
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(b)
|
Dara
J. White
|
2
RICs
1 PIV
7 other
accounts
|
$828.09
million
$652.61 million
$130.07 million
|
None
|
$500,001
–
$1,000,000
(a)
$100,001 –
$500,000
(b)
|
Young
Kim
|
2
RICs
1 PIV
8 other
accounts
|
$828.09
million
$652.61 million
$126.69 million
|
None
|
$50,001-$100,000
(b)
|
Perry
Vickery
|
2
RICs
1 PIV
11 other
accounts
|
$828.09
million
$652.61 million
$128.13 million
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(a)
$10,001 –
$50,000
(b)
|
Global
Dividend
Opportunity
Fund
|
Jonathan
Crown
|
1
PIV
5 other
accounts
|
$2.32
billion
$2.70 billion
|
None
|
None
|
Threadneedle
|
Threadneedle
|
Georgina
Hellyer
(g)
|
1
other account
|
$55.00
million
|
None
|
None
(c)
|
Global
Energy
and Natural
Resources
Fund
|
Josh
Kapp
|
1
PIV
5 other
accounts
|
$18.53
million
$1.82 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Global
Technology
Growth Fund
|
Rahul
Narang
|
3
RICs
7 other
accounts
|
$1.23
billion
$6.16 million
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Greater
China
Fund
|
Jasmine
(Weili)
Huang
|
4
RICs
1 PIV
12 other
accounts
|
$2.41
billion
$652.61 million
$127.02 million
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Mid
Cap
Growth Fund
|
Matthew
Litfin
(j)
|
4
RICs
6 other
accounts
|
$5.88
billion
$4.8 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
WAM
|
Columbia
WAM
|
Erika
Maschmeyer
(j)
|
4
other
accounts
|
$509,889
|
None
|
None
|
John
Emerson
(j)
|
4
other
accounts
|
$830,000
|
None
|
None
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
107
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
MM
Alternative Strategies
Fund
|
AQR:
Clifford S. Asness
|
39 RICs
52 PIVs
77 other
accounts
|
$26.57 billion
$30.99 billion
$40.14 billion
|
43 PIVs
($25.05 B)
28 other
accounts
($11.69B)
|
None
|
AQR
|
AQR
|
Brian
K. Hurst
|
13
RICs
60 PIVs
22 other
accounts
|
$18.49
billion
$36.15 billion
$13.86 billion
|
52
PIVs
($29.98 B)
6 other
accounts
($5.23 B)
|
None
|
John
M. Liew
|
21
RICs
40 PIVs
32 other
accounts
|
$21.99
billion
$24.54 billion
$17.07 billion
|
34
PIVs
($18.4 B)
11 other
accounts
($6.22 B)
|
None
|
Yao
Hua Ooi
|
12
RICs
49 PIVs
3 other
accounts
|
$18.29
billion
$27.95 billion
$1.29 billion
|
44
PIVs
($24.36 B)
2 other
accounts
($1.01 B)
|
None
|
Ari
Levine
|
7
RICs
42 PIVs
9 other
accounts
|
$13.62
billion
$28.08 billion
$4.97 billion
|
39
PIVs
($23.88 B)
3 other
accounts
($1.5 B)
|
None
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
108
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
MM
Alternative Strategies
Fund (continued)
|
Manulife:
Daniel Janis III
(d)
|
5 RICs
34 PIVs
15 other accounts
|
$13.12 billion
$17.68 billion
$10.07 billion
|
2 other accounts ($6.84 B)
|
None
|
Manulife
|
Manulife
|
Christopher
Chapman
(d)
|
4
RICs
32 PIVs
15 other accounts
|
$12.76
billion
$17.38 billion
$10.07 billion
|
2
other accounts ($6.84 B)
|
None
|
Thomas
Goggins
(d)
|
4
RICs
31 PIVs
15 other accounts
|
$12.85
billion
$17.25 billion
$10.07 billion
|
2
other accounts ($6.84 B)
|
None
|
Kisoo
Park
(d)
|
4
RICs
33 PIVs
15 other accounts
|
$12.85
billion
$17.39 billion
$10.07 billion
|
2
other accounts ($6.84 B)
|
None
|
TCW:
Tad Rivelle
|
30 RICs
51 PIVs
240 other accounts
|
$115.97 billion
$12.2 billion
$38.81 billion
|
24 PIVs
($1.61 B)
8 other
accounts
($3.98 B)
|
None
|
TCW
|
TCW
|
Stephen
M. Kane
|
33
RICs
55 PIVs
240 other accounts
|
$107.9
billion
$13.76 billion
$38.81 billion
|
24
PIVs
($1.61 B)
8 other
accounts
($3.98 B)
|
None
|
Laird
R.
Landmann
|
30
RICs
51 PIVs
240 other accounts
|
$107.84
billion
$12.23 billion
$38.81 billion
|
24
PIVs
($1.61 B)
8 other
accounts
($3.98 B)
|
None
|
Bryan
Whalen
|
28
RICs
50 PIVs
240 other accounts
|
$115.95
billion
$12.1 billion
$38.81 billion
|
24
PIVs
($1.61 B)
8 other
accounts
($3.98 B)
|
None
|
Water
Island:
Edward Chen
|
2 RICs
|
$136 million
|
None
|
None
|
Water
Island
|
Water
Island
|
Gregory
Loprete
|
3
RICs
|
$520
billion
|
None
|
None
|
Todd
W. Munn
|
3
RICs
|
$2.35
billion
|
None
|
None
|
Roger
P.
Foltynowicz
|
3
RICs
|
$2.35
billion
|
None
|
None
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
109
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
MM
Small Cap
Equity Strategies Fund
|
Columbia
Management:
Jarl Ginsberg
|
4 RICs
42 other
accounts
|
$2.78 billion
$89.65 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Christian
K.
Stadlinger
|
4
RICs
36 other
accounts
|
$2.78
billion
$94.08 million
|
None
|
None
|
Conestoga:
Robert M. Mitchell
|
2 RICs
1 PIV
142 other
accounts
|
$1.23 billion
$10.89 million
$1.1 billion
|
None
|
None
|
Conestoga
|
Conestoga
|
Joseph
F.
Monahan
|
2
RICs
1 PIV
129 other accounts
|
$1.23
billion
$10.89 million
$1.02 billion
|
None
|
None
|
DGHM:
Jeffrey C. Baker
|
11 PIVs
82 other
accounts
|
$53.52 million
$1.56 billion
|
3 PIVs
($34.4 M)
11 other
accounts
($279.24 M)
|
None
|
DGHM
|
DGHM
|
Bruce
H. Geller
|
11
PIVs
82 other
accounts
|
$53.52
million
$1.56 billion
|
3
PIVs
($34.4 M)
11 other
accounts
($279.24 M)
|
None
|
Peter
A. Gulli
|
11
PIVs
82 other
accounts
|
$53.52
million
$1.56 billion
|
3
PIVs
($34.4 M)
11 other
accounts
($279.24 M)
|
None
|
Edward
W. Turville
(with REMS)
|
11
PIVs
82 other
accounts
|
$53.52
million
$1.56 billion
|
3
PIVs
($34.4 M)
11 other
accounts
($279.24 M)
|
None
|
EAM:
Montie L.
Weisenberger
|
6 RICs
2 other
accounts
|
$417.6 million
$241.2 million
|
None
|
None
|
EAM
|
EAM
|
Travis
Prentice
(i)
|
6
RICs
6 other accounts
|
$445.7
million
$625.0 million
|
None
|
None
|
BMO:
David Corris
(h)
|
8 RICs
6 PIVs
141 other
accounts
|
$1.44 billion
$4.83 billion
$6.29 billion
|
None
|
None
|
BMO
|
BMO
|
Thomas
Lettenberger
(h)
|
5
RICs
30 other
accounts
|
$566.41
million
$325.89 million
|
None
|
None
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
110
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
Loomis
Sayles:
Christopher Harms
|
3 RICs
4 PIVs
151 other
accounts
|
$1.25 billion
$1.68 billion
$13.18 billion
|
None
|
None
|
Loomis
Sayles
|
Loomis
Sayles
|
Clifton
Rowe
|
3
RICs
5 PIVs
145 other
accounts
|
$1.25
billion
$1.71 billion
$13.41 billion
|
None
|
None
|
Kurt
Wagner
|
3
RICs
9 PIVs
165 other
accounts
|
$1.25
billion
$11.24 billion
$17.57 billion
|
2
other
accounts
($4.72 B)
|
None
|
PGIM:
Michael Collins
|
29 RICs
13 PIVs
76 other
accounts
|
$61.88 billion
$10.54 billion
$23 billion
|
None
|
None
|
PGIM
|
PGIM
|
Robert
Tipp
|
24
RICs
19 PIVs
89 other
accounts
|
$34.75
billion
$8.23 billion
$22.21 billion
|
1
PIV
|
None
|
Richard
Piccirillo
|
38
RICs
27 PIVs
132 other
accounts
|
$53.26
billion
$12.68 billion
$53.51 billion
|
2
PIVs
|
None
|
Gregory
Peters
|
14
RICs
11 PIVs
40 other
accounts
|
$46.76
billion
$4.77 billion
$22.06 billion
|
None
|
None
|
MM Total
Return
Bond Strategies Fund (continued)
|
TCW:
Tad Rivelle
|
30 RICs
51 PIVs
240 other
accounts
|
$116.07 billion
$12.2 billion
$38.81 billion
|
24 PIVs
($1.61 B)
8 other
accounts
($3.98 B)
|
None
|
TCW
|
TCW
|
Stephen
M. Kane
|
33
RICs
55 PIVs
240 other
accounts
|
$108
billion
$13.76 billion
$38.81 billion
|
24
PIVs
($1.61 B)
8 other
accounts
($3.98 B)
|
None
|
Laird
R.
Landmann
|
30
RICs
51 PIVs
240 other
accounts
|
$107.84
billion
$ 12.23 billion
$38.81 billion
|
24
PIVs
($1.61 B)
8 other
accounts
($3.98 B)
|
None
|
Bryan
Whalen
|
28
RICs
50 PIVs
240 other
accounts
|
$116.05
billion
$12.1 billion
$38.81 billion
|
24
PIVs
($1.61 B)
8 other
accounts
($3.98 B)
|
None
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
111
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
Small
Cap
Growth Fund I
|
Daniel
Cole
|
1
RIC
6 other
accounts
|
$28.93
million
$3.88 million
|
None
|
$10,001-$50,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Wayne
M.
Collette
|
1
RIC
1 PIV
6 other
accounts
|
$28.93
million
$4.60 million
$5.08 million
|
None
|
$10,001-$50,000
(b)
|
Lawrence
W. Lin
|
1
RIC
1 PIV
9 other
accounts
|
$28.93
million
$4.60 million
$2.38 million
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(a)
$1–$10,000
(b)
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
Jason
Callan
(f)
|
9
RICs
7 PIVs
4 other accounts
|
$14.85
billion
$15.48 billion
$0.84 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Colin
Lundgren
|
2
RICs
71 other
accounts
|
$1.40
billion
$1.20 billion
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(b)
|
Gene
Tannuzzo
|
4
RICs
76 other
accounts
|
$1.61
billion
$1.24 billion
|
None
|
$100,001
–
$500,000
(a)
$100,001 –
$500,000
(b)
|
For
Funds with fiscal year ending October 31 – Information is as of October 31, 2017, unless otherwise noted
|
AMT-Free
CT
Intermediate
Muni Bond
Fund
|
Paul
F. Fuchs
|
10
RICs
4 other
accounts
|
$3.93
billion
$1.96 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Deborah
Vargo
(f)
|
127
other accounts
|
$1.68
billion
|
124
Other Accounts - $1.66B
|
None
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate
Muni Bond
Fund
|
Paul
F. Fuchs
|
10
RICs
4 other
accounts
|
$2.09
billion
$1.96 million
|
None
|
$10,001
–
$50,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Deborah
Vargo
(f)
|
127
other accounts
|
$1.68
billion
|
124
Other Accounts - $1.66B
|
None
|
AMT-Free
MA
Intermediate
Muni Bond
Fund
|
Paul
F. Fuchs
|
10
RICs
4 other
accounts
|
$3.80
billion
$1.96 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Deborah
Vargo
(f)
|
127
other accounts
|
$1.68
billion
|
124
Other Accounts - $1.66B
|
$1-$10,000
(a)
$1-$10,000
(b)
|
AMT-Free
NY
Intermediate
Muni Bond
Fund
|
Paul
F. Fuchs
|
10
RICs
4 other
accounts
|
$3.81
billion
$1.96 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Deborah
Vargo
(f)
|
127
other accounts
|
$1.68
billion
|
124
Other Accounts - $1.66B
|
None
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income
Fund
|
Catherine
Stienstra
|
5
RICs
2 PIVs
3 other
accounts
|
$4.07
billion
$1.76 billion
$1.01 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Anders
Myhran
|
3
RICs
2 PIVs
3 other
accounts
|
$2.21
billion
$1.76 billion
$4.23 million
|
None
|
None
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
112
|
|
|
Other
Accounts Managed (Excluding the Fund)
|
Ownership
of Fund
Shares
|
Potential
Conflicts
of Interest
|
Structure
of
Compensation
|
Fund
|
Portfolio
Manager
|
Number
and Type
of Account*
|
Approximate
Total Net
Assets
|
Performance-
Based
Accounts**
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income
Fund
|
Catherine
Stienstra
|
5
RICs
2 PIVs
3 other
accounts
|
$4.36
billion
$1.76 billion
$1.01 million
|
None
|
None
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
Anders
Myhran
|
3
RICs
2 PIVs
3 other
accounts
|
$2.51
billion
$1.76 billion
$4.23 million
|
None
|
None
|
For
Funds with fiscal year ending December 31 – Information is as of December 31, 2016, unless otherwise noted
|
Real
Estate
Equity Fund
|
Arthur
J. Hurley
|
1
RIC
9 other
accounts
|
$4.16
million
$1.62 million
|
None
|
$1
–
$10,000
(a)
$10,001 –
$50,000
(b)
|
Columbia
Management
|
Columbia
Management
|
*
|
RIC refers to a Registered
Investment Company; PIV refers to a Pooled Investment Vehicle.
|
**
|
Number and type of accounts
for which the advisory fee paid is based in part or wholly on performance and the aggregate net assets in those accounts.
|
(a)
|
Excludes any notional
investments.
|
(b)
|
Notional investments through a
deferred compensation account.
|
(c)
|
The Fund is available for sale
only in the U.S. The portfolio managers do not reside in the U.S. and therefore do not hold any shares of the Fund.
|
(d)
|
The portfolio manager began
managing the Fund after its last fiscal year end; reporting information is provided as of September 30, 2017.
|
(e)
|
The portfolio manager began
managing the Fund on October 24, 2017 (commencement of operations); reporting information is provided as of August 31, 2017.
|
(f)
|
The portfolio manager began
managing the Fund after its last fiscal year end.
|
(g)
|
The portfolio manager began
managing the Fund after its last fiscal year end; reporting information is provided as of October 31, 2017.
|
(h)
|
Reporting information is
provided as of October 31, 2017.
|
(i)
The portfolio manager began managing the Fund after its last fiscal year end; reporting information is provided as of January 22, 2018.
(j) The portfolio manager began managing the Fund after its last
fiscal year end; reporting information is provided as of December 31, 2017.
(k) The portfolio manager will begin managing
the Fund on or about April 5, 2018 (commencement of operations); reporting information is provided as of January 31, 2018.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
113
|
Potential Conflicts of Interest
|
Analytic Investors
: Analytic Investors and its officers, employees and beneficial owners shall be free from time to time to acquire, possess, manage, and dispose of securities or other investment assets for their own accounts, for the
accounts of their families, for the account of any entity in which they have a beneficial interest or for the accounts of others for whom they may provide investment advisory, brokerage or other services (collectively, “Managed
Accounts”), in transactions which may or may not correspond with transactions effected or positions held in the fund. It is understood that when Analytic Investors determines that it would be appropriate for the fund and one or more Managed
Accounts to participate in an investment opportunity, Analytic Investors will seek to execute orders for the fund and for such Managed Accounts on a basis which it considers equitable, but that equality of treatment of the fund and other Managed
Accounts is not assured. In such situations, Analytic Investors may (but is not be required to) place orders for the fund and each other Managed Account simultaneously and if all such orders are not filled at the same price, Analytic Investors may
cause the fund and each Managed Account to pay or receive the average of the prices at which the orders were filled. If all such orders cannot be fully executed under prevailing market conditions, Analytic Investors may allocate the securities
traded among the fund and other Managed Accounts in a manner which it considers equitable, taking into account the size of the order placed for the fund and each other Managed Account as well as any other factors which it deems relevant.
|
|
Certain of the
Managed Accounts that Analytic Investors advises may sell securities short, including securities with respect to which other Managed Accounts hold long positions. The portfolio managers and traders for these Managed Accounts are not separated from
the rest of Analytic Investors’ investment personnel and therefore have access to full information about Analytic Investors’ investment research and the investment decisions and strategies being employed for the Managed Accounts. These
Managed Accounts pay Analytic Investors management fees at rates comparable to and in some cases lower than those paid by the fund and other Managed Accounts. Analytic Investors also receives a significant share of any profits earned by certain of
the Managed Accounts as incentive compensation. As a result, Analytic Investors may have a conflict between its own interests and the interests of other Analytic Investors investment advisory clients in managing the portfolios of certain of these
Managed Accounts.
|
|
AQR:
Each of the portfolio managers is also responsible for managing other accounts in addition to each Fund, including other accounts of AQR, or its affiliates. Other accounts may include, without limitation, separately
managed accounts for foundations, endowments, pension plans, and high net-worth families; registered investment companies; unregistered investment companies relying on either Section 3(c)(1) or Section 3(c)(7) of the 1940 Act (such companies are
commonly referred to as “hedge funds”); foreign investment companies; and may also include accounts or investments managed or made by the portfolio managers in a personal or other capacity (“Proprietary Accounts”). Management
of other accounts in addition to a Fund can present certain conflicts of interest, as described below. From time to time, potential conflicts of interest may arise between a portfolio manager’s management of the investments of a Fund, on the
one hand, and the management of other accounts (including, for purposes of this discussion, other Funds and Proprietary Accounts), on the other. The other accounts might have similar investment objectives or strategies as the Fund, or otherwise
hold, purchase, or sell securities that are eligible to be held, purchased or sold by the Fund. Because of their positions with the Fund, the portfolio managers know the size, timing and possible market impact of the Fund’s trades. A potential
conflict of interest exists where portfolio managers could use this information to the advantage of other accounts they manage and to the possible detriment of the Fund.
|
|
A number of
potential conflict of interest may arise as a result of AQR’s or the portfolio manager’s management of a number of accounts with similar investment strategies. Often, an investment opportunity may be suitable for both the Fund and other
accounts, but may not be available in sufficient quantities for both the Fund and the other accounts to participate fully. Similarly, there may be limited opportunity to sell an investment held by the Fund and another account. In circumstances where
the amount of total exposure to a strategy or investment type across accounts is, in the opinion of AQR, capacity constrained, the availability of the strategy or investment type for the Fund and other accounts will be reduced regardless of the
AQR’s trade allocation policies. A Fund may therefore have reduced exposure to a capacity constrained strategy or investment type, which could adversely affect the Fund’s return. AQR is not obligated to allocate capacity pro rata and may
take its financial interests into account when allocating capacity among the Fund and other accounts. Among other things, capacity constraints in a particular strategy or investment type could cause the Fund to close to all or certain new investors.
|
|
Another conflict
could arise where different account guidelines and/or differences within particular investment strategies lead to the use of different investment practices for portfolios with a similar investment strategy. AQR will not necessarily purchase or sell
the same instruments at the same time or in the same direction (particularly if different accounts have different strategies), or in the same proportionate amounts for all eligible accounts (particularly if different accounts have materially
different amounts of capital under management, different amounts of investable cash available, different investment restrictions, or different risk tolerances). As a result, although AQR manages numerous accounts and/or portfolios with similar or
identical investment objectives, or may manage accounts with different objectives that trade in the
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
114
|
|
same instruments,
the portfolio decisions relating to these accounts, and the performance resulting from such decisions, may differ from account to account. AQR may, from time to time, implement new trading strategies or participate in new trading strategies for some
but not all accounts, including the Fund. Strategies may not be implemented in the same manner among accounts where they are employed, even if the strategy is consistent with the objectives of such accounts.
|
|
Whenever decisions
are made to buy or sell investments by the Fund and one or more other accounts simultaneously, AQR or the portfolio managers may aggregate the purchases and sales of the investments and will allocate the transactions in a manner that it believes to
be equitable under the circumstances. To this end, AQR has adopted policies and procedures that are intended to assure that investment opportunities are allocated equitably among accounts over time. As a result of the allocations, there may be
instances where the Fund will not participate in a transaction that is allocated among other accounts or the Fund may not be allocated the full amount of the investments sought to be traded. These aggregation and allocation policies could have a
detrimental effect on the price or amount of the investments available to the Fund from time to time. Subject to applicable laws and/or account restrictions, AQR may buy, sell or hold securities for other accounts while entering into a different or
opposite investment decision for the Fund.
|
|
To the extent that
a Fund holds interests in an issue that are different (or more senior or junior) than those held by other accounts, AQR may be presented with investment decisions where the outcome would benefit one account and would not benefit or would harm the
other account. Furthermore, it is possible that a Fund’s interest may be subordinated or otherwise adversely impacted by virtue of such other accounts’ involvement and actions relating to their investment. In addition, when a Fund and
other accounts hold investments in the same issuer (including at the same place in the capital structure), the Fund may be prohibited by applicable law from participating in restructurings, work-outs or other activities related to its investment in
the issuer. As a result, a Fund may not be permitted by law to make the same investment decisions as other accounts in the same or similar situations even if AQR believes it would be in the Fund’s best economic interests to do so. A Fund may
be prohibited by applicable law from investing in an issuer (or an affiliate) that other accounts are also investing in or currently invest in even if AQR believes it would be in the best economic interests of the Fund to do so. Furthermore,
entering into certain transactions that are not deemed prohibited by law when made may potentially lead to a condition that raises regulatory or legal concerns in the future. This may be the case, for example, with issuers that AQR consider to be at
risk of default and restructuring or work-outs with debt holders, which may include a Fund and other accounts. In some cases, to avoid the potential of future prohibited transactions, AQR may avoid allocating an investment opportunity to a Fund that
it would otherwise recommend, subject to AQR’s then-current allocation policy and any applicable exemptions.
|
|
AQR and the
Fund’s portfolio managers may also face a conflict of interest where some accounts pay higher fees to AQR than others, as they may have an incentive to favor accounts with the potential for greater fees. For instance, the entitlement to a
performance fee in managing one or more accounts may create an incentive for AQR to take risks in managing assets that it would not otherwise take in the absence of such arrangements. Additionally, since performance fees reward AQR for performance
in accounts which are subject to such fees, AQR may have an incentive to favor these accounts over those that have only fixed asset-based fees, such as the Fund, with respect to areas such as trading opportunities, trade allocation, and allocation
of new investment opportunities.
|
|
AQR has
implemented specific policies and procedures (e.g., a code of ethics and trade allocation policies) that seek to address potential conflicts of interest that may arise in connection with the management of the Fund and other accounts and that are
designed to ensure that all client accounts are treated fairly and equitably over time.
|
|
BMO:
A conflict of interest may arise as a result of a portfolio manager being responsible for multiple accounts, including the Fund, which may have different investment guidelines and objectives. In addition to the Fund,
these accounts may include other mutual funds managed on an advisory or subadvisory basis, separate accounts, and collective trust accounts. An investment opportunity may be suitable for a Fund as well as for any of the other managed accounts.
However, the investment may not be available in sufficient quantity for all of the accounts to participate fully. In addition, there may be limited opportunity to sell an investment held by a Fund and the other accounts. The other accounts may have
similar investment objectives or strategies as the Fund, they may track the same benchmarks or indexes as the Fund tracks, and they may sell securities that are eligible to be held, sold or purchased by the Fund. A portfolio manager may be
responsible for accounts that have different advisory fee schedules, which may create the incentive for the portfolio manager to favor one account over another in terms of access to investment opportunities. A portfolio manager also may manage
accounts whose investment objectives and policies differ from those of the Fund, which may cause the portfolio manager to effect trading in one account that may have an adverse effect on the value of the holdings within another account, including a
Fund.
|
|
To address and
manage these potential conflicts of interest, BMO has adopted compliance policies and procedures to allocate investment opportunities and to ensure that each of its clients is treated on a fair and equitable basis. Such policies and procedures
include, but are not limited to, trade allocation and trade aggregation policies, cross trading policies, portfolio manager assignment practices, and oversight by investment management, and/or compliance departments.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
115
|
|
Boston Partners:
Boston Partners owes its clients a duty of loyalty and monitors situations in which the interests of its advisory clients may be in conflict with its own interests. Boston Partners identifies business practices that may
cause a conflict of interest between it and its clients, discloses such conflicts of interest to clients and develops reasonable procedures to mitigate such conflicts.
|
|
Boston Partners
has identified the following potential conflicts of interest and the measures it uses to address these matters:
|
|
Equitable
Treatment of Accounts
Boston Partners recognizes that potential conflicts may arise from the side-by-side management of registered investment companies and “investment accounts,” which include privately offered funds and separately
managed accounts of individuals and institutional investors. Where Boston Partners’ separately managed accounts are charged performance fees, portfolio managers may be inclined to take investment risks that are outside the scope of such
client’s investment objectives and strategy. In addition, since Boston Partners’ private investment funds charge performance fees and share those fees with portfolio managers, such portfolio managers may also be inclined to take
additional investment risks. Boston Partners maintains a Trade Allocation and Aggregation Policy as well as a Simultaneous Management Policy to ensure that client accounts are treated equitably. The Compliance Department (“CD”) reviews
allocations and dispersion regularly, and accounts within the same strategy are precluded from simultaneously holding a security long and short. There are certain circumstances that would permit a long/short portfolio to take a contra position in a
security that is held in another strategy. This happens very infrequently and the contra position is generally not related to the fundamental views of the security (i.e. – initiating a long position in a security at year-end to take advantage
of tax-loss selling as a short term investment, or initiating a position based solely on its relative weight in the benchmark to manage investment risk). However in certain situations, the investment constraints of a strategy, including but not
limited to country, region, industry or benchmark, may result in a different investment thesis for the same security. Each situation is fully vetted and approved by the firm’s Chief Investment Officer or his designee. Risk Management performs
periodic reviews to ensure the product complies with the investment strategy and defined risk parameters.
|
|
Furthermore, since
Boston Partners charges a performance fee on certain accounts, and in particular these accounts may receive “new issues” allocations, Boston Partners has a conflict of interest in allocating new issues to these accounts. Boston Partners
maintains an IPO Allocation Policy and the CD assists in, and/or reviews, the allocation of new issues to ensure that IPOS are being allocated among all eligible accounts in an equitable manner.
|
|
Utilizing
Brokerage to Advantage Boston Partners
Boston Partners does not place trades through affiliated brokers. Securities trades are executed through brokerage firms with which Boston Partners maintains other advantageous relationships, such as soft
dollars. In these cases, the broker may expect commission business in return. Boston Partners has established a Trade Management Oversight Committee to evaluate brokerage services and to review commissions paid to brokers. In addition, Boston
Partners maintains a Best Execution Policy and a Soft Dollar Policy to assist in its monitoring efforts. Boston Partners also identifies affiliates of the investment companies for which it acts as investment adviser or sub adviser to ensure it is
trading in accordance with applicable rules and regulations.
|
|
Directed
Brokerage
Boston Partners faces an inherent conflict since it is in a position to direct client transactions to a broker or dealer in exchange for distribution capacity. Boston Partners maintains policies which prohibit its traders from
considering a broker-dealer’s distribution capacity for promoting or selling Boston Partners’ separate account services, mutual funds, or proprietary funds (collectively “Boston Partners’ Services”) during the broker
selection process. Nor will Boston Partners compensate any broker either directly or indirectly by directing brokerage transactions to that broker for consideration in selling Boston Partners’ Services.
|
|
Mixed Use
Allocations and Use of Soft Dollars to Benefit Adviser
Soft dollar services which have a “mixed use” allocation present a conflict of interest when determining the allocation between those services that primarily benefit Boston
Partners’ clients and those that primarily benefit Boston Partners. In addition, a conflict of interest exists when Boston Partners uses soft dollars to pay expenses that would normally be paid by Boston Partners. Boston Partners has developed
soft dollar policies which require it to make a good faith allocation of “mixed use” services and to document its analysis. In addition, the CD reviews all requests for soft dollars to ensure inclusion under the safe harbor of Section 28
(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”).
|
|
Trade Errors
A
conflict arises when an investment adviser requests a broker/dealer to absorb the cost of a trade error in return for increased trading and/or commissions. Boston Partners prohibits correcting a trade error for any quid pro quo with a broker and has
procedures for the proper correction of trade errors.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
116
|
|
Principal
Transactions
A principal transaction occurs when an investment adviser, acting for the account of itself or an affiliate buys a security from, or sells a security to a client. An inherent conflict of interest exists since an adviser has an
opportunity to transfer unwanted securities from its account to a client's account, sell securities to a client’s account at prices above the market, or transfer more favorably priced securities from a client account to its account. Boston
Partners generally does not permit the selling of a security from one client account and the purchasing of the same security in another client account if Boston Partners has a principal interest in one of the accounts at the time of the transaction.
Additionally, Boston Partners requires that clients give consent by signing subscription agreements to purchase a pooled investment vehicle in which Boston Partners or a related entity has an interest.
|
|
Cross Trades
Cross transactions between clients create an inherent conflict of interest because Boston Partners has a duty to obtain the most favorable price for both the selling client and the purchasing client. Boston Partners generally does not engage in
cross trading, however Boston Partners has procedures to ensure that any cross trade is in the best interests of all clients.
|
|
Affiliated
Investments
Potential conflicts exist if Boston Partners directs client investments into affiliated vehicles in order to increase the size of these vehicles and thereby increase its compensation by (a) lowering overall expenses of the vehicle,
some of which Boston Partners may have responsibility for; (b) permitting greater marketing of the vehicle which will generate greater fee revenue for Boston Partners; or (c) allowing Boston Partners or an affiliate to redeem its investment capital
in such vehicle. To mitigate any detriment to the client, Boston Partners has product suitability procedures and will obtain a client’s consent prior to investing client assets in an affiliated vehicle.
|
|
Proprietary
Trading Opportunities
Employees are in a position to take investment opportunities for themselves or Boston Partners before such opportunities are executed on behalf of clients. Employees have a duty to advance Boston Partners’ client
interests before Boston Partners interests or their personal interests. Boston Partners must assure that employees do not favor their own or Boston Partners’ accounts. The Code of Ethics (“the Code”) includes procedures on ethical
conduct and personal trading, including preclearance and blackout procedures, to which all employees are subject.
|
|
Insider
Trading/Non-Public Information
Employees are in a position to learn material nonpublic information. Such employees are in a position to trade in their personal accounts on such information, to the potential disadvantage of client accounts. The
Code addresses insider trading including permissible activities. Employees certify, at least annually, that they are in compliance with the Code.
|
|
Boston Partners
periodically discusses securities which may be held in client accounts with external investment professionals when sourcing and analyzing investment ideas. These discussions may include but are not limited to economic factors, market outlook, sector
and industry views, and general and/or specific information regarding securities. Discussion of specific securities creates a conflict which could disadvantage Boston Partners’ clients if the external parties were to act upon this information,
including but not limited to front-running and scalping either particular securities or numerous securities in a similar sector to the extent such information is known about Boston Partners’ holdings. Boston Partners has policies prohibiting
discussion of client investments for non-business purposes and has outlined permissible activities as well as certain other prohibitions when sourcing investment ideas for business purposes.
|
|
Value-Added
Investors
A senior executive from a public company or a private company that is a hedge fund, broker-dealer, investment adviser, or investment bank, (collectively “VAIs”), may invest in Boston Partners’ private funds. A
conflict exists if Boston Partners invests in companies affiliated with a VAI or if a VAI who works at a private company provide material non-public information to Boston Partners or vice versa. Both of these conflicts raise issues with respect to
information sharing. Boston Partners has procedures to: i) identify these individuals through its annual outside businesses questionnaire, its annual compliance questionnaire, review of new account start-up documents, and its 5130 and 5131
questionnaires, and ii) monitor conflicts these persons present through its pre-trade compliance system and/or email surveillance.
|
|
Selective
Disclosure
Selective disclosure occurs when material information is given to a single investor, or a limited group of investors, and not to all investors at the same time. This practice may allow one set of investors to profit on undisclosed
information prior to giving others the same opportunity. In order to prevent this conflict of interest, Boston Partners has procedures regarding the dissemination of account holdings.
|
|
Valuation of
Client Accounts
Because Boston Partners calculates its own advisory fees, it has an incentive to over-value such accounts to either increase the fees payable by the client, or to conceal poor performance for an incentive fee. Boston Partners has
several safeguards in
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
117
|
|
place to mitigate
this conflict. Boston Partners has a policy for the valuation of securities. Boston Partners’ Operations Department reconciles cash, assets, and prices for all client accounts with the client’s custodian bank’s records on a monthly
basis. Finally the CD, periodically reviews client fee invoices.
|
|
Representing
Clients \t times, clients may request Boston Partners represent their interests in class action litigation, bankruptcies or other matters. Boston Partners’ expertise lies in investment management and has an inherent conflict of interest if
cast in any other role. When possible, Boston Partners’ investment management agreements include provisions that Boston Partners will not act on behalf of the client in class actions, bankruptcies or matters of litigation.
|
|
Outside Business
Activities
An employee’s outside business activities may conflict with the employee’s duties to Boston Partners and its clients. Boston Partners requires all employees to disclose any outside employment to the CD, who, in conjunction
with the employee’s supervisor and the Director of HR, will identify any potential conflicts. In the event that a resolution to the conflict cannot be reached, the employee may be asked to terminate either his outside employment or his
position with Boston Partners.
|
|
Business Gifts and
Entertainment
Boston Partners employees periodically give or receive gifts from clients. Boston Partners employees host clients or receive entertainment provided by a client. Such gifts or entertainment may be considered efforts to gain unfair
advantage. Boston Partners maintains a gifts and entertainment policy and has developed a “Q&A” guide for employees regarding certain types of gifts and entertainment. Generally, employees are not permitted to give or receive gifts
of more than $100 in value, per person, per year. Entertainment that is normal or customary in the industry is considered appropriate. Employees should consult the CD if they are unsure about a particular gift or value of entertainment.
|
|
Illegal or
Unethical Behavior
Unethical or illegal conduct by employees damages Boston Partners’ ability to meet its fiduciary duties to clients. Employees are required to report to management any actual or suspected illegal or unethical conduct on
the part of other employees of which they become aware or any situations in which they are concerned about the “best course of action.” In addition, employees are required to certify annually that they are in compliance with this Manual.
Regardless of whether a government inquiry occurs, Boston Partners views seriously any violation of this Manual. Disciplinary sanctions may be imposed on any employee committing a violation of this Manual.
|
|
Proxy Voting
Boston Partners’ proxy voting authority for its clients, puts it in a position where its interests may conflict with the best interests of its clients when determining how to vote. Boston Partners has a proxy voting policy and has engaged an
outside vendor to execute proxies according to this policy. Boston Partners has a procedure to handle conflicts of interest which may arise in voting client securities.
|
|
Consulting
Relationships
Boston Partners may purchase software, educational programs and peer group information from consulting firms that represent Boston Partners clients. Due to the lack of payment transparency, these relationships could give rise to
improper activity on the part of the investment adviser or the consultant. Products purchased from consultants must serve a legitimate need for Boston Partners’ business and may not be acquired to influence a consultant’s recommendation
of Boston Partners.
|
|
Columbia Management:
Like other investment professionals with multiple clients, a Fund’s portfolio manager(s) may face certain potential conflicts of interest in connection with managing both the Fund and other accounts at the same
time. The Investment Manager and the Funds have adopted compliance policies and procedures that attempt to address certain of the potential conflicts that portfolio managers face in this regard. Certain of these conflicts of interest are summarized
below.
|
|
The management of
accounts with different advisory fee rates and/or fee structures, including accounts that pay advisory fees based on account performance (performance fee accounts), may raise potential conflicts of interest for a portfolio manager by creating an
incentive to favor higher fee accounts.
|
|
Potential
conflicts of interest also may arise when a portfolio manager has personal investments in other accounts that may create an incentive to favor those accounts. As a general matter and subject to the Investment Manager’s Code of Ethics and
certain limited exceptions, the Investment Manager’s investment professionals do not have the opportunity to invest in client accounts, other than the funds.
|
|
A portfolio
manager who is responsible for managing multiple funds and/or accounts may devote unequal time and attention to the management of those Funds and/or accounts. The effects of this potential conflict may be more pronounced where Funds and/or accounts
managed by a particular portfolio manager have different investment strategies.
|
|
A
portfolio manager may be able to select or influence the selection of the broker/dealers that are used to execute securities transactions for the Funds. A portfolio manager’s decision as to the selection of broker/dealers could produce
disproportionate costs and benefits among the Funds and the other accounts the portfolio manager manages.
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A potential
conflict of interest may arise when a portfolio manager buys or sells the same securities for a Fund and other accounts. On occasions when a portfolio manager considers the purchase or sale of a security to be in the best interests of a Fund as well
as other accounts, the Investment Manager’s trading desk may, to the extent consistent with applicable laws and regulations, aggregate the securities to be sold or bought in order to obtain the best execution and lower brokerage commissions,
if any. Aggregation of trades may create the potential for unfairness to a Fund or another account if a portfolio manager favors one account over another in allocating the securities bought or sold. The Investment Manager and its Participating
Affiliates (including Threadneedle) may coordinate their trading operations for certain types of securities and transactions pursuant to personnel-sharing agreements or similar intercompany arrangements. However, typically the Investment Manager
does not coordinate trading activities with a Participating Affiliate with respect to accounts of that Participating Affiliate unless such Participating Affiliate is also providing trading services for accounts managed by the Investment Manager.
Similarly, a Participating Affiliate typically does not coordinate trading activities with the Investment Manager with respect to accounts of the Investment Manager unless the Investment Manager is also providing trading services for accounts
managed by such Participating Affiliate. As a result, it is possible that the Investment Manager and its Participating Affiliates may trade in the same instruments at the same time, in the same or opposite direction or in different sequence, which
could negatively impact the prices paid by the Fund on such instruments. Additionally, in circumstances where trading services are being provided on a coordinated basis for the Investment Manager’s accounts (including the Funds) and the
accounts of one or more Participating Affiliates in accordance with applicable law, it is possible that the allocation opportunities available to the Funds may be decreased, especially for less actively traded securities, or orders may take longer
to execute, which may negatively impact Fund performance.
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“Cross
trades,” in which a portfolio manager sells a particular security held by a Fund to another account (potentially saving transaction costs for both accounts), could involve a potential conflict of interest if, for example, a portfolio manager
is permitted to sell a security from one account to another account at a higher price than an independent third party would pay. The Investment Manager and the Funds have adopted compliance procedures that provide that any transactions between a
Fund and another account managed by the Investment Manager are to be made at a current market price, consistent with applicable laws and regulations.
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Another potential
conflict of interest may arise based on the different investment objectives and strategies of a Fund and other accounts managed by its portfolio manager(s). Depending on another account’s objectives and other factors, a portfolio manager may
give advice to and make decisions for a Fund that may differ from advice given, or the timing or nature of decisions made, with respect to another account. A portfolio manager’s investment decisions are the product of many factors in addition
to basic suitability for the particular account involved. Thus, a portfolio manager may buy or sell a particular security for certain accounts, and not for a Fund, even though it could have been bought or sold for the Fund at the same time. A
portfolio manager also may buy a particular security for one or more accounts when one or more other accounts are selling the security (including short sales). There may be circumstances when a portfolio manager’s purchases or sales of
portfolio securities for one or more accounts may have an adverse effect on other accounts, including the Funds.
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To the extent a
Fund invests in underlying funds, a portfolio manager will be subject to the potential conflicts of interest described in
Potential Conflicts of Interest – Columbia Management – FOF (Fund-of-Funds)
below.
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A
Fund’s portfolio manager(s) also may have other potential conflicts of interest in managing the Fund, and the description above is not a complete description of every conflict that could exist in managing the Fund and other accounts. Many of
the potential conflicts of interest to which the Investment Manager’s portfolio managers are subject are essentially the same or similar to the potential conflicts of interest related to the investment management activities of the Investment
Manager and its affiliates.
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Columbia Management
– FoF (Fund-of-Funds):
Management of funds-of-funds differs from that of the other Funds. The portfolio management process is set forth generally below and in more detail in the Funds’ prospectus.
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Portfolio
managers of the fund-of-funds may be involved in determining each funds-of-fund’s allocation among the three main asset classes (equity, fixed income and cash) and the allocation among investment categories within each asset class, as well as
each funds-of-fund’s allocation among the underlying funds.
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Because of the
structure of the funds-of-funds, the potential conflicts of interest for the portfolio managers may be different than the potential conflicts of interest for portfolio managers who manage other Funds.
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The
Investment Manager and its affiliates may receive higher compensation as a result of allocations to underlying funds with higher fees.
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In addition to the accounts
above, portfolio managers may manage accounts in a personal capacity that may include holdings that are similar to, or the same as, those of the Fund. The Investment Manager has in place a Code of Ethics that is designed to address conflicts and
that, among other things, imposes restrictions on the ability of the portfolio managers and other “investment access persons” to invest in securities that may be recommended or traded in the Fund and other client accounts.
To the extent a fund-of-funds
invest in securities and instruments other than other Funds, the portfolio manager is subject to the potential conflicts of interest described in
Potential Conflicts of Interest – Columbia Management
above.
A Fund’s
portfolio manager(s) also may have other potential conflicts of interest in managing the Fund, and the description above is not a complete description of every conflict that could exist in managing the fund and other accounts. Many of the potential
conflicts of interest to which the Investment Manager’s portfolio managers are subject are essentially the same or similar to the potential conflicts of interest related to the Investment Management activities of the Investment Manager and its
affiliates.
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Conestoga:
Like other investment professionals with multiple clients, portfolio managers may face certain potential conflicts of interest in connection with managing both the portion of the Fund’s assets allocated to
Conestoga (Conestoga’s Sleeve) and other accounts at the same time. Conestoga has adopted compliance policies and procedures that attempt to address certain of the potential conflicts that Conestoga’s portfolio managers face in this
regard. Certain of those conflicts of interest are summarized below.
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The management of
accounts with different advisory or sub-advisory fee rates and/or fee and expense structures may raise certain potential conflicts of interest for a portfolio manager by creating an incentive to favor higher fee, or higher profit margin accounts.
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Potential
conflicts of interest also may arise when a portfolio manager has personal investments in other accounts that may create an incentive to favor those accounts. A portfolio manager who is responsible for managing multiple funds and/or accounts may
devote unequal time and attention to the management of those funds and/or accounts. The effects of this potential conflict may be more pronounced where funds and/or accounts managed by a particular portfolio manager have different investment
strategies.
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A portfolio
manager may be able to select or influence the selection of the broker-dealers that are used to execute securities transactions for a fund. A portfolio manager’s decision as to the selection of broker-dealers could produce disproportionate
costs and benefits among Conestoga’s Sleeve and the other accounts the portfolio manager manages.
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A potential
conflict of interest may arise when a portfolio manager buys or sells the same securities for the Conestoga’s Sleeve and other accounts. On occasions when a portfolio manager considers the purchase or sale of a security to be in the best
interests of Conestoga’s Sleeve as well as other accounts, the Conestoga’s trading desk may, to the extent consistent with applicable laws and regulations, aggregate the securities to be sold or bought in order to obtain the best
execution and lower brokerage commissions, if any. Aggregation of trades may create the potential for unfairness to Conestoga’s Sleeve or the Fund or another account if a portfolio manager favors one account over another in allocating the
securities bought or sold.
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“Cross
trades,” in which a portfolio manager sells a particular security held by Conestoga’s Sleeve to another account (potentially saving transaction costs for both accounts), could involve a potential conflict of interest if, for example, a
portfolio manager is permitted to sell a security from one account to another account at a higher price than an independent third party would pay. The Investment Manager has adopted compliance procedures that provide that any transactions between
the Fund and another account managed by Conestoga are to be made at a current market price, consistent with applicable laws and regulations.
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Another
potential conflict of interest may arise based on the different investment objectives and strategies of Conestoga’s Sleeve and other accounts managed by its portfolio manager(s). Depending on another account’s objectives and other
factors, a portfolio manager may give advice to and make decisions for Conestoga’s Sleeve that may differ from advice given, or the timing or nature of decisions made, with respect to another account. A portfolio manager’s investment
decisions are the product of many factors in addition to basic suitability for the particular account involved. Thus, a portfolio manager may buy or sell a particular security for certain accounts, and not for Conestoga’s Sleeve, even though
it could have been bought or sold for Conestoga’s Sleeve at the same time. A portfolio manager also may buy a particular security for one or more accounts when one or more other accounts are selling the security. There may be circumstances
when a portfolio manager’s purchases or sales of portfolio securities for one or more accounts may have an adverse effect on other accounts, including the Fund.
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The portfolio
manager(s) also may have other potential conflicts of interest in managing Conestoga’s Sleeve, and the description above is not a complete description of every conflict that could exist in managing Conestoga’s Sleeve and other accounts.
Many of the potential conflicts of interest to which the Conestoga’s portfolio managers are subject are essentially the same or similar to the potential conflicts of interest related to the investment management activities of the Investment
Manager or other subadvisers of the Fund.
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Columbia WAM:
Like other investment professionals with multiple clients, a Fund’s portfolio manager(s) may face certain potential conflicts of interest in connection with managing both the Fund and other accounts at the same
time. Columbia WAM and the Funds have adopted compliance policies and procedures that attempt to address certain of the potential conflicts that portfolio managers face in this regard. Certain of these conflicts of interest are summarized
below.
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The management of
accounts with different advisory fee rates and/or fee structures may raise potential conflicts of interest for a portfolio manager by creating an incentive to favor higher fee accounts.
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Potential
conflicts of interest also may arise when a portfolio manager has personal investments in other accounts that may create an incentive to favor those accounts. As a general matter and subject to the Investment Manager’s Code of Ethics and
certain limited exceptions, the Investment Manager’s investment professionals do not have the opportunity to invest in client accounts, other than the Funds and the series of Wanger Advisors Trust.
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A portfolio
manager who is responsible for managing multiple funds and/or accounts may devote unequal time and attention to the management of those funds and/or accounts. The effects of this potential conflict may be more pronounced where funds and/or accounts
managed by a particular portfolio manager have different investment strategies.
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A portfolio
manager may be able to select or influence the selection of the broker/dealers that are used to execute securities transactions for the Funds. A portfolio manager’s decision as to the selection of broker/dealers could produce disproportionate
costs and benefits among the Funds and the other accounts the portfolio manager manages.
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A potential
conflict of interest may arise when a portfolio manager buys or sells the same securities for a Fund and other accounts. On occasions when a portfolio manager considers the purchase or sale of a security to be in the best interests of a Fund as well
as other accounts, Columbia WAM’s trading desk may, to the extent consistent with applicable laws and regulations, aggregate the securities to be sold or bought in order to obtain the best execution and lower brokerage commissions, if any.
Aggregation of trades may create the potential for unfairness to a Fund or another account if a portfolio manager favors one account over another in allocating the securities bought or sold.
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“Cross
trades,” in which a portfolio manager sells a particular security held by a Fund to another account (potentially saving transaction costs for both accounts), could involve a potential conflict of interest if, for example, a portfolio manager
is permitted to sell a security from one account to another account at a higher price than an independent third party would pay. Columbia WAM and the Funds have adopted compliance procedures that provide that any transactions between the Fund and
another account managed by Columbia WAM are to be made at an independent current market price, consistent with applicable laws and regulation.
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Another potential
conflict of interest may arise based on the different investment objectives and strategies of a Fund and other accounts managed by its portfolio manager(s). Depending on another account’s objectives and other factors, a portfolio manager may
give advice to and make decisions for a Fund that may differ from advice given, or the timing or nature of decisions made, with respect to another account. A portfolio manager’s investment decisions are the product of many factors in addition
to basic suitability for the particular account involved. Thus, a portfolio manager may buy or sell a particular security for certain accounts, and not for a Fund, even though it could have been bought or sold for the Fund at the same time. A
portfolio manager also may buy a particular security for one or more accounts when one or more other accounts are selling the security (including short sales). There may be circumstances when a portfolio manager’s purchases or sales of
portfolio securities for one or more accounts may have an adverse effect on other accounts, including the Funds.
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A
Fund’s portfolio manager(s) also may have other potential conflicts of interest in managing the Fund, and the description above is not a complete description of every conflict that could be deemed to exist in managing both the Fund and other
accounts. Many of the potential conflicts of interest to which Columbia WAM’s portfolio managers are subject are essentially the same as or similar to the potential conflicts of interest related to the investment management activities of
Columbia WAM and its affiliates.
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DGHM:
The portfolio managers’ management of “other accounts” may give rise to potential conflicts of interest in connection with their management of the investments of the portion of the Fund’s assets
allocated to DGHM (DGHM’s Sleeve), on the one hand, and the investments of the other accounts, on the other. The other accounts include hedge funds, separately managed private clients and discretionary 401(k) accounts (“Other
Accounts”). The Other Accounts might have similar investment objectives as the Fund, be compared to the same index as the Fund, or otherwise hold, purchase, or sell securities that are eligible to be held, purchased, or sold by DGHM’s
Sleeve.
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Knowledge of the
Timing and Size of Fund Trades
. A potential conflict of interest may arise as a result of the portfolio managers’ day-to-day management of DGHM’s Sleeve. The portfolio managers know the size and timing of
trades for DGHM’s Sleeve and the Other Accounts, and may be able to predict the market impact of the DGHM’s Sleeve trades. It is theoretically possible that the portfolio managers could use this information to the advantage of Other
Accounts they manage and to the possible detriment of DGHM’s Sleeve, or vice versa.
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Investment
Opportunities.
DGHM provides investment supervisory services for a number of investment products that have varying investment guidelines. The same portfolio management team works across all investment products.
Differences in the compensation structures of DGHM’s investment products may give rise to a conflict of interest by creating an incentive for DGHM to allocate the investment opportunities it believes might be the most profitable to the client
accounts where it might benefit the most from the investment gains.
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EAM:
The portfolio manager is responsible for managing other accounts invested in the same strategy as the portion of the Fund’s assets allocated to EAM (EAM’s Sleeve). These other accounts include separately
managed accounts for pension funds. In addition, other EAM portfolio managers manage accounts which have similar investment strategies and may invest in some of the same securities as EAM’s Sleeve or the Fund.
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From time to time,
potential conflicts of interest may arise between the portfolio manager’s management of the investments of EAM’s Sleeve, on the one hand, and the management of other accounts, on the other. For example, an investment opportunity may be
suitable for both EAM’s Sleeve and other accounts, but may not be available in sufficient quantities for both EAM’s Sleeve and the other accounts to participate fully. Similarly, there may be limited opportunity to sell an investment
held by EAM’s Sleeve and another account. Whenever decisions are made to buy or sell securities by EAM’s Sleeve and one or more of the other accounts simultaneously, EAM or the portfolio managers may aggregate the purchases and sales of
the securities and will allocate the securities transactions in a manner that it believes to be equitable under the circumstances. As a result of the allocations, there may be instances when EAM’s Sleeve will not participate in a transaction
that is allocated among other accounts or that may not be allocated the full amount of the securities sought to be traded. Another potential conflict may arise when a portfolio manager may have an incentive to allocate opportunities to an account
where EAM and the portfolio manager have a greater financial incentive, such as a performance fee account.
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EAM has
implemented specific policies and procedures (
e.g.
, a code of ethics and trade allocation policies) that seek to address these potential conflicts.
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Loomis
Sayles:
Conflicts of interest may arise in the allocation of investment opportunities and the allocation of aggregated orders among the Funds and other accounts managed by the portfolio managers. A portfolio
manager potentially could give favorable treatment to some accounts for a variety of reasons, including favoring larger accounts, accounts that pay higher fees, accounts that pay performance-based fees, accounts of affiliated companies and accounts
in which the portfolio manager has an interest. Such favorable treatment could lead to more favorable investment opportunities or allocations for some accounts. Loomis Sayles makes investment decisions for all accounts (including institutional
accounts, mutual funds, hedge funds and affiliated accounts) based on each account’s availability of other comparable investment opportunities and Loomis Sayles’ desire to treat all accounts fairly and equitably over time. Loomis Sayles
maintains trade allocation and aggregation policies and procedures to address these potential conflicts. Conflicts of interest also may arise to the extent a portfolio manager short sells a stock in one client account but holds that stock long in
other accounts, including the Funds, or sells a stock for some accounts while buying the stock for others, and through the use of “soft dollar arrangements,” which are discussed in Loomis Sayles’ Brokerage Allocation Policies and
Procedures and Loomis Sayles’ Trade Aggregation and Allocation Policies and Procedures.
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Los Angeles Capital
: Los Angeles Capital has implemented policies and procedures, including brokerage and trade allocation policies and procedures, which Los Angeles Capital believes address the potential for conflicts of interest
associated with managing portfolios for multiple clients to ensure that all clients are treated equitably and fairly. While each client account is managed individually, Los Angeles Capital will, at any given time, purchase and/or sell the same
securities for a number of accounts.
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When appropriate,
Los Angeles Capital will aggregate trades in the same securities for many accounts. In these situations, client accounts will receive the same execution price per share, which will reflect the average of multiple prices if the order was executed in
multiple trades. Accounts participating in an aggregated trade will be charged a pro-rata share of the total commission charges. However, where a client has specified directed brokerage or a specific order strategy (e.g., market on-close), such
transactions may not be aggregated with other orders and may result in commission rates and execution prices that differ from those obtained in an aggregated transaction. In addition, aggregated trades that are partially filled will generally be
allocated on a pro-rata basis, subject to adjustments for factors such as available cash and maintenance of guideline weightings.
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Los Angeles
Capital’s portfolio managers may manage accounts that are charged a performance-based fee alongside accounts with standard asset-based fee schedules. While performance-based fee arrangements may be viewed as creating an incentive to favor
certain accounts over others in the allocation of investment opportunities, Los Angeles Capital has designed and implemented procedures to ensure that all clients are treated fairly and equally, and to prevent conflicts from influencing the
allocation of investment opportunities.
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Los Angeles
Capital regularly rotates the order for the trading of U.S. strategy accounts and non-U.S. strategy accounts. Given the number of different strategies, the customization of guidelines and turnover in accounts, the weekly trade lists for accounts
vary from one account to the next. In a typical week, Los Angeles Capital will begin trading its U.S. strategy accounts followed shortly thereafter by its non-U.S. strategy accounts. While most accounts are traded weekly, some strategies are traded
less frequently. Los Angeles Capital endeavors to complete the rebalancing of accounts to be traded within a trading week using alphas generated at the start of the trading week. Los Angeles Capital’s proprietary accounts may be traded in
rotation with client accounts, after the trading of most client accounts, or on a particular day of the week depending on liquidity, size, model constraints and resource constraints. Los Angeles Capital’s proprietary accounts are invested in
liquid securities. Investment personnel of Los Angeles Capital or its affiliates may be permitted to be commercially or professionally involved with an issuer of securities. Any potential conflicts of interest from such involvement would be
monitored for compliance with the firm's Code of Ethics.
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Manulife
: When a portfolio manager is responsible for the management of more than one account, the potential arises for the portfolio manager to favor one account over another. The principal types of potential conflicts of
interest that may arise are discussed below. For the reasons outlined below, the Fund does not believe that any material conflicts are likely to arise out of a portfolio manager‘s responsibility for the management of the Fund as well as one or
more other accounts. Manulife has adopted procedures that are intended to monitor compliance with the policies referred to in the following paragraphs. Generally, the risks of such conflicts of interests are increased to the extent that a portfolio
manager has a financial incentive to favor one account over another. Manulife has structured their compensation arrangements in a manner that is intended to limit such potential for conflicts of interests. See ―Compensation of Portfolio
Managers below.
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A portfolio
manager could favor one account over another in allocating new investment opportunities that have limited supply, such as initial public offerings and private placements. If, for example, an initial public offering that was expected to appreciate in
value significantly shortly after the offering was allocated to a single account, that account may be expected to have better investment performance than other accounts that did not receive an allocation on the initial public offering. Manulife has
policies that require a portfolio manager to allocate such investment opportunities in an equitable manner and generally to allocate such investments proportionately among all accounts with similar investment objectives.
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A portfolio
manager could favor one account over another in the order in which trades for the accounts are placed. If a portfolio manager determines to purchase a security for more than one account in an aggregate amount that may influence the market price of
the security, accounts that purchased or sold the security first may receive a more favorable price than accounts that made subsequent transactions. The less liquid the market for the security or the greater the percentage that the proposed
aggregate purchases or sales represent of average daily trading volume, the greater the potential for accounts that make subsequent purchases or sales to receive a less favorable price. When a portfolio manager intends to trade the same security for
more than one account, the policies of Manulife generally require that such trades be “bunched”, which means that the trades for the individual accounts are aggregated and each account receives the same price. There are some types of
accounts as to which bunching may not be possible for contractual reasons (such as directed brokerage arrangements). Circumstances may also arise where the trader believes that bunching the orders may not result in the best possible price. Where
those accounts or circumstances are involved, Manulife will place the order in a manner intended to result in as favorable a price as possible for such client.
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A portfolio
manager could favor an account if the portfolio manager‘s compensation is tied to the performance of that account rather than all accounts managed by the portfolio manager. If, for example, the portfolio manager receives a bonus based upon the
performance of certain accounts relative to a benchmark while other accounts are disregarded for this purpose, the portfolio manager will have a financial incentive to seek to have the accounts that determine the portfolio manager‘s bonus
achieve the best possible performance to the possible detriment of other accounts. Similarly, if Manulife receives a performance-based advisory fee, the portfolio manager may favor that account, whether or not the performance of that account
directly determines the portfolio manager‘s compensation. The investment performance on specific accounts is not a factor in determining the portfolio manager‘s compensation. Neither the Advisor nor Manulife receives a performance-based
fee with respect to any of the accounts managed by the portfolio managers.
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A
portfolio manager could favor an account if the portfolio manager has a beneficial interest in the account, in order to benefit a large client or to compensate a client that had poor returns. For example, if the portfolio manager held an interest
in an investment partnership that was one of the accounts managed by the portfolio manager, the portfolio manager would
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have an economic
incentive to favor the account in which the portfolio manager held an interest. Manulife imposes certain trading restrictions and reporting requirements for accounts in which a portfolio manager or certain family members have a personal interest in
order to confirm that such accounts are not favored over other accounts.
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If
the different accounts have materially and potentially conflicting investment objectives or strategies, a conflict of interest may arise. For example, if a portfolio manager purchases a security for one account and sells the same security short for
another account, such trading pattern could disadvantage either the account that is long or short. In making portfolio manager assignments, Manulife seeks to avoid such potentially conflicting situations. However, where a portfolio manager is
responsible for accounts with differing investment objectives and policies, it is possible that the portfolio manager will conclude that it is in the best interest of one account to sell a portfolio security while another account continues to hold
or increase the holding in such security.
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PGIM
: Like other investment advisers, PGIM Fixed Income is subject to various conflicts of interest in the ordinary course of its business. PGIM Fixed Income strives to identify potential risks, including conflicts of
interest, that are inherent in its business, and conducts annual conflict of interest reviews. When actual or potential conflicts of interest are identified, PGIM Fixed Income seeks to address such conflicts through one or more of the following
methods:
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elimination of the
conflict;
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disclosure of the
conflict; or
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management of the
conflict through the adoption of appropriate policies, procedures or other mitigants.
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PGIM Fixed Income
follows the policies of Prudential Financial on business ethics, personal securities trading by investment personnel, and information barriers. PGIM Fixed Income has adopted a code of ethics, allocation policies and conflicts of interest policies,
among others, and has adopted supervisory procedures to monitor compliance with its policies. PGIM Fixed Income cannot guarantee, however, that its policies and procedures will detect and prevent, or result in the disclosure of, each and every
situation in which a conflict may arise.
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Side-by-Side
Management of Accounts and Related Conflicts of Interest. PGIM Fixed Income’s side-by-side management of multiple accounts can create conflicts of interest. Examples are detailed below, followed by a discussion of how PGIM Fixed Income
addresses these conflicts.
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Performance Fees -
PGIM Fixed Income manages accounts with asset-based fees alongside accounts with performance-based fees.
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This side-by-side
management may be deemed to create an incentive for PGIM Fixed Income and its investment professionals to favor one account over another. Specifically, PGIM Fixed Income or its affiliates could be considered to have the incentive to favor accounts
for which PGIM Fixed Income or an affiliate receives performance fees, and possibly take greater investment risks in those accounts, in order to bolster performance and increase its fees.
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Affiliated
accounts - PGIM Fixed Income manages accounts on behalf of its affiliates as well as unaffiliated accounts. PGIM Fixed Income could be considered to have an incentive to favor accounts of affiliates over others.
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Large accounts -
large accounts typically generate more revenue than do smaller accounts and certain of PGIM Fixed Income’s strategies have higher fees than others. As a result, a portfolio manager could be considered to have an incentive when allocating
scarce investment opportunities to favor accounts that pay a higher fee or generate more income for PGIM Fixed Income.
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Long only and
long/short accounts - PGIM Fixed Income manages accounts that only allow it to hold securities long as well as accounts that permit short selling. PGIM Fixed Income may, therefore, sell a security short in some client accounts while holding the same
security long in other client accounts. These short sales could reduce the value of the securities held in the long only accounts. In addition, purchases for long only accounts could have a negative impact on the short positions.
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Securities of the
same kind or class - PGIM Fixed Income sometimes buys or sells for one client account securities of the same kind or class that are purchased or sold for another client at prices that may be different. PGIM Fixed Income may also, at any time,
execute trades of securities of the same kind or class in one direction for an account and in the opposite direction for another account due to differences in investment strategy or client direction. Different strategies trading in the same
securities or types of securities may appear as inconsistencies in PGIM Fixed Income’s management of multiple accounts side-by-side.
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Financial
interests of investment professionals - PGIM Fixed Income investment professionals may invest in certain investment vehicles that it manages, including mutual funds and private funds. Also, certain of these investment vehicles are options under the
401(k) and deferred compensation plans offered by Prudential Financial, Inc. In addition, the value of
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grants under PGIM
Fixed Income’s long-term incentive plan and targeted long-term incentive plan is affected by the performance of certain client accounts. As a result, PGIM Fixed Income investment professionals may have financial interests in accounts managed
by PGIM Fixed Income or that are related to the performance of certain client accounts.
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Non-discretionary
accounts - PGIM Fixed Income provides non-discretionary investment advice to some clients and manages others on a discretionary basis. Trades in non-discretionary accounts could occur before, in concert with, or after PGIM Fixed Income executes
similar trades in its discretionary accounts. The non-discretionary clients may be disadvantaged if PGIM Fixed Income delivers investment advice to them after it initiates trading for the discretionary clients, or vice versa.
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How PGIM Fixed
Income Addresses These Conflicts of Interest. PGIM Fixed Income has developed policies and procedures designed to address the conflicts of interest with respect to its different types of side-by-side management described above.
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The chief
investment officer/head of PGIM Fixed Income periodically reviews and compares performance and performance attribution for each client account within its various strategies during meetings typically attended by members of PGIM Fixed Income’s
senior leadership team, chief compliance officer or his designee, and senior portfolio managers.
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In keeping with
PGIM Fixed Income’s fiduciary obligations, its policy with respect to trade aggregation and allocation is to treat all of its accounts fairly and equitably over time. PGIM Fixed Income’s trade management oversight committee, which
generally meets quarterly, is responsible for providing oversight with respect to trade aggregation and allocation. Its compliance group periodically reviews a sampling of new issue allocations and related documentation to confirm compliance with
the trade aggregation and allocation procedures. In addition, the compliance and investment risk management groups review forensic reports regarding new issue and secondary trade activity on a quarterly basis. This forensic analysis includes such
data as the: (i) number of new issues allocated in the strategy; (ii) size of new issue allocations to each portfolio in the strategy;(iii) profitability of new issue transactions; and (iv) portfolio turnover. The results of these analyses are
reviewed and discussed at PGIM Fixed Income’s trade management oversight committee meetings. The procedures above are designed to detect patterns and anomalies in PGIM Fixed Income’s side-by-side management and trading so that it may
assess and improve its processes.
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PGIM Fixed Income
has procedures that specifically address its side-by-side management of long/short and long only portfolios. These procedures address potential conflicts that could arise from differing positions between long/short and long only portfolios. In
addition, lending opportunities with respect to securities for which the market is demanding a slight premium rate over normal market rates are allocated to long only accounts prior to allocating the opportunities to long/short accounts.
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Conflicts Related
to PGIM Fixed Income’s Affiliations. As an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Prudential Financial, Inc., PGIM Fixed Income is part of a diversified, global financial services organization. PGIM Fixed Income is affiliated with many types of
U.S. and non-U.S. financial service providers, including insurance companies, broker-dealers, commodity trading advisors, commodity pool operators and other investment advisers. Some of its employees are officers of some of these affiliates.
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Conflicts
Arising Out of Legal Restrictions. PGIM Fixed Income may be restricted by law, regulation, contract or other constraints as to how much, if any, of a particular security it may purchase or sell on behalf of a client, and as to the timing of such
purchase or sale. Sometimes these restrictions apply as a result of its relationship with Prudential Financial, Inc. and its other affiliates. For example, PGIM Fixed Income does not purchase securities issued by Prudential Financial, Inc. for
client accounts. In addition, PGIM Fixed Income’s holdings of a security on behalf of its clients are required, under some SEC rules, to be aggregated with the holdings of that security by other Prudential Financial, Inc. affiliates. These
holdings could, on an aggregate basis, exceed certain reporting or ownership thresholds . Prudential Financial, Inc. tracks these aggregated holdings and may restrict purchases to avoid exceeding these thresholds because of the potential
consequences to Prudential Financial, Inc. if such thresholds are exceeded. In addition, PGIM Fixed Income could receive material, non-public information with respect to a particular issuer and, as a result, be unable to execute transactions in
securities of that issuer for its clients. For example, PGIM Fixed Income’s bank loan team often invests in private bank loans in connection with which the borrower provides material, non-public information, resulting in restrictions on
trading securities issued by those borrowers. PGIM Fixed Income has procedures in place to carefully consider whether to intentionally accept material, non-public information with respect to certain issuers. PGIM Fixed Income is generally able to
avoid receiving material, non-public information from its affiliates and other units within PGIM by maintaining information barriers. In some instances, it may create an isolated information barrier around a small number of its employees so that
material, non-public information received by such employees is not attributed to the rest of PGIM Fixed Income.
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Conflicts Related
to Outside Business Activity. From time to time, certain of PGIM Fixed Income employees or officers may engage in outside business activity, including outside directorships. Any outside business activity is subject to prior approval pursuant to PGIM
Fixed Income’s personal conflicts of interest and outside business activities policy. Actual and potential conflicts of interest are analyzed during such approval process. PGIM Fixed Income could be restricted in trading the securities of
certain issuers in client portfolios in the unlikely event that an employee or officer, as a result of outside business activity, obtains material, non-public information regarding an issuer.
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Conflicts Related
to Investment of Client Assets in Affiliated Funds. PGIM Fixed Income may invest client assets in funds that it manages or subadvises for an affiliate. PGIM Fixed Income may also invest cash collateral from securities lending transactions in these
funds. These investments benefit both PGIM Fixed Income and its affiliate.
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PICA General
Account. Because of the substantial size of the general account of The Prudential Insurance Company of America (PICA), trading by PICA’s general account, including PGIM Fixed Income’s trades on behalf of the account, may affect market
prices. Although PGIM Fixed Income does not expect that PICA’s general account will execute transactions that will move a market frequently, and generally only in response to unusual market or issuer events, the execution of these transactions
could have an adverse effect on transactions for or positions held by other clients.
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Conflicts Related
to Co-investment by Affiliates. PGIM Fixed Income affiliates may provide initial funding or otherwise invest in vehicles it manages. When an affiliate provides “seed capital” or other capital for a fund, it may do so with the intention
of redeeming all or part of its interest at a future point in time or when it deems that sufficient additional capital has been invested in that fund.
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The timing of a
redemption by an affiliate could benefit the affiliate. For example, the fund may be more liquid at the time of the affiliate’s redemption than it is at times when other investors may wish to withdraw all or part of their interests.
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In addition, a
consequence of any withdrawal of a significant amount, including by an affiliate, is that investors remaining in the fund will bear a proportionately higher share of fund expenses following the redemption.
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PGIM Fixed Income
could also face a conflict if the interests of an affiliated investor in a fund it manages diverge from those of the fund or other investors. For example, PGIM Fixed Income affiliates, from time to time, hedge some or all of the risks associated
with their investments in certain funds PGIM Fixed Income manages. PGIM Fixed Income may provide assistance in connection with this hedging activity.
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PGIM Fixed Income
believes that these conflicts are mitigated by its allocation policies and procedures, its supervisory review of accounts and its procedures with respect to side-by-side management of long only and long-short accounts.
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Conflicts Arising
Out of Industry Activities. PGIM Fixed Income and its affiliates have service agreements with various vendors that are also investment consultants. Under these agreements, PGIM Fixed Income or its affiliates compensate the vendors for certain
services, including software, market data and technology services. PGIM Fixed Income’s clients may also retain these vendors as investment consultants. The existence of these service agreements may provide an incentive for the investment
consultants to favor PGIM Fixed Income when they advise their clients. PGIM Fixed Income does not, however, condition its purchase of services from consultants upon their recommending PGIM Fixed Income to their clients. PGIM Fixed Income will
provide clients with information about services that it obtains from these consultants upon request.
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PGIM Fixed Income
retains third party advisors and other service providers to provide various services for PGIM Fixed Income as well as for funds that PGIM Fixed Income manages or subadvises. A service provider may provide services to PGIM Fixed Income or one of PGIM
Fixed Income’s funds while also providing services to other PGIM units, other PGIM-advised funds, or affiliates of PGIM, and may negotiate rates in the context of the overall relationship. PGIM Fixed Income may benefit from negotiated fee
rates offered to its funds and vice versa. There is no assurance, however, that PGIM Fixed Income will be able to obtain advantageous fee rates from a given service provider negotiated by its affiliates based on their relationship with the service
provider, or that PGIM Fixed Income will know of such negotiated fee rates.
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Conflicts Related
to Securities Holdings and Other Financial Interests.
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Securities
Holdings. Prudential Financial, Inc., PICA, PGIM Fixed Income and other affiliates of PGIM at times have financial interests in, or relationships with, companies whose securities PGIM Fixed Income holds, purchases or sells in its client accounts.
Certain of these interests and relationships are material to PGIM Fixed Income or to the Prudential enterprise. At any time, these interests and relationships could be inconsistent or in potential or actual conflict with positions held or actions
taken by us on behalf of PGIM Fixed Income’s client accounts. For example:
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PGIM Fixed Income
invests in the securities of one or more clients for the accounts of other clients.
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PGIM Fixed
Income’s affiliates sell various products and/or services to certain companies whose securities we purchase and sell for PGIM Fixed Income clients.
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PGIM
Fixed Income invests in the debt securities of companies whose equity is held by its affiliates.
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PGIM Fixed
Income’s affiliates hold public and private debt and equity securities of a large number of issuers and may invest in some of the same companies as other client accounts but at different levels in the capital structure. For example:
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Affiliated
accounts can hold the senior debt of an issuer whose subordinated debt is held by PGIM Fixed Income’s clients or hold secured debt of an issuer whose public unsecured debt is held in client accounts. In the event of restructuring or
insolvency, the affiliated accounts as holders of senior debt may exercise remedies and take other actions that are not in the interest of, or are adverse to, other clients that are the holders of junior debt.
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To the extent
permitted by applicable law, PGIM Fixed Income may also invest client assets in offerings of securities the proceeds of which are used to repay debt obligations held in affiliated accounts or other client accounts. PGIM Fixed Income’s interest
in having the debt repaid creates a conflict of interest. PGIM Fixed Income has adopted a refinancing policy to address this conflict.
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Certain of PGIM
Fixed Income’s affiliates (as well as directors or officers of its affiliates) are officers or directors of issuers in which PGIM Fixed Income invests from time to time. These issuers may also be service providers to PGIM Fixed Income or its
affiliates.
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In addition, PGIM
Fixed Income may invest client assets in securities backed by commercial mortgage loans that were originated or are serviced by an affiliate.
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In general,
conflicts related to the financial interests described above are addressed by the fact that PGIM Fixed Income makes investment decisions for each client independently considering the best economic interests of such client.
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Conflicts Related
to the Offer and Sale of Securities. Certain of PGIM Fixed Income’s employees may offer and sell securities of, and interests in, commingled funds that it manages or subadvises. There is an incentive for PGIM Fixed Income’s employees to
offer these securities to investors regardless of whether the investment is appropriate for such investor since increased assets in these vehicles will result in increased advisory fees to it. In addition, such sales could result in increased
compensation to the employee.
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Conflicts Related
to Long-Term Compensation. The performance of many client accounts is not reflected in the calculation of changes in the value of participation interests under PGIM Fixed Income’s long-term incentive plan. This may be because the composite
representing the strategy in which the account is managed is not one of the composites included in the calculation or because the account is excluded from a specified composite due to guideline restrictions or other factors. In addition, the
performance of only a small number of our investment strategies is covered under PGIM Fixed Income’s targeted long-term incentive plan. As a result of the long-term incentive plan and targeted long-term incentive plan, PGIM Fixed
Income’s portfolio managers from time to time have financial interests related to the investment performance of some, but not all, of the accounts they manage. To address potential conflicts related to these financial interests, PGIM Fixed
Income has procedures, including trade allocation and supervisory review procedures, designed to confirm that each of its client accounts is managed in a manner that is consistent with PGIM Fixed Income’s fiduciary obligations, as well as with
the account’s investment objectives, investment strategies and restrictions. For example, PGIM Fixed Income’s chief investment officer/head reviews performance among similarly managed accounts on a quarterly basis during meetings
typically attended by members of PGIM Fixed Income’s senior leadership team, chief compliance officer or his designee, and senior portfolio managers.
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Conflicts Related
to Trading – Personal Trading by Employees. Personal trading by PGIM Fixed Income employees creates a conflict when they are trading the same securities or types of securities as PGIM Fixed Income trades on behalf of its clients. This conflict
is mitigated by PGIM Fixed Income’s personal trading standards and procedures.
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In general,
conflicts related to the securities holdings and financial interests described above are addressed by the fact that PGIM Fixed Income makes investment decisions for each client independently considering the best economic interests of such client.
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Conflicts Related
to Valuation and Fees.
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When client
accounts hold illiquid or difficult to value investments, PGIM Fixed Income faces a conflict of interest when making recommendations regarding the value of such investments since its management fees are generally based on the value of assets under
management. PGIM Fixed Income believes that its valuation policies and procedures mitigate this conflict effectively and enable it to value client assets fairly and in a manner that is consistent with the client’s best interests. In addition,
single client account clients often calculate fees based on the valuation of assets provided by their custodian or administrator.
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Conflicts Related
to Securities Lending Fees
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When
PGIM Fixed Income manages a client account and also serves as securities lending agent for the account, it could be considered to have the incentive to invest in securities that would yield higher securities lending rates.
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Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
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127
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TCW:
TCW has policies and controls to avoid and/or mitigate conflicts of interest across its businesses. The policies and procedures in TCW’s Code of Ethics (the “Code”) serve to address or mitigate both
conflicts of interest and the appearance of any conflict of interest. The Code contains several restrictions and procedures designed to eliminate conflicts of interest relating to personal investment transactions, including (i) reporting account
openings, changes, or closings (including accounts in which an Access Person has a "beneficial interest"), (ii) pre-clearance of non-exempt personal investment transactions (make a personal trade request for Securities) and (iii) the completion of
timely required reporting (Initial Holdings Report, Quarterly Transactions Report, Annual Holdings Report and Annual Certificate of Compliance).
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In addition, the
Code addresses potential conflicts of interest through its policies on insider trading, anti-corruption, an employee’s outside business activities, political activities and contributions, confidentiality and whistleblower provisions.
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Conflicts of
interest may also arise in the management of accounts and investment vehicles. These conflicts may raise questions that would allow TCW to allocate investment opportunities in a way that favors certain accounts or investment vehicles over other
accounts or investment vehicles, or incentivize a TCW portfolio manager to receive greater compensation with regard to the management of certain account or investment vehicles. TCW may give advice or take action with certain accounts or investment
vehicles that could differ from the advice given or action taken on other accounts or investment vehicles. When an investment opportunity is suitable for more than one account or investment vehicle, such investments will be allocated in a manner
that is fair and equitable under the circumstances to all TCW clients. As such, TCW has adopted compliance policies and procedures in its Portfolio Management Policy that helps to identify a conflict of interest and then specifies how a conflict of
interest is managed. TCW’s Trading and Brokerage Policy also discusses the process of timing and method of allocations, and addresses how the firm handles affiliate transactions.
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The respective
Equity and Fixed Income Trading and Allocation Committees review trading activities on behalf of client accounts, including the allocation of investment opportunities and address any issues with regard to side-by-side management in order to ensure
that all of TCW’s clients are treated on a fair and equitable basis. Further, the Portfolio Analytics Committee reviews TCW’s investment strategies, evaluates various analytics to facilitate risk assessment, changes to performance
composites and benchmarks and monitors the implementation and maintenance of the Global Investment Performance Standards or GIPS® compliance.
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TCW’s
approach to handling conflicts of interest is multi-layered starting with its policies and procedures, reporting and pre-clearance processes and oversight by various committees.
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Threadneedle:
Threadneedle portfolio managers may manage one or more mutual funds as well as other types of accounts, including proprietary accounts, separate accounts for institutions, and other pooled investment vehicles. Portfolio
managers make investment decisions for an account or portfolio based on its investment objectives and policies, and other relevant investment considerations. A portfolio manager may manage a separate account or other pooled investment vehicle whose
fees may be materially greater than the management fees paid by the Fund and may include a performance-based fee. Management of multiple funds and accounts may create potential conflicts of interest relating to the allocation of investment
opportunities, and the aggregation and allocation of trades. In addition, a portfolio manager’s responsibilities at Threadneedle include working as a securities analyst. This dual role may give rise to conflicts with respect to making
investment decisions for accounts that he/she manages versus communicating his/her analyses to other portfolio managers concerning securities that he/she follows as an analyst.
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Threadneedle
has a fiduciary responsibility to all of the clients for which it manages accounts. Threadneedle seeks to provide best execution of all securities transactions and to aggregate securities transactions and then allocate securities to client accounts
in a fair and timely manner. Threadneedle has developed policies and procedures, including brokerage and trade allocation policies and procedures, designed to mitigate and manage the potential conflicts of interest that may arise from the management
of multiple types of accounts for multiple clients.
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Water Island:
Water Island’s portfolio managers may face certain potential conflicts of interest in connection with their responsibility for managing multiple similar accounts. Other accounts may include, without limitation:
separately managed accounts, registered investment companies, unregistered investment companies such as pooled investment vehicles and hedge funds, and proprietary accounts. Management of multiple accounts can present certain conflicts of interest,
including variation in compensation across accounts, conflicts that may arise from the purchase or sale of similar securities for more than one account, conflicts arising from transactions between accounts, conflicts arising from transactions
involving ‘pilot’ funds, and conflicts arising from the selection of brokers and dealers to effect transactions. Water Island’s compliance team has implemented trading and allocation policies and oversight procedures in order to
closely monitor and ensure equitable treatment of all accounts to address these conflicts.
Variation in Compensation
- A potential conflict
of interest related to variation in compensation may arise where the financial or other benefits available to the portfolio manager differ among the accounts that they manage. A portfolio manager might be motivated to help certain accounts over
others if the structure of the investment adviser’s management fee and/or the portfolio manager’s compensation differs among accounts (such as where certain accounts pay higher
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Statement
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128
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management fees or
performance-based management fees), or if the portfolio manager or Water Island has a greater financial interest in one or more of the accounts. Similarly, the desire to maintain or raise assets under management or to enhance the portfolio
manager’s performance record or to derive other rewards, financial or otherwise, could influence the portfolio manager to lend preferential treatment to those accounts that could most significantly benefit the portfolio manager.
Purchase or Sale of Securities for More Than One Account
- To address these and other potential conflicts of interest, Water Island has implemented policies and procedures designed to allocate securities among the
various accounts it advises in a fair and equitable manner over time. In addition, Water Island has implemented processes for monitoring the effectiveness of these policies and procedures, including periodic reviews of allocations by its compliance
department so as to help ensure equitable treatment. Water Island has also adopted policies and procedures to address certain additional conflicts specifically, as further described below.
Cross
Trades
- “Cross trades,” in which one account sells a particular security to another account (saving transaction costs for both accounts), may also pose a potential conflict of interest. Conflicts may arise if, for example, one
account is permitted to sell a security to another account at a higher price than an independent third party would pay, or if such trades result in more attractive investments being allocated to higher-fee accounts. In an effort to address this
potential conflict of interest, Water Island has adopted compliance procedures that, consistent with applicable law, include Rule 17a-7 under the 1940 Act, provide that any transactions between the advised accounts are to be made for cash without
payment of any commission, spread, or other type of brokerage costs and at an independent current market price. Proposed cross trade must be reviewed and approved by Water Island’s compliance department prior to execution.
Pilot Funds
- Water Island may from time to time establish “pilot” or “incubator” funds for the purpose of testing proposed investment strategies or products prior to accepting assets from
outside investors. These pilot accounts may be in the form of registered investment companies, private funds such as partnerships, or separate accounts. Typically, Water Island or an affiliate supplies the funding for these accounts. Employees of
Water Island, including the portfolio manager(s), may also invest in certain pilot accounts. Pilot funds and accounts may, and frequently do, invest in the same securities as the other accounts managed by Water Island. In an effort to address this
potential conflict of interest, Water Island has adopted a policy to treat pilot accounts in the same manner as client accounts for purposes of trading allocation – neither favoring nor disfavoring them. For example, pilot accounts would be
included in the daily block trade aggregation procedures alongside client accounts (except that pilot accounts do not participate in initial public offerings).
Selection of Brokers/Dealers
- A
portfolio manager may be able to select or influence the selection of the broker/dealers that are used to execute securities transactions. In addition to executing trades, some brokers and dealers provide Water Island with brokerage and research
services (as those terms are defined in Section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”)), which may result in the payment of higher brokerage fees than might have otherwise be available. These services may be
more beneficial to certain accounts than to others. In order to be assured of continuing to receive services considered of value to its clients, Water Island has adopted a brokerage allocation policy embodying the concepts of Section 28(e) of the
Exchange Act. A portfolio manager’s decision as to the selection of brokers and dealers could yield disproportionate costs and benefits among the accounts that they manage, although the payment of brokerage commissions is always subject to the
requirement that Water Island determine in good faith that the commissions are reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research services provided.
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The portfolio
managers may also face other potential conflicts of interest in the management of multiple similar accounts, and the examples above are not intended to provide an exhaustive list or complete description of every conflict that may arise.
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Structure of Compensation
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Analytic Investors:
The compensation structure for WellsCap’s portfolio managers includes a competitive fixed base salary plus variable incentives, payable annually and over a longer term period. WellsCap participates in third party
investment management compensation surveys in order to provide WellsCap with market-based compensation information to help support individual pay decisions.Incentive bonuses are typically tied to relative, pre-tax investment performance of all
accounts under his or her management within acceptable risk parameters. Relative investment performance is generally evaluated for 1- 3- and 5- year performance results, with a predominant weighting on the 3- and 5- year time periods, versus the
relevant benchmarks and/or peer groups consistent with the investment style. This evaluation takes into account relative performance of the accounts to each account’s individual benchmark and/or the relative composite performance of all
accounts to one or more relevant benchmarks consistent with the overall investment style. Research analysts are evaluated on the overall team's relative investment performance as well as the performance and quality of their individual
research.
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AQR
: The compensation for each of the portfolio managers that is a Principal of AQR is in the form of distributions based on the net income generated by AQR and each Principal’s relative ownership in AQR. Net income
distributions are a function of assets under management and performance of the funds and accounts managed by AQR. A Principal’s relative
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Statement
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129
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ownership in AQR
is based on cumulative research, leadership and other contributions to AQR. There is no direct linkage between assets under management, performance and compensation. However, there is an indirect linkage in that superior performance tends to attract
assets and thus increase revenues. Each portfolio manager is also eligible to participate in AQR’s 401(k) retirement plan which is offered to all employees of AQR.
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BMO:
Compensation for BMO’s portfolio managers consists of base salary, which is monitored to ensure competitiveness in the external marketplace. In addition to base salary, portfolio managers have a portion of their
compensation tied to the investment performance of client accounts. The formula for each professional varies according to their level of portfolio responsibility and seniority. Investment professionals also may receive bonuses of restricted share
units or other units linked to the performance of the Bank of Montreal, the indirect owner of BMO Asset Management Corp.
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Boston Partners
: All investment professionals receive a compensation package comprised of an industry competitive base salary and a discretionary bonus and long-term incentives. Through our bonus program, key investment professionals
are rewarded primarily for strong investment performance.
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Typically, bonuses
are based upon a combination of one or more of the following four criteria:
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1. Individual
Contribution: an evaluation of the professional’s individual contribution based on the expectations established at the beginning of each year;
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2. Product
Investment Performance: performance of the investment product(s) with which the individual is involved versus the pre-designed index, based on the excess return;
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3. Investment Team
Performance: the financial results of the investment group; and
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4. Firm-wide
Performance: the overall financial performance of Boston Partners.
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Boston Partners
professional compensation consultants with asset management expertise to annually review our practices to ensure that they remain highly competitive.
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Columbia Management
: Portfolio manager direct compensation is typically comprised of a base salary, and an annual incentive award that is paid either in the form of a cash bonus if the size of the award is under a specified threshold, or,
if the size of the award is over a specified threshold, the award is paid in a combination of a cash bonus, an equity incentive award, and deferred compensation. Equity incentive awards are made in the form of Ameriprise Financial restricted stock,
or for more senior employees both Ameriprise Financial restricted stock and stock options. The investment return credited on deferred compensation is based on the performance of specified Columbia Funds, in most cases including the Columbia Funds
the portfolio manager manages.
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Base salary is
typically determined based on market data relevant to the employee’s position, as well as other factors including internal equity. Base salaries are reviewed annually, and increases are typically given as promotional increases, internal equity
adjustments, or market adjustments.
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Annual incentive
awards are variable and are based on (1) an evaluation of the employee’s investment performance and (2) the results of a peer and/or management review of the employee, which takes into account skills and attributes such as team participation,
investment process, communication, and professionalism. Scorecards are used to measure performance of Columbia Funds and other accounts managed by the employee versus benchmarks and/or peer groups. Performance versus benchmark and peer group is
generally weighted for the rolling one, three, and five year periods. One year performance is weighted 10%, three year performance is weighted 60%, and five year performance is weighted 30%. Relative asset size is a key determinant for fund
weighting on a scorecard. Typically, weighting would be proportional to actual assets. Consideration may also be given to performance in managing client assets in sectors and industries assigned to the employee as part of his/her investment team
responsibilities, where applicable. For leaders who also have group management responsibilities, another factor in their evaluation is an assessment of the group’s overall investment performance.
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Equity incentive
awards are designed to align participants’ interests with those of the shareholders of Ameriprise Financial. Equity incentive awards vest over multiple years, so they help retain employees.
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Deferred
compensation awards are designed to align participants’ interests with the investors in the Columbia Funds and other accounts they manage. The value of the deferral account is based on the performance of Columbia Funds. Employees have the
option of selecting from various Columbia Funds for their deferral account, however portfolio managers must allocate a minimum of 25% of their incentive awarded through the deferral program to the Columbia Fund(s) they manage. Deferrals vest over
multiple years, so they help retain employees.
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Exceptions to this
general approach to bonuses exist for certain teams and individuals. Funding for the bonus pool is determined by management and depends on, among other factors, the levels of compensation generally in the investment management industry taking into
account investment performance (based on market compensation data) and both Ameriprise Financial and Columbia Management profitability for the year, which is largely determined by assets under management.
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For
all employees the benefit programs generally are the same, and are competitive within the financial services industry. Employees participate in a wide variety of plans, including options in Medical, Dental, Vision, Health Care and Dependent
Spending Accounts, Life Insurance, Long Term Disability Insurance, 401(k), and a cash balance pension plan.
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Conestoga:
Each of the Fund’s portfolio managers is a partner of Conestoga. As such, each portfolio manager receives a share of Conestoga’s annual profits, as specified in the manager’s partnership agreement with
Conestoga, from Conestoga’s management of the Fund and all other accounts.
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Columbia WAM:
Portfolio manager direct compensation is typically comprised of a base salary and an annual incentive award that is paid in a combination of a cash bonus, deferred compensation tied to the performance of specified
Columbia Funds, and Ameriprise Financial equity incentive awards.
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Base salary is
typically determined based on market data relevant to the position, as well as other factors including tenure in the organization and broad contribution to the business. Base salaries are reviewed annually, and increases are typically given as
promotional increases, internal equitable adjustments or market adjustments.
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Annual incentive
awards are variable and are based on (i) an evaluation of the individual’s investment performance relating to the funds or accounts the individual manages and, if applicable, relating to the individual’s work as an investment research
analyst, and (ii) the results of a peer and/or management review of the individual, taking into account attributes such as team participation, investment process, communications, and professionalism. Investment performance of portfolios versus
benchmark and/or peer group is generally weighted for the rolling one-, three- and five-year periods, with an emphasis on three-year performance. Consideration is given to the amount of assets the individual manages, and where multiple portfolios
are managed, the relative weighting by assets is taken into account to assess overall performance. Where the individual also has responsibility as a research analyst, an assessment of their performance in that role is also taken into account. For
leaders who have group management responsibilities, an assessment of the group’s overall investment performance is another factor considered.
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Individual awards
are determined by Columbia WAM’s senior management, subject to review by Columbia Management and Ameriprise Financial, from an aggregate annual incentive pool allocated by Columbia Management to Columbia WAM. Funding for the pool is determined
annually by Columbia Management and Ameriprise Financial taking into account historical pool amounts, investment performance, Columbia WAM assets under management, and Columbia Management and Ameriprise Financial profitability for the year.
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Deferred
compensation awards are designed to align participants’ interests with those of investors in the Funds and other accounts they manage. The value of a deferred account is adjusted based on the performance of the funds selected by the
participant from a list of specified Columbia Funds. Portfolio managers must allocate at least 50% of their deferred incentive awards to Columbia Acorn Funds, with at least 25% allocated to the specific Columbia Acorn Funds they manage. Deferrals
vest over multiple years, so they help to retain employees.
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Equity incentive
awards are designed to align participants’ interests with those of the shareholders of Ameriprise Financial. Equity incentive awards vest over multiple years, so they help to retain employees.
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Portfolio managers
and other employees of Columbia WAM participate in a wide variety of benefit programs, including retirement savings and health insurance plans.
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DGHM:
The portfolio managers’ compensation varies with the general success of the firm. Each portfolio manager’s compensation consists of a fixed annual salary, plus additional remuneration based on assets
under management. The portfolio managers’ compensation is not directly linked to the performance of the Fund or other accounts managed by the firm, although positive performance and growth in managed assets are factors that may contribute to
distributable profits and assets under management.
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EAM:
The portfolio manager’s compensation is comprised of a base salary, a revenue allocation and firm profit allocation. The salary is in-line with industry specific benchmarks. The revenue allocation is based on
firm-wide revenue while the profit allocation is based on firm-wide profitability. There is no direct linkage between performance and compensation, however, there is an indirect linkage as superior performance tends to attract and retain assets and
consequently increase revenues and profitability.
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Loomis Sayles:
Loomis Sayles believes that portfolio manager compensation should be driven primarily by the delivery of consistent and superior long-term performance for its clients. Portfolio manager compensation is made up primarily
of three
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131
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main components:
base salary, variable compensation and a long-term incentive program. Although portfolio manager compensation is not directly tied to assets under management, a portfolio manager’s base salary and/or variable compensation potential may reflect
the amount of assets for which the manager is responsible relative to other portfolio managers. Loomis Sayles also offers a profit sharing plan. Base salary is a fixed amount based on a combination of factors, including industry experience, firm
experience, job performance and market considerations. Variable compensation is an incentive-based component and generally represents a significant multiple of base salary. Variable compensation is based on four factors: investment performance,
profit growth of the firm, profit growth of the manager’s business unit and personal conduct. Investment performance is the primary component of total variable compensation and generally represents at least 60% of the total for fixed-income
managers and 70% for equity managers. The other three factors are used to determine the remainder of variable compensation, subject to the discretion of the Chief Investment Officer (“CIO”) and senior management. The CIO and senior
management evaluate these other factors annually.
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Equity Managers
.
While mutual fund performance and asset size do not directly contribute to the compensation calculation, investment performance for equity managers is measured by comparing the performance of Loomis Sayles’
institutional composites to the performance of the applicable Morningstar peer group and/or the Lipper universe. Generally speaking the performance of the respective product’s fund is compared against the applicable Morningstar peer group
and/or the Lipper universe. To the extent the majority of assets managed in the fund strategy are for institutional separate accounts, the Evestment Alliance institutional peer group will also be used as an additional comparison. In situations where
substantially all of the assets for the strategy are institutional, the institutional peer group will be used as the primary method of comparison. A manager’s performance relative to the peer group for the 1, 3 and 5 year periods, (3 and 5 or
10 years for large cap growth, all cap growth and global growth), or since the start of the manager’s tenure, if shorter, is used to calculate the amount of variable compensation payable due to performance. Longer-term performance is typically
weighted more than shorter-term performance (1 year or 3 years for large cap growth, all cap growth and global growth). In addition, the performance measurement for equity compensation usually incorporates a consistency metric using longer term (3,
5, etc.) rolling return compared to the peer group over a sustained measurement period (5, 7, etc. years). However, the exact method may be adjusted to a product’s particular style. If a manager is responsible for more than one product, the
rankings of each product are weighted based on relative revenue of accounts represented in each product. An external benchmark is used as a secondary comparison. The external benchmark used for the MM Growth Strategies Fund is the Russell 1000
Growth Index. Certain portfolio managers also receive additional compensation based on revenue and performance hurdles for their strategies, and performance fee based compensation as portfolio managers for private investment funds.
|
|
In cases where the
institutional peer groups are used, Loomis Sayles believes they represent the most competitive product universe while closely matching the investment styles offered by the Loomis Sayles fund.
|
|
Fixed-Income
Managers. While mutual fund performance and asset size do not directly contribute to the compensation calculation, investment performance for fixed-income managers is measured by comparing the performance of Loomis Sayles’ institutional
composite (pre-tax and net of fees) in the manager’s style to the performance of an external benchmark and a customized peer group. The external benchmark used for the investment style utilized by each fund is noted below. The customized peer
group is created by Loomis Sayles and is made up of institutional managers in the particular investment style. A manager’s relative performance for the past five years, or seven years for some products, is used to calculate the amount of
variable compensation payable due to performance. To ensure consistency, Loomis Sayles analyzes the five or seven year performance on a rolling three year basis. If a manager is responsible for more than one product, the rankings of each product are
weighted based on relative revenue size of accounts represented in each product. Loomis Sayles uses both an external benchmark and a customized peer group as a point of comparison for fixed-income manager performance because it believes they
represent an appropriate combination of the competitive fixed-income product universe and the investment styles offered by Loomis Sayles. The external benchmark used for the MM Total Return Bond Strategies Fund is the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Index.
|
|
In addition to the
compensation described above, portfolio managers may receive additional compensation based on the overall growth of their strategies.
|
|
General.
Most mutual funds do not directly contribute to a portfolio manager’s overall compensation because Loomis Sayles’ uses the performance of the portfolio manager’s institutional accounts compared to an institutional peer group.
However, each fund managed by Loomis Sayles employs strategies endorsed by Loomis Sayles and fits into the product category for the relevant investment style. Loomis Sayles may adjust compensation if there is significant dispersion among the returns
of the composite and accounts not included in the composite.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
132
|
|
Loomis Sayles has
developed and implemented two distinct long-term incentive plans to attract and retain investment talent. The plans supplement existing compensation. The first plan has several important components distinguishing it from traditional equity ownership
plans:
|
■
|
the plan grants
units that entitle participants to an annual payment based on a percentage of company earnings above an established threshold;
|
■
|
upon retirement, a
participant will receive a multi-year payout for his or her vested units; and
|
■
|
participation
is contingent upon signing an award agreement, which includes a non-compete covenant.
|
The second plan is similarly
constructed although the participants’ annual participation in company earnings is deferred for two years from the time of award and is only payable if the portfolio manager remains at Loomis Sayles. In this plan, there are no post-retirement
payments or non-compete covenants.
Senior management expects that
the variable compensation portion of overall compensation will continue to remain the largest source of income for those investment professionals included in the plan. The plan was initially offered to portfolio managers and over time the scope of
eligibility widened to include other key investment professionals. Management has full discretion on what units are issued and to whom.
Portfolio managers also
participate in the Loomis Sayles profit sharing plan, in which Loomis Sayles makes a contribution to the retirement plan of each employee based on a percentage of base salary (up to a maximum amount). The portfolio managers may also participate in
the Loomis Sayles defined benefit pension plan, which applies to all Loomis Sayles employees who joined the firm prior to May 3, 2003. The defined benefit is based on years of service and base compensation (up to a maximum amount).
|
Los Angeles Capital:
Los Angeles Capital’s portfolio managers participate in a competitive compensation program that is aimed at attracting and retaining talented employees with an emphasis on disciplined risk management, ethics and
compliance-centered behavior. No component of Los Angeles Capital’s compensation policy or payment scheme is tied directly to the performance of one or more client portfolios or funds.
|
|
Each of Los
Angeles Capital’s portfolio managers receives a base salary fixed from year to year. In addition, the portfolio managers participate in Los Angeles Capital’s profit sharing plan. The aggregate amount of the contribution to Los Angeles
Capital’s profit sharing plan is based on overall firm profitability with amounts paid to individual employees based on their relative overall compensation. Each of the portfolio managers also are shareholders of Los Angeles Capital and
receive compensation based upon the firm’s overall profits. Certain portfolio managers are also eligible to receive a discretionary bonus from Los Angeles Capital.
|
|
Manulife
: Manulife Asset Management has designed its compensation plan to effectively attract, retain and reward top investment talent. The incentive plan is designed to align and reward investment teams that deliver consistent
value added performance for the company’s client and partners through world-class investment strategies and solutions.
|
|
Investment
professionals are compensated with a combination of base salary and incentives as detailed below.
|
|
Base salaries
|
|
Base salaries are
market-based and salary ranges are periodically reviewed. Individual salary adjustments are based on individual performance against mutually-agreed-upon objectives and development of technical skills.
|
|
Incentives —
Short- and Long-Term
|
|
All investment
professionals (including portfolio managers, analysts and traders) are eligible for participation in a short and long term investment incentive plan. These incentives are tied to performance against various objective and subjective measures,
including:
|
|
Investment
Performance — Performance of portfolios managed by the investment team. This is the most heavily weighted factor and it is measured relative to an appropriate benchmark or universe over established time periods.
|
|
Financial
Performance — Performance of Manulife Asset Management and its parent corporation.
|
|
Non-Investment
Performance — Derived from the contributions an investment professional brings to Manulife Asset Management.
|
|
Awards under this
plan include:
|
|
Annual Cash Awards
|
|
Deferred
Incentives — One hundred percent of this portion of the award is invested in strategies managed by the team/individual as well as other Manulife Asset Management strategies.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
133
|
|
Manulife equity
awards — Investment professionals that are considered officers of Manulife receive a portion of their award in Manulife Restricted Share Units (RSUs) or stock options. This plan is based on the value of the underlying common shares of
Manulife.
|
|
PGIM
: The base salary of an investment professional in the PGIM Fixed Income unit of PGIM is based on market data relative to similar positions as well as the past performance, years of experience and scope of responsibility
of the individual. Incentive compensation, including the annual cash bonus, the long-term equity grant and grants under PGIM Fixed Income’s long-term incentive plans, is primarily based on such person’s contribution to PGIM Fixed
Income’s goal of providing investment performance to clients consistent with portfolio objectives, guidelines and risk parameters and market-based data such as compensation trends and levels of overall compensation for similar positions in the
asset management industry. In addition, an investment professional’s qualitative contributions to the organization and its commercial success are considered in determining incentive compensation. Incentive compensation is not solely based on
the performance of, or value of assets in, any single account or group of client accounts.
|
|
An investment
professional’s annual cash bonus is paid from an annual incentive pool. The pool is developed as a percentage of PGIM Fixed Income’s operating income and the percentage used to calculate the pool may be refined by factors such as:
|
|
- business
initiatives;
|
|
- the number of
investment professionals receiving a related peer group compensation; and
|
|
- investment
performance of portfolios: (i) relative to appropriate peer groups and/or (ii) as measured against relevant investment indices.
|
|
Long-term
compensation consists of Prudential Financial restricted stock and grants under the long-term incentive plan and targeted long-term incentive plan. Grants under the long-term incentive plan and targeted long-term incentive plan are participation
interests in notional accounts with a beginning value of a specified dollar amount. For the long-term incentive plan, the value attributed to these notional accounts increases or decreases over a defined period of time based, in part, on the
performance of investment composites representing a number of PGIM Fixed Income’s investment strategies. With respect to targeted long-term incentive awards, the value attributed to the notional accounts increases or decreases over a defined
period of time based on the performance of either (i) a long-short investment composite or (ii) a commingled investment vehicle. An investment composite is an aggregation of accounts with similar investment strategies. The long-term incentive plan
is designed to more closely align compensation with investment performance and the growth of PGIM Fixed Income’s business. In addition, the targeted long-term incentive plan is designed to align the interests of certain of PGIM Fixed
Income’s investment professionals with the performance of a particular long-short composite or commingled investment vehicle. The chief investment officer/head of PGIM Fixed Income also receives (i) performance shares which represent the right
to receive shares of Prudential Financial, Inc. common stock conditioned upon, and subject to, the achievement of specified financial performance goals by Prudential Financial, Inc.; (ii) book value units which track the book value per share of
Prudential Financial, Inc.; and (iii) Prudential Financial, Inc. stock options. Each of the restricted stock, long-term incentive plan grants, performance shares and book value units and stock options is subject to vesting requirements.
|
|
TCW:
The overall objective of TCW’s compensation program for portfolio managers is to attract experienced and expert investment professionals and to retain them over the long-term. Compensation is comprised of several
components which, in the aggregate, are designed to achieve these objectives and to reward the portfolio managers for their contributions to the successful performance of the accounts they manage. Portfolio managers are compensated through a
combination of base salary, fee sharing based compensation (“fee sharing”), bonus and equity incentive participation in the TCW’s parent company (“equity incentives”). Fee sharing and equity incentives generally
represent most of the portfolio managers’ compensation. In some cases, portfolio managers are eligible for discretionary bonuses.
|
|
Salary.
Salary is agreed to with managers at time of employment and is reviewed from time to time. It does not change significantly and generally does not constitute a significant part of the portfolio manager’s
compensation.
|
|
Fee
Sharing.
Fee sharing for investment professionals is based on revenues generated by accounts in the investment strategy area for which the investment professionals are responsible. In most cases, revenues are
allocated to a pool and fee sharing compensation is allocated among members of the investment team after the deduction of certain expenses (including compensation over a threshold level) related to the strategy group. The allocations are based on
the investment professionals’ contributions to TCW and its clients, including qualitative and quantitative contributions.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
134
|
|
In general, the
same fee sharing percentage is used to compensate investment professionals for investment services related to the Funds is generally the same as that used to compensate investment professionals for other client accounts in the same strategy managed
by MetWest or one of the other TCW-affiliated advisers (together, “the TCW Group”). In some cases, the fee sharing pool includes revenues related to more than one product, in which case each participant in the pool is entitled to fee
sharing derived from his or her contributions to all the included products.
|
|
Investment
professionals are not directly compensated for generating performance fees. In some cases, the fee sharing pool is subject to fluctuation based on the relative pre-tax performance of the investment strategy composite returns, net of fees and
expenses, to that of the benchmark. The measurement of performance relative to the benchmark can be based on single year or multiple year metrics, or a combination thereof. The benchmark used is the one associated with the Fund managed by the
portfolio manager as disclosed in the prospectus. Benchmarks vary from strategy to strategy but, within a given strategy, the same benchmark applies to all accounts, including the Funds.
|
|
Discretionary
Bonus/Guaranteed Minimums.
Discretionary bonuses may be paid out of an investment team’s fee sharing pool, as determined by the supervisor(s) in the department. Investment professionals do not receive fee
sharing or the company has determined the combination of salary and fee sharing does not adequately compensate an investment professional, discretionary bonuses may be paid by the TCW Group. Also, pursuant to contractual arrangements, some
investment professionals received minimum bonuses.
|
|
Equity Incentives.
Management believes that equity ownership aligns the interest of investment professionals with the interests of the firm and its clients. Accordingly, TCW’s key investment professionals participate in equity
incentives through ownership or participation in restricted unit plans that vest over time or unit appreciation plans of TCW’s parent company. The plans include the Fixed Income Retention Plan, Restricted Unit Plan and 2013 Equity Unit
Incentive Plan.
|
|
Under the Fixed
Income Retention Plan, certain investment professionals in the fixed income area were awarded cash and/or partnership units in TCW’s parent company, either on a contractually-determined basis or on a discretionary basis. Awards under this plan
were made in or after 2010 vested over a period of time.
|
|
Under the
Restricted Unit Plan, certain investment professionals in the fixed income and equity areas were awarded partnership units in TCW’s parent company. Awards under this plan vest over time. Vesting is in part dependent on satisfaction of
performance criteria.
|
|
Under the 2013
Equity Unit Incentive Plan, certain investment professionals in the fixed income and equity areas are awarded options to acquire partnership units in TCW’s parent company with a strike price equal to the fair market value of the option at the
date of grant. The options granted under the plan are subject to vesting and other conditions.
|
|
Other
Plans and Compensation Vehicles.
Investment professionals may also elect to participate in the TCW Group’s 401(k) plan, to which they may contribute a portion of their pre—and post-tax compensation to
the plan for investment on a tax-deferred basis.
|
|
Threadneedle:
Direct compensation is typically comprised of a base salary, and an annual incentive award that is paid either in the form of a cash bonus if the size of the award is under a specified threshold, or, if the size of the
award is over a specified threshold, the award is paid in a combination of a cash bonus, an equity incentive award, and deferred compensation. Equity incentive awards are made in the form of Ameriprise Financial restricted stock, or for more senior
employees both Ameriprise Financial restricted stock and stock options. The investment return credited on deferred compensation is based on the performance of specified Threadneedle funds, in most cases including the funds the portfolio manager
manages.
|
|
Base salary is
typically determined based on market data relevant to the employee’s position, as well as other factors including internal equity. Base salaries are reviewed annually, and increases are typically given as promotional increases, internal equity
adjustments, or market adjustments.
|
|
Annual
incentive awards and pool funding are variable and are designed to reward:
|
■
|
Investment
performance, both at the individual and team levels
|
■
|
Client
requirements, in particular the alignment with clients through a mandatory deferral into the company’s own products
|
■
|
Team
cooperation and Values
|
Scorecards are used to measure
performance of Threadneedle funds and other accounts managed by the employee. Prior to 2016, the primary measurement of performance was return versus the relevant benchmark on a 1- and 3-year basis, with a bias towards 3-year performance in order to
incentivize delivery of longer-term performance. In order to provide an integrated global compensation framework to investment employees across all locations, in 2016 performance will be measured versus peer performance wherever appropriate, in
addition to return versus benchmark. In addition, longer-term
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
135
|
performance will be incorporated, using 1-year,
3-year, and 4-year performance in 2016, and 1-year, 3-year, 5-year performance from 2017 onwards, both weighted 10% on the 1-year, 60% on the 3-year, and 30% on the 4 or 5-year. Consideration may also be given to performance in managing client
assets in sectors and industries assigned to the employee as part of his/her investment team responsibilities, where applicable.
Equity incentive awards are
designed to align participants’ interests with those of the shareholders of Ameriprise Financial. Equity incentive awards vest over multiple years, so they help retain employees.
Deferred compensation awards are
designed to align participants’ interests with the investors in the funds and other accounts they manage. The value of the deferral account is based on the performance of those funds. Employees have the option of selecting from various
internal funds for their deferral account. Deferrals vest over multiple years, so they help to retain employees and to align their longer-term interests with those of the investor.
Exceptions to this general
approach to bonuses exist for certain teams and individuals. Funding for the bonus pool is determined by management and overseen by the EMEA Remuneration Committee, and depends on, among other factors, the levels of compensation generally in the
investment management industry taking into account investment performance (based on market compensation data) and both Ameriprise Financial and the asset management business profitability for the year, which is largely determined by assets under
management.
For all
employees the benefit programs generally are the same, and are competitive within the Financial Services Industry. Employees participate in a wide variety of plans, including options in Medical, Health Care, Life Insurance, Long Term Disability
Insurance, and retirement savings plans.
|
Water Island:
Investment professionals are compensated with salary and a bonus based on individual performance, both relative and absolute fund performance, and profitability of Water Island. Profit sharing in Water Island may also
be included as potential compensation. In addition, Water Island believes employee ownership and the opportunity for all employees to hold ownership interests in Water Island fosters teamwork and encourages longevity in tenure. Ownership shares may
be issued to employees based on tenure, position, and contribution to Water Island. Water Island’s policies help ensure that the financial interests of its key investment personnel are aligned with its clients’ financial interests. Water
Island also expends efforts to help ensure it attracts and retains key investment talent. Its goal is to focus its employees on long-term rather than short-term performance and to encourage employee retention.
|
The Administrator
Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC (which
is also the Investment Manager) serves as administrator of the Funds.
Administrative Services Agreement
Prior to the Management Agreement Effective Date listed for each
Fund in the
Investment Management and Other Services – The Investment Manager and Subadvisers – Management Agreement Fee Rates
section, each Fund, except MM Directional Alternative
Strategies Fund, the Adaptive Retirement Funds and the Solution Series Funds was party to the Investment Management Services Agreement and the Administrative Services Agreement with the Investment Manager for advisory and administrative services,
respectively. Each Fund party to these agreements paid the Investment Manager an annual fee for advisory services, as set forth in the Investment Management Services Agreement, and a separate fee for administrative services under the Administrative
Services Agreement. See
Investment Management and Other Services – The Investment Manager and Subadvisers – Investment Management Services Agreement
for information with respect to
the Investment Management Services Agreement. As of the Management Agreement Effective Date for each Fund, these services have been combined under the Management Agreement as described in the
Investment Management and Other Services – The Investment Manager and Subadvisers
section.
Services Provided Under the Administrative Services
Agreement
Pursuant to the terms of the Administrative
Services Agreement, the Investment Manager has agreed to provide all of the services necessary for, or appropriate to, the business and effective operation of each Fund that are not (a) provided by employees or other agents engaged by the Fund or
(b) required to be provided by any person pursuant to any other agreement or arrangement with the Fund.
Administrative Services Fee
Prior to the Management Agreement Effective Date, the
administrative services fee was calculated as a percentage of the daily net assets of each Fund and was paid monthly at the annual rates as set forth in the Administrative Services Agreement.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
136
|
Administrative Services Fees Paid.
The table below shows the total administrative services fees paid by each Fund under the Administrative Services Agreement for the last three fiscal periods. Beginning with the fiscal year ended March
31, 2016, amounts shown are for the period from the first day of the applicable fiscal year through the Fund's Management Agreement Effective Date (see
Management Agreement Fee Schedule
). As
of each Fund's Management Agreement Effective Date, the Fund no longer paid these fees. The table is organized by fiscal year end.
Administrative Services Fees
|
Administrative
Services Fees
|
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending January 31
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
$420
|
$2,208
|
$2,157
(a)
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending March 31
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
N/A
|
392,250
|
938,124
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
N/A
|
71,076
|
214,928
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
N/A
|
1,095,275
|
3,122,847
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30
|
Bond
Fund
|
N/A
|
142,968
|
492,269
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
N/A
|
314,329
|
942,806
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
N/A
|
18,480
|
4,748
(b)
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
N/A
|
243,472
|
930,547
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
705,786
|
2,202,786
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
N/A
|
403,250
|
976,955
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending May 31
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
N/A
|
88,584
|
149,017
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
N/A
|
48,241
|
43,808
(c)
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
N/A
|
29,280
|
23,286
(d)
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
N/A
|
1,293,409
|
3,998,779
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
N/A
|
192,012
|
542,532
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending July 31
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
101,527
|
305,465
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
N/A
|
584,102
|
1,688,311
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
N/A
|
815,484
|
2,394,304
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
4,699
|
3,773
(e)
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
(f)
|
N/A
|
0
|
0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31
|
Balanced
Fund
|
N/A
|
605,430
|
1,412,144
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
N/A
|
1,004,339
|
2,679,269
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
N/A
|
131,266
|
727,538
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
N/A
|
292,437
|
1,140,095
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
N/A
|
139,005
|
490,647
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
N/A
|
48,280
|
181,053
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
N/A
|
0
|
0
|
Greater
China Fund
|
N/A
|
37,315
|
117,428
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
N/A
|
365,736
|
1,201,473
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
N/A
|
202,111
|
609,318
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
N/A
|
349,312
|
638,594
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
N/A
|
985,615
|
2,809,022
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
137
|
|
Administrative
Services Fees
|
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
N/A
|
$126,449
|
$540,729
|
Strategic
Income Fund
(g)
|
N/A
|
497,333
|
1,322,802
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending October 31
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
36,936
|
111,085
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
472,435
|
1,364,016
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
67,735
|
202,872
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
64,375
|
186,753
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
N/A
|
119,000
|
331,278
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
N/A
|
44,957
|
124,233
|
|
2016
|
2015
|
2014
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending December 31
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
$97,784
|
325,962
|
324,853
|
(a)
|
For the period from March 11,
2014 (commencement of operations) to January 31, 2015.
|
(b)
|
For the period from March 27,
2015 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2015.
|
(c)
|
For the period from January 27,
2015 (commencement of operations) to May 31, 2015.
|
(d)
|
For the period from February
19, 2015 (commencement of operations) to May 31, 2015.
|
(e)
|
For the period from March 26,
2015 (commencement of operations) to July 31, 2015.
|
(f)
|
The Fund did not pay an
administrative services fee under the Administrative Services Agreement because payment for such services was included in its Unitary Fee.
|
(g)
|
The Fund changed its fiscal
year end in 2017 from October 31 to August 31.
|
The Distributor
Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc.
(the Distributor), 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02110, an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial and an affiliate of the Investment Manager, serves as the principal underwriter and distributor for the continuous offering of
shares of the Funds pursuant to a Distribution Agreement. The Distribution Agreement obligates the Distributor to use reasonable efforts to find purchasers for the shares of the Funds.
Distribution Obligations
Pursuant to the Distribution Agreement, the Distributor, as agent,
sells shares of the Funds on a continuous basis and transmits purchase and redemption orders that it receives to the Trust or the Transfer Agent, or their designated agents. Additionally, the Distributor has agreed to use reasonable efforts to
solicit orders for the sale of shares and to undertake advertising and promotion as it believes appropriate in connection with such solicitation. Pursuant to the Distribution Agreement, the Distributor, at its own expense, finances those activities
as it deems reasonable and which are primarily intended to result in the sale of shares of the Funds, including, but not limited to, advertising, compensation of underwriters, dealers and sales personnel, the printing and mailing of prospectuses to
other than existing shareholders, and the printing and mailing of sales literature. The Distributor, however, may be compensated or reimbursed for all or a portion of such expenses to the extent permitted by a Distribution Plan adopted by the Trust
pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act. See
Investment Management and Other Services – Distribution and/or Servicing Plans
for more information about the share classes for which the
Trust has adopted a Distribution Plan.
See
Investment Management and Other Services – Other Roles and Relationships of Ameriprise Financial and its Affiliates – Certain Conflicts of Interest
for more information about conflicts
of interest, including those that relate to the Investment Manager and its affiliates.
The Distribution Agreement became effective with
respect to each Fund after approval by its Board, and, after an initial two-year period, continues from year to year, provided that such continuation of the Distribution Agreement is specifically approved at least annually by the Board, including
its Independent Trustees. The Distribution Agreement terminates automatically in the event of its assignment, and is terminable with respect to each Fund at any time without penalty by the Trust (by vote of the Board or by vote of a majority of the
outstanding voting securities of the Fund) or by the Distributor on 60 days’ written notice.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
138
|
Underwriting Commissions Paid by the Funds
The Distributor received commissions and other compensation for its
services as reflected in the following charts, which show amounts paid to the Distributor, as well as amounts the Distributor retained, after paying commissions, for the three most recently completed fiscal years.
Sales Charges Paid to, and Retained by, Distributor
|
Sales
Charges Paid to Distributor
|
Amount
Retained by Distributor
After Paying Commissions
|
Fund
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending January 31
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
$897
|
$0
|
$0
(a)
|
$129
|
$0
|
$0
(a)
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending March 31
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
3,494
|
17,791
|
7,352
|
582
|
2,639
|
1,015
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
322,479
|
1,022,570
|
1,136,315
|
90,630
|
164,470
|
234,232
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30
|
Bond
Fund
|
83,097
|
67,551
|
42,181
|
13,879
|
11,628
|
6,802
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
77,712
|
36,891
|
80,500
|
11,948
|
6,685
|
12,942
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
0
(d)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
0
(d)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
3,509
|
471
|
0
(e)
|
964
|
71
|
0
(e)
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
131,831
|
57,953
|
33,869
|
18,936
|
8,670
|
6,117
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
274,811
|
240,913
|
279,465
|
42,933
|
38,295
|
47,107
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
14,460
|
2,677
|
14,959
|
14,460
|
2,677
|
3,658
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending May 31
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
824,604
|
368,923
|
616,767
|
130,410
|
75,668
|
89,399
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
18,446
|
48,909
|
9,733
(f)
|
4,827
|
7,683
|
1,415
(f)
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
2,953
|
3,037
|
0
(g)
|
440
|
410
|
0
(g)
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
3,212,909
|
1,845,108
|
1,603,065
|
515,080
|
292,895
|
263,988
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
234,286
|
244,719
|
361,055
|
71,094
|
46,510
|
58,286
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending July 31
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
90,822
|
94,063
|
72,678
|
34,931
|
15,790
|
11,662
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
661,707
|
1,084,362
|
1,005,649
|
106,233
|
173,619
|
150,091
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
964,733
|
1,261,223
|
1,557,740
|
165,347
|
206,688
|
239,816
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
32,350
|
11,261
|
0
(h)
|
5,010
|
1,697
|
0
(h)
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
139
|
|
Sales
Charges Paid to Distributor
|
Amount
Retained by Distributor
After Paying Commissions
|
Fund
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31
|
Balanced
Fund
|
$8,664,928
|
$10,975,587
|
$6,281,355
|
$1,490,728
|
$1,701,137
|
$951,730
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
3,965,905
|
4,193,236
|
4,190,663
|
645,801
|
658,542
|
612,550
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
25,856
|
24,451
|
57,817
|
4,520
|
4,216
|
12,448
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
223,934
|
158,125
|
223,116
|
32,578
|
23,619
|
33,697
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
35,778
|
43,430
|
90,766
|
5,599
|
7,019
|
14,294
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
92,604
|
213,270
|
319,897
|
16,283
|
32,963
|
49,263
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
879,116
|
562,528
|
509,917
|
134,413
|
118,082
|
74,714
|
Greater
China Fund
|
29,426
|
27,322
|
112,545
|
5,747
|
11,040
|
21,019
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
217,798
|
358,920
|
317,206
|
31,978
|
54,093
|
48,677
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
0
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
MM
Total Return Bond StrategiesFund
|
|
0
|
0
|
|
0
|
0
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
66,191
|
36,703
|
29,677
|
9,736
|
5,534
|
4,679
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
1,790,951
(i)
|
2,239,469
|
1,355,201
|
338,759
(i)
|
392,648
|
219,886
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending October 31
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
1,061
|
11,020
|
12,062
|
269
|
1,792
|
2,755
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
74,333
|
117,184
|
148,524
|
17,765
|
20,121
|
29,051
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
9,879
|
30,867
|
11,664
|
3,949
|
8,906
|
2,118
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
23,280
|
48,490
|
21,110
|
11,685
|
11,913
|
4,309
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
116,611
|
148,911
|
143,676
|
38,512
|
27,312
|
23,774
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
67,190
|
168,081
|
60,483
|
29,229
|
29,102
|
9,753
|
|
2016
|
2015
|
2014
|
2016
|
2015
|
2014
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending December 31
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
129,130
|
115,646
|
148,666
|
18,689
|
23,378
|
24,627
|
(a)
|
For the period from March 11,
2014 (commencement of operations) to January 31, 2015.
|
(b)
|
The Fund commenced operations
on October 24, 2017, and therefore has no reporting information for periods prior to such date.
|
(c)
|
No historical information is
given for the Fund because the Fund had not commenced operations as of the date of this SAI.
|
(d)
|
For the period from October 17,
2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017.
|
(e)
|
For the period from March 27,
2015 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2015.
|
(f)
|
For the period from January 27,
2015 (commencement of operations) to May 31, 2015.
|
(g)
|
For the period from February
19, 2015 (commencement of operations) to May 31, 2015.
|
(h)
|
For the period from March 26,
2015 (commencement of operations) to July 31, 2015.
|
(i)
|
The Fund changed its fiscal
year end in 2017 from October 31 to August 31. For the fiscal year ended in 2017, the information shown is for the period from November 1, 2016 to August 31, 2017.
|
Part of the sales charge may be paid to selling
dealers who have agreements with the Distributor. The Distributor will retain the balance of the sales charge. At times the entire sales charge may be paid to selling dealers. See the prospectus for amounts retained by financial intermediaries as a
percentage of the offering price.
Distribution and/or
Servicing Plans
The Trustees have adopted
distribution and/or shareholder servicing plans for certain share classes. See the cover of this SAI for the share classes offered by the Funds.
The table below shows the annual distribution and/or
services fees (payable monthly and calculated based on an annual percentage of average daily net assets) and the combined amount of such fees applicable to each share class. The Trust is not aware as to what amount, if any, of the distribution and
service fees paid to the Distributor were, on a Fund-by-Fund basis, used for advertising, printing and mailing of prospectuses to other than current shareholders, compensation to broker-dealers, compensation to sales personnel, or interest, carrying
or other financing charges.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
140
|
|
Distribution
Fee
|
Service
Fee
|
Combined
Total
|
Class
A
|
up
to 0.10%
|
0.25%
|
Up
to 0.25%
(a)(b)
|
Class
A for Multi-Manager Strategies Funds
|
up
to 0.25%
|
up
to 0.25%
|
0.25%
(c)
|
Class
Adv
|
None
|
None
|
None
|
Class
C
|
0.75%
|
0.25%
|
1.00%
(b)(d)
|
Class
Inst
|
None
|
None
|
None
|
Class
Inst2
|
None
|
None
|
None
|
Class
Inst3
|
None
|
None
|
None
|
Class
E
|
0.10%
|
0.25%
|
0.35%
|
Class
R
|
0.50%
|
—
(e)
|
0.50%
|
Class
T
|
up
to 0.25%
|
up
to 0.25%
|
0.25%
(f)
|
Class
V
|
None
|
0.50%
(g)
|
0.50%
(g)
|
Shares
of Ultra Short Term Bond Fund
|
None
|
None
|
None
|
(a)
|
As shown in the table below,
the maximum distribution and service fees of Class A shares varies among the Funds.
|
Funds
|
Class
A
Distribution Fee
|
Class
A
Service Fee
|
Class
A
Combined Total
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund, Alternative Beta Fund, AMT-Free CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, AMT-Free MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, AMT-Free NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Bond Fund, Corporate Income Fund, Diversified Absolute Return Fund, Diversified
Real Return Fund; Emerging Markets Fund, Global Dividend Opportunity Fund, Global Energy and Natural Resources Fund, Greater China Fund, Multi-Asset Income Fund, Pacific/Asia Fund, Select Large Cap Growth Fund, Small Cap Value Fund I, Strategic CA
Municipal Income Fund, Strategic Income Fund, Strategic NY Municipal Income Fund, U.S. Social Bond Fund and U.S. Treasury Index Fund
|
—
|
0.25%
|
0.25%
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, HY Municipal Fund and Tax-Exempt Fund
|
—
|
0.20%
|
0.20%
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Balanced Fund, Contrarian Core Fund, Disciplined Small Core Fund, Dividend Income Fund, Global Technology Growth Fund, Large Cap Growth Fund, Mid Cap Growth Fund, Real Estate Equity Fund, Small Cap Growth Fund I and
Total Return Bond Fund
|
up
to 0.10%
|
up
to 0.25%
|
Up
to 0.35%; these Funds may pay distribution and service fees up to a maximum of 0.35% of their average daily net assets attributable to Class A shares but currently limit such fees to an aggregate fee of not more than 0.25%
|
(b)
|
The annual service fee for
Class A and Class C shares of HY Municipal Fund, AMT-Free Intermediate Muni Bond Fund and Tax-Exempt Fund may equal up to 0.20% of the average daily net asset value of all shares of such Fund class. The annual distribution fee for Class C shares for
AMT-Free Intermediate Muni Bond Fund shall be 0.65% of the average daily net assets of the Fund’s Class C shares. The Distributor has voluntarily agreed to waive the Service Fee for Class A and Class C shares of U.S. Treasury Index Fund so
that the Service Fee does not exceed 0.15% annually. This arrangement may be modified by the Distributor at any time.
|
(c)
|
Class A shares of
Multi-Manager Strategies Funds may pay distribution and service fees up to a maximum of 0.25% of the Fund’s average daily net assets attributable to Class A shares (comprised of up to 0.25% for distribution services and up to 0.25% for
shareholder liaison services).
|
(d)
|
The Distributor has voluntarily
agreed to waive a portion of the distribution fee for Class C shares of the following Funds so that the distribution fee does not exceed the specified percentage annually: 0.45% for AMT-Free CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, AMT-Free MA Intermediate
Muni Bond Fund, AMT-Free NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, AMT-Free OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund, Strategic CA Municipal Income Fund and Strategic NY Municipal Income Fund; 0.60% for Corporate Income Fund; 0.65% for HY Municipal Fund and Tax-Exempt
Fund; and 0.70% for U.S. Treasury Index Fund. These arrangements may be modified or terminated by the Distributor at any time.
|
(e) Class R shares pay a distribution fee pursuant to a
Fund’s distribution (Rule 12b-1) plan for Class R shares. The Funds do not have a shareholder service plan for Class R shares.
(f)
|
The combined distribution fee
and service fee for Class T shares shall not exceed 0.25%.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
141
|
(g)
|
The shareholder servicing fees
for Class V shares are up to 0.50% of average daily net assets attributable to Class V shares for equity Funds and 0.40% for fixed income Funds. In general, the Funds currently limit such fees to a maximum of 0.25% for equity Funds and 0.15% for
fixed income Funds. These fees for Class V shares are not paid pursuant to a Rule 12b-1 plan. See
Class V Shares Shareholder Service Fees
below for more information.
|
If you maintain shares of a Fund directly with the
Fund, without working directly with a financial advisor or financial intermediary, distribution and service fees, as applicable, are retained by the Distributor as payment or reimbursement for incurring certain distribution and shareholder service
related expenses.
Over time, these
distribution and/or shareholder service fees will reduce the return on your investment and may cost you more than paying other types of sales charges. The Fund will pay these fees to the Distributor and/or to eligible financial intermediaries for as
long as the distribution and/or shareholder servicing plans continue in effect. The Fund may reduce or discontinue payments at any time. Your financial intermediary may also charge you other additional fees for providing services to your account,
which may be different from those described here.
The shareholder servicing plans permit the Funds to
compensate or reimburse financial intermediaries for the shareholder services they have provided. The Distribution Plans permit the Funds to compensate or reimburse the Distributor and/or financial intermediaries for activities or expenses primarily
intended to result in the sale of the classes’ shares. Payments are made at an annual rate and paid monthly, as a percentage of average daily net assets, set from time to time by the Board, and are charged as expenses of each Fund directly to
the applicable share class. A substantial portion of the expenses incurred pursuant to these plans may be paid to affiliates of the Distributor and Ameriprise Financial.
Under the shareholder servicing plan, the Board must
review, at least quarterly, a written report of the amounts paid under the servicing agreements and the purposes for which those expenditures were made. The initial term of the shareholder servicing plan is one year and it will continue in effect
from year to year provided that its continuance is specifically approved at least annually by a majority of the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees who have no direct or indirect financial interest in the operation of the
shareholder servicing plan or in any agreement related to it. Any material amendment to the shareholder servicing plan must be approved in the same manner. The shareholder servicing plan is terminable at any time with respect to the Funds by a vote
of a majority of the Independent Trustees.
The
Trustees believe the Distribution Plans could be a significant factor in the growth and retention of a Fund’s assets resulting in more advantageous expense ratios and increased investment flexibility which could benefit each class of Fund
shareholders. The Distribution Plans will continue in effect from year to year so long as continuance is specifically approved at least annually by a vote of the Trustees, including the Independent Trustees. The Distribution Plans may not be amended
to increase the fee materially without approval by vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the relevant class of shares, and all material amendments of the Distribution Plans must be approved by the Trustees in the manner provided
in the foregoing sentence. The Distribution Plans may be terminated at any time by vote of a majority of the Independent Trustees or by vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the relevant class of shares.
Class V Shares Shareholder Service Fees
The Funds that offer Class V shares have adopted a shareholder
services plan that permits them to pay for certain services provided to Class V shareholders by their financial intermediaries. Equity Funds may pay shareholder servicing fees up to an aggregate annual rate of 0.50% of the Fund’s average daily
net assets attributable to Class V shares (comprised of up to 0.25% for shareholder liaison services and up to 0.25% for administrative support services). Fixed income Funds may pay shareholder servicing fees up to an aggregate annual rate of 0.40%
of the Fund’s average daily net assets attributable to Class V shares (comprised of an annual rate of up to 0.20% for shareholder liaison services and up to 0.20% for administrative support services). These fees are currently limited to an
aggregate annual rate of not more than 0.25% for equity Funds and not more than 0.15% for fixed income Funds. These fees for Class V shares are not paid pursuant to a Rule 12b-1 plan. With respect to those Funds that declare dividends on a daily
basis, the shareholder servicing fee shall be waived by the financial intermediaries to the extent necessary to prevent net investment income from falling below 0.00% on a daily basis. The Funds consider “administrative support services”
to include, without limitation, (i) aggregating and processing purchase and redemption orders, (ii) providing beneficial owners with statements showing their positions in the Funds, (iii) processing dividend payments, (iv) providing sub-accounting
services for Fund shares held beneficially, (v) forwarding shareholder communications, such as proxies, shareholder reports, dividend and tax notices, and updating prospectuses to beneficial owners, (vi) receiving, tabulating and transmitting
proxies executed by the beneficial owners, (vii) sub-transfer agent services for beneficial owners of Fund shares and (viii) other similar services. If you maintain shares of a Fund directly with the Fund, without working directly with a financial
advisor or other intermediary, shareholder services fees may be retained by the Distributor as payment or reimbursement for incurring certain shareholder service related expenses.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
142
|
Fees Paid
The table below shows the distribution and/or servicing fees paid
by each Fund during the Fund's last fiscal year (or period). The table is organized by fiscal year end.
Rule 12b-1 Fees
Fund
|
Class
A
|
Class
C
|
Class
R
|
Class
T
|
Class
V
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending January 31
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
$162
|
$415
|
N/A
|
$22
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending March 31
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
5,395,143
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
6,673
|
9,235
|
N/A
|
7
|
N/A
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
2,523,309
|
1,948,597
|
$79,817
|
23,784
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30
|
Bond
Fund
|
140,756
|
108,524
|
6,978
|
25
|
$15,813
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
237,708
|
99,430
|
N/A
|
61,475
|
N/A
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
1,061,513
(a)
|
N/A
(a)
|
N/A
(a)
|
N/A
(a)
|
N/A
(a)
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
1,062
|
2,641
|
N/A
|
24
|
N/A
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
615,253
|
272,557
|
14,605
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
2,323,070
|
541,007
|
10,627
|
1,046,345
|
N/A
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
72,439
|
80,331
|
N/A
|
358,943
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending May 31
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
384,411
|
780,436
|
15,933
|
1,550,105
|
N/A
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
34,800
|
16,453
|
46
|
489,200
|
N/A
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
357
|
142
|
N/A
|
27,871
|
N/A
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
5,750,410
|
7,385,509
|
463,216
|
224
|
190,638
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
340,902
|
502,733
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending July 31
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
125,634
|
184,831
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
(b)
|
4,419,525
|
1,024,524
|
137,651
|
154,824
|
456,438
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
6,155,287
|
974,695
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
9,416
|
7,169
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31
|
Balanced
Fund
|
7,569,839
|
14,108,132
|
490,083
|
2
|
N/A
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
6,061,118
|
7,086,541
|
569,474
|
165,466
|
371,584
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
154,484
|
130,463
|
N/A
|
459
|
146,821
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
615,340
|
193,689
|
50,187
|
90,096
|
N/A
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
259,598
|
90,701
|
8,339
|
5
|
N/A
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
221,768
|
145,380
|
45,637
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
469,830
|
753,103
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Greater
China Fund
|
143,698
|
95,013
|
N/A
|
5
|
N/A
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
2,117,819
|
437,457
|
77,454
|
340
|
54,239
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
891,194
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
1,303,432
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
8,847,864
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
444,679
|
129,421
|
7,051
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
143
|
Fund
|
Class
A
|
Class
C
|
Class
R
|
Class
T
|
Class
V
|
Strategic
Income Fund
(c)
|
$2,848,122
|
$2,719,573
|
$24,995
|
$21
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending October 31
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
19,635
|
33,438
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
$16,176
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
417,368
|
429,322
|
N/A
|
15
(d)
|
20,260
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
49,870
|
62,131
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
26,998
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
45,609
|
139,124
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
10,047
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
867,098
|
346,116
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
370,617
|
203,124
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending December 31
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
304,416
|
180,603
|
44,163
|
64
|
N/A
|
(a)
|
For the period from October 17,
2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017.
|
(b)
|
The Fund paid distribution
and/or service fees of $51,598 for Class E shares and $8,388 for Class F shares for the fiscal year ended 2017.
|
(c)
|
The Fund changed its fiscal
year end in 2017 from October 31 to August 31. For the fiscal year ended in 2017, the information shown is for the period from November 1, 2016 to August 31, 2017.
|
(d)
|
For the period from April 3,
2017 to October 31, 2017.
|
Other
Services Provided
The Transfer Agent
Columbia Management
Investment Services Corp. is the transfer agent for the Funds. The Transfer Agent is located at 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02110. Under the Transfer Agency Agreement, the Transfer Agent provides transfer agency, dividend disbursing and
shareholder services to the Funds, for which the Funds pay transfer agency fees based on the cost of servicing the Funds and a target profit margin. The Funds pay the Transfer Agent an annual fee payable monthly that varies by account type (on a per
account or asset-based basis). With respect to Class Inst3 shares, the annual rate for transfer agency fees is currently capped at 0.02%. As described below under
Other Practices – Additional
Shareholder Servicing Payments
, transfer agency fees for Class Inst2 shares are also subject to an expense limitation.
In addition to the fees above, the Funds pay a fee
for shareholder services provided by financial intermediaries who maintain shares through omnibus or networked accounts. See
Other Practices – Additional Shareholder Servicing Payments
for more information.
The Funds also pay certain
reimbursable out-of-pocket expenses of the Transfer Agent. The Transfer Agent also may retain as additional compensation for its services revenues for fees for wire, telephone and redemption orders, IRA trustee agent fees and account transcripts due
the Transfer Agent from Fund shareholders and credits (net of bank charges) earned with respect to balances in accounts the Transfer Agent maintains in connection with its services to the Funds. Transfer agency costs for each Fund are calculated
separately for each of (i) Class Inst2 shares, (ii) Class Inst3 shares, and (iii) all other share classes.
The fees paid to the Transfer Agent may be changed
by the Board without shareholder approval.
The
Transfer Agent retains DST, 2000 Crown Colony Drive, Quincy, MA 02169 as the Funds’ sub-transfer agent. DST assists the Transfer Agent in carrying out its duties.
The Custodian
The Funds' securities and cash are held pursuant to a custodian
agreement with JPMorgan, 1 Chase Manhattan Plaza, 19th Floor, New York, NY 10005. JPMorgan is responsible for safeguarding the Funds' cash and securities, receiving and delivering securities and collecting the Funds' interest and dividends. The
custodian is permitted to deposit some or all of its securities in central depository systems as allowed by federal law. For its services, each Fund pays its custodian a maintenance charge and a charge per transaction in addition to reimbursing the
custodian’s out-of-pocket expenses.
As
part of this arrangement, securities purchased outside the United States are maintained in the custody of various foreign branches of JPMorgan or in other financial institutions as permitted by law and by the Funds' custodian agreement.
Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
PwC, which is located at 45 South Seventh Street, Suite 3400,
Minneapolis, MN 55402, is the Funds' independent registered public accounting firm. The financial statements contained in each Fund’s Annual Report were audited by PwC. The Board has selected PwC as the independent registered public accounting
firm to audit the Funds' books and review their tax returns for their respective fiscal years.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
144
|
The
Report of
Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
and the audited financial statements are included in the annual report to shareholders of each Fund, and are incorporated herein by reference. No other parts of the annual or semi-annual reports
to shareholders are incorporated by reference herein. The audited financial statements incorporated by reference into the Funds' prospectuses and this SAI have been so incorporated in reliance upon the report of the independent registered public
accounting firm, given on its authority as an expert in auditing and accounting.
Counsel
Ropes & Gray LLP serves as legal counsel to the Trust. Its
address is Prudential Tower, 800 Boylston St., Boston, Massachusetts 02199. Vedder Price P.C. serves as co-counsel. Its address is 1401 I Street N.W., Suite 1100, Washington, DC 20005.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
145
|
Expense Limitations
The Investment Manager and certain of its affiliates
have agreed to waive fees and/or reimburse certain expenses, subject to certain exclusions described in a Fund’s prospectus, so that certain Funds’ net operating expenses, after giving effect to fees waived/expenses reimbursed and any
balance credits and/or overdraft charges from the Fund’s custodian, do not exceed specified rates for specified time periods, also as described in a Fund’s prospectus.
The table below shows the total Fund level expenses
reimbursed by the Investment Manager and its affiliates for the last three fiscal periods. The table is organized by fiscal year end.
Expenses Reimbursed
|
Amounts
Reimbursed
|
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending January 31
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
$135,013
|
$153,869
|
$176,999
(a)
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending March 31
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30
|
Bond
Fund
|
784,175
|
908,180
|
752,335
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
555,872
|
476,459
|
89,583
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
268,331
(d)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
330,226
|
411,083
|
64,010
(e)
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
43,690
|
1,923
|
0
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
1,085,663
|
1,507,986
|
2,029,498
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
1,625,963
|
1,037,002
|
677,252
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending May 31
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
0
|
331,893
|
633,805
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
183,218
|
976,916
|
335,108
(f)
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
354,486
|
392,299
|
90,008
(g)
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
570,809
|
788,955
|
770,550
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending July 31
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
0
|
39,812
|
153,915
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
146
|
|
Amounts
Reimbursed
|
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
$207,641
|
$217,320
|
$69,661
(h)
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
88,030
|
83,758
|
93,709
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31
|
Balanced
Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
104,936
|
38,331
|
0
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
277,910
|
0
|
0
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
803,209
|
767,205
|
446,626
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Greater
China Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
2,192,588
|
1,786,978
|
1,694,733
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
186,196
|
135,594
|
0
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
0
(i)
|
97,786
|
627,722
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending October 31
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
201,139
|
277,658
|
288,981
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
1,306,973
|
2,078,361
|
2,569,822
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
311,514
|
446,678
|
462,338
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
430,003
|
591,994
|
576,794
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
75,096
|
348,734
|
457,819
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
122,135
|
226,407
|
244,644
|
|
2016
|
2015
|
2014
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending December 31
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
(a)
|
For the period from March 11,
2014 (commencement of operations) to January 31, 2015.
|
(b)
|
The Fund commenced operations
on October 24, 2017, and therefore has no reporting information for periods prior to such date.
|
(c)
|
No historical information is
given for the Fund because the Fund had not commenced operations as of the date of this SAI.
|
(d)
|
For the period from October 17,
2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017.
|
(e)
|
For the period from March 27,
2015 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2015.
|
(f)
|
For the period from January 27,
2015 (commencement of operations) to May 31, 2015.
|
(g)
|
For the period from February
19, 2015 (commencement of operations) to May 31, 2015.
|
(h)
|
For the period from March 26,
2015 (commencement of operations) to July 31, 2015.
|
(i)
|
The Fund changed its fiscal
year end in 2017 from October 31 to August 31. For the fiscal year ended in 2017, the information shown is for the period from November 1, 2016 to August 31, 2017.
|
The table below shows the total fees waived by the
Investment Manager and its affiliates for the last three fiscal periods. If a Fund is not shown, there were no fees waived for the relevant fiscal periods. The table is organized by fiscal year end.
Fees Waived
|
Fees
Waived
|
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30
|
Bond
Fund
|
$0
|
$0
|
$5,339
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
17,580
|
19,565
|
22,458
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
147
|
|
Fees
Waived
|
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
$0
|
$0
|
$63,536
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
63,033
|
44,856
|
28,560
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending May 31
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
635,534
|
214,103
|
28,890
(a)
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
59,246
|
42,675
|
30,431
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending July 31
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
79,310
|
78,724
|
76,493
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
114,808
|
107,301
|
160,023
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
387
|
0
|
0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
3,940
|
0
|
0
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
28,676
|
0
|
0
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
327,050
|
201,700
|
66,602
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
8,952
(b)
|
0
|
0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending October 31
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
14,338
|
18,599
|
18,684
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
26,642
|
29,880
|
29,586
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
59,696
|
67,077
|
57,409
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
148,406
|
149,221
|
127,240
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
87,538
|
76,118
|
53,321
|
(a)
|
For the period from January 27,
2015 (commencement of operations) to May 31, 2015.
|
(b)
|
The Fund changed its fiscal
year end in 2017 from October 31 to August 31. For the fiscal year ended in 2017, the information shown is for the period from November 1, 2016 to August 31, 2017.
|
Other Roles and Relationships of Ameriprise Financial and Its
Affiliates —
Certain Conflicts of Interest
As described above in the
Investment Management and Other Services
section of this SAI, and in the
More Information About the Fund – Primary Service Providers
section of each
Fund's prospectus, the Investment Manager, Distributor and Transfer Agent, all affiliates of Ameriprise Financial, receive compensation from the Funds for the various services they provide to the Funds. Additional information as to the specific
terms regarding such compensation is set forth in these affiliated service providers’ contracts with the Funds, each of which typically is included as an exhibit to Part C of each Fund's registration statement.
In many instances, the compensation paid to the
Investment Manager and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates for the services they provide to the Funds is based, in some manner, on the size of the Funds' assets under management. As the size of the Funds' assets under management grows, so does the
amount of compensation paid to the Investment Manager and, as the case may be, other Ameriprise Financial affiliates for providing services to the Funds. This relationship between Fund assets and any affiliated service provider compensation may
create economic and other conflicts of interests of which Fund investors should be aware. These potential conflicts of interest, as well as additional ones, are discussed in detail below and also are addressed in other disclosure materials,
including the Funds' prospectuses. Many of these conflicts of interest also are highlighted in account documentation and other disclosure materials of Ameriprise Financial affiliates that make available or offer the Columbia Funds as investments in
connection with their respective products and services. In addition, Parts 1A and 2A of the Investment Manager’s Form ADV, which it must file with the SEC as an investment adviser registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, provide
information about the Investment Manager’s business, assets under management, affiliates and potential conflicts of interest. Parts 1A and 2A of the Investment Manager’s Form ADV are available online through the SEC’s website at
www.adviserinfo.sec.gov.
Additional actual or
potential conflicts of interest and certain investment activity limitations that could affect the Funds may arise from the financial services activities of Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates, including, for example, the investment
advisory/management services provided for clients and customers other than the Funds. Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates are engaged in a wide range of financial activities beyond the fund-related activities of the Investment Manager,
including,
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
148
|
among others, broker-dealer (sales and trading), asset management,
insurance and other financial activities. The broad range of financial services activities of Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates may involve multiple advisory, transactional, lending, financial and other interests in securities and other
instruments, and in companies, that may be bought, sold or held by the Funds. The following describes certain actual and potential conflicts of interest that may be presented.
Actual and Potential Conflicts of Interest Related to
the Investment Advisory/Management Activities of Ameriprise Financial and its Affiliates in Connection With Other Advised/Managed Funds and Accounts
The Investment Manager, Ameriprise Financial and other affiliates
of Ameriprise Financial may advise or manage funds and accounts other than the Funds. In this regard, Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates may provide investment advisory/management and other services to other advised/managed funds and accounts
that are similar to those provided to the Funds. The Investment Manager and Ameriprise Financial’s other investment adviser affiliates (including, for example, Columbia Wanger Asset Management, LLC) will give investment advice to and make
investment decisions for advised/managed funds and accounts, including the Funds, as they believe to be in that fund’s and/or account’s best interests, consistent with their fiduciary duties. The Funds and the other advised/managed funds
and accounts of Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates are separately and potentially divergently managed, and there is no assurance that any investment advice Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates give to other advised/managed funds and accounts
will also be given simultaneously or otherwise to the Funds.
A variety of other actual and potential conflicts of
interest may arise from the advisory relationships of the Investment Manager, Ameriprise Financial and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates with other clients and customers. Advice given to the Funds and/or investment decisions made for the Funds
by the Investment Manager or other Ameriprise Financial affiliates may differ from, or may conflict with, advice given to and/or investment decisions made by the Investment Manager, Ameriprise Financial and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates for
other advised/managed funds and accounts. As a result, the performance of the Funds may differ from the performance of other funds or accounts advised/managed by the Investment Manager, Ameriprise Financial or other Ameriprise Financial affiliates.
Similarly, a position taken by Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates, including the Investment Manager, on behalf of other funds or accounts may be contrary to a position taken on behalf of the Funds. Moreover, Ameriprise Financial and its
affiliates, including the Investment Manager, may take a position on behalf of other advised/managed funds and accounts, or for their own proprietary accounts, that is adverse to companies or other issuers in which the Funds are invested. For
example, the Funds may hold equity securities of a company while another advised/managed fund or account may hold debt securities of the same company. If the portfolio company were to experience financial difficulties, it might be in the best
interest of the Funds for the company to reorganize while the interests of the other advised/managed fund or account might be better served by the liquidation of the company. This type of conflict of interest could arise as the result of
circumstances that cannot be generally foreseen within the broad range of investment advisory/management activities in which Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates engage.
Investment transactions made on behalf of other
funds or accounts advised/managed by the Investment Manager, Ameriprise Financial or other Ameriprise Financial affiliates also may have a negative effect on the value, price or investment strategies of the Funds. For example, this could occur if
another advised/managed fund or account implements an investment decision ahead of, or at the same time as, the Funds and causes the Funds to experience less favorable trading results than they otherwise would have experienced based on market
liquidity factors. In addition, the other funds and accounts advised/managed by the Investment Manager, Ameriprise Financial and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates, including the other Columbia Funds and accounts of Ameriprise Financial and its
affiliates, may have the same or very similar investment objective and strategies as the Funds. In this situation, the allocation of, and competition for, investment opportunities among the Funds and other funds and/or accounts advised/managed by
the Investment Manager, Ameriprise Financial or other Ameriprise Financial affiliates may create conflicts of interest especially where, for example, limited investment availability is involved. The Investment Manager has adopted policies and
procedures designed to address the allocation of investment opportunities among the Funds and other funds and accounts advised by the Investment Manager, Ameriprise Financial and other affiliates of Ameriprise Financial. For more information, see
Investment Management and Other Services – The Investment Manager and Subadvisers – Portfolio Managers – Potential Conflicts of Interest
.
Sharing of Information among Advised/Managed
Accounts
Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates, including
the Investment Manager, also may possess information that could be material to the management of a Fund and may not be able to, or may determine not to, share that information with the Fund, even though the information might be beneficial to the
Fund. This information may include actual knowledge regarding the particular investments and transactions of other advised/managed funds and accounts, as well as proprietary investment, trading and other market research, analytical and technical
models, and new investment techniques, strategies and opportunities. Depending on the context, Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates generally will have no obligation to share any such information with the Funds. In general, employees of
Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates, including the portfolio managers of the Investment Manager, will make investment decisions without regard to information otherwise known by other employees of Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates, and
generally will have no obligation to access any such information and may, in some instances, not be able to access
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such information because of legal and regulatory constraints or the
internal policies and procedures of Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates. For example, if the Investment Manager or another Ameriprise Financial affiliate, or their respective employees, come into possession of non-public information regarding
another advised/managed fund or account, they may be prohibited by legal and regulatory constraints, or internal policies and procedures, from using that information in connection with transactions made on behalf of the Funds. For more information,
see
Investment Management and Other Services – The Investment Manager and Subadvisers – Portfolio Managers – Potential Conflicts of Interest
.
Soft Dollar Benefits
Certain products and services, commonly referred to as “soft
dollar services” (including, to the extent permitted by law, research reports, economic and financial data, financial publications, proxy analysis, computer databases and other research-oriented materials), that the Investment Manager may
receive in connection with brokerage services provided to a Fund may have the inadvertent effect of disproportionately benefiting other advised/managed funds or accounts. This could happen because of the relative amount of brokerage services
provided to a Fund as compared to other advised/managed funds or accounts, as well as the relative compensation paid by a Fund.
Services Provided to Other Advised/Managed
Accounts
Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates, including
the Investment Manager, Distributor and Transfer Agent, also may act as an investment adviser, investment manager, administrator, transfer agent, custodian, trustee, broker-dealer, agent, or in another capacity, for advised/managed funds and
accounts other than the Funds, and may receive compensation for acting in such capacity. This compensation that the Investment Manager, Distributor and Transfer Agent and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates receive could be greater than the
compensation Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates receive for acting in the same or similar capacity for the Funds. In addition, the Investment Manager, Distributor and Transfer Agent and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates may receive other
benefits, including enhancement of new or existing business relationships. This compensation and/or the benefits that Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates may receive from other advised/managed funds and accounts and other relationships could
potentially create incentives to favor other advised/managed funds and accounts over the Funds. Trades made by Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates for the Funds may be, but are not required to be, aggregated with trades made for other funds and
accounts advised/managed by the Investment Manager and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates. If trades are aggregated among the Funds and those other funds and accounts, the various prices of the securities being traded may be averaged, which could
have the potential effect of disadvantaging the Funds as compared to the other funds and accounts with which trades were aggregated.
Proxy Voting
The Investment Manager has adopted
proxy voting policies and procedures that are designed to provide that all proxy voting is done in the best economic interests of its clients, including the Funds, without regard to any resulting benefit or detriment to the Investment Manager and/or
its affiliates, including Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates. Although the Investment Manager endeavors to make all proxy voting decisions with respect to the interests of the Funds for which it is responsible in accordance with its proxy
voting policies and procedures, the Investment Manager’s proxy voting decisions with respect to a Fund’s portfolio securities may or may not benefit Ameriprise Financial or other affiliates of the Investment Manager or other
advised/managed funds and accounts, and/or clients, of Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates. For more information about the Funds' proxy voting policies and procedures, see
Investment Management
and Other Services – Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures
.
Certain Trading Activities
The directors/trustees, officers and employees of Ameriprise
Financial and its affiliates may buy and sell securities or other investments for their own accounts, and in doing so may take a position that is adverse to the Funds. In order to reduce the possibility that such personal investment activities of
the directors/trustees, officers and employees of Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates will materially adversely affect the Funds, Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates have adopted policies and procedures, and the Funds, the Board, the
Investment Manager and the Distributor have each adopted a Code of Ethics that addresses such personal investment activities. For more information, see
Investment Management and Other Services
– Codes of Ethics
.
Affiliate
Transactions
Subject to applicable legal and regulatory
requirements, a Fund may enter into transactions in which Ameriprise Financial and/or its affiliates, or companies that are deemed to be affiliates of a Fund because of, among other factors, their or their affiliates’ ownership or control of
shares of the Fund, may have an interest that potentially conflicts with the interests of the Fund. For example, an affiliate of Ameriprise Financial may sell securities to a Fund from an offering in which it is an underwriter or that it owns as a
dealer, subject to applicable legal and regulatory requirements. Applicable legal and regulatory requirements also may prevent a Fund from engaging in transactions with an affiliate of the Fund, which may include Ameriprise Financial and its
affiliates, or from participating in an investment opportunity in which an affiliate of a Fund participates.
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Certain Investment Limitations
Regulatory and other restrictions may limit a Fund’s
investment activities in various ways. For example, certain securities may be subject to ownership limitations due to regulatory limits on investments in certain industries (such as, for example, banking and insurance) and markets (such as emerging
or international markets), or certain transactions (such as those involving certain derivatives or other instruments) or mechanisms imposed by certain issuers (such as, among others, poison pills). Certain of these restrictions may impose limits on
the aggregate amount of investments that may be made by affiliated investors in the aggregate or in individual issuers. In these circumstances, the Investment Manager may be prevented from acquiring securities for a Fund (that it might otherwise
prefer to acquire) if the acquisition would cause the Fund and its affiliated investors to exceed an applicable limit. These types of regulatory and other applicable limits are complex and vary significantly in different contexts including, among
others, from country to country, industry to industry and issuer to issuer. The Investment Manager has policies and procedures designed to monitor and interpret these limits. Nonetheless, given the complexity of these limits, the Investment Manager
and/or its affiliates may inadvertently breach these limits, and a Fund may therefore be required to sell securities that it might otherwise prefer to hold in order to comply with such limits. In addition, aggregate ownership limitations could cause
performance dispersion among funds and accounts managed by the Investment Manager with similar investment objectives and strategies and portfolio management teams. For example, if further purchases in an issuer are restricted due to regulatory or
other reasons, a portfolio manager would not be able to acquire securities or other assets of an issuer for a new Fund that may already be held by other funds and accounts with the same/similar investment objectives and strategies that are managed
by the same portfolio management team. The Investment Manager may also choose to limit purchases in an issuer to a certain threshold for risk management purposes. If the holdings of the Investment Manager’s affiliates are included in that
limitation, a Fund may be more limited in its ability to purchase a particular security or other asset than if the holdings of the Investment Manager’s affiliates had been excluded from the limitation. At certain times, a Fund may be
restricted in its investment activities because of relationships that an affiliate of the Fund, which may include Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates, may have with the issuers of securities. This could happen, for example, if a Fund desired to
buy a security issued by a company for which Ameriprise Financial or an affiliate serves as underwriter. In any of these scenarios, a Fund’s inability to participate (or participate further) in a particular investment, despite a portfolio
manager’s desire to so participate, may negatively impact Fund performance. The internal policies and procedures of Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates covering these types of restrictions and addressing similar issues also may at times
restrict a Fund’s investment activities. See also
About Fund Investments – Certain Investment Activity Limits
.
Actual and Potential Conflicts of Interest Related to
Ameriprise Financial and its Affiliates’ Non-Advisory Relationships with Clients and Customers other than the Funds
The financial relationships that Ameriprise Financial and its
affiliates may have with companies and other entities in which a Fund may invest can give rise to actual and potential conflicts of interest. Subject to applicable legal and regulatory requirements, a Fund may invest (a) in the securities of
Ameriprise Financial and/or its affiliates and/or in companies in which Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates have an equity, debt or other interest, and/or (b) in the securities of companies held by other Columbia Funds. The purchase, holding and
sale of such securities by a Fund may enhance the profitability and the business interests of Ameriprise Financial and/or its affiliates and/or other Columbia Funds. There also may be limitations as to the sharing with the Investment Manager of
information derived from the non-investment advisory/management activities of Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates because of legal and regulatory constraints and internal policies and procedures (such as information barriers and ethical walls).
Because of these limitations, Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates generally will not share information derived from its non-investment advisory/management activities with the Investment Manager.
Actual and Potential Conflicts of Interest Related to
Ameriprise Financial Affiliates’ Marketing and Use of the Columbia Funds as Investment Options
Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates also provide a variety of
products and services that, in some manner, may utilize the Columbia Funds as investment options. For example, the Columbia Funds may be offered as investments in connection with brokerage and other securities products offered by Ameriprise
Financial and its affiliates, and may be utilized as investments in connection with fiduciary, investment management and other accounts offered by affiliates of Ameriprise Financial, as well as for other Columbia Funds structured as
“funds-of-funds.” The use of the Columbia Funds in connection with other products and services offered by Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates may introduce economic and other conflicts of interest. These conflicts of interest are
highlighted in account documentation and other disclosure materials for the other products and services offered by Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates.
Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates, including
the Investment Manager, may, subject to applicable legal and regulatory requirements, make payments to their affiliates in connection with the promotion and sale of the Funds' shares, in addition to the sales-related and other compensation that
these parties may receive from the Funds, if any. As a general matter, personnel of Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates do not receive compensation in connection with their sales or use of the Funds that is greater than that paid in connection
with their sales of other comparable products and services. Nonetheless, because the
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compensation that the Investment Manager and other affiliates of
Ameriprise Financial may receive for providing services to the Funds is generally based on the Funds' assets under management and those assets will grow as shares of the Funds are sold, potential conflicts of interest may exist. See
Other Practices – Additional Shareholder Servicing Payments
and
–
Additional Payments to
Financial Intermediaries
for more information.
Actual or Potential Conflicts of Interest Related to
Affiliated Indexes
Columbia Management and its
affiliates may develop, own and operate stock market and other indexes (each, an Affiliated Index) based on investment and trading strategies developed by Columbia Management and/or its affiliates (Affiliated Index Strategies). Some of the ETFs for
which Columbia Management acts as investment adviser (the Affiliated Index ETFs) seek to track the performance of the Affiliated Indexes. Columbia Management and/or its affiliates may, from time to time, manage other funds or accounts that invest in
these Affiliated Index ETFs. In the future, Columbia Management and/or its affiliates may manage client accounts that track the same Affiliated Indexes used by the Affiliated Index ETFs or which are based on the same, or substantially similar,
Affiliated Index Strategies that are used in the operation of the Affiliated Indexes and the Affiliated Index ETFs. The operation of the Affiliated Indexes, the Affiliated Index ETFs and other accounts managed in this manner may give rise to
potential conflicts of interest.
For example,
any accounts managed by Columbia Management and/or its affiliates that seek to track the same Affiliated Indexes may engage in purchases and sales of securities at different times. These differences may result in certain accounts having more
favorable performance relative to that of the Affiliated Index or other accounts that seek to track the Affiliated Index. Other potential conflicts include (i) the potential for unauthorized access to Affiliated Index information, allowing
Affiliated Index changes that benefit Columbia Management and/or its affiliates or other accounts managed by Columbia Management and/or its affiliates and not the clients in the accounts seeking to track the Affiliated Index, and (ii) the
manipulation of Affiliated Index pricing to present the performance of accounts seeking to track the Affiliated Index, or the firm’s tracking ability, in a preferential light.
Columbia Management has adopted policies and
procedures that are designed to address potential conflicts that may arise in connection with the operation of the Affiliated Indexes, the Affiliated Index ETFs and other accounts.
To the extent it is intended that an account managed
by Columbia Management and/or its affiliates seeks to track an Affiliated Index, the account may not match (performance or holdings), and may vary substantially from, such index for any period of time. An account that seeks to track an index may
purchase, hold and sell securities at times when another client would not do so. Columbia Management and its affiliates do not guarantee that any tracking error targets will be achieved. Accounts managed by Columbia Management and/or its affiliates
that seek to track an index may be negatively impacted by errors in the index, either as a result of calculation errors, inaccurate data sources or otherwise. Columbia Management and its affiliates do not guarantee the timeliness, accuracy and/or
completeness of an index and are not responsible for errors, omissions or interruptions in the index (including when Columbia Management or an affiliate acts as the index provider) or the calculation thereof (including when Columbia Management or an
affiliate acts as the calculation agent).
Columbia Management and its affiliates are not
obligated to license the Affiliated Indexes to clients or other third-parties.
Codes of Ethics
The Funds, the Investment Manager, the subadvisers
and the Distributor have adopted Codes of Ethics pursuant to the requirements of the 1940 Act, including Rule 17j-1 under the 1940 Act. These Codes of Ethics permit personnel subject to the Codes of Ethics to invest in securities, including
securities that may be bought or held by the Funds. These Codes of Ethics are included as exhibits to Part C of the Funds' registration statement. These Codes of Ethics can be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room and may be
obtained by calling the SEC at 202.551.8090; they also are available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov, and may be obtained, after paying a duplicating fee, by electronic request to publicinfo@sec.gov or by writing to the SEC’s Public
Reference Section, Washington, D.C. 20549-1520.
Proxy
Voting Policies and Procedures
General.
The Funds have delegated to the Investment Manager the responsibility to vote proxies relating to portfolio securities held by the Funds, including Funds managed by subadvisers. In deciding to delegate
this responsibility to the Investment Manager, the Board reviewed the policies adopted by the Investment Manager. These included the procedures that the Investment Manager follows when a vote presents a conflict between the interests of the Funds
and their shareholders and the Investment Manager and its affiliates.
The Investment Manager’s policy is to vote all
proxies for Fund securities in a manner considered by the Investment Manager to be in the best economic interests of its clients, including the Funds, without regard to any benefit or detriment to the Investment Manager, its employees or its
affiliates. The best economic interests of clients is defined for this purpose as the interest of enhancing or protecting the value of client accounts, considered as a group rather than individually, as the Investment Manager
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determines in its discretion. The
Investment Manager endeavors to vote all proxies of which it becomes aware prior to the vote deadline; provided, however, that in certain circumstances the Investment Manager may refrain from voting securities. For instance, the Investment Manager
may refrain from voting foreign securities if it determines that the costs of voting outweigh the expected benefits of voting and typically will not vote securities if voting would impose trading restrictions.
The Board may, in its
discretion, vote proxies for the Funds. For instance, the Board may determine to vote on matters that may present a material conflict of interest to the Investment Manager.
Oversight.
The operation of the Investment Manager’s proxy voting policy and procedures is overseen by a committee (the Proxy Voting Committee) composed of representatives of the Investment Manager’s
equity investments, equity research, responsible investment, compliance, legal and operations functions. The Proxy Voting Committee has the responsibility to review, at least annually, the Investment Manager’s proxy voting policies to ensure
consistency with internal policies, regulatory requirements, conflicts of interest and client disclosures. The Board reviews on an annual basis, or more frequently as determined appropriate, the Investment Manager’s administration of the proxy
voting process.
Corporate Governance and
Proxy Voting Principles (the Principles).
The Investment Manager has adopted the Principles, which set out the Investment Manager’s views on key issues and the broad principles shaping its
approach, as well as the types of related voting action the Investment Manager may take. The Principles also provide indicative examples of key guidelines used in any given region, which illustrate the standards against which voting decisions are
considered.
The Investment Manager has developed voting stances that align with the Principles and will generally vote in accordance with such voting stances. The Proxy Voting Committee or
investment professionals may determine to vote differently from the voting stances on particular proposals in the event it determines that doing so is in the clients’ best economic interests. The Investment Manager may also consider the voting
recommendations of analysts, portfolio managers,
subadvisers and information obtained from outside resources, including one or more third party research providers. When proposals are not
covered by the voting stances or a voting determination must be made on a case-by-case basis, a portfolio manager,
subadviser or analyst will make the voting determination based on his or
her determination of the clients’ best economic interests; ; provided, however, for securities held in Funds managed in traditional index or certain quantitative strategies and not in any other fund or account managed by the Investment
Manager, proxies will generally be voted in accordance with the recommendation of a third party research provider if the proposal is not covered by a voting stance or a voting determination must be made on a case-by-case basis. In addition, the
Proxy Voting Committee may determine proxy votes when proposals require special consideration.
Addressing Conflicts of Interest.
The Investment Manager seeks to address potential material conflicts of interest by voting in accordance with predetermined voting stances. In addition, if the Investment Manager determines that a
material conflict of interest exists, the Investment Manager will invoke one or more of the following conflict management practices: (i) causing the proxies to be voted in accordance with the recommendations of an independent third party (which may
be the Investment Manager’s proxy voting administrator or research provider); (ii) causing the proxies to be delegated to an independent third party (which may be the Investment Manager’s proxy voting administrator or research provider);
and (iii) in infrequent cases, forwarding the proxies to an Independent Trustee authorized to vote the proxies for the Funds. A member of the Proxy Voting Committee is prohibited from voting on any proposal for which he or she has a conflict of
interest by reason of a direct relationship with the issuer or other party affected by a given proposal. Persons making recommendations to the Proxy Voting Committee or its members are required to disclose to the committee any relationship with a
party making a proposal or other matter known to the person that would create a potential conflict of interest.
Voting Proxies of Affiliated Underlying Funds.
Certain Funds may invest in shares of other Columbia Funds (referred to in this context as “underlying funds”) and may own substantial portions of these underlying funds. If such Funds are
in a master-feeder structure, the feeder fund will either seek instructions from its shareholders with regard to the voting of proxies with respect to the master fund’s shares and vote such proxies in accordance with such instructions or vote
the shares held by it in the same proportion as the vote of all other master fund shareholders. With respect to Funds that hold shares of underlying funds other than in a master-feeder structure, the holding Funds will typically vote proxies of the
underlying funds in the same proportion as the vote of all other holders of the underlying fund’s shares, unless the Board otherwise instructs.
Proxy Voting Agents.
The Investment Manager has retained Institutional Shareholder Services Inc., a third-party vendor, as its proxy voting administrator to implement its proxy voting process and to provide recordkeeping
and vote disclosure services. The Investment Manager has retained both Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. and Glass-Lewis & Co. to provide proxy research services.
Additional Information.
Information regarding how the Columbia Funds (except certain Columbia Funds that do not invest in voting securities) voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the most recent twelve month
period ended June 30 will be available by August 31 of this year free of charge: (i) through the Columbia Funds’ website at www.columbiathreadneedle.com/us and (ii) on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. For a copy of the Investment
Manager’s Principles in effect on the date of this SAI, see Appendix B to this SAI.
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Organization and Management of Wholly-Owned Subsidiaries
Each of Alternative Beta Fund, MM Alternative
Strategies Fund and Diversified Absolute Return Fund (for purposes of this section, referred to collectively as a “Fund”) may invest a portion of its assets, within the limitations of Subchapter M and Section 817(h) of the Code, as
applicable, in one or more of its wholly-owned subsidiaries (previously defined collectively as the “Subsidiary”). The Subsidiary is a limited liability company organized under the laws of the Cayman Islands, whose registered office is
located at P.O. Box 309, Ugland House, Grand Cayman Islands.
The Subsidiary is overseen by its own board of
directors and is not registered under the 1940 Act. The Fund, as the sole shareholder of the Subsidiary, does not have all of the protections offered by the 1940 Act to shareholders of investment companies registered under the 1940 Act. However, the
Subsidiary is wholly-owned and controlled by the Fund and the Fund’s Board of Trustees oversees the investment activities of the Fund, including its investment in the Subsidiary, and the Fund’s role as sole shareholder of the Subsidiary.
The Investment Manager and, where applicable, the Fund’s subadvisers are responsible for the Subsidiary’s day-to-day business pursuant to their separate agreements with, or in respect of, the Subsidiary. The following individuals serve
as a director of the Subsidiary:
Name,
address, year of birth
|
Position
held with Subsidiary
and length of service
|
Principal
occupation during past five years
|
Anthony
P. Haugen
807 Ameriprise
Financial Center,
Minneapolis, MN 55474-2405
Born 1964
|
Director
since
November 2013
|
Vice
President – Finance, Ameriprise Financial, Inc.
since June 2004
|
Amy
K. Johnson
5228 Ameriprise
Financial Center
Minneapolis, MN 55474-2405
Born 1965
|
Director
since
November 2013
|
See
Fund Governance – Fund Officers
.
|
Christopher
O. Petersen
5228 Ameriprise
Financial Center
Minneapolis, MN 55474-2405
Born 1970
|
Director
since
January 2015
|
See
Fund Governance – Fund Officers
.
|
The Subsidiary has entered into a separate
management agreement for the provision of advisory and administrative services with the Investment Manager. Under this agreement, the Investment Manager provides the Subsidiary with the same type of management services, under the same terms, as are
provided to the Fund. The Subsidiary pays the Investment Manager an annual fee for its management services, as set forth in the management agreement and the table below.
Management Agreement Fee Schedule
Subsidiary
|
Assets
(millions)
|
Annual
rate at
each asset level
(a)
|
ASGM
Offshore Fund, Ltd.
|
$0
- $500
|
1.100%
|
ASMF
Offshore Fund, Ltd.
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
1.050%
|
(Subsidiaries
of MM Alternative Strategies Fund)
|
>$1,000
- $3,000
|
1.020%
|
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
0.990%
|
|
>$6,000
- $12,000
|
0.960%
|
|
>$12,000
|
0.950%
|
CAAF
Offshore Fund, Ltd.
|
$0
- $500
|
0.960%
|
(Subsidiary
of Alternative Beta Fund)
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
0.955%
|
|
>$1,000
- $3,000
|
0.950%
|
|
>$3,000
- $12,000
|
0.940%
|
|
>$12,000
|
0.930%
|
CDARF1
Offshore Fund, Ltd.
|
$0
- $500
|
1.180%
|
CDARF2
Offshore Fund, Ltd.
|
>$500
- $1,000
|
1.130%
|
CDARF3
Offshore Fund, Ltd.
|
>$1,000
- $3,000
|
1.100%
|
(Subsidiaries
of Diversified Absolute Return Fund)
|
>$3,000
- $6,000
|
1.070%
|
|
>$6,000
- $12,000
|
1.040%
|
|
>$12,000
|
1.030%
|
(a)
|
When calculating asset levels
for purposes of determining fee rate breakpoints, asset levels are based on aggregate net assets of the Fund and the Parent Fund. When calculating the fee payable under this agreement, the annual rates are based on a percentage of the daily net
assets of the Fund.
|
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The Subsidiary has entered into a separate contract
for the provision of custody services with the same service providers who provide those services to the Fund. The Subsidiary has also entered into arrangements with PwC to serve as the Subsidiary’s independent registered public accounting
firm. The Subsidiary will bear the fees and expenses incurred in connection with the services that it receives pursuant to each of these separate agreements and arrangements. The Fund expects that the expenses borne by the Subsidiary will not be
material in relation of the value of the Fund’s assets.
For purposes of adhering to the Fund’s
compliance policies and procedures, the Investment Manager will treat the assets of the Subsidiary as if the assets were held directly by the Fund. The Chief Compliance Officer makes periodic reports to the Fund’s Board regarding the
management and operations of the Subsidiary.
The financial information of the Subsidiary is
consolidated into the Fund’s financial statements, as contained within the Fund’s annual and semiannual reports provided to shareholders.
Please refer to the section titled “
Taxation – The Subsidiary
” for information about certain tax considerations relating to the Fund’s investment in the Subsidiary.
By investing in the Subsidiary, the Fund is
indirectly exposed to the risks associated with the Subsidiary’s investments. The derivatives and other investments held by the Subsidiary are subject to the same risks that would apply to similar investments if held directly by the Fund. The
Subsidiary is subject to the same principal risks to which the Fund is subject (as described in the Fund’s prospectus). There can be no assurance that the investment objective of the Subsidiary will be achieved. The Subsidiary is not
registered under the 1940 Act and, except as otherwise noted, is not subject to the investor protections of the 1940 Act. However, the Fund wholly owns and controls the Subsidiary, and the Fund and the Subsidiary are both managed by the Investment
Manager, making it unlikely that the Subsidiary will take action contrary to the interests of the Fund and its shareholders. The Fund’s Board has oversight responsibility for the investment activities of the Fund, including its investment in
the Subsidiary, and the Fund’s role as sole shareholder of the Subsidiary. In managing the Subsidiary’s investment portfolio, the Investment Manager will manage the Subsidiary’s portfolio in accordance with the Fund’s
investment policies and restrictions.
The
Investment Manager and any subadviser, if applicable, as it relates to the Subsidiary, complies with provisions of the 1940 Act relating to investment advisory contracts under Section 15 as an investment adviser to the Fund under Section 2(a)(20) of
the 1940 Act. The Fund complies with the provisions of the 1940 Act, including those relating to investment policies (Section 8) and capital structure and leverage (Section 18) on an aggregate basis with the Subsidiary, and the Subsidiary complies
with the provisions relating to affiliated transactions and custody (Section 17).
Changes in the laws of the United States and/or the
Cayman Islands, under which the Fund and the Subsidiary, respectively, are organized, could result in the inability of the Fund and/or the Subsidiary to operate as described in the applicable prospectus and this SAI and could adversely affect the
Fund and its shareholders. For example, the Cayman Islands laws currently do not impose any income, corporate or capital gains tax, estate duty, inheritance tax, gift tax or withholding tax on the Subsidiary. If Cayman Islands law were changed and
the Subsidiary was required to pay Cayman Islands taxes, the investment returns of the Fund would likely decrease.
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FUND GOVERNANCE
Board of Trustees and Officers
Shareholders elect the Board that oversees the
Funds' operations. The Board appoints officers who are responsible for day-to-day business decisions based on policies set by the Board. The following table provides basic biographical information about the Funds' Trustees as of the date of this
SAI, including their principal occupations during the past five years, although specific titles for individuals may have varied over the period. The year set forth beneath Length of Service in the table below is the year in which the Trustee was
first appointed or elected as Trustee to any Fund currently in the Columbia Funds Complex or a predecessor thereof. Under current Board policy, members serve terms of indefinite duration.
Trustees
Independent Trustees
Name,
Address, Year of Birth
|
Position
Held with the Trust and Length of Service
|
Principal
Occupation(s)
During the Past Five Years and Other Relevant
Professional Experience
|
Number
of Funds
in the
Columbia
Funds
Complex
Overseen
|
Other
Directorships
Held by Trustee During
the Past Five Years
|
Committee
Assignments
|
Janet
Langford Carrig
c/o Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC,
225 Franklin Street,
Mail Drop BX32 05228,
Boston, MA 02110
1957
|
Trustee
1996
|
Senior
Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary, ConocoPhillips (independent energy company) since September 2007
|
70
|
None
|
Compliance,
Product and Distribution, Governance, Investment Oversight Committee #2
|
Douglas
A. Hacker
c/o Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC,
225 Franklin Street,
Mail Drop BX32 05228,
Boston, MA 02110
1955
|
Trustee
and Chairman of the Board
1996
|
Independent
business executive since May 2006; Executive Vice President – Strategy of United Airlines from December 2002 to May 2006; President of UAL Loyalty Services (airline marketing company) from September 2001 to December 2002; Executive Vice
President and Chief Financial Officer of United Airlines from July 1999 to September 2001
|
70
|
Spartan
Nash Company (food distributor); Nash Finch Company (food distributor) from 2005 to 2013; Aircastle Limited (aircraft leasing); SeaCube Container Leasing Ltd. (container leasing) from 2010 to 2013; and Travelport Worldwide Limited (travel
information technology)
|
Audit,
Governance, Investment Oversight Committee #1
|
Nancy
T. Lukitsh
c/o Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC,
225 Franklin Street,
Mail Drop BX32 05228,
Boston, MA 02110
1956
|
Trustee
2011
|
Senior
Vice President, Partner and Director of Marketing, Wellington Management Company, LLP (investment adviser) from 1997 to 2010; Chair, Wellington Management Portfolios (commingled non-U.S. investment pools) from 2007 to 2010; Director, Wellington
Trust Company, NA and other Wellington affiliates from 1997 to 2010
|
70
|
None
|
Advisory
Fees & Expenses, Product and Distribution, Investment Oversight Committee #2
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
156
|
Name,
Address, Year of Birth
|
Position
Held with the Trust and Length of Service
|
Principal
Occupation(s)
During the Past Five Years and Other Relevant
Professional Experience
|
Number
of Funds
in the
Columbia
Funds
Complex
Overseen
|
Other
Directorships
Held by Trustee During
the Past Five Years
|
Committee
Assignments
|
David
M. Moffett
c/o Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC,
225 Franklin Street,
Mail Drop BX32 05228,
Boston, MA 02110
1952
|
Trustee
2011
|
Retired;
Consultant to Bridgewater and Associates
|
70
|
Director,
CSX Corporation (transportation suppliers); Genworth Financial, Inc. (financial and insurance products and services); Paypal Holdings Inc. (payment and data processing services); Trustee, University of Oklahoma Foundation; former Director, eBay
Inc. (online trading community), 2007-2015; and former Director, CIT Bank, CIT Group Inc. (commercial and consumer finance), 2010-2016
|
Compliance,
Audit, Investment Oversight Committee #1
|
John
J. Neuhauser
c/o Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC,
225 Franklin Street,
Mail Drop BX32 05228,
Boston, MA 02110
1943
|
Trustee
1984
|
President,
Saint Michael’s College since August 2007; Director or Trustee of several non-profit organizations, including University of Vermont Medical Center; Academic Vice President and Dean of Faculties, Boston College from August 1999 to October
2005; University Professor, Boston College from November 2005 to August 2007
|
70
|
Liberty
All-Star Equity Fund and Liberty All-Star Growth Fund (closed-end funds)
|
Advisory
Fees & Expenses, Product and Distribution, Investment Oversight Committee #2
|
Patrick
J. Simpson
c/o Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC,
225 Franklin Street,
Mail Drop BX32 05228,
Boston, MA 02110
1944
|
Trustee
2000
|
Of
Counsel, Perkins Coie LLP (law firm) since 2015; Partner, Perkins Coie LLP from 1988 to 2014
|
70
|
None
|
Advisory
Fees & Expenses, Audit, Governance, Investment Oversight Committee #1
|
Anne-Lee
Verville
c/o Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC,
225 Franklin Street,
Mail Drop BX32 05228,
Boston, MA 02110
1945
|
Trustee
1998
|
Retired.
General Manager, Global Education Industry from 1994 to 1997, President – Application Systems Division from 1991 to 1994, Chief Financial Officer – US Marketing & Services from 1988 to 1991, and Chief Information Officer from 1987
to 1988, IBM Corporation (computer and technology)
|
70
|
Enesco
Group, Inc. (producer of giftware and home and garden decor products) from 2001 to 2006
|
Audit,
Compliance, Investment Oversight Committee #1
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
157
|
Consultant to the Independent Trustees*
Name,
Address, Year of Birth
|
Position
Held with the Funds and Length of Service
|
Principal
Occupation(s)
During the Past Five Years and Other Relevant
Professional Experience
|
Number
of Funds
in the
Columbia
Funds
Complex
Overseen
|
Other
Directorships
Held by Trustee During
the Past Five Years
|
Committee
Assignments
|
J.
Kevin Connaughton
c/o Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC,
225 Franklin Street,
Mail Drop BX32 05228,
Boston, MA 02110
1964
|
Independent
Trustee Consultant
2016
|
Independent
Trustee Consultant, Columbia Funds since March 2016; Adjunct Professor of Finance, Bentley University since November 2017; Managing Director and General Manager of Mutual Fund Products, Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC from May 2010 to
February 2015; President, Columbia Funds from 2009 to 2015; and senior officer of Columbia Funds and affiliated funds from 2003 to 2015
|
70
|
Director,
The Autism Project since March 2015; former Trustee, New Century Portfolios, March 2015 – December 2017
|
Product
and Distribution, Advisory Fees & Expenses, Audit, Investment Oversight Committees #1 & #2
|
Natalie
A. Trunow
c/o Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC,
225 Franklin Street,
Mail Drop BX32 05228,
Boston, MA 02110
1967
|
Independent
Trustee Consultant
2016
|
Independent
Trustee Consultant, Columbia Funds since September 2016; Chief Executive Officer, Millennial Portfolio Solutions LLC (asset management and consulting services) since January 2016; Director of Investments, Casey Family Programs from April 2016 to
September 2016; Senior Vice President and Chief Investment Officer, Calvert Investments from August 2008 to January 2016; Section Head and Portfolio Manager, General Motors Asset Management from June 1997 to August 2008
|
70
|
Director,
Health Services for Children with Special Needs, Inc.; Director, Guidewell Financial Solutions
|
Product
and Distribution, Advisory Fees & Expenses, Compliance, Investment Oversight Committees #1 & #2
|
*
|
J. Kevin Connaughton was
appointed consultant to the Independent Trustees effective March 1, 2016. Natalie A. Trunow was appointed consultant to the Independent Trustees effective September 1, 2016. Shareholders of the Funds are expected to be asked to elect each of Mr.
Connaughton and Ms. Trunow as a Trustee at a future shareholder meeting.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
158
|
Interested Trustee Affiliated with Investment
Manager*
Name,
Address,
Year of Birth
|
Position
Held
with the Trust and Length of Service
|
Principal
Occupation(s)
During the Past Five Years
and Other Relevant
Professional Experience
|
Number
of
Funds in the
Columbia Funds Complex
Overseen
|
Other
Directorships Held by Trustee During the Past Five Years
|
Committee
Assignments
|
William
F. Truscott
c/o Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC,
225 Franklin St.
Boston, MA 02110
1960
|
Trustee
2012
|
Chairman
of the Board and President, Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC since May 2010 and February 2012, respectively; Chief Executive Officer, Global Asset Management, Ameriprise Financial, Inc. since September 2012 (previously Chief Executive
Officer, U.S. Asset Management & President, Annuities, May 2010 - September 2012); Director and Chief Executive Officer, Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc. since May 2010 and February 2012, respectively; Chairman of the Board and
Chief Executive Officer, RiverSource Distributors, Inc. since 2006; Director, Threadneedle Asset Management Holdings, SARL since 2014; President and Chief Executive Officer, Ameriprise Certificate Company, 2006 - August 2012.
|
195
|
Chairman
of the Board, Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC since May 2010; Director, Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc. since May 2010; Former Director, Ameriprise Certificate Company, 2006 - January 2013
|
None
|
*
|
Interested person (as defined
under the 1940 Act) by reason of being an officer, director, security holder and/or employee of the Investment Manager or Ameriprise Financial.
|
The Officers
The Board has appointed officers who are responsible
for day-to-day business decisions based on policies it has established. The officers serve at the pleasure of the Board. The following table provides basic information about the Officers of the Trust as of the date of this SAI, including principal
occupations during the past five years, although their specific titles may have varied over the period. In addition to Mr. Truscott, who is Senior Vice President, the Funds' other officers are:
Fund Officers
Name,
Address
and Year of Birth
|
Position
and Year
First Appointed to
Position for any Fund in the
Columbia Funds Complex
or a Predecessor Thereof
|
Principal
Occupation(s) During Past Five Years
|
Christopher
O. Petersen
5228 Ameriprise Financial Center
Minneapolis, MN 55474
Born 1970
|
President
and Principal Executive Officer (2015)
|
Vice
President and Lead Chief Counsel, Ameriprise Financial, Inc. since January 2015 (previously, Vice President and Chief Counsel January 2010 – December 2014); officer of Columbia Funds and affiliated funds since 2007.
|
Michael
G. Clarke
225 Franklin Street
Boston, MA 02110
Born 1969
|
Treasurer
(2011), Chief Financial Officer (2009) and Chief Accounting Officer (2015)
|
Vice
President – Mutual Fund Administration, Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC, since May 2010; senior officer of Columbia Funds and affiliated funds since 2002.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
159
|
Name,
Address
and Year of Birth
|
Position
and Year
First Appointed to
Position for any Fund in the
Columbia Funds Complex
or a Predecessor Thereof
|
Principal
Occupation(s) During Past Five Years
|
Paul
B. Goucher
100 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10017
Born 1968
|
Senior
Vice President (2011) and Assistant Secretary (2008)
|
Senior
Vice President and Assistant General Counsel, Ameriprise Financial, Inc. since January 2017 (previously Vice President and Lead Chief Counsel, November 2008 – January 2017 and January 2013 – January 2017, respectively; and Chief
Counsel, January 2010 - January 2013); Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Assistant Secretary, Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC since May 2010.
|
Thomas
P. McGuire
225 Franklin Street
Boston, MA 02110
Born 1972
|
Senior
Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer (2012)
|
Vice
President – Asset Management Compliance, Ameriprise Financial, Inc., since May 2010; Chief Compliance Officer, Ameriprise Certificate Company since September 2010.
|
Colin
Moore
225 Franklin Street
Boston, MA 02110
Born 1958
|
Senior
Vice President (2010)
|
Executive
Vice President and Global Chief Investment Officer, Ameriprise Financial, Inc., since July 2013; Executive Vice President and Global Chief Investment Officer, Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC since July 2013 (previously Director and
Global Chief Investment Officer, 2010 – 2013).
|
Ryan
C. Larrenaga
225 Franklin Street
Boston, MA 02110
Born 1970
|
Senior
Vice President (2017), Chief Legal Officer (2017) and Secretary (2015)
|
Vice
President and Group Counsel, Ameriprise Financial, Inc. since August 2011; officer of Columbia Funds and affiliated funds since 2005.
|
Michael
E. DeFao
225 Franklin Street
Boston, MA 02110
Born 1968
|
Vice
President (2011) and Assistant Secretary (2010)
|
Vice
President and Chief Counsel, Ameriprise Financial, Inc. since May 2010.
|
Amy
Johnson
5228 Ameriprise Financial Center
Minneapolis, MN 55474
Born 1965
|
Vice
President (2006)
|
Managing
Director and Global Head of Operations, Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC since April 2016 (previously Managing Director and Chief Operating Officer, 2010 – 2016).
|
Lyn
Kephart-Strong
5228 Ameriprise Financial Center
Minneapolis, MN 55474
Born 1960
|
Vice
President (2015)
|
President,
Columbia Management Investment Services Corp. since October 2014; Vice President & Resolution Officer, Ameriprise Trust Company since August 2009.
|
Responsibilities of the Board with
respect to Fund Management
The Board consists of ten
Trustees who have varied experience and skills. With respect to Mr. Truscott, the Trustees have concluded that having a senior officer of the Investment Manager serve as a Trustee benefits Fund shareholders by facilitating communication between the
Independent Trustees and the senior management of the Investment Manager, and by assisting efforts to align the interests of the Investment Manager more closely with those of Fund shareholders. Further information about the backgrounds and
qualifications of the Trustees can be found in the section
Trustee Biographical Information and Qualifications
. The Board has several standing committees, which are an integral part of each
Fund’s overall governance and risk oversight structure. The roles of each committee are more fully described in the section
Committees of the Board
below.
The Funds have retained the Investment Manager as
the Funds’ investment adviser and administrator. The Investment Manager provides the Funds with investment advisory services, and is responsible for day-to-day administration of the Funds and management of the risks that arise from the
Funds’ investments and operations. The Board provides oversight of the services provided by the Investment Manager, including risk management services. In addition, each committee of the Board provides oversight of the Investment
Manager’s risk management services with respect to the particular activities within the committee’s purview. In the course of providing oversight, the Board and the committees receive a wide range of reports with respect to the
Funds’ activities, including reports regarding each Fund’s investment portfolio, the compliance of the Funds with applicable laws, and the Funds’ financial accounting and reporting. The Board and the relevant committees meet
periodically with officers of the Funds and the Investment Manager and with representatives of various of the Funds’ service providers. The Board and certain committees also meet periodically with the Funds’ Chief Compliance Officer to
receive reports regarding the compliance
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
160
|
of the Funds and the Investment Manager with the federal securities
laws and their internal compliance policies and procedures. In addition, the Board meets periodically with the portfolio managers of the Funds to receive reports regarding the management of the Funds, including their investment risks.
The Board recognizes that not all risks that may
affect the Funds can be identified in advance; that it may not be practical or cost-effective to eliminate or mitigate certain risks; that it may be necessary to bear certain risks (such as various investment-related risks) in seeking to achieve the
Funds’ investment objectives; and that the processes and controls employed to address certain risks may be limited in their effectiveness. As a result of the foregoing and other factors, the Board’s risk management oversight is subject
to substantial limitations.
The Board reviews
its leadership structure periodically and believes that its structure is appropriate, in light of the size of the Trust and the nature of its business, to enable the Board to exercise its oversight of the Funds and the other investment companies
overseen by the Trustees. In particular, the Board believes that having an Independent Trustee serve as the chair of the Board and having other Independent Trustees serve as chairs of each committee promotes independence from the Investment Manager
in setting agendas and conducting meetings. The Board believes that its committee structure makes the oversight process more efficient and more effective by allowing, among other things, smaller groups of Trustees to bring increased focus to matters
within the purview of each committee.
Trustee
Biographical Information and Qualifications
The following
provides an overview of the considerations that led the Board to conclude that each individual serving as a Trustee should so serve. Generally, no one factor was decisive in the selection of an individual to join the Board. Among the factors the
Board considered when concluding that an individual should serve on the Board were the following: (i) the individual’s business and professional experience and accomplishments; (ii) the individual’s ability to work effectively with the
other Trustees; (iii) the individual’s prior experience, if any, serving on the boards of public companies (including, where relevant, other investment companies) and other complex enterprises and organizations; and (iv) how the
individual’s skills, experience and attributes would contribute to an appropriate mix of relevant skills and experience on the Board.
In respect of each current Trustee, the
individual’s substantial professional accomplishments and experience, including in fields related to the operations of the Fund, were a significant factor in the determination that, in light of the business and structure of the Trust, the
individual should serve as a Trustee. Following is a summary of each Trustee’s particular professional experience and additional considerations that contributed to the Board’s conclusion that an individual should serve as a
Trustee:
Douglas A. Hacker
— Mr. Hacker has extensive executive experience, having served in various executive roles with United Airlines and more recently as an independent business executive. Mr. Hacker also has experience on other boards
of directors. As former chief financial officer of United Airlines, Mr. Hacker has significant experience in accounting and financial management, including in a public company setting.
Janet Langford Carrig
— Ms. Carrig is Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary for ConocoPhillips. Prior to joining ConocoPhillips, Ms. Carrig held senior legal and leadership roles in other large corporations and
law firms, including as a partner at the law firms Sidley & Austin and at Zelle, Hoffman, Voelbel, Mason and Gette. Ms. Carrig has previously served on the board of directors for a public company and various industry groups and non-profit
organizations.
Nancy T. Lukitsh
— Ms. Lukitsh has extensive executive experience in the financial services industries, particularly with respect to the marketing of investment products, having served as Senior Vice President, Partner and Director
of Marketing for Wellington Management Company, LLP. Ms. Lukitsh has previously served as Chair of Wellington Management Portfolios (commingled investment pools designed for non-U.S. institutional investors) and as a director of other Wellington
affiliates. In addition, she has previously served on the boards of directors of various non-profit organizations. She is also a Chartered Financial Analyst.
David M. Moffett
— Mr. Moffett has extensive executive and board of director experience, including serving on audit committees for public companies. Mr. Moffett was selected as CEO when the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation was placed under
conservatorship in 2008, and served as a consultant to its interim chief executive officer and the board of directors until 2009. Formerly, Mr. Moffett was the CFO of a large U.S. bank holding company where his responsibilities included trust and
wealth management.
John J. Neuhauser
— Dr. Neuhauser is an experienced investment company trustee, having served on the Board since 1985 and on the boards of other investment companies. In addition to his board experience, Dr. Neuhauser has extensive
executive experience. He is currently the President of Saint Michael’s College and has served in a variety of other leadership roles in higher education.
Patrick J. Simpson
— Mr. Simpson is of counsel and formerly a partner in the Portland, Oregon office of Perkins Coie LLP, an international law firm. Mr. Simpson’s practice has included such relevant areas as corporate governance, corporate finance and
securities law compliance for private and public companies.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
161
|
Anne-Lee Verville
— Ms. Verville has significant executive experience. Prior to her retirement in 1997, she held various leadership and executive roles with IBM Corporation. Ms. Verville has previously served on the board of directors for a public company and
non-profit organizations.
William F.
Truscott
— Mr. Truscott has significant executive and board experience with financial services and investment companies. Mr. Truscott has served on the Board of Trustees of certain Columbia funds since 2001. He
has served as chairman of the board of the Investment Manager since May 2010 and since February 2012 has served as its president. From 2001 to April 2010, Mr. Truscott served as the president, chairman of the board and chief investment officer of
the Investment Manager. He has served as director of the Distributor since May 2010 and since February 2012 has served as its chief executive officer. From 2008 to April 2010, Mr. Truscott served as chairman of the board and chief executive officer
of the Distributor.
Consultant to the
Independent Trustees:
J. Kevin Connaughton
— Mr. Connaughton has significant executive and board experience with financial services and investment companies. Mr. Connaughton served as a senior officer of certain Columbia funds from 2003 through 2015. He
served as the managing director and general manager of mutual fund products for the Investment Manager from 2010 through 2015. Mr. Connaughton currently serves on the Board of Directors of two not for profit entities, and the investment committee
for a small college endowment. He has previously served on the Board of Directors of a separate fund group, the Transfer Agent, and two offshore groups of funds managed by the Investment Manager and/or affiliates. Mr. Connaughton also serves as an
adjunct professor of Finance at Bentley University.
Natalie A. Trunow
— Ms. Trunow has extensive executive experience in financial services and with investment companies, including service as Chief Executive Officer at Millennial Portfolio Solutions LLC (asset management and
consulting services), as Director of Investments at Casey Family Programs Foundation, as Senior Vice President and Chief Investment Officer at Calvert Investments, and as Section Head and Portfolio Manager responsible for alternative and traditional
funds at General Motors Asset Management. Ms. Trunow’s responsibilities as Senior Vice President and Chief Investment officer at Calvert Investments included oversight responsibilities for public and private equity investments, in-house and
sub-advised funds, asset allocation funds, balanced funds, and volatility-managed funds, and investing portfolios. Ms. Trunow also currently serves on the board of non-profit organizations.
Committees of the Board
For purposes of this section, the term Independent
Trustees includes Mr. Connaughton and Ms. Trunow, as Consultants to the Independent Trustees.
The Board has organized the following standing
committees to facilitate its work: the Audit Committee, the Governance Committee, the Advisory Fees & Expenses Committee, the Compliance Committee, the Investment Oversight Committees and the Product and Distribution Committee. These Committees
are comprised solely of Independent Trustees. The table above providing background on each Trustee also includes their respective committee assignments. The duties of these committees are described below.
Board Governance Committee.
The Governance Committee’s functions include recommending to the Board nominees for Independent Trustee positions and for appointments to various committees, overseeing the Board’s periodic
evaluations of the effectiveness of the Board, reviewing and recommending to the Board governance and other policies and practices to be followed in carrying out the Trustees’ duties and responsibilities and reviewing and making
recommendations to the Board regarding the compensation of the Independent Trustees.
The Governance Committee will consider nominees for
Trustee recommended by shareholders provided that, as applicable, such recommendations are submitted by the date disclosed in a Fund’s proxy statement soliciting proxies to be voted at a meeting of shareholders, if such a meeting is held
(mutual funds, including ETFs, are not required to hold annual shareholder meetings) and otherwise comply with applicable securities laws, including Rule 14a-8 under the 1934 Act. Such shareholder recommendations must be in writing and should be
sent to the attention of Douglas A. Hacker, Chair of the Board, Columbia Funds Complex, 225 Franklin Street, Mail Drop BX32 05228, Boston, MA 02110. Shareholder recommendations should include the proposed nominee’s biographical information
(including business experience for the past ten years) and a description of the qualifications of the proposed nominee, along with a statement from the proposed nominee that he or she is willing to serve and meets the requirements to serve as an
Independent Trustee, if applicable.
Compliance
Committee.
The Compliance Committee’s functions include, among other things, monitoring, supervising and assessing the performance of the Funds’ Chief Compliance Officer and reviewing
his compensation, reviewing periodically and recommending changes to the codes of ethics and compliance policies of the Funds and its service providers, and reviewing each Fund’s portfolio execution.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
162
|
Advisory Fees & Expenses Committee.
The Advisory Fees & Expenses Committee’s functions include reviewing and making recommendations to the Board as to contracts requiring approval of a majority of the Independent Trustees and
as to any other contracts or fee proposals that may be referred to the Advisory Fees & Expenses Committee by the Board.
Investment Oversight Committee.
Each Independent Trustee also serves on an Investment Oversight Committee (IOC). Each IOC is responsible for monitoring, on an ongoing basis, a select group of Columbia Funds overseen by the Board and
gives particular consideration to such matters as each Fund’s adherence to its investment mandates, historical performance, changes in investment processes and personnel, and proposed changes to investment objectives. Investment personnel who
manage the Funds attend IOC meetings from time to time to assist each IOC in its review of the Funds.
Audit Committee.
The Audit Committee’s functions include making recommendations to the Board regarding the selection and performance of the independent registered public accounting firm, and reviewing matters
relating to accounting and auditing practices and procedures, accounting records and the internal accounting controls of the Funds and certain service providers.
Product and Distribution Committee.
The Product and Distribution Committee’s functions include, among other things, reviewing such matters relating to the marketing of the Funds and the distribution of the Fund’s shares,
including matters relating to the design and positioning of Funds, marketing and distribution strategies for the Funds and the effectiveness and competitiveness of such strategies, as the Committee may deem appropriate.
The table below shows the number of times each
committee met during the indicated fiscal years. The Table is organized by fiscal year end.
Committee Meetings
Fiscal
Period
|
Audit
Committee
|
Governance
Committee
|
Advisory
Fees
& Expenses
Committee
|
Compliance
Committee
|
Investment
Oversight
Committee
|
Product
&
Distribution
Committee
|
For
the fiscal year
ending January 31, 2017
|
6
|
5
|
6
|
5
|
8
|
4
|
For
the fiscal year
ending March 31, 2017
|
6
|
5
|
6
|
5
|
6
|
4
|
For
the fiscal year
ending April 30, 2017
|
7
|
6
|
8
|
6
|
10
|
5
|
For
the fiscal year
ending May 31, 2017
|
6
|
5
|
7
|
6
|
8
|
4
|
For
the fiscal year
ending July 31, 2017
|
7
|
7
|
8
|
6
|
10
|
5
|
For
the fiscal year
ending August 31, 2017
|
7
|
7
|
7
|
6
|
12
|
5
|
For
the fiscal year
ending October 31, 2017
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
5
|
10
|
4
|
For
the fiscal year
ending December 31, 2016
|
5
|
4
|
5
|
4
|
8
|
3
|
Beneficial Equity
Ownership
The tables below show, for each Trustee, the amount
of Fund equity securities beneficially owned by the Trustee and the aggregate value of all investments in equity securities of all Funds in the Columbia Funds Complex overseen by the Trustee, including notional amounts through the Deferred
Compensation Plan, where noted, stated as one of the following ranges: A = $0; B = $1-$10,000; C = $10,001-$50,000; D = $50,001-$100,000; and E = over $100,000. The information is provided as of December 31, 2017.
The tables only include ownership of Columbia Funds
overseen by the Trustees; the Trustees and Officers may own shares of other Columbia Funds they do not oversee.
Independent Trustee Ownership
Fund
|
Carrig
|
Hacker
|
Lukitsh
|
Moffett
|
Neuhauser
|
Simpson
|
Verville
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
163
|
Fund
|
Carrig
|
Hacker
|
Lukitsh
|
Moffett
|
Neuhauser
|
Simpson
|
Verville
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
A
|
E
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Balanced
Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
D
|
E
(a)
|
Bond
Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
C
(a)
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
E
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
D
(a)
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
E
(a)
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
E
(a)
|
D
(a)
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
A
|
E
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
E
(a)
|
A
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
D
(a)
|
A
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
A
|
A
|
E
|
E
(a)
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Greater
China Fund
|
A
|
E
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
High
Yield Municipal Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
D
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
E
(a)
|
D
(a)
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
B
|
A
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
E
(a)
|
A
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
D
|
E
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
E
(a)
|
A
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
E
|
E
(a)
|
A
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
D
(a)
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
164
|
Fund
|
Carrig
|
Hacker
|
Lukitsh
|
Moffett
|
Neuhauser
|
Simpson
|
Verville
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
E
|
A
|
A
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
E
(a)
|
A
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
A
|
Aggregate
Dollar Range of Equity Securities in all Funds in the Columbia Funds Complex Overseen by the Trustee
|
E
(a)
|
E
|
E
|
E
(a)
|
E
|
E
(a)
|
E
(a)
|
(a)
|
Includes the value of
compensation payable under a Deferred Compensation Plan that is determined as if the amounts deferred had been invested, as of the date of deferral, in shares of one or more funds in the Columbia Funds Complex overseen by the Trustee as specified by
the Trustee.
|
Consultant to the
Independent Trustees Ownership
Fund
|
Connaughton
|
Trunow
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
A
|
A
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Balanced
Fund
|
C
|
A
|
Bond
Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
E
|
A
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
D
|
A
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Greater
China Fund
|
A
|
A
|
High
Yield Municipal Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
165
|
Fund
|
Connaughton
|
Trunow
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
A
|
A
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
A
|
A
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
A
|
A
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
A
|
A
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
E
|
A
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
A
|
A
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
A
|
A
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
|
A
|
A
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
|
A
|
A
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
E
|
A
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
A
|
A
|
Aggregate
Dollar Range of Equity Securities in all Funds in the
Columbia Funds Complex Overseen by the Consultant
|
E
|
A
|
Interested Trustee Ownership
Fund
|
Truscott
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
|
A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
|
A
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
E
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
E
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
A
|
Balanced
Fund
|
A
|
Bond
Fund
|
A
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
E
(a)
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
166
|
Fund
|
Truscott
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
B
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
A
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
A
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
A
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
A
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
D
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
A
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
A
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
A
|
Greater
China Fund
|
A
|
High
Yield Municipal Fund
|
E
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
D
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
A
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
A
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
A
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
A
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
A
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
A
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
A
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
A
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
A
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
E
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
A
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
A
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
|
A
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
|
A
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
A
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
E
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
A
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
A
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
C
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
A
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
B
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
A
|
Aggregate
Dollar Range of Equity Securities in all Funds in the
Columbia Funds Complex Overseen by the Trustee
|
E
(a)
|
(a)
|
Includes notional investments
through a deferred compensation account. Mr. Truscott’s deferred compensation plan is separate from that of the Independent Trustees (for these purposes, including Mr. Connaughton and Ms. Trunow, as Consultants to the Independent Trustees).
|
Compensation
For purposes of this section, the term Independent
Trustees includes Mr. Connaughton and Ms. Trunow, as Consultants to the Independent Trustees.
Total compensation.
The following table shows the total compensation paid to Independent Trustees for their services from all the Funds in the Columbia Funds Complex overseen by the Trustee for the fiscal year ended
October 31, 2017.
Mr. Truscott is not
compensated for his services on the Board.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
167
|
Trustee
Name
|
Total
Cash Compensation
from the Columbia
Funds
Complex
Paid to Trustee
(a)
|
Amount
Deferred
from Total
Compensation
(b)
|
Trustee
|
|
|
Janet
L. Carrig
|
$294,500
|
$294,500
|
Douglas
A. Hacker
|
$414,500
|
$0
|
Nancy
T. Lukitsh
|
$291,500
|
$0
|
William
E. Mayer
(c)
|
$16,500
|
$0
|
David
M. Moffett
|
$305,500
|
$18,500
|
Charles
R. Nelson
(d)
|
$280,500
|
$0
|
John
J. Neuhauser
|
$296,500
|
$0
|
Patrick
J. Simpson
|
$311,000
|
$151,000
|
Anne-Lee
Verville
|
$288,000
|
$0
|
Consultant
|
|
|
J.
Kevin Connaughton
|
$264,000
|
$0
|
Natalie
A. Trunow
|
$255,000
|
$150,000
|
(a)
|
Includes any portion of cash
compensation Trustees elected to defer during the fiscal period.
|
(b)
|
The Trustees may elect to defer
a portion of the total cash compensation payable. Additional information regarding the Deferred Compensation Plan is described below.
|
(c)
|
Mr. Mayer served as Trustee
until December 31, 2016, and stopped receiving compensation from the Funds and the Columbia Funds Complex as of such date.
|
(d)
|
Mr. Nelson served as Trustee
until December 31, 2017, and stopped receiving compensation from the Funds and the Columbia Funds Complex as of such date.
|
In addition to the above compensation, all
Independent Trustees receive reimbursements for reasonable expenses related to their attendance at meetings of the Board or standing committees, which are not included in the amounts shown.
Independent Trustees did not accrue any pension or
retirement benefits as part of Fund expenses, nor will they receive any annual benefits upon retirement.
Deferred Compensation Plan
Under the terms of the Deferred Fee Agreement (the Deferred
Compensation Plan), each eligible Trustee may elect, on an annual basis, to defer receipt of all or a portion of compensation payable to him or her for service as a Trustee for that calendar year (expressly, a Trustee may elect to defer his/her
annual retainer, his/her attendance fees, or both components, which together comprise total compensation for service). Fees deferred by a Trustee are credited to a book reserve account (the Deferral Account) established by the Columbia Funds, the
value of which is derived from the rate of return of one or more Columbia Funds selected by the Trustee (with accruals to the Deferral Account beginning at such time as a Trustee’s fund elections having been established, and proceeds for
service having been paid into such account, and terminating at such time as when proceeds become payable to such Trustee under the Deferred Compensation Plan). Trustees may change their fund elections only in accordance with the provisions of the
Deferred Compensation Plan.
Distributions from
a Trustee’s Deferral Account will be paid by check, either in a lump sum or in annual installments. Payments made in annual installments are disbursed over a period of up to ten years, following such time as a Trustee may qualify to receive
such payments. If a deferring Trustee dies prior to or after the commencement of the disbursement of amounts accrued in his/her Deferral Account, the balance of the account will be distributed to his/her designated beneficiary either in lump sum or
in annual payments as established by such Trustee himself/herself, his/her beneficiary or his/her estate. Amounts payable under the Deferred Compensation Plan are not funded or secured in any way, and each deferring Trustee has the status of a
general unsecured creditor of the Columbia Fund(s) from which compensation has been deferred.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
168
|
Compensation from each Fund
.
The following table shows the compensation paid to Independent Trustees from each Fund during its last fiscal year (or period), as well as the amount deferred
from each Fund, which is included in the total. The table is organized by fiscal year end.
Fund
|
Aggregate
Compensation from Fund
|
Independent
Trustees
|
|
Consultant
to Independent Trustees
|
Janet
L.
Carrig
(a)
|
Douglas
A.
Hacker
|
Nancy
T.
Lukitsh
|
William
E.
Mayer
(b)
|
David
M.
Moffett
(c)
|
Charles
R.
Nelson
(d)
|
John
J.
Neuhauser
|
Patrick
J.
Simpson
(e)
|
Anne-Lee
Verville
(f)
|
J.
Kevin
Connaughton
(g)
|
Natalie
A.
Trunow
(h)
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending January 31
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
$1,362
|
$2,105
|
$1,387
|
$1,098
|
$1,393
|
$1,299
|
$1,434
|
$1,467
|
$1,367
|
$1,417
|
$814
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$1,362
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,153
|
$0
|
$0
|
$601
|
$0
|
$0
|
$212
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending March 31
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
(i)
|
$521
|
$655
|
$515
|
$0
|
$526
|
$496
|
$521
|
$534
|
$515
|
$324
|
$324
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$521
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$331
|
$0
|
$0
|
$191
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
(j)
|
$1,383
|
$1,943
|
$1,419
|
$0
|
$1,440
|
$0
|
$1,442
|
$1,442
|
$1,407
|
$1,335
|
$1,335
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$1,383
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,440
|
$0
|
$0
|
$560
|
$0
|
$0
|
$834
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
(i)
|
$525
|
$659
|
$518
|
$0
|
$530
|
$499
|
$525
|
$538
|
$518
|
$326
|
$326
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$525
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$333
|
$0
|
$0
|
$192
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
(j)
|
$1,383
|
$1,943
|
$1,419
|
$0
|
$1,440
|
$0
|
$1,442
|
$1,442
|
$1,407
|
$1,335
|
$1,335
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$1,383
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,440
|
$0
|
$0
|
$560
|
$0
|
$0
|
$834
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
(i)
|
$518
|
$651
|
$512
|
$0
|
$523
|
$493
|
$518
|
$531
|
$512
|
$322
|
$322
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$518
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$329
|
$0
|
$0
|
$190
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
(j)
|
$1,383
|
$1,943
|
$1,419
|
$0
|
$1,440
|
$0
|
$1,442
|
$1,442
|
$1,407
|
$1,335
|
$1,335
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$1,383
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,440
|
$0
|
$0
|
$560
|
$0
|
$0
|
$834
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
(i)
|
$518
|
$651
|
$512
|
$0
|
$523
|
$493
|
$518
|
$531
|
$512
|
$322
|
$322
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$518
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$329
|
$0
|
$0
|
$190
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
(j)
|
$1,383
|
$1,943
|
$1,419
|
$0
|
$1,440
|
$0
|
$1,442
|
$1,442
|
$1,407
|
$1,335
|
$1,335
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$1,383
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,440
|
$0
|
$0
|
$560
|
$0
|
$0
|
$834
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
(i)
|
$518
|
$651
|
$512
|
$0
|
$523
|
$493
|
$518
|
$531
|
$512
|
$322
|
$322
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$518
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$329
|
$0
|
$0
|
$190
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
$5,488
|
$8,533
|
$5,604
|
$4,084
|
$5,626
|
$5,241
|
$5,795
|
$5,917
|
$5,520
|
$5,776
|
$3,144
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$5,488
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$4,311
|
$0
|
$0
|
$2,375
|
$0
|
$0
|
$789
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
$1,760
|
$2,726
|
$1,794
|
$1,275
|
$1,801
|
$1,680
|
$1,855
|
$1,896
|
$1,768
|
$1,839
|
$1,050
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$1,760
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,343
|
$0
|
$0
|
$772
|
$0
|
$0
|
$274
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
$10,859
|
$16,958
|
$11,115
|
$8,146
|
$11,156
|
$10,386
|
$11,496
|
$11,711
|
$10,944
|
$11,538
|
$6,228
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$10,859
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$8,614
|
$0
|
$0
|
$4,633
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,551
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
(i)
|
$523
|
$657
|
$516
|
$0
|
$528
|
$497
|
$523
|
$536
|
$516
|
$325
|
$325
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$523
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$332
|
$0
|
$0
|
$191
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
(i)
|
$523
|
$657
|
$516
|
$0
|
$528
|
$497
|
$523
|
$535
|
$516
|
$325
|
$325
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$523
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$331
|
$0
|
$0
|
$191
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30
|
Bond
Fund
|
$2,569
|
$3,787
|
$2,573
|
$1,348
|
$2,602
|
$2,440
|
$2,653
|
$2,747
|
$2,554
|
$2,458
|
$1,985
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,569
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,389
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,250
|
$0
|
$0
|
$714
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
169
|
Fund
|
Aggregate
Compensation from Fund
|
Independent
Trustees
|
|
Consultant
to Independent Trustees
|
Janet
L.
Carrig
(a)
|
Douglas
A.
Hacker
|
Nancy
T.
Lukitsh
|
William
E.
Mayer
(b)
|
David
M.
Moffett
(c)
|
Charles
R.
Nelson
(d)
|
John
J.
Neuhauser
|
Patrick
J.
Simpson
(e)
|
Anne-Lee
Verville
(f)
|
J.
Kevin
Connaughton
(g)
|
Natalie
A.
Trunow
(h)
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
$3,905
|
$5,748
|
$3,913
|
$2,010
|
$3,959
|
$3,712
|
$4,033
|
$4,175
|
$3,884
|
$3,729
|
$3,017
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$3,905
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$2,072
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,903
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,101
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
$1,692
(k)
|
$2,488
(k)
|
$1,716
(k)
|
$54
(k)
|
$1,771
(k)
|
$1,655
(k)
|
$1,765
(k)
|
$1,804
(k)
|
$1,719
(k)
|
$1,778
(k)
|
$1,665
(k)
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$1,692
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$76
|
$0
|
$0
|
$759
|
$0
|
$0
|
$980
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
$1,745
|
$2,572
|
$1,749
|
$889
|
$1,770
|
$1,658
|
$1,803
|
$1,865
|
$1,736
|
$1,674
|
$1,366
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$1,745
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$916
|
$0
|
$0
|
$845
|
$0
|
$0
|
$501
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
$2,701
|
$3,978
|
$2,707
|
$1,382
|
$2,739
|
$2,567
|
$2,790
|
$2,887
|
$2,687
|
$2,586
|
$2,098
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,701
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,425
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,312
|
$0
|
$0
|
$769
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
$7,435
|
$10,975
|
$7,449
|
$4,029
|
$7,529
|
$7,064
|
$7,682
|
$7,961
|
$7,391
|
$7,122
|
$5,683
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$7,435
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$4,152
|
$0
|
$0
|
$3,622
|
$0
|
$0
|
$2,001
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
$3,107
|
$4,585
|
$3,112
|
$1,651
|
$3,147
|
$2,950
|
$3,207
|
$3,324
|
$3,089
|
$2,976
|
$2,403
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$3,107
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,700
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,512
|
$0
|
$0
|
$857
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending May 31
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
$3,664
|
$5,429
|
$3,716
|
$1,535
|
$3,730
|
$3,513
|
$3,807
|
$3,926
|
$3,654
|
$3,542
|
$3,007
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$3,664
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,583
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,777
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,232
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
$2,087
|
$3,099
|
$2,107
|
$1,018
|
$2,117
|
$1,987
|
$2,159
|
$2,233
|
$2,077
|
$2,011
|
$1,656
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,087
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,048
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,009
|
$0
|
$0
|
$623
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
$1,735
|
$2,576
|
$1,745
|
$917
|
$1,755
|
$1,643
|
$1,788
|
$1,854
|
$1,723
|
$1,664
|
$1,340
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$1,735
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$943
|
$0
|
$0
|
$839
|
$0
|
$0
|
$477
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
$20,289
|
$30,057
|
$20,443
|
$10,111
|
$20,558
|
$19,277
|
$20,944
|
$21,685
|
$20,169
|
$19,442
|
$15,844
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$20,289
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$10,412
|
$0
|
$0
|
$9,849
|
$0
|
$0
|
$5,886
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
$3,265
|
$4,855
|
$3,287
|
$1,729
|
$3,308
|
$3,097
|
$3,369
|
$3,491
|
$3,246
|
$3,144
|
$2,532
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$3,265
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,781
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,574
|
$0
|
$0
|
$902
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending July 31
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
$2,561
|
$3,711
|
$2,475
|
$768
|
$2,553
|
$2,359
|
$2,535
|
$2,691
|
$2,429
|
$2,369
|
$2,286
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,561
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$705
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,252
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,025
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
$8,481
|
$12,274
|
$8,188
|
$2,449
|
$8,472
|
$7,804
|
$8,386
|
$8,907
|
$8,035
|
$7,822
|
$7,549
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$8,481
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$2,336
|
$0
|
$0
|
$4,155
|
$0
|
$0
|
$3,388
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
$9,862
|
$14,294
|
$9,540
|
$2,988
|
$9,837
|
$9,086
|
$9,774
|
$10,368
|
$9,361
|
$9,121
|
$8,793
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$9,862
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$2,849
|
$0
|
$0
|
$4,832
|
$0
|
$0
|
$3,892
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
$1,688
|
$2,446
|
$1,630
|
$482
|
$1,688
|
$1,554
|
$1,670
|
$1,773
|
$1,599
|
$1,560
|
$1,507
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$1,688
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$460
|
$0
|
$0
|
$825
|
$0
|
$0
|
$679
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
$5,095
|
$7,376
|
$4,930
|
$1,352
|
$5,109
|
$4,704
|
$5,049
|
$5,352
|
$4,839
|
$4,726
|
$4,561
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$5,095
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,297
|
$0
|
$0
|
$2,482
|
$0
|
$0
|
$2,104
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31
|
AP
- Alternatives Fund
|
$2,922
|
$4,277
|
$2,829
|
$670
|
$2,981
|
$2,692
|
$2,898
|
$3,125
|
$2,804
|
$2,713
|
$2,619
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,922
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$685
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,477
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,152
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
170
|
Fund
|
Aggregate
Compensation from Fund
|
Independent
Trustees
|
|
Consultant
to Independent Trustees
|
Janet
L.
Carrig
(a)
|
Douglas
A.
Hacker
|
Nancy
T.
Lukitsh
|
William
E.
Mayer
(b)
|
David
M.
Moffett
(c)
|
Charles
R.
Nelson
(d)
|
John
J.
Neuhauser
|
Patrick
J.
Simpson
(e)
|
Anne-Lee
Verville
(f)
|
J.
Kevin
Connaughton
(g)
|
Natalie
A.
Trunow
(h)
|
AP
- Small Cap Equity Fund
|
$3,612
|
$5,257
|
$3,482
|
$788
|
$3,675
|
$3,319
|
$3,566
|
$3,860
|
$3,454
|
$3,316
|
$3,201
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$3,612
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$800
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,845
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,429
|
AP
- Total Return Bond Fund
|
$15,482
|
$22,475
|
$14,965
|
$3,195
|
$15,786
|
$14,272
|
$15,321
|
$16,527
|
$14,818
|
$14,147
|
$13,669
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$15,482
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$3,277
|
$0
|
$0
|
$7,924
|
$0
|
$0
|
$6,196
|
Balanced
Fund
|
$14,434
|
$20,825
|
$13,930
|
$2,758
|
$14,714
|
$13,311
|
$14,256
|
$15,385
|
$13,795
|
$13,049
|
$12,601
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$14,434
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$2,837
|
$0
|
$0
|
$7,456
|
$0
|
$0
|
$5,834
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
$22,425
|
$32,543
|
$21,679
|
$4,611
|
$22,870
|
$20,681
|
$22,196
|
$23,933
|
$21,478
|
$20,521
|
$19,799
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$22,425
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$4,735
|
$0
|
$0
|
$11,472
|
$0
|
$0
|
$8,991
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
$2,148
|
$3,131
|
$2,077
|
$466
|
$2,190
|
$1,979
|
$2,128
|
$2,295
|
$2,059
|
$1,980
|
$1,912
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,148
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$477
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,092
|
$0
|
$0
|
$856
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
$4,260
|
$6,208
|
$4,123
|
$919
|
$4,348
|
$3,930
|
$4,223
|
$4,551
|
$4,086
|
$3,929
|
$3,791
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$4,260
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$945
|
$0
|
$0
|
$2,165
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,700
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
$2,873
|
$4,181
|
$2,776
|
$616
|
$2,929
|
$2,646
|
$2,843
|
$3,069
|
$2,751
|
$2,638
|
$2,547
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,873
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$630
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,466
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,143
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
$2,129
|
$3,099
|
$2,058
|
$454
|
$2,171
|
$1,962
|
$2,108
|
$2,274
|
$2,039
|
$1,957
|
$1,890
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,129
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$465
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,084
|
$0
|
$0
|
$849
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
$2,890
|
$4,173
|
$2,784
|
$571
|
$2,945
|
$2,660
|
$2,850
|
$3,082
|
$2,758
|
$2,609
|
$2,521
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,890
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$586
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,495
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,155
|
Greater
China Fund
|
$1,857
|
$2,700
|
$1,793
|
$396
|
$1,893
|
$1,710
|
$1,837
|
$1,983
|
$1,777
|
$1,701
|
$1,643
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$1,857
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$405
|
$0
|
$0
|
$949
|
$0
|
$0
|
$739
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
$5,374
|
$7,823
|
$5,195
|
$1,153
|
$5,479
|
$4,951
|
$5,320
|
$5,740
|
$5,148
|
$4,942
|
$4,770
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$5,374
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,180
|
$0
|
$0
|
$2,737
|
$0
|
$0
|
$2,140
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
$2,470
|
$3,590
|
$2,386
|
$522
|
$2,518
|
$2,275
|
$2,443
|
$2,637
|
$2,364
|
$2,262
|
$2,185
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,470
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$534
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,262
|
$0
|
$0
|
$984
|
Strategic
Income Fund
(l)
|
$8,220
|
$11,911
|
$7,943
|
$1,652
|
$8,384
|
$7,584
|
$8,132
|
$8,771
|
$7,869
|
$7,502
|
$7,237
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$8,220
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,699
|
$0
|
$0
|
$4,216
|
$0
|
$0
|
$3,311
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending October 31
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
$1,986
|
$2,807
|
$1,966
|
$117
|
$2,061
|
$1,892
|
$2,000
|
$2,099
|
$1,942
|
$1,780
|
$1,719
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$1,986
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$131
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,020
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,011
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
$6,159
|
$8,723
|
$6,114
|
$398
|
$6,396
|
$5,884
|
$6,219
|
$6,515
|
$6,038
|
$5,563
|
$5,354
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$6,159
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$446
|
$0
|
$0
|
$3,156
|
$0
|
$0
|
$3,149
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
$2,250
|
$3,180
|
$2,228
|
$134
|
$2,334
|
$2,144
|
$2,266
|
$2,377
|
$2,201
|
$2,018
|
$1,948
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,250
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$150
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,155
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,146
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
$2,239
|
$3,165
|
$2,217
|
$134
|
$2,323
|
$2,134
|
$2,255
|
$2,366
|
$2,190
|
$2,009
|
$1,939
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,239
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$150
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,150
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,140
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
171
|
Fund
|
Aggregate
Compensation from Fund
|
Independent
Trustees
|
|
Consultant
to Independent Trustees
|
Janet
L.
Carrig
(a)
|
Douglas
A.
Hacker
|
Nancy
T.
Lukitsh
|
William
E.
Mayer
(b)
|
David
M.
Moffett
(c)
|
Charles
R.
Nelson
(d)
|
John
J.
Neuhauser
|
Patrick
J.
Simpson
(e)
|
Anne-Lee
Verville
(f)
|
J.
Kevin
Connaughton
(g)
|
Natalie
A.
Trunow
(h)
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
$2,801
|
$3,960
|
$2,774
|
$167
|
$2,907
|
$2,670
|
$2,822
|
$2,960
|
$2,740
|
$2,515
|
$2,427
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,801
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$187
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,437
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,428
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
$2,162
|
$3,055
|
$2,140
|
$127
|
$2,243
|
$2,059
|
$2,177
|
$2,284
|
$2,114
|
$1,938
|
$1,872
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,162
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$142
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,110
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,101
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending December 31
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
$2,307
|
$3,586
|
$2,350
|
$2,218
|
$2,360
|
$2,198
|
$2,430
|
$2,486
|
$2,315
|
$1,910
|
$778
|
Amount
Deferred
|
$2,307
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
$2,360
|
$0
|
$0
|
$1,032
|
$0
|
$0
|
$0
|
(a)
|
As of December 31, 2017, the
value of Ms. Carrig’s account under the deferred compensation plan was $1,797,467.
|
(b)
|
Mr. Mayer served as Trustee
until December 31, 2016, and stopped receiving compensation from the Funds and the Columbia Funds Complex as of such date.
|
(c)
|
As of December 31, 2017, the
value of Mr. Moffett's account under the deferred compensation plan was $663,429.
|
(d)
|
Mr. Nelson served as Trustee
until December 31, 2017, and stopped receiving compensation from the Funds and the Columbia Funds Complex as of such date.
|
(e)
|
As of December 31, 2017, the
value of Mr. Simpson’s account under the deferred compensation plan was $2,616,428.
|
(f)
|
As of December 31, 2017, the
value of Ms. Verville’s account under the deferred compensation plan was $632,556.
|
(g)
|
Beginning with the fiscal year
ended March 31, 2017, Mr. Connaughton was a consultant to the Independent Trustees for the full period shown in the table above. For fiscal years ended prior to March 31, 2017, payments to Mr. Connaughton are for the period from March 1, 2016 (when
he was first appointed consultant to the Independent Trustees) through the applicable fiscal year end. Mr. Connaughton receives compensation from the Funds for serving as a consultant to the Independent Trustees at an annual rate of $255,000.
|
(h)
|
Payments to Ms. Trunow are for
the period from September 1, 2016 (when she was first appointed consultant to the Independent Trustees) through the applicable fiscal year end. Ms. Trunow receives compensation from the Funds for serving as a consultant to the Independent Trustees
at an annual rate of $255,000. As of December 31, 2017, the value of Ms. Trunow's account under the deferred compensation plan was $165,093.
|
(i)
|
The Fund commenced operations
on October 24, 2017. The compensation shown for the Fund is the estimated amount that will be paid from October 23, 2017 to March 31, 2018.
|
(j)
|
The Fund is expected to
commence operations on or about April 5, 2018. The compensation shown for the Fund is the estimated amount that will be paid from April 5, 2018 to March 31, 2019.
|
(k)
|
For the period from October 17,
2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017.
|
(l)
|
The Fund changed its fiscal
year end in 2017 from October 31 to August 31. For the fiscal year ended in 2017, the information shown is for the period from November 1, 2016 to August 31, 2017.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
172
|
BROKERAGE ALLOCATION AND RELATED
PRACTICES
General Brokerage Policy, Brokerage
Transactions and Broker Selection
Subject to
policies established by the Board, as well as the terms of the Investment Management Services Agreement, Management Agreement and Subadvisory Agreement, as applicable, the Investment Manager (and/or the investment subadviser(s) who makes the
day-to-day investment decisions for all or a portion of a Fund’s net assets) is responsible for decisions to buy and sell securities and other instruments and assets for a Fund, for the selection of broker-dealers, for the execution of a
Fund’s transactions and for the allocation of brokerage commissions in connection with such transactions. The Investment Manager effects transactions for the Fund consistent with its duty to seek best execution of client (including Fund)
orders under the circumstances of the particular transaction. Purchases and sales of securities on a securities exchange are effected through broker-dealers who charge negotiated commissions for their services. Orders may be directed to any
broker-dealer to the extent and in the manner permitted by applicable law and by the policies and procedures of the Investment Manager and/or any investment subadvisers.
In the over-the-counter market, securities generally
are traded on a “net” basis with dealers acting as principals for their own accounts without stated commissions, although the price of a security usually includes a profit to the dealer. In underwritten offerings, securities are bought
at a fixed price that includes an amount of compensation to the underwriter, generally referred to as the underwriter’s “concession” or “discount.” On occasion, certain money market instruments may be bought directly
from an issuer, in which case no commissions or discounts are paid.
The Investment Manager effects security transactions
for the Funds consistent with its duty to seek best execution of client (including the Funds) orders under the circumstances of the particular transaction. In seeking such execution, the Investment Manager will use its best judgment in evaluating
the terms of a transaction, and will give consideration to various relevant factors, including, without limitation, the size and type of the transaction, the nature and character of the market for the security or other instrument or asset, the
confidentiality, speed and certainty of effective execution required for the transaction, the general execution and operational capabilities of the broker-dealer, the reputation, reliability, experience and financial condition of the broker-dealer,
the value and quality of the services rendered by the broker-dealer in this instance and other transactions and the reasonableness of the spread or commission, if any. Research services received from broker-dealers supplement the Investment
Manager’s own research and may include the following types of information: statistical and background information on industry groups and individual companies; forecasts and interpretations with respect to U.S. and foreign economies,
securities, markets, specific industry groups and individual companies; information on political developments; Fund management strategies; performance information on securities and other instruments and assets and information concerning prices of
same; and information supplied by specialized services to the Investment Manager and to the Board with respect to the performance, investment activities and fees and expenses of other funds. Such information may be communicated electronically,
orally or in written form.
Broker-dealers may,
from time to time, arrange meetings with management of companies and provide access to consultants who supply research information. The outside research is useful to the Investment Manager since, in certain instances, the broker-dealers utilized by
the Investment Manager may follow a different universe of issuers and other matters than those that the Investment Manager’s staff follow. In addition, this research provides the Investment Manager with a different perspective on investment
matters, even if the securities research obtained relates to issuers followed by the Investment Manager.
Research services that are provided to the
Investment Manager by broker-dealers are available for the benefit of all accounts managed or advised by the Investment Manager. In some cases, the research services are available only from the broker-dealer providing such services. In other cases,
the research services may be obtainable from alternative sources. Broker-dealer research typically supplements rather than replaces the Investment Manager’s own research, tending to improve the quality of its investment advice. However, to the
extent that the Investment Manager would have bought any such research services had such services not been provided by broker-dealers, the expenses of such services to the Investment Manager could be considered to have been reduced accordingly.
Certain research services furnished by broker-dealers may be useful to the clients of the Investment Manager other than the Funds. Conversely, any research services received by the Investment Manager through the placement of transactions of other
clients may be of value to the Investment Manager in fulfilling its obligations to the Funds. The Investment Manager is of the opinion that this material is beneficial in supplementing its research and analysis; and, therefore, it may benefit the
Funds by improving the quality of the Investment Manager’s investment advice. The advisory fees paid by the Funds are not reduced because the Investment Manager receives such services.
Under Section 28(e) of the 1934 Act, the Investment
Manager shall not be “deemed to have acted unlawfully or to have breached its fiduciary duty” solely because under certain circumstances it has caused the account to pay a higher commission than the lowest available. To obtain the
benefit of Section 28(e), the Investment Manager must make a good faith determination that the commissions paid are “reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research services provided by such member, broker, or dealer, viewed
in terms of either that particular transaction or his overall responsibilities with respect to the accounts
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
173
|
as to which he exercises investment discretion.” Accordingly,
the price to a Fund in any transaction may be less favorable than that available from another broker-dealer if the difference is reasonably justified by other aspects of the portfolio execution services offered. Some broker-dealers may indicate that
the provision of research services is dependent upon the generation of certain specified levels of commissions and underwriting concessions by the Investment Manager’s clients, including the Funds.
The Investment Manager does not consider sales of
shares of the Funds as a factor in the selection of broker-dealers through which to execute securities transactions on behalf of the Funds. On a periodic basis, the Investment Manager makes a comprehensive review of the broker-dealers and the
overall reasonableness of their commissions, which evaluates execution, operational efficiency, and research services. Certain limited reviews are also conducted by an independent third-party evaluator.
Commission rates are established pursuant to
negotiations with broker-dealers based on the quality and quantity of execution services provided by broker-dealers in light of generally prevailing rates. On exchanges on which commissions are negotiated, the cost of transactions may vary among
different broker-dealers. Transactions on foreign stock exchanges involve payment of brokerage commissions that generally are fixed. Transactions in both foreign and domestic over-the-counter markets generally are principal transactions with
dealers, and the costs of such transactions involve dealer spreads rather than brokerage commissions. With respect to over-the-counter transactions, the Investment Manager, where possible, will deal directly with dealers who make a market in the
securities involved, except in those circumstances in which better prices and execution are available elsewhere.
The Investment Manager or a subadviser, if
applicable, may use step-out transactions. A “step-out” is an arrangement in which the Investment Manager or subadviser executes a trade through one broker-dealer but instructs that broker-dealer to step-out all or a part of the trade to
another broker-dealer. The second broker-dealer will clear and settle, and receive commissions for, the stepped-out portion. The Investment Manager or subadviser may receive research products and services in connection with step-out
transactions.
Use of Fund commissions may
create potential conflicts of interest between the Investment Manager or subadviser and a Fund. However, the Investment Manager and each subadviser has policies and procedures in place intended to mitigate these conflicts and ensure that the use of
fund commissions falls within the “safe harbor” of Section 28(e) of the 1934 Act. Some products and services may be used for both investment decision-making and non-investment decision-making purposes (“mixed use” items). The
Investment Manager and each subadviser, to the extent it has mixed use items, has procedures in place to assure that Fund commissions pay only for the investment decision-making portion of a mixed-use item.
Some broker-dealers with whom the Investment
Manager’s Fixed Income Department executes trades provide the Fixed Income Department with proprietary research products and services, though the Fixed Income Department does not put in place any client commission arrangements with such
broker-dealers. However, such research may be considered by the Fixed Income Department when determining which broker-dealers to include on its approved broker-dealer list. It is the Investment Manager’s policy not to execute a fixed income
trade with a broker-dealer at a lower bid/higher offer than that provided by another broker-dealer in consideration of the value of research products and services received by the Fixed Income Department.
In certain instances, there may be securities that
are suitable for a Fund as well as for one or more of the other clients of the Investment Manager. Investment decisions for the Funds and for the Investment Manager’s other clients are made with the goal of achieving their respective
investment objectives. A particular security may be bought or sold for only one client even though it may be held by, or bought or sold for, other clients. Likewise, a particular security may be bought for one or more clients when one or more other
clients are selling that same security. Some simultaneous transactions are inevitable when a number of accounts receive investment advice from the same investment adviser, particularly when the same security is suitable for the investment objectives
of more than one client. When two or more clients are engaged simultaneously in the purchase or sale of the same security, the securities are allocated among clients in a manner believed to be equitable to each. In some cases, this policy could have
a detrimental effect on the price or volume of the security in a particular transaction that may affect the Funds.
The Investment Manager operates several separate
trading desks in different geographic locations in the United States. The trading desks support different portfolio management teams managing a variety of accounts and products. The Funds may forego certain opportunities including the aggregation of
trades across accounts that trade on different trading desks, which could result in one trading desk competing with another in the market for similar trades. In addition, it is possible that the separate trading desks may be on opposite sides of a
trade at the same time. While the trading desks operate in several locations, the desks do have linkages in oversight and reporting lines and are generally conducted under similar policies and procedures. In addition, certain fixed income portfolio
managers currently have the authority to execute trades themselves.
As the Investment Manager seeks to enhance its
investment capabilities and services to its clients, including the Funds, the Investment Manager may engage certain of its investment advisory affiliates (Participating Affiliates) around the world to provide a variety of services. For example, the
Investment Manager may engage Participating Affiliates and their personnel to provide (jointly or in coordination with the Investment Manager) services relating to client relations, investment monitoring, account administration, trading and
discretionary investment management (including portfolio management and risk
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
174
|
management) to certain accounts the Investment Manager manages,
including the Funds, other pooled vehicles and separately managed accounts. In some circumstances, a Participating Affiliate may delegate responsibility for providing those services to another Participating Affiliate. In addition, the Investment
Manager may provide certain similar services to its Participating Affiliates for accounts they manage.
The Investment Manager believes that harnessing the
collective expertise of the firm and its Participating Affiliates will benefit its clients. In this regard, the Investment Manager has certain portfolio management and client servicing teams at both the firm and at Participating Affiliates (through
subadvisory or other intercompany arrangements) operating jointly to provide a better client experience. These joint teams use expanded and shared capabilities that the Investment Manager and its Participating Affiliates provide, including the
sharing of research and other information by investment personnel (
e.g.
, portfolio managers and analysts) across the firm and at its Participating Affiliates relating to economic perspectives, market analysis
and equity and fixed income securities analysis.
Participating Affiliates may provide certain
advisory and trading-related services to certain of the Investment Manager’s accounts, including the Funds. The Investment Manager may also provide similar services to certain accounts of Participating Affiliates. The Investment Manager
believes that local trading in certain local markets will benefit its clients, including the Funds. However, such services may result in potential conflicts of interest to such accounts.
The Investment Manager has portfolio management
teams in its multiple geographic locations that may share research information regarding leveraged loans. The Investment Manager operates separate and independent trading desks in these locations for the purpose of purchasing and selling leveraged
loans. As a result, the Investment Manager does not aggregate orders in leveraged loans across portfolio management teams. For example, funds and other client accounts being managed by these portfolio management teams may purchase and sell the same
leveraged loan in the secondary market on the same day at different times and at different prices. There is also the potential for a particular account or group of accounts, including a Fund, to forego an opportunity or to receive a different
allocation (either larger or smaller) than might otherwise be obtained if the Investment Manager were to aggregate trades in leveraged loans across the portfolio management teams. Although the Investment Manager does not aggregate orders in
leveraged loans across its portfolio management teams in the multiple geographic locations, it operates in this structure subject to its duty to seek best execution.
The Funds may participate, if and when practicable,
in bidding for the purchase of portfolio securities directly from an issuer in order to take advantage of the lower purchase price available to members of a bidding group. A Fund will engage in this practice, however, only when the Investment
Manager, in its sole discretion, believes such practice to be otherwise in such Fund’s interests.
The Funds will not execute portfolio transactions
through, or buy or sell portfolio securities from or to the Investment Manager and its affiliates acting as principal (including repurchase and reverse repurchase agreements), except to the extent permitted by applicable law, regulation or order.
However, the Investment Manager is authorized to allocate buy and sell orders for portfolio securities to certain broker-dealers and financial institutions, including, in the case of agency transactions, broker-dealers and financial institutions
that are affiliated with Ameriprise Financial. To the extent that a Fund executes any securities trades with an affiliate of Ameriprise Financial, such Fund does so in conformity with Rule 17e-1 under the 1940 Act and the procedures that such Fund
has adopted pursuant to the rule. In this regard, for each transaction, the Board will determine that the transaction is effected in accordance with the Funds’ Rule 17e-1 procedures, which require: (i) the transaction resulted in prices for
and execution of securities transactions at least as favorable to the particular Fund as those likely to be derived from a non-affiliated qualified broker-dealer; (ii) the affiliated broker-dealer charged the Fund commission rates consistent with
those charged by the affiliated broker-dealer in similar transactions to clients comparable to the Fund and that are not affiliated with the broker-dealer in question; and (iii) the fees, commissions or other remuneration paid by the Fund did not
exceed 2% of the sales price of the securities if the sale was effected in connection with a secondary distribution, or 1% of the purchase or sale price of such securities if effected in other than a secondary distribution.
Certain affiliates of Ameriprise Financial may have
deposit, loan or commercial banking relationships with the corporate users of facilities financed by industrial development revenue bonds or private activity bonds bought by certain of the Funds. Ameriprise Financial or certain of its affiliates may
serve as trustee, custodian, tender agent, guarantor, placement agent, underwriter, or in some other capacity, with respect to certain issues of securities. Under certain circumstances, a Fund may buy securities from a member of an underwriting
syndicate in which an affiliate of Ameriprise Financial is a member. The Funds have adopted procedures pursuant to Rule 10f-3 under the 1940 Act, and intend to comply with the requirements of Rule 10f-3, in connection with any purchases of
securities that may be subject to Rule 10f-3.
Given the breadth of the Investment Manager’s
investment management activities, investment decisions for the Funds are not always made independently from those other investment companies and accounts advised or managed by the Investment Manager. To the extent permitted by law, when a purchase
or sale of the same security is made at substantially the same time on behalf of one or more of the Funds and another investment portfolio, investment company or account, the Investment Manager may aggregate the securities to be sold or bought for
the Funds with those to be sold or bought for other investment portfolios,
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
175
|
investment companies or accounts in executing transactions, and
such transactions will be averaged as to price and available investments allocated as to amount in a manner which the Investment Manager believes to be equitable to the Funds and such other investment portfolio, investment company or account. In
some instances, this investment procedure may adversely affect the price paid or received by a Fund or the size of the position obtained or sold by the Fund.
See
Investment
Management and Other Services – Other Roles and Relationships of Ameriprise Financial and its Affiliates – Certain Conflicts of Interest
for more information about these and other conflicts of interest.
Brokerage Commissions
The following charts reflect the amounts of
brokerage commissions paid by the Funds for the three most recently completed fiscal years. In certain instances, the Funds may pay brokerage commissions to broker-dealers that are affiliates of Ameriprise Financial. As indicated above, all such
transactions involving the payment of brokerage commissions to affiliates are done in compliance with Rule 17e-1 under the 1940 Act.
Aggregate Brokerage Commissions Paid by the
Funds
The following chart reflects the aggregate amount of
brokerage commissions paid by the Funds for the three most recently completed fiscal years. Differences, year to year, in the amount of brokerage commissions paid by a Fund were primarily the result of increased market volatility as well as
shareholder purchase and redemption activity in the Fund. The table is organized by fiscal year end.
Total Brokerage Commissions
|
Total
Brokerage Commissions
|
Fund
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending January 31
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
$260
|
$530
|
$932
(a)
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending March 31
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
(c)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
1,170,504
|
1,540,259
|
1,048,675
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
483,636
|
456,905
|
510,601
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
1,601,142
|
2,716,236
|
2,312,302
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30
|
Bond
Fund
|
18,287
|
23,846
|
15,224
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
69,484
|
54,070
|
59,212
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
930,710
(d)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
21,643
|
22,078
|
42,481
(e)
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
1,212,265
|
1,960,857
|
2,305,255
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
225,810
|
167,980
|
72,702
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending May 31
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
627,857
|
239,119
|
210,129
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
176
|
|
Total
Brokerage Commissions
|
Fund
|
2017
|
2016
|
2015
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
$17,770
|
$46,588
|
$23,795
(f)
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
104,102
|
2,293,997
|
618,976
(g)
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
1,356,544
|
1,853,862
|
2,285,197
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending July 31
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
926,115
|
1,107,524
|
1,344,066
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
4,550
|
0
|
0
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
332
|
13
|
0
(h)
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31
|
Balanced
Fund
|
1,764,194
|
1,567,482
|
827,182
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
4,479,950
|
3,952,735
|
2,566,680
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
382,628
|
1,236,808
|
821,155
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
2,969,418
|
3,765,444
|
4,498,397
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
459,504
|
853,746
|
1,119,280
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
103,062
|
112,438
|
265,939
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
379,605
|
328,663
|
333,197
|
Greater
China Fund
|
139,256
|
136,815
|
268,667
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
2,081,806
|
2,710,169
|
2,311,420
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
1,110,334
|
1,059,559
|
1,427,187
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
1,730,634
|
3,051,542
|
1,967,401
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
420,658
|
489,671
|
210,419
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
1,207,610
|
1,065,842
|
1,711,624
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
262,921
(i)
|
178,818
|
129,182
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending October 31
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
0
|
1,232
|
0
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
0
|
809
|
0
|
Fund
|
2016
|
2015
|
2014
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending December 31
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
245,905
|
284,239
|
354,039
|
(a)
|
For the period from March 11,
2014 (commencement of operations) to January 31, 2015.
|
(b)
|
The Fund commenced operations
on October 24, 2017, and therefore has no reporting information for periods prior to such date.
|
(c)
|
No historical information is
given for the Fund because the Fund had not commenced operations as of the date of this SAI.
|
(d)
|
For the period from October 17,
2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017.
|
(e)
|
For the period from March 27,
2015 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2015.
|
(f)
|
For the period from January 27,
2015 (commencement of operations) to May 31, 2015.
|
(g)
|
For the period from February
19, 2015 (commencement of operations) to May 31, 2015.
|
(h)
|
For the period from March 26,
2015 (commencement of operations) to July 31, 2015.
|
(i)
|
The Fund changed its fiscal
year end in 2017 from October 31 to August 31. For the fiscal year ended in 2017, the information shown is for the period from November 1, 2016 to August 31, 2017.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
177
|
Brokerage Commissions Paid to Brokers Affiliated with
the Investment Manager
Affiliates of the Investment
Manager may engage in brokerage and other securities transactions on behalf of a Fund according to procedures adopted by the Board and to the extent consistent with applicable provisions of the federal securities laws. Subject to approval by the
Board, the same conditions apply to transactions with broker-dealer affiliates of any Fund subadviser. The Investment Manager will use an affiliate only if (i) the Investment Manager determines that the Fund will receive prices and executions at
least as favorable, under the circumstances, as those offered by qualified independent brokers performing similar brokerage and other services for the Fund and (ii) the affiliate charges the Fund commission rates consistent with those the affiliate
charges comparable unaffiliated customers in similar transactions and if such use is consistent with terms of the Investment Management Services Agreement or Management Agreement, as applicable.
No brokerage commissions were paid by the Funds in
the last three fiscal periods to brokers affiliated with the Funds' Investment Manager or any subadvisers.
Directed Brokerage
The Funds or the Investment Manager, through an
agreement or understanding with a broker-dealer, or otherwise through an internal allocation procedure, may direct, subject to applicable legal requirements, the Funds' brokerage transactions to a broker-dealer because of the research services it
provides the Funds or the Investment Manager.
Reported numbers include third party soft dollar
commissions and portfolio manager directed commissions directed for research. The Investment Manager also receives proprietary research from brokers, but these amounts have not been included in the table.
During each Fund’s last fiscal year (or
period), the Funds directed certain brokerage transactions and paid related commissions in the amounts as follows:
Brokerage Directed for Research
|
Brokerage
directed for research
|
Fund
|
Amount
of Transactions
|
Amount
of Commissions Imputed or Paid
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending January 31
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
$0
|
$0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending March 31
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
|
N/A
(b)
|
N/A
(b)
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
|
N/A
(c)
|
N/A
(c)
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
|
N/A
(b)
|
N/A
(b)
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
|
N/A
(c)
|
N/A
(c)
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
|
N/A
(b)
|
N/A
(b)
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
|
N/A
(c)
|
N/A
(c)
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
|
N/A
(b)
|
N/A
(b)
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
|
N/A
(c)
|
N/A
(c)
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
|
N/A
(b)
|
N/A
(b)
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
1,983,862,874
|
362,061
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
48,694,488
|
55,573
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
2,713,958,498
|
695,008
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
|
N/A
(b)
|
N/A
(b)
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
|
N/A
(b)
|
N/A
(b)
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30
|
Bond
Fund
|
0
|
0
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
0
|
0
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
748,476,870
(d)
|
221,469
(d)
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
3,038,917
|
2,268
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
319,153,574
|
542,616
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
178
|
|
Brokerage
directed for research
|
Fund
|
Amount
of Transactions
|
Amount
of Commissions Imputed or Paid
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
$0
|
$0
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
0
|
0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending May 31
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
0
|
0
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
0
|
0
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
18,981,941
|
6,358
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
2,058,851,738
|
873,880
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
0
|
0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending July 31
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
0
|
0
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
1,006,812,328
|
356,717
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
0
|
0
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
0
|
0
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
0
|
0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31
|
Balanced
Fund
|
1,762,235,353
|
721,726
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
4,525,483,379
|
1,864,970
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
127,145,134
|
123,710
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
289,983,785
|
467,673
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
220,480,966
|
136,298
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
38,278,873
|
30,887
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
122,882,265
|
76,386
|
Greater
China Fund
|
18,766,331
|
24,877
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
1,193,894,857
|
639,990
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
1,740,450,417
|
368,432
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
338,013,806
|
165,451
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
0
|
0
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
540,188,659
|
389,932
|
Strategic
Income Fund
(e)
|
0
|
0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending October 31
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
0
|
0
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
0
|
0
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
0
|
0
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
0
|
0
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
0
|
0
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
0
|
0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending December 31
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
109,816,330
|
57,313
|
(a)
|
For the period from March 11,
2014 (commencement of operations) to January 31, 2015.
|
(b)
|
The Fund commenced operations
on October 24, 2017, and therefore has no reporting information for periods prior to such date.
|
(c)
|
No historical information is
given for the Fund because the Fund had not commenced operations as of the date of this SAI.
|
(d)
|
For the period from October 17,
2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017.
|
(e)
|
The Fund changed its fiscal
year end in 2017 from October 31 to August 31. For the fiscal year ended in 2017, the information shown is for the period from November 1, 2016 to August 31, 2017.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
179
|
Securities of Regular Broker-Dealers
In certain cases, the Funds, as part of their
principal investment strategies, or otherwise as a permissible investment, will invest in the common stock or debt obligations of the regular broker-dealers that the Investment Manager uses to transact brokerage for the Funds.
As of each Fund’s last fiscal year (or period)
end, the Funds owned securities of their “regular brokers or dealers” or their parents, as defined in Rule 10b-1 under the 1940 Act, as shown in the table below:
Investments in Securities of Regular Brokers or Dealers
Fund
|
Issuer
|
Value
of securities owned
at end of fiscal period
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending January 31, 2017
|
Diversified
Real Return
|
None
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending March 31, 2017
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2020 Fund
(a)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2030 Fund
(a)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2035 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2040 Fund
(a)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2045 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2050 Fund
(a)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
(b)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Adaptive
Retirement 2060 Fund
(a)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
Eaton
Vance Corp.
|
$1,543,252
|
The
Charles Schwab Corp.
|
$27,354,045
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
The
Charles Schwab Corp.
|
$132,680,411
|
Solutions
Aggressive Portfolio
(a)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Solutions
Conservative Portfolio
(a)
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30, 2017
|
Bond
Fund
|
Chase
Issuance Trust
|
$1,656,677
|
Citigroup,
Inc.
|
$5,528,912
|
Citigroup
Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc.
|
$640,204
|
Credit
Suisse Mortgage Capital Certificates
|
$40,851
|
JPMorgan
Chase & Co.
|
$13,600,386
|
JPMorgan
Chase Capital XXI
|
$309,944
|
JPMorgan
Chase Capital XXIII
|
$220,096
|
JPMorgan
Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust
|
$1,377,038
|
Morgan
Stanley Re-Remic Trust
|
$471,673
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
Citigroup,
Inc.
|
$14,171,577
|
The
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
|
$11,843,271
|
JPMorgan
Chase & Co.
|
$10,174,710
|
Morgan
Stanley
|
$13,115,830
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
TD
Ameritrade Holding Corp.
|
$1,642,242
|
Citigroup,
Inc.
|
$4,581,504
|
Credit
Suisse Group AG
|
$(1,110,770)
|
Eaton
Vance Corp.
|
$(1,548,528)
|
The
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
|
$1,530,344
|
JPMorgan
Chase & Co.
|
$4,178,175
|
Morgan
Stanley
|
$524,907
|
Raymond
James Financial, Inc. (subsidiary)
|
$1,740,266
|
The
Charles Schwab Corp.
|
$2,265,538
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
180
|
Fund
|
Issuer
|
Value
of securities owned
at end of fiscal period
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
Citigroup,
Inc.
|
$179,401
|
Citigroup
Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc.
|
$1,567,454
|
Credit
Suisse AG
|
$44,598
|
Credit
Suisse Mortgage Capital Certificates
|
$1,386,946
|
Goldman
Sachs International
|
$27,451
|
JPMorgan
Chase & Co.
|
$285,825
|
Morgan
Stanley
|
$52,391
|
PNC
Financial Services Group, Inc.(The)
|
$15,030
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
None
|
N/A
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
Chase
Issuance Trust
|
$10,291,844
|
Citigroup,
Inc.
|
$15,060,248
|
Citigroup
Commercial Mortgage Trust
|
$2,201,702
|
Citigroup
Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc.
|
$15,893,745
|
Credit
Suisse Mortgage Capital Certificates
|
$22,813,634
|
Credit
Suisse Securities (USA) LLC
|
$7,358,096
|
JPMorgan
Chase & Co.
|
$28,475,081
|
JPMorgan
Chase Capital XXI
|
$20,108,070
|
JPMorgan
Chase Capital XXIII
|
$387,541
|
JPMorgan
Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities Trust
|
$1,731,403
|
JPMorgan
Resecuritization Trust
|
$6,096,818
|
Merrill
Lynch Mortgage Investors Trust
|
$5,078
|
Morgan
Stanley Capital I Trust
|
$4,307,542
|
Morgan
Stanley Re-Remic Trust
|
$4,067,487
|
PNC
Bank NA
|
$3,442,740
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending May 31, 2017
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
Affiliated
Managers Group, Inc.
|
$(87,848)
|
Citigroup,
Inc.
|
$829,402
|
Franklin
Resources, Inc.
|
$(52,279)
|
The
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
|
$112,179
|
JPMorgan
Chase & Co.
|
$998,576
|
JPMorgan
Chase Capital XXI
|
$297,905
|
JPMorgan
Chase Capital XXIII
|
$395,973
|
Legg
Mason, Inc. (subsidiary)
|
$(49,148)
|
Morgan
Stanley
|
$98,840
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
JPMorgan
Chase & Co.
|
$330,243,000
|
PNC
Financial Services Group, Inc.(The)
|
$155,832,327
|
High
Yield Municipal Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending July 31, 2017
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
The
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
|
$40,104,459
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
181
|
Fund
|
Issuer
|
Value
of securities owned
at end of fiscal period
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
Citigroup,
Inc.
|
$14,112,420
|
Credit
Suisse AG
|
$6,001,596
|
The
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
|
$13,218,790
|
JPMorgan
Chase & Co.
|
$16,140,000
|
JPMorgan
Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust
|
$5,568,485
|
JPMBB
Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust
|
$3,487,250
|
Morgan
Stanley
|
$12,093,300
|
Morgan
Stanley Bank of America Merrill Lynch Trust
|
$844,680
|
PNC
Bank NA
|
$10,438,324
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31, 2017
|
Balanced
Fund
|
Citigroup,
Inc.
|
$146,057,604
|
Credit
Suisse AG
|
$4,715,001
|
GS
Mortgage Securities Trust
|
$13,135,687
|
The
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
|
$12,580,248
|
JPMorgan
Chase & Co.
|
$148,991,369
|
JPMorgan
Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust
|
$1,273,722
|
LB-UBS
Commercial Mortgage Trust
|
$1,071,427
|
Morgan
Stanley
|
$72,790,009
|
Morgan
Stanley Capital I Trust
|
$5,997,248
|
PNC
Bank NA
|
$4,385,321
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
Citigroup,
Inc.
|
$331,087,452
|
JPMorgan
Chase & Co.
|
$334,219,617
|
Morgan
Stanley
|
$159,262,968
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
Piper
Jaffray Companies
|
$909,380
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
Greater
China Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
182
|
Fund
|
Issuer
|
Value
of securities owned
at end of fiscal period
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
Bear
Stearns Alt-A Trust
|
$740,974
|
Bear
Stearns Mortgage Funding Trust
|
$633,638
|
Bear
Stearns Trust
|
$585,332
|
Chase
Issuance Trust
|
$400,579
|
Citigroup,
Inc.
|
$1,802,831
|
Citigroup
Commercial Mortgage Trust
|
$802,450
|
Citigroup
Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc.
|
$1,191,354
|
Credit
Suisse Mortgage Capital Trust
|
$1,829,789
|
Credit
Suisse First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp.
|
$23,338
|
Eaton
Vance CLO Ltd.
|
$400,399
|
GS
Mortgage Securities Trust
|
$2,332,605
|
GS
Mortgage Securities Corp. II
|
$131,780
|
The
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
|
$1,946,689
|
JPMorgan
Chase & Co.
|
$763,782
|
JPMorgan
Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust
|
$1,926,462
|
JPMorgan
Mortgage Acquisition Corp
|
$1,501,325
|
Morgan
Stanley
|
$1,446,998
|
Morgan
Stanley Bank of America Merrill Lynch Trust
|
$174,844
|
Morgan
Stanley Capital I Trust
|
$146,123
|
Morgan
Stanley Mortgage Loan Trust
|
$513,240
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
Legg
Mason, Inc.
|
|
Stifel
Financial Corp.
|
$1,546,718
|
Westwood
Holdings Group, Inc.
|
$3,618,896
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
183
|
Fund
|
Issuer
|
Value
of securities owned
at end of fiscal period
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
The
Bear Stearns Companies LLC
|
$7,531,037
|
Chase
Issuance Trust
|
$20,858,408
|
Citigroup,
Inc.
|
$67,483,868
|
Citigroup
Commercial Mortgage Trust
|
$24,318,679
|
Citigroup
Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc.
|
$4,185,120
|
Credit
Suisse Mortgage Capital Certificates
|
$16,611,611
|
Credit
Suisse Group Funding
|
$7,054,442
|
Credit
Suisse Mortgage Capital Trust
|
$14,283,501
|
E*TRADE
Financial Corp.
|
$3,426,983
|
GS
Mortgage Securities Trust
|
$36,331,604
|
The
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.
|
$64,765,439
|
Jefferies
Group LLC
|
$3,793,086
|
JPMorgan
Chase & Co.
|
$87,329,783
|
JPMorgan
Chase Bank NA
|
$2,614,364
|
JPMorgan
Chase Capital XXI
|
$17,190,288
|
JPMorgan
Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust
|
$20,566,156
|
JPMorgan
Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities Trust
|
$44,577
|
JPMorgan
Mortgage Trust
|
$1,247,320
|
JPMorgan
Resecuritization Trust
|
$4,675,762
|
Lehman
XS Trust
|
$5,379,190
|
Merrill
Lynch & Co., Inc.
|
$2,118,154
|
Banc
of America Merrill Lynch Commercial Mortgage, Inc.
|
$1,734,164
|
Morgan
Stanley
|
$55,077,027
|
Morgan
Stanley Bank of America Merrill Lynch Trust
|
$3,635,832
|
Morgan
Stanley Capital I Trust
|
$13,742,600
|
Morgan
Stanley Mortgage Loan Trust
|
$4,363,742
|
Morgan
Stanley Re-Remic Trust
|
$1,072,558
|
Morgan
Stanley Resecuritization Trust
|
$492,732
|
PNC
Bank NA
|
$10,192,742
|
Stifel
Financial Corp.
|
$1,780,987
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
None
|
N/A
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
Citigroup,
Inc.
|
$7,039,145
|
Citigroup
Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc.
|
$15,369,616
|
Credit
Suisse Mortgage Capital Certificates
|
$90,317,642
|
Jefferies
Resecuritization Trust
|
$513,679
|
Banc
of America Merrill Lynch Commercial Mortgage, Inc.
|
$11,687,429
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending October 31, 2017
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending December 31, 2016
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
None
|
N/A
|
(a)
|
The Fund commenced operations
on October 24, 2017, and therefore has no reporting information for periods prior to such date.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
184
|
(b)
|
No historical information is
given for the Fund because the Fund had not commenced operations as of the date of this SAI.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
185
|
OTHER PRACTICES
Performance Disclosure
Effective beginning with performance reporting for
the December 31, 2011 year end, in presenting performance information for newer share classes, if any, of a Fund, the Fund typically includes, for periods prior to the offering of such share classes, the performance of the Fund’s oldest share
class (except as otherwise disclosed), adjusted to reflect any higher class-related operating expenses of the newer share classes, as applicable, based on the expense ratios of those share classes for the Fund’s most recently completed fiscal
year for which data was available at December 31, 2011 or, for Funds and classes first offered after January 1, 2011, the expected expense differential at the time the newer share class is first offered. Actual expense differentials across classes
will vary over time. The performance of the Fund’s newer share classes would have been substantially similar to the performance of the Fund’s oldest share class because all share classes of a Fund are invested in the same portfolio of
securities, and would have differed only to the extent that the classes do not have the same sales charges and/or expenses (and any differences in expenses between share classes may change over time).
Prior to December 31, 2011, in presenting
performance information for a newer share class of a Fund, the Fund would typically include, for periods prior to the offering of such newer share class, the performance of an older share class, the class-related operating expense structure of which
was most similar to that of the newer share class, and for periods prior to the initial offering of such older share class, would include the performance of successively older share classes with successively less similar expense structures. Such
performance information was not restated to reflect any differences in expenses between share classes and if such differences had been reflected, the performance shown might have been lower. Because, prior to December 31, 2011, the Funds used a
different methodology for presenting performance information for a newer share class, such performance information published before December 31, 2011 may differ from corresponding performance information published after December 31, 2011.
For certain Funds, performance shown includes the
returns of a predecessor to the Fund. The table below identifies the predecessor fund for certain of these Funds and shows the periods when performance shown is that of the predecessor fund or a predecessor to that fund.
Fund
|
|
Predecessor
Fund
|
|
For
periods prior to:
|
Bond
Fund
|
|
Excelsior
Core Bond Fund, a series of Excelsior Funds, Inc.
|
|
March
31, 2008
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
|
Excelsior
Emerging Markets Fund, a series of Excelsior Funds, Inc.
|
|
March
31, 2008
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
|
Excelsior
Energy and Natural Resources Fund, a series of Excelsior Funds, Inc.
|
|
March
31, 2008
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
|
Excelsior
Pacific/Asia Fund, a series of Excelsior Funds, Inc.
|
|
March
31, 2008
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
|
Excelsior
Large Cap Growth Fund, a series of Excelsior Funds, Inc.
|
|
March
31, 2008
|
Portfolio Turnover
A change in the securities held by a Fund is known
as “portfolio turnover.” High portfolio turnover involves correspondingly greater expenses to the Fund, including brokerage commissions or dealer mark-ups and other transaction costs on the sale of securities and reinvestments in other
securities. Such sales may also result in adverse tax consequences to a Fund’s shareholders. The trading costs and tax effects associated with portfolio turnover may adversely affect a Fund’s performance. For each Fund’s portfolio
turnover rate, see the
Fees and Expenses of the Fund — Portfolio Turnover
section in the prospectuses for that Fund.
In any particular year, market conditions may result
in greater rates than are presently anticipated. The rate of a Fund’s turnover may vary significantly from time to time depending on, among other factors, economic, market and other conditions.
See below for an explanation of any significant
variation in a Fund’s portfolio turnover rates over the two most recently completed fiscal years:
For MM Alternative Strategies Fund, during the
fiscal year ended August 31, 2017, the Fund experienced a higher rate of portfolio turnover than during the previous fiscal year. This was primarily due to the addition of and allocation of Fund assets to TCW, which became a subadviser to the Fund
on March 29, 2017.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
186
|
Disclosure of Portfolio Holdings Information
The Board and the Investment Manager believe that
the investment ideas of the Investment Manager and any subadviser with respect to portfolio management of a Fund should seek to benefit the Fund and its shareholders, and do not want to afford speculators an opportunity to profit by anticipating
Fund trading strategies. However, the Board also believes that selective disclosure of a Fund’s portfolio holdings can, under appropriate circumstances, be made for purposes beneficial to the Fund and its shareholders or for other purposes
under conditions that are designed to protect the interests of the Fund and its shareholders.
The Board has therefore adopted policies and
procedures relating to disclosure of the Funds’ portfolio securities. These policies and procedures are intended to protect the confidentiality of Fund portfolio holdings information and generally prohibit the release of such information until
such information is made available to the general public, unless such persons have been authorized to receive such information on a selective basis, as described below. It is the policy of the Fund not to provide or permit others to provide
portfolio holdings on a selective basis, and the Investment Manager does not intend to selectively disclose portfolio holdings or expect that such holdings information will be selectively disclosed, except where necessary for the Fund’s
operation or where there are other legitimate business purposes for doing so and, in any case, where conditions are met that are designed to protect the interests of the Funds and their shareholders.
Although the Investment Manager seeks to limit the
selective disclosure of portfolio holdings information and such selective disclosure is monitored under the Fund’s compliance program for conformity with the policies and procedures, there can be no assurance that these policies will protect
the Fund from the potential misuse of holdings information by individuals or firms in possession of that information. Under no circumstances may the Investment Manager, its affiliates or any employee thereof receive any consideration or compensation
for disclosing such holdings information.
Public
Disclosures
The Funds’ portfolio
holdings are currently disclosed to the public through filings with the SEC and postings on the Funds’ website. The information is available on the Funds’ website as described below.
■
|
For equity,
alternative and flexible funds (other than the equity funds identified below) and funds-of-funds (equity and fixed income), a complete list of Fund portfolio holdings as of month-end is posted approximately, but no earlier than, 15 calendar days
after such month-end.
|
■
|
For Columbia Small
Cap Growth Fund I and Columbia Variable Portfolio – Small Company Growth Fund, a complete list of Fund portfolio holdings as of month-end is posted approximately, but no earlier than, 30 calendar days after such month-end.
|
■
|
For fixed-income
Funds (other than money market funds), a complete list of Fund portfolio holdings as of calendar quarter-end is posted approximately, but no earlier than, 30 calendar days after such quarter-end.
|
■
|
For money market
Funds, a complete list of Fund portfolio holdings as of month-end is posted no later than five business days after such month-end. Such month-end holdings are continuously available on the website for at least six months, together with a link to an
SEC webpage where a user of the website may obtain access to the Fund’s most recent 12 months of publicly available filings on Form N-MFP. Money market Fund portfolio holdings information posted on the website, at minimum, includes with
respect to each holding, the name of the issuer, the category of investment (
e.g.
, Treasury debt, government agency debt, asset backed commercial paper, structured investment vehicle note), the CUSIP number
(if any), the principal amount, the maturity date (as determined under Rule 2a-7 for purposes of calculating weighted average maturity), the final maturity date (if different from the maturity date previously described), coupon or yield and the
value. The money market Funds will also disclose on the website its overall weighted average maturity, weighted average life maturity, percentage of daily liquid assets, percentage of weekly liquid assets and daily inflows and outflows.
|
Portfolio holdings of
Funds owned solely by the Investment Manager or its affiliates are not disclosed on the website. A complete schedule of each Fund’s portfolio holdings is available semiannually and annually in shareholder reports filed on Form N-CSR and, after
the first and third fiscal quarters, in regulatory filings on Form N-Q. These shareholder reports and regulatory filings are filed with the SEC in accordance with federal securities laws. Shareholders may obtain each Fund’s Form N-CSR and N-Q
filings on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. In addition, each Fund’s Form N-CSR and N-Q filings may be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s public reference room in Washington, D.C. You may call the SEC at 202.551.8090 for information
about the SEC’s website or the operation of the public reference room.
In addition, the Investment Manager makes publicly
available information regarding certain Fund’s largest five to fifteen holdings, as a percentage of the market value of the Funds’ portfolios as of a month-end. This holdings information is made publicly available through the website
columbiathreadneedle.com/us, approximately 15 calendar days following the month-end. The scope of the information that is made available on the Funds’ websites pursuant to the Funds’ policies may change from time to time without prior
notice. Certain fund marketing material, such as fund fact sheets, containing the largest five to fifteen holdings may be made available earlier than 15 days following month end.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
187
|
The Investment Manager may also disclose more
current portfolio holdings information as of specified dates on the Funds’ website.
The Funds, the Investment Manager and their
affiliates may include portfolio holdings information that already has been made public through a website posting or SEC filing in marketing literature and other communications to shareholders, advisors or other parties, provided that the
information is disclosed no earlier than when the information is disclosed publicly on the funds’ website or no earlier than the time a fund files such information in a publicly available SEC filing required to include such information.
Other Disclosures
The Funds’ policies and procedures provide
that no disclosures of the Funds’ portfolio holdings may be made prior to the portfolio holdings information being made available to the general public unless (i) the Funds have a legitimate business purpose for making such disclosure, (ii)
the Funds or their authorized agents authorize such non-public disclosure of information, and (iii) the party receiving the non-public information enters into an appropriate confidentiality agreement or is otherwise subject to a confidentiality
obligation.
In determining the existence of a
legitimate business purpose for making portfolio disclosures, the following factors, among others, are considered: (i) any prior disclosure must be consistent with the anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities laws and the fiduciary duties of
the Investment Manager; (ii) any conflicts of interest between the interests of Fund shareholders, on the one hand, and those of the Investment Manager, the Funds’ Distributor or any affiliated person of a Fund, the Investment Manager or
Distributor on the other; and (iii) any prior disclosure to a third party, although subject to a confidentiality agreement, would not make conduct lawful that is otherwise unlawful.
Fund complete portfolio holdings may be disclosed
between and among the following persons (collectively, Affiliates and Agents) for legitimate business purposes within the scope of their official duties and responsibilities, subject to Fund policies and procedures designed to prevent the misuse of
inside information, by agreement, or under applicable laws, rules, and regulations: (1) persons who are subject to the Code of Ethics or policies and procedures designed to prevent the misuse of inside information; (2) an investment adviser,
distributor, administrator, transfer agent, or custodian to the Fund; (3) an accounting firm, an auditing firm, or outside legal counsel retained by the Investment Manager or its affiliates, or the Fund; (4) an investment adviser to whom complete
portfolio holdings are disclosed for due diligence purposes when the adviser is in merger or acquisition talks with a the Investment Manager or its parent company; and (5) a newly hired subadviser to whom complete portfolio holdings are disclosed
prior to the time it commences its duties.
The
frequency with which complete portfolio holdings may be disclosed between and among Affiliates and Agents, and the length of the lag, if any, between the date of the information and the date on which the information is disclosed between and among
the Affiliates and Agents, is determined by such Affiliates and Agents based on the facts and circumstances, including, without limitation, the nature of the portfolio holdings information to be disclosed, the risk of harm to the Funds and their
shareholders, and the legitimate business purposes served by such disclosure. The frequency of disclosure between and among Affiliates and Agents varies and may be as frequent as daily, with no lag. Any disclosure of Fund complete portfolio holdings
to any Affiliates and Agents as previously described may also include a list of the other investment positions that make up the Fund, such as cash investments and derivatives.
The Funds also disclose portfolio holdings
information as required by federal, state or international securities laws, and may disclose portfolio holdings information in response to requests by governmental authorities, or in connection with litigation or potential litigation, a
restructuring of a holding, where such disclosure is necessary to participate or explore participation in a restructuring of the holding (
e.g.
, as part of a bondholder group), or to the issuer of a holding,
pursuant to a request of the issuer or any other party who is duly authorized by the issuer.
In certain limited situations, the Funds may provide
portfolio holdings to an institutional client (or its custodian or other agent) when the client is effecting a redemption in-kind from a Fund and the Investment Manager believes that such disclosure will not be harmful to the Fund. In these
situations, the Investment Manager makes it clear through non-disclosure agreements or other means that the recipient must ensure that the confidential information is used only as necessary to effect the redemption-in-kind and will maintain the
information in a manner designed to protect against unauthorized access or misuse.
The Board has adopted policies to ensure that the
Fund’s portfolio holdings information is only disclosed in accordance with these policies. Before any selective disclosure of portfolio holdings information is permitted, the person seeking to disclose such holdings information must submit a
written request to the Portfolio Holdings Committee (“PHC”). The PHC, which is chaired by the Funds’ Chief Compliance Officer, is comprised of members from the Investment Manager’s legal department and compliance department,
and the Funds’ President. The PHC is authorized by the Board to perform an initial review of requests for disclosure of holdings information to evaluate whether there is a legitimate business purpose for selective disclosure, whether selective
disclosure is in the best interests of a Fund and its shareholders, to consider any potential conflicts of interest between the Fund, the Investment Manager, and its affiliates, and to safeguard against improper use of holdings information.
Factors
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
188
|
considered in this analysis are whether the recipient has agreed to
or has a duty to keep the holdings information confidential and whether risks have been mitigated such that the recipient has agreed or has a duty to use the holdings information only as necessary to effectuate the purpose for which selective
disclosure may be authorized. Before portfolio holdings may be selectively disclosed, requests approved by the PHC must also be authorized by the Funds’ President, Chief Compliance Officer or General Counsel/Chief Legal Officer or their
respective designees. On at least an annual basis, the PHC reviews the approved recipients of selective disclosure and may require a resubmission of the request, in order to re-authorize certain ongoing arrangements. These procedures are intended to
be reasonably designed to protect the confidentiality of Fund holdings information and to prohibit their release to individual investors, institutional investors, intermediaries that distribute the Fund’s shares, and other parties, until such
holdings information is made public or unless such persons have been authorized to receive such holdings information on a selective basis, as set forth above.
Ongoing Portfolio Holdings Disclosure Arrangements:
The Funds currently have ongoing arrangements with
certain approved recipients with respect to the disclosure of portfolio holdings information prior to such information being made public. Portfolio holdings information disclosed to such recipients is current as of the time of its disclosure, is
disclosed to each recipient solely for purposes consistent with the services described below and has been authorized in accordance with the policy. No compensation or consideration is received in exchange for this information. In addition to the
daily information provided to a Fund’s custodians, subcustodians, Investment Manager and subadvisers, the following disclosure arrangements are in place:
Identity
of Recipient
|
|
Conditions/restrictions
on use of information
|
|
Frequency
of
Disclosure
|
Recipients
under arrangements with the Funds or Investment Manager:
|
|
|
Barclays
Capital, Inc.
|
|
Used
for analytics including risk and attribution assessment.
|
|
Daily
|
BlackRock,
Inc.
|
|
Used
for fixed income trading and decision support.
|
|
Daily
|
Bloomberg,
L.P.
|
|
Used
for portfolio analytics, statistical analysis and independent research.
|
|
Daily,
Monthly and Quarterly
|
Bolger,
Inc.
|
|
Used
for commercial printing.
|
|
As
Needed
|
Boston
Investors Communications Group, LLC (BICG)
|
|
Used
for writing services that require disclosing portfolio holdings in advance of their dissemination to the general public.
|
|
Monthly
|
Capital
Markets Services (CMS) Group
|
|
Used
for intraday post-trade information when equity exposures (either via futures or options trades) are modified beyond certain limits for VP – Managed Volatility Funds.
|
|
As
Needed
|
Catapult
|
|
Used
for commercial printing.
|
|
As
Needed
|
Citigroup,
Inc.
|
|
Used
for mortgage decision support.
|
|
Daily
|
Donnelley
Financial Solutions
|
|
Used
to provide Edgar filing and typesetting services, and printing of prospectuses, factsheets, annual and semi-annual reports. Used for commercial printing.
|
|
As
Needed
|
Elevation
Exhibits & Events
|
|
Used
for trade show exhibits.
|
|
As
Needed
|
Equifax,
Inc.
|
|
Used
to ensure that Columbia Management does not violate the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanction requirements.
|
|
Daily
|
Ernst
& Young, LLP
|
|
Used
to analyze PFIC investments.
|
|
Monthly
|
Eva
Dimensions
|
|
Used
as a research service for small cap stock.
|
|
As
Needed
|
Eze
Software Group, LLC
|
|
Used
to facilitate the evaluation of commission rates and to provide flexible commission reporting.
|
|
Daily
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
189
|
Identity
of Recipient
|
|
Conditions/restrictions
on use of information
|
|
Frequency
of
Disclosure
|
FactSet
Research Systems, Inc.
|
|
Used
for provision of quantitative analytics, charting and fundamental data and for portfolio analytics. Used to cover product and marketing developments related to index funds, ETFs, index derivatives, and other sophisticated investment strategies.
|
|
Daily
or Monthly
|
Fidelity
National Information Services, Inc.
|
|
Used
as portfolio accounting system.
|
|
Daily
|
Goldman
Sachs Asset Management, L.P., as agent to KPMG LLP
|
|
Used
to provide holdings by Columbia Contrarian Core Fund and Columbia High Yield Bond Fund in certain audit clients of KPMG LLP to assist the accounting firm in complying with its regulatory obligations relating to independence of its audit clients.
|
|
Monthly
|
Harte-Hanks
|
|
Used
for printing of prospectuses, factsheets, annual and semi-annual reports.
|
|
As
Needed
|
Imagine
Print Solutions
|
|
Used
for commercial printing.
|
|
Daily,
Monthly and Quarterly
|
Institutional
Shareholder Services Inc. (ISS)
|
|
Used
for proxy voting administration and research on proxy matters.
|
|
Daily
|
Intex
Solutions Inc.
|
|
Used
to provide mortgage analytics.
|
|
Periodic
|
Investment
Technology Group, Inc.
|
|
Used
to evaluate and assess trading activity, execution and practices.
|
|
Quarterly
|
Investor
Tools
|
|
Used
for municipal bond analytics, research and decision support.
|
|
As
Needed
|
JDP
Marketing Services
|
|
Used
to write or edit Columbia Fund shareholder reports, quarterly fund commentaries, and communications, including shareholder letters and management’s discussion of Columbia Fund performance.
|
|
Monthly,
as needed
|
John
Roberts, Inc.
|
|
Used
for commercial printing.
|
|
Daily,
Monthly and Quarterly
|
Kendall
Press
|
|
Used
for commercial printing.
|
|
As
Needed
|
Kynex
|
|
Used
to provide portfolio attribution reports for the Columbia Convertible Securities Fund. Used also for portfolio analytics.
|
|
Daily
|
Malaspina
Communications
|
|
Used
to facilitate writing management’s discussion of Columbia Fund performance for Columbia Fund shareholder reports and periodic marketing communications.
|
|
Monthly
|
Markit
|
|
Used
for an asset database for analytics and investor reporting. Used to reconcile client commission trades with broker-dealers.
|
|
As
Needed and Monthly
|
Merrill
Corporation
|
|
Used
for printing of prospectuses, factsheets, annual and semi-annual reports.
|
|
As
Needed
|
MoneyMate,
Inc.
|
|
Used
to report returns and analytics to client facing materials.
|
|
Monthly
|
Morningstar,
Inc.
|
|
Used
for independent research and ranking of funds. Used also for statistical analysis.
|
|
Monthly,
Quarterly or As Needed
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
190
|
Identity
of Recipient
|
|
Conditions/restrictions
on use of information
|
|
Frequency
of
Disclosure
|
MSCI,
Inc.
|
|
Used
as a hosted portfolio management platform designed for research, reporting, strategy development, portfolio construction and performance and risk attribution, and used for risk analysis and reporting.
|
|
Daily
|
Print
Craft
|
|
Used
to assemble kits and mailing that include the fact sheets.
|
|
As
Needed
|
RegEd,
Inc.
|
|
Used
to review external and certain internal communications prior to dissemination.
|
|
Daily
|
SEI
Investments Company
|
|
Used
for trading wrap accounts and to reconcile wrap accounts.
|
|
Daily
|
SS&C
Technologies, Inc.
|
|
Used
to translate account positions for reconciliations.
|
|
Daily
|
Sustainalytics
US Inc.
|
|
Used
to affirm and validate social scoring methodology of Columbia U.S. Social Bond Fund’s investment strategy.
|
|
Quarterly
|
S.W.I.F.T.
Scrl.
|
|
Used
to send trade messages via SWIFT to custodians.
|
|
Daily
|
Thomson
Reuters
|
|
Used
for statistical analysis.
|
|
Monthly
|
Threadneedle
Investments
|
|
Used
by portfolio managers and research analysts in supporting certain management strategies, and by shared support partners (legal, operations, compliance, risk, etc.) to provide Fund maintenance and development.
|
|
As
Needed
|
Universal
Wilde
|
|
Used
to provide printing and mailing services for prospectuses, annual and semi-annual reports, and supplements.
|
|
As
Needed
|
Visions,
Inc.
|
|
Used
for commercial printing.
|
|
Daily,
Monthly and Quarterly
|
Wilshire
Associates, Inc.
|
|
Used
to provide daily performance attribution reporting based on daily holdings to the investment and investment analytics teams.
|
|
Daily
|
Wolters
Kluwer
|
|
Used
to perform tax calculations specific to wash sales and used to analyze tax straddles (diminution of risk).
|
|
Monthly
|
Identity
of Recipient
|
|
Conditions/restrictions
on use of information
|
|
Frequency
of
Disclosure
|
Recipients
under arrangements with subadvisers:
|
|
|
Advent
Software, Inc.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for portfolio accounting system. Used by certain subadvisers for custodian reconciliation system. Used by certain subadvisers for portfolio management information systems.
|
|
Daily
|
Advisory
Compliance Associates Group
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for best execution analysis.
|
|
Quarterly
|
Ashland
Partners & Co., LLP
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for organizational controls audit.
|
|
Annually
|
Barclays
Capital, Inc.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for portfolio and risk analytics.
|
|
Daily
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
191
|
Identity
of Recipient
|
|
Conditions/restrictions
on use of information
|
|
Frequency
of
Disclosure
|
Bloomberg,
L.P.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for analytical and statistical information, and for trade order management and compliance.
|
|
Daily
|
BNY
Mellon, N.A.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for back office asset servicing.
|
|
Daily
|
Brown
Brothers Harriman & Co.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for FX trade execution for non-US trades. Used by certain subadvisers for trade matching and SWIFT messaging.
|
|
Daily
|
Charles
River Development, Ltd.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for order management, for order management and compliance, and for OMS trading system and compliance.
|
|
Daily
|
Client
Service Specialists, Inc.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for operational and reconciliation services.
|
|
Monthly
|
Electra
Information Systems, Inc.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for daily reconciliation of positions and transactions for outside custodians. Used by certain subadvisers for portfolio holdings reconciliation. Used by certain subadvisers for monthly audited client statements for market
value reconciliations.
|
|
Daily
|
Ernst
& Young, LLP
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers to provide general audit services.
|
|
Semi-annually
|
eVestment
Alliance, LLC
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers to provide representative holdings to databases.
|
|
Quarterly
|
FactSet
Research Systems, Inc.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for analytical and statistical information, for portfolio attribution and for portfolio and risk analytics.
|
|
Daily
|
Fidelity
ActionsXchange, Inc.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for corporate actions processing.
|
|
Daily
|
Financial
Recovery Technologies, LLC
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for class action monitoring.
|
|
Quarterly
|
Glass,
Lewis & Company, LLC
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for proxy voting services.
|
|
Daily
|
IHS
Markit, Ltd.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for confirming and settling bank loan trades. Used by certain subadvisers for matching Credit Default Swaps and Interest Rate Swaps.
|
|
Daily
|
Infinit-O
Global, Ltd.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for reconciling cash and positions.
|
|
Daily
|
Institutional
Shareholder Services Inc.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for proxy voting services.
|
|
Daily
|
Investment
Technology Group, Inc.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for transaction cost analysis.
|
|
Daily
|
MSCI,
Inc.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for portfolio analytics and analysis.
|
|
Daily
|
Northern
Trust Corporation
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for settlement, accounting, reconciliation and performance.
|
|
Daily
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
192
|
Identity
of Recipient
|
|
Conditions/restrictions
on use of information
|
|
Frequency
of
Disclosure
|
Omgeo,
LLC
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for trade settlement. Used by certain subadvisers for block trade confirmations. Used by certain subadvisers for electronically providing allocations to counterparties, and electronic trade matching and affirmation of
confirms.
|
|
Daily
|
Seismic
Software, Inc.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers to automate quarterly updates.
|
|
Quarterly
|
SS&C
Technologies, Inc.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for SWIFT messaging and reconciliation, and for accounting.
|
|
Daily
|
State
Street Bank and Trust Company
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for FX trading matching and SWIFT messaging.
|
|
Daily
|
Trade
Informatics, LLC
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for equity trading transaction cost analysis.
|
|
Daily
|
Tradeweb
Markets, LLC
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for confirmation of TBAs, Treasuries and Discount Notes.
|
|
Daily
|
Traiana,
Inc.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for block trade confirmation between Charles River and ISDA counterparty.
|
|
Daily
|
TriOptima,
AB
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for back office reconciliation. Used by certain subadvisers for daily reconciliations on collateral management.
|
|
Daily
|
William
O’Neil & Co., Inc.
|
|
Used
by certain subadvisers for analytical and statistical information.
|
|
Daily
|
In addition, portfolio
holdings information may be provided from time to time to the Funds’ counsel, counsel to the independent trustees and the Funds’ independent auditors in connection with the services they provide to the Funds or the trustees. Portfolio
holdings information may also be provided to affiliates of the Investment Manager to monitor risks and various holdings limitations that must be aggregated with affiliated funds and accounts, among other purposes. The Investment Manager and the
subadvisers use a variety of broker-dealers and other agents to effect securities transactions on behalf of the Funds. These broker-dealers may become aware of the Funds’ intentions, transactions and positions in performing their
functions.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
193
|
Additional Shareholder Servicing Payments
The Funds, along with the Transfer Agent, the
Distributor and the Investment Manager, may pay significant amounts to financial intermediaries, including other Ameriprise Financial affiliates, for providing shareholder services, including the types of services that would otherwise be provided
directly by a mutual fund’s transfer agent. The level of payments made to financial intermediaries may vary by financial intermediary and according to distribution channel. A number of factors may be considered in determining payments to a
financial intermediary, including, without limitation, the nature of the services provided to shareholders or retirement plan participants that invest in the Funds through retirement plans. These services may include sub-accounting, sub-transfer
agency, participant recordkeeping, shareholder or participant reporting, shareholder or participant transaction processing, maintaining shareholder records, preparing account statements and/or the provision of call center support and other customer
services.
Effective October 1, 2016, the
Board authorized each Fund to pay up to the lesser of the amount charged by the financial intermediary for such services or such fees up to a channel-specific cap established by the Board from time to time. For certain distribution channels, the
reimbursement is set at a per account amount for accounts of intermediaries that charge a per account fee. The amounts in excess of the amount reimbursed by a Fund are borne by the Transfer Agent, the Investment Manager and/or their affiliates.
These payments are in addition to the annual transfer agency fees paid by a Fund to the Transfer Agent, as described in the
Investment Management and Other Services – Other Services Provided
– The Transfer Agent
section above, and may include payments to financial intermediaries that charge networking fees for certain services provided in connection with the maintenance of shareholder accounts through the NSCC. With respect
to Class Inst2 shares, the annual rate for transfer agency fees and reimbursement of fees for additional shareholder services is currently capped at 0.07%. With respect to Class Inst3 shares, the Transfer Agent does not currently pay financial
intermediaries for shareholder services and the Fund does not currently pay the Transfer Agent for any shareholder services provided by financial intermediaries. Payments for these additional shareholder services are made by a Fund to the Transfer
Agent who in turn makes payments to the financial intermediary for the provision of such services. The Funds’ Transfer Agent, Distributor and/or their affiliates will pay, from its or their own resources, amounts in excess of the amount paid
by the Funds to financial intermediaries in connection with the provision of these additional shareholder services and other services.
The Funds also may make additional payments to
financial intermediaries that charge networking fees for certain services provided in connection with the maintenance of shareholder accounts through the NSCC. A significant portion of these networking account fees are paid to financial
intermediaries affiliated with Ameriprise Financial.
In addition, the Transfer Agent, the Distributor and
other Ameriprise Financial affiliates may make lump sum payments to selected financial intermediaries receiving shareholder servicing payments as compensation for the costs of printing literature for participants, account maintenance fees or fees
for establishment of the Funds on the financial intermediary’s system or other similar services.
As of April 2017, the Transfer Agent and/or other
Ameriprise Financial affiliates had agreed to make shareholder servicing payments with respect to the Funds to the financial intermediaries or their affiliates shown below.
Recipients of Shareholder Servicing Payments Relating to the
Funds from the Transfer Agent and/or other Ameriprise Financial Affiliates
■
|
ADP Broker-Dealer,
Inc.
|
■
|
American
Enterprise Investment Services Inc.*
|
■
|
American United
Life Insurance Co.
|
■
|
Ameriprise
Financial Services, Inc.*
|
■
|
AXA Equitable Life
Insurance
|
■
|
Benefit Plan
Administrators
|
■
|
BMO Harris Bank
(f/k/a Marshall & Illsley Trust Company)
|
■
|
Charles Schwab
& Co., Inc.
|
■
|
Charles Schwab
Trust Co.
|
■
|
Daily Access
Concepts, Inc.
|
■
|
Digital Retirement
Solutions
|
■
|
Edward D. Jones
& Co., LP
|
■
|
Fidelity Brokerage
Services, Inc.
|
■
|
Fidelity
Investments Institutional Operations Co.
|
■
|
First Mercantile
Trust Co.
|
■
|
Guardian Insurance
and Annuity Company Inc.
|
■
|
Genworth Life and
Annuity Insurance Company
|
■
|
Genworth Life
Insurance Co. of New York
|
■
|
Hartford Life
Insurance Company
|
■
|
ICMA Retirement
Corporation
|
■
|
Janney Montgomery
Scott, Inc.
|
■
|
John Hancock Life
Insurance Company (USA)
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
194
|
■
|
John Hancock Life
Insurance Company of New York
|
■
|
John Hancock Trust
Company
|
■
|
Lincoln Life &
Annuity Company of New York
|
■
|
Lincoln National
Life Insurance Company
|
■
|
Lincoln Retirement
Services
|
■
|
LPL Financial
Corporation
|
■
|
Massachusetts
Mutual Life Insurance Company
|
■
|
Mercer HR
Services, LLC
|
■
|
Merrill Lynch,
Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated
|
■
|
Mid Atlantic
Capital Corporation
|
■
|
Minnesota Life
Insurance Co.
|
■
|
Morgan Stanley
Smith Barney
|
■
|
MSCS Financial
Services Division of Broadridge Business Process Outsourcing LLC
|
■
|
National Financial
Services
|
■
|
Nationwide
Investment Services
|
■
|
Newport Retirement
Services, Inc.
|
■
|
New York State
Deferred Compensation Plan
|
■
|
Oppenheimer &
Co., Inc.
|
■
|
Plan
Administrators, Inc.
|
■
|
Principal Life
Insurance Company of America
|
■
|
Prudential
Insurance Company of America
|
■
|
Prudential
Retirement Insurance & Annuity Company
|
■
|
Raymond James
& Associates
|
■
|
Robert W. Baird
& Co., Inc.
|
■
|
Sammons Retirement
Solutions
|
■
|
SEI Private Trust
Company
|
■
|
Standard Insurance
Company
|
■
|
TD Ameritrade
Clearing, Inc.
|
■
|
TD Ameritrade
Trust Company
|
■
|
The Retirement
Plan Company
|
■
|
Teachers Insurance
and Annuity Association of America
|
■
|
Transamerica
Advisors Life Insurance Company
|
■
|
Transamerica
Advisors Life Insurance Company of New York
|
■
|
Transamerica
Financial Life Insurance Company
|
■
|
T. Rowe Price
Group, Inc.
|
■
|
UBS Financial
Services, Inc.
|
■
|
Unified Trust
Company, N.A.
|
■
|
Upromise
Investments, Inc.
|
■
|
VALIC Retirement
Services Company
|
■
|
Voya Retirement
Insurance and Annuity Company
|
■
|
Voya Institutional
Plan Services, LLP
|
■
|
Voya Investments
Distributors, LLC
|
■
|
Voya Financial
Partners, LLC
|
■
|
Wells Fargo
Clearing Services, LLC
|
■
|
Wilmington Trust
Retirement & Institutional Services Company
|
*
|
Ameriprise Financial affiliate
|
The Transfer
Agent, the Distributor, the Investment Manager and/or their affiliates may enter into similar arrangements with other financial intermediaries from time to time. Therefore, the preceding list is subject to change at any time without notice.
Additional Payments to Financial Intermediaries
Financial intermediaries may receive
different commissions, sales charge reallowances and other payments with respect to sales of different classes of shares of the Funds. These other payments may include shareholder servicing payments to retirement plan administrators and other
institutions in amounts described above under
Other Practices – Additional Shareholder Servicing Payments.
The Distributor and other Ameriprise
Financial affiliates may pay additional compensation to selected financial intermediaries, including other Ameriprise Financial affiliates, under the categories described below. These categories are not mutually exclusive, and a single financial
intermediary may receive payments under all categories. A financial intermediary also may receive lump sum payments described above under
Other Practices – Additional Shareholder Servicing
Payments.
Such payments may create an incentive for a financial intermediary or its representatives to recommend or offer shares of a Fund to its customers. The amount of payments made to financial intermediaries may vary. In determining the
amount of payments to be made, the Distributor and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates may consider a number of factors, including, without limitation, asset mix and length of relationship with the financial intermediary, the size of the
customer/shareholder base of the financial intermediary, the manner in which customers of the financial intermediary make investments in the Funds, the nature and scope of marketing support or services provided by the financial intermediary (as
described more fully below) and the costs incurred by the financial intermediary in connection with maintaining the infrastructure necessary or desirable to support investments in the Funds.
These additional payments by the
Distributor and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates are made pursuant to agreements between the Distributor and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates and financial intermediaries, and do not change the price paid by investors for the purchase of a
Fund share, or the amount a Fund will receive as proceeds from such sales or the distribution fees and expenses paid by the Fund as shown under the heading
Fees and Expenses of the Fund
in the
Fund’s prospectuses.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
195
|
Marketing Support Payments
The Distributor, the Investment Manager and/or their
affiliates make payments, from their own resources, to certain financial intermediaries, including other Ameriprise Financial affiliates, for marketing support services relating to the Columbia Funds, including, but not limited to, business planning
assistance, educating financial intermediary personnel about the Funds and shareholder financial planning needs, placement on the financial intermediary’s preferred or recommended fund list or otherwise identifying the Funds as being part of a
complex to be accorded a higher degree of marketing support than complexes not making such payments, access to sales meetings, sales representatives and management representatives of the financial intermediary, client servicing and systems
infrastructure support and data analytics. Not all financial intermediaries receive marketing support payments. These payments are generally based upon one or more of the following factors: average net assets of the Columbia Funds distributed by the
Distributor attributable to that financial intermediary, gross sales of the Columbia Funds distributed by the Distributor attributable to that financial intermediary, compensation for ticket charges (fees that a financial intermediary firm charges
its representatives for effecting transactions in Fund shares) or a negotiated lump sum payment.
While the financial arrangements may vary for each
financial intermediary, the marketing support payments to each financial intermediary generally are expected to be between 0.05% and 0.40% on an annual basis for payments based on average net assets of the Funds attributable to the financial
intermediary and between 0.05% and 0.25% on an annual basis for firms receiving a payment based on gross sales of the Funds attributable to the financial intermediary. The Distributor, the Investment Manager and other Ameriprise Financial affiliates
make payments with respect to a Fund or the Columbia Funds in materially larger amounts or on a basis materially different from those described above when dealing with certain financial intermediaries. Such increased payments may enable the
financial intermediaries to offset credits that they may provide to their customers.
As of April 2017, the Distributor, the Investment
Manager or their affiliates had agreed to make marketing support payments relating to the Funds to the following financial intermediaries or their affiliates.
Recipients of Marketing Support Payments Relating to the Funds
from the Distributor and/or other Ameriprise Financial Affiliates
■
|
Ameriprise
Financial Services, Inc.*
|
■
|
Cetera Financial
Group, Inc.
|
■
|
Citigroup Global
Markets Inc./Citibank
|
■
|
Commonwealth
Financial Network
|
■
|
J.J.B. Hilliard,
W.L. Lyons, Inc.
|
■
|
Lincoln Financial
Advisors Corp.
|
■
|
LPL Financial
Corporation
|
■
|
Merrill Lynch,
Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated
|
■
|
Morgan Stanley
Smith Barney
|
■
|
Northwestern
Mutual Investment Services, LLC
|
■
|
Oppenheimer &
Co., Inc.
|
■
|
Raymond James
& Associates, Inc.
|
■
|
Raymond James
Financial Services, Inc.
|
■
|
UBS Financial
Services Inc.
|
■
|
Unified Trust
Company, N.A.
|
■
|
US Bancorp
Investments, Inc.
|
■
|
Vanguard Marketing
Corp.
|
■
|
Voya Financial
Advisors, LLC
|
■
|
Wells Fargo
Advisors Financial Network, LLC
|
■
|
Wells Fargo
Clearing Services, LLC
|
*
|
Ameriprise Financial affiliate
|
The
Distributor, the Investment Manager and/or their affiliates may enter into similar arrangements with other financial intermediaries from time to time. Therefore, the preceding list is subject to change at any time without notice.
Other Payments
From time to time, the Distributor, from
its own resources and not as an expense of the Fund, typically provides additional compensation to certain financial intermediaries that sell or arrange for the sale of shares of the Funds to the extent not prohibited by laws or the rules of any
self-regulatory agency, such as the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA). Such compensation provided by the Distributor includes financial assistance to financial intermediaries that enable the Distributor to participate in and/or present
at financial intermediary-sponsored conferences or seminars, sales or training programs for invited registered representatives and other financial intermediary employees, financial intermediary entertainment and other financial
intermediary-sponsored events, and travel expenses, including lodging incurred by registered representatives and other employees in connection with prospecting, retention and due diligence trips. The Distributor makes payments for entertainment
events it deems appropriate, subject to the Distributor’s internal guidelines and applicable law. These payments may vary depending upon the nature of the event. Your financial intermediary may charge you fees or commissions in addition to
those disclosed in this SAI. You should consult with your financial intermediary and review carefully any disclosure your financial intermediary provides regarding its services and compensation. Depending on the financial arrangement in place at any
particular time, a financial intermediary and its financial consultants may have a financial incentive for recommending a
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
196
|
particular fund, including the Funds, or a particular share class
over other funds or share classes. See
Investment Management and Other Services — Other Roles and Relationships of Ameriprise Financial and its Affiliates — Certain Conflicts of Interest
for more information.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
197
|
CAPITAL STOCK AND OTHER
SECURITIES
Description of the Trust's
Shares
The Trust may issue an unlimited
number of full and fractional shares of beneficial interest of each Fund, without par value, and to divide or combine the shares of any series into a greater or lesser number of shares of that Fund without thereby changing the proportionate
beneficial interests in that Fund and to divide such shares into classes. Most of the Funds are authorized to issue multiple classes of shares. Such classes are designated as Class A, Class Adv, Class C, Class E, Class Inst, Class Inst2, Class
Inst3, Class R, Class T and Class V. A Fund offers only those classes of shares listed on the cover of its prospectuses. Each share of a class of a Fund represents an equal proportional interest in that Fund with each other share in the same class
and is entitled to such distributions out of the income earned on the assets belonging to that Fund as are declared in the discretion of the Board. However, different share classes of a Fund pay different distribution amounts because each share
class has different expenses. Each time a distribution is made, the net asset value per share of the share class is reduced by the amount of the distribution.
Subject to certain limited exceptions discussed in
each Fund’s prospectuses and in this SAI, a Fund may no longer be accepting new investments from current shareholders or prospective investors in general or with respect to one or more classes of shares. The Funds, however, may at any time and
without notice, accept new investments in general or with respect to one or more previously closed classes of shares.
Restrictions on Holding or Disposing of Shares
There are no restrictions on the right of shareholders to retain or
dispose of the Funds' shares, other than the possible future termination of the Funds or the relevant class. The Funds or any class of shares of the Funds may be terminated by reorganization into another mutual fund or by liquidation and
distribution of their assets. Unless terminated by reorganization or liquidation, the Funds and classes will continue indefinitely.
Shareholder Liability
The Trust is organized as a business trust under Massachusetts law.
Under Massachusetts law, shareholders could, under certain circumstances, be held personally liable for the obligations of the Trust. However, the Trust’s Declaration of Trust disclaims any shareholder liability for acts or obligations of the
Funds and the Trust and requires that notice of such disclaimer be given in each agreement, obligation, or instrument entered into or executed by a Fund or the Trustees. The Declaration of Trust provides for indemnification out of Fund property for
all loss and expense of any shareholder held personally liable for the obligations of a Fund. Thus, the risk of a shareholder incurring financial loss on account of shareholder liability is limited to circumstances (which are considered remote) in
which a Fund would be unable to meet its obligations and the disclaimer was inoperative. The risk of a Fund incurring financial loss on account of another series of the Trust also is believed to be remote, because it would be limited to
circumstances in which the disclaimer was inoperative and the other series of the Trust was unable to meet its obligations.
Dividend Rights
The shareholders of a Fund are entitled to receive any dividends or
other distributions declared for the Fund. No shares have priority or preference over any other shares of the Funds with respect to distributions. Distributions will be made from the assets of the Funds, and will be paid pro rata to all shareholders
of each Fund (or class) according to the number of shares of each Fund (or class) held by shareholders on the record date. The amount of income dividends per share may vary between separate share classes of the Funds based upon differences in the
way that expenses are allocated between share classes pursuant to a multiple class plan.
Voting Rights and Shareholder Meetings
Shareholders have the power to vote only as expressly granted under
the 1940 Act or under Massachusetts business trust law. Each whole share (or fractional share) outstanding on the record date shall be entitled to a number of votes on any matter on which it is entitled to vote equal to the net asset value of the
share (or fractional share) in U.S. dollars determined at the close of business on the record date (for example, a share having a net asset value of $10.50 would be entitled to 10.5 votes).
Shareholders have no independent right to vote on
any matter, including the creation, operation, dissolution or termination of the Trust. Shareholders have the right to vote on other matters only as the Board authorizes. Currently, the 1940 Act requires that shareholders have the right to vote,
under certain circumstances, to: (i) elect Trustees; (ii) approve investment advisory agreements; (iii) approve a change in subclassification of a Fund; (iv) approve any change in fundamental investment policies; (v) approve a distribution plan
under Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act; and (vi) to terminate the independent accountant. With respect to matters that affect one class but not another, shareholders vote as a class; for example, the approval of a distribution plan applicable to that
class is voted on by holders of that class of shares. Subject to the foregoing, all shares of a Trust have equal voting rights and will be voted in the aggregate, and not by Fund, except where voting by Fund is required by law or where
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
198
|
the matter involved only affects one Fund. For example, a change in
a Fund’s fundamental investment policy affects only one Fund and would be voted upon only by shareholders of the Fund involved. Additionally, approval of an investment advisory agreement or, if shareholder approval is required under exemptive
relief, investment subadvisory agreement, since it only affects one Fund, is a matter to be determined separately by each Fund. Approval by the shareholders of one Fund is effective as to that Fund whether or not sufficient votes are received from
the shareholders of the other series to approve the proposal as to those Funds. Shareholders are entitled to one vote for each whole share held and a proportional fractional vote for each fractional vote held, on matters on which they are entitled
to vote. Fund shareholders do not have cumulative voting rights. The Trust is not required to hold, and has no present intention of holding, annual meetings of shareholders. Special meetings may be called for certain purposes.
Previously, the Trust had voluntarily undertaken to
adhere to certain governance measures contemplated by an SEC settlement order with respect to the Trust’s prior investment adviser in 2005. Over the past several years, the SEC has adopted many rules under the 1940 Act and the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940 to strengthen fund governance and compliance oversight of funds and their investment advisers.
Accordingly, although the Trust
may continue to follow
certain governance practices noted in the 2005 settlement order, it will do so as the Board deems appropriate and not pursuant to any voluntary undertakings. In this regard, the Board has determined that it is unnecessary to commit to holding a
meeting of shareholders to elect trustees at least every five years. Instead, the Board will convene meetings of shareholders to elect trustees as required by the 1940 Act or as deemed appropriate by the Board.
Liquidation Rights
In the event of the liquidation or dissolution of the Trust or a
Fund, all shares have equal rights and shareholders of a Fund are entitled to a proportionate share of the assets of the Fund that are available for distribution and to a distribution of any general assets not attributable to a particular Fund that
are available for distribution in such manner and on such basis as the Board may determine.
Preemptive Rights
There are no preemptive rights associated with Fund shares.
Conversion Rights
Conversion features and exchange privileges, if applicable, are
described in the Funds’ prospectuses and Appendix S to this SAI.
Redemptions
Each Fund’s dividend, distribution and redemption policies
can be found in its prospectuses. However, the Board may suspend the right of shareholders to sell shares when permitted or required to do so by law or compel sales of shares in certain cases.
Sinking Fund Provisions
The Trust has no sinking fund provisions.
Calls or Assessment
All Fund shares are issued in uncertificated form only and when
issued will be fully paid and non-assessable by its Trust.
Conduct of the Trust's Business
Forum Selection. The Trust’s Bylaws provide
that the sole and exclusive forums for any shareholder (including a beneficial owner of shares) to bring (i) any action or proceeding brought on behalf of the Trust, (ii) any action asserting a claim for breach of a fiduciary duty owed by any
Trustee, officer or employee, if any, of the Trust to the Trust or the Trust’s shareholders, (iii) any action asserting a claim against the Trust or any of its Trustees, officers or employees arising pursuant to any provision of the statutory
or common law of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts or any federal securities law, in each case as amended from time to time, or the Trust’s Declaration of Trust or Bylaws, or (iv) any action asserting a claim governed by the internal affairs
doctrine shall be within the federal or state courts in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
This forum selection provision may limit a
shareholder’s ability to bring a claim in a judicial forum that the shareholder finds favorable for disputes with the Trust and/or any of its Trustees, officers, employees or service providers. If a court were to find the forum selection
provision contained in the Bylaws to be inapplicable or unenforceable in an action, the Trust may incur additional costs associated with resolving such action in other jurisdictions.
Derivative and Direct Claims of Shareholders. The
Trust’s Bylaws contain provisions regarding derivative and direct claims of shareholders. As used in the Bylaws, a “direct” shareholder claim refers to (i) a claim based upon alleged violations of a shareholder’s individual
rights independent of any harm to the Trust, including a shareholder’s voting rights under the Bylaws; rights to receive a dividend payment as may be declared from time to time; rights to inspect books and records; or other similar rights
personal to the shareholder and independent of any harm to the Trust; and (ii) a claim for which a direct shareholder action
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
199
|
is expressly provided under the U.S. federal securities laws. Any
other claim asserted by a shareholder, including without limitation any claims purporting to be brought on behalf of the Trust or involving any alleged harm to the Trust, is considered a “derivative” claim as used in the Bylaws.
A shareholder may not bring or maintain any court
action or other proceeding asserting a derivative claim or any claim asserted on behalf of the Trust or involving any alleged harm to the Trust without first making demand on the Trustees requesting the Trustees to bring or maintain such action,
proceeding or claim. The requirement to make such demand shall not be excused under any circumstances, including claims of alleged interest on the part of the Trustees, unless the shareholder makes a specific showing that irreparable nonmonetary
injury to the Trust would otherwise result.
A
shareholder may not bring or maintain a court action or other proceeding asserting a direct claim against the Trust, the Trustees, or officers predicated upon an express or implied right of action under the Declaration of Trust or U.S. federal
securities laws (excepting direct shareholder actions expressly provided by U.S. federal securities laws), unless the shareholder has obtained authorization from the Trustees to bring the action. The requirement of authorization shall not be excused
under any circumstances, including claims of alleged interest on the part of the Trustees.
The Trustees of the Trust shall consider any demand
or request for authorization to bring or maintain a court action, proceeding or claim within 90 days of its receipt by the Trust . In their sole discretion, the Trustees may submit the matter to a vote of shareholders of the Trust or of any series
or class of shares, as appropriate. Any decision by the Trustees to settle or to authorize (or not to settle or to authorize) such court action, proceeding or claim, or to submit the matter to a vote of shareholders, shall be binding upon the
shareholder seeking authorization.
Any person
purchasing or otherwise holding any interest in shares of beneficial interest of the Trust will be deemed to have notice of and consented to the foregoing provisions. These provisions may limit a shareholder’s ability to bring a claim against
the Trustees, officers or other employees of the Trust and/or its service providers.
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Purchase, Redemption and Pricing of
Shares
Purchase and Redemption
An investor may buy, sell and transfer shares in the
Funds utilizing the methods, and subject to the restrictions, described in the Funds’ prospectuses. The following information supplements information in the Funds’ prospectuses.
Purchases and redemptions of shares of the Funds may
be effected on a Business Day. Each Trust and the Distributor reserve the right to reject any purchase or redemption order. The issuance of shares is recorded on the books of the Trust, and share certificates are not issued. Purchase orders for
shares in the Funds that are received by the Distributor or by the Transfer Agent before the end of the Business Day (typically 4:00 p.m., Eastern time) are priced according to the net asset value determined on that day but are not executed until
4:00 p.m., Eastern time, on the Business Day on which immediately available funds in payment of the purchase price are received by the Fund’s Custodian. Redemption orders for sales of Fund shares received in good form (as defined in the Fund's
prospectus) by the Distributor or by the Transfer Agent before the end of the Business Day are priced according to the net asset value determined on that day. The Business Day that applies to your purchase or redemption order is also called the
trade date.
The Funds have authorized one or
more broker-dealers to accept buy and sell orders on the Funds’ behalf. These broker-dealers are authorized to designate other intermediaries to accept buy and sell orders on the Funds’ behalf. The Funds will be deemed to have received a
buy or sell order when an authorized broker-dealer, or, if applicable, a broker-dealer’s authorized designee, accepts the order. Customer orders will be priced at each Fund’s net asset value next computed after they are accepted by an
authorized broker-dealer or the broker’s authorized designee.
Should a Fund stop selling shares, the Board may
make a deduction from the value of the assets held by the Fund to cover the cost of future liquidations of the assets so as to distribute these costs fairly among all shareholders.
The Trust also may make payment for sales in readily
marketable securities or other property if it is appropriate to do so in light of the Trust’s responsibilities under the 1940 Act.
Under the 1940 Act, the Funds may suspend the right
of redemption or postpone the date of payment for shares during any period when (i) trading on the NYSE is restricted by applicable rules and regulations of the SEC; (ii) the NYSE is closed for other than customary weekend and holiday closings;
(iii) the SEC has by order permitted such suspension; (iv) an emergency exists as determined by the SEC. (The Funds may also suspend or postpone the recordation of the transfer of their shares upon the occurrence of any of the foregoing
conditions).
The Trust has elected to be
governed by Rule 18f-1 under the 1940 Act, as a result of which each Fund is obligated to redeem shares, subject to the exceptions listed above, with respect to any one shareholder during any 90-day period, solely in cash up to the lesser of
$250,000 or 1% of the net asset value of each Fund at the beginning of the period. Although redemptions in excess of this limitation would normally be paid in cash, the Fund reserves the right to make these payments in whole or in part in securities
or other assets in case of an emergency, or if the payment of a redemption in cash would be detrimental to the existing shareholders of the Fund as determined by the Board. In these circumstances, the securities distributed would be valued as set
forth in this SAI. Should a Fund distribute securities, a shareholder may incur brokerage fees or other transaction costs in converting the securities to cash.
The timing and magnitude of cash inflows from
investors buying Fund shares could prevent a Fund from always being fully invested. Conversely, the timing and magnitude of cash outflows to investors redeeming Fund shares could require large ready reserves of uninvested cash to meet shareholder
redemptions. Either situation could adversely impact a Fund’s performance.
Anti-Money Laundering Compliance
The Funds are required to comply with various anti-money laundering
laws and regulations. Consequently, the Funds may request additional required information from you to verify your identity. Your application will be rejected if it does not contain your name, social security number, date of birth and permanent
street address. If at any time the Funds believe a shareholder may be involved in suspicious activity or if certain account information matches information on government lists of suspicious persons, the Funds may choose not to establish a new
account or may be required to “freeze” a shareholder’s account. The Funds also may be required to provide a governmental agency with information about transactions that have occurred in a shareholder’s account or to transfer
monies received to establish a new account, transfer an existing account or transfer the proceeds of an existing account to a governmental agency. In some circumstances, the law may not permit the Funds to inform the shareholder that it has taken
the actions described above.
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Pay-out Plans
You can use any of several pay-out plans to redeem your investment
in regular installments. If you redeem shares, you may be subject to a contingent deferred sales charge as discussed in the prospectus. While the plans differ on how the pay-out is figured, they all are based on the redemption of your investment.
Net investment income dividends and any capital gain distributions will automatically be reinvested, unless you elect to receive them in cash. If you redeem an IRA or a qualified retirement account, certain restrictions, federal tax penalties, and
special federal income tax reporting requirements may apply. You should consult your tax advisor about this complex area of the tax law.
Applications for a systematic investment in a class
of a Fund subject to a sales charge normally will not be accepted while a pay-out plan for any of those Funds is in effect. Occasional investments, however, may be accepted.
To start any of these plans, please consult your
financial intermediary. Your authorization must be received at least five days before the date you want your payments to begin. Payments will be made on a monthly, bimonthly, quarterly, semiannual, or annual basis. Your choice is effective until you
change or cancel it.
Offering Price
The share price of each Fund is based on each
Fund’s net asset value (NAV) per share, which is calculated separately for each class of shares as of the end of the Business Day.
The value of each Fund’s portfolio securities
is determined in accordance with the Trust’s valuation procedures, which are approved by the Board. Except as described below under “Fair Valuation of Portfolio Securities,” the Fund’s portfolio securities are typically
valued using the following methodologies:
Equity Securities.
Equity securities (including common stocks, preferred stocks, convertible securities, warrants and ETFs) listed on an exchange are valued at the closing price on their primary exchange (which, in the case of foreign securities, may be a foreign
exchange) or, if a closing price is not readily available, at the mean of the closing bid and asked prices. Over-the-counter equity securities not listed on any national exchange but included in the NASDAQ National Market System are valued at the
NASDAQ Official Closing Price or, if the official closing price is not readily available, at the mean between the closing bid and asked prices. Equity securities and ETFs that are not listed on any national exchange and are not included in the
NASDAQ National Market System are valued at the mean between the closing bid and asked prices. Shares of other open-end investment companies (other than ETFs) are valued at the latest net asset value reported by those companies as of the valuation
time.
Fixed Income Securities.
Debt securities with remaining maturities in excess of 60 days are valued at market value based on an evaluated bid, which may be obtained from a pricing service. If pricing information is unavailable from a pricing
service or is not believed to be reflective of market value, then a security may be valued at a bid quote from a broker-dealer, or, if a bid quote from a broker-dealer is not available, at fair value. Debt securities with remaining maturities of 60
days or less are valued at their amortized cost value if such value is approximately the same as market value. If the amortized cost value of such securities is not reflective of market value, then the valuation process for debt securities with
remaining maturities in excess of 60 days will be applied. Amortized cost is determined by systematically increasing the carrying value of a security if acquired at a discount, or reducing the carrying value if acquired at a premium, so that the
carrying value is equal to maturity value on the maturity date. Short-term variable rate demand notes are typically valued at par value. Newly issued debt securities may be valued at purchase price for up to two days following purchase or at fair
value if the purchase price is not believed to be reflective of market value.
Futures, Options and Other Derivatives.
Futures and options on futures are valued based on the settle price at the close of regular trading on their principal exchange or, in the absence of transactions, they are valued at the mean of the closing bid and asked
prices closest to the last reported sale price. Listed options are valued at the mean of the closing bid and asked prices. If market quotations are not readily available, futures and options are valued using quotations from broker-dealers.
Customized derivative products are valued at a price provided by a pricing service or, if such a price is unavailable, a broker quote or at a price derived from an internal valuation model.
Repurchase and Reverse Repurchase Agreements.
Repurchase and reverse repurchase agreements are generally valued at a price equal to the amount of cash invested in the repurchase agreement, or borrowed in the reverse repurchase agreement, respectively, at the time of
valuation.
Bank Loans.
Bank loans purchased in the primary market are typically valued at acquisition cost for up to two days, and are then valued using a market quotation from a pricing service or quote from a broker-dealer, or if such quotes
are unavailable, fair value. For bank loans trading in the secondary market, prices are obtained from a pricing service and are based upon the average of one or more indicative bids from broker-dealers.
Private Placement Securities.
Private placement securities requiring fair valuation are typically valued utilizing prices from broker-dealers or using internal analysis and any issuer-provided financial information.
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Foreign Currencies.
Foreign currencies, securities denominated in foreign currencies and payables/receivables denominated in foreign currencies are valued in U.S. dollars utilizing spot exchange rates at the close of regular trading on the NYSE. Forward foreign
currency contracts are valued in U.S. dollars utilizing the applicable forward currency exchange rate as of the close of regular trading on the NYSE.
Fair Valuation of Portfolio Securities.
In the event that (i) market quotations or valuations from other sources are not readily available, such as when trading is halted or securities are not actively
traded; (ii) market quotations or valuations from other sources are not reflective of market value (i.e., such prices or values are deemed unreliable in the judgment of the Investment Manager); or (iii) a significant event has been recognized in
relation to a security or class of securities that is not reflected in market quotations or valuations from other sources, such as when an event impacting a foreign security occurs after the closing of the security’s foreign exchange but
before the closing of the NYSE, a fair value for each such security is determined in accordance with valuation procedures approved by the Board. The fair value of a security is likely to be different from the quoted or published price and fair value
determinations often require significant judgment.
In general, any relevant factors may be taken into
account in determining fair value, including but not limited to the following, among others: the fundamental analytical data relating to the security; the value of other financial instruments, including derivative securities traded on other markets
or among dealers; trading volumes on markets, exchanges, or among dealers; values of baskets of securities traded on other markets, exchanges, or among dealers; changes in interest rates; observations from financial institutions; government actions
or pronouncements; other news events; information as to any transactions or offers with respect to the security; price and extent of public trading in similar securities of the issuer or comparable companies; nature and expected duration of the
event, if any, giving rise to the valuation issue; pricing history; the relative size of the position in the portfolio; internal models; and other relevant information.
With respect to securities traded on foreign
markets, relevant factors may include, but not be limited to, the following: the value of foreign securities traded on other foreign markets; ADR and/or GDR trading; closed-end fund trading; foreign currency exchange activity and prices; and the
trading of financial products that are tied to baskets of foreign securities, such as certain exchange-traded index funds. A systematic independent fair value pricing service assists in the fair valuation process for foreign securities in order to
adjust for possible changes in value that may occur between the close of the foreign exchange and the time at which a Fund’s NAV is determined. Although the use of this service is intended to decrease opportunities for time zone arbitrage
transactions, there can be no assurance that it will successfully decrease arbitrage opportunities.
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TAXATION
The following information supplements and should be
read in conjunction with the section in the Funds’ prospectuses entitled
Distributions and Taxes
. The prospectuses generally describe the U.S. federal income tax treatment of distributions by the Funds.
This section of the SAI provides additional information concerning U.S. federal income taxes. It is based on the Code, applicable U.S. Treasury Regulations, judicial authority, and administrative rulings and practice, all as in effect as of the date
of this SAI and all of which are subject to change, including changes with retroactive effect. Except as specifically set forth below, the following discussion does not address any state, local or foreign tax matters. The Funds may or may not invest
in all of the securities or other instruments described in this
Taxation
section. Please see the Funds' prospectuses for information about a Fund's investments, as well as each Fund’s
semiannual and annual shareholder reports.
A
shareholder’s tax treatment may vary depending upon his or her particular situation. This discussion applies only to shareholders holding Fund shares as capital assets within the meaning of the Code. Except as otherwise noted, it may not apply
to certain types of shareholders who may be subject to special rules, such as insurance companies, tax-exempt organizations, shareholders holding Fund shares through tax-advantaged accounts (such as 401(k) Plan Accounts or Individual Retirement
Accounts, variable annuity contracts or variable life insurance contracts), financial institutions, broker-dealers, entities that are not organized under the laws of the United States or a political subdivision thereof, persons who are neither
citizens nor residents of the United States, shareholders holding Fund shares as part of a hedge, straddle, or conversion transaction, shareholders who are subject to the U.S. federal alternative minimum tax, trusts, estates, pass-through entities
or investors in such entities, “controlled foreign corporations,” “passive foreign investment companies,” persons eligible for benefits under an income tax treaty to which the United States is a party, or persons otherwise
subject to special treatment under the Code.
The Trust has not requested and will not request an
advance ruling from the IRS as to the U.S. federal income tax matters described below. The IRS could adopt positions contrary to those discussed below and such positions could be sustained. In addition, the following discussion and the discussions
in the prospectuses address only some of the U.S. federal income tax considerations generally affecting investments in the Funds. Prospective shareholders are urged to consult with their own tax advisors and financial planners regarding the U.S.
federal tax consequences of an investment in a Fund, the application of state, local, or foreign laws, and the effect of any possible changes in applicable tax laws on their investment in the Funds.
Qualification as a Regulated Investment Company
It is intended that each Fund qualify as a “regulated
investment company” under Subchapter M of Subtitle A, Chapter 1 of the Code. Each Fund will be treated as a separate entity for U.S. federal income tax purposes. Thus, the provisions of the Code applicable to regulated investment companies
generally will apply separately to each Fund, even though each Fund is a series of the Trust. Furthermore, each Fund will separately determine its income, gains, losses, and expenses for U.S. federal income tax purposes.
In order to qualify for the special tax treatment
accorded regulated investment companies and their shareholders under the Code, each Fund must, among other things, derive at least 90% of its gross income each taxable year generally from (i) dividends, interest, certain payments with respect to
securities loans, gains from the sale or other disposition of stock, securities or foreign currencies, or other income attributable to its business of investing in such stock, securities or foreign currencies (including, but not limited to, gains
from options, futures or forward contracts) and (ii) net income derived from an interest in a qualified publicly traded partnership, as defined below. In general, for purposes of this 90% gross income requirement, income derived from a partnership
(other than a qualified publicly traded partnership) will be treated as qualifying income only to the extent such income is attributable to items of income of the partnership which would be qualifying income if realized directly by the regulated
investment company. However, 100% of the net income derived from an interest in a qualified publicly traded partnership (generally, defined as a partnership (x) the interests in which are traded on an established securities market or readily
tradable on a secondary market or the substantial equivalent thereof, and (y) that derives less than 90% of its gross income from the qualifying income described in clause (i) above) will be treated as qualifying income. In general, such entities
will be treated as partnerships for federal income tax purposes if they meet the passive income requirement under Section 7704(c)(2) of the Code. Certain of a Fund’s investments in master limited partnerships ("MLPs") and ETFs, if any, may
qualify as interests in qualified publicly traded partnerships. In addition, although in general the passive loss rules do not apply to a regulated investment company, such rules do apply to a regulated investment company with respect to items
attributable to an interest in a qualified publicly traded partnership.
Each Fund must also diversify its holdings so that,
at the end of each quarter of the Fund’s taxable year: (i) at least 50% of the fair market value of its total assets consists of (A) cash and cash items (including receivables), U.S. Government securities and securities of other regulated
investment companies, and (B) other securities, of any one issuer (other than those described in clause (A)) to the extent such securities do not exceed 5% of the value of the Fund’s total assets and are not more than 10% of the outstanding
voting securities of such issuer, and (ii) not more than 25% of the value of the Fund’s total assets is invested in, including through corporations in which the Fund owns a 20% or more voting stock interest, the securities of any one
issuer
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(other than those described in clause (i)(A)), the securities
(other than securities of other regulated investment companies) of two or more issuers the Fund controls and which are engaged in the same, similar, or related trades or businesses, or the securities of one or more qualified publicly traded
partnerships.
In addition, for purposes of
meeting this diversification requirement, the term “outstanding voting securities of such issuer” includes the equity securities of a qualified publicly traded partnership and in the case of a Fund’s investments in loan
participations, the Fund shall treat both the financial intermediary and the issuer of the underlying loan as an issuer. The qualifying income and diversification requirements described above may limit the extent to which a Fund can engage in
certain derivative transactions, as well as the extent to which it can invest in MLPs and certain commodity-linked ETFs.
In addition, each Fund generally must distribute to
its shareholders at least 90% of its investment company taxable income for the taxable year, which generally includes its ordinary income and the excess of any net short-term capital gain over net long-term capital loss, and at least 90% of its net
tax-exempt interest income (if any) for the taxable year.
If a Fund qualifies as a regulated investment
company that is accorded special tax treatment, it generally will not be subject to U.S. federal income tax on any of the investment company taxable income and net capital gain (
i.e.
, the excess of net
long-term capital gain over net short-term capital loss) it distributes to its shareholders. Each Fund generally intends to distribute at least annually substantially all of its investment company taxable income (computed without regard to the
dividends-paid deduction) and its net capital gain. However, no assurance can be given that a Fund will not be subject to U.S. federal income taxation. Any investment company taxable income or net capital gain retained by a Fund will be subject to
tax at regular corporate rates.
If a Fund
retains any net capital gain, it will be subject to a tax at regular corporate rates on the amount retained, but may designate the retained amount as undistributed capital gains in a timely notice to its shareholders, who (i) will be required to
include in income for U.S. federal income tax purposes, as long-term capital gain, their shares of such undistributed amount, and (ii) will be entitled to credit their proportionate shares of the tax paid by the Fund on such undistributed amount
against their U.S. federal income tax liabilities, if any, and to claim refunds to the extent the credit exceeds such liabilities. For U.S. federal income tax purposes, the tax basis of shares owned by a shareholder of a Fund will be increased by an
amount equal under current law to the difference between the amount of undistributed capital gains included in the shareholder’s gross income under clause (i) of the preceding sentence and the tax deemed paid by the shareholder under clause
(ii) of the preceding sentence.
In determining
its net capital gain, including in connection with determining the amount available to support a Capital Gain Dividend (as defined below), its taxable income, and its earnings and profits, a regulated investment company generally may elect to treat
part or all of any post-October capital loss (defined as any net capital loss attributable to the portion, if any, of the taxable year after October 31 or, if there is no such loss, the net long-term capital loss or net short-term capital loss
attributable to such portion, if any, of the taxable year) or late-year ordinary loss (generally, the sum of its (i) net ordinary loss from the sale, exchange or other taxable disposition of property, attributable to the portion, if any, of the
taxable year after October 31 and its (ii) other net ordinary loss attributable to the portion, if any, of the taxable year after December 31) as if incurred in the succeeding taxable year.
In order to comply with the distribution
requirements described above applicable to regulated investment companies, a Fund generally must make the distributions in the same taxable year that it realizes the income and gain, although in certain circumstances, a Fund may make the
distributions in the following taxable year in respect of income and gains from the prior taxable year. Shareholders generally are taxed on any distributions from a Fund in the year they are actually distributed. If a Fund declares a distribution to
shareholders of record in October, November or December of one calendar year and pays the distribution in January of the following calendar year, however, the Fund and its shareholders will be treated as if the Fund paid the distribution on December
31 of the earlier year.
If a Fund were to fail
to meet the income, diversification or distribution tests described above, the Fund could in some cases cure such failure including by paying a fund-level tax or interest, making additional distributions, or disposing of certain assets. If the Fund
were ineligible to or otherwise did not cure such failure for any year, or were otherwise to fail to qualify and be eligible for treatment as a regulated investment company accorded special tax treatment under the Code, it would be taxed in the same
manner as an ordinary corporation without any deduction for its distributions to shareholders. In this case, all distributions from the Fund’s current and accumulated earnings and profits (including any distributions of its net tax-exempt
income and net long-term capital gains) to its shareholders would be taxable to shareholders as dividend income. In addition, the Fund could be required to recognize unrealized gains, pay substantial taxes and interest and make substantial
distributions before requalifying as a regulated investment company.
Excise Tax
If a Fund fails to distribute by December 31 of each calendar year
at least the sum of 98% of its ordinary income for that year (excluding capital gains and losses) and 98.2% of its capital gain net income (adjusted for net ordinary losses) for the 1-year period ending on October 31 of that year (or November 30 or
December 31 of that year if the Fund is permitted to elect and so elects), and any of its ordinary income and capital gain net income from previous years that were not distributed during such
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years, the Fund will be subject to a nondeductible 4% excise tax on
the undistributed amounts. For these purposes, ordinary gains and losses from the sale, exchange, or other taxable disposition of property that would be properly taken into account after October 31 of a calendar year (or November 30 if the Fund
makes the election described above) are generally treated as arising on January 1 of the following calendar year; in the case of a Fund with a December 31 year end that makes the election described above, no such gains or losses will be so treated.
For purposes of the excise tax, a Fund will be treated as having distributed any amount on which it has been subject to corporate income tax in the taxable year ending within the calendar year. Each Fund generally intends to actually distribute or
be deemed to have distributed substantially all of its ordinary income and capital gain net income, if any, by the end of each calendar year and, thus, expects not to be subject to the excise tax. However, no assurance can be given that a Fund will
not be subject to the excise tax. Moreover, a Fund reserves the right to pay an excise tax rather than make an additional distribution when circumstances warrant (for example, if the amount of excise tax to be paid is deemed de minimis by a
Fund).
Capital Loss Carryovers
Capital losses in excess of capital gains (“net capital
losses”) are not permitted to be deducted against a Fund’s net investment income. Instead, potentially subject to certain limitations, a Fund is able to carry forward a net capital loss from any taxable year to offset its capital gains,
if any, realized during a subsequent taxable year.
If a Fund incurs or has incurred net capital losses
in taxable years beginning after December 22, 2010 (“post-2010 losses”), those losses will be carried forward to one or more subsequent taxable years without expiration; any such carryover losses will retain their character as short-term
or long-term. If a Fund incurred net capital losses in a taxable year beginning on or before December 22, 2010 (“pre-2011 losses”), the Fund is permitted to carry such losses forward for eight taxable years; in the year to which they are
carried over, such losses are treated as short-term capital losses that first offset short-term capital gains, and then offset any long-term capital gains. The Fund must use any post-2010 losses, which will not expire, before it uses any pre-2011
losses. This increases the likelihood that pre-2011 losses will expire unused at the conclusion of the eight-year carryover period.
Capital gains that are offset by carried forward
capital losses are not subject to fund-level U.S. federal income taxation, regardless of whether they are distributed to shareholders. Accordingly, the Funds do not expect to distribute any capital gains so offset. The Funds cannot carry back or
carry forward any net operating losses (defined as deductions and ordinary losses in excess of ordinary income).
The total capital loss carryovers below include
post-October capital losses, if applicable.
Capital Loss
Carryovers
Fund
|
Total
Capital Loss
Carryovers
|
Amount
Expiring in
|
|
Amount
not Expiring
|
2017
|
2018
|
2019
|
|
Short-term
|
Long-term
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending January 31
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
$1,027,662
|
N/A
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
$0
|
$1,027,662
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending March 31
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
$1,786,666
|
N/A
|
$1,786,666
|
$0
|
|
$0
|
$0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending April 30
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
$13,814,802
|
N/A
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
$1,247,636
|
$12,567,166
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
$3,308,467
|
N/A
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
$3,308,467
|
$0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending May 31
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
$10,185,772
|
N/A
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
$9,504,956
|
$680,816
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
$2,667,641
|
N/A
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
$1,675,808
|
$991,833
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
$42,710,600
|
N/A
|
$35,721,468
|
$4,244,605
|
|
$1,961,649
|
$782,878
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending July 31
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
$947,711
|
N/A
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
$947,711
|
$0
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
$23,446,035
|
N/A
|
$0
|
$7,286,973
|
|
$8,117,805
|
$8,041,257
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
$258,025
|
N/A
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
$56,443
|
$201,582
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
$24,288,560
|
N/A
|
$1,023,617
|
$11,369,928
|
|
$4,055,173
|
$7,839,842
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending August 31
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
$74,781,273
|
N/A
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
$74,781,273
|
$0
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
$17,051,810
|
N/A
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
$17,051,810
|
$0
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
$33,763,919
|
N/A
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
$3,003,362
|
$30,760,557
|
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206
|
Fund
|
Total
Capital Loss
Carryovers
|
Amount
Expiring in
|
|
Amount
not Expiring
|
2017
|
2018
|
2019
|
|
Short-term
|
Long-term
|
Greater
China Fund
|
$1,802,252
|
N/A
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
$1,802,252
|
$0
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
$45,740,767
|
N/A
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
$10,816,699
|
$34,924,068
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending October 31
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
$1,684,697
|
N/A
|
$62,558
|
$0
|
|
$1,622,139
|
$0
|
For
Funds with fiscal period ending December 31
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
$5,025,563
|
$5,025,563
|
$0
|
$0
|
|
$0
|
$0
|
Equalization
Accounting
Each Fund may use the so-called
“equalization method” of accounting to allocate a portion of its “accumulated earnings and profits,” which generally equals a Fund’s undistributed net investment income and realized capital gains, with certain
adjustments, to redemption proceeds. This method permits a Fund to achieve more balanced distributions for both continuing and redeeming shareholders. Although using this method generally will not affect a Fund’s total returns, it may reduce
the amount of income and gains that the Fund would otherwise distribute to continuing shareholders by reducing the effect of redemptions of Fund shares on Fund distributions to shareholders. The IRS has not sanctioned the particular equalization
method used by the Funds, and thus a Fund’s use of this method may be subject to IRS scrutiny.
Taxation of Fund Investments
In general, realized gains or losses on the sale of securities held
by a Fund will be treated as capital gains or losses, and long-term capital gains or losses if the Fund has held or is deemed to have held the securities for more than one year at the time of disposition.
For federal income tax purposes, debt securities
purchased by the Funds may be treated as having original issue discount (“OID”), which is generally treated as interest for federal income tax purposes. If a Fund purchases a debt obligation with OID (generally a debt obligation with an
issue price less than its stated principal amount, such as a zero-coupon bond), which exceeds a de minimis amount, the Fund may be required to annually include in its income a portion of the OID as ordinary income, even though the Fund will not
receive cash payments for such discount until maturity or disposition of the obligation, and depending on market conditions and the credit quality of the bond, might not ever receive cash for such discount. OID on tax-exempt bonds is generally not
subject to U.S. federal income tax (but may be subject to the U.S. federal alternative minimum tax or "AMT," as that term is defined below). Inflation-protected bonds generally can be expected to produce OID income as their principal amounts are
adjusted upward for inflation.
Debt securities
may be purchased by the Funds at a discount which exceeds the original issue discount remaining on the securities, if any, at the time the Funds purchased the securities. This additional discount represents market discount for federal income tax
purposes. Generally, market discount is accrued on a daily basis. In general, gains recognized on the disposition of (or the receipt of any partial payment of principal on) a debt obligation (including a municipal obligation) purchased by a Fund at
a market discount (other than de minimis market discount), generally at a price less than its principal amount, will be treated as ordinary income to the extent of the portion of market discount which accrued, subject to the discussion below
regarding Section 451 of the Code, but was not previously recognized pursuant to an available election, during the term that the Fund held the debt obligation. Effective for taxable years beginning after 2017, Section 451 of the Code generally
requires an accrual method taxpayer to take into account items of gross income no later than the time at which such items are taken into account as revenue in the taxpayer's financial statements. The application of Section 451 to the accrual of
market discount on debt instruments is currently unclear. If Section 451 applies to the accrual of market discount on debt instruments, a Fund must include in taxable income any market discount as it takes the same into account as revenue on its
financial statements. Many Funds are currently including market discount in taxable income as it accrues, however, certain Tax-Exempt Funds are not, and such Funds could be affected by the potential application of Section 451.
A Fund generally will be required to make
distributions to shareholders representing the OID or market discount (if an election is made by the Fund to include market discount over the holding period of the applicable debt obligation, subject to the discussion above regarding Section 451 of
the Code) on debt securities that is currently includible in income, even though the cash representing such income may not have been received by the Fund, and depending on market conditions and the credit quality of the bond, might not ever be
received. Cash to pay such distributions may be obtained from borrowing or from sales proceeds of securities held by a Fund which the Fund otherwise might have continued to hold; obtaining such cash might be disadvantageous for the Fund. In
addition, payment-in-kind securities similarly will give rise to income which is required to be distributed and is taxable even though a Fund receives no cash interest payment on the security during the year. A portion of the
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interest paid or accrued on certain high-yield discount obligations
(such as high-yield corporate debt securities) may not (and interest paid on debt obligations owned by a Fund that are considered for tax purposes to be payable in the equity of the issuer or a related party will not) be deductible to the issuer,
possibly affecting the cash flow of the issuer.
If a Fund invests in debt obligations that are in
the lowest rating categories or are unrated, including debt obligations of issuers not currently paying interest or who are in default, special tax issues may exist for the Fund. Tax rules are not entirely clear about issues such as: (1) whether a
Fund should recognize market discount on a debt obligation and, if so, (2) the amount of market discount the Fund should recognize, (3) when a Fund may cease to accrue interest, OID or market discount, (4) when and to what extent deductions may be
taken for bad debts or worthless securities and (5) how payments received on obligations in default should be allocated between principal and income. These and other related issues will be addressed by a Fund when, as and if it invests in such
securities, in order to seek to ensure that it distributes sufficient income to preserve its status and eligibility for treatment as a regulated investment company and does not become subject to U.S. federal income or excise tax.
Very generally, when a Fund purchases a bond at a
price that exceeds the redemption price at maturity – that is, at a premium – the premium is amortizable over the remaining term of the bond. In the case of a taxable bond, if a Fund makes an election applicable to all such bonds it
purchases, which election is irrevocable without consent of the IRS, the Fund reduces the current taxable interest income from the bond by the amortized premium and reduces its tax basis in the bond by the amount of such offset; upon the disposition
or maturity of such bonds acquired on or after January 4, 2013, a Fund is permitted to deduct any remaining premium allocable to a prior period. In the case of a tax-exempt bond, tax rules require a Fund to reduce its tax basis and the tax-exempt
interest available for exempt-interest dividends to shareholders by the amount of the amortized premium.
If an option granted by a Fund is sold, lapses or is
otherwise terminated through a closing transaction, such as a repurchase by the Fund of the option from its holder, the Fund generally will realize a short-term capital gain or loss, depending on whether the premium income is greater or less than
the amount paid by the Fund in the closing transaction, unless the option is subject to Section 1256 of the Code, described below. Some capital losses realized by a Fund in the sale, exchange, exercise or other disposition of an option may be
deferred if they result from a position that is part of a “straddle,” discussed below. If securities are sold by a Fund pursuant to the exercise of a covered call option granted by it, the Fund generally will add the premium received to
the sale proceeds of the securities delivered in determining the amount of gain or loss on the sale. If securities are purchased by a Fund pursuant to the exercise of a put option granted by it, the Fund generally will subtract the premium received
from its cost basis in the securities purchased.
Some regulated futures contracts, foreign currency
contracts, and non-equity, listed options that may be used by a Fund will be deemed “Section 1256 contracts.” A Fund will be required to “mark to market” any such contracts held at the end of the taxable year by treating them
as if they had been sold on the last day of that year at market value. Sixty percent of any net gain or loss realized on all dispositions of Section 1256 contracts, including deemed dispositions under the “mark-to-market” rule, generally
will be treated as long-term capital gain or loss, and the remaining 40% will be treated as short-term capital gain or loss, although certain foreign currency gains and losses from such contracts may be treated as entirely ordinary income or loss as
described below. These provisions may require a Fund to recognize income or gains without a concurrent receipt of cash. Transactions that qualify as designated hedges are exempt from the mark-to-market rule and the “60%/40%” rule and may
require the Fund to defer the recognition of losses on certain futures contracts, foreign currency contracts, and non-equity options.
Foreign exchange gains and losses realized by a Fund
in connection with certain transactions involving foreign currency-denominated debt securities, certain options, futures contracts, forward contracts and similar instruments relating to foreign currencies, or payables or receivables denominated in a
foreign currency are subject to Section 988 of the Code, which generally causes such gains and losses to be treated as ordinary income or loss and may affect the amount and timing of recognition of the Fund’s income. Under future U.S. Treasury
Regulations, any such transactions that are not directly related to a Fund’s investments in stock or securities (or its options contracts or futures contracts with respect to stock or securities) may have to be limited in order to enable the
Fund to satisfy the 90% qualifying income test described above. If the net foreign exchange loss exceeds a Fund’s net investment company taxable income (computed without regard to such loss) for a taxable year, the resulting ordinary loss for
such year will not be available as a carryover and thus cannot be deducted by the Fund or its shareholders in future years.
Offsetting positions held by a Fund involving
certain derivative instruments, such as forward, futures and options contracts, may be considered, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, to constitute “straddles.” “Straddles” are defined to include “offsetting
positions” in actively traded personal property. The tax treatment of “straddles” is governed by Section 1092 of the Code which, in certain circumstances, overrides or modifies the provisions of Section 1256. If a Fund is treated
as entering into a “straddle” and at least one (but not all) of the Fund’s positions in derivative contracts comprising a part of such straddle is governed by Section 1256 of the Code, described above, then such straddle could be
characterized as a “mixed straddle.” A Fund may make one or more elections with respect to “mixed straddles.” Depending upon which election is made, if any, the results with respect to a Fund may differ. Generally, to the
extent the straddle rules apply to positions established by a Fund, losses realized by the
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Fund may be deferred to the extent of unrealized gain in any
offsetting positions. Moreover, as a result of the straddle rules, short-term capital loss on straddle positions may be recharacterized as long-term capital loss, and long-term capital gain may be characterized as short-term capital gain. In
addition, the existence of a straddle may affect the holding period of the offsetting positions. As a result, the straddle rules could cause distributions that would otherwise constitute “qualified dividend income” or qualify for the
dividends-received deduction to fail to satisfy the applicable holding period requirements (as described below). Furthermore, the Fund may be required to capitalize, rather than deduct currently, any interest expense and carrying charges applicable
to a position that is part of a straddle, including any interest on indebtedness incurred or continued to purchase or carry any positions that are part of a straddle. The application of the straddle rules to certain offsetting Fund positions can
therefore affect the amount, timing, and character of distributions to shareholders, and may result in significant differences from the amount, timing and character of distributions that would have been made by the Fund if it had not entered into
offsetting positions in respect of certain of its portfolio securities.
If a Fund enters into a “constructive
sale” of any appreciated financial position in stock, a partnership interest, or certain debt instruments, the Fund will be treated as if it had sold and immediately repurchased the property and must recognize gain (but not loss) with respect
to that position. A constructive sale of an appreciated financial position occurs when a Fund enters into certain offsetting transactions with respect to the same or substantially identical property, including, but not limited to: (i) a short sale;
(ii) an offsetting notional principal contract; (iii) a futures or forward contract; or (iv) other transactions identified in future U.S. Treasury Regulations. The character of the gain from constructive sales will depend upon a Fund’s holding
period in the appreciated financial position. Losses realized from a sale of a position that was previously the subject of a constructive sale will be recognized when the position is subsequently disposed of. The character of such losses will depend
upon a Fund’s holding period in the position beginning with the date the constructive sale was deemed to have occurred and the application of various loss deferral provisions in the Code. Constructive sale treatment does not apply to certain
closed transactions, including if such a transaction is closed on or before the 30th day after the close of the Fund’s taxable year and the Fund holds the appreciated financial position unhedged throughout the 60-day period beginning with the
day such transaction was closed.
The amount of
long-term capital gain a Fund may recognize from certain derivative transactions with respect to interests in certain pass-through entities is limited under the Code’s constructive ownership rules. The amount of long-term capital gain is
limited to the amount of such gain the Fund would have had if the Fund directly invested in the pass-through entity during the term of the derivative contract. Any gain in excess of this amount is treated as ordinary income. An interest charge is
imposed on the amount of gain that is treated as ordinary income.
If a Fund makes a distribution of income received by
the Fund in lieu of dividends (a “substitute payment”) with respect to securities on loan pursuant to a securities lending transaction, such income will not constitute qualified dividend income to individual shareholders and will not be
eligible for the dividends-received deduction for corporate shareholders. Similar consequences may apply to repurchase and other derivative transactions. Similarly, to the extent that the Funds make distributions of income received by such Fund in
lieu of tax-exempt interest with respect to securities on loan, such distributions will not constitute exempt-interest dividends (defined below) to shareholders.
In addition, a Fund’s transactions in
securities and certain types of derivatives (
e.g.,
options, futures contracts, forward contracts and swap agreements) may be subject to other special tax rules, such as the “wash sale” rules or the
short-sale rules, the effect of which may be to accelerate income to the Fund, defer losses to the Fund, cause adjustments in the holding periods of the Fund’s securities, convert long-term capital gains into short-term capital gains, and/or
convert short-term capital losses into long-term capital losses. These rules could therefore affect the amount, timing and character of distributions to shareholders.
Certain of a Fund’s investments in derivative
instruments and foreign currency-denominated instruments, as well as any of its foreign currency transactions and hedging activities, are likely to produce a difference between its book income and its taxable income. If a Fund’s book income
exceeds the sum of its taxable income and net tax-exempt income (if any), the distribution (if any) of such excess generally will be treated as (i) a dividend to the extent of the Fund’s remaining earnings and profits (including earnings and
profits arising from tax-exempt income), (ii) thereafter, as a return of capital to the extent of the recipient’s basis in its shares, and (iii) thereafter, as gain from the sale or exchange of a capital asset. If a Fund’s book income is
less than the sum of its taxable income and net tax-exempt income (if any), the Fund could be required to make distributions exceeding book income to qualify for treatment as a regulated investment company that is accorded special tax
treatment.
Rules governing the U.S. federal
income tax aspects of derivatives, including swap agreements and certain commodity-linked investments, are not entirely clear in certain respects. Accordingly, while each Fund intends to account for such transactions in a manner it deems to be
appropriate, an adverse determination or future guidance by the IRS with respect to these rules (which determination or guidance could be retroactive) may affect whether a Fund has made sufficient distributions, and otherwise satisfied the relevant
requirements to maintain its qualification as a regulated investment company and avoid fund-level tax. Certain requirements that must be met under the Code in order for a Fund to qualify as a regulated investment company may limit the extent to
which a Fund will be able to engage in certain derivatives or commodity-linked transactions.
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Certain of the Funds employ a multi-manager approach
in which the Investment Manager and one or more investment subadvisers each provide day-to-day portfolio management for a portion (or “sleeve”) of the Fund’s assets. Due to this multi-manager approach, certain of these Funds’
investments may be more likely to be subject to one or more special tax rules (including, but not limited to, wash sale, constructive sale, short sale, and straddle rules) that may affect the timing, character and/or amount of a Fund’s
distributions to shareholders.
Any investment
by a Fund in equity securities of a REIT may result in the Fund’s receipt of cash in excess of the REIT’s earnings; if the Fund distributes these amounts, these distributions could constitute a return of capital to Fund shareholders for
U.S. federal income tax purposes. Dividends received by a Fund from a REIT generally will not constitute qualified dividend income and will not qualify for the dividends-received deduction. Any Fund distribution of income attributable to qualified
REIT dividends or qualified publicly traded partnership income from a Fund’s investment in a REIT, will not qualify for the deduction that could be available to a non-corporate shareholder were the shareholder to own such REIT stock
directly.
A Fund may invest directly or
indirectly in residual interests in REMICs or equity interests in taxable mortgage pools (“TMPs”). Under an IRS notice, and U.S. Treasury Regulations that have yet to be issued but may apply retroactively, a portion of a Fund’s
income (including income allocated to the Fund from a REIT, a regulated investment company or other pass-through entity) that is attributable to a residual interest in a REMIC or an equity interest in a TMP (referred to in the Code as an
“excess inclusion”) will be subject to U.S. federal income tax in all events. This notice also provides, and the regulations are expected to provide, that excess inclusion income of a regulated investment company, such as a Fund, will be
allocated to shareholders of the regulated investment company in proportion to the dividends received by such shareholders, with the same consequences as if the shareholders held the related interest directly. As a result, the Fund may not be a
suitable investment for certain tax-exempt shareholders, as noted under
Tax-Exempt Shareholders
below.
In general, excess inclusion income allocated to
shareholders (i) cannot be offset by net operating losses (subject to a limited exception for certain thrift institutions), (ii) will constitute unrelated business taxable income (“UBTI”) to entities (including a qualified pension plan,
an individual retirement account, a 401(k) plan, a Keogh plan or certain other tax-exempt entities) subject to tax on UBTI, thereby potentially requiring such an entity that is allocated excess inclusion income, and otherwise might not be required
to file a tax return, to file a tax return and pay tax on such income, and (iii) in the case of a foreign shareholder, will not qualify for any reduction in U.S. federal withholding tax.
Some amounts received by a Fund from its investments
in MLPs will likely be treated as returns of capital because of accelerated deductions available with respect to the activities of MLPs. On the disposition of an investment in such an MLP, the Fund will likely realize taxable income in excess of
economic gain from that asset (or, in later periods, if a Fund does not dispose of the MLP, the Fund will likely realize taxable income in excess of cash flow received by the Fund from the MLP), and the Fund must take such income into account in
determining whether the Fund has satisfied its regulated investment company distribution requirements. The Fund may have to borrow or liquidate securities to satisfy its distribution requirements and meet its redemption requests, even though
investment considerations might otherwise make it undesirable for the Fund to borrow money or sell securities at the time. In addition, distributions attributable to gain from the sale of MLPs that are characterized as ordinary income under the
Code’s recapture provisions will be taxable to Fund shareholders as ordinary income. Any Fund distribution of income attributable to qualified publicly traded partnership income from a Fund’s investment in an MLP, will not qualify for
the deduction that could be available to a non-corporate shareholder were the shareholder to own such MLP directly.
As noted above, certain of the ETFs and MLPs in
which a Fund may invest qualify as qualified publicly traded partnerships. In such cases, the net income derived from such investments will constitute qualifying income for purposes of the 90% gross income requirement described earlier for
qualification as a regulated investment company. If, however, such a vehicle were to fail to qualify as a qualified publicly traded partnership in a particular year, a Fund’s investment in that vehicle would be treated as an investment in a
publicly traded partnership subject to taxation as a corporation, which would reduce the amount of income available for distribution by the vehicle to the Fund, and could adversely affect the Fund’s qualification for the asset diversification
test, and thus could adversely affect the Fund’s ability to qualify as a regulated investment company for a particular year. In addition, as described above, the diversification requirement for regulated investment company qualification will
limit a Fund’s investments in one or more vehicles that are qualified publicly traded partnerships to 25% of the Fund’s total assets as of the end of each quarter of the Fund’s taxable year.
“Passive foreign investment companies”
(“PFICs”) are generally defined as foreign corporations where at least 75% of their gross income for their taxable year is income from passive sources (such as certain interest, dividends, rents and royalties, or capital gains) or at
least 50% of their assets on average produce or are held for the production of such passive income. If a Fund acquires any equity interest in a PFIC, the Fund could be subject to U.S. federal income tax and interest charges on “excess
distributions” received from the PFIC or on gain from the sale of such equity interest in the PFIC, even if all income or gain actually received by the Fund is timely distributed to its shareholders. Excess distributions and gain from the sale
of interests in PFICs may be characterized as ordinary income even though, absent the application of PFIC rules, these amounts may otherwise have been classified as capital gain.
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A Fund will not be permitted to pass through to its
shareholders any credit or deduction for these special taxes and interest charges incurred with respect to a PFIC. Elections may be available that would ameliorate these adverse tax consequences, but such elections would require a Fund to include
its share of the PFIC’s income and net capital gains annually, regardless of whether it receives any distribution from the PFIC (in the case of a “QEF election”), or to mark the gains (and to a limited extent losses) in its
interests in the PFIC “to the market” as though the Fund had sold and repurchased such interests on the last day of the Fund’s taxable year, treating such gains and losses as ordinary income and loss (in the case of a
“mark-to-market election”). The QEF and mark-to-market elections may require a Fund to recognize taxable income or gain without the concurrent receipt of cash and increase the amount required to be distributed by the Fund to avoid
taxation. Making either of these elections therefore may require a Fund to liquidate other investments prematurely to meet the minimum distribution requirements described above, which also may accelerate the recognition of gain and adversely affect
the Fund’s total return. Each Fund may attempt to limit and/or manage its holdings in PFICs to minimize tax liability and/or maximize returns from these investments but there can be no assurance that it will be able to do so. Moreover, because
it is not always possible to identify a foreign corporation as a PFIC, a Fund may incur the tax and interest charges described above in some instances. Dividends paid by a foreign corporation that, for its taxable year in which the dividend is paid
or the preceding taxable year, is a PFIC will not be eligible to be treated as qualified dividend income, as defined below.
A U.S. person, including a Fund, who owns (directly
or indirectly) 10% or more of the total combined voting power of all classes of stock of a foreign corporation or 10% or more of the total value of shares of all classes of stock of a foreign corporation is a “U.S. Shareholder” for
purposes of the controlled foreign corporation (“CFC”) provisions of the Code. Generally, a CFC is a foreign corporation that is owned (directly, indirectly, or constructively determined by reference to complex ownership attribution
rules under the Code) more than 50% (measured by voting power or value) by U.S. Shareholders.
Each Subsidiary of each of Alternative Beta Fund, MM
Alternative Strategies Fund and Diversified Absolute Return Fund is expected to be a CFC in which the Fund owning the Subsidiary will be a U.S. Shareholder. If the Fund is a U.S. Shareholder, such Fund will be required to include in gross income for
U.S. federal income tax purposes all of a CFC’s “subpart F income,” whether or not such income is actually distributed by the CFC. Subpart F income generally includes net gains from the disposition of stocks or securities, receipts
with respect to securities loans, net gains from transactions (including futures, forward, and similar transactions) in commodities, and net payments received with respect to equity swaps and similar derivatives. Subpart F income is treated as
ordinary income, regardless of the character of the CFC’s underlying income. Net losses incurred by a CFC during a tax year do not flow through to the Fund and thus will not be available to offset income or capital gain generated from the
Fund’s other investments. In addition, net losses incurred by a CFC during a tax year generally cannot be carried forward by the CFC to offset gains realized by it in subsequent taxable years. The Fund will take steps to ensure that the
Fund’s income in respect of the Subsidiary will constitute qualifying income. The Subsidiary may be required to sell investments in order to make cash payments to the Fund, including at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so. Please
refer to the section entitled
Taxation – The Subsidiary
for further information.
In addition, if any income earned by a Subsidiary
were treated as “effectively connected” with the conduct of a trade or business in the United States (“effectively connected income” or “ECI”), such income would be subject to both a so-called “branch
profits tax” and a federal income tax at the rates applicable to U.S. corporations, at the entity level. If, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, a Subsidiary were to earn ECI in connection with its direct investment activities, a portion or
all of the Subsidiary’s income would be subject to these U.S. taxes. The Funds that own one or more Subsidiaries expect that, in general, the activities of the Subsidiaries will be conducted in such a manner that they will not be treated as
engaged in a U.S. trade or business, but there can be no assurance that the entity will not recognize any effectively connected income. The imposition of U.S. taxes on ECI could significantly reduce shareholders’ returns on their investments
in a Fund owning a Subsidiary subject to such taxes. The Fund does not expect that income from any Subsidiary will be eligible to be treated as qualified dividend income. In addition, the Fund does not expect that distributions from any Subsidiary
will be eligible for the dividends-received deduction.
In addition to the investments described above,
prospective shareholders should be aware that other investments made by a Fund may involve complex tax rules that may result in income or gain recognition by the Fund without corresponding current cash receipts. Although each Fund seeks to avoid
significant noncash income, such noncash income could be recognized by a Fund, in which case the Fund may distribute cash derived from other sources in order to meet the minimum distribution requirements described above. In this regard, a Fund could
be required at times to liquidate investments prematurely in order to satisfy its minimum distribution requirements, which may accelerate the recognition of gain and adversely affect the Fund’s total return.
Taxation of Distributions
Except for exempt-interest dividends (defined below) paid by a
Fund, distributions paid out of a Fund’s current and accumulated earnings and profits, whether paid in cash or reinvested in the Fund, generally are deemed to be taxable distributions and must be reported by each shareholder who is required to
file a U.S. federal income tax return. Dividends and distributions on a Fund’s shares are generally subject to U.S. federal income tax as described herein to the extent they do not exceed the Fund’s realized income and gains, even though
such dividends and distributions may economically represent a return of a particular
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shareholder’s investment. Such distributions are likely to
occur in respect of shares purchased at a time when the Fund’s net asset value reflects either unrealized gains, or realized but undistributed income or gains. Such realized income and gains may be required to be distributed even when the
Fund’s net asset value also reflects unrealized losses. For U.S. federal income tax purposes, a Fund’s earnings and profits, described above, are determined at the end of the Fund’s taxable year. Distributions in excess of a
Fund’s current and accumulated earnings and profits will first be treated as a return of capital up to the amount of a shareholder’s tax basis in his or her Fund shares and then as capital gain. A return of capital is not taxable, but it
reduces a shareholder’s tax basis in his or her Fund shares, thus reducing any loss or increasing any gain on a subsequent taxable disposition by the shareholder of his or her shares. A Fund may make distributions in excess of its earnings and
profits to a limited extent, from time to time.
For U.S. federal income tax purposes, distributions
of investment income (except for exempt-interest dividends and qualified dividend income, each defined below) are generally taxable as ordinary income, and distributions of gains from the sale of investments that a Fund owned (or is deemed to have
owned) for one year or less will be taxable as ordinary income. Distributions properly reported by a Fund as capital gain dividends (Capital Gain Dividends) will be taxable to shareholders as long-term capital gain (to the extent such distributions
do not exceed the Fund’s actual net long-term capital gain for the taxable year), regardless of how long a shareholder has held Fund shares, and do not qualify as dividends for purposes of the dividends-received deduction or as qualified
dividend income (defined below). Each Fund will report Capital Gain Dividends, if any, in written statements furnished to its shareholders.
Some states will not tax distributions made to
individual shareholders that are attributable to interest a Fund earns on direct obligations of the U.S. Government if the Fund meets the state’s minimum investment or reporting requirements, if any. Investments in GNMA or FNMA securities,
bankers’ acceptances, commercial paper, and repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. government securities generally do not qualify for tax-free treatment. This exemption may not apply to corporate shareholders.
Sales and Exchanges of Fund Shares
Generally, if a shareholder sells or exchanges his or her Fund
shares, he or she generally will realize a taxable capital gain or loss on the difference between the amount received for the shares (or deemed received in the case of an exchange) and his or her tax basis in the shares. This gain or loss will be
long-term capital gain or loss if he or she has held (or is deemed to have held) such Fund shares for more than one year at the time of the sale or exchange, and short-term capital gain or loss otherwise.
If a shareholder incurs a sales charge in acquiring
Fund shares and sells or exchanges those Fund shares within 90 days of having acquired such shares and if, as a result of having initially acquired those shares, he or she subsequently pays a reduced sales charge on a new purchase of shares of the
Fund or a different regulated investment company, the sales charge previously incurred in acquiring the Fund’s shares generally shall not be taken into account (to the extent the previous sales charges do not exceed the reduction in sales
charges on the new purchase) for the purpose of determining the amount of gain or loss on the disposition, but generally will be treated as having been incurred in the new purchase. This sales charge basis deferral rule shall apply only when a
shareholder makes such new acquisition of Fund shares or shares of a different regulated investment company during the period beginning on the date the original Fund shares are disposed of and ending on January 31 of the calendar year following the
calendar year the original Fund shares are disposed of. If a shareholder realizes a loss on a disposition of Fund shares, the loss generally will be disallowed under the “wash sale” rules to the extent that he or she purchases (including
through the reinvestment of dividends) substantially identical shares within the 61-day period beginning 30 days before and ending 30 days after the disposition. Any disallowed loss generally will be reflected in an adjustment to the tax basis of
the purchased shares.
If a shareholder
receives a Capital Gain Dividend or is deemed to receive a distribution of long-term capital gain with respect to any Fund share and such Fund share is held or treated as held for six months or less, then (unless otherwise disallowed) any loss on
the sale or exchange of that Fund share will be treated as a long-term capital loss to the extent of the Capital Gain Dividend or deemed long-term capital gain distribution. If Fund shares are sold at a loss after being held for six months or less,
the loss will generally be disallowed to the extent of any exempt-interest dividends (defined below) received on those shares. However, this loss disallowance does not apply with respect to redemptions of Fund shares with a holding period beginning
after December 22, 2010 if such Fund declares substantially all of its net tax-exempt income as exempt-interest dividends on a daily basis, and pays such dividends on at least a monthly basis (as would typically be the case for tax-exempt money
market funds).
Cost Basis Reporting
Each Fund (or the shareholder’s financial intermediary, if
Fund shares are held through a financial intermediary) generally is required to report to shareholders and the IRS gross proceeds on the sale, redemption or exchange of Fund shares. In addition, for shares purchased, including shares purchased
through dividend reinvestment, on or after January 1, 2012, the Funds (or the shareholder’s financial intermediary) generally are required to provide the shareholders and the IRS, upon the sale, redemption or exchange of Fund shares, with cost
basis information about those shares as well as information about whether any gain or loss
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is short- or long-term and whether any loss is disallowed under the
“wash sale” rules. This reporting is not required for Fund shares held in a retirement or other tax-advantaged account. With respect to Fund shares in accounts held directly with a Fund, each Fund will calculate and report cost basis
using the Fund’s default method of average cost, unless the shareholder instructs the Fund to use a different calculation method. A Fund will not report cost basis for shares whose cost basis is uncertain or unknown to the Fund. Please visit
the Columbia Funds’ website at www.columbiathreadneedle.com/us or contact the Funds at 800.345.6611 for more information regarding average cost basis reporting and other available methods for cost basis reporting and how to select or change a
particular method or to choose specific shares to sell, redeem or exchange. If a shareholder retains Fund shares through a financial intermediary, he or she should contact such financial intermediary to learn about the Fund’s cost basis
reporting default method and the reporting elections available to his or her account. The Funds do not recommend any particular method of determining cost basis. The shareholder should consult a tax advisor to determine which available cost basis
method is best. When completing U.S. federal and state income tax returns, shareholders should carefully review the cost basis and other information provided and make any additional basis, holding period or other adjustments that may be
required.
Foreign Taxes
Amounts realized by a Fund from sources within foreign countries
may be subject to withholding and other taxes imposed by such countries. Tax conventions between certain countries and the United States may reduce or eliminate such taxes. If more than 50% of the value of a Fund’s total assets at the close of
its taxable year consists of securities of foreign corporations, the Fund will be eligible to file an annual election with the IRS pursuant to which the Fund may pass through to its shareholders on a pro rata basis foreign income and similar taxes
paid by the Fund with respect to foreign securities that the Fund has held for at least the minimum holding periods specified in the Code and such taxes may be claimed, subject to certain limitations, either as a tax credit or deduction by the
shareholders. In some cases, a Fund may also be eligible to pass through to its shareholders the foreign taxes paid by underlying funds (as defined below) in which it invests that themselves elected to pass through such taxes to their shareholders,
see
Special Tax Considerations Pertaining to Funds-of-Funds
below.
Certain Funds may qualify for and make the election; however, even if a Fund qualifies for the election for any
year, it may determine not to make the election for such year. If a Fund does not so qualify or qualifies but does not so elect, then shareholders will not be entitled to claim a credit or deduction with respect to foreign taxes paid by or withheld
from payments to the Fund. A Fund will notify its shareholders in written statements if it has elected for the foreign taxes paid by it to “pass through” for that year.
In general, if a Fund makes the election, the Fund
itself will not be permitted to claim a credit or deduction for foreign taxes paid in that year, and the Fund’s dividends-paid deduction will be increased by the amount of foreign taxes paid that year. Fund shareholders generally shall include
their proportionate share of the foreign taxes paid by the Fund in their gross income and treat that amount as paid by them for the purpose of the foreign tax credit or deduction, provided that any applicable holding period and other requirements
have been met. If a shareholder claims a credit for foreign taxes paid, in general, the credit will be subject to certain limits. A deduction for foreign taxes paid may be claimed only by shareholders that itemize their deductions. Shareholders that
are not subject to U.S. federal income tax, and those who invest in the Fund through tax-exempt accounts (including those who invest through IRAs or other tax-advantaged retirement plans), generally will receive no benefit from any tax credit or
deduction passed through by the Fund.
Special
Tax Considerations Pertaining to Tax-Exempt Funds
If, at the
close of each quarter of a regulated investment company’s taxable year, at least 50% of the value of its total assets consists of obligations the interest on which is exempt from U.S. federal income tax under Section 103(a) of the Code, then
the regulated investment company may qualify to pay “exempt-interest dividends” and pass through to its shareholders the tax-exempt character of its income from such obligations. Certain of the Funds intend to so qualify and are designed
to provide shareholders with a high level of income in the form of exempt-interest dividends, which are generally exempt from U.S. federal income tax (each such qualifying Fund, a “Tax-Exempt Fund”). In some cases, a Fund may also be
eligible to pass through to its shareholders the tax-exempt character of any exempt-interest dividends it receives from underlying funds (as defined below) in which it invests, see
Special Tax
Considerations Pertaining to Funds-of-Funds
below.
Distributions by a Tax-Exempt Fund, other than those
attributable to interest on the Tax-Exempt Fund’s tax-exempt obligations and properly reported as exempt-interest dividends, will be taxable to shareholders as ordinary income or long-term capital gain or, in some cases, could constitute a
return of capital to shareholders. See
Taxation of Distributions
above. Each Tax-Exempt Fund will notify its shareholders in written statements of the portion of the distributions for the
taxable year that constitutes exempt-interest dividends. The percentage of a shareholder’s income reported as tax-exempt for any particular distribution may be substantially different from the percentage of the Tax-Exempt Fund’s income
that was tax-exempt during the period covered by the distribution. The deductibility of interest paid or accrued on indebtedness incurred by a shareholder to purchase or carry shares of a Tax-Exempt Fund may be limited. The portion of such interest
that is non-deductible generally equals the amount of
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such interest times the ratio of a Tax-Exempt Fund’s
exempt-interest dividends received by the shareholder to all of the Tax-Exempt Fund’s dividends received by the shareholder (excluding Capital Gain Dividends and any capital gains required to be included in the shareholder’s long-term
capital gains in respect of capital gains retained by the Tax-Exempt Fund, as described earlier).
Although exempt-interest dividends are generally
exempt from U.S. federal income tax, there may not be a similar exemption under the laws of a particular state or local taxing jurisdiction. Thus, exempt-interest dividends may be subject to state and local taxes ; however, each state-specific
Tax-Exempt Fund generally invests at least 80% of its net assets in municipal bonds that pay interest that is exempt not only from U.S. federal income tax, but also from the applicable state’s personal income tax (but not necessarily local
taxes or taxes of other states).
You should
consult your tax advisor to discuss the tax consequences of your investment in a Tax-Exempt Fund. Tax-exempt interest on certain “private activity bonds” has been designated as a “tax preference item” and must be added back
to taxable income for purposes of calculating U.S. federal alternative minimum tax (“AMT”). To the extent that a Tax-Exempt Fund invests in certain private activity bonds, its shareholders will be required to report that portion of the
Tax-Exempt Fund’s distributions attributable to income from the bonds as a tax preference item in determining their U.S. federal AMT, if any. Shareholders will be notified of the tax status of distributions made by a Tax-Exempt Fund. Persons
who may be “substantial users” (or “related persons” of substantial users) of facilities financed by private activity bonds should consult their tax advisors before purchasing shares in a Tax-Exempt Fund. Shareholders with
questions or concerns about the U.S. federal AMT should consult their own tax advisors.
Ordinarily, a Tax-Exempt Fund relies on an opinion
from the issuer’s bond counsel that interest on the issuer’s obligation will be exempt from U.S. federal income taxation. However, no assurance can be given that the IRS will not successfully challenge such exemption, which could cause
interest on the obligation to be taxable and could jeopardize a Tax-Exempt Fund’s ability to pay exempt-interest dividends. Similar challenges may occur as to state-specific exemptions. Also, from time to time legislation may be introduced or
litigation may arise that would change the treatment of exempt-interest dividends. Such litigation or legislation may have the effect of raising the state or other taxes payable by shareholders on such dividends. Shareholders should consult their
tax advisors for the current law on exempt-interest dividends.
A shareholder who receives Social Security or
railroad retirement benefits should consult his or her tax advisor to determine what effect, if any, an investment in a Tax-Exempt Fund may have on the U.S. federal taxation of such benefits. Exempt-interest dividends are included in income for
purposes of determining the amount of benefits that are taxable.
Special Tax Considerations Pertaining to
Funds-of-Funds
Certain Funds (each such fund, a
Fund-of-Funds) invest their assets primarily in shares of other mutual funds, ETFs or other companies that are regulated investment companies (collectively, underlying funds). Consequently, their income and gains will normally consist primarily of
distributions from underlying funds and gains and losses on the disposition of shares of underlying funds. To the extent that an underlying fund realizes net losses on its investments for a given taxable year, a Fund-of-Funds will not be able to
benefit from those losses until (i) the underlying fund realizes gains that it can reduce by those losses, or (ii) the Fund-of-Funds recognizes its share of those losses (so as to offset distributions of capital gains from other underlying funds)
when it disposes of shares of the underlying fund. Moreover, even when a Fund-of-Funds does make such a disposition, a portion of its loss may be recognized as a long-term capital loss, which will not be treated as favorably for U.S. federal income
tax purposes as a short-term capital loss or an ordinary deduction. In particular, a Fund-of-Funds will not be able to offset any capital losses from its dispositions of underlying fund shares against its ordinary income (including distributions of
any net short-term capital gains realized by an underlying fund).
In addition, in certain circumstances, the
“wash sale” rules may apply to sales of underlying fund shares by a Fund-of-Funds. As discussed above, a wash sale occurs if shares of an underlying fund are sold by a Fund-of-Funds at a loss and the Fund-of-Funds acquires additional
shares of that same underlying fund within the period beginning 30 days before and ending 30 days after the date of the sale. The rules could defer losses of a Fund-of-Funds on sales of underlying fund shares (to the extent such sales are wash
sales) for extended (and, in certain cases, potentially indefinite) periods of time.
As a result of the foregoing rules, and certain
other special rules, it is possible that the amounts of net investment income and net capital gain that a Fund-of-Funds will be required to distribute to shareholders will be greater than such amounts would have been had the Fund-of-Funds invested
directly in the securities held by the underlying funds, rather than investing in shares of the underlying funds. For similar reasons, the character of distributions from a Fund-of-Funds (
e.g.,
long-term
capital gain, exempt interest, eligibility for dividends-received deduction) will not necessarily be the same as it would have been had the Fund-of-Funds invested directly in the securities held by the underlying funds.
Depending on the percentage ownership of a
Fund-of-Funds in an underlying fund before and after a redemption of underlying fund shares, the redemption of shares by the Fund-of-Funds of such underlying fund may cause the Fund-of-Funds to be treated as receiving a dividend in the full amount
of the redemption proceeds instead of receiving a capital gain or loss on the
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redemption of shares of the underlying fund. This could be the case
where a Fund-of-Funds holds a significant interest in an underlying fund that is not “publicly offered” (as defined in the Code) and redeems only a small portion of such interest. Dividend treatment of a redemption by a Fund-of-Funds
would affect the amount and character of income required to be distributed by both the Fund-of-Funds and the underlying fund for the year in which the redemption occurred. It is possible that such a dividend would qualify as “qualified
dividend income”; otherwise, it would be taxable as ordinary income and could cause shareholders of a Fund-of-Funds to recognize higher amounts of ordinary income than if the shareholders had held shares of the underlying fund directly.
If a Fund-of-Funds receives dividends from an
underlying fund, and the underlying fund reports such dividends as “qualified dividend income,” as discussed below, then the Fund-of-Funds is permitted, in turn, to report a portion of its distributions as “qualified dividend
income,” provided the Fund-of-Funds meets the holding period and other requirements with respect to shares of the underlying fund. If a Fund-of-Funds receives dividends from an underlying fund, and the underlying fund reports such dividends as
eligible for the dividends-received deduction, then the Fund-of-Funds is permitted, in turn, to report a portion of its distributions as eligible for the dividends-received deduction, provided the Fund-of-Funds meets the holding period and other
requirements with respect to shares of the underlying fund.
If a Fund-of-Funds is a “qualified
fund-of-funds” (a regulated investment company that invests at least 50% of its total assets in other regulated investment companies at the close of each quarter of its taxable year), it will be able to distribute exempt-interest dividends and
thereby pass through to its shareholders the tax-exempt character of any interest received on tax-exempt obligations in which it directly invests or any exempt-interest dividends it receives from underlying funds in which it invests. For further
considerations pertaining to exempt-interest dividends, see
Special Tax Considerations Pertaining to Tax-Exempt Funds
above.
Further, if a Fund-of-Funds is a qualified
fund-of-funds, it will be able to elect to pass through to its shareholders any foreign income and other similar taxes paid by the Fund-of-Funds or paid by an underlying fund in which the Fund-of-Funds invests that itself elected to pass such taxes
through to shareholders, so that shareholders of the Fund-of-Funds will be eligible to claim a tax credit or deduction for such taxes, subject to applicable limitations. However, even if a Fund-of-Funds qualifies to make the election for any year,
it may determine not to do so. For further considerations pertaining to foreign taxes paid by a Fund, see
Foreign Taxes
above.
Finally, a Fund-of-Funds generally must look through
its 20 percent voting interest in a corporation, including an underlying fund, to the underlying assets thereof for purposes of the diversification test; special rules potentially provide limited relief from the application of this rule where the
Fund-of-Funds is a qualified fund-of-funds.
U.S.
Federal Income Tax
In general, “qualified dividend
income” is income attributable to dividends received by a Fund from certain domestic and foreign corporations, as long as certain holding period and other requirements are met by the Fund with respect to the dividend-paying corporation’s
stock and by the Fund's shareholders with respect to the Fund’s shares. If 95% or more of a Fund’s gross income (excluding net long-term capital gain over net short-term capital loss) constitutes qualified dividend income, all of its
distributions (other than Capital Gain Dividends) will be generally treated as qualified dividend income in the hands of individual shareholders, as long as they have owned their Fund shares for at least 61 days during the 121-day period beginning
60 days before the Fund’s ex-dividend date (or, in the case of certain preferred stock, 91 days during the 181-day period beginning 90 days before such date) and meet certain other requirements specified in the Code. In general, if less than
95% of a Fund’s gross income is attributable to qualified dividend income, then only the portion of the Fund’s distributions that is attributable to qualified dividend income and reported as such in a timely manner will be so treated in
the hands of individual shareholders who meet the aforementioned holding period requirements. Qualified dividend income is taxable to individual shareholders at tax rates applicable to long-term capital gain. The rules regarding the qualification of
Fund distributions as qualified dividend income are complex, including the holding period requirements. Individual Fund shareholders therefore are urged to consult their own tax advisors and financial planners. Fixed income funds typically do not
distribute significant amounts of qualified dividend income.
The Code generally imposes a 3.8% net investment
income tax on certain high-income individuals, trusts and estates. For individuals, the 3.8% tax applies to the lesser of (1) the amount (if any) by which the taxpayer’s modified adjusted gross income exceeds certain threshold amounts or (2)
the taxpayer’s “net investment income.” For this purpose, “net investment income” generally includes, among other things, (i) distributions paid by a Fund of net investment income and capital gains (other than
exempt-interest dividends) as described above, and (ii) any net gain recognized on the sale, redemption, exchange or other taxable disposition of Fund shares. Certain details of the implementation of the tax remain subject to future guidance.
Shareholders are advised to consult their tax advisors regarding the possible implications of this additional tax on their investment in a Fund.
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Backup Withholding
Each Fund generally is required to withhold, and remit to the U.S.
Treasury, subject to certain exemptions, a percentage of all distributions and redemption proceeds (including proceeds from exchanges and redemptions in-kind) paid or credited to a Fund shareholder if (1) the shareholder fails to furnish the Fund
with a correct “taxpayer identification number” (TIN) or has not certified to the Fund that withholding does not apply or (2) the IRS notifies the Fund that the shareholder’s TIN is incorrect or the shareholder is otherwise subject
to backup withholding. These backup withholding rules may also apply to distributions that are properly reported as exempt-interest dividends (defined above). This backup withholding is not an additional tax imposed on the shareholder. The
shareholder may apply amounts required to be withheld as a credit against his or her future U.S. federal income tax liability, provided that the required information is furnished to the IRS. If a shareholder fails to furnish a valid TIN upon
request, the shareholder can also be subject to IRS penalties.
Tax-Deferred Plans
The shares of a Fund may be available for a variety of tax-deferred
retirement and other tax-advantaged plans and accounts. Prospective investors should contact their tax advisors and financial planners regarding the tax consequences to them of holding Fund shares through such plans and/or accounts.
Corporate Shareholders
Subject to limitations and other rules, a corporate shareholder of
a Fund may be eligible for the dividends-received deduction on Fund distributions attributable to dividends received by the Fund from domestic corporations, which, if received directly by the corporate shareholder, would qualify for such a
deduction. For eligible corporate shareholders, the dividends-received deduction may be subject to certain reductions, and a distribution by a Fund attributable to dividends of a domestic corporation will be eligible for the deduction only if
certain holding period and other requirements are met. For information regarding eligibility for the dividends-received deduction of dividend income derived by an underlying fund in which a Fund-of-Funds invests, see
Special Tax Considerations Pertaining to Funds-of-Funds
above. These requirements are complex; therefore, corporate shareholders of the Funds are urged to consult their own tax advisors and
financial planners.
As discussed above, a
portion of the interest paid or accrued on certain high-yield discount obligations that a Fund may own may not be deductible to the issuer. If a portion of the interest paid or accrued on these obligations is not deductible, that portion will be
treated as a dividend. In such cases, if the issuer of the obligation is a domestic corporation, dividend payments by a Fund may be eligible for the dividends-received deduction to the extent of the dividend portion of such interest.
Foreign Shareholders
For purposes of this discussion, “foreign shareholders”
generally include: (i) nonresident alien individuals, (ii) foreign trusts (
i.e.
, a trust other than a trust with respect to which a U.S. court is able to exercise primary supervision over administration of
that trust and one or more U.S. persons have authority to control substantial decisions of that trust), (iii) foreign estates (
i.e.
, the income of which is not subject to U.S. tax regardless of source), and
(iv) foreign corporations.
Distributions by a
Fund made to foreign shareholders that are not “U.S. persons” within the meaning of the Code properly reported by a Fund as (1) Capital Gain Dividends, (2) short-term capital gain dividends, (3) interest-related dividends or (4)
exempt-interest dividends, each as defined above or below, generally are not subject to withholding of U.S. federal income tax. In general, the Code defines (1) “short-term capital gain dividends” as distributions of net short-term
capital gains in excess of net long-term capital losses and (2) “interest-related dividends” as distributions from U.S. source interest income of types similar to those not subject to U.S. federal income tax if earned directly by an
individual foreign shareholder, in each case to the extent such distributions are properly reported as such by the Fund in a written notice to shareholders. The exceptions to withholding for Capital Gain Dividends and short-term capital gain
dividends do not apply to (A) distributions to an individual foreign shareholder who is present in the United States for a period or periods aggregating 183 days or more during the year of the distribution and (B) distributions attributable to gain
that is treated as effectively connected with the conduct by the foreign shareholder of a trade or business within the United States under special rules regarding the disposition of U.S. real property interests as described below. The exception to
withholding for interest-related dividends does not apply to distributions to a foreign shareholder (A) that has not provided a satisfactory statement that the beneficial owner is not a U.S. person, (B) to the extent that the dividend is
attributable to certain interest on an obligation if the foreign shareholder is the issuer or is a 10% shareholder of the issuer, (C) that is within certain foreign countries that have inadequate information exchange with the United States, or (D)
to the extent the dividend is attributable to interest paid by a person that is a related person of the foreign shareholder and the foreign shareholder is a controlled foreign corporation.
If a Fund invests in a RIC that pays Capital Gain
Dividends, short-term capital gain dividends, exempt-interest dividends, or interest-related dividends to the Fund, such distributions retain their character as not subject to withholding if properly reported when paid by the Fund to foreign
shareholders (provided, in the case of exempt-interest dividends, that the Fund and the underlying RIC meet the requirements discussed in
Special Tax Considerations Pertaining to
Funds-of-Funds
above).
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A Fund is permitted to report such part of its
dividends as interest-related and/or short-term capital gain dividends as are eligible, but is not required to do so. In the case of shares held through an intermediary, the intermediary may withhold even if a Fund reports all or a portion of a
payment as a short-term capital gain or interest-related dividend. Foreign shareholders should contact their intermediaries regarding the application of these rules to their accounts.
Distributions by a Fund to foreign shareholders
other than Capital Gain Dividends, short-term capital gain dividends, exempt-interest dividends, and interest-related dividends (e.g., dividends attributable to foreign-source dividend and interest income, or to short-term capital gains or U.S.
source interest income to which the exception from withholding description above does not apply) are generally subject to U.S. federal income tax withheld at a rate of 30% (or lower applicable treaty rate).
In general, a foreign shareholder is not subject to
U.S. federal income tax and withholding on gains (and is not allowed a deduction for losses) realized on the disposition of shares of a Fund unless: (i) such gain is effectively connected with the conduct by the foreign shareholder of a trade or
business within the United States, (ii) in the case of a foreign shareholder that is an individual, the shareholder is present in the United States for a period or periods aggregating 183 days or more during the year of disposition and certain other
conditions are met, or (iii) the special rules relating to gain attributable to the sale or exchange of “U.S. real property interests” (“USRPIs”) apply to the foreign shareholder’s sale of shares of the Fund (as
described below).
Special rules apply if a
Fund were a qualified investment entity (“QIE”) because it is either a “U.S. real property holding corporation” (“USRPHC”) or would be a USRPHC but for the operation of certain exceptions to the definition of
USRPIs described below.
Generally, a USRPHC is
a domestic corporation that holds USRPIs the fair market value of which equals or exceeds 50% of the sum of the fair market values of the corporation’s USRPIs, interests in real property located outside the United States and other trade or
business assets.
USRPIs are generally defined
as any interest in U.S. real property and any interest (other than solely as a creditor) in a USRPHC or, very generally, an entity that has been a USRPHC in the last five years. A Fund that holds, directly or indirectly, significant interests in
REITs, may be a USRPHC. Interests in: (i) domestically controlled QIEs, including REITs and RICs that are QIEs, (ii) not-greater-than 10% interests in publicly traded classes of stock in REITs, and (iii) not-greater-than-5% interests in publicly
traded classes of stock in RICs, generally are not USRPIs, but these exceptions do not apply for purposes of determining whether a Fund is a QIE.
If an interest in a Fund were a USRPI, the Fund
would be required to withhold U.S. tax on the proceeds of a share redemption by a greater-than-5% foreign shareholder, in which case such foreign shareholder generally would also be required to file U.S. tax returns and pay any additional taxes due
in connection with the redemption.
Moreover,
if a Fund were a USRPHC or, very generally, had been one in the last five years, it would be required to withhold on amounts distributed to a greater-than-5% foreign shareholder to the extent such amounts would not be treated as a dividend, i.e.,
are in excess of the Fund’s current and accumulated “earnings and profits” for the applicable tax year. Such withholding generally is not required if the Fund is a domestically controlled QIE.
If a Fund is a QIE, under a special “look
through” rule, any distributions by the Fund to a greater-than-5% foreign shareholder (including, in certain cases, distributions made by the Fund in redemption of its shares) that are attributable directly or indirectly to (i) distributions
received by the Fund from a lower-tier RIC or REIT that the Fund is required to treat as USRPI gain in its hands and (ii) gains realized on the disposition of USRPIs by the Fund will retain their character as gains realized from USRPIs in the hands
of the Fund’s foreign shareholders and will be subject to U.S. tax withholding. In addition, such distributions could result in the foreign shareholder being required to file a U.S. income tax return and pay tax on the distributions at regular
U.S. federal income tax rates. The consequences to a foreign shareholder, including the rate of such withholding and character of such distributions (e.g., as ordinary income or USRPI gain), would vary depending upon the extent of the foreign
shareholder’s current and past ownership of a Fund.
Foreign shareholders of a Fund may also be subject
to “wash sale” rules to prevent the avoidance of the foregoing tax-filing and payment obligations discussed above through the sale and repurchase of Fund shares.
Foreign shareholders should consult their tax
advisors and, if holding shares through intermediaries, their intermediaries, concerning the application of these rules to their investment in a Fund.
Foreign shareholders with respect to whom income
from a Fund is effectively connected with a trade or business conducted by the foreign shareholder within the United States will in general be subject to U.S. federal income tax on the income derived from the Fund at the graduated rates applicable
to U.S. citizens, residents or domestic corporations, whether such income is received in cash or reinvested in shares of a Fund and, in the case of a foreign corporation, may also be subject to a branch profits tax. If a foreign shareholder is
eligible for the benefits of a tax treaty, any effectively connected income or gain will generally be subject
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to U.S. federal income tax on a net basis only if it is also
attributable to a permanent establishment maintained by the shareholder in the United States. More generally, foreign shareholders who are residents in a country with an income tax treaty with the United States may obtain different tax results than
those described herein, and are urged to consult their tax advisors.
In order to qualify for any exemptions from
withholding described above or for lower withholding tax rates under income tax treaties, or to establish an exemption from backup withholding, a foreign shareholder must comply with applicable certification requirements relating to its foreign
status (including, in general, furnishing an IRS Form W-8BEN, W-8BEN-E or substitute form). Foreign shareholders should consult their tax advisors in this regard.
Special rules (including withholding and reporting
requirements) apply to foreign partnerships and those holding Fund shares through foreign partnerships. In addition, additional considerations may apply to foreign trusts and foreign estates. Investors holding Fund shares through foreign entities
should consult their tax advisors about their particular situation.
A beneficial holder of shares who is a foreign
person may be subject to state and local tax and to the U.S. federal estate tax in addition to the U.S. federal income tax referred to above.
Tax-Exempt Shareholders
Each Fund serves to “block” (that is, prevent the
attribution to shareholders of) unrelated business taxable income (“UBTI”) from being realized by tax-exempt shareholders. Notwithstanding this “blocking” effect, a tax-exempt shareholder could realize UBTI by virtue of its
investment in a Fund if shares in the Fund constitute debt-financed property in the hands of the tax-exempt shareholder within the meaning of Section 514(b) of the Code.
It is possible that a tax-exempt shareholder will
also recognize UBTI if a Fund recognizes excess inclusion income (as described above) derived from direct or indirect investments in residual interests in real estate mortgage investment conduits (“REMICs”) or equity interests in taxable
mortgage pools (“TMPs”). Furthermore, any investment in residual interests of a collateralized mortgage obligation ("CMO") that has elected to be treated as a REMIC can create complex tax consequences, especially if the Fund has state or
local governments or other tax-exempt organizations as shareholders.
In addition, special tax consequences apply to
charitable remainder trusts (“CRTs”) that invest in regulated investment companies that invest directly or indirectly in residual interests in REMICs or equity interests in TMPs. Under legislation enacted in December 2006, a CRT, as
defined in Section 664 of the Code, that realizes UBTI for a taxable year must pay an excise tax annually of an amount equal to such UBTI. Under IRS guidance issued in October 2006, a CRT will not recognize UBTI solely as a result of investing in a
Fund to the extent that it recognizes excess inclusion income. Rather, if at any time during any taxable year a CRT (or one of certain other tax-exempt shareholders, such as the United States, a state or political subdivision, or an agency or
instrumentality thereof, and certain energy cooperatives) is a record holder of a share in a Fund and the Fund recognizes excess inclusion income, then the Fund will be subject to a tax on that portion of its excess inclusion income for the taxable
year that is allocable to such shareholders at the highest U.S. federal corporate income tax rate. The extent to which the IRS guidance remains applicable in light of the December 2006 legislation is unclear. To the extent permitted under the 1940
Act, each Fund may elect to specially allocate any such tax to the applicable CRT, or other shareholder, and thus reduce such shareholder’s distributions for the year by the amount of the tax that relates to such shareholder’s interest
in the Fund. Each Fund has not yet determined whether such an election will be made. CRTs are urged to consult their tax advisors concerning the consequences of investing in a Fund.
Tax Shelter Reporting Regulations
Under U.S. Treasury Regulations, if a shareholder recognizes a loss
of $2 million or more for an individual shareholder or $10 million or more for a corporate shareholder, the shareholder must file with the IRS a disclosure statement on IRS Form 8886. Direct holders of portfolio securities are in many cases excepted
from this reporting requirement, but under current guidance, shareholders of a regulated investment company are not excepted. Future guidance may extend the current exception from this reporting requirement to shareholders of most or all regulated
investment companies. The fact that a loss is reportable under these regulations does not affect the legal determination of whether the taxpayer’s treatment of the loss is proper. Shareholders should consult with their tax advisors to
determine the applicability of these regulations in light of their individual circumstances.
Shareholder Reporting Obligations With Respect to
Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts
Shareholders that are
U.S. persons and own, directly or indirectly, more than 50% of a Fund could be required to report annually their “financial interest” in the Fund’s “foreign financial accounts,” if any, on FinCEN Form 114, Report of
Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (“FBAR”). Shareholders should consult a tax advisor, and persons investing in the Fund through an intermediary should contact their intermediary, regarding the applicability to them of this reporting
requirement.
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Other Reporting and Withholding Requirements
Sections 1471-1474 of the Code, and the U.S. Treasury Regulations
and IRS guidance issued thereunder (collectively, “FATCA”), generally require a Fund to obtain information sufficient to identify the status of each of its shareholders under FATCA or under an applicable intergovernmental agreement (an
“IGA”) between the United States and a foreign government, as described more fully below. If a shareholder of a Fund fails to provide the requested information or otherwise fails to comply with FATCA or an IGA, the Fund is generally
required to withhold under FATCA at a rate of 30% with respect to that shareholder on ordinary dividends it pays, and on or after January 1, 2019, 30% of certain Capital Gain Dividends and gross proceeds of the sale, redemption or exchange of Fund
shares it pays. If a payment by a Fund is subject to FATCA withholding, the Fund is required to withhold even if such payment would otherwise be exempt from withholding under the rules applicable to foreign shareholders described above (e.g.,
Capital Gain Dividends, exempt-interest dividends, short-term capital gain dividends and interest-related dividends).
Payments to a shareholder will generally not be
subject to FATCA withholding, provided the shareholder provides a Fund with such certifications, waivers or other documentation or information as the Fund requires, including, to the extent required, with regard to such shareholder’s direct
and indirect owners, to establish the shareholder’s FATCA status and otherwise to comply with these rules. In order to avoid withholding, a shareholder that is a “foreign financial institution” (“FFI”) must either (i)
become a “participating FFI” by entering into a valid U.S. tax compliance agreement with the IRS, (ii) qualify for an exception from the requirement to enter into such an agreement, for example by becoming a “deemed-compliant
FFI,” or (iii) be covered by an applicable IGA between the United States and a non-U.S. government to implement FATCA and improve international tax compliance. In any of these cases, the investing FFI generally will be required to provide its
Fund with appropriate identifiers, certifications or documentation concerning its status.
A Fund may disclose the information that it receives
from (or concerning) its shareholders to the IRS, non-U.S. taxing authorities or other parties as necessary to comply with applicable IGAs or other applicable law or regulation.
Prospective investors are urged to consult their tax
advisors regarding the applicability of FATCA and any other reporting requirements with respect to the prospective investor’s own situation, including investments through an intermediary.
The Subsidiary
Each of Alternative Beta Fund, MM Alternative Strategies Fund and
Diversified Absolute Return Fund (for purposes of this section, the “Fund”) intends to invest a portion of its assets in one or more Subsidiaries, each of which will be classified as a corporation for U.S. federal tax purposes. Foreign
corporations, such as the Subsidiary, will generally not be subject to U.S. federal income tax unless it is deemed to be engaged in a United States trade or business. The Subsidiary intends to conduct its activities in a manner that is expected to
meet the requirements of a safe harbor under Section 864(b)(2) of the Code under which the Subsidiary may engage in trading in stocks or securities or certain commodities for its own account without being deemed to be engaged in a United States
trade or business. However, if certain of the Subsidiary’s activities were deemed not to be of the type described in the safe harbor, the activities of the Subsidiary might constitute a United States trade or business.
Even if the Subsidiary is not engaged in a United
States trade or business, it will potentially be subject to a U.S. withholding tax at a rate of 30% on all or a portion of its United States source gross income that is not effectively connected with a United States trade or business.
The Subsidiary will be treated as a CFC. The Fund
will be treated as a “U.S. Shareholder” of the Subsidiary. As a result, the Fund will be required to include in its gross income all of the Subsidiary’s “subpart F income”. It is expected that all of the
Subsidiary’s income will be “subpart F income”. “Subpart F income” is generally treated as ordinary income. Under proposed regulations, the annual net income, if any, realized by the Subsidiary and treated as received
by the Fund for U.S. federal income tax purposes will constitute qualifying income for purposes of the Fund’s qualification as a RIC under the Code only to the extent such net income is currently and timely distributed to the Fund. The Fund
and the Subsidiary currently take steps, and will continue to take steps to ensure that the Fund’s income in respect of the Subsidiary will constitute qualifying income, including but not limited to by causing the Subsidiary to distribute cash
to the Fund each year in an amount equal to the Subsidiary’s “subpart F income.” The Subsidiary may be required to sell investments in order to make such cash payments to the Fund, including at a time when it may be not
advantageous to do so. Accordingly, any such cash payments may temporarily limit the Subsidiary’s or the Fund’s ability to pursue its respective investment strategy. If a net loss is realized by the Subsidiary, such loss is not generally
available to offset the income of the Fund and generally is not permitted to be carried forward to offset income of the Subsidiary in future years. The recognition by the Fund of the Subsidiary’s “subpart F income” will increase
the Fund’s tax basis in the Subsidiary. Distributions by the Subsidiary to the Fund will not be taxable to the extent of its previously undistributed “subpart F income”, and will reduce the Fund’s tax basis in the
Subsidiary.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
219
|
In order to qualify for the special tax treatment
accorded to RICs under the Code, the Fund must satisfy a 90% gross income requirement and an asset diversification requirement. These requirements are not applicable to the Subsidiary. For purposes of the asset diversification requirement, the Fund
will limit its investment in the Subsidiary in the aggregate to 25% or less of the Fund's total assets as of the end of every quarter of its taxable year; the asset diversification requirement applies to the Fund's interest in the Subsidiary but not
to the Subsidiary's investments.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
220
|
CONTROL PERSONS AND PRINCIPAL HOLDERS
OF SECURITIES
Management
Ownership
As of
February 28, 2018, the Trustees and Officers of the Trust, as a group, beneficially owned less than 1% of each class of shares of each Fund, except as set forth in the table below:
Fund
|
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
Beneficially Owned
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
Class
Inst2
|
8.70%
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
Class
Inst2
|
52.61%
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
Class
A
|
1.54%
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
Class
Inst
|
51.08%
|
Principal
Shareholders and Control Persons
The tables below identify
the names, address and ownership percentage of each person who owns of record or is known by the Trust to own beneficially 5% or more of any class of a Fund’s outstanding shares (Principal Holders) or 25% or more of a Fund’s outstanding
shares (Control Persons). A shareholder who beneficially owns more than 25% of a Fund’s shares is presumed to “control” the Fund, as that term is defined in the 1940 Act, and may have a significant impact on matters submitted to a
shareholder vote. A shareholder who beneficially owns more than 50% of a Fund’s outstanding shares may be able to approve proposals, or prevent approval of proposals, without regard to votes by other Fund shareholders. Additional information
about Control Persons, if any, is provided following the tables. The information provided for each Fund is as of a date no more than 30 days prior to the date of filing a post-effective amendment to the applicable Trust’s registration
statement with respect to such Fund.
The information provided for each
Fund is as of the date indicated in the table below, and certain share classes may have changed since such date as follows. Effective March 27, 2017, Class W shares were renamed and re-designated as Class T shares, which have no relation to, or
connection with, Class T shares existing on January 23, 2017 (now known as Class V shares). Also effective March 27, 2017, shares held by Class I shareholders were exchanged for Class Y shares of the same Fund in a tax-free transaction with no
impact on the fees and expenses paid by shareholders. Effective July 17, 2017, Class B shares and Class F shares (except those shares representing the Investment Manager's initial capital) automatically converted to Class A shares and Class E
shares, respectively, and effective on August 4, 2017, all remaining Class B shares and Class F shares (the Investment Manager's initial capital) were redeemed. Effective November 1, 2017, Class R4 shares were renamed as Class Adv shares, Class R5
shares were renamed as Class Inst2 shares, Class Y shares were renamed as Class Inst3 shares, and Class Z shares were renamed as Class Inst shares. Effective March 9, 2018, shares held by Class K shareholders were exchanged for Class Adv shares of
the same Fund in a tax-free transaction with no impact on the fees and expenses paid by shareholders.
Funds with Fiscal Period Ending January 31:
Except as otherwise indicated, the information below is as of April
30, 2017:
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
Diversified
Real Return Fund
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class A
|
11.84%
|
88.60%
(a)
|
Class
C
|
16.49%
|
Class
R4
|
100.00%
|
Class
R5
|
100.00%
|
Class
T
|
100.00%
|
Class
Y
|
100.00%
|
Class
Z
|
99.24%
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class A
|
66.59%
|
N/A
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class A
|
7.16%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
83.51%
|
|
WELDON
L WEBER III
6226 GEORGIA DR
CORPUS CHRISTI TX 78414-3664
|
Class A
|
5.87%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
221
|
Funds with Fiscal Period Ending March 31:
Except as otherwise indicated, the information below is as of June
30, 2017:
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
MM
Growth Strategies Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
99.98%
|
100.00%
|
Class
Z
|
100.00%
|
Pacific/Asia
Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
34.28%
|
N/A
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class T
|
100.00%
|
83.65%
(a)
|
|
JPMCB
NA AS CUST FOR THE SC529 PLAN
COLUMBIA MODERATE 529 PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PARKWAY
FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Z
|
57.26%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
19.21%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
49.05%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
27.02%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER & SMITH
FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT OF IT CUSTOMER
4800 DEER LAKE DR E
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class Z
|
31.45%
|
N/A
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class C
|
24.36%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class C
|
5.58%
|
N/A
|
Class
R4
|
44.63%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class A
|
25.05%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
10.65%
|
Class
R4
|
50.93%
|
|
STATE
STREET BK & TR IRA
JACK C MASSEY
4370 OLIVE BRANCH RD
GREENWOOD IN 46143-9667
|
Class C
|
6.21%
|
N/A
|
|
STATE
STREET BK & TR ROLLOVER IRA
SHERRIE S HARRIS
7234 SHELBYVILLE RD
INDIANAPOLIS IN 46259-9721
|
Class C
|
5.53%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class A
|
6.33%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
18.92%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
222
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
Select
Large Cap Growth Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
10.67%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
8.18%
|
Class
T
|
99.04%
|
Class
Z
|
12.37%
|
|
ASCENSUS
TRUST COMPANY FBO
RELIANCE SOLUTIONS 401(K) SAVINGS P
PO BOX 10758
FARGO ND 58106-0758
|
Class R
|
20.71%
|
N/A
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY A/C FBO CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUND DEPT
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class R5
|
5.69%
|
N/A
|
|
COLUMBIA
THERMOSTAT FUND
ATTN STEVEN SWINHART
225 FRANKLIN ST FL 25
BOSTON MA 02110-2888
|
Class Y
|
9.46%
|
N/A
|
|
DCGT
AS TTEE AND/OR CUST
FBO PLIC VARIOUS RETIREMENT PLANS
OMNIBUS
ATTN NPIO TRADE DESK
711 HIGH ST
DES MOINES IA 50392-0001
|
Class R
|
11.88%
|
N/A
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class Z
|
10.87%
|
N/A
|
|
FIIOC
FBO
PBK ARCHITECTS INC 401K PROFIT
SHARING PLAN & TRUST
100 MAGELLAN WAY # KW1C
COVINGTON KY 41015-1987
|
Class R4
|
5.82%
|
N/A
|
|
GREAT-WEST
TRUST COMPANY LLC TTEE F
RECORDKEEPING VARIOUS BENEFIT PL NY
C/O MUTUAL FUND TRADING
8525 E ORCHARD RD
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class R
|
14.18%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
16.53%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
37.09%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
18.92%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA GLOBAL STRATEGIC EQUITY
PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
5.32%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER & SMITH
FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT OF IT CUSTOMER
4800 DEER LAKE DR E
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class A
|
5.47%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
14.89%
|
Class
Z
|
34.31%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
223
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
MID
ATLANTIC TRUST COMPANY FBO
1251 WATERFRONT PL STE 525
PITTSBURGH PA 15222-4228
|
Class R
|
10.27%
|
N/A
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class A
|
6.14%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
17.37%
|
Class
Z
|
11.51%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class A
|
49.32%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
32.01%
|
Class
R4
|
33.28%
|
Class
R5
|
80.48%
|
Class
Y
|
5.31%
|
|
NATIONWIDE
TRUST COMPANY/FSB
C/O IPO PORTFOLIO ACCOUNTING
PO BOX 182029
COLUMBUS OH 43218-2029
|
Class R5
|
8.67%
|
N/A
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class R4
|
33.64%
|
N/A
|
|
RELIANCE
TRUST CO CUST
FBO
PO BOX 48529
ATLANTA GA 30362-1529
|
Class R
|
19.81%
|
N/A
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST UBSFSI
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class C
|
5.38%
|
N/A
|
|
VANGUARD
FDUCIARY TRUST CO
PO BOX 2600 VM 613
ATTN: OUTSIDE FUNDS
VALLEY FORGE PA 19482-2600
|
Class R4
|
15.76%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class C
|
6.17%
|
N/A
|
Class
Z
|
5.07%
|
Funds with Fiscal Period
Ending April 30:
Except as otherwise indicated, the
information below is as of July 31, 2017:
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
Bond
Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
13.64%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
23.89%
|
|
ASCENSUS
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 10758
FARGO ND 58106-0758
|
Class A
|
6.05%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
22.76%
|
Class
R
|
61.36%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class B
|
100.00%
|
N/A
(a)
|
Class
T
|
100.00%
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class A
|
7.75%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
5.10%
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH, PIERCE, FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class A
|
29.64%
|
74.74%
|
Class
C
|
6.76%
|
Class
V
|
21.37%
|
Class
Y
|
99.27%
|
Class
Z
|
82.87%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
224
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
MID
ATLANTIC TRUST COMPANY FBO
1251 WATERFRONT PL STE 525
PITTSBURGH PA 15222-4228
|
Class R
|
38.63%
|
N/A
|
Class
R5
|
7.89%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class A
|
6.36%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
7.16%
|
Class
R4
|
32.59%
|
Class
R5
|
80.16%
|
|
TAYNIK
& CO
C/O INVESTORS BANK & TRUST CO
1200 CROWN COLONY DR CC10313
QUINCY MA 02169-0938
|
Class R4
|
59.18%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class C
|
10.22%
|
N/A
|
Corporate
Income Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
16.92%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
31.13%
|
Class
T
|
98.04%
|
Class
Z
|
23.88%
|
|
BAND
& CO C/O US BANK NA
1555 N RIVERCENTER DR STE 302
MILWAUKEE WI 53212-3958
|
Class Z
|
22.17%
|
N/A
|
|
CBNA
AS CUSTODIAN FBO
JOHN B RYAN EES 401(K) PLAN & TRUS
6 RHOADS DR STE 7
UTICA NY 13502-6317
|
Class R5
|
5.10%
|
N/A
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY A/C FBO CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUND DEPT
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class A
|
23.41%
|
N/A
|
Class
R5
|
37.48%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class B
|
100.00%
|
47.82%
(a)
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class A
|
7.11%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
5.16%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
CONSERVATIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
6.75%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
30.52%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE CONSERVATIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
10.88%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
225
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
23.34%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA INCOME BUILDER FUND
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
21.76%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR SC529 PLAN
COLUMBIA COLLEGE 529 PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Z
|
11.03%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH, PIERCE, FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class A
|
6.66%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
8.81%
|
Class
Z
|
28.77%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class C
|
5.79%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class C
|
10.37%
|
N/A
|
Class
R4
|
9.44%
|
Class
R5
|
16.85%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class C
|
10.20%
|
N/A
|
Class
R4
|
40.61%
|
Class
R5
|
27.31%
|
|
TAYNIK
& CO
C/O INVESTORS BANK & TRUST CO
1200 CROWN COLONY DR CC10313
QUINCY MA 02169-0938
|
Class R4
|
48.08%
|
N/A
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FBO
OUR CUSTOMERS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class R5
|
7.62%
|
N/A
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class C
|
5.56%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class A
|
5.17%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
6.56%
|
MM
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
98.85%
|
100.00%
|
Class
Z
|
100.00%
|
Multi-Asset
Income Fund
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY A/C FBO CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUND DEPT
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class A
|
32.91%
|
N/A
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class R5
|
75.56%
|
96.15%
(a)
|
Class
T
|
100.00%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
226
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
JAMES
C CHERON
PATRICIA B CHERON
4608 REBECCA BLVD
METAIRIE LA 70003-7624
|
Class Z
|
7.07%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
11.00%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
CONSERVATIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
6.66%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
38.15%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE CONSERVATIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
14.75%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
28.14%
|
N/A
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class A
|
13.73%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
16.32%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class A
|
9.22%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
5.43%
|
Class
R4
|
65.92%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class A
|
23.13%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
20.54%
|
Class
R4
|
29.72%
|
Class
R5
|
24.44%
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
HOUSE
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class A
|
9.13%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
48.71%
|
Class
Z
|
9.88%
|
|
STATE
STREET BK & TR IRA
DOUGLAS A HACKER
18172 LAGOS WAY
NAPLES FL 34110-2762
|
Class Z
|
53.73%
|
N/A
|
|
STATE
STREET BK & TR IRA
JEFFREY L KNIGHT
15 SYLVAN LN
WESTON MA 02493-1027
|
Class Z
|
23.58%
|
N/A
|
|
STATE
STREET BK & TR IRA
JOHN D HARRIS
13410 CASTLECOMBE DR
HOUSTON TX 77044-4951
|
Class A
|
9.25%
|
N/A
|
Small
Cap Value Fund I
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
7.44%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
9.63%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
227
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
CAPITAL
BANK & TRUST CO TRUSTEE FBO
C/O FASCORE LLC
8515 E ORCHARD RD # 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class R
|
83.16%
|
N/A
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY A/C FBO CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUND DEPT
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class A
|
6.62%
|
N/A
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class B
|
100.00%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
FIIOC
FBO
100 MAGELLAN WAY (KW1C)
COVINGTON KY 41015-1987
|
Class R5
|
5.06%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA INCOME BUILDER FUND
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
92.09%
|
N/A
|
|
LINCOLN
RETIREMENT SERVICES CO
FBO
PO BOX 7876
FORT WAYNE IN 46801-7876
|
Class Z
|
7.90%
|
N/A
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class C
|
7.31%
|
N/A
|
|
MATRIX
TRUST COMPANY CUST FBO
717 17TH ST STE 1300
DENVER CO 80202-3304
|
Class R
|
6.53%
|
N/A
|
Class
R5
|
12.76%
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH, PIERCE, FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class A
|
6.69%
|
N/A
|
Class
Z
|
42.57%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class C
|
15.77%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class A
|
8.48%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
8.56%
|
Class
R4
|
43.26%
|
Class
R5
|
32.97%
|
Class
Z
|
9.90%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class A
|
5.35%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
11.07%
|
Class
R4
|
47.02%
|
|
PIMS/PRUDENTIAL
RETIREMENT
AS NOMINEE
P O BOX 1979
835 N RUSH ST
CHICAGO IL 60611-2030
|
Class Y
|
5.58%
|
N/A
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
HOUSE
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class C
|
7.83%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
228
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
SHAPIRO
BUCHMAN PROVINE BROTHERS TT
BUCHMAN PROVINE BROS AND SMITH LLP
C/O FASCORE LLC
8515 E ORCHARD RD # 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class R
|
6.59%
|
N/A
|
|
TIAA
FSB CUST/TTEE FBO
RETIREMENT PLANS FOR WHICH
TIAA ACTS AS RECORDKEEPER
ATTN TRUST OPERATIONS
211 N BROADWAY STE 1000
SAINT LOUIS MO 63102-2748
|
Class R5
|
35.27%
|
N/A
|
Class
Z
|
15.35%
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class A
|
5.29%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
13.97%
|
Total
Return Bond Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
83.76%
|
35.30%
|
Class
C
|
42.95%
|
Class
T
|
99.80%
|
Class
Z
|
13.99%
|
|
ASCENSUS
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 10758
FARGO ND 58106-0758
|
Class R
|
17.66%
|
N/A
|
|
CAPITAL
BANK & TRUST CO TRUSTEE FBO
C/O FASCORE LLC
8515 E ORCHARD RD # 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class R
|
18.22%
|
N/A
|
Class
R5
|
18.05%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY A/C FBO CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUND DEPT
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class R4
|
39.01%
|
N/A
|
Class
R5
|
11.86%
|
Class
Z
|
8.23%
|
|
CHRISTINA
PFLEIDER & TOM PFLEIDER T
FBO META DYNAMIC INC 401K PSP
C/O FASCORE LLC
8515 E ORCHARD RD # 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class R
|
8.87%
|
N/A
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class B
|
100.00%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
COLUMBIA
THERMOSTAT FUND
ATTN STEVEN SWINHART
225 FRANKLIN ST FL 25
BOSTON MA 02110-2888
|
Class Y
|
36.39%
|
N/A
|
|
FIIOC
FBO
100 MAGELLAN WAY (KW1C)
COVINGTON KY 41015-1987
|
Class R4
|
26.23%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE CONSERVATIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
7.45%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
46.65%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR SC529 PLAN
COLUMBIA COLLEGE 529 PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Z
|
18.68%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
229
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
MATRIX
TRUST COMPANY CUST FBO
717 17TH ST STE 1300
DENVER CO 80202-3304
|
Class R
|
20.60%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH, PIERCE, FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class C
|
5.46%
|
N/A
|
Class
R
|
11.91%
|
Class
Z
|
37.07%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class C
|
21.75%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class R
|
9.04%
|
N/A
|
Class
R4
|
11.32%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class C
|
6.37%
|
N/A
|
Class
R4
|
15.70%
|
Class
R5
|
32.75%
|
|
RELIANCE
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 28004
ATLANTA GA 30358-0004
|
Class R5
|
6.99%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO BANK FBO
1525 W W T HARRIS BLVD
CHARLOTTE NC 28262-8522
|
Class K
|
98.37%
|
N/A
|
Class
R5
|
16.38%
|
U.S.
Treasury Index Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
6.75%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
31.34%
|
Class
T
|
99.19%
|
Class
Z
|
8.22%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class B
|
100.00%
|
53.82%
(a)
|
|
COLUMBIA
THERMOSTAT FUND
ATTN STEVEN SWINHART
225 FRANKLIN ST FL 25
BOSTON MA 02110-2888
|
Class Y
|
32.11%
|
N/A
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class C
|
6.20%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
CONSERVATIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
12.75%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
6.87%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE CONSERVATIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
22.98%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
230
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
19.42%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR SC529 PLAN
COLUMBIA COLLEGE 529 PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Z
|
60.56%
|
N/A
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class C
|
5.13%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH, PIERCE, FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class A
|
48.89%
|
N/A
|
Class
R5
|
86.29%
|
Class
Z
|
10.58%
|
|
MID
ATLANTIC TRUST COMPANY FBO
1251 WATERFRONT PL STE 525
PITTSBURGH PA 15222-4228
|
Class A
|
5.16%
|
N/A
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class C
|
6.58%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class C
|
5.33%
|
N/A
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
HOUSE
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class C
|
18.22%
|
N/A
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class C
|
8.37%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class C
|
10.62%
|
N/A
|
Funds with Fiscal Period
Ending May 31:
Except as otherwise indicated, the information
below is as of August 31, 2017:
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
Adaptive
Risk Allocation Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
65.94%
|
89.76%
|
Class
C
|
67.85%
|
Class
T
|
99.83%
|
Class
Z
|
93.69%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
CUST A/C FOR THE EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT
ATTENTION MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class R4
|
29.57%
|
N/A
|
Class
R5
|
25.01%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
231
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class K
|
100.00%
|
N/A
(a)
|
Class
Y
|
100.00%
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class A
|
6.18%
|
N/A
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class A
|
7.68%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
7.45%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class A
|
6.14%
|
N/A
|
Class
R
|
94.70%
|
Class
R4
|
23.52%
|
Class
R5
|
39.03%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class R4
|
44.68%
|
N/A
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CLIENTS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class R5
|
31.37%
|
N/A
|
Alternative
Beta Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
95.38%
|
96.01%
|
Class
C
|
86.89%
|
Class
T
|
98.54%
|
Class
Z
|
99.86%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
CUST A/C FOR THE EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT
ATTENTION MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class R5
|
78.12%
|
N/A
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class R
|
100.00%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
19.99%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
CONSERVATIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
19.99%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
19.99%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE CONSERVATIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
19.99%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
232
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
19.99%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class C
|
7.63%
|
N/A
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class R4
|
95.48%
|
N/A
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CLIENTS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class R5
|
20.59%
|
N/A
|
Diversified
Absolute Return Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
89.09%
|
N/A
|
Class
T
|
88.85%
|
Class
Z
|
22.45%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class A
|
9.88%
|
97.56%
(a)
|
Class
C
|
70.11%
|
Class
R4
|
100.00%
|
Class
R5
|
100.00%
|
Class
T
|
11.15%
|
|
DONNA
C KNIGHT & JEFFREY L KNIGHT
TTEES DONNA C KNIGHT LIVING TRUST
15 SYLVAN LN
WESTON MA 02493-1027
|
Class Z
|
39.59%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
8.98%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
CONSERVATIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
5.09%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
32.01%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE CONSERVATIVE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
11.76%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE PORTFOLIO
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
26.66%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES FUND
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
13.95%
|
N/A
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class Z
|
36.21%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
233
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
STATE
STREET BK & TR IRA
JUSTIN D PITTMAN
1623 EUCLID AVE
JOPLIN MO 64801-1308
|
Class C
|
29.89%
|
N/A
|
Dividend
Income Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
14.58%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
16.42%
|
Class
T
|
95.15%
|
Class
Z
|
18.69%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
CUST A/C FOR THE EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT
ATTENTION MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class A
|
7.07%
|
N/A
|
Class
R5
|
21.64%
|
Class
V
|
8.17%
|
Class
Z
|
7.88%
|
|
DCGT
AS TTEE AND /OR CUST
FBO PLIC VARIOUS RETIREMENT PLANS
OMNIBUS
ATTN NPIO TRADE DESK
711 HIGH ST
DES MOINES IA 50392-0001
|
Class R
|
6.34%
|
N/A
|
|
EQUITABLE
LIFE FOR SA NO65
ON BEHALF OF VARIOUS 401K
EXPEDITER PLANS
1290 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS
NEW YORK NY 10104-0101
|
Class R
|
54.02%
|
N/A
|
|
GREAT
WEST TRUST CO
FBO RETIREMENT PLANS
8515 E ORCHARD RD 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class R4
|
6.98%
|
N/A
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class C
|
5.30%
|
N/A
|
Class
Z
|
5.21%
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class A
|
9.86%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
12.62%
|
Class
R
|
10.34%
|
Class
R4
|
6.12%
|
Class
V
|
17.40%
|
Class
Y
|
73.28%
|
Class
Z
|
7.46%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class C
|
11.73%
|
N/A
|
Class
Z
|
5.09%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class A
|
20.65%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
8.47%
|
Class
R4
|
40.58%
|
Class
R5
|
21.23%
|
Class
Y
|
9.23%
|
Class
Z
|
16.76%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class A
|
5.58%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
7.19%
|
Class
R4
|
22.92%
|
|
PIMS/PRUDENTIAL
RETIREMENT
AS NOMINEE FOR THE TTEE/CUST
ROBERT WOOD JOHNSON HOSPITAL
379 CAMPUS DRIVE
SOMERSET NJ 08873-1161
|
Class R5
|
6.74%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
234
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
HOUSE ACCT FIRM
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class C
|
9.99%
|
N/A
|
Class
Z
|
15.30%
|
|
RELIANCE
TRUST CO CUST
FBO MASSMUTUAL OMNIBUS
PO BOX 48529
ATLANTA GA 30362-1529
|
Class R5
|
12.60%
|
N/A
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CLIENTS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class R5
|
7.02%
|
N/A
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class C
|
6.81%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class C
|
11.27%
|
N/A
|
HY
Municipal Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class A
|
28.06%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
24.68%
|
Class
Z
|
7.40%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
CUST A/C FOR THE EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT
ATTENTION MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class A
|
6.31%
|
N/A
|
Class
R5
|
17.18%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class Y
|
43.18%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class A
|
8.59%
|
48.02%
|
Class
C
|
6.72%
|
Class
Z
|
61.31%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class A
|
14.76%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
12.36%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class A
|
6.43%
|
N/A
|
Class
R4
|
47.76%
|
Class
R5
|
35.38%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class R4
|
51.34%
|
N/A
|
Class
R5
|
45.58%
|
Class
Y
|
56.74%
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
HOUSE ACCT FIRM
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class A
|
9.49%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
18.59%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
235
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class C
|
6.76%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class A
|
6.53%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
18.50%
|
Funds with Fiscal Period
Ending July 31:
Except as otherwise indicated, the
information below is as of September 30, 2017:
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
AMT-Free
OR Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
8.10%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
17.44%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY A/C FBO CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUND DEPT
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
A
|
10.69%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
70.69%
|
Class
Inst
|
14.22%
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class
A
|
36.98%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
10.80%
|
Class
Inst3
|
99.66%
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER &
SMITH INC
FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT OF IT S CUSTOM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
C
|
7.62%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
8.55%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
C
|
18.75%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
A
|
6.83%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
11.16%
|
Class
Inst2
|
5.73%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
Adv
|
87.25%
|
N/A
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
HOUSE ACCT FIRM
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class
A
|
6.23%
|
N/A
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CLIENTS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class
Inst2
|
23.44%
|
N/A
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class
A
|
7.27%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
A
|
12.78%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
29.49%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
236
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
Large
Cap Growth Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
63.58%
|
37.84%
|
Class
C
|
35.32%
|
Class
T
|
99.67%
|
Class
Inst
|
13.72%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY A/C FBO CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUND DEPT
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
K
|
84.10%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
7.00%
|
Class
Inst2
|
81.98%
|
Class
Inst
|
8.12%
|
|
FIIOC
FBO
100 MAGELLAN WAY #KW1C
COVINGTON KY 41015-1987
|
Class
Inst2
|
5.97%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
5.13%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
15.47%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
5.54%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA GLOBAL STRATEGIC EQUITY
PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
5.70%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER &
SMITH INC
FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT OF IT S CUSTOM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
C
|
6.26%
|
N/A
|
Class
R
|
84.28%
|
Class
Adv
|
10.86%
|
Class
V
|
24.37%
|
Class
Inst3
|
55.09%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
C
|
6.64%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
Adv
|
56.93%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
7.58%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
Adv
|
7.68%
|
N/A
|
|
STATE
STREET BANK AND TRUST AS
TRUSTEE AND/OR CUSTODIAN FBO
1 LINCOLN ST
BOSTON MA 02111-2901
|
Class
Adv
|
8.92%
|
N/A
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class
C
|
8.60%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
C
|
7.33%
|
N/A
|
Class
K
|
11.01%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
237
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
Tax-Exempt
Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
47.82%
|
39.90%
|
Class
C
|
45.04%
|
Class
Inst
|
11.76%
|
|
CATHAY
LIFE INSURANCE CO LTD
296 JEN-AI ROAD SEC. 4
TAIPEI, 106 TAIWAN R.O.C
|
Class
Inst
|
15.19%
|
N/A
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY A/C FBO CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUND DEPT
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
Inst2
|
26.88%
|
N/A
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class
A
|
11.92%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst3
|
98.11%
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER &
SMITH INC
FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT OF IT S CUSTOM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
C
|
8.35%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
39.02%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
C
|
6.60%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
Adv
|
46.20%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
22.30%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
Adv
|
50.42%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
30.79%
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
HOUSE ACCT FIRM
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class
C
|
7.46%
|
N/A
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CLIENTS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class
Inst2
|
19.59%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
A
|
5.28%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
9.07%
|
U.S.
Social Bond Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
23.75%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
46.93%
|
Class
Inst
|
14.96%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class
Adv
|
100.00%
|
54.89%
(a)
|
Class
Inst
|
68.28%
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class
C
|
8.71%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst3
|
98.15%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
A
|
45.10%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
19.58%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
238
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
A
|
10.20%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
92.63%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
Inst2
|
6.46%
|
N/A
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class
A
|
8.39%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
11.79%
|
|
WELLS
FARGO BANK FBO
1525 W W T HARRIS BLVD
CHARLOTTE NC 28262-8522
|
Class
Inst
|
5.61%
|
N/A
|
Ultra
Short Term Bond Fund
|
JPMCB
NA AS CUSTODIAN FOR THE SC529
PLAN COLUMBIA CONSERVATIVE 529 PORT
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Shares
|
9.97%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER &
SMITH INC
FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT OF IT S CUSTOM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Shares
|
89.71%
|
89.71%
|
Funds with Fiscal Period
Ending August 31:
Except as otherwise indicated, the
information below is as of November 30, 2017:
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
Balanced
Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
47.92%
|
36.64%
|
Class
C
|
44.53%
|
Class
Inst
|
33.88%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
A
|
6.79%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
12.26%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class
T
|
100.00%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class
Inst3
|
19.95%
|
N/A
|
|
FIIOC
FBO
100 MAGELLAN WAY (KW1C)
COVINGTON KY 41015-1987
|
Class
R
|
5.60%
|
N/A
|
|
GREAT-WEST
TRUST COMPANY LLC TTEE F
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS CLIENTS 401K
8515 E ORCHARD RD # 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class
K
|
32.75%
|
N/A
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class
Inst
|
5.71%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
239
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
C
|
5.42%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
15.36%
|
Class
Inst3
|
9.57%
|
Class
R
|
30.61%
|
|
MID
ATLANTIC TRUST COMPANY FBO
1251 WATERFRONT PL STE 525
PITTSBURGH PA 15222-4228
|
Class
Inst3
|
14.67%
|
N/A
|
Class
R
|
5.80%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
C
|
8.03%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
7.59%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
A
|
14.85%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
58.54%
|
Class
Inst2
|
39.36%
|
Class
Inst3
|
9.85%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
Adv
|
29.52%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
6.56%
|
Class
Inst2
|
8.53%
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class
C
|
7.70%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
7.85%
|
|
RELIANCE
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 48529
ATLANTA GA 30362-1529
|
Class
Inst3
|
11.48%
|
N/A
|
|
STATE
STREET BANK
FBO
1 LINCOLN ST
BOSTON MA 02111-2901
|
Class
Inst3
|
9.07%
|
N/A
|
Class
R
|
36.81%
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CLIENTS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class
Inst2
|
13.13%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO BANK FBO
1525 W W T HARRIS BLVD
CHARLOTTE NC 28262-8522
|
Class
Inst2
|
11.39%
|
N/A
|
Class
K
|
66.44%
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
C
|
13.70%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
7.84%
|
Contrarian
Core Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
43.31%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
28.61%
|
Class
Inst
|
18.61%
|
Class
T
|
99.67%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
Inst
|
11.42%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
14.67%
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class
Inst3
|
13.45%
|
N/A
|
|
JOHN
HANCOCK TRUST COMPANY LLC
690 CANTON ST STE 100
WESTWOOD MA 02090-2324
|
Class
K
|
97.58%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
240
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
JPMCB
NA AS CUSTODIAN FOR THE SC529
PLAN COLUMBIA CONSERVATIVE 529 PORT
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst
|
5.87%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
7.03%
|
N/A
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class
C
|
5.25%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
7.83%
|
|
MASSACHUSETTS
MUTUAL LIFE INS CO
1295 STATE ST MIP M200-INVST
SPRINGFIELD MA 01111-0001
|
Class
R
|
7.69%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
A
|
7.71%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
8.10%
|
Class
Inst
|
7.10%
|
Class
Inst3
|
38.68%
|
Class
R
|
19.75%
|
Class
V
|
28.35%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
C
|
10.35%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
A
|
10.37%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
47.64%
|
Class
C
|
8.13%
|
Class
Inst
|
9.56%
|
Class
Inst2
|
45.32%
|
Class
Inst3
|
18.88%
|
|
NATIONWIDE
TRUST COMPANY FSB
FBO PARTICIPATING RETIREMENT PLANS
NTC-PLNS
C/O IPO PORTFOLIO ACCOUNTING
PO BOX 182029
COLUMBUS OH 43218-2029
|
Class
Inst2
|
16.45%
|
N/A
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
Adv
|
20.15%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
7.76%
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class
C
|
7.55%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
5.67%
|
|
SAMMONS
FINANCIAL NETWORK LLC
4546 CORPORATE DR STE 100
WEST DES MOINES IA 50266-5911
|
Class
R
|
35.75%
|
N/A
|
|
STANDARD
INSURANCE COMPANY
1100 SW 6TH AVE
PORTLAND OR 97204-1093
|
Class
Adv
|
6.17%
|
N/A
|
|
STIFEL
NICOLAUS & CO INC
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
501 N BROADWAY
SAINT LOUIS MO 63102-2188
|
Class
C
|
6.09%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
C
|
10.72%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
241
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
Disciplined
Small Core Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
18.07%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
19.03%
|
Class
Inst
|
12.38%
|
Class
T
|
99.21%
|
|
ASCENSUS
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 10758
FARGO ND 58106-0758
|
Class
Adv
|
42.68%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
29.57%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
Inst
|
5.47%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
21.95%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
20.89%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE CONSERVATIVE PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
11.25%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
41.49%
|
N/A
|
|
MATRIX
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 52129
PHOENIX AZ 85072-2129
|
Class
Inst
|
15.94%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
A
|
20.43%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
11.42%
|
Class
Inst
|
29.96%
|
Class
V
|
26.83%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
C
|
7.17%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
A
|
10.46%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
28.65%
|
Class
C
|
10.97%
|
Class
Inst
|
8.95%
|
Class
Inst2
|
6.90%
|
Class
V
|
6.04%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
A
|
6.44%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
23.68%
|
Class
C
|
10.98%
|
Class
Inst2
|
44.90%
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CLIENTS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class
Inst2
|
14.08%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
242
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class
Inst
|
5.49%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
C
|
19.09%
|
N/A
|
Emerging
Markets Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
71.40%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
42.73%
|
Class
Inst
|
25.66%
|
Class
T
|
98.38%
|
|
ASCENSUS
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 10758
FARGO ND 58106-0758
|
Class
Inst2
|
16.51%
|
N/A
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
Adv
|
67.63%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
22.66%
|
|
COMERICA
BANK FBO CALHOUN
PO BOX 75000 MSC 3446
DETROIT MI 48275-0001
|
Class
Inst
|
20.44%
|
N/A
|
|
JOHN
RITUCCI TTEE FBO
TRI STATE TRUCK CENTER 401K
C/O FASCORE LLC
8515 E ORCHARD RD # 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class
R
|
5.66%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
7.03%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
15.02%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
6.01%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
Adv
|
12.59%
|
32.48%
|
Class
Inst
|
6.32%
|
Class
Inst3
|
60.29%
|
Class
R
|
65.56%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
Adv
|
11.65%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
66.78%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
C
|
5.34%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
5.49%
|
Class
K
|
42.90%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
243
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class
C
|
15.35%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
C
|
6.83%
|
N/A
|
Class
K
|
53.89%
|
Global
Dividend Opportunity Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
5.34%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
12.65%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
A
|
9.21%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
8.83%
|
Class
Inst
|
6.99%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class
T
|
100.00%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
FIIOC
FBO
100 MAGELLAN WAY (KW1C)
COVINGTON KY 41015-1987
|
Class
Adv
|
75.78%
|
N/A
|
Class
R
|
5.43%
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA GLOBAL STRATEGIC EQUITY
PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
61.02%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA INCOME BUILDER FUND
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
36.82%
|
N/A
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class
C
|
10.39%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
A
|
6.99%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
A
|
7.79%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
8.26%
|
Class
C
|
5.49%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
A
|
6.89%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
5.74%
|
Class
Inst2
|
30.02%
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class
C
|
7.52%
|
N/A
|
|
RELIANCE
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 48529
ATLANTA GA 30362-1529
|
Class
R
|
85.93%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
244
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
STATE
STREET BANK
FBO
1 LINCOLN ST
BOSTON MA 02111-2901
|
Class
Adv
|
10.78%
|
N/A
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CLIENTS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class
Inst2
|
69.53%
|
N/A
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class
C
|
12.96%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
A
|
5.68%
|
N/A
|
Global
Energy and Natural Resources Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
65.46%
|
28.23%
|
Class
C
|
29.05%
|
Class
Inst
|
10.59%
|
|
ASCENSUS
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 10758
FARGO ND 58106-0758
|
Class
Inst2
|
15.08%
|
N/A
|
|
CAPITAL
BANK & TRUST COMPANY TTEE F
8515 E ORCHARD RD # 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class
R
|
6.38%
|
N/A
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
Inst
|
32.02%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
18.69%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class
K
|
41.33%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
HARTFORD
LIFE INS. CO.
SEPARATE ACCOUNT
ATTN UIT OPERATIONS
PO BOX 2999
HARTFORD CT 06104-2999
|
Class
R
|
14.22%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA GLOBAL STRATEGIC EQUITY
PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
95.73%
|
N/A
|
|
MASSACHUSETTS
MUTUAL LIFE INS CO
1295 STATE ST MIP M200-INVST
SPRINGFIELD MA 01111-0001
|
Class
R
|
34.77%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
Adv
|
9.01%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
6.77%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
C
|
8.53%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
5.98%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
245
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
Inst
|
13.87%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
49.48%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
Adv
|
85.45%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
9.20%
|
Class
K
|
58.67%
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class
C
|
18.62%
|
N/A
|
|
STATE
STREET BANK
FBO
1 LINCOLN ST
BOSTON MA 02111-2901
|
Class
R
|
14.52%
|
N/A
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE TRUST COMPANY
ATTN HOUSE
PO BOX 17748
DENVER CO 80217-0748
|
Class
Inst2
|
5.32%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
C
|
9.12%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
5.74%
|
Global
Technology Growth Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
12.39%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
15.49%
|
Class
Inst
|
20.69%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
A
|
19.86%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
7.48%
|
Class
Inst2
|
14.22%
|
|
DCGT
AS TTEE AND/OR CUST
FBO PLIC VARIOUS RETIREMENT PLANS
OMNIBUS
ATTN NPIO TRADE DESK
711 HIGH ST
DES MOINES IA 50392-0001
|
Class
Inst3
|
9.07%
|
N/A
|
|
FIIOC
FBO
100 MAGELLAN WAY (KW1C)
COVINGTON KY 41015-1987
|
Class
Adv
|
7.81%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
8.16%
|
Class
Inst3
|
5.37%
|
|
GREAT-WEST
TRUST COMPANY LLC TTEE F
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS CLIENTS 401K
8515 E ORCHARD RD # 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class
Inst2
|
6.93%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA GLOBAL STRATEGIC EQUITY
PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
76.10%
|
N/A
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class
A
|
7.20%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
16.89%
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
A
|
7.72%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
16.36%
|
Class
Inst
|
30.79%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
246
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
C
|
12.90%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
5.67%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
A
|
12.05%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
25.81%
|
Class
Inst2
|
13.55%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
A
|
10.10%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
45.51%
|
Class
C
|
8.47%
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class
C
|
6.23%
|
N/A
|
|
STATE
STREET BANK
FBO
1 LINCOLN ST
BOSTON MA 02111-2901
|
Class
Adv
|
5.82%
|
N/A
|
|
T
ROWE PRICE TRUST CO TTEE
FBO RETIREMENT PLAN CLIENTS
PO BOX 17215
BALTIMORE MD 21297-1215
|
Class
Inst2
|
13.26%
|
N/A
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CLIENTS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class
Inst2
|
8.42%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO BANK FBO
1525 W W T HARRIS BLVD
CHARLOTTE NC 28262-8522
|
Class
Inst2
|
6.17%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
A
|
7.37%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
13.59%
|
Greater
China Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
C
|
7.15%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
5.43%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
A
|
10.16%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
6.56%
|
Class
Inst
|
9.11%
|
Class
Inst2
|
5.42%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class
T
|
100.00%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class
Inst3
|
10.41%
|
N/A
|
|
GREAT-WEST
TRUST COMPANY LLC TTEE F
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS CLIENTS 401K
8515 E ORCHARD RD # 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class
Inst2
|
9.45%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
247
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
A
|
11.09%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
8.20%
|
Class
Inst3
|
88.01%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
A
|
6.71%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
15.51%
|
Class
Inst
|
11.74%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
A
|
12.46%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
12.57%
|
Class
C
|
16.31%
|
Class
Inst
|
15.08%
|
Class
Inst2
|
8.05%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
A
|
5.67%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
81.99%
|
Class
C
|
10.01%
|
Class
Inst2
|
63.81%
|
|
RBC
CAPITAL MARKETS, LLC
MUTUAL FUND OMNIBUS PROCESSING
OMNIBUS
ATTN MUTUAL FUND OPS MANAGER
510 MARQUETTE AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-1110
|
Class
Inst
|
10.07%
|
N/A
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class
C
|
5.13%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
6.48%
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
A
|
9.20%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
20.40%
|
Class
Inst
|
8.89%
|
Mid
Cap Growth Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
66.04%
|
31.46%
|
Class
C
|
22.41%
|
Class
T
|
98.30%
|
|
ASCENSUS
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 10758
FARGO ND 58106-0758
|
Class
R
|
7.89%
|
N/A
|
|
CAPITAL
BANK & TRUST COMPANY TTEE F
8515 E ORCHARD RD # 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class
Inst2
|
18.35%
|
N/A
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
C
|
5.25%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
11.37%
|
|
CHRISTOPHER
J. HUYCK, MD FBO
ARTHRITIS CARE PC 401(K) PROFIT
SHARING PLAN & TRUST
2414 15TH ST
TROY NY 12180-1701
|
Class
K
|
8.67%
|
N/A
|
|
COUNSEL
TRUST DBA MATC FBO
EAGLE METALCRAFT INC 401K PSP
& TRUST
1251 WATERFRONT PL STE 525
PITTSBURGH PA 15222-4228
|
Class
K
|
22.92%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
248
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
DCGT
AS TTEE AND/OR CUST
FBO PLIC VARIOUS RETIREMENT PLANS
OMNIBUS
ATTN NPIO TRADE DESK
711 HIGH ST
DES MOINES IA 50392-0001
|
Class
R
|
10.35%
|
N/A
|
|
GREAT-WEST
TRUST COMPANY LLC TTEE F
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS CLIENTS 401K
8515 E ORCHARD RD # 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class
Inst2
|
5.78%
|
N/A
|
|
KEITH
B ROSE FBO
ROSE LAW FIRM PLLC 401K PSP
& TRUST
501 NEW KARNER RD
ALBANY NY 12205-3874
|
Class
K
|
13.20%
|
N/A
|
|
MATRIX
TRUST COMPANY
717 17TH ST STE 1300
DENVER CO 80202-3304
|
Class
K
|
12.92%
|
N/A
|
Class
R
|
10.80%
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
Adv
|
14.99%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst3
|
88.63%
|
Class
R
|
47.55%
|
Class
V
|
13.40%
|
|
MID
ATLANTIC TRUST COMPANY FBO
1251 WATERFRONT PL STE 525
PITTSBURGH PA 15222-4228
|
Class
R
|
5.77%
|
N/A
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
C
|
8.80%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
Inst
|
15.15%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
49.42%
|
Class
Inst3
|
6.17%
|
Class
V
|
7.39%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
Adv
|
5.62%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
9.22%
|
Class
K
|
41.69%
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class
C
|
7.38%
|
N/A
|
|
RELIANCE
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 48529
ATLANTA GA 30362-1529
|
Class
Inst2
|
9.06%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO BANK FBO
1525 W W T HARRIS BLVD
CHARLOTTE NC 28262-8522
|
Class
Adv
|
72.86%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
C
|
11.48%
|
N/A
|
MM
Alternative Strategies Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
99.88%
|
100.00%
|
Class
Inst
|
100.00%
|
MM
Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
99.94%
|
100.00%
|
Class
Inst
|
100.00%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
249
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
MM
Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
99.95%
|
100.00%
|
Class
Inst
|
100.00%
|
Small
Cap Growth Fund I
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
19.79%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
14.56%
|
|
ASCENSUS
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 10758
FARGO ND 58106-0758
|
Class
R
|
5.80%
|
N/A
|
|
BAND
& CO C/O US BANK NA
1555 N RIVERCENTER DR STE 302
MILWAUKEE WI 53212-3958
|
Class
Inst
|
5.28%
|
N/A
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
Inst
|
14.35%
|
N/A
|
|
DCGT
AS TTEE AND/OR CUST
FBO PLIC VARIOUS RETIREMENT PLANS
OMNIBUS
ATTN NPIO TRADE DESK
711 HIGH ST
DES MOINES IA 50392-0001
|
Class
R
|
6.41%
|
N/A
|
|
HEI
HOSPITALITY LLC
FBO EXEC EXCESS OF HEI HOSPITALITY
ATTN ERNIE FREEDMAN
101 MERRITT 7 STE 1
NORWALK CT 06851-1060
|
Class
R
|
12.08%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
6.43%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA CAPITAL ALLOCATION
MODERATE AGGRESSIVE PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
18.16%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA GLOBAL STRATEGIC EQUITY
PORTFOLIO
4 CHASE METROTECH CENTER 3RD FLOOR
BROOKLYN NY 11245-0003
|
Class
Inst3
|
43.27%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
A
|
13.66%
|
N/A
|
Class
R
|
6.34%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
C
|
7.41%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
A
|
6.02%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
79.97%
|
Class
C
|
7.78%
|
Class
Inst
|
5.69%
|
Class
Inst3
|
5.87%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
Adv
|
18.65%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
6.28%
|
Class
K
|
85.16%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
250
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class
C
|
6.52%
|
N/A
|
|
RELIANCE
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 48529
ATLANTA GA 30362-1529
|
Class
R
|
62.56%
|
N/A
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CLIENTS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class
Inst2
|
10.71%
|
N/A
|
|
VANGUARD
FDUCIARY TRUST CO
PO BOX 2600 VM 613
ATTN: OUTSIDE FUNDS
VALLEY FORGE PA 19482-2600
|
Class
Inst
|
5.55%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst3
|
18.39%
|
|
WELLS
FARGO BANK FBO
1525 W W T HARRIS BLVD
CHARLOTTE NC 28262-8522
|
Class
Inst2
|
83.76%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
C
|
15.17%
|
N/A
|
Class
K
|
11.89%
|
Strategic
Income Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
44.56%
|
37.22%
|
Class
C
|
37.21%
|
Class
Inst
|
41.41%
|
|
ASCENSUS
TRUST COMPANY FBO
PO BOX 10758
FARGO ND 58106-0758
|
Class
R
|
10.06%
|
N/A
|
|
CAPITAL
BANK & TRUST COMPANY TTEE F
8515 E ORCHARD RD # 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class
R
|
9.26%
|
N/A
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
A
|
7.43%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
51.00%
|
Class
Inst3
|
10.55%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class
K
|
11.68%
|
N/A
(a)
|
Class
T
|
100.00%
|
|
DCGT
AS TTEE AND/OR CUST
FBO PLIC VARIOUS RETIREMENT PLANS
OMNIBUS
ATTN NPIO TRADE DESK
711 HIGH ST
DES MOINES IA 50392-0001
|
Class
R
|
19.25%
|
N/A
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class
Inst3
|
24.67%
|
N/A
|
|
FIIOC
FBO
100 MAGELLAN WAY (KW1C)
COVINGTON KY 41015-1987
|
Class
R
|
6.72%
|
N/A
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class
Inst
|
7.53%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
251
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTENTION SERVICE TEAM
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 3
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
A
|
5.66%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
6.71%
|
Class
Inst
|
10.03%
|
Class
Inst3
|
51.45%
|
Class
R
|
23.61%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
C
|
11.59%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
11.69%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
A
|
6.96%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
37.98%
|
Class
Inst2
|
22.88%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
A
|
5.08%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
57.45%
|
Class
C
|
5.46%
|
Class
Inst2
|
16.61%
|
Class
K
|
88.30%
|
Class
R
|
5.44%
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class
C
|
7.87%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
5.81%
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class
C
|
5.60%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
9.10%
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
C
|
11.73%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
7.46%
|
Funds with Fiscal Period
Ending October 31:
Except as otherwise indicated, the
information below is as of January 31, 2018:
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
AMT-Free
CT Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
24.53%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
19.67%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
A
|
12.73%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
9.53%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class
Inst3
|
100.00%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
KELLY
F SHACKELFORD
PO BOX 672
NEW CANAAN CT 06840-0672
|
Class
V
|
15.72%
|
N/A
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class
C
|
12.21%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
252
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
4800 DEER LAKE DR E
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
A
|
24.86%
|
78.33%
|
Class
Inst
|
91.86%
|
Class
V
|
17.15%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
Adv
|
24.60%
|
N/A
|
|
PEOPLE
S SECURITIES INC
FRANK FICKO JR
TOD ACCOUNT
15 HARMONY LN
MONROE CT 06468-1138
|
Class
A
|
5.51%
|
N/A
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
Adv
|
71.54%
|
N/A
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class
C
|
7.58%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
A
|
8.61%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
29.72%
|
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
52.82%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
31.34%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
Inst2
|
19.54%
|
N/A
|
Class
V
|
8.52%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class
T
|
100.00%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class
Inst3
|
99.58%
|
N/A
|
|
JOHN
J ALMEIDA TR
JOHN J ALMEIDA REVOCABLE TRUST
27 TOPMAST CT
JAMESTOWN RI 02835-2227
|
Class
V
|
7.88%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
4800 DEER LAKE DR E
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
A
|
11.36%
|
75.43%
|
Class
C
|
17.60%
|
Class
Inst
|
86.46%
|
Class
V
|
9.54%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
C
|
9.31%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
Adv
|
14.24%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
38.01%
|
Class
V
|
7.73%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
253
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
Adv
|
84.62%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
6.28%
|
Class
Inst2
|
12.45%
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class
A
|
5.52%
|
N/A
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CLIENTS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class
Inst2
|
29.92%
|
N/A
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class
C
|
5.88%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
A
|
5.64%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
13.86%
|
AMT-Free
MA Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
17.82%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
37.45%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class
Inst2
|
100.00%
|
N/A
(a)
|
Class
Inst3
|
9.15%
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class
Inst3
|
90.85%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
4800 DEER LAKE DR E
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
A
|
11.36%
|
77.98%
|
Class
C
|
7.86%
|
Class
Inst
|
91.42%
|
Class
V
|
44.73%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
A
|
11.58%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
78.74%
|
Class
C
|
10.67%
|
Class
V
|
5.44%
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
Adv
|
20.98%
|
N/A
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class
A
|
30.65%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
17.18%
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class
A
|
6.13%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
6.30%
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
A
|
9.79%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
15.73%
|
AMT-Free
NY Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
20.65%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
6.61%
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
254
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
A
|
10.04%
|
N/A
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class
Inst3
|
94.93%
|
N/A
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class
A
|
6.16%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
4800 DEER LAKE DR E
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
A
|
16.97%
|
71.94%
|
Class
C
|
28.70%
|
Class
Inst
|
81.54%
|
Class
V
|
27.20%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
A
|
12.78%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
19.18%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
A
|
7.21%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
48.31%
|
Class
C
|
6.35%
|
Class
Inst2
|
95.66%
|
|
PAUL
E HOWARD &
JUDITH A HOWARD JTWROS
PO BOX 649
SCHOHARIE NY 12157-0649
|
Class
V
|
5.15%
|
N/A
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
A
|
8.51%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
50.56%
|
Class
C
|
7.62%
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class
C
|
5.42%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
A
|
9.31%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
10.94%
|
Strategic
CA Municipal Income Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
32.63%
|
27.17%
|
Class
C
|
19.20%
|
Class
Inst
|
16.67%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
A
|
5.86%
|
N/A
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class
Inst2
|
8.50%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class
Inst3
|
99.71%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
255
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class
Inst
|
9.22%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
4800 DEER LAKE DR E
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
A
|
11.65%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
30.85%
|
Class
Inst
|
52.48%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
A
|
5.64%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
9.80%
|
Class
Inst
|
5.24%
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
Adv
|
39.81%
|
N/A
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
Adv
|
59.37%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst2
|
28.92%
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CLIENTS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class
Inst2
|
62.58%
|
N/A
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
A
|
7.37%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
14.36%
|
Class
Inst
|
5.08%
|
Strategic
NY Municipal Income Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVC
707 2ND AVE S
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55402-2405
|
Class
A
|
31.10%
|
31.04%
|
Class
C
|
17.37%
|
Class
Inst
|
44.19%
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FBO
CUSTOMERS
ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class
Inst2
|
92.46%
|
N/A
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class
Inst3
|
13.46%
|
N/A
(a)
|
|
EDWARD
D JONES & CO
FOR THE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMERS
12555 MANCHESTER RD
SAINT LOUIS MO 63131-3729
|
Class
Inst3
|
46.49%
|
N/A
|
|
LPL
FINANCIAL
9785 TOWNE CENTRE DR
SAN DIEGO CA 92121-1968
|
Class
Inst
|
8.78%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER
& SMITH INC FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT
OF ITS CUSTOMERS
4800 DEER LAKE DR E
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class
A
|
6.09%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
18.75%
|
Class
Inst
|
20.72%
|
|
MORGAN
STANLEY SMITH BARNEY
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER
PLAZA 2, 3RD FLOOR
JERSEY CITY NJ 07311
|
Class
C
|
11.91%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
256
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class
Adv
|
12.54%
|
N/A
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class
A
|
6.97%
|
N/A
|
Class
Adv
|
87.08%
|
Class
C
|
9.06%
|
Class
Inst3
|
40.05%
|
|
STRAFE
& CO
FBO
PO BOX 6924
NEWARK DE 19714-6924
|
Class
Inst
|
10.68%
|
N/A
|
|
TD
AMERITRADE INC FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CLIENTS
PO BOX 2226
OMAHA NE 68103-2226
|
Class
Inst2
|
5.08%
|
N/A
|
|
UBS
WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXCL BEN CUST
1000 HARBOR BLVD
WEEHAWKEN NJ 07086-6761
|
Class
C
|
5.03%
|
N/A
|
Class
Inst
|
7.00%
|
|
WELLS
FARGO CLEARING SERVICES LLC
SPECIAL CUSTODY ACCT FOR THE
EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF CUSTOMER
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class
A
|
7.16%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
14.31%
|
Funds with Fiscal Period
Ending December 31:
Except as otherwise indicated, the
information below is as of March 31, 2017:
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
Real
Estate Equity Fund
|
AMERICAN
ENTERPRISE INVESTMENT SVCS
PO BOX 9446
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55440-9446
|
Class A
|
70.00%
|
N/A
|
Class
B
|
62.97%
|
Class
C
|
26.55%
|
Class
T
|
83.78%
|
|
CAPITAL
BANK & TRUST COMPANY TTEE
8515 E ORCHARD RD # 2T2
GREENWOOD VLG CO 80111-5002
|
Class R
|
30.06%
|
N/A
|
|
CHARLES
SCHWAB & CO INC
CUST A/C FOR THE EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT
ATTENTION MUTUAL FUNDS
101 MONTGOMERY ST
SAN FRANCISCO CA 94104-4151
|
Class C
|
9.13%
|
N/A
|
Class
K
|
62.12%
|
Class
Z
|
21.18%
|
|
COLUMBIA
MGMT INVESTMENT ADVSR LLC
ATTN KATRINA MACBAIN
50807 AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL CTR
MINNEAPOLIS MN 55474-0508
|
Class K
|
6.61%
|
25.14%
(a)
|
Class
T
|
16.22%
|
|
FIRST
CLEARING LLC
2801 MARKET ST
SAINT LOUIS MO 63103-2523
|
Class B
|
14.46%
|
N/A
|
Class
C
|
9.39%
|
Class
K
|
31.27%
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA ADAPTIVE RISK ALLOCATION
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
90.00%
|
N/A
|
|
JPMCB
NA CUST FOR
COLUMBIA INCOME BUILDER FUND
14201 N DALLAS PKWY FL 13
DALLAS TX 75254-2916
|
Class Y
|
10.00%
|
N/A
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
257
|
Fund
|
Shareholder
Name and Address
|
Share
Class
|
Percentage
of Class
|
Percentage
of Fund
(if greater than 25%)
|
|
MAC
& CO
ATTN: MUTUAL FUND OPS
500 GRANT STREET
PITTSBURGH PA 15219-2502
|
Class R5
|
63.82%
|
N/A
|
|
MERRILL
LYNCH PIERCE FENNER & SMITH
FOR THE SOLE BENEFIT OF
ITS CUSTOMERS
ATTN FUND ADMINISTRATION
4800 DEER LAKE DR E FL 2
JACKSONVILLE FL 32246-6484
|
Class C
|
7.42%
|
N/A
|
Class
R
|
37.70%
|
Class
Z
|
34.45%
|
|
MID
ATLANTIC TRUST COMPANY FBO
1251 WATERFRONT PL STE 525
PITTSBURGH PA 15222-4228
|
Class R
|
5.72%
|
N/A
|
|
NATIONAL
FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FEBO CUSTOMERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
200 LIBERTY STREET 1WFC
NEW YORK NY 10281-1003
|
Class R4
|
60.91%
|
N/A
|
|
PERSHING
LLC
1 PERSHING PLZ
JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002
|
Class B
|
5.79%
|
N/A
|
Class
R4
|
25.28%
|
|
RAYMOND
JAMES
FBO OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
ATTN: COURTNEY WALLER
880 CARILLON PKWY
ST PETERSBURG FL 33716-1100
|
Class C
|
12.26%
|
N/A
|
|
SEI
PRIVATE TRUST COMPANY
1 FREEDOM VALLEY DR
OAKS PA 19456-9989
|
Class Z
|
6.41%
|
N/A
|
|
VOYA
INSTITUTIONAL TRUST COMPANY
TTE
30 BRAINTREE HILL OFFICE PARK
BRAINTREE MA 02184-8747
|
Class R5
|
34.30%
|
N/A
|
(a)
|
Combination of all share
classes of Columbia Management initial capital and/or affiliated funds-of-funds’ investments.
|
American Enterprise Investment Services Inc., a
Minnesota corporation, is a subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial, Inc.
Bank of America, N.A., a national banking
association organized under the laws of the United States, and Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated, a Delaware corporation, are subsidiaries of Bank of America Corporation.
The Investment Manager, a Minnesota limited
liability company, is a subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial, Inc. Other Columbia Funds managed by the Investment Manager may hold more than 25% of a Fund.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
258
|
INFORMATION REGARDING PENDING AND
SETTLED LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
Ameriprise
Financial and certain of its affiliates have historically been involved in a number of legal, arbitration and regulatory proceedings, including routine litigation, class actions, and governmental actions, concerning matters arising in connection
with the conduct of their business activities. Ameriprise Financial believes that the Funds are not currently the subject of, and that neither Ameriprise Financial nor any of its affiliates are the subject of, any pending legal, arbitration or
regulatory proceedings that are likely to have a material adverse effect on the Funds or the ability of Ameriprise Financial or its affiliates to perform under their contracts with the Funds. Ameriprise Financial is required to make quarterly
(10-Q), annual (10-K) and, as necessary, 8-K filings with the SEC on legal and regulatory matters that relate to Ameriprise Financial and its affiliates. Copies of these filings may be obtained by accessing the SEC website at www.sec.gov.
There can be no assurance that these matters, or the
adverse publicity associated with them, will not result in increased Fund redemptions, reduced sale of Fund shares or other adverse consequences to the Funds. Further, although we believe proceedings are not likely to have a material adverse effect
on the Funds or the ability of Ameriprise Financial or its affiliates to perform under their contracts with the Funds, these proceedings are subject to uncertainties and, as such, we are unable to estimate the possible loss or range of loss that may
result. An adverse outcome in one or more of these proceedings could result in adverse judgments, settlements, fines, penalties or other relief that could have a material adverse effect on the consolidated financial condition or results of
operations of Ameriprise Financial.
NO PERSON
HAS BEEN AUTHORIZED TO GIVE ANY INFORMATION OR TO MAKE ANY REPRESENTATIONS NOT CONTAINED IN THE PROSPECTUS OR IN THIS STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION, WHICH THE PROSPECTUS INCORPORATES BY REFERENCE, IN CONNECTION WITH THE OFFERING MADE BY THE
PROSPECTUS AND, IF GIVEN OR MADE, SUCH INFORMATION OR PRESENTATIONS MUST NOT BE RELIED UPON AS HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED BY THE TRUST(S). THIS STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFERING BY THE TRUST(S) IN ANY JURISDICTION IN
WHICH SUCH AN OFFERING MAY NOT LAWFULLY BE MADE.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
259
|
APPENDIX A — DESCRIPTION OF
RATINGS
The ratings of S&P,
Moody’s and Fitch represent their opinions as to quality. These ratings are not absolute standards of quality and are not recommendations to purchase, sell or hold a security. Issuers and issues are subject to risks that are not evaluated by
the rating agencies. When a security is not rated by one of these agencies, it is designated as Not Rated. Securities designated as Not Rated do not necessarily indicate low credit quality, and for such securities the Investment Manager evaluates
the credit quality.
S&P’s Debt Ratings
Long-Term Issue Credit Ratings
An obligation rated ‘AAA’ has the highest rating
assigned by S&P. The obligor’s capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation is extremely strong.
An obligation rated ‘AA’ differs from
the highest-rated obligations only to a small degree. The obligor’s capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation is very strong.
An obligation rated ‘A’ is somewhat more
susceptible to the adverse effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions than obligations in higher-rated categories. However, the obligor’s capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation is still strong.
An obligation rated ‘BBB’ exhibits
adequate protection parameters. However, adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity of the obligor to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.
Obligations rated ‘BB’, ‘B’,
‘CCC’, ‘CC’, and ‘C’ are regarded as having significant speculative characteristics. ‘BB’ indicates the least degree of speculation and ‘C’ the highest. While such obligations will likely
have some quality and protective characteristics, these may be outweighed by large uncertainties or major exposures to adverse conditions.
An obligation rated ‘BB’ is less
vulnerable to nonpayment than other speculative issues. However, it faces major ongoing uncertainties or exposure to adverse business, financial, or economic conditions which could lead to the obligor’s inadequate capacity to meet its
financial commitment on the obligation.
An
obligation rated ‘B’ is more vulnerable to nonpayment than obligations rated ‘BB’, but the obligor currently has the capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation. Adverse business, financial, or economic
conditions will likely impair the obligor’s capacity or willingness to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.
An obligation rated ‘CCC’ is currently
vulnerable to nonpayment, and is dependent upon favorable business, financial, and economic conditions for the obligor to meet its financial commitment on the obligation. In the event of adverse business, financial, or economic conditions, the
obligor is not likely to have the capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.
An obligation rated ‘CC’ is currently
highly vulnerable to nonpayment. The ‘CC’ rating is used when a default has not yet occurred, but S&P expects default to be a virtual certainty, regardless of the anticipated time to default.
An obligation rated 'C' is currently highly
vulnerable to nonpayment, and the obligation is expected to have lower relative seniority or lower ultimate recovery compared to obligations that are rated higher.
An obligation rated ‘D’ is in default or
in breach of an imputed promise. For non-hybrid capital instruments, the ‘D’ rating category is used when payments on an obligation are not made on the date due, unless S&P believes that such payments will be made within five
business days in the absence of a stated grace period or within the earlier of the stated grace period or 30 calendar days. The ‘D’ rating also will be used upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking of similar action and
where default on an obligation is a virtual certainty, for example due to automatic stay provisions. An obligation’s rating is lowered to ‘D’ if it is subject to a distressed exchange offer.
‘NR’ indicates that no rating has been
requested, or that there is insufficient information on which to base a rating, or that S&P does not rate a particular obligation as a matter of policy.
Short-Term Issue Credit Ratings
Short-term ratings are generally assigned to those obligations
considered short-term in the relevant market. In the U.S., for example, that means obligations with an original maturity of no more than 365 days – including commercial paper.
A short-term obligation rated ‘A-1’ is
rated in the highest category by S&P. The obligor’s capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation is strong. Within this category, certain obligations are designated with a plus sign (+). This indicates that the
obligor’s capacity to meet its financial commitment on these obligations is extremely strong.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
A-1
|
A short-term obligation rated ‘A-2’ is
somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions than obligations in higher rating categories. However, the obligor’s capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation is
satisfactory.
A short-term obligation rated
‘A-3’ exhibits adequate protection parameters. However, adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity of the obligor to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.
A short-term obligation rated ‘B’ is
regarded as vulnerable and has significant speculative characteristics. The obligor currently has the capacity to meet its financial commitments; however, it faces major ongoing uncertainties which could lead to the obligor’s inadequate
capacity to meet its financial commitments.
A
short-term obligation rated ‘C’ is currently vulnerable to nonpayment and is dependent upon favorable business, financial, and economic conditions for the obligor to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.
A short-term obligation rated ‘D’ is in
default or in breach of an imputed promise. For non-hybrid capital instruments, the ‘D’ rating category is used when payments on an obligation are not made on the date due, unless S&P believes that such payments will be made within
any stated grace period. However, any stated grace period longer than five business days will be treated as five business days. The ‘D’ rating also will be used upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking of a similar action
and where default on an obligation is a virtual certainty, for example due to automatic stay provisions. An obligation's rating is lowered to 'D' if it is subject to a distressed exchange offer.
Municipal Short-Term Note Ratings
SP-1
Strong capacity to pay
principal and interest. An issue determined to possess a very strong capacity to pay debt service is given a plus (+) designation.
SP-2
Satisfactory
capacity to pay principal and interest, with some vulnerability to adverse financial and economic changes over the term of the notes.
SP-3
Speculative
capacity to pay principal and interest.
Moody’s Long-Term Debt Ratings
Global Long-Term Rating Scale
Aaa
– Obligations rated Aaa
are judged to be of the highest quality, subject to the lowest level of credit risk.
Aa
–
Obligations rated Aa are judged to be of high quality and are subject to very low credit risk.
A
–
Obligations rated A are judged to be upper-medium grade and are subject to low credit risk.
Baa
–
Obligations rated Baa are judged to be medium-grade and subject to moderate credit risk and as such may possess certain speculative characteristics.
Ba
–
Obligations rated Ba are judged to be speculative and are subject to substantial credit risk.
B
–
Obligations rated B are considered speculative and are subject to high credit risk.
Caa
–
Obligations rated Caa are judged to be speculative of poor standing and are subject to very high credit risk.
Ca
–
Obligations rated Ca are highly speculative and are likely in, or very near, default, with some prospect of recovery of principal and interest.
C
–
Obligations rated C are the lowest rated and are typically in default, with little prospect for recovery of principal or interest.
Global Short-Term Rating Scale
Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Prime-1 (P-1) have a
superior ability to repay short-term debt obligations.
Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Prime-2
(P-2) have a strong ability to repay short-term debt obligations.
Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Prime-3
(P-3) have an acceptable ability to repay short-term obligations.
Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Not Prime
(NP) do not fall within any of the Prime rating categories.
US Municipal Short-Term Debt and Demand Obligation
Ratings
While the global short-term ‘prime’
rating scale is applied to U.S. municipal tax-exempt commercial paper, these programs are typically backed by external letters of credit or liquidity facilities and their short-term prime ratings usually map to the long-term rating of the enhancing
bank or financial institution and not to the municipality’s rating. Other short-term municipal obligations, which generally have different funding sources for repayment, are rated using two additional short-term rating scales (
i.e.
, the MIG and VMIG scales discussed below).
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
A-2
|
The Municipal Investment Grade (MIG) scale is used
to rate US municipal bond anticipation notes of up to three years maturity. Municipal notes rated on the MIG scale may be secured by either pledged revenues or proceeds of a take-out financing received prior to note maturity. MIG ratings expire at
the maturity of the obligation, and the issuer’s long-term rating is only one consideration in assigning the MIG rating. MIG ratings are divided into three levels — MIG 1 through MIG 3 — while speculative grade short-term
obligations are designated SG.
The MIG 1
designation denotes superior credit quality. Excellent protection is afforded by established cash flows, highly reliable liquidity support, or demonstrated broad-based access to the market for refinancing.
The MIG 2 designation denotes strong credit quality.
Margins of protection are ample, although not as large as in the preceding group.
The MIG 3 designation denotes acceptable credit
quality. Liquidity and cash-flow protection may be narrow, and market access for refinancing is likely to be less well-established.
The SG designation denotes speculative-grade credit
quality. Debt instruments in this category may lack sufficient margins of protection.
In the case of variable rate demand obligations
(VRDOs), a two-component rating is assigned: a long or short-term debt rating and a demand obligation rating. The first element represents Moody’s evaluation of risk associated with scheduled principal and interest payments. The second element
represents Moody’s evaluation of risk associated with the ability to receive purchase price upon demand (“demand feature”). The second element uses a rating from a variation of the MIG scale called the Variable Municipal Investment
Grade (VMIG) scale. The rating transitions on the VMIG scale, as shown in the diagram below, differ from those on the Prime scale to reflect the risk that external liquidity support generally will terminate if the issuer’s long-term rating
drops below investment grade.
The VMIG 1
designation denotes superior credit quality. Excellent protection is afforded by the superior short-term credit strength of the liquidity provider and structural and legal protections that ensure the timely payment of purchase price upon
demand.
The VMIG 2 designation denotes strong
credit quality. Good protection is afforded by the strong short-term credit strength of the liquidity provider and structural and legal protections that ensure the timely payment of purchase price upon demand.
The VMIG 3 designation denotes acceptable credit
quality. Adequate protection is afforded by the satisfactory short-term credit strength of the liquidity provider and structural and legal protections that ensure the timely payment of purchase price upon demand.
The SG designation denotes speculative-grade credit
quality. Demand features rated in this category may be supported by a liquidity provider that does not have an investment grade short-term rating or may lack the structural and/or legal protections necessary to ensure the timely payment of purchase
price upon demand.
Fitch’s Ratings
Corporate Finance Obligations – Long-Term Rating
Scales
AAA:
Highest credit
quality.
‘AAA’ ratings denote the lowest expectation of credit risk. They are assigned only in cases of exceptionally strong capacity for payment of financial commitments. This capacity is highly unlikely to be adversely affected by
foreseeable events.
AA:
Very high credit quality.
‘AA’ ratings denote expectations of very low credit risk. They indicate very strong capacity for payment of financial commitments. This capacity is not significantly vulnerable
to foreseeable events.
A:
High credit quality.
‘A’ ratings denote expectations of low credit risk. The capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered strong. This capacity may, nevertheless, be more vulnerable to
adverse business or economic conditions than is the case for higher ratings.
BBB:
Good credit
quality.
‘BBB’ ratings indicate that expectations of credit risk are currently low. The capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered adequate but adverse business or economic conditions are more likely to impair this
capacity.
BB:
Speculative.
‘BB’ ratings indicate an elevated vulnerability to credit risk, particularly in the event of adverse changes in business or economic conditions over time; however, business or financial
alternatives may be available to allow financial commitments to be met.
B:
Highly
speculative.
‘B’ ratings indicate that material credit risk is present.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
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A-3
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CCC:
Substantial
credit risk.
‘CCC’ ratings indicate that substantial credit risk is present.
CC:
Very high levels
of credit risk.
‘CC’ ratings indicate very high levels of credit risk.
C:
Exceptionally
high levels of credit risk.
‘C’ indicates exceptionally high levels of credit risk.
Defaulted obligations typically are not assigned
‘RD’ or ‘D’ ratings, but are instead rated in the ‘B’ to ‘C’ rating categories, depending upon their recovery prospects and other relevant characteristics. This approach better aligns obligations that
have comparable overall expected loss but varying vulnerability to default and loss.
Short-Term Ratings Assigned to Issuers or Obligations
in Corporate, Public and Structured Finance
F1:
Highest short-term credit quality.
Indicates the strongest intrinsic capacity for timely payment of financial commitments; may have an added “+” to denote any exceptionally strong credit
feature.
F2:
Good short-term credit quality.
Good intrinsic capacity for timely payment of financial commitments.
F3:
Fair short-term
credit quality.
The intrinsic capacity for timely payment of financial commitments is adequate.
B:
Speculative
short-term credit quality.
Minimal capacity for timely payment of financial commitments, plus heightened vulnerability to near term adverse changes in financial and economic conditions.
C:
High short-term
default risk.
Default is a real possibility.
RD:
Restricted
default.
Indicates an entity that has defaulted on one or more of its financial commitments, although it continues to meet other financial obligations. Typically applicable to entity ratings only.
D:
Default.
Indicates a broad-based default event for an entity, or the default of a short-term obligation.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
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APPENDIX B — CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
AND PROXY VOTING PRINCIPLES
As active
investors, well informed investment research and stewardship of our clients’ investments are important aspects of our responsible investment activities. Our approach to this is framed in the relevant Responsible Investment Policies we maintain
and publish. These policy documents provide an overview of our approach in practice (e.g., around the integration of environmental, social and governance (ESG) and sustainability research and analysis).
As part of this, acting as shareholders of a
company, we are charged with responsibility for exercising the voting rights associated with that share ownership. Unless clients decide otherwise, that forms part of the stewardship duty we owe our clients in managing their assets. Subject to
practical limitations, we therefore aim to exercise all voting rights for which we are responsible, although exceptions do nevertheless arise (for example, due to technical or administrative issues, including those related to Powers of Attorney,
share blocking, related option rights or the presence of other exceptional or market-specific issues). This provides us with the opportunity to use those voting rights to express our preferences on relevant aspects of the business of a company, to
highlight concerns to the board, to promote good practice and, when appropriate, to exercise related rights. In doing so we have an obligation to ensure that we do that in the best interests of our clients and in keeping with the mandate we have
from them.
Corporate governance has particular
importance to us in this context, which reflects our view that well governed companies are better positioned to manage the risks and challenges inherent in business, capture opportunities that help deliver sustainable growth and returns for our
clients. Governance is a term used to describe the arrangements and practices that frame how directors of a company organize and operate in leading and directing a business on behalf of the shareholders of the company. Such arrangements and
practices give effect to the mechanisms through which companies facilitate the exercise of shareholders’ rights and define the extent to which these are equitable for all shareholders.
We recognize that companies are not homogeneous and
some variation in governance structures and practice is to be expected. In formulating our approach, we are also mindful of best practice standards and codes that help frame good practice, including international frameworks and investment industry
guidance. While we are mindful of company and industry specific issues, as well as normal market practice, in considering the approach and proposals of a company we are guided solely by the best interests of our clients and will consider any issues
and related disclosures or explanations in that context.
This document sets out our views on key issues and
the broad principles that help shape our approach.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
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Corporate Governance and Proxy Voting Principles
Shareholder Rights
The shareholder membership of listed companies is
generally made up (directly or indirectly) of diverse individuals and institutions whose views, interests, goals and time horizons can vary considerably. Nevertheless, as shareholders, having confidence that the capital we commit to a company will
be protected from misuse (e.g. from any potential agency conflicts) and will be prudently managed is important to us, our clients, and as a factor in the development and proper functioning of capital markets.
It is not the role of shareholders to micro manage
businesses, rather it is the role and duty of directors to promote the long-term success of their company as noted in the next section. Nevertheless, by virtue of their share-ownership interest and position, shareholders are afforded certain rights
to ensure, amongst other things, that appropriate leadership of the business is in place (e.g. through the appointment of the directors), review their performance (e.g. through receipt of the annual report & accounts, updates and general
meetings), approve the broad parameters of the company’s authorities (e.g. in agreeing capital authorities), or indeed to exercise other rights afforded to shareholders (e.g. to requisition matters for consideration at General meetings).
Shareholder rights, framed in law, regulation and a
company’s formational documents (i.e., bylaws or articles of association), are an important and integral part of corporate governance frameworks and the context in which we retain confidence in committing capital to businesses, to support
their growth, development and success. This is particularly true in terms of ensuring that minority shareholders’ rights and interests will be respected. Arrangements or actions that detract from these rights and interest (including control
distortions) need to be avoided.
While the
precise nature and scope of shareholder rights vary across jurisdictions and many related aspects of our expectations are touched upon in other parts of these Principles, a number merit direct mention in this context:
Equal treatment of all shareholders
One share one vote: Ordinary or common shares should feature one
vote for each share and discriminatory voting rights or equivalent arrangements are neither appropriate nor welcome. Companies need to disclose sufficient information about the key attributes of all of the group’s capital structure (including
minority interests in subsidiaries) to enable a proper understanding of the structures in place and their implications.
Controlling shareholder agreements: where a company
has a controlling shareholder (whether by virtue of the control of voting rights or through board representation) it should put an agreement in place to safeguard the independence of the company and ability of the board to fulfill its duties to the
shareholders as a whole.
Shareholder
approvals
Boards should ensure that shareholders have the
ability and right to:
■
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effectively
exercise their voting rights across the full range of business normally associated with general meetings of a company in line with market best practice (e.g. the election of individual directors, discharge authorities, capital authorities, auditor
appointment, major or related party transactions etc).
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■
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place items on the
agenda of general meetings, and to propose resolutions subject to reasonable limitations;
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■
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call a meeting of
shareholders for the purpose of transacting the legitimate business of the company; and
|
that shareholder rights are not circumvented
through, for example, the introduction or maintenance of limitations in the company’s formational documents.
Shareholder engagement
Boards should ensure that:
■
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Clear, consistent
and effective reporting to shareholders is undertaken at regular intervals and that they remain aware of shareholder sentiment on major issues to do with the business, its strategy and performance. Where significant shareholder dissent is emerging
or apparent (e.g. through the voting levels seen at General Meetings), boards should act to address that.
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■
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Boards should also
allow a reasonable opportunity for the shareholders at a general meeting to ask questions about or make comments on the management of the company, and to ask the external auditor questions related to the audit.
|
As an institutional shareholder, stewardship is
about more than just voting and include monitoring and reviews of companies’ activities and developments. Where appropriate it may also include engagement with companies on matters such as strategy, performance, risk, capital structure,
standards of operational practice, including environmental, social and governance factors. Our broad approach to these stewardship responsibilities and activities are set out in our Global Stewardship Statement.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
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The Board
Strong corporate governance starts with a balanced,
effective, and independent board. The directors are collectively responsible for the long-term success and ongoing evolution in the leadership of the company, within a framework of prudent and effective oversight, policies and controls.
The board is thus responsible for providing
leadership to the business, setting and monitoring the strategy, overseeing its management and implementation, as well as for ensuring that a culture of integrity and strong standards is maintained across all activities and operations. Not least
this should enable business opportunities and risk to be assessed and responded to appropriately.
Boards need to have appropriate independent
membership and an effective balance and diversity (re: skills, knowledge, experience, gender, approach and perspectives) that complements the strategy, operations and footprint of the business. For non-executive (supervisory) directors (NEDs), the
ability to provide objective input and scrutiny, on behalf of the shareholders, is essential in ensuring diversity of thought and integrity in board deliberations. In this context, the importance of true independence of thought is critical. NEDs
need to be reflective and thoughtful in their approach, being able to ask challenging, often difficult questions, while offering considered and constructive input to board discussions, based on sound judgement. The same holds true in terms of board
committee membership. Suitably independent committees are one important mechanism for non-executive/supervisory directors to achieve this, whether that is in respect of risk, audit, succession or remuneration, so as to enable them to participate
effectively as part of the board and in their role as directors of the business.
As part of this dynamic, well considered succession
planning, orientation, on-going briefings, updates and annual evaluations (that make regular use of external facilitation) of the board, its sub-committees and members are essential.
All directors should be able to allocate sufficient
time to the company to discharge their responsibilities fully and effectively and have an appropriate knowledge of the business and access to its operations and staff. Given the important role and duties of a board member, it is important that
directors are not over-boarded and can maintain consistent participation at all their board and committee meetings and their wider engagement with the companies they lead.
All directors should be subject to annual election.
However, in markets where that is not normal or best practice, we expect all directors to be subject to re-election in line with local market best practice, but in any case, at least every 4 years. At the same time, arrangements that might entrench
boards or management, or otherwise insulate them from accountability, should be avoided.
Given their role and duties, directors should also
ensure that they are well informed about the views and/or concerns of shareholders, as well as understanding the dynamic around their broader stakeholders (including bondholders, pension fund trustees, employees, customers, suppliers and the
communities they operate in).
Chair of the
Board
The Board Chair has a crucial function in providing
leadership in the boardroom, setting the right context in terms of the board’s overall responsibility for the oversight of the business and its strategy. It is the Board Chair’s role to manage the board agenda and the provision of
information to directors, as well as to ensure open boardroom discussion that enables the directors to have effective dialogue and provide the constructive challenge that a company needs. This role is distinct from the role of a chief executive
officer who leads the day-to-day running of the business and implementation of the strategy.
We expect the Board Chair (or lead/senior
independent director) to ensure that the board is aware of the views and considers concerns raised by shareholders, whether through ongoing dialogue and engagement with shareholders or where notable dissent has been indicated through shareholder
voting.
We recognise that in some markets the
combination of roles is not uncommon, nevertheless we regard the separation of the roles of the Board Chair and the CEO to be a matter of good practice and governance. In light of experience, we consider that this separation encourages collegial
decision-making on matters of importance for a public company, and a balanced board, and it also mitigates potential conflicts of interest. Not least it also helps mitigate against the risk of a concentration of decision making powers in the hands
of a single individual. Separation is deemed to improve the board’s capacity for independent decision making and increases accountability.
The Chair of the Board’s role should be
complemented by an independent non-executive director appointed as the senior or lead independent director, who can provide a sounding board for the chairman and serve as a deputy and intermediary for the other directors and, indeed, shareholders
when necessary.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
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Capital Management
Prudent capital management is a key building block for the
long-term success of a business, supporting the strategy and ensuring its ability to weather adverse economic conditions. Clarity on financial capital, disciplines and how they relate to the strategy for growth, capital investment and M&A, or to
share buybacks, dividends and/or other distributions, is a critical ingredient in building a shared understanding of the business with shareholders and other providers of capital.
From a shareholder perspective the rationale for and
potential dilution from equity capital issuances and, for example, the risks of poorly timed or structured share buybacks are important considerations in granting capital authorities at shareholder meetings. These activities can have significant
implications and need to be approached by boards and management with care and consideration for shareholder interests.
In seeking shareholder approval for equity capital
issuance authorities, companies should ensure the rationale for policy on, and approach to, the use of such authorities is disclosed. Routine disapplication of pre-emption rights (pro-rata rights of first refusal) should not exceed 10% (or lower
where that is market practice) and authorities should be structured in line with best practice.
Similarly, prudent management of debt through the
cycle is important. Boards should ensure they monitor and oversee the maintenance of prudent levels of debt (e.g. average net-debt not just the year-end position) and leverage in the business and balance sheet, which should extend to contingent and
off-balance sheet liabilities. They should also ensure that sudden spikes in leverage can be explained in the context of the broader long-term business strategy. Large, unexplained or unjustified authorities to issue debt, or to increase or remove
debt limits set out in a company’s formational documents, can raise potentially significant concerns for both long-term shareholders and bondholders, which the board needs to be mindful of. Taking on debt solely to fund buybacks and/or hit
‘per-share’ targets such as EPS established under short-term variable remuneration schemes is neither good practice nor welcome.
Any exceptional cases should be supported by a
substantive justification and explained properly to shareholders.
Major Transactions
Mergers, acquisitions, joint ventures and disposals are a regular
feature of business and the capital markets. In many cases these are a normal part of the management and development of a business and the implementation of its strategy. However, large, inappropriate or poorly executed transactions can also lead to
operational issues, significant write-downs and shareholder value destruction.
Boards should be actively involved in the planning
for and assessment of potential transactions, ensuring that an appropriately disciplined approach (to both acquisitions and disposals) is maintained that is clearly aligned with the strategy. Ensuring appropriate and effective oversight of such
activity is critical and monitoring the integration and subsequent performance against plan and related objectives (including synergies) is an important role of the board.
Where major transactions are not subject to
shareholder approval, companies should consider the views of their major shareholders, subject to regulatory constraints and shareholders’ policies on being made ‘insiders’.
Related Party Transactions
The scope for conflicts and abuse in related party transactions in
any market is a potentially significant issue. Such concerns can arise in relation to individual transactions or from the number, nature or pattern of them. Alongside appropriate procedures to identify and manage conflicts of interest, boards should
have a robust, independent process for reviewing, approving and monitoring related party transactions (both individual transactions and in aggregate).
A committee of independent directors, with the
ability to take independent advice, should review related party transactions, their nature and their incidence or aggregate levels, to determine whether they are necessary, appropriate and in the best interests of the company and, if so, agree what
terms are fair for other shareholders. All related party transactions should be reported to the board and be subject to approval. The company should also disclose transactions that are significant, whether by virtue of their materiality to the
business, the individuals involved or given the risk of perceived conflicts of interest, along with the rationale for allowing them.
Where a related party transaction is allowed to
proceed it must be:
■
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subject to proper
oversight by the board and regular review (e.g. audit, shareholder approval);
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■
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clearly justified
and not be detrimental to the long-term interests of the company;
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undertaken in the
normal course of business;
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undertaken on
fully commercial terms;
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In line with best
practice; and
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In the interests
of all shareholders.
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Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
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Tax Management
Tax management, approached prudently and legally, is
part of the responsible management of a company’s affairs. Artificial or ‘aggressive’ tax strategies and constructs create imprudent risks for a company. They can pose potentially significant reputation and commercial risks for
those that are, or are perceived to be, pushing the boundaries of tax practice by, for example, exploiting loopholes and tax havens to avoid paying tax. The same reputation risks hold in respect of the directors of companies involved in such
practices and the perception of the culture and attitudes it evidences. This applies equally to the use of tax avoidance structures in executive compensation arrangements, as it does at a corporate level.
From an investor perspective, tax management offers
an insight into the culture predominant in a company and the attitudes and risk appetite of the management and directors. It also offers an additional indicator on the quality of earnings, risk and potential liabilities of a business, which can be
relevant in terms of valuation and the investment quality of a business.
We expect the board to take a responsible approach
to overseeing a company’s approach to and policy on tax and the related risks, to ensure that the company’s approach is and remains prudent and sustainable. The risks arising from engineered tax optimization practices should be
understood and avoided; those arising from policy reforms (e.g. those being coordinated by the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) and other authorities) should be properly mitigated. The board should regularly review the
business’s tax policy, its implementation and the related risks, as well as in response to significant events that may affect it. A summary of the tax policy and related codes of conduct should be published by companies, highlighting the
approach to managing the associated risks.
In
terms of changes in tax domicile or re-incorporation, while economic benefit may be gained, there should be no diminution of shareholders rights as a result of the changes, nor triggering of variable compensation as a result of the associated
technical, legal or structural changes required.
Annual Report and Accounts
Annual reports and accounts are a key reference document for
shareholders and the providers of a company’s long-term capital. They should provide a summary account of the board’s stewardship of the business that year (as opposed say to being designed or prepared for a secondary market context i.e.
decision usefulness), whilst setting a direction of travel for the future.
In the annual report, the board should present a
fair, balanced and understandable assessment of the company’s strategy, business plan, objectives, KPIs, capital and assets, operations, risks, challenges, performance and prospects in its annual report. This should include how the
business’ approach is adapting to major trends (e.g. from technology, climate change or demographics etc) that could have a material impact on the business and the related risks and opportunities it sees and how they affect the sustainability
of the business and its long-term prospects.
The annual financial statements (accounts) need to
be prepared on a prudent basis and present a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the business, its assets, liabilities, financial position and distributable profit or the loss. Boards should ensure that aggressive accounting practices are
avoided and recognise that headline compliance with accounting standards, where significant judgement and discretion can be used, is unlikely of itself to effectively provide comfort that a ‘true & fair view’ is being maintained.
Boards should ensure company practice does not fall into the trap of accounting form over substance.
The annual report and accounts are a reflection of
the quality and prudence of management and the board of directors. Managements should strive for perfection in delivering these important documents. Errors and omissions may ultimately factor in our view toward the constitution and effectiveness of
management and the board.
While recognizing
the differences that exist in market norms and dynamics, we expect companies to plan for and look to the long-term in their reporting. The board should ensure that the company does not become fixated on quarterly numbers at the expense of investment
for the long-term.
External Audit
The statutory audit is a significant and important shareholder and
creditor protection mechanism, to which we attach considerable importance. Its purpose is to protect the company itself from errors, omissions or, potentially, wrongdoing, as well as to signal any issues to shareholders to enable them to engage with
the directors, not least through the general meeting.
Companies should, therefore, ensure that the
relationship with the auditor is clearly owned and overseen by the Audit Committee and that they maintain a robust, independent and effective audit and that the auditors are and are seen to be independent. As part of this, companies should have a
clear policy on the approach to and timeframes for re-tendering the audit contract.
Non-audit work should be kept to a minimum, require
prior audit committee approval and largely be restricted to audit related work. Audit committees should also oversee any work undertaken by other audit firms to ensure that the company’s options and choice of alternative auditors is not
compromised by potential conflicts.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
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Internal Audit and Risk
Committees
Companies need to maintain an effective system of
internal control, which should be measured against internationally accepted standards of internal audit and tested periodically for its adequacy.
Companies are encouraged to have an internal audit
function that supports the board and executives in the oversight and management of risks. We expect financial institutions to maintain a separate risk committee and support this practice, where appropriate, in other companies.
Compensation/Remuneration
Executive pay has been a persistent area of concern and controversy
over the years. Given the problems around executive pay inflation, widening pay differentials, questions about the linkage with performance and perceived rewards for failure, and complexity, compensation (remuneration) committees need to ensure a
prudent approach is maintained.
We expect a
substantial proportion of executive pay to be performance based, vesting according to the achievement of stretching performance metrics that are clearly aligned with the company’s strategy, management’s value creation and the experience
of its shareholders. In terms of pay and overall employee costs, we will have particular regard to the relative levels of pay compared to the performance of the business, distributions to shareholders.
Across a company’s pay arrangements,
structural or technical provisions that can weaken or undermine the principle of pay for performance, need to be avoided. Similarly, we are generally supportive of local market best practices that enhance the alignment of pay and performance, such
as retention and deferral arrangements, malus/clawback, reasonable all-employee share schemes etc. Consideration should also be given to the emerging disclosures required around pay ratios and the ramifications for the companies in which we
invest.
Broadly speaking, compensation
(remuneration) committees should look to ensure that their company’s pay arrangements are:
1.
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Clear, simple and
understandable;
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2.
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Balanced and
proportionate, in respect of structure, deliverables, opportunity and the market;
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3.
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Aligned with the
long-term strategy, related key performance indicators and risk management discipline;
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4.
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Linked
robustly to the delivery of performance;
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5.
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Delivering
outcomes that reflect value creation and the shareholder ‘experience’; and
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6.
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Structured
to avoid pay for failure or the avoidance of accountability to shareholders.
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Where a company consults with its shareholders on
its executive pay arrangements, the compensation (remuneration) committee chair should take ownership and lead that process, ensuring proper two-way dialogue, as deference to consultants undermines credibility. That said, pay is only one aspect of
the dialogue we need to have or prioritise with companies. As a result, we would note that, generally, we only look to participate directly in such consultations where we are a significant shareholder.
Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG)
Practices
Broader ESG practices provide
shareholders with an additional lens into the quality, leadership, strategic focus and operational standards of practice of a business. Reflecting our philosophy on the importance of integrating ESG considerations into our assessment of how well a
business is run, we will consider the level and effectiveness of ESG disclosure made by companies in their annual reports and other materials. Our focus will be on those factors deemed material to businesses in a given sector with a focus on
practices deemed unsustainable or in need of improvement to protect shareholder value.
We aim to assess company’s focus, management
and effectiveness in dealing with the environmental and social issues most relevant to their business. In cases where management and the board have not demonstrated adequate efforts to be transparent and address or mitigate material ESG issues, or
are considered to be failing to adequately address current or emergent risks that may threaten shareholder value in future, we may take voting action to highlight this.
We will also be mindful of companies’
adherence to proper standards of operational practices and where, for example, those practices fail to meet generally accepted international standards (e.g. adherence to the UN Global Compact, UN Convention on Human Rights or International Labour
Organisation Core Labor Standards), this will be taken into account as part of our deliberations on voting action.
Shareholder Resolutions
As part of this focus, shareholder resolutions
represent the exercise of a key shareholder right, although they can encompass a wide range of issues. However, they are commonly focused on environmental and social issues.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
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We assess shareholder resolutions
in light of good practice, the standards already applied by a company, how proportionate the proposals are, their alignment with our philosophy and approach, as well any potential conflicts with our client’s interests. We will also have regard
to whether a shareholder resolution is binding in nature or advisory (non-binding) in applying these considerations.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
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APPENDIX C — DESCRIPTION OF STATE
RISK FACTORS
The state tax-exempt and
state municipal bond Funds invest primarily in municipal securities issued by a single state and political sub-divisions of that state. Each state tax-exempt and state municipal bond Fund will be particularly affected by political and economic
conditions and developments in the state in which it invests. This exposure to factors affecting the state’s tax-exempt investments will be significantly greater than that of more geographically diversified funds, and may result in greater
losses and volatility. Because of the relatively small number of issuers of tax-exempt securities in a given state, the Fund may invest a higher percentage of assets in a single issuer and, therefore, be more exposed to the risk of loss than a fund
that invests more broadly. At times, the Fund and other accounts managed by the Investment Manager may own all or most of the debt of a particular issuer. This concentration of ownership may make it more difficult to sell, or to determine the fair
value of, these investments. In addition, a Fund may focus on a segment of the tax-exempt debt market, such as revenue bonds for health care facilities, housing or airports. These investments may cause the value of a Fund’s shares to change
more than the values of shares of funds that invest more diversely. The yields on the securities in which the Funds invest generally are dependent on a variety of factors, including among others, the financial condition of the issuer or other
obligor, the revenue source from which the debt service is payable, general economic and monetary conditions, conditions in the relevant market, the size of a particular issue, the maturity of the obligation, and the rating of the issue. In addition
to such factors, geographically concentrated securities will be particularly sensitive to local conditions, including political and economic changes, adverse conditions to an industry significant to the area, and other further developments within a
particular locality. Because many tax-exempt bonds may be revenue or general obligations of local governments or authorities, ratings on tax-exempt bonds may be different from the ratings given to the general obligation bonds of a particular
state.
Certain events may adversely affect
investments within a particular sector in a state. Examples include litigation, legislation or court decisions, concerns about pending or contemplated litigation, legislation or court decisions, or lower demand for the services or products provided
by a sector. Investing mostly in state-specific, tax-exempt investments makes the Funds more vulnerable to the relevant state’s economy and to factors affecting tax-exempt issuers in the state than would be true for more geographically
diversified funds. These risks include, among others:
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the inability or
perceived inability of a government authority to collect sufficient tax or other revenues to meet its payment obligations;
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natural disasters
and ecological or environmental concerns;
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the introduction
of constitutional or statutory limits on a tax-exempt issuer’s ability to raise revenues or increase taxes;
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the inability of
an issuer to pay interest on or to repay principal or securities in which the funds invest during recessionary periods; and
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economic
or demographic factors that may cause a decrease in tax or other revenues for a government authority or for private operators of publicly financed facilities.
|
State Specific Information
The following discussion regarding certain economic,
financial and legal matters pertaining to the states, U.S. territories and possessions referenced below, and their political subdivisions is drawn from the documents indicated below and does not purport to be a complete description or a complete
listing of all relevant factors. More information about state specific risks may be available from other official state resources. The information has not been updated nor will it be updated during the year. The Funds have not independently verified
any of the information contained in such documents and are not expressing any opinion regarding the completeness or materiality of such information. The information is subject to change at any time. Any such change may adversely affect the financial
condition of the applicable state, U.S. territory or possession.
Estimates and projections, if any, contained in the
following summaries should not be construed as statements of fact; such estimates and projections are based on assumptions that may be affected by numerous factors and there can be no assurance that such estimates and projections will be realized or
achieved. Discussions regarding the financial condition of a particular state or U.S. territory or possession may not be relevant to Municipal Obligations issued by political subdivisions of that state or U.S. territory or possession. Moreover, the
general economic conditions discussed may or may not affect issuers of the obligations of these states, U.S. territories or possessions.
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California
Unless otherwise noted, the following information has
been obtained from the Official Statement, dated August 29, 2017, for the following bonds: $2,538,470,000 State of California General Obligation Bonds, $802,400,000 Various Purpose General Obligation Bonds and $1,736,070,000 Various Purpose General
Obligation Refunding Bonds (collectively, the “California 2017 Bonds”).
Current Economic Condition.
The State of California (California) has the largest
economy among the 50 states and one of the largest in the world and has major components in high technology, trade, entertainment, government, manufacturing, tourism, construction and services. The makeup of California’s economy generally
mirrors that of the national economy. The California economy continues to benefit from broad-based growth.
California is by far the most populous state in the
nation, nearly 50% larger than the second-ranked state according to the 2010 U.S. Census. The estimate of California’s population as of July 2016 was 39.4 million residents, which is 12% of the total United States population.
California, along with the United States as a whole,
completed its seventh year of economic recovery as the state ended its fiscal year on June 30, 2016. California’s economy demonstrated continued economic growth throughout the 2015-2016 fiscal year.
Employment opportunities in California continued to
improve during the first several months of the 2016-17 fiscal year. By December 2016, total employment was nearly 18.4 million jobs, reflecting a year-to-year increase of 500,000 jobs compared to December 2015. California’s unemployment rate
largely held steady during the first half of fiscal year 2016-17, and by December, it had receded slightly to 5.2%.
California’s personal income growth continued
to outpace the nation during the beginning of the 2016-17 fiscal year, with total personal income for the third quarter of 2016, 4.8% above the level observed in the same period in 2015, compared with an increase of 3.6% nationally. As personal
income grew, consumer spending also increased, as demonstrated by a 2.8% increase in California’s new vehicle registrations in the 2015-2016 fiscal year and a $1.2 billion (5.1%) increase in sales and use tax revenue.
California’s real GDP increased by 2.9 percent
in 2016, and totaled $2.6 trillion at current prices, making California the sixth largest economy in the world. California’s job growth has slowed since late 2016 and the unemployment rate has fallen to 4.7 percent in June 2017, tying the
modern historic low last reached in November and December 2000. With job growth slowing, average wages are starting to rise. The source of personal income growth is shifting from more people being employed to higher income per person. Labor force
growth is expected to keep up with job growth, despite increasing numbers of retirees in California. Consumer inflation is expected to remain higher in California than the nation, with overall California inflation expected to average 3.0 percent in
2017, and 2.9 percent in 2018 and afterwards. Housing permits issued by local authorities remain well below levels needed to account for population growth, a trend that is expected to continue throughout the forecast period.
State Budget.
California’s 2016-17 Budget Act was enacted on
June 27, 2016. The Budget Act appropriated $170.9 billion: $122.5 billion from the General Fund, $44.6 billion from special funds, and $3.8 billion from bond funds. The General Fund’s budgeted expenditures increased $6.9 billion (6.0%) over
the previous year’s General Fund budget. The General Fund’s revenues were projected to be $120.3 billion, after a projected $3.3 billion transfer to the Budget Stabilization Account (Rainy Day Fund). General Fund revenue comes
predominantly from taxes, with personal income taxes expected to provide 67.5% of total revenue. California’s major taxes (personal income, sales and use, and corporation taxes) are projected to supply approximately 98.1% of the General
Fund’s resources in the 2016-17 fiscal year.
The majority of the spending plan for the 2016-17
fiscal year included funding that maintains existing state policies or is based on spending allocations driven by constitutional funding requirements, such as the Proposition 98 guaranteed minimum funding levels for K12 schools and community
colleges and the Proposition 2 required minimum transfers to the BSA and minimum annual debt reduction payments. The discretionary portion of the 2016-17 spending plan allocated $2.6 billion toward additional General Fund reserves—an
additional $2.0 billion transfer to the BSA and $600 million to the SFEU; funding for one-time activities, such as $1.5 billion for repairing and replacing aged infrastructure, $500 million for building affordable housing, and $200 million for
drought-related activities; and ongoing funding augmentations for specific programs, including $300 million to the University of California and California State Universities.
Despite the recent significant budgetary
improvements, there remain a number of budget risks that threaten the financial condition of California’s General Fund, including the threat of recession, potentially unfavorable changes to federal fiscal policies, and the significant unfunded
liabilities of the two main retirement systems managed by state entities, the California
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Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) and the
California State Teachers’ Retirement System (CalSTRS). In recent years, California has committed to significant increases in annual payments to these systems to reduce the unfunded liabilities. California also has a significant unfunded
liability with respect to other post-employment benefits (OPEB).
There can be no assurances that California will not
face fiscal stress and cash pressures again, or that other changes in the state or national economies will not materially adversely affect the financial condition of the state’s General Fund.
Real Estate and Housing.
California’s real estate market showed mixed
signs of continued strength during the fiscal year. As of June 2016, median prices for existing single-family homes were 6.1% higher and sales were essentially flat (down by 0.1%) compared to the prior year. Homebuilding had largely leveled off in
California, with new residential building permits issued during the 2015-16 fiscal year increasing by approximately 1.7% to nearly 97,000 units. Nonresidential construction activity showed more strength relative to the residential sector, with new
permit activity increasing by 15.9% during the 2015-2016 fiscal year to $28.1 billion.
Long-Term Debt.
As of July 1, 2017, California had approximately
$83.2 billion of outstanding general obligation bonds and lease revenue bonds payable principally from the state’s General Fund or from lease payments paid from the operating budget of the respective lessees, which operating budgets are
primarily, but not exclusively, derived from the General Fund. As of July 1, 2017, there were approximately $33.7 billion of authorized and unissued long-term voter-approved general obligation bonds which, when issued, will be payable principally
from the General Fund and approximately $4.9 billion of authorized and unissued lease revenue bonds.
Certain state agencies and authorities issue revenue
obligations for which the General Fund has no liability. These revenue obligations are either payable from state revenue-producing enterprises and projects, and not payable from the General Fund, or are conduit obligations payable only from revenues
paid by local governments or private users of facilities financed by the revenue obligations. California has always paid when due the principal of and interest on its general obligation bonds, general obligation commercial paper notes, lease-revenue
obligations and short-term obligations, including revenue anticipation notes and revenue anticipation warrants.
Bond Ratings.
Three major credit rating agencies, Moody’s
Investors Service, Inc. (“Moody’s”), Standard and Poor’s Ratings Services (“S&P”), and Fitch Ratings (“Fitch”), assigned ratings to the California 2017 Bonds, as follows: Moody’s assigned a
rating of “Aa3,” S&P assigned a rating of “AA-,” and Fitch assigned a rating of “AA-.” It is not possible to determine whether, or the extent to which, Moody’s, S&P, or Fitch will change its
respective rating in the future. In addition, ratings assigned to individual Municipal Obligations vary.
Connecticut
The following information has been obtained from the
Annual Information Statement of the State of Connecticut, dated March 29, 2017.
Current Economic Condition.
The State of Connecticut (“Connecticut”)
is a highly developed and urbanized state. It is situated directly between the financial centers of Boston and New York.
Connecticut’s economic performance is measured
by personal income, which has been among the highest in the nation on a per capital basis, and gross state product (the market value of all final goods and services produced by labor and property located within Connecticut). Connecticut’s
nonagricultural employment reached a high in March 2008 with 1,713,300 persons employed, but began declining with the onset of the recession, falling to 1,594,200 jobs in February 2010, and has since risen to 1,679,900 in November 2016.
After enjoying an extraordinary boom during the late
1990s, Connecticut, as well as the rest of the Northeast and the country, experienced an economic slowdown during the recession of the early 2000s. The state’s unemployment rate climbed to 9.1% in 2010, compared to the New England average of
8.3% and the national average of 9.6% for the same period. During the subsequent weak recovery, Connecticut’s average unemployment rate fell to 6.6% for 2014, and for the first six months of 2016 has averaged 5.7%, compared to the New England
average of 4.5% and the national average of 4.9% for the same period.
State Budget.
Connecticut finances most of its operations through
its General Fund. Certain state functions, such as Connecticut’s transportation budget, are financed through other state funds. General Fund revenues are derived primarily from the collection of state taxes, including the personal income tax,
the sales and use tax and the corporation business tax. Connecticut expected to derive approximately 86.6 percent and 86.7 percent of its General Fund revenues from taxes during fiscal year 2016 and fiscal
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year 2017, respectively. Connecticut expends money on a variety of
programs and services. Significant elements of state expenditures include human services; education, libraries and museums; non-functional (debt service and miscellaneous expenditures including fringe benefits); health and hospitals; corrections;
general government and judicial.
State
Debt.
Pursuant to various public and special
acts, Connecticut has authorized a variety of types of debt. These types fall generally into the following categories: direct general obligation debt, which is payable from Connecticut’s General Fund; special tax obligation debt, which is
payable from specified taxes and other funds that are maintained outside Connecticut’s General Fund; and special obligation and revenue debt, which is payable from specified revenues or other funds that are maintained outside
Connecticut’s General Fund. In addition, Connecticut has a number of programs under which the state provides annual appropriation support for, or is contingently liable on, the debt of certain state quasi-public agencies and political
subdivisions.
Statutory Debt Limit
. Section 3-21 of the General Statutes provides that no bonds, notes or other evidences of indebtedness for borrowed money payable from General Fund tax receipts of Connecticut may be authorized by the General Assembly or
issued unless they do not cause the aggregate amount of (1) the total amount of bonds, notes or other evidences of indebtedness payable from General Fund tax receipts authorized by the General Assembly but which have not been issued and (2) the
total amount of such indebtedness that has been issued and remains outstanding, to exceed 1.6 times the total estimated General Fund tax receipts of Connecticut for the fiscal year in which any such authorization will become effective or in which
such indebtedness is issued, as estimated for such fiscal year by the joint standing committee of the General Assembly having cognizance of finance, revenue and bonding. In computing the aggregate amount of indebtedness at any time, however, a
significant number of exclusions apply.
Transportation Fund and Debt
. In 1984, Connecticut adopted legislation establishing a transportation infrastructure program and authorizing Special Tax Obligation (“STO”) bonds to finance the program. The transportation infrastructure
program is a continuous program for planning, construction and improvement of Connecticut highways and bridges, projects on the interstate highway system, alternate highway projects in the interstate highway substitution program, waterway
facilities, mass transportation and transit facilities, the highway safety program, maintenance garages and administrative facilities of the Department of Transportation, payment of Connecticut’s share of the costs of the local bridge program,
and payment of state contributions to the local bridge revolving fund. The transportation infrastructure program is administered by the Department of Transportation.
The cost of the transportation infrastructure
program for state fiscal years 1985-2020, which will be met from federal, state and local funds, is estimated at $37.8 billion. Connecticut’s share of such cost, estimated at $18.6 billion, is to be funded from transportation- related taxes,
fees and revenues deposited in the Special Transportation Fund and from the proceeds of STO bonds.
Certain Pension and Retirement Systems.
State Employees’ Retirement Fund
. Connecticut maintains a State Employees’ Retirement Fund with approximately 50,019 active members, 1,412 inactive (vested) members and 48,191 retired members and beneficiaries as of June 30, 2016. Payments into
the fund are made from employee contributions, General and Special Transportation Fund appropriations and grant reimbursements from Federal and other funds.
As of June 30, 2016, the market value of the
fund’s investment assets was estimated to be $10,636.7 million. The November 2014 actuarial valuation determined that employer contributions of $1,514.5 million and $1,569.1 million would be required for fiscal year 2016 and fiscal year 2017,
respectively. For fiscal year 2016, Connecticut made an employer contribution of $1,501.7 million, 99.2% of the actuarial employer contribution requirement. The adopted budget for fiscal year 2017 contained appropriations expected to be sufficient,
together with anticipated grant reimbursement from Federal and other funds, to fully fund the employer contribution requirement.
Teachers’ Retirement Fund
. The Teachers’ Retirement Fund, administered by the Teachers’ Retirement Board, provides benefits for any teacher, principal, supervisor, superintendent or other eligible employee in the public school systems
of Connecticut, with certain exceptions. While setting and paying salaries for teachers, municipalities do not provide contributions to the maintenance of the fund. As of June 30, 2016, there were 101,977 active and former employees with accrued and
accruing benefits, 36,065 retired members and beneficiaries, and 283 members on disability allowance. Contributions to the fund are made by employees and by General Fund appropriations from Connecticut.
As of June 30, 2014, the market value of the
fund’s investment assets was $15,584.6 million. The October 2014 actuarial valuation determined that employer contributions of $975.6 million and $1,012.2 million would be required for fiscal year 2016 and fiscal year 2017. For fiscal year
2016, Connecticut made an employer contribution of $975.6 million, 100% of the actuarial employer contribution requirement. The adopted budget for fiscal year 2017 contained appropriations expected to be sufficient to fully fund the employer
contribution requirement.
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Bond Ratings.
Four major credit rating agencies, Moody’s
Investors Service (“Moody’s”), S&P Global Ratings (“S&P”), Fitch Ratings (“Fitch”) and Kroll Bond Ratings Agency (“Kroll”), assign ratings to the Connecticut’s long-term general
obligation bonds. Connecticut’s general obligation bonds were rated Aa3 by Moody’s, AA- by S&P, AA- by Fitch and AA- by Kroll. It is not possible to determine whether, or the extent to which, Moody’s, S&P, Fitch or Kroll
will change such ratings in the future. Ratings assigned to individual Municipal Obligations vary.
Massachusetts
The following information has been obtained from The
Commonwealth of Massachusetts Information Statement, dated September 27, 2017.
Current Economic Condition and Government
Structure.
The ability of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts (the “Commonwealth”) to meet its obligations is affected by future social, environmental, and economic conditions, among other things, as well as by the legislative policies and the financial condition of the Commonwealth.
Many of these conditions are not within the Commonwealth’s control.
Massachusetts has established a number of
independent authorities and agencies, the budgets of which are not included in the Commonwealth’s annual budget. In fiscal 2016, Massachusetts had significant operational or financial relationships, or both, with 40 of these authorities. The
Commonwealth’s contractual agreements with these authorities constitute general obligations of Massachusetts for which its full faith and credit are pledged. The Commonwealth also guarantees certain outstanding bonds of two authorities, the
Massachusetts State College Building Authority and the University of Massachusetts Building Authority. The ratings of these independent authorities are based on the guarantee of the Commonwealth and generally can be expected to move in tandem with
ratings on the Massachusetts general obligation debt.
In addition, a portion of the Commonwealth’s
receipts from the sales tax (other than the tax on meals) is dedicated through nonbudgeted special revenue funds to the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) and the Massachusetts School Building Authority (MSBA). The amount dedicated to
the MSBA is the amount raised by a 1% sales tax (not including meals). The amount dedicated to the MBTA is a comparable amount, subject to an inflation-adjusted floor, plus $160 million annually. Effective for fiscal 2015, the $160 million
adjustment was integrated into the inflation-adjusted floor, which was reset at $970.6 million. The floor grows by the allowable base revenue growth (lesser of sales tax growth or inflation, but not greater than 3% and not less than 0%) thereafter.
Legislation approved by the Governor on October 31, 2014 increased the amount statutorily required to be credited to the MBTA by $160 million starting in fiscal 2015. The $160 million increase in the dedicated sales tax revenue amount and the amount
included in the inflation-adjusted floor were intended to replace the $160 million annual state appropriation the MBTA received from fiscal 2010 through fiscal 2014. In fiscal year 2016, total dedicated sales tax revenue that was directed to the
MBTA was approximately $986 million. Massachusetts also has a net liability of $ 5.891 billion for debt and grant obligations for the School Building Assistance Program that finances construction of schools for the Commonwealth’s cities and
towns.
Population and Employment.
The Commonwealth has a population of about 6.81
million as of July 1, 2016. Since reaching 6.8 percent in January 2014, the Commonwealth’s unemployment rate gradually declined to 4.1 percent in May 2017, which is the same as the national rate.
Commonwealth Budget.
The budgeted operating funds of the Commonwealth
ended fiscal year 2017 with a deficit of revenues and other sources over expenditures and other uses of $41.0 million and aggregate ending fund balances in the budgeted operating funds of the Commonwealth of approximately $1.44 billion. The budgeted
operating funds of the Commonwealth are projected to end fiscal 2018 with a deficiency of revenues and other sources over expenditures and other uses of $144.1 million and aggregate ending fund balances in the budgeted operating funds of the
Commonwealth of approximately $1.30 billion.
Chapter 62F of the General Laws establishes a state
tax revenue growth limit for each fiscal year equal to the average positive rate of growth in total wages and salaries in the Commonwealth, as reported by the federal government, during the three calendar years immediately preceding the end of such
fiscal year. The growth limit is used to calculate “allowable state tax revenue” for each fiscal year. Chapter 62F also requires that allowable state tax revenues be reduced by the aggregate amount received by local governmental units
from any newly authorized or increased local option taxes or excises. Any excess in state tax revenue collections for a given fiscal year over the prescribed limit, as determined by the State Auditor, is to be applied as a credit against the
then-current personal income tax liability of all taxpayers in the Commonwealth in proportion to the personal income tax liability of all taxpayers in the Commonwealth for the immediately preceding tax year.
Since December 1989, state finance law has included
a limit on the amount of outstanding “direct” bonds of the Commonwealth. For the fiscal 2016 capital budget, the Governor maintained the administrative bond cap at $2.125 billion. The bond cap for fiscal 2017 through fiscal 2021 is
projected to be $2.19 billion.
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The Commonwealth is statutorily responsible for the
payment of pension benefits for Commonwealth employees and for teachers of the cities, towns and regional school districts throughout the Commonwealth. Massachusetts employees’ and teachers’ retirement systems are partially funded by
employee contributions of regular compensation. In September 2017, the Commonwealth issued a valuation, as of January 1, 2017, of its total pension obligation. The unfunded actuarial accrued liability was calculated to be approximately $ 39.622
billion.
Local Considerations.
The Commonwealth makes substantial payments to its
cities, towns and regional school districts (local aid) to mitigate the impact of local property tax limits on local programs and services. Local aid payments to cities, towns and regional school districts take the form of both direct and indirect
assistance. Direct local aid consists of general revenue sharing funds and specific program funds sent directly to local governments and regional school districts. The Commonwealth’s budget for fiscal 2018 provides $6.142 billion of
state-funded local aid to municipalities.
Transportation.
On February 19, 1999, the Commonwealth and the
Massachusetts Turnpike Authority entered into a contract which
provides for the Commonwealth to make annual
operating assistance payments to MassDOT, as successor to the
Turnpike Authority, which are capped at $25 million
annually and extend until June 30, 2050, which is the end of
the 40th fiscal year following the transfer of
certain facilities associated with the Commonwealth’s Central Artery/Ted Williams Tunnel Project (CA/T) to MassDOT. On June 30, 2009, the Commonwealth and the Turnpike Authority entered into a contract for financial assistance which provides
for the payment by the Commonwealth to Mass DOT, as successor to the Authority, of $100 million per fiscal year, commencing July 1, 2009 until June 30, 2039. Payments under both contracts constitute a general obligation pledge of the Commonwealth
for which its full faith and credit are pledged.
Water Initiatives.
The Massachusetts Clean Water Trust (the
“Trust”) manages the Commonwealth’s state revolving fund program under the federal Clean Water Act and the federal Safe Drinking Water Act. Under state law, loans made by the Trust are required to provide for subsidies or other
financial assistance to reduce the debt service expense on the loans. As of September 27, 2017, most new loans made by the Trust bore interest at 2%. To provide for a portion of the subsidy on most of its loans, the Trust received contract
assistance payments from the Commonwealth. Under the Trust’s enabling act, the aggregate annual contract assistance payment for the Trust’s programs may not exceed $138 million. As of August 31, 2017 the Trust had approximately $3.0
billion of bonds outstanding. Approximately 6.61% of the Trust’s aggregate debt service was covered by the Commonwealth contract assistance as of September 27, 2017. Prior to August, 2014, the Trust was known as the Massachusetts Water
Pollution Abatement Trust.
Infrastructure
Development.
Under the infrastructure
investment incentive program, known as “I-Cubed,” up to $600 million of public infrastructure improvements to support significant new private developments may be financed by bonds issued by the Massachusetts Development Finance Agency
(MassDevelopment) that are secured by and payable from a general obligation pledge of contract assistance from the Commonwealth. After each phase of the private development is completed and occupied, the municipality is required to reimburse the
Commonwealth for any portion of the debt service cost on the bonds that is not covered by new state tax revenues generated from the related private development. The obligation of the municipality ends when the Commonwealth has collected revenues
sufficient to pay principal and interest payments to date, or in some cases to the next redemption date, plus all remaining principal payments due. As of August 31, 2017, total “I-Cubed” program bonds were outstanding in the amount of
approximately $106.0 million.
Legislation
approved by the Governor on August 8, 2008 included an authorization to finance up to $43 million of the costs of a parkway at the former South Weymouth naval air base. The bonds to finance the parkway are secured by and payable from a general
obligation pledge of contract assistance from the Commonwealth. Approximately $25.2 million of such bonds were outstanding as of August 31, 2017.
Social Innovation.
Legislation approved in 2012 established a Social
Innovation Financing Trust Fund for the purpose of funding “pay for success” contracts to improve outcomes and lower costs for contracted government services. The first such contract was entered into in January, 2014, to help young men
leaving the juvenile justice system or on probation avoid reoffending. The contract obligates the Commonwealth to make up to $28 million in success payments, in the aggregate, through fiscal year 2020. In September, 2016, the Commonwealth entered
into a side letter to permit the parties to negotiate a contract amendment to extend the period in which young men may be referred to the project without changing the timing or maximum amount of success payments. The
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Commonwealth entered into a second such contract in December, 2014,
to address chronic individual homelessness through permanent stable, supportive housing. The contract obligates the Commonwealth to make up to $6 million in success payments, in the aggregate, through fiscal 2021. The Commonwealth entered into a
third such contract in June, 2016, to assist individuals in
Adult Basic Education (ABE) or English for Speakers
of Other Languages (ESOL) programs transition to employment, higher wage jobs, and higher education. The contract obligates the Commonwealth to make up to $15 million in success payments, in the aggregate, through fiscal 2023.
Bond Ratings.
Three major credit rating agencies, Moody’s
Investors Service, Inc. (“Moody’s”), Standard and Poor’s Ratings Services (“S&P”) and Fitch Ratings (“Fitch”), assign ratings to the Commonwealth long-term general obligation bonds. The
Commonwealth’s general obligation bonds have been assigned long-term ratings of “Aa1” by Moody’s Investors Service, Inc., “AA” by Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services and “AA+” by Fitch. It is
not possible to determine whether, or the extent to which, Moody’s, S&P or Fitch will change such ratings in the future. Ratings assigned to individual Municipal Obligations vary.
New York
The following information has been obtained from the
Annual Information Statement of the State of New York, dated June 20, 2017, as supplemented on September 26, 2017.
Current Economic Condition.
The State of New York (“New York”) has a
diverse economy, with a comparatively large share of the nation’s financial services, information, education, and health services economic activity. New York’s Division of the Budget outlook for private sector job growth for 2017 is 1.4
percent, following growth of 1.8 percent for 2016. Most recent economic data indicate that the pace of New York employment growth remains healthy, and New York’s Division of the Budget forecasts personal income growth to be at 2.4 percent for
2016 and 3.7 percent for 2017.
As the
nation’s financial capital, both the volume of financial market activity and the volatility in equity markets pose a particularly large degree of uncertainty for New York.
During fiscal year 2017, tax receipts were $6.81
billion lower than the prior year’s results, due to weak non-wage income growth in Tax Year 2016 and a largely timing-related increase in refunds. After controlling for the impact of tax law changes, base tax revenue decreased 0.1 percent in
FY 2017, and is projected to increase by 4.6 percent in FY 2018 and 4.7 percent in FY 2019.
Other uncertainties and risks concerning the
economic and receipts forecasts include the impacts of: national and international events; ongoing financial instability in the Euro-zone; changes in consumer confidence, oil supplies and oil prices; major terrorist events, hostilities or war;
climate change and extreme weather events; Federal statutory and regulatory changes concerning financial sector activities; changes concerning financial sector bonus payouts, as well as any future legislation governing the structure of compensation;
shifts in monetary policy affecting interest rates and the financial markets; financial and real estate market developments which may adversely affect bonus income and capital gains realizations; the effect of household debt on consumer spending and
New York tax collections; and the outcomes of litigation and other claims affecting New York.
Population and Employment.
New York is the fourth most populous state in the
United States. According to the 2016 U.S. Census, New York’s 2016 population was 19.7 million, an increase from 19.4 million in 2004.
As of March 2017, New York’s Division of the
Budget anticipated a state unemployment rate of 4.6 percent for 2017, compared with a national unemployment rate of 4.6 percent. Total state nonagricultural employment grew by 1.6 percent in 2016 and was projected to grow by 1.2 percent in 2017.
Private sector employment grew by 1.8 percent in 2016 and was projected to grow by 1.4 percent in 2017. Total employment growth of 1.3 percent is projected for 2017, after growth of 1.6 percent for 2016.
State Budget.
New York’s budget process is governed by the
New York constitution, with additional details and actions prescribed by New York law and practices established over time. The New York General Fund receives the majority of New York taxes and all income not earmarked for a particular program or
activity. New York law requires the Governor to submit, and the Legislature to enact, a General Fund budget that is balanced on a cash basis of accounting.
New York receives revenues from taxes, fees, charges
for state-provided services, Federal grants, and other miscellaneous sources. General Fund receipts, including transfers from other funds, are estimated to total $70.2 billion in fiscal year 2018, or $344 million higher than estimated in the Enacted
Budget Financial Plan. While modest economic growth is projected for fiscal year 2017, total tax receipts are estimated to increase by 3.0 percent for fiscal year 2018.
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New York expends money on a variety of programs and
services. Major categories of operating disbursements include healthcare and Medicaid, higher education (including subsidization of the State University of New York and City University of New York systems), criminal justice and public safety, school
aid, transportation, and mental hygiene programs. General Fund disbursements are expected to total $70.4 billion in fiscal year 2018, an increase of $4.4 billion or 6.7 percent over the prior year. The Division of the Budget estimates that spending
in State Operating Funds will grow at 2.0 percent from fiscal year 2017 to fiscal year 2018, consistent with the 2 percent spending benchmark.
New York is also responsible for the payment of
pension benefits for public employees. Employer contribution rates decreased for fiscal year 2017.
New York ended fiscal year 2017 with receipts
exceeding disbursements by about $5.7 billion. The General Fund closing balance was $548 million higher than estimated in the Enacted Budget Financial Plan.
Implementation of New York’s current financial
plan is dependent on the state’s ability to market its bonds successfully. New York finances much of its capital spending from the General Fund, which it reimburses with proceeds from the sale of general obligation or other state-supported
bonds. New York’s inability to sell bonds at the levels or on the timetable expected may adversely affect the state’s overall cash position and capital funding plan. The success of projected public sales will be dependent on prevailing
market conditions.
Local Considerations.
New York’s fiscal demands may be affected by
the fiscal condition of New York City, which relies in part on state aid to balance its budget and meet its cash requirements. In addition, certain localities other than New York City have experienced financial problems and have requested and
received additional state assistance during the last several state fiscal years. While a relatively infrequent practice, deficit financing by local governments has become more common in recent years.
Local assistance spending includes payments to local
governments, school districts, health care providers, and other local entities, as well as financial assistance to, or on behalf of, individuals, families, and nonprofit organizations. Expenditures in the form of aid to local governments for their
general purposes (and to school districts and municipalities for specific purposes such as education and social services) are made from New York’s General Fund. These payments are limited under the New York constitution to appropriations in
force. Local assistance spending in State Operating Funds is estimated at $66 billion in fiscal year 2018, approximately two-thirds of total State Operating Funds spending.
Debt Service.
New York pays debt service on all outstanding
state-supported bonds. These include general obligation bonds, for which New York is constitutionally obligated to pay debt service, as well as certain bonds issued by New York public authorities, such as the Empire State Development Corporation and
the New York State Thruway Authority, the payment obligation on which is subject to appropriation. New York’s access to the public credit markets through bond issuances constituting state-supported or state-related debt issuances by certain of
its authorities could be impaired and the market price of its outstanding debt may be materially and adversely affected if its public authorities were to default on their respective state-supported or state-related debt issuances.
Total debt service is projected to be $5.292 billion
for fiscal year 2018, of which $916 million is expected to be paid from the General Fund for general obligations and service contract bonds, and $4.38 billion of which is expected to service other state supported bonds.
The Debt Reform Act of 2000 restricts the issuance
of state-supported debt to capital purposes only and limits such debt to a maximum term of 30 years. Under the Debt Reform Act, new state-supported debt issued since April 1, 2000 is limited to 4 percent of state personal income, while new debt
service costs are limited to 5 percent of all Funds receipts.
Bond Ratings.
As of November 2016, New York’s general
obligation bonds were rated “Aa1” by Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. (“Moody’s”), “AA+” by Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services (“S&P”), and “AA+” by Fitch Ratings
(“Fitch”). It is not possible to determine whether, or the extent to which, Moody’s, S&P or Fitch will change such ratings in the future. Ratings assigned to individual Municipal Obligations may vary.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
C-8
|
APPENDIX D — SERIES OF CFST, CFST
I AND CFST II
Below are the series of
CFST, CFST I and CFST II. In prospectuses dated prior to June 25, 2014, series of CFST and CFST I are referred to as “Legacy Columbia Funds” and series of CFST II are referred to as “Legacy RiverSource Funds”.
Columbia Funds Series Trust
Columbia AMT-Free California Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia AMT-Free Georgia Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia AMT-Free Maryland Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia AMT-Free North Carolina Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia AMT-Free South Carolina Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia AMT-Free Virginia Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia Capital Allocation Moderate Aggressive Portfolio
Columbia Capital Allocation Moderate Conservative Portfolio
Columbia Convertible Securities Fund
Columbia Global
Strategic Equity Fund
Columbia Large Cap Enhanced Core Fund
Columbia Large Cap Growth Fund III
Columbia Large Cap Index Fund
Columbia Mid Cap Index Fund
Columbia Mid Cap Value Fund
Columbia Overseas Value Fund
Columbia
Select Global Growth Fund
Columbia Select International Equity Fund
Columbia Select Large Cap Equity Fund
Columbia Short Term Bond Fund
Columbia Short Term Municipal Bond Fund
Columbia Small Cap Index Fund
Columbia Small Cap
Value Fund II
Columbia Funds Series Trust
I
CMG Ultra Short
Term Bond Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2020 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2030 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2040 Fund
Columbia
Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2050 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2060 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Risk Allocation Fund
Columbia Alternative Beta Fund
Columbia
AMT-Free Connecticut Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia AMT-Free Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia AMT-Free Massachusetts Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia AMT-Free New York Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia AMT-Free
Oregon Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia Balanced Fund
Columbia Bond Fund
Columbia Contrarian Core Fund
Columbia Corporate Income Fund
Columbia Disciplined Small Core
Fund
Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund
Columbia Diversified Real Return Fund
Columbia Dividend Income Fund
Columbia Emerging Markets Fund
Columbia Global Dividend Opportunity Fund
Columbia Global Energy and Natural
Resources Fund
Columbia Global Technology Growth Fund
Columbia Greater China Fund
Columbia High Yield Municipal Fund
Columbia Large Cap Growth Fund
Columbia Mid Cap Growth Fund
Columbia Multi-Asset Income Fund
Columbia
Pacific/Asia Fund
Columbia Real Estate Equity Fund
Columbia Select Large Cap Growth Fund
Columbia Small Cap Growth Fund I
Columbia Small Cap Value Fund I
Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio
Columbia Solutions Conservative
Portfolio
Columbia Strategic California Municipal Income Fund
Columbia Strategic Income Fund
Columbia Strategic New York Municipal Income Fund
Columbia Tax-Exempt Fund
Columbia Total Return Bond Fund
Columbia U.S. Social Bond
Fund
Columbia U.S. Treasury Index Fund
Multi-Manager Alternative Strategies Fund
Multi-Manager Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
Multi-Manager Growth Strategies Fund
Multi-Manager Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
Multi-Manager Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
Columbia Funds Series Trust II
Columbia Absolute Return Currency and Income Fund
Columbia
Capital Allocation Aggressive Portfolio
Columbia Capital Allocation Conservative Portfolio
Columbia Capital Allocation Moderate Portfolio
Columbia Commodity Strategy Fund
Columbia Contrarian Asia Pacific Fund
Columbia Contrarian
Europe Fund
Columbia Disciplined Core Fund
Columbia Disciplined Growth Fund
Columbia Disciplined Value Fund
Columbia Dividend Opportunity Fund
Columbia Emerging Markets Bond Fund
Columbia Flexible Capital Income Fund
Columbia Floating Rate Fund
Columbia Global Bond Fund
Columbia Global Equity Value Fund
Columbia Global Infrastructure Fund
Columbia Global Opportunities Fund
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
D-1
|
Columbia Government Money Market Fund
Columbia High Yield Bond
Fund
Columbia Income Builder Fund
Columbia Income Opportunities Fund
Columbia Inflation Protected Securities Fund
Columbia Large Cap Value Fund
Columbia Limited Duration Credit Fund
Columbia Minnesota Tax-Exempt Fund
Columbia Mortgage Opportunities Fund
Columbia Overseas Core Fund
Columbia Select Global Equity Fund
Columbia Select Large-Cap
Value Fund
Columbia Select Smaller-Cap Value Fund
Columbia Seligman Communications and Information Fund
Columbia Seligman Global Technology Fund
Columbia Short-Term Cash Fund
Columbia Small/Mid Cap Value Fund
Columbia
Strategic Municipal Income Fund
Columbia U.S. Government Mortgage Fund
Multi-Manager Value Strategies Fund
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
D-2
|
APPENDIX S — MORE INFORMATION
ABOUT CHOOSING A SHARE CLASS
The
Fund’s prospectus contains information relative to choosing a share class. The information in this Appendix S should be read in conjunction with the information contained in the prospectus. With regard to any sales charge waivers and discounts
described in this Appendix S and the prospectus, it is your obligation to advise your financial intermediary or (in the case of Direct-at-Fund Accounts, as defined in the prospectus) the Transfer Agent that you qualify for any waiver or reduced
sales charge and be prepared to provide proof thereof.
Certain Historical Changes to Share Class Names
Class T shares existing on January 23, 2017 were renamed as Class V
shares on January 24, 2017. Effective March 27, 2017, Class W shares were renamed as Class T shares. Effective November 1, 2017, Class R4 shares were renamed as Class Adv shares, Class R5 shares were renamed as Class Inst2 shares, Class Y shares
were renamed as Class Inst3 shares, and Class Z shares were renamed as Class Inst shares.
Certain Share Class Conversions and Exchanges
Effective March 27, 2017,
Class I shares, which were only offered to Columbia Funds, were exchanged for Class Y shares of the same Fund. Effective on July 17, 2017, Class B shares (except those shares representing the Investment Manager's initial capital) converted to Class
A shares, and effective on August 4, 2017, all remaining Class B shares were redeemed. Effective March 9, 2018, the shares held by Class K shareholders were exchanged for Class Adv shares of the same Fund for all Funds except Columbia Small Cap
Index Fund. Effective on the same date, Class K shares of Columbia Small Cap Index Fund were exchanged for Class Inst2 shares of the same Fund. Class K shares representing the Investment Manager's initial capital were allowed to be redeemed, instead
of exchanged, on the same date.
Sales
Charge Waivers
Front-End Sales Charge
Waivers*
The following information is in addition to the
description in the Fund’s prospectus of front-end sales charge waivers applicable to Class A, Class E and Class V shares. The following categories of investors may buy Class A, Class E
(a)
and Class V shares at net asset value, without payment of any front-end sales charge that would otherwise apply:
■
|
Current or retired
fund Board members, officers or employees of the funds or Columbia Management or its affiliates
(b)
;
|
■
|
Current or retired
Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc. (Ameriprise Financial Services) financial advisors and employees of such financial advisors
(b)
;
|
■
|
Registered
representatives and other employees of affiliated or unaffiliated financial intermediaries (and their immediate family members and related trusts or other entities owned by the foregoing) having a selling agreement with the Distributor
(b)
;
|
■
|
Registered
broker-dealer firms that have entered into a dealer agreement with the Distributor may buy Class A shares without paying a front-end sales charge for their investment account only;
|
■
|
Portfolio managers
employed by subadvisers of the funds
(b)
;
|
■
|
Partners and
employees of outside legal counsel to the funds or to the funds’ directors or trustees who regularly provide advice and services to the funds, or to their directors or trustees;
|
■
|
Direct rollovers (
i.e.
, rollovers of fund shares and not reinvestments of redemption proceeds) from qualified employee benefit plans, provided that the rollover involves a transfer to Class A shares in the same fund;
|
■
|
Employees or
partners of Columbia Wanger Asset Management, LLC;
|
■
|
Separate accounts
established and maintained by an insurance company which are exempt from registration under Section 3(c)(11);
|
■
|
At a fund’s
discretion, front-end sales charges may be waived for shares issued in plans of reorganization, such as mergers, asset acquisitions and exchange offers, to which the fund is a party;
|
■
|
Purchases
by registered representatives and employees (and their immediate family members and related trusts or other entities owned by the foregoing (referred to as “Related Persons”)) of Ameriprise Financial Services and its affiliates;
provided that with respect to employees (and their Related Persons) of an affiliate of Ameriprise Financial, such persons must make purchases through an account held at Ameriprise Financial or its affiliates.
|
Purchases of Class A and Class V shares may be made
at net asset value if they are made as follows:
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
S-1
|
■
|
Through or under a
wrap fee product or other investment product sponsored by a financial intermediary that charges an account management fee or other managed agency/asset allocation accounts or programs involving fee-based compensation arrangements that have or that
clear trades through a financial intermediary that has a selling agreement with the Distributor;
|
■
|
Through state
sponsored college savings plans established under Section 529 of the Internal Revenue Code;
|
■
|
Through banks,
trust companies and thrift institutions, acting as fiduciaries; or
|
■
|
Through
“employee benefit plans” created under Section 401(a), 401(k), 457 and 403(b), and qualified deferred compensation plans, that have a plan level or omnibus account maintained with the Fund or the Transfer Agent and transact directly with
the Fund or the Transfer Agent through a third-party administrator or third-party recordkeeper. This waiver does not apply to accounts held through commissionable brokerage platforms.
|
*
|
Any shareholder with a
Direct-at-Fund account (i.e., shares held directly with the Fund through the Transfer Agent) that is eligible to purchase shares without a front-end sales charge by virtue of having qualified for a previous waiver may continue to purchase shares
without a front-end sales charge if they no longer qualify under a category described in the prospectus or in this section. Otherwise, you must qualify for a front-end sales charge waiver described in the prospectus or in this section.
|
(a)
|
The Funds no longer accept
investments from new or existing investors in Class E shares, except by existing Class E and former Class F shareholders who opened and funded their account prior to September 22, 2006 that may continue to invest in Class E shares (Class F shares
automatically converted to Class E shares on July 17, 2017). See the prospectus offering Class E shares of Large Cap Growth Fund (a series of CFST I) for details.
|
(b)
|
Including their spouses or
domestic partners, children or step-children, parents, step-parents or legal guardians, and their spouse’s or domestic partner’s parents, step-parents, or legal guardians.
|
Contingent Deferred Sales Charge Waivers (Class A,
Class C, Class E and Class V Shares)
For purposes of
calculating a CDSC, the start of the holding period is generally the first day of the month in which your purchase was made.
Shareholders won’t pay a CDSC on redemption of
Class A, Class C, Class E and Class V shares:
■
|
In the event of
the shareholder’s death;
|
■
|
For which no sales
commission or transaction fee was paid to an authorized financial intermediary at the time of purchase;
|
■
|
Purchased through
reinvestment of dividend and capital gain distributions;
|
■
|
That result from
required minimum distributions taken from retirement accounts upon the shareholder’s attainment of age 70½;
|
■
|
That result from
returns of excess contributions made to retirement plans or individual retirement accounts, so long as the financial intermediary returns the applicable portion of any commission paid by the Distributor;
|
■
|
Of Class A shares
of a fund initially purchased by an employee benefit plan;
|
■
|
Other than Class A
shares of a fund initially purchased by an employee benefit plan that are not connected with a plan level termination;
|
■
|
In connection with
the fund’s Small Account Policy (as described in the prospectus); and
|
■
|
At a fund’s
discretion, issued in connection with plans of reorganization, including but not limited to mergers, asset acquisitions and exchange offers, to which the fund is a party.
|
Restrictions may apply to certain accounts and
certain transactions. The Distributor may, in its sole discretion, authorize the waiver of the CDSC for additional classes of investors. The Fund may change or cancel these terms at any time. Any change or cancellation applies only to future
purchases.
Class Inst Shares Additional Eligible
Investors
In addition to the categories of Class Inst
investors described in the Fund’s prospectus (other than for the Multi-Manager Strategies Funds), the minimum initial investments in Class Inst shares for the following categories of eligible investors is $2,000 ($1,000 for IRAs, as
applicable):
■
|
Any client of Bank
of America or one of its subsidiaries buying shares through an asset management company, trust, fiduciary, retirement plan administration or similar arrangement with Bank of America or the subsidiary.
|
■
|
Any employee (or
family member of an employee) of Bank of America or one of its subsidiaries.
|
■
|
Any investor
buying shares through a Columbia Management state tuition plan organized under Section 529 of the Internal Revenue Code.
|
■
|
Any trustee or
director (or family member of a trustee or director) of a fund distributed by the Distributor.
|
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
S-2
|
■
|
Other than for the
Multi-Manager Strategies Funds, any shareholder (as well as any family member of a shareholder or person listed on an account registration for any account of the shareholder) who holds Class Inst shares of a fund distributed by the Distributor is
eligible to purchase Class Inst shares of other funds distributed by the Distributor, subject to a minimum initial investment of $2,000 ($1,000 for IRAs). If the account in which the shareholder holds Class Inst shares is not eligible to purchase
additional Class Inst shares, the shareholder may purchase Class Inst shares in an account maintained directly with the Transfer Agent, subject to a minimum initial investment of $2,000 ($1,000 for IRAs).
|
Shares of Multi-Manager Strategies Funds
The Multi-Manager Strategies Funds
offer Class A shares and Class Inst shares that are available only through certain wrap fee programs sponsored and/or managed by Ameriprise Financial or its affiliates. The minimum initial investment for Class A shares and Class Inst shares
of the Multi-Manager Strategies Funds
is $100, and each share class has no minimum additional investment. Shares of the Multi-Manager Strategies Funds
are not subject to
any front-end sales charge or CDSC. See the Fund’s prospectus for additional information.
Fund Reorganizations
Class A shares may be issued without any initial sales charge in
connection with the acquisition of cash and securities owned by other investment companies. Any CDSC will be waived in connection with the redemption of shares of the fund if the fund is combined with another fund or in connection with a similar
reorganization transaction.
Rejection of
Purchases
Each fund and the distributor of the funds reserve
the right to reject any offer to purchase shares, in their sole discretion.
Restrictions and Changes in Terms and Conditions
Restrictions may apply to certain accounts and
certain transactions. The Funds and/or the Distributor may change or cancel these terms and conditions at any time. Unless you provide your financial intermediary with information in writing about all of the factors that may count toward available
reductions or waivers of an applicable sales charge, there can be no assurance that you will receive all of the reductions and waivers for which you may be eligible. To the extent your Fund account is held directly with the Fund, you should provide
this information to the Fund when placing your purchase or redemption order. Please see the Fund’s prospectus for more information about sales charge reductions and waivers.
Shares of Solution Series Funds
Shares of Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Solutions Conservative
Portfolio are sold only to the Adaptive Retirement Funds.
Statement
of Additional Information – April 2, 2018
|
S-3
|
PART C. OTHER INFORMATION
Item 28. Exhibits
(a)(1)
|
Second Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust, dated August 10, 2005, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 40 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (a)(1)), filed on September 16, 2005.
|
(a)(2)
|
Amendment No. 1 to Second Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust, effective September 19, 2005, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 40 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (a)(2)), filed on September 16, 2005.
|
(a)(3)
|
Amendment No. 2 to Second Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust, effective December 13, 2017, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 313 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (a)(3)), filed on January 16, 2018.
|
(a)(4)
|
Amendment No. 3 to Second Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust, effective March 7, 2018, is filed herewith as Exhibit (a)(4) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 318 to Registration
Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A.
|
(b)
|
Amended and Restated
By-laws
of the Registrant, effective October 20, 2015, are incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 248 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (b)), filed on December 22, 2015.
|
(d)(1)
|
Amended and Restated Management Agreement, as of April 25, 2016, between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC, Columbia Funds Variable Insurance Trust and the Registrant, is incorporated by reference to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 257 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(1)), filed on April 27, 2016.
|
(d)(1)(i)
|
Schedule A and Schedule B, as of July 1, 2017, to the Management Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC, Columbia Funds Variable Insurance Trust and the Registrant, as of April 25,
2016, are incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 299 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit
(d)(1)(i)), filed on July 28, 2017.
|
(d)(2)
|
Amended and Restated Management Agreement, as of October 25, 2016, between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC, Columbia Funds Variable Insurance Trust and the Registrant, effective June 16, 2015, is
incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 68 to Registration Statement
No. 033-14954
of Columbia Funds Variable Insurance Trust on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(2)), filed on October 31, 2016.
|
(d)(2)(i)
|
Schedule A and Schedule B, as of December 13, 2017, to the Management Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC, Columbia Funds Variable Insurance Trust and the Registrant, as of
October 25, 2016, are incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 316 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(2)(i)), filed on February 27, 2018.
|
(d)(3)
|
Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and AQR Capital Management, LLC, dated March 7, 2012, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 196 to Registration
Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(3)), filed on May 30, 2014.
|
(d)(3)(i)
|
Addendum, dated March 7, 2012, to the Subadvisory Agreement, dated March 7, 2012, between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and AQR Capital Management, LLC on behalf of Multi-Manager Alternative
Strategies Fund is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 196 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit
(d)(3)(1)), filed on May 30, 2014.
|
(d)(3)(ii)
|
Amendment No. 1, dated August 18, 2016 to the Subadvisory Agreement dated March 7, 2012, between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and AQR Capital Management, LLC on behalf of Multi-Manager
Directional Alternative Strategies Fund is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 276 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(3)(ii)), filed on September 30, 2016.
|
(d)(4)
|
Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC, dated March 7, 2012, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment
No. 196 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(4)), filed on May 30, 2014.
|
(d)(4)(i)
|
Amendment No.1, dated June 10, 2015, to the Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC, dated March 7, 2012, is
incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 231 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(6)(i)), filed
on June 29, 2015.
|
(d)(5)
|
Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and EAM Investors, LLC, dated March 7, 2012, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 196 to Registration
Statement No. 99356 of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(5)), filed on May 30, 2014.
|
(d)(6)
|
Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and PGIM, Inc., the asset management arm of Prudential Financial, dated March 9, 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 259 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(6)), filed on May 16, 2016.
|
(d)(7)
|
Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and TCW Investment Management Company LLC, dated February 6, 2013, last amended January 25, 2017, is incorporated by reference to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 293 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(7)), filed on March 29, 2017.
|
(d)(7)(i)
|
Addendum Authorization to Enter Into
Over-The-Counter
And/Or Exchange Traded Derivatives between Columbia Management Investment
Advisers, LLC and TCW Investment Management Company LLC, dated March 7, 2012, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 196 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the
Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(7)(1)), filed on May 30, 2014.
|
(d)(8)
|
Subadvisory Agreement among Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Threadneedle International Limited, dated March 5, 2014, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 236 to
Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(10)), filed on August 26, 2015.
|
(d)(8)(i)
|
Amendment No. 1, dated December 19, 2014, to the Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Threadneedle International Limited is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 236 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(10)(i)), filed on August 26, 2015.
|
(d)(8)(ii)
|
Amendment No. 2, dated March 4, 2015, to the Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Threadneedle International Limited is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 236 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(10)(ii)), filed on August 26, 2015.
|
(d)(8)(iii)
|
Amendment No. 3, dated June 10, 2015, to the Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Threadneedle International Limited is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 236 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(10)(iii)), filed on August 26, 2015.
|
(d)(8)(iv)
|
Addendum, dated December 19, 2014, to the Subadvisory Agreement, dated March 5, 2014, between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Threadneedle International Limited, pertaining to CDARF1 Offshore
Fund Ltd., a subsidiary of Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 236 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(10)(iv)), filed on August 26, 2015.
|
(d)(8)(v)
|
Addendum, dated December 19, 2014, to the Subadvisory Agreement, dated March 5, 2014, between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Threadneedle International Limited, pertaining to CDARF2 Offshore
Fund Ltd., a subsidiary of Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 236 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(10)(v)), filed on August 26, 2015.
|
(d)(8)(vi)
|
Addendum, dated December 19, 2014, to the Subadvisory Agreement, dated March 5, 2014, between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Threadneedle International Limited, pertaining to CDARF3 Offshore
Fund Ltd., a subsidiary of Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 236 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(10)(vi)), filed on August 26, 2015.
|
(d)(8)(vii)
|
Addendum, dated December 19, 2014, to the Subadvisory Agreement, dated March 5, 2014, between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Threadneedle International Limited, pertaining to CAAF Offshore
Fund Ltd., a subsidiary of Columbia Alternative Beta Fund, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 236 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(10)(vii)), filed on August 26, 2015.
|
(d)(9)
|
Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Water Island Capital, LLC, dated March 7, 2012, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 196 to Registration
Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(9)), filed on May 30, 2014.
|
(d)(10)
|
Delegation Agreement, dated March 7, 2012, between Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC and Real Estate Management Services Group, LLC is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment
No. 196 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(10)), filed on May 30, 2014.
|
(d)(11)
|
Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Conestoga Capital Advisors, LLC, dated June 11, 2014, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 205 to
Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(11)), filed on August 28, 2014.
|
(d)(12)
|
Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Loomis, Sayles and Company, L.P., dated December 4, 2013, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 196 to
Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(12)), filed on May 30, 2014.
|
(d)(12)(i)
|
Amendment No.1, dated March 9, 2016, to the Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Loomis, Sayles and Company, L.P., dated December 4, 2013, is incorporated by reference
to Post-Effective Amendment No. 256 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(14)(i)), filed on April 11, 2016.
|
(d)(13)
|
Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and BMO Asset Management Corp., dated October 20, 2015, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 243 to
Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(16)), filed on October 26, 2015.
|
(d)(13)(i)
|
Amendment No.1, as of May 1, 2017, to the Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and BMO Asset Management Corp., dated October 20, 2015, is incorporated by reference to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 295 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(13)(i)), filed on April 26, 2017.
|
(d)(14)
|
Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Boston Partners Global Investors Inc., on behalf of Multi-Manager Directional Alternative Strategies Fund, dated August 18, 2016, is
incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 276 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(15)), filed on
September 30, 2016.
|
(d)(15)
|
Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Analytic Investors, LLC, on behalf of Multi-Manager Directional Alternative Strategies Fund, dated October 3, 2016, is incorporated by
reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 277 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(16)), filed on October 3,
2016.
|
(d)(16)
|
Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Los Angeles Capital Management and Equity Research, Inc., on behalf of Multi-Manager Growth Strategies Fund, effective February 7,
2017, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 288 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(16)),
filed on February 7, 2017.
|
(d)(17)
|
Subadvisory Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Manulife Asset Management (US) LLC, on behalf of Multi-Manager Alternative Strategies Fund, effective September 13, 2017, is
incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 304 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(17)), filed on
September 13, 2017.
|
(d)(18)
|
Management Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and CAAF Offshore Fund, Ltd., a subsidiary of Columbia Alternative Beta Fund, effective October 1, 2015, is incorporated by reference to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 239 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(18)), filed on September 28, 2015.
|
(d)(19)
|
Management Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and CDARF1 Offshore Fund, Ltd., a subsidiary of Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund, effective October 1, 2015, is incorporated by
reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 239 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(19)), filed on
September 28, 2015.
|
(d)(20)
|
Management Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and CDARF2 Offshore Fund, Ltd., a subsidiary of Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund, effective October 1, 2015, is incorporated by
reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 239 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(20)), filed on
September 28, 2015.
|
(d)(21)
|
Management Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and CDARF3 Offshore Fund, Ltd., a subsidiary of Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund, effective October 1, 2015, is incorporated by
reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 239 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(21)), filed on
September 28, 2015.
|
(d)(22)
|
Management Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and ASGM Offshore Fund, Ltd., a subsidiary of Multi-Manager Alternative Strategies Fund, effective January 1, 2016, is incorporated by
reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 248 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(22)), filed on
December 22, 2015.
|
(d)(23)
|
Management Agreement between Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and ASMF Offshore Fund, Ltd., a subsidiary of Multi-Manager Alternative Strategies Fund, effective January 1, 2016, is incorporated by
reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 248 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (d)(23)), filed on
December 22, 2015.
|
(e)(1)
|
Amended and Restated Distribution Agreement by and between Registrant and Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc., dated March 1, 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment
No. 256 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (e)(1)), filed on April 11, 2016.
|
(e)(1)(i)
|
Restated Schedule I, effective December 13, 2017, and Schedule II to Amended and Restated Distribution Agreement by and between the Registrant and Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc., dated
March 1, 2016, are incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 316 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (e)(1)(i)), filed on February 27, 2018.
|
(e)(2)
|
Form of Mutual Fund Sales Agreement is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 293 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (e)(2)), filed on March 29, 2017.
|
(f)
|
Form of Deferred Compensation Agreement is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 196 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (f)), filed on May 30, 2014.
|
(g)(1)
|
Second Amended and Restated Master Global Custody Agreement between certain Funds and JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., dated March 7, 2011, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 124 to
Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (g)(2)), filed on April 29, 2011.
|
(g)(2)
|
Addendum to Master Global Custody Agreement (related to Multi-Manager Alternative Strategies Fund, Multi-Manager Total Return Bond Strategies Fund, Multi-Manager Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund and Multi-Manager Growth
Strategies Fund), dated March 9, 2012, Addendum to Master Global Custody Agreement (related to Columbia Adaptive Risk Allocation Fund), dated June 11, 2012, and Addendum to Master Global Custody Agreement (related to Columbia Diversified
Real Return Fund), dated February 25, 2014, are incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 196 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (g)(2)), filed on May 30, 2014.
|
(g)(3)
|
Addendum to Master Global Custody Agreement (related to Columbia Alternative Beta Fund and Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund), dated January 15, 2015, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 221 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (g)(3)), filed on February 27, 2015.
|
(g)(4)
|
Addendum to Master Global Custody Agreement (related to Columbia Multi-Asset Income Fund and Columbia U.S. Social Bond Fund), dated March 18, 2015, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment
No. 223 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (g)(4)), filed on March 24, 2015.
|
(g)(5)
|
Side letter (related to the China Connect Service on behalf of Columbia Emerging Markets Fund, Columbia Greater China Fund, Columbia Pacific/Asia Fund and Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund), dated March 6,
2018, to the Second Amended and Restated Master Global Custody Agreement with JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., dated March 7, 2011, is filed herewith as Exhibit (g)(5) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 318 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A.
|
(g)(6)
|
Addendum to Master Global Custody Agreement (related to Multi-Manager Directional Alternative Strategies Fund), is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 276 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (g)(6)), filed on September 30, 2016.
|
(g)(7)
|
Addendum to Master Global Custody Agreement (related to Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2020 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2030 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2040 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2050 Fund,
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2060 Fund, Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio) is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 308 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (g)(7)), filed on October 20, 2017.
|
(g)(8)
|
Addendum to Master Global Custody Agreement (related to Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund and Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund)
is filed herewith as Exhibit (g)(8) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 318 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A.
|
(g)(9)
|
Addendum to Master Global Custody Agreement (related to Multi-Manager International Equity Strategies Fund) is filed herewith as Exhibit (g)(9) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 318 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A.
|
(g)(10)
|
Addendum, effective April 4, 2016, to the Second Amended and Restated Master Global Custody Agreement with JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., dated March 7, 2011, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 297 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (g)(7)), filed on May 30, 2017.
|
(h)(1)
|
Amended and Restated Transfer and Dividend Disbursing Agent Agreement by and between the Registrant and Columbia Management Investment Services Corp., dated March 1, 2016, is incorporated by reference to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 295 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (h)(1)), filed on April 26, 2017.
|
(h)(1)(i)
|
Schedule A and Schedule B, effective December 13, 2017, to the Amended and Restated Transfer and Dividend Disbursing Agent Agreement by and between the Registrant and Columbia Management Investment Services Corp.,
dated March 1, 2016, are incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 316 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (h)(1)(i)), filed on February 27, 2018.
|
(h)(2)
|
Form of Indemnification Agreement is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 46 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (h)(6)), filed on March 24, 2006.
|
(h)(3)
|
Amended and Restated Fee Waiver and Expense Cap Agreement, effective July 1, 2016, by and among Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC, Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc., Columbia Management
Investment Services Corp., the Registrant and Columbia Funds Variable Insurance Trust is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 264 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the
Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (h)(4)), filed on June 29, 2016.
|
(h)(3)(i)
|
Restated Schedule A, effective December 13, 2017, to the Amended and Restated Fee Waiver and Expense Cap Agreement, effective July 1, 2016, by and among Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC, Columbia
Management Investment Distributors, Inc., Columbia Management Investment Services Corp., the Registrant and Columbia Funds Variable Insurance Trust is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 316 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (h)(3)(i)), filed on February 27, 2018.
|
(h)(4)
|
Agreement and Plan of Reorganization, dated October 9, 2012, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 175 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (h)(8)), filed on May 30, 2013.
|
(h)(5)
|
Agreement and Plan of Reorganization, dated December 20, 2010, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 15 to Registration Statement
No. 333-146374
of Columbia Funds Variable Series Trust II on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (h)(9)), filed on April 29, 2011.
|
(h)(6)
|
Agreement and Plan of Reorganization, dated December 17, 2015, is incorporated by reference to Registration Statement
No. 333-208706
of Columbia Funds Series Trust on
Form
N-14
(Exhibit (4)), filed on December 22, 2015.
|
(h)(7)
|
Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, as of December 9, 2014, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 225 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (h)(14)), filed on April 16, 2015.
|
(h)(7)(i)
|
Restated Credit Agreement, as of December 8, 2015, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 256 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the
Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (h)(9)(i)), filed on April 11, 2016.
|
(h)(7)(ii)
|
Restated Credit Agreement, as of December 6, 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 297 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the
Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (h)(8)(ii)), filed on May 30, 2017.
|
(h)(7)(iii)
|
Amendment to the Credit Agreement, dated April 25, 2017, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 297 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of
the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (h)(8)(iii)), filed on May 30, 2017.
|
(i)(1)
|
Opinion of Counsel of Ropes & Gray LLP is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 40 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant
on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (i)), filed on September 16, 2005.
|
(i)(2)
|
Opinion of Counsel of Ropes & Gray LLP is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 68 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant
on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (i)(2)), filed on January 16, 2008.
|
(i)(3)
|
Opinion of Counsel of Ropes & Gray LLP is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 81 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant
on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (i)(3)), filed on November 25, 2008.
|
(i)(4)
|
Opinion of Counsel of Ropes & Gray LLP is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 95 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant
on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (i)(4)), filed on November 20, 2009.
|
(i)(5)
|
Opinion of Counsel of Ropes & Gray LLP is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 143 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant
on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (i)(5)), filed on March 14, 2012.
|
(i)(6)
|
Opinion of Counsel of Ropes & Gray LLP, with respect to Columbia Adaptive Risk Allocation Fund, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 153 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (I)(6)), filed on June 15, 2012.
|
(i)(7)
|
Opinion of Counsel of Ropes & Gray LLP, with respect to Columbia Diversified Real Return Fund, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 190 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (i)(7)), filed on March 10, 2014.
|
(i)(8)
|
Opinion of Counsel of Ropes & Gray LLP, with respect to Columbia Alternative Beta Fund and Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 219 to
Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (j)(8)), filed on January 27, 2015.
|
(i)(9)
|
Opinion of Counsel of Ropes & Gray LLP, with respect to Columbia Multi-Asset Income Fund and Columbia U.S. Social Bond Fund, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 223 to Registration
Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (i)(9)), filed on March 24, 2015.
|
(i)(10)
|
Opinion of Counsel of Ropes & Gray LLP, with respect to Multi-Manager Directional Alternative Strategies Fund, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 276 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (i)(10)), filed on September 30, 2016.
|
(i)(11)
|
Opinion of Counsel of Ropes & Gray LLP, with respect to Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2020 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2030 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2040 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2050
Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2060 Fund, Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio and Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 308 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (i)(11)), filed on October 20, 2017.
|
(i)(12)
|
Opinion of Counsel of Ropes & Gray LLP, with respect to Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund and Columbia Adaptive Retirement
2055 Fund, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 313 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit
(i)(12)), filed on January 16, 2018.
|
(j)(1)
|
Consent of Morningstar, Inc., is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 21 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (11)(b)), filed on August 30, 1996.
|
(j)(2)
|
Consent of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP: Not Applicable.
|
(k)
|
Omitted Financial Statements: Not Applicable.
|
(l)
|
Initial Capital Agreement: Not Applicable.
|
(m)(1)
|
Amended and Restated Distribution Plan, as of July 18, 2017, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 299 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (m)(1)), filed on July 28, 2017.
|
(m)(2)
|
Amended and Restated Shareholder Servicing Plan, as of July 18, 2017, for certain Fund share classes of the Registrant, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 299 to Registration
Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (m)(2)), filed on July 28, 2017.
|
(m)(3)
|
Amended and Restated Shareholder Services Plan, as of June 14, 2017, for Registrants Class V (formerly known as Class T) shares is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 299
to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (m)(3)), filed on July 28, 2017.
|
(m)(4)
|
Shareholder Servicing Plan Implementation Agreement, amended and restated as of June 14, 2017, for Registrants Class V (formerly known as Class T) shares between the Registrant and Columbia
Management Investment Distributors, Inc., is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 299 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (m)(4)), filed on July 28, 2017.
|
(m)(4)(i)
|
Restated Schedule I, effective June 14, 2017, to Shareholder Servicing Plan Implementation Agreement for Registrants Class V (formerly known as Class T) shares between the Registrant and Columbia
Management Investment Distributors, Inc., is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 299 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (m)(4)(i)), filed on July 28, 2017.
|
(m)(5)
|
Shareholder Servicing Plan Implementation Agreement for certain Fund share classes of the Registrant between the Registrant, Columbia Funds Series Trust and Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc., is
incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 113 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (m)(4)), filed on
November 24, 2010.
|
(m)(5)(i)
|
Restated Schedule I, dated July 18, 2017, to Shareholder Servicing Plan Implementation Agreement, between the Registrant, Columbia Funds Series Trust and Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc. is
incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 168 to Registration Statement
No. 333-89661
of Columbia Funds Series Trust on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit
(m)(4)(i)), filed on July 28, 2017.
|
(n)
|
Rule 18f 3 Multi-Class Plan, amended and restated as of November 1, 2017, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 309 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (n)), filed on October 30, 2017.
|
(p)(1)
|
Code of Ethics of Columbia Atlantic Board Funds, effective February 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 256 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(1)), filed on April 11, 2016.
|
(p)(2)
|
Ameriprise Global Asset Management Personal Trading Account Dealing and Code of Ethics Policy, effective December 27, 2017, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 315 to Registration
Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(2)), filed on February 1, 2018.
|
(p)(3)
|
Code of Ethics of AQR Capital Management, LLC (a subadviser of Multi-Manager Alternative Strategies Fund and Multi-Manager Directional Alternative Strategies Fund), effective February 2016, is incorporated by reference
to Post-Effective Amendment No. 276 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(3)), filed on September 30, 2016.
|
(p)(4)
|
Code of Ethics of Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC (a subadviser of Multi-Manager Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund), dated May 20, 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment
No. 295 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(4)), filed on April 26, 2017.
|
(p)(5)
|
Code of Ethics and Standards of Business Conduct of EAM Investors, LLC (a subadviser of Multi-Manager Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund), effective July 1, 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 295 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(5)), filed on April 26, 2017.
|
(p)(6)
|
Code of Ethics of Prudential Financial (for PGIM, Inc., a subadviser of Multi-Manager Total Return Bond Strategies Fund), dated January 9, 2017, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 295
to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(6)), filed on April 26, 2017.
|
(p)(7)
|
Code of Ethics of TCW Investment Management Company LLC (a subadviser of Multi-Manager Alternative Strategies Fund and Multi-Manager Total Return Bond Strategies Fund), dated March 13, 2017, is incorporated by
reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 295 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(7)), filed on April 26,
2017.
|
(p)(8)
|
Code of Ethics of Water Island Capital, LLC (a subadviser of Multi-Manager Alternative Strategies Fund), dated April 2017, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 295 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(8)), filed on April 26, 2017.
|
(p)(9)
|
Code of Ethics of Real Estate Management Services Group, LLC (provides advisory services as delegated by Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC, a subadviser of Multi-Manager Small Cap Equity Strategies
Fund), dated July 1, 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 295 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(9)), filed on April 26, 2017.
|
(p)(10)
|
Code of Ethics of Conestoga Capital Advisors, LLC (a subadviser of Multi-Manager Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund), dated July 19, 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 295 to
Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(10)), filed on April 26, 2017.
|
(p)(11)
|
Code of Ethics of Loomis, Sayles and Company, L.P. (a subadviser of Multi-Manager Growth Strategies Fund and Multi-Manager Total Return Bond Strategies Fund), effective January 14, 2000, as amended August 11,
2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 295 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(11)),
filed on April 26, 2017.
|
(p)(12)
|
Code of Ethics of BMO Asset Management Corp. (a subadviser of Multi-Manager Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund), dated December 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 295 to Registration
Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(12)), filed on April 26, 2017.
|
(p)(13)
|
Code of Ethics of Boston Partners Global Investors Inc. (a subadviser of Multi-Manager Directional Alternative Strategies Fund), effective March 1, 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment
No. 276 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(14)), filed on September 30, 2016.
|
(p)(14)
|
Code of Ethics of Wells Capital Management, Inc. (for Analytic Investors, LLC, a subadviser of Multi-Manager Directional Alternative Strategies Fund), effective September 30, 2016, is incorporated by reference to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 278 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(15)), filed on October 5, 2016.
|
(p)(15)
|
Code of Ethics of Los Angeles Capital Management and Equity Research, Inc. (a subadviser of Multi-Manager Growth Strategies Fund), effective December 30, 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 288 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(15)), filed on February 7, 2017.
|
(p)(16)
|
Code of Ethics of Manulife Asset Management (US) LLC (a subadviser of Multi-Manager Alternative Strategies Fund), effective September 1, 2015, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 304
to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (p)(16)), filed on September 13, 2017.
|
(q)(1)
|
Trustees Power of Attorney, dated January 1, 2018, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 315 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of
the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (q)(1)), filed on February 1, 2018.
|
(q)(2)
|
Power of Attorney for Christopher O. Petersen, dated February 16, 2015, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 221 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (q)(7)), filed on February 27, 2015.
|
(q)(3)
|
Power of Attorney for Michael G. Clarke, dated May 23, 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 261 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (q)(3)), filed on May 27, 2016.
|
(q)(4)
|
Power of Attorney for Amy K. Johnson, dated May 11, 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 261 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of
the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (q)(4)), filed on May 27, 2016.
|
(q)(5)
|
Power of Attorney for Anthony P. Haugen, dated May 11, 2016, is incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 261 to Registration Statement
No. 2-99356
of the Registrant on Form
N-1A
(Exhibit (q)(5)), filed on May 27, 2016.
|
Item 29.
Persons Controlled by or under Common Control with the Registrant
Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC (the investment manager or Columbia
Management), as sponsor of the Columbia funds, may make initial capital investments in Columbia funds (seed accounts). Columbia Management also serves as investment manager of certain Columbia
funds-of-funds
that invest primarily in shares of affiliated funds (the underlying funds). Columbia Management does not make initial capital investments or invest in underlying funds for the purpose of
exercising control. However, since these ownership interests may be significant, in excess of 25%, such that Columbia Management may be deemed to control certain Columbia funds, procedures have been put in place to assure that public shareholders
determine the outcome of all actions taken at shareholder meetings. Specifically, Columbia Management (which votes proxies for the seed accounts) and the Boards of Trustees of the affiliated
funds-of-funds
(which votes proxies for the affiliated
funds-of-funds)
vote on each proposal in the same proportion as the vote
of the direct public shareholders vote; provided, however, that if there are no direct public shareholders of an underlying fund or if direct public shareholders represent only a minority interest in an underlying fund, the Fund may cast votes in
accordance with instructions from the independent members of the Board.
Item 30. Indemnification
Article Five of the Bylaws of Registrant provides that Registrant shall indemnify each of its trustees and officers (including persons who serve at
Registrants request as directors, officers or trustees of another organization in which Registrant has any interest as a shareholder, creditor or otherwise) who are not employees or officers of any investment adviser to Registrant or any
affiliated person thereof and its chief compliance officer, regardless of whether such person is an employee or officer of any investment adviser to Registrant or any affiliated person thereof, and may indemnify each of its trustees and officers
(including persons who serve at Registrants request as directors, officers or trustees of another organization in which Registrant has any interest as a shareholder, creditor or otherwise) (i.e., those who are employees or officers of any
investment adviser to Registrant or any affiliated person thereof) (Covered Persons) under specified circumstances, all as more fully set forth in the Registrants Bylaws, which have been filed as an exhibit to this registration statement.
Section 17(h) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (1940 Act) provides that no instrument pursuant to which Registrant is organized or administered
shall contain any provision which protects or purports to protect any trustee or officer of Registrant against any liability to Registrant or its shareholders to which he or she would otherwise be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith,
gross negligence, or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of his or her office. In accordance with Section 17(h) of the 1940 Act, no Covered Person is indemnified under the Bylaws against any liability to Registrant or its
shareholders by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of the Covered Persons office.
Pursuant to the Distribution Agreement, Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc. agrees to indemnify the Registrant, its officers and trustees
against claims, demands, liabilities and expenses under specified circumstances, all as more fully set forth in the Registrants Distribution Agreement, which has been filed as an exhibit to the registration statement. The Registrant may be
party to other contracts that include indemnification provisions for the benefit of the Registrants trustees and officers.
The trustees and officers of the Registrant and the personnel of the Registrants investment adviser and
principal underwriter are insured under an errors and omissions liability insurance policy. Registrants investment adviser, Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC, maintains investment advisory professional liability insurance to insure
it, for the benefit of Registrant and its
non-interested
trustees, against loss arising out of any effort, omission, or breach of any duty owed to Registrant or any series of Registrant by Columbia Management
Investment Advisers, LLC.
Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act of 1933 may be permitted to trustees, officers and
controlling persons of the Registrant by the Registrant pursuant to the Registrants organizational instruments or otherwise, the Registrant is aware that in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), such indemnification is
against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act of 1933 and, therefore, is unenforceable.
Item 31. Business and Other Connections of the
Investment Adviser
To the knowledge of the Registrant, none of the directors or officers of Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC (the
Investment Manager), the Registrants investment adviser, or the subadviser to a series of the Registrant, except as set forth below, are or have been, at any time during the Registrants past two fiscal years, engaged in any other
business, profession, vocation or employment of a substantial nature.
|
(a)
|
The Investment Manager, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial, Inc. performs investment advisory services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of the Investment
Manager and certain of its officers is set forth in the Prospectuses and Statements of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolios and is incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business of the Investment Manager and
the directors and principal executive officers of the Investment Manager is also included in the Form ADV filed by the Investment Manager (formerly, RiverSource Investments, LLC) with the SEC pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-25943),
which is incorporated herein by reference. In addition to their position with the Investment Manager, certain directors and officers of the Investment Manager also hold various positions with,
and engage in business for, Ameriprise Financial, Inc. or its other subsidiaries.
|
|
(b)
|
Analytic Investors, LLC performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of Analytic Investors, LLC and certain of its officers is set forth in the
Prospectuses and Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by Analytic Investors, LLC and is incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business of Analytic Investors, LLC and the directors and
principal executive officers of Analytic Investors, LLC is also included in the Form ADV filed by Analytic Investors, LLC with the SEC pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-7082),
which is incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
(c)
|
AQR Capital Management, LLC performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of AQR Capital Management, LLC and certain of its officers is set
forth in the Prospectuses and Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by AQR Capital Management, LLC and is incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business of AQR Capital Management, LLC
and the directors and principal executive officers of AQR Capital Management, LLC is also included in the Form ADV filed by AQR Capital Management, LLC with the SEC pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-55543),
which is incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
(d)
|
Boston Partners Global Investors, Inc. performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of Boston Partners Global Investors, Inc. and certain of
its officers is set forth in the Prospectuses and Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by Boston Partners Global Investors, Inc. and is incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business
of Boston Partners Global Investors, Inc. and the directors and principal executive officers of Boston Partners Global Investors, Inc. is also included in the Form ADV filed by Boston Partners Global Investors, Inc. with the SEC pursuant to the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-61786),
which is incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
(e)
|
BMO Asset Management Corp. performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of BMO Asset Management Corp. and certain of its officers is set forth
in the Prospectuses and Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by BMO Asset Management Corp. and is incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business of BMO Asset Management Corp. and the
directors and principal executive officers of BMO Asset Management Corp. is also included in the Form ADV filed by BMO Asset Management Corp. with the SEC pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-35533),
which is incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
(f)
|
Conestoga Capital Advisors, LLC performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of Conestoga Capital Advisors, LLC and certain of its officers is
set forth in the Prospectuses and Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by Conestoga Capital Advisors, LLC and is incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business of Conestoga Capital
Advisors, LLC and the directors and principal executive officers of Conestoga Capital Advisors, LLC is also included in the Form ADV filed by Conestoga Capital Advisors, LLC with the SEC pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-60133),
which is incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
(g)
|
Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher &
Co., LLC and certain of its officers is set forth in the Prospectuses and Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC and is incorporated herein by
reference. Information about the business of Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC and the directors and principal executive officers of Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC is also included in the Form ADV filed by
Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., LLC with the SEC pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-62895),
which is incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
(h)
|
EAM Investors, LLC performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of EAM Investors, LLC and certain of its officers is set forth in the
Prospectuses and Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by EAM Investors, LLC and is incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business of EAM Investors, LLC and the directors and principal
executive officers of EAM Investors, LLC is also included in the Form ADV filed by EAM Investors, LLC with the SEC pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-70305),
which is
incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
(i)
|
Loomis, Sayles and Company, L.P. performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of Loomis, Sayles and Company, L.P. and certain of its officers
is set forth in the Prospectuses and Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by Loomis, Sayles and Company, L.P. and is incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business of Loomis, Sayles
and Company, L.P. and the directors and principal executive officers of Loomis, Sayles and Company, L.P. is also included in the Form ADV filed by Loomis, Sayles and Company, L.P. with the SEC pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-170),
which is incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
(j)
|
Los Angeles Capital Management and Equity Research, Inc. performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of Los Angeles Capital Management and
Equity Research, Inc. and certain of its officers is set forth in the Prospectuses and Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by Los Angeles Capital Management and Equity Research, Inc. and is
incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business of Los Angeles Capital Management and Equity Research, Inc. and the directors and principal executive officers of Los Angeles Capital Management and Equity Research, Inc. is also
included in the Form ADV filed by Los Angeles Capital Management and Equity Research, Inc. with the SEC pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-60934),
which is incorporated herein
by reference.
|
|
(k)
|
Manulife Asset Management (US) LLC performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of Manulife Asset Management (US) LLC and certain of its
officers is set forth in the Prospectuses and Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by Manulife Asset Management (US) LLC and is incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business of
Manulife Asset Management (US) LLC and the directors and principal executive officers of Manulife Asset Management (US) LLC is also included in the Form ADV filed by Manulife Asset Management (US) LLC with the SEC pursuant to the Investment Advisers
Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-42023),
which is incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
(l)
|
PGIM, Inc. performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of PGIM, Inc. and certain of its officers is set forth in the Prospectuses and
Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by PGIM, Inc. and is incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business of PGIM, Inc. and the directors and principal executive officers of PGIM, Inc.
is also included in the Form ADV filed by PGIM, Inc. with the SEC pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-22808),
which is incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
(m)
|
TCW Investment Management Company LLC performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of TCW Investment Management Company LLC and certain of its
officers is set forth in the Prospectuses and Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by TCW Investment Management Company LLC and is incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business of
TCW Investment Management Company LLC and the directors and principal executive officers of TCW Investment Management Company LLC is also included in the Form ADV filed by TCW Investment Management Company LLC with the SEC pursuant to the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-29075),
which is incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
(n)
|
Threadneedle International Limited performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of Threadneedle International Limited and certain of its
officers is set forth in the Prospectuses and Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by Threadneedle International Limited and is incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business of
Threadneedle International Limited and the directors and principal executive officers of Threadneedle International Limited is also included in the Form ADV filed by Threadneedle International Limited with the SEC pursuant to the Investment Advisers
Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-63196),
which is incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
(o)
|
Water Island Capital, LLC performs investment management services for the Registrant and certain other clients. Information regarding the business of Water Island Capital, LLC and certain of its officers is set forth in
the Prospectuses and Statement of Additional Information of the Registrants portfolio(s) subadvised by Water Island Capital, LLC and is incorporated herein by reference. Information about the business of Water Island Capital, LLC and the
directors and principal executive officers of Water Island Capital, LLC is also included in the Form ADV filed by Water Island Capital, LLC with the SEC pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (File
No. 801-57341),
which is incorporated herein by reference.
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Item 32. Principal
Underwriter
|
(a)
|
Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc. acts as principal underwriter for the following investment companies, including the Registrant:
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|
|
Columbia Acorn Trust; Columbia Funds Series Trust; Columbia Funds Series Trust I; Columbia Funds Series Trust II; Columbia Funds Variable Series Trust II; Columbia Funds Variable Insurance Trust and Wanger Advisors
Trust.
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(b)
|
As to each director, principal officer or partner of Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc.
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|
|
|
|
|
Name and Principal
Business Address*
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|
Position and Offices
with Principal Underwriter
|
|
Positions and Offices
with Registrant
|
|
|
|
William F. Truscott
|
|
Chief Executive Officer
|
|
Board Member, Senior Vice President
|
|
|
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Joseph Kringdon
|
|
President and Head of Intermediary Distribution
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Jeffrey J. Scherman
|
|
Chief Financial Officer
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Michael E. DeFao
|
|
Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Assistant Secretary
|
|
Vice President and Assistant Secretary
|
|
|
|
Stephen O. Buff
|
|
Vice President, Chief Compliance Officer
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
James Bumpus
|
|
Vice President National Sales Manager
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Thomas A. Jones
|
|
Vice President and Head of Strategic Relations
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Gary Rawdon
|
|
Vice President Sales Governance and Administration
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Leslie A. Walstrom
|
|
Vice President and U.S. Head of Marketing
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Daniel J. Beckman
|
|
Vice President and Head of U.S. Retail Product
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Marc Zeitoun
|
|
Vice President, Head of Strategic Beta and Head of Private Client Accounts
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Thomas R. Moore
|
|
Secretary
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Paul B. Goucher
|
|
Vice President and Assistant Secretary
|
|
Senior Vice President and Assistant Secretary
|
|
|
|
Tara W. Tilbury
|
|
Vice President and Assistant Secretary
|
|
Assistant Secretary
|
|
|
|
Nancy W. LeDonne
|
|
Vice President and Assistant Secretary
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Ryan C. Larrenaga
|
|
Vice President and Assistant Secretary
|
|
Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary
|
|
|
|
Joseph L. DAlessandro
|
|
Vice President and Assistant Secretary
|
|
Assistant Secretary
|
|
|
|
Christopher O. Petersen
|
|
Vice President and Assistant Secretary
|
|
President and Principal Executive Officer
|
|
|
|
James E. Brefeld, Jr.
|
|
Treasurer
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Michael Tempesta
|
|
Anti-Money Laundering Officer and Identity Theft Prevention Officer
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Kevin Wasp
|
|
Ombudsman
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Kristin Weisser
|
|
Conflicts Officer
|
|
None
|
*
|
The principal business address of Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc. is 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02110.
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Item 33. Location of Accounts and Records
Persons maintaining physical possession of accounts, books and other documents required to be maintained by Section 31(a) of the 1940 Act and the Rules
thereunder include:
|
|
|
Registrant, 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02110;
|
|
|
|
Registrants investment adviser and administrator, Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC, 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02110;
|
|
|
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Registrants subadviser, Analytic Investors, LLC, 555 West Fifth Street, 50th Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90013;
|
|
|
|
Registrants subadviser, AQR Capital Management, LLC, Two Greenwich Plaza, 3rd Floor, Greenwich, CT 06830;
|
|
|
|
Registrants subadviser, Boston Partners Global Investors, Inc., 909 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10022;
|
|
|
|
Registrants subadviser, BMO Asset Management, Corp., 115 South LaSalle Street, 11
th
Floor, Chicago, IL, 60603;
|
|
|
|
Registrants subadviser, Conestoga Capital Advisors, LLC, 550 East Swedesford Road, Suite 120, Wayne, PA 19087;
|
|
|
|
Registrants subadviser, Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., 565 Fifth Avenue, Suite 2101, New York, NY 10017;
|
|
|
|
Registrants subadviser, EAM Investors, LLC, 2533 South Coast Highway 101, Suite 240,
Cardiff-by-the-Sea,
CA 92007;
|
|
|
|
Registrants subadviser, Loomis, Sayles and Company, L.P., One Financial Center, Boston, MA 02111;
|
|
|
|
Registrants subadviser, Los Angeles Capital Management and Equity Research, Inc., 1150 Santa Monica Blvd., Suite 200, Los Angeles, CA 90025;
|
|
|
|
Registrants subadviser, Manulife Asset Management (US) LLC, 197 Clarendon St # 4, Boston, MA 02116;
|
|
|
|
Registrants subadviser, PGIM, Inc./Prudential Financial, Inc., 655 Broad Street, Newark, NJ 07102;
|
|
|
|
Registrants subadviser, TCW Investment Management Company LLC, 865 South Figueroa Street, Suite 1800, Los Angeles, CA 90017;
|
|
|
|
Registrants subadviser, Threadneedle International Limited, Cannon Place, 78 Cannon Street, London EC4N 6AG, United Kingdom;
|
|
|
|
Registrants subadviser, Water Island Capital, LLC, 41 Madison Avenue, 42nd floor, New York, NY 10010;
|
|
|
|
Registrants provider of advisory service as delegated by DGHM, Real Estate Management Services Group, LLC, 1100 Fifth Avenue South, Suite 305, Naples, FL 34102;
|
|
|
|
Registrants former subadviser, Eaton Vance Management, Two International Place, Boston, MA 02110;
|
|
|
|
Registrants former subadviser, Federated Investment Management Company, Federated Investors Tower, 1001 Liberty Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15222-3779;
|
|
|
|
Registrants former subadviser, Nordea Investment Management North America, Inc., 1211 Avenue of the Americas, 23
rd
Floor, New York, NY;
|
|
|
|
Registrants former subadviser, RS Investment Management Co. LLC, One Bush Street, Suite 900, San Francisco, CA 94104;
|
|
|
|
Registrants former subadviser, Wasatch Advisors Inc, 505 Wakara Way, 3
rd
Floor, Salt Lake City, UT 84108;
|
|
|
|
Registrants principal underwriter, Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc., 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA, 02110;
|
|
|
|
Registrants transfer agent, Columbia Management Investment Services Corp., 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA, 02110;
|
|
|
|
Registrants custodian, JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., 1 Chase Manhattan Plaza 19
th
Floor, New York, NY 10005; and
|
|
|
|
Registrants former custodian, State Street Bank and Trust Company, State Street Financial Center, One Lincoln Street, Boston, MA 02111.
|
In addition, Iron Mountain Records Management is an
off-site
storage
facility housing historical records that are no longer required to be maintained
on-site.
Records stored at this facility include various trading and accounting records, as well as other miscellaneous records.
The address for Iron Mountain Records Management is 920 & 950 Apollo Road, Eagan, MN 55121.
Item 34. Management Services
Not Applicable.
Item 35. Undertakings
Not Applicable.
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant, COLUMBIA FUNDS SERIES TRUST I, certifies
that it meets all the requirements for effectiveness of this Amendment to its Registration Statement under Rule 485(b) under the Securities Act of 1933 and has duly caused this Amendment to its Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by
the undersigned, duly authorized, in the City of Minneapolis, and the State of Minnesota on the 29th day of March, 2018.
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|
|
COLUMBIA FUNDS SERIES TRUST I
|
|
|
By:
|
|
/s/ Christopher O. Petersen
|
|
|
Christopher O. Petersen
President
|
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Amendment to the Registration Statement has been
signed below by the following persons in the capacities indicated on the 29th day of March, 2018.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Signature
|
|
Capacity
|
|
Signature
|
|
Capacity
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Christopher O. Petersen
Christopher O. Petersen
|
|
President
(Principal Executive Officer)
|
|
/s/ John J. Neuhauser*
John J. Neuhauser
|
|
Trustee
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Michael G. Clarke*
Michael G. Clarke
|
|
Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)
Chief Accounting Officer
(Principal Accounting Officer)
|
|
/s/ Patrick J. Simpson*
Patrick J. Simpson
|
|
Trustee
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Douglas A. Hacker*
Douglas A. Hacker
|
|
Chair of the Board
|
|
/s/ William F. Truscott*
William F. Truscott
|
|
Trustee
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Janet L. Carrig*
Janet L. Carrig
|
|
Trustee
|
|
/s/ Anne-Lee Verville*
Anne-Lee Verville
|
|
Trustee
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ Nancy T. Lukitsh*
Nancy T. Lukitsh
|
|
Trustee
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ David M. Moffett*
David M. Moffett
|
|
Trustee
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* By:
|
|
/s/ Joseph DAlessandro
|
Name:
|
|
Joseph DAlessandro**
Attorney-in-fact
|
**
|
Executed by Joseph DAlessandro on behalf of Michael G. Clarke pursuant to a Power of Attorney, dated May 23, 2016 and incorporated by reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 261 to Registration Statement No.
2-99356 of the Registrant on Form N-1A (Exhibit (q)(3)), filed with the Commission on May 27, 2016, and on behalf of each of the Trustees pursuant to a Trustees Power of Attorney, dated January 1, 2018, and incorporated by reference to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 315 to Registration Statement No. 2-99356 of the Registrant on Form N-1A (Exhibit (q)(1)), filed with the Commission on February 1, 2018.
|
Exhibit Index
|
|
|
|
|
(a)(4)
|
|
Amendment No. 3 to Second Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust, effective March 7, 2018
|
|
|
(g)(5)
|
|
Side letter (related to the China Connect Service on behalf of Columbia Emerging Markets Fund, Columbia Greater China Fund, Columbia Pacific/Asia Fund and Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund), dated March 6, 2018, to the
Second Amended and Restated Master Global Custody Agreement with JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., dated March 7, 2011
|
|
|
(g)(8)
|
|
Addendum to Master Global Custody Agreement (related to Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund, Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund and Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund)
|
|
|
(g)(9)
|
|
Addendum to Master Global Custody Agreement (related to Multi-Manager International Equity Strategies Fund)
|
COLUMBIA FUNDS SERIES TRUST I
AMENDMENT NO. 3 TO THE
SECOND AMENDED AND RESTATED AGREEMENT AND DECLARATION OF TRUST
WHEREAS, Section 5 of Article III of the Second Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust (the Declaration of
Trust) of Columbia Funds Series Trust I (the Trust), dated August 10, 2005, as amended from time to time, a copy of which is on file in the Office of the Secretary of The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, authorizes the Trustees
of the Trust to amend the Declaration of Trust to establish, to change or to abolish and rescind the designation of any Series or class of Shares without authorization by vote of the Shareholders of the Trust; and
NOW, THEREFORE, The undersigned, being at least a majority of the Trustees of Columbia Funds Series Trust I, do hereby certify that we have
authorized the renaming of Columbia California
Tax-Exempt
Fund to Columbia Strategic California Municipal Income Fund and Columbia New York
Tax-Exempt
Fund to Columbia
Strategic New York Municipal Income Fund and have authorized the following amendment to said Declaration of Trust:
1. Section 6 of Article III is hereby amended by replacing the text preceding paragraph (a) with the following:
Without limiting the authority of the Trustees set forth in Section 5, inter alia, to establish and designate any further Series or
classes or to modify the rights and preferences of any Series or class, the following Series shall be, and are hereby, established and designated:
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2020 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2025 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2030 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2040 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2050 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2055 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2060 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Risk Allocation Fund
Columbia Alternative Beta Fund
Columbia
AMT-Free
Connecticut Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia
AMT-Free
Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia
AMT-Free
Massachusetts Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia
AMT-Free
New York Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
Columbia
AMT-Free
Oregon Intermediate Muni Bond Fund
CMG Ultra Short Term Bond Fund
Columbia Balanced Fund
Columbia
Bond Fund
Columbia Contrarian Core Fund
Columbia Corporate Income Fund
Columbia Disciplined Small Core Fund
Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund
Columbia Diversified Real Return Fund
Columbia Dividend Income Fund
Columbia Emerging Markets Fund
Columbia Global Dividend Opportunity Fund
Columbia Global Energy and Natural Resources Fund
Columbia Global Technology Growth Fund
Columbia Greater China Fund
Columbia High Yield Municipal Fund
Columbia Large Cap Growth Fund
Columbia Mid Cap Growth Fund
Columbia Multi-Asset Income Fund
Columbia Pacific/Asia Fund
Columbia Real Estate Equity Fund
Columbia Select Large Cap Growth Fund
Columbia Small Cap Growth Fund I
Columbia Small Cap Value Fund I
Columbia Solutions Aggressive Portfolio
Columbia Solutions Conservative Portfolio
Columbia Strategic California Municipal Income Fund
Columbia Strategic Income Fund
Columbia Strategic New York Municipal Income Fund
Columbia
Tax-Exempt
Fund
Columbia Total Return Bond Fund
Columbia U.S. Social Bond Fund
Columbia U.S. Treasury Index Fund
Multi-Manager Alternative Strategies Fund
Multi-Manager Directional Alternative Strategies Fund
Multi-Manager Growth Strategies Fund
Multi-Manager International Equity Strategies Fund
Multi-Manager Small Cap Equity Strategies Fund
Multi-Manager Total Return Bond Strategies Fund
Shares of each Series established in this Section 6 shall have the following rights and preferences relative to Shares of each other
Series, and Shares of each class of a Multi-Class Series shall have such rights and preferences relative to other classes of the same Series as are set forth in the Declaration of Trust, together with such other rights and preferences relative to
such other classes as are set forth in the Trusts Rule
18f-3
Plan, registration statement as from time to time amended, and any applicable resolutions of the Trustees establishing and designating such
class of Shares.
The rest of this Section 6 remains unchanged.
The foregoing amendment is effective as of March 7, 2018.
[The remainder of this page intentionally left blank.]
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned has signed this Amendment No. 3 to the Declaration of Trust on
March 7, 2018.
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/s/ Douglas A. Hacker
Douglas A. Hacker
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/s/ John J. Neuhauser
John J. Neuhauser
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/s/ Janet L. Carrig
Janet L. Carrig
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/s/ Patrick J. Simpson
Patrick J. Simpson
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/s/ Nancy T. Lukitsh
Nancy T. Lukitsh
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/s/ William F. Truscott
William F. Truscott
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/s/ David M. Moffett
David M. Moffett
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/s/ Anne-Lee Verville
Anne-Lee Verville
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/s/ Charles R. Nelson
Charles R. Nelson
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Registered Agent:
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Corporation Service Company
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March 6, 2018
Amy Johnson
Vice President
Columbia Threadneedle Investments
707 2
nd
Ave. S, Routing: H19/5903
Minneapolis, MN 55402
RE: China Connect Service on behalf of each Registrant listed in Schedule A hereto, on behalf of itself and each of the Funds listed under its name on
Schedule A hereto
Dear Amy:
This letter relates to your
interest in participating in the China Connect Service (as defined by the Rules of the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong (SEHK)) through your relationships with J.P. Morgans global custody business (J.P. Morgan Custody)
pursuant to your global custody agreement dated March 7, 2011 with us (Custody Agreement) and your applicable J.P. Morgan broker-dealer and its affiliates (including the SEHK exchange participant J.P. Morgan Broking (Hong Kong)
Limited) (J.P. Morgan Broker). As a result, J.P. Morgan is able to facilitate a coordinated settlement process (coordinated brokerage and custody model) to safekeep your China Connect Securities (as defined by the Rules of
SEHK) and handle trade settlements via J.P. Morgan Broking (Hong Kong) Limited.
This letter amends and restates the letter dated February 7, 2018 on
this subject.
By choosing to avail yourself of the coordinated brokerage and custody model, you hereby agree that this letter supplements the Custody
Agreement in relation to your trading in China Connect Securities:
1. Disclosure for stock positions held under the
coordinated brokerage and custody model, you authorize J.P. Morgan Custody to disclose information on available China Connect Securities positions to J.P. Morgan Broker prior to the execution of any sale order from you to ensure you have sufficient
stock available to sell.
2. Delivery of Stock J.P. Morgan Custody shall perform instruction matching with J.P. Morgan
Broker and investigate where any material discrepancy is identified between the settlement instruction received and the executed trade instruction. J.P. Morgan shall promptly notify you of any discrepancies that are not resolved. You acknowledge
that, for sale orders executed under the China Connect Service, J.P. Morgan Broker is obligated to deliver securities out of the appropriate CCASS account with Hong Kong Securities Clearing Company Limited (HKSCC) on trade date to
satisfy its Continuous Net Settlement obligation due to HKSCC. Due to local market deadlines, this delivery may occur prior to any instruction matching being initiated and the delivery must take place even in the event that J.P. Morgan Custody has
not received corresponding instructions from you or irrespective of the agreement of an alternative settlement date between you and J.P. Morgan as broker.
With respect to the settlement and custody of China Connect Securities in any of your securities accounts that is or will be opened pursuant to the Custody
Agreement, you acknowledge and undertake that you have familiarized yourself with, and fully understand, the rules, regulations, policies or guidelines applicable to China Connect Service and have satisfied yourself as to your eligibility to
participate and the resultant implications in connection with participating and trading in China Connect Securities.
The China Connect Service raises a number of investment considerations with which you will need to be
familiar. Certain of these considerations are listed in market materials that we will provide you separately and in a supplement to our
17f-7
assessment of the HKSCC.
Please sign and return the enclosed copy of this letter to reflect your understanding of, and agreement to, the above.
Very truly yours,
JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.
By:
/s/ Lisa Zippelius
Name: Lisa Zippelius
Title: Executive Director
ACCEPTED AND AGREED:
EACH REGISTRANT LISTED ON SCHEDULE A
HERETO ON BEHALF OF ITSELF
AND EACH
OF THE FUNDS LISTED UNDER ITS NAME ON
SCHEDULE A
HERETO
By:
/s/ Amy K. Johnson
Name: Amy K. Johnson
Title: Vice President
SCHEDULE A
Columbia Funds Series Trust
Columbia Overseas Value Fund
China Connect (AGS98)
Columbia International Value Fund China Connect (AGS99)
Columbia Select Global Growth Fund (EKS13)
Columbia Funds
Series Trust I
Columbia Emerging Markets Fund China Connect (AGS93)
Columbia Greater China Fund China Connect (AGS95)
Columbia Pacific/Asia Fund China Connect (AGS97)
Columbia
Diversified Absolute Return Fund China Connect (AHL35)
Columbia Diversified Absolute Return Fund China Connect (AHL36)
Columbia Funds Series Trust II
Columbia Global
Opportunities Fund China Connect (AGS94)
Columbia Global Opportunities Fund China Connect (AGS96)
Columbia Contrarian Asia Pacific Fund China Connect (EMK76)
Columbia Overseas Core Fund China Connect (EMN31)
Columbia Funds Variable Series Trust II
Variable
Portfolio Emerging Markets Fund China Connect (AGT00)
Columbia Global Asset Allocation Strategy Fund (ECD44)
Columbia Variable Portfolio Select International Equity Fund China Connect (EMM67)
ADDENDUM TO MASTER GLOBAL CUSTODY AGREEMENT
The undersigned
Columbia Funds Series Trust I
, on behalf of each of its series listed on Appendix A hereto (each, the Customer), formed
under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts as a business trust with a place of business at 50606 Ameriprise Financial Center, Minneapolis, MN 55474, hereby requests the securities custody services of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., and Customer,
by its signature below, agrees to the terms and conditions of that certain Second Amended and Restated Master Global Custody Agreement, dated March 7, 2011 (the Agreement), with JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. on behalf of each of the
Funds listed on Schedule A thereto, which such Schedule A is hereby amended with the addition of the Customer pursuant to this addendum. Notwithstanding anything in the Agreement to the contrary, each of Customer and Bank hereby agree that Customer
shall (i) be an Additional Customer, as such term is defined in the Agreement, and (ii) not be subject to the Initial Term (as defined in the Agreement) or the early termination fee set forth in Section 9 of the Agreement, and
(iii) be entitled to terminate the Agreement upon 60 days written notice to JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (unless entitled to a shorter notice period pursuant to Section 9.1(b)).
COLUMBIA FUNDS SERIES TRUST I, ON
BEHALF OF EACH OF ITS SERIES LISTED
ON APPENDIX A HERETO
By:
/s/ Christopher O. Petersen
Name: Christopher O. Petersen
Title: President and Principal Executive Officer
Date: January 29, 2018
JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A.
By:
/s/ Brian Eckert
Name: Brian Eckert
Title: Executive Director
Date: March 8, 2018
Appendix A
Columbia Funds Series Trust I
Columbia Adaptive
Retirement 2025 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2035 Fund
Columbia Adaptive Retirement 2045 Fund
Columbia Adaptive
Retirement 2055 Fund
ADDENDUM TO MASTER GLOBAL CUSTODY AGREEMENT
The undersigned
Columbia Funds Series Trust I
, on behalf of each of its series listed on Appendix A hereto (each, the Customer), formed
under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts as a business trust with a place of business at 50606 Ameriprise Financial Center, Minneapolis, MN 55474, hereby requests the securities custody services of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., and Customer,
by its signature below, agrees to the terms and conditions of that certain Second Amended and Restated Master Global Custody Agreement, dated March 7, 2011 (the Agreement), with JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. on behalf of each of the
Funds listed on Schedule A thereto, which such Schedule A is hereby amended with the addition of the Customer pursuant to this addendum. Notwithstanding anything in the Agreement to the contrary, each of Customer and Bank hereby agree that Customer
shall (i) be an Additional Customer, as such term is defined in the Agreement, and (ii) not be subject to the Initial Term (as defined in the Agreement) or the early termination fee set forth in Section 9 of the Agreement, and
(iii) be entitled to terminate the Agreement upon 60 days written notice to JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (unless entitled to a shorter notice period pursuant to Section 9.1(b)).
COLUMBIA FUNDS SERIES TRUST I, ON
BEHALF OF EACH OF ITS SERIES LISTED
ON APPENDIX A HERETO
By:
/s/ Christopher O. Petersen
Name: Christopher O. Petersen
Title: President and Principal Executive Officer
Date: February 22, 2018
JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A.
By:
/s/ Brian Eckert
Name: Brian Eckert
Title: Executive Director
Date: March 8, 2018
Appendix A
Columbia Funds Series Trust I
Multi-Manager
International Equity Strategies Fund