UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549


FORM N-CSR

CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED

MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES


Investment Company Act file number   811-03785


Fidelity Advisor Series I

 (Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)


245 Summer St., Boston, Massachusetts 02210

 (Address of principal executive offices)       (Zip code)


Cynthia Lo Bessette, Secretary

245 Summer St.

Boston, Massachusetts  02210

(Name and address of agent for service)



Registrant's telephone number, including area code:

617-563-7000



Date of fiscal year end:

August 31

 

 

Date of reporting period:

August 31, 2021




Item 1.

Reports to Stockholders






Fidelity Advisor® Balanced Fund



Annual Report

August 31, 2021

FIDELITY INVESTMENTS



FIDELITY INVESTMENTS

Contents

Note to Shareholders

Performance

Management's Discussion of Fund Performance

Investment Summary

Schedule of Investments

Financial Statements

Notes to Financial Statements

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

Trustees and Officers

Shareholder Expense Example

Distributions

Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and Management Fees


To view a fund's proxy voting guidelines and proxy voting record for the 12-month period ended June 30, visit http://www.fidelity.com/proxyvotingresults or visit the Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) web site at http://www.sec.gov.

You may also call 1-877-208-0098 to request a free copy of the proxy voting guidelines.

Standard & Poor's, S&P and S&P 500 are registered service marks of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. and have been licensed for use by Fidelity Distributors Corporation.

Other third-party marks appearing herein are the property of their respective owners.

All other marks appearing herein are registered or unregistered trademarks or service marks of FMR LLC or an affiliated company. © 2021 FMR LLC. All rights reserved.



This report and the financial statements contained herein are submitted for the general information of the shareholders of the Fund. This report is not authorized for distribution to prospective investors in the Fund unless preceded or accompanied by an effective prospectus.

A fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-PORT. Forms N-PORT are available on the SEC’s web site at http://www.sec.gov. A fund's Forms N-PORT may be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, DC. Information regarding the operation of the SEC's Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330.

For a complete list of a fund's portfolio holdings, view the most recent holdings listing, semiannual report, or annual report on Fidelity's web site at http://www.fidelity.com, http://www.institutional.fidelity.com, or http://www.401k.com, as applicable.

NOT FDIC INSURED •MAY LOSE VALUE •NO BANK GUARANTEE

Neither the Fund nor Fidelity Distributors Corporation is a bank.



Note to Shareholders:

Early in 2020, the outbreak and spread of COVID-19 emerged as a public health emergency that had a major influence on financial markets, primarily based on its impact on the global economy and corporate earnings. On March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic, citing sustained risk of further global spread. The pandemic prompted a number of measures to limit the spread of COVID-19, including travel and border restrictions, quarantines, and restrictions on large gatherings. In turn, these resulted in lower consumer activity, diminished demand for a wide range of products and services, disruption in manufacturing and supply chains, and – given the wide variability in outcomes regarding the outbreak – significant market uncertainty and volatility. To help stem the turmoil, the U.S. government took unprecedented action – in concert with the U.S. Federal Reserve and central banks around the world – to help support consumers, businesses, and the broader economy, and to limit disruption to the financial system.

In general, the overall impact of the pandemic lessened in 2021, amid a resilient economy and widespread distribution of three COVID-19 vaccines granted emergency use authorization from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) early in the year. Still, the situation remains dynamic, and the extent and duration of its influence on financial markets and the economy is highly uncertain, due in part to a recent spike in cases based on highly contagious variants of the coronavirus.

Extreme events such as the COVID-19 crisis are exogenous shocks that can have significant adverse effects on mutual funds and their investments. Although multiple asset classes may be affected by market disruption, the duration and impact may not be the same for all types of assets. Fidelity is committed to helping you stay informed amid news about COVID-19 and during increased market volatility, and we continue to take extra steps to be responsive to customer needs. We encourage you to visit us online, where we offer ongoing updates, commentary, and analysis on the markets and our funds.

Performance: The Bottom Line

Average annual total return reflects the change in the value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of distributions from dividend income and capital gains (the profits earned upon the sale of securities that have grown in value, if any) and assuming a constant rate of performance each year. The hypothetical investment and the average annual total returns do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares. During periods of reimbursement by Fidelity, a fund’s total return will be greater than it would be had the reimbursement not occurred. How a fund did yesterday is no guarantee of how it will do tomorrow.

Average Annual Total Returns

For the periods ended August 31, 2021  Past 1 year  Past 5 years  Past 10 years 
Class A (incl. 5.75% sales charge)  17.23%  12.74%  11.23% 
Class M (incl. 3.50% sales charge)  19.76%  13.01%  11.23% 
Class C (incl. contingent deferred sales charge)  22.43%  13.23%  11.21% 
Class I  24.68%  14.38%  12.17% 
Class Z  24.82%  14.52%  12.29% 

 Class C shares' contingent deferred sales charges included in the past one year, past five years and past ten years total return figures are 1%, 0% and 0%, respectively. 

 The initial offering of Class Z shares took place on August 13, 2013. Returns prior to August 13, 2013, are those of Class I. 

$10,000 Over 10 Years

Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity Advisor® Balanced Fund - Class A on August 31, 2011, and the current 5.75% sales charge was paid.

The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the S&P 500® Index performed over the same period.


Period Ending Values

$28,982 Fidelity Advisor® Balanced Fund - Class A

$45,424 S&P 500® Index

Management's Discussion of Fund Performance

Market Recap:  The S&P 500® index gained 31.17% for the 12 months ending August 31, 2021, as U.S. equities continued a historic rebound following a steep but brief decline due to the early-2020 outbreak and spread of COVID-19. The rally slowed in September 2020, when stocks began a two-month retreat amid Congress’s inability to reach a deal on additional fiscal stimulus, as well as uncertainty about the election. But as the calendar turned, investors grew hopeful. The rollout of three COVID-19 vaccines was underway, the U.S. Federal Reserve pledged to hold interest rates near zero until the economy recovered, and the federal government planned to deploy trillions of dollars to boost consumers and the economy. As part of the “reopening” theme, investors favored cheap smaller companies that stood to benefit from a broad cyclical recovery. A flattish May reflected concerns about inflation and jobs, but the uptrend resumed through August, driven by corporate earnings. Notably, this leg saw momentum shift back to large growth, as easing rates and a hawkish Fed stymied the reflation trade. By sector, financials and energy led the way for the full year, whereas the consumer segments notably lagged. Turning to fixed income, U.S. taxable investment-grade bonds posted a modest decline for the 12 months, hampered by markedly higher interest rates. The Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index returned -0.08%. Meanwhile, strong fundamentals bolstered high-yield bonds, up 10.26%, as per the ICE BofA® US High Yield Constrained Index.

Comments from Co-Portfolio Manager Robert Stansky:  For the fiscal year ending August 31, 2021, the fund's share classes (excluding sales charges, if applicable) gained about 23% to 25%, well ahead of the 17.92% advance of the Fidelity Balanced 60/40 Composite Index℠. The decision to overweight stocks and underweight bonds contributed significantly to the fund’s outperformance of the Composite index. Security selection in the equity subportfolio also provided a boost, as did picks in the investment-grade bond sleeve to a lesser extent. The fund’s stock investments gained 36.01% the past 12 months, well ahead of the 31.17% advance of the S&P 500®. Choices in the information technology, materials, communication services and financials sectors boosted the subportfolio’s relative result most. At the stock level, the top relative contributor was Capital One Financial, which gained about 144% in the subportfolio. We reduced this position. Conversely, a non-benchmark stake in Sunrun was the subportfolio’s largest relative detractor, returning -31%. We significantly increased this position. The investment-grade bond central fund gained 2.01%, compared with -0.08% for the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index. Our decision to overweight corporate bonds added value, as credit spreads tightened for the 12 months. Our picks among corporate bonds also contributed. Underweighting mortgage-backed securities (MBS), which offered little value for most of the period, further aided the fund’s relative result. On the other hand, positioning along the yield curve detracted somewhat, especially overweighting 30-year U.S. Treasury bonds. Sector allocation among the bonds of industrial firms also set us back to a degree, but our picks in this segment made up for this shortfall and then some.

The views expressed above reflect those of the portfolio manager(s) only through the end of the period as stated on the cover of this report and do not necessarily represent the views of Fidelity or any other person in the Fidelity organization. Any such views are subject to change at any time based upon market or other conditions and Fidelity disclaims any responsibility to update such views. These views may not be relied on as investment advice and, because investment decisions for a Fidelity fund are based on numerous factors, may not be relied on as an indication of trading intent on behalf of any Fidelity fund.

Investment Summary (Unaudited)

The information in the following tables is based on the combined investments of the Fund and its pro-rata share of the investments of Fidelity's Fixed-Income Central Funds.

Top Five Stocks as of August 31, 2021

  % of fund's net assets 
Microsoft Corp.  4.8 
Apple, Inc.  3.3 
Amazon.com, Inc.  2.7 
Facebook, Inc. Class A  2.0 
Alphabet, Inc. Class A  1.7 
  14.5 

Top Five Bond Issuers as of August 31, 2021

(with maturities greater than one year)  % of fund's net assets 
U.S. Treasury Obligations  6.8 
Freddie Mac  1.9 
Ginnie Mae  1.6 
Uniform Mortgage Backed Securities  1.3 
Fannie Mae  1.3 
  12.9 

Top Five Market Sectors as of August 31, 2021

  % of fund's net assets 
Information Technology  18.8 
Financials  12.7 
Health Care  9.6 
Consumer Discretionary  8.9 
Communication Services  8.6 

Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)

As of August 31, 2021* 
    Stocks and Equity Futures  71.7% 
    Bonds  28.1% 
    Convertible Securities  0.2% 
    Other Investments  0.1% 
  Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities)**  (0.1)% 


 * Foreign investments - 8.5%

 ** Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities) are not included in the pie chart

An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of any securities and other investments held indirectly through its investment in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com and/or institutional.fidelity.com, as applicable.

Percentages in the above tables are adjusted for the effect of TBA Sale Commitments.

Percentages are adjusted for the effect of futures contracts and swaps, if applicable.

Schedule of Investments August 31, 2021

Showing Percentage of Net Assets

Common Stocks - 69.5%     
  Shares  Value (000s) 
COMMUNICATION SERVICES - 7.8%     
Entertainment - 1.4%     
Activision Blizzard, Inc.  145,717  $12,003 
Electronic Arts, Inc.  45,335  6,583 
Live Nation Entertainment, Inc. (a)  32,300  2,800 
Marcus Corp. (a)(b)  18,068  282 
Netflix, Inc. (a)  57,445  32,697 
Sea Ltd. ADR (a)  3,100  1,049 
Square Enix Holdings Co. Ltd.  16,100  938 
The Walt Disney Co. (a)  246,485  44,688 
    101,040 
Interactive Media & Services - 5.6%     
Alphabet, Inc.:     
Class A (a)  41,803  120,976 
Class C (a)  40,842  118,819 
Facebook, Inc. Class A (a)  374,028  141,899 
Snap, Inc. Class A (a)  69,558  5,294 
Tencent Holdings Ltd.  32,800  2,026 
Tongdao Liepin Group (a)  1,540,421  2,729 
Twitter, Inc. (a)  110,241  7,111 
Vimeo, Inc. (a)  36,758  1,401 
Z Holdings Corp.  246,000  1,603 
Zoominfo Technologies, Inc. (a)  57,500  3,748 
    405,606 
Media - 0.5%     
Altice U.S.A., Inc. Class A (a)  36,558  1,003 
Comcast Corp. Class A  531,414  32,246 
ViacomCBS, Inc. Class B  84,300  3,494 
    36,743 
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.3%     
T-Mobile U.S., Inc. (a)  136,135  18,653 
TOTAL COMMUNICATION SERVICES    562,042 
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 8.6%     
Automobiles - 0.8%     
Ferrari NV  21,000  4,565 
Lucid Motors, Inc. (c)  48,422  967 
Tesla, Inc. (a)  71,400  52,530 
    58,062 
Distributors - 0.1%     
LKQ Corp. (a)  199,500  10,512 
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 1.3%     
Airbnb, Inc. Class A  48,200  7,471 
Booking Holdings, Inc. (a)  9,400  21,617 
Boyd Gaming Corp. (a)  73,900  4,535 
Caesars Entertainment, Inc. (a)  73,700  7,490 
Churchill Downs, Inc.  41,100  8,652 
Compass Group PLC (a)  418,300  8,642 
Domino's Pizza, Inc.  5,700  2,946 
MakeMyTrip Ltd. (a)  76,989  1,988 
Marriott International, Inc. Class A (a)  136,600  18,460 
McDonald's Corp.  56,700  13,464 
Penn National Gaming, Inc. (a)  15,900  1,289 
    96,554 
Household Durables - 0.6%     
GoPro, Inc. Class A (a)  289,000  2,881 
Leggett & Platt, Inc.  144,600  6,997 
Lennar Corp. Class A  164,200  17,620 
Mohawk Industries, Inc. (a)  31,900  6,309 
Tempur Sealy International, Inc.  135,400  6,052 
    39,859 
Internet & Direct Marketing Retail - 3.3%     
Amazon.com, Inc. (a)  56,035  194,486 
Chewy, Inc. (a)(b)  18,100  1,595 
Coupang, Inc. Class A (a)  41,900  1,255 
Deliveroo PLC  200,000  910 
Deliveroo PLC Class A (a)(d)  365,100  1,749 
eBay, Inc.  252,900  19,408 
Farfetch Ltd. Class A (a)  120,600  5,048 
Kogan.Com Ltd. (b)  29,521  246 
Porch Group, Inc. Class A (a)  440,763  8,815 
Shop Apotheke Europe NV (a)(d)  6,400  1,140 
THG PLC  258,700  2,189 
ZOZO, Inc.  19,700  751 
    237,592 
Leisure Products - 0.1%     
Mattel, Inc. (a)  200,382  4,278 
Multiline Retail - 0.2%     
Dollar Tree, Inc. (a)  119,300  10,801 
Nordstrom, Inc. (a)  131,200  3,754 
    14,555 
Specialty Retail - 1.6%     
Auto1 Group SE (d)  69,700  3,033 
Burlington Stores, Inc. (a)  14,300  4,283 
Industria de Diseno Textil SA  251,500  8,592 
Lowe's Companies, Inc.  232,900  47,486 
The Home Depot, Inc.  83,509  27,239 
TJX Companies, Inc.  282,030  20,509 
    111,142 
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 0.6%     
Capri Holdings Ltd. (a)  43,900  2,481 
LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE  8,200  6,075 
NIKE, Inc. Class B  86,964  14,326 
PVH Corp. (a)  52,700  5,522 
Tapestry, Inc.  300,700  12,124 
    40,528 
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY    613,082 
CONSUMER STAPLES - 4.1%     
Beverages - 1.3%     
Constellation Brands, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.)  34,700  7,327 
Keurig Dr. Pepper, Inc.  123,600  4,409 
Monster Beverage Corp. (a)  128,575  12,545 
PepsiCo, Inc.  195,000  30,496 
Pernod Ricard SA  26,800  5,631 
The Coca-Cola Co.  584,300  32,902 
    93,310 
Food & Staples Retailing - 1.2%     
BJ's Wholesale Club Holdings, Inc. (a)  145,800  8,261 
Costco Wholesale Corp.  68,500  31,201 
U.S. Foods Holding Corp. (a)  285,600  9,710 
Walgreens Boots Alliance, Inc.  123,600  6,273 
Walmart, Inc.  202,400  29,975 
Zur Rose Group AG (a)  4,260  1,833 
    87,253 
Food Products - 0.4%     
Bunge Ltd.  17,400  1,317 
Darling Ingredients, Inc. (a)  31,400  2,339 
Freshpet, Inc. (a)  10,000  1,281 
Hotel Chocolat Group Ltd. (a)  33,000  170 
Lamb Weston Holdings, Inc.  88,300  5,753 
Mondelez International, Inc.  268,700  16,678 
Oatly Group AB ADR (a)  33,400  609 
    28,147 
Household Products - 0.7%     
Procter & Gamble Co.  356,500  50,762 
Personal Products - 0.3%     
Estee Lauder Companies, Inc. Class A  43,200  14,709 
Herbalife Nutrition Ltd. (a)  39,500  2,028 
The Honest Co., Inc. (b)  59,100  602 
    17,339 
Tobacco - 0.2%     
Altria Group, Inc.  265,700  13,346 
Philip Morris International, Inc.  20,100  2,070 
    15,416 
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES    292,227 
ENERGY - 1.9%     
Energy Equipment & Services - 0.2%     
Baker Hughes Co. Class A  165,900  3,779 
Halliburton Co.  230,600  4,607 
Oceaneering International, Inc. (a)  115,309  1,418 
Subsea 7 SA  130,000  990 
    10,794 
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 1.7%     
Africa Oil Corp. (a)  1,546,400  2,084 
Canadian Natural Resources Ltd.  286,900  9,494 
Cheniere Energy, Inc.  45,300  3,962 
Chevron Corp.  23,976  2,320 
ConocoPhillips Co.  45,700  2,538 
Enterprise Products Partners LP  75,600  1,683 
Exxon Mobil Corp.  778,691  42,454 
Harbour Energy PLC (a)  287,575  1,410 
Hess Corp.  173,100  11,901 
Imperial Oil Ltd. (b)  99,000  2,620 
Marathon Petroleum Corp.  14,300  848 
MEG Energy Corp. (a)  1,028,100  6,552 
Murphy Oil Corp.  115,400  2,453 
Phillips 66 Co.  100,874  7,171 
Range Resources Corp. (a)  2,132  31 
Reliance Industries Ltd.  15,709  348 
Reliance Industries Ltd.  520,984  16,127 
Reliance Industries Ltd. sponsored GDR (d)  78,180  4,835 
Tourmaline Oil Corp.  104,400  2,792 
Valero Energy Corp.  49,000  3,249 
    124,872 
TOTAL ENERGY    135,666 
FINANCIALS - 7.6%     
Banks - 3.1%     
Bank of America Corp.  1,258,991  52,563 
BNP Paribas SA  50,300  3,186 
Citigroup, Inc.  96,330  6,927 
Citizens Financial Group, Inc.  184,100  8,062 
Comerica, Inc.  60,100  4,442 
EFG Eurobank Ergasias SA (a)  4,279,500  4,078 
First Horizon National Corp.  156,898  2,572 
JPMorgan Chase & Co.  182,700  29,223 
M&T Bank Corp.  54,100  7,575 
NatWest Group PLC  413,900  1,213 
Piraeus Financial Holdings SA (a)  748,700  1,264 
PNC Financial Services Group, Inc.  106,400  20,333 
Signature Bank  13,000  3,371 
Societe Generale Series A  222,200  6,994 
Standard Chartered PLC (United Kingdom)  518,800  3,244 
Starling Bank Ltd. Series D (a)(e)  659,301  1,173 
UniCredit SpA  259,100  3,233 
Wells Fargo & Co.  1,322,100  60,420 
    219,873 
Capital Markets - 1.8%     
Bank of New York Mellon Corp.  657,700  36,318 
BlackRock, Inc. Class A  26,400  24,903 
Cboe Global Markets, Inc.  39,272  4,954 
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.  26,400  10,917 
Intercontinental Exchange, Inc.  26,000  3,108 
Morgan Stanley  280,500  29,293 
State Street Corp.  99,600  9,254 
StepStone Group, Inc. Class A  120,278  5,758 
Virtu Financial, Inc. Class A  115,500  2,827 
    127,332 
Consumer Finance - 1.3%     
American Express Co.  155,700  25,840 
Capital One Financial Corp.  301,009  49,958 
OneMain Holdings, Inc.  238,325  13,782 
Shriram Transport Finance Co. Ltd.  89,092  1,652 
    91,232 
Diversified Financial Services - 0.4%     
Ant International Co. Ltd. Class C (a)(c)(e)  463,804  1,160 
Berkshire Hathaway, Inc.:     
Class A (a)  11  4,729 
Class B (a)  71,700  20,490 
Cazoo Group Ltd. (c)  53,300  408 
Jumo World Ltd. (e)  162  1,218 
Voya Financial, Inc.  60,300  3,918 
    31,923 
Insurance - 1.0%     
AIA Group Ltd.  157,800  1,884 
American International Group, Inc.  176,100  9,608 
Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.  54,400  7,813 
Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.  213,000  14,318 
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.  56,700  8,913 
Prudential PLC (a)  83,800  1,746 
The Travelers Companies, Inc.  144,900  23,142 
Willis Towers Watson PLC  36,300  8,012 
    75,436 
Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.0%     
Mr. Cooper Group, Inc. (a) 
TOTAL FINANCIALS    545,796 
HEALTH CARE - 9.1%     
Biotechnology - 1.0%     
Amgen, Inc.  88,155  19,882 
Argenx SE ADR (a)  16,000  5,296 
Blueprint Medicines Corp. (a)  30,800  2,873 
Horizon Therapeutics PLC (a)  193,840  20,952 
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)  30,000  20,202 
    69,205 
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 2.8%     
Abbott Laboratories  366,054  46,258 
Boston Scientific Corp. (a)  725,719  32,766 
DexCom, Inc. (a)  24,076  12,746 
Envista Holdings Corp. (a)  237,800  10,175 
Intuitive Surgical, Inc. (a)  28,700  30,237 
ResMed, Inc.  32,300  9,384 
Siemens Healthineers AG (d)  230,908  16,059 
Stryker Corp.  145,090  40,204 
    197,829 
Health Care Providers & Services - 2.3%     
AmerisourceBergen Corp.  132,600  16,205 
dentalcorp Holdings Ltd. (a)  148,990  1,882 
Guardant Health, Inc. (a)  15,500  1,973 
HCA Holdings, Inc.  112,900  28,561 
Humana, Inc.  54,500  22,095 
Option Care Health, Inc. (a)  330,103  8,830 
Surgery Partners, Inc. (a)  284,559  14,000 
UnitedHealth Group, Inc.  171,818  71,523 
    165,069 
Health Care Technology - 0.1%     
Health Catalyst, Inc. (a)  123,858  6,764 
Life Sciences Tools & Services - 0.8%     
Avantor, Inc. (a)  81,468  3,213 
Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.  99,222  55,063 
    58,276 
Pharmaceuticals - 2.1%     
AstraZeneca PLC sponsored ADR  221,500  12,909 
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.  475,894  31,818 
Eli Lilly & Co.  154,900  40,009 
Roche Holding AG (participation certificate)  32,585  13,085 
Royalty Pharma PLC  325,382  12,576 
UCB SA  125,400  14,345 
Zoetis, Inc. Class A  146,300  29,927 
    154,669 
TOTAL HEALTH CARE    651,812 
INDUSTRIALS - 6.9%     
Aerospace & Defense - 2.1%     
General Dynamics Corp.  115,806  23,197 
Lockheed Martin Corp.  74,159  26,682 
Northrop Grumman Corp.  69,499  25,555 
Raytheon Technologies Corp.  406,487  34,454 
Space Exploration Technologies Corp. Class A (a)(c)(e)  1,600  672 
The Boeing Co. (a)  172,222  37,803 
    148,363 
Air Freight & Logistics - 0.5%     
FedEx Corp.  102,561  27,249 
United Parcel Service, Inc. Class B  57,470  11,243 
    38,492 
Airlines - 0.1%     
Joby Aviation, Inc. (c)  72,057  870 
Spirit Airlines, Inc. (a)  134,355  3,296 
    4,166 
Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.1%     
CoreCivic, Inc. (a)  460,599  4,477 
Construction & Engineering - 0.3%     
AECOM (a)  284,476  18,650 
API Group Corp. (a)(d)  19,400  450 
    19,100 
Electrical Equipment - 0.9%     
Array Technologies, Inc.  382,891  7,302 
FTC Solar, Inc. (a)  128,300  1,392 
Plug Power, Inc. (a)(b)  69,200  1,803 
Sensata Technologies, Inc. PLC (a)  433,593  25,660 
Shoals Technologies Group, Inc.  47,950  1,562 
Sunrun, Inc. (a)  690,705  30,564 
    68,283 
Industrial Conglomerates - 0.9%     
3M Co.  42,202  8,218 
General Electric Co.  351,023  37,001 
Hitachi Ltd.  218,900  12,107 
Honeywell International, Inc.  26,837  6,224 
    63,550 
Machinery - 0.7%     
Allison Transmission Holdings, Inc.  509,317  18,835 
Caterpillar, Inc.  143,542  30,269 
Flowserve Corp.  59,467  2,311 
    51,415 
Marine - 0.2%     
Genco Shipping & Trading Ltd.  192,927  3,760 
Golden Ocean Group Ltd.  180,914  2,077 
Star Bulk Carriers Corp.  351,300  8,104 
    13,941 
Professional Services - 0.5%     
Dun & Bradstreet Holdings, Inc. (a)  222,500  4,078 
Nielsen Holdings PLC  1,617,033  34,702 
Renrui Human Resources Technology Holdings Ltd.  90,800  109 
    38,889 
Road & Rail - 0.6%     
Lyft, Inc. (a)  128,561  6,121 
Norfolk Southern Corp.  55,216  13,999 
Uber Technologies, Inc. (a)  542,599  21,237 
Union Pacific Corp.  11,555  2,506 
    43,863 
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS    494,539 
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 18.2%     
Electronic Equipment & Components - 1.2%     
Corning, Inc.  57,900  2,315 
Flex Ltd. (a)  1,386,640  25,764 
Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. Ltd. (Foxconn)  921,000  3,697 
Insight Enterprises, Inc. (a)  38,839  3,996 
Jabil, Inc.  892,770  55,155 
    90,927 
IT Services - 2.7%     
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. Class A  34,800  2,656 
Dlocal Ltd.  62,500  4,000 
Fidelity National Information Services, Inc.  52,100  6,657 
Fiserv, Inc. (a)  17,000  2,002 
Genpact Ltd.  8,800  457 
Global Payments, Inc.  73,400  11,938 
GoDaddy, Inc. (a)  41,900  3,072 
MasterCard, Inc. Class A  157,100  54,393 
MongoDB, Inc. Class A (a)  17,100  6,700 
PayPal Holdings, Inc. (a)  155,800  44,973 
Square, Inc. (a)  5,000  1,340 
Visa, Inc. Class A  228,350  52,315 
Wix.com Ltd. (a)  7,100  1,577 
    192,080 
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 2.7%     
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (a)  21,100  2,336 
Applied Materials, Inc.  103,663  14,008 
Cirrus Logic, Inc. (a)  47,900  4,008 
indie Semiconductor, Inc. (a)  64,900  655 
Lam Research Corp.  9,300  5,625 
Marvell Technology, Inc.  204,700  12,526 
Microchip Technology, Inc.  55,800  8,781 
Micron Technology, Inc.  91,887  6,772 
NVIDIA Corp.  353,200  79,064 
NXP Semiconductors NV  127,697  27,471 
ON Semiconductor Corp. (a)  509,306  22,593 
Renesas Electronics Corp. (a)  177,800  1,904 
Semtech Corp. (a)  32,600  2,279 
Teradyne, Inc.  11,800  1,433 
Universal Display Corp.  5,600  1,168 
Xilinx, Inc.  28,900  4,497 
    195,120 
Software - 8.1%     
Adobe, Inc. (a)  42,800  28,406 
Anaplan, Inc. (a)  121,900  7,312 
Autodesk, Inc. (a)  79,630  24,692 
Avalara, Inc. (a)  16,900  3,037 
CCC Intelligent Solutions Holdings, Inc. (c)  34,443  380 
Ceridian HCM Holding, Inc. (a)  28,900  3,247 
Cloudflare, Inc. (a)  9,300  1,123 
Cognyte Software Ltd. (a)  280,890  7,719 
Confluent, Inc.  10,800  604 
Coupa Software, Inc. (a)  7,800  1,910 
Elastic NV (a)  13,996  2,233 
Epic Games, Inc. (a)(c)(e)  1,715  1,518 
Everbridge, Inc. (a)  29,100  4,568 
FireEye, Inc. (a)  62,800  1,142 
Intuit, Inc.  33,900  19,191 
Lightspeed Commerce, Inc.  36,300  4,036 
LivePerson, Inc. (a)  125,600  8,051 
Microsoft Corp.  1,127,900  340,488 
Momentive Global, Inc. (a)  871,203  17,084 
Otonomo Technologies Ltd. (c)  96,391  664 
Qualtrics International, Inc.  93,900  4,252 
Salesforce.com, Inc. (a)  195,189  51,778 
ServiceNow, Inc. (a)  20,200  13,002 
Stripe, Inc. Class B (a)(c)(e)  15,600  626 
Verint Systems, Inc. (a)  20,300  906 
Workday, Inc. Class A (a)  45,800  12,511 
Workiva, Inc. (a)  7,800  1,094 
Yext, Inc. (a)  613,423  8,293 
Zendesk, Inc. (a)  66,800  8,256 
Zoom Video Communications, Inc. Class A (a)  5,600  1,621 
    579,744 
Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals - 3.5%     
Apple, Inc.  1,578,120  239,606 
HP, Inc.  190,500  5,665 
Western Digital Corp. (a)  53,100  3,356 
    248,627 
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY    1,306,498 
MATERIALS - 1.8%     
Chemicals - 0.9%     
Air Products & Chemicals, Inc.  19,460  5,245 
Albemarle Corp. U.S.  20,000  4,735 
Balchem Corp.  19,500  2,738 
Ecolab, Inc.  31,883  7,185 
FMC Corp.  33,800  3,165 
Innospec, Inc.  35,844  3,355 
Linde PLC  45,083  14,183 
LyondellBasell Industries NV Class A  41,700  4,185 
Olin Corp.  231,742  11,550 
Sherwin-Williams Co.  18,154  5,513 
Valvoline, Inc.  188,400  5,682 
    67,536 
Construction Materials - 0.3%     
Martin Marietta Materials, Inc.  19,307  7,361 
Summit Materials, Inc. (a)  176,674  5,949 
Vulcan Materials Co.  32,500  6,043 
    19,353 
Containers & Packaging - 0.1%     
Crown Holdings, Inc.  82,400  9,047 
Metals & Mining - 0.5%     
Commercial Metals Co.  127,815  4,169 
First Quantum Minerals Ltd.  432,300  9,005 
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc.  322,648  11,741 
Newmont Corp.  141,028  8,178 
    33,093 
TOTAL MATERIALS    129,029 
REAL ESTATE - 1.9%     
Equity Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) - 1.8%     
Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc.  33,400  6,893 
American Tower Corp.  68,500  20,014 
Corporate Office Properties Trust (SBI)  41,400  1,167 
CubeSmart  165,600  8,860 
Digital Realty Trust, Inc.  50,800  8,327 
Douglas Emmett, Inc.  50,500  1,667 
Equinix, Inc.  4,100  3,458 
Equity Lifestyle Properties, Inc.  118,900  10,115 
Healthcare Trust of America, Inc.  18,000  546 
Invitation Homes, Inc.  209,300  8,619 
Kilroy Realty Corp.  45,400  2,981 
Lexington Corporate Properties Trust  315,200  4,265 
Mid-America Apartment Communities, Inc.  57,600  11,081 
Prologis (REIT), Inc.  127,800  17,210 
SBA Communications Corp. Class A  14,600  5,241 
Ventas, Inc.  77,500  4,335 
VICI Properties, Inc.  42,700  1,320 
Welltower, Inc.  86,117  7,538 
Weyerhaeuser Co.  50,200  1,807 
    125,444 
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.1%     
Cushman & Wakefield PLC (a)  345,100  6,260 
Jones Lang LaSalle, Inc. (a)  13,300  3,224 
    9,484 
TOTAL REAL ESTATE    134,928 
UTILITIES - 1.6%     
Electric Utilities - 1.1%     
American Electric Power Co., Inc.  13,800  1,236 
Duke Energy Corp.  11,300  1,183 
Edison International  128,300  7,421 
Entergy Corp.  24,571  2,718 
Evergy, Inc.  93,365  6,391 
Exelon Corp.  259,876  12,739 
FirstEnergy Corp.  184,000  7,152 
NextEra Energy, Inc.  253,900  21,325 
NRG Energy, Inc.  51,700  2,361 
PG&E Corp. (a)  588,862  5,400 
PPL Corp.  49,100  1,441 
Southern Co.  184,300  12,114 
    81,481 
Independent Power and Renewable Electricity Producers - 0.1%     
FREYR Battery SA (a)  72,304  642 
The AES Corp.  198,849  4,747 
    5,389 
Multi-Utilities - 0.4%     
CenterPoint Energy, Inc.  220,945  5,544 
Dominion Energy, Inc.  113,645  8,846 
NiSource, Inc.  136,600  3,367 
Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc.  38,800  2,481 
Sempra Energy  70,124  9,282 
    29,520 
TOTAL UTILITIES    116,390 
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS     
(Cost $3,179,554)    4,982,009 
Preferred Stocks - 0.3%     
Convertible Preferred Stocks - 0.2%     
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.0%     
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 0.0%     
Algolia SAS Series D (c)(e)  28,657  838 
INDUSTRIALS - 0.0%     
Aerospace & Defense - 0.0%     
ABL Space Systems Series B (c)(e)  16,809  757 
Construction & Engineering - 0.0%     
Beta Technologies, Inc. Series A (c)(e)  6,703  491 
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS    1,248 
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 0.2%     
Communications Equipment - 0.0%     
Astranis Space Technologies Corp. Series C (c)(e)  56,066  1,229 
Xsight Labs Ltd. Series D (c)(e)  60,136  481 
    1,710 
IT Services - 0.1%     
ByteDance Ltd. Series E1 (c)(e)  18,992  1,970 
Checkr, Inc. Series E (c)(e)  30,412  1,642 
    3,612 
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 0.0%     
Astera Labs, Inc. Series C (c)(e)  140,700  473 
Software - 0.1%     
Amplitude, Inc. Series F (c)(e)  43,619  1,397 
Databricks, Inc.:     
Series G (c)(e)  1,359  300 
Series H (c)(e)  6,495  1,432 
Stripe, Inc. Series H (c)(e)  6,300  253 
ThoughtWorks, Inc.:     
Series A (c)(e)  2,404  1,980 
Series B (c)(e)  1,219  1,004 
    6,366 
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY    12,161 
TOTAL CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCKS    14,247 
Nonconvertible Preferred Stocks - 0.1%     
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.1%     
Automobiles - 0.1%     
Porsche Automobil Holding SE (Germany)  73,700  7,456 
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 0.0%     
IT Services - 0.0%     
Gupshup, Inc. (c)(e)  58,730  1,343 
TOTAL NONCONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCKS    8,799 
TOTAL PREFERRED STOCKS     
(Cost $20,150)    23,046 
  Principal Amount (000s)  Value (000s) 
U.S. Treasury Obligations - 0.2%     
U.S. Treasury Bills, yield at date of purchase 0.02% to 0.05% 9/9/21 to 11/12/21 (f)     
(Cost $9,469)  9,470  9,469 
Preferred Securities - 0.0%     
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.0%     
Internet & Direct Marketing Retail - 0.0%     
Circle Internet Financial Ltd. 0%
(Cost $1,011)(c)(e)(g) 
$1,011  $1,011 
  Shares  Value (000s) 
Fixed-Income Funds - 27.1%     
Fidelity Investment Grade Bond Central Fund (h)     
(Cost $1,914,886)  16,805,489  1,943,723 
Money Market Funds - 2.9%     
Fidelity Cash Central Fund 0.06% (i)  199,262,201  199,302 
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund 0.06% (i)(j)  4,862,220  4,863 
TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS     
(Cost $204,165)    204,165 
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES - 100.0%     
(Cost $5,329,235)    7,163,423 
NET OTHER ASSETS (LIABILITIES) - 0.0%    2,379 
NET ASSETS - 100%    $7,165,802 

Futures Contracts           
  Number of contracts  Expiration Date  Notional Amount (000s)  Value (000s)  Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation) (000s) 
Purchased           
Equity Index Contracts           
CME E-mini S&P 500 Index Contracts (United States)  609  Sept. 2021  $137,649  $7,865  $7,865 

The notional amount of futures purchased as a percentage of Net Assets is 1.9%

Values shown as $0 in the Schedule of Investments may reflect amounts less than $500.

Legend

 (a) Non-income producing

 (b) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.

 (c) Restricted securities (including private placements) - Investment in securities not registered under the Securities Act of 1933 (excluding 144A issues). At the end of the period, the value of restricted securities (excluding 144A issues) amounted to $23,866,000 or 0.3% of net assets.

 (d) Security exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers. At the end of the period, the value of these securities amounted to $27,266,000 or 0.4% of net assets.

 (e) Level 3 security

 (f) Security or a portion of the security was pledged to cover margin requirements for futures contracts. At period end, the value of securities pledged amounted to $7,378,000.

 (g) Security is perpetual in nature with no stated maturity date.

 (h) Affiliated fund that is generally available only to investment companies and other accounts managed by Fidelity Investments. A complete unaudited schedule of portfolio holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is filed with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-PORT and is available upon request or at the SEC's website at www.sec.gov. An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of securities and other investments held indirectly through its investment in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds is available at fidelity.com and/or institutional.fidelity.com, as applicable. In addition, each Fidelity Central Fund's financial statements, which are not covered by the Fund's Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC's website or upon request.

 (i) Affiliated fund that is generally available only to investment companies and other accounts managed by Fidelity Investments. The rate quoted is the annualized seven-day yield of the fund at period end. A complete unaudited listing of the fund's holdings as of its most recent quarter end is available upon request. In addition, each Fidelity Central Fund's financial statements, which are not covered by the Fund's Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC's website or upon request.

 (j) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.

Additional information on each restricted holding is as follows:

Security  Acquisition Date  Acquisition Cost (000s) 
ABL Space Systems Series B  3/24/21  $757 
Algolia SAS Series D  7/23/21  $838 
Amplitude, Inc. Series F  8/9/21  $1,397 
Ant International Co. Ltd. Class C  5/16/18  $2,602 
Astera Labs, Inc. Series C  8/24/21  $473 
Astranis Space Technologies Corp. Series C  3/19/21  $1,229 
Beta Technologies, Inc. Series A  4/9/21  $491 
ByteDance Ltd. Series E1  11/18/20  $2,081 
Cazoo Group Ltd.  3/28/21  $533 
CCC Intelligent Solutions Holdings, Inc.  2/2/21  $344 
Checkr, Inc. Series E  8/24/21  $1,642 
Circle Internet Financial Ltd. 0%  5/11/21  $1,011 
Databricks, Inc. Series G  2/1/21  $241 
Databricks, Inc. Series H  8/31/21  $1,432 
Epic Games, Inc.  3/29/21  $1,518 
Gupshup, Inc.  6/8/21  $1,343 
Joby Aviation, Inc.  2/23/21  $721 
Lucid Motors, Inc.  2/22/21  $726 
Otonomo Technologies Ltd.  1/31/21  $964 
Space Exploration Technologies Corp. Class A  2/16/21  $672 
Stripe, Inc. Class B  5/18/21  $626 
Stripe, Inc. Series H  3/15/21  $253 
ThoughtWorks, Inc. Series A  1/13/21  $1,472 
ThoughtWorks, Inc. Series B  6/25/21  $807 
Xsight Labs Ltd. Series D  2/16/21  $481 

Affiliated Central Funds

Fiscal year to date information regarding the Fund's investments in Fidelity Central Funds, including the ownership percentage, is presented below.

Fund (Amounts in thousands)  Value, beginning of period  Purchases  Sales Proceeds  Dividend Income  Realized Gain/Loss  Change in Unrealized appreciation (depreciation)  Value, end of period  % ownership, end of period 
Fidelity Cash Central Fund 0.06%  $88,711  $2,236,868  $2,126,275  $125  $(2)  $--  $199,302  0.3% 
Fidelity High Income Central Fund  78,429  1,380  82,096  1,466  2,510  (223)  --  0.0% 
Fidelity Investment Grade Bond Central Fund  1,364,888  612,509  --  69,188  --  (33,674)  1,943,723  5.9% 
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund 0.06%  20,393  131,707  147,237  49  --  --  4,863  0.0% 
Total  $1,552,421  $2,982,464  $2,355,608  $70,828  $2,508  $(33,897)  $2,147,888   

Amounts in the income column in the above table include any capital gain distributions from underlying funds, which are presented in the corresponding line-item in the Statement of Operations, if applicable. Amount for Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less rebates paid to borrowers and any lending agent fees associated with the loan, plus any premium payments received for lending certain types of securities.

Investment Valuation

The following is a summary of the inputs used, as of August 31, 2021, involving the Fund's assets and liabilities carried at fair value. The inputs or methodology used for valuing securities may not be an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities. For more information on valuation inputs, and their aggregation into the levels used below, please refer to the Investment Valuation section in the accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.

  Valuation Inputs at Reporting Date: 
Description  Total  Level 1  Level 2  Level 3 
(Amounts in thousands)         
Investments in Securities:         
Equities:         
Communication Services  $562,042  $560,016  $2,026  $-- 
Consumer Discretionary  621,376  588,863  31,675  838 
Consumer Staples  292,227  292,227  --  -- 
Energy  135,666  135,666  --  -- 
Financials  545,796  528,027  14,218  3,551 
Health Care  651,812  638,727  13,085  -- 
Industrials  495,787  492,997  870  1,920 
Information Technology  1,320,002  1,301,406  5,932  12,664 
Materials  129,029  129,029  --  -- 
Real Estate  134,928  134,928  --  -- 
Utilities  116,390  116,390  --  -- 
U.S. Government and Government Agency Obligations  9,469  --  9,469  -- 
Preferred Securities  1,011  --  --  1,011 
Fixed-Income Funds  1,943,723  1,943,723  --  -- 
Money Market Funds  204,165  204,165  --  -- 
Total Investments in Securities:  $7,163,423  $7,066,164  $77,275  $19,984 
Derivative Instruments:         
Assets         
Futures Contracts  $7,865  $7,865  $--  $-- 
Total Assets  $7,865  $7,865  $--  $-- 
Total Derivative Instruments:  $7,865  $7,865  $--  $-- 
Net unrealized depreciation on unfunded commitments  $(458)  $--  $(458)  $-- 

Value of Derivative Instruments

The following table is a summary of the Fund's value of derivative instruments by primary risk exposure as of August 31, 2021. For additional information on derivative instruments, please refer to the Derivative Instruments section in the accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.

Primary Risk Exposure / Derivative Type  Value 
  Asset  Liability 
(Amounts in thousands)     
Equity Risk     
Futures Contracts(a)  $7,865  $0 
Total Equity Risk  7,865 
Total Value of Derivatives  $7,865  $0 

 (a) Reflects gross cumulative appreciation (depreciation) on futures contracts as presented in the Schedule of Investments. In the Statement of Assets and Liabilities, the period end daily variation margin is included in receivable or payable for daily variation margin on futures contracts, and the net cumulative appreciation (depreciation) is included in Total accumulated earnings (loss).

Other Information

The composition of credit quality ratings as a percentage of Total Net Assets is as follows (Unaudited):

U.S. Government and U.S. Government Agency Obligations  14.1% 
AAA,AA,A  4.3% 
BBB  6.7% 
BB  1.6% 
0.0% 
Not Rated  0.7% 
Equities  69.8% 
Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets  2.8% 
  100% 

We have used ratings from Moody's Investors Service, Inc. Where Moody's® ratings are not available, we have used S&P® ratings. All ratings are as of the date indicated and do not reflect subsequent changes.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.


Financial Statements

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

Amounts in thousands (except per-share amounts)    August 31, 2021 
Assets     
Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $4,650) — See accompanying schedule:
Unaffiliated issuers (cost $3,210,184) 
$5,015,535   
Fidelity Central Funds (cost $2,119,051)  2,147,888   
Total Investment in Securities (cost $5,329,235)    $7,163,423 
Receivable for investments sold    8,354 
Receivable for fund shares sold    12,103 
Dividends receivable    5,631 
Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds    23 
Prepaid expenses    11 
Other receivables    148 
Total assets    7,189,693 
Liabilities     
Payable to custodian bank  $1,294   
Payable for investments purchased  6,898   
Unrealized depreciation on unfunded commitments  458   
Payable for fund shares redeemed  4,166   
Accrued management fee  2,196   
Distribution and service plan fees payable  1,983   
Payable for daily variation margin on futures contracts  143   
Other affiliated payables  979   
Other payables and accrued expenses  911   
Collateral on securities loaned  4,863   
Total liabilities    23,891 
Net Assets    $7,165,802 
Net Assets consist of:     
Paid in capital    $4,932,828 
Total accumulated earnings (loss)    2,232,974 
Net Assets    $7,165,802 
Net Asset Value and Maximum Offering Price     
Class A:     
Net Asset Value and redemption price per share ($1,723,094 ÷ 58,066 shares)(a)    $29.67 
Maximum offering price per share (100/94.25 of $29.67)    $31.48 
Class M:     
Net Asset Value and redemption price per share ($1,743,911 ÷ 57,985 shares)(a)    $30.08 
Maximum offering price per share (100/96.50 of $30.08)    $31.17 
Class C:     
Net Asset Value and offering price per share ($1,117,950 ÷ 38,059 shares)(a)    $29.37 
Class I:     
Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($1,831,448 ÷ 60,319 shares)    $30.36 
Class Z:     
Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($749,399 ÷ 24,673 shares)    $30.37 

 (a) Redemption price per share is equal to net asset value less any applicable contingent deferred sales charge.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.


Statement of Operations

Amounts in thousands    Year ended August 31, 2021 
Investment Income     
Dividends    $46,676 
Interest   
Income from Fidelity Central Funds (including $49 from security lending)    38,387 
Total income    85,072 
Expenses     
Management fee  $22,089   
Transfer agent fees  9,016   
Distribution and service plan fees  20,711   
Accounting fees  1,402   
Custodian fees and expenses  106   
Independent trustees' fees and expenses  23   
Registration fees  367   
Audit  124   
Legal  19   
Miscellaneous  27   
Total expenses before reductions  53,884   
Expense reductions  (240)   
Total expenses after reductions    53,644 
Net investment income (loss)    31,428 
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)     
Net realized gain (loss) on:     
Investment securities:     
Unaffiliated issuers (net of foreign taxes of $171)  425,511   
Fidelity Central Funds  2,508   
Foreign currency transactions  (20)   
Futures contracts  38,940   
Capital gain distributions from Fidelity Central Funds  32,441   
Total net realized gain (loss)    499,380 
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:     
Investment securities:     
Unaffiliated issuers (net of increase in deferred foreign taxes of $243)  775,265   
Fidelity Central Funds  (33,897)   
Unfunded commitments  (458)   
Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies  (13)   
Futures contracts  638   
Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)    741,535 
Net gain (loss)    1,240,915 
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations    $1,272,343 

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.


Statement of Changes in Net Assets

Amounts in thousands  Year ended August 31, 2021  Year ended August 31, 2020 
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets     
Operations     
Net investment income (loss)  $31,428  $44,644 
Net realized gain (loss)  499,380  187,400 
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)  741,535  562,557 
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations  1,272,343  794,601 
Distributions to shareholders  (201,498)  (110,464) 
Share transactions - net increase (decrease)  1,332,853  286,311 
Total increase (decrease) in net assets  2,403,698  970,448 
Net Assets     
Beginning of period  4,762,104  3,791,656 
End of period  $7,165,802  $4,762,104 

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.


Financial Highlights

Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund Class A

Years ended August 31,  2021  2020  2019  2018  2017 
Selected Per–Share Data           
Net asset value, beginning of period  $24.87  $21.14  $22.22  $21.09  $19.18 
Income from Investment Operations           
Net investment income (loss)A  .17  .27  .30  .25  .26 
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)  5.67  4.10  .08  2.22  1.98 
Total from investment operations  5.84  4.37  .38  2.47  2.24 
Distributions from net investment income  (.17)  (.29)  (.29)  (.25)  (.25) 
Distributions from net realized gain  (.88)  (.35)  (1.18)  (1.09)  (.09) 
Total distributions  (1.04)B  (.64)  (1.46)B  (1.34)  (.33)B 
Net asset value, end of period  $29.67  $24.87  $21.14  $22.22  $21.09 
Total ReturnC,D  24.38%  21.16%  2.15%  12.26%  11.84% 
Ratios to Average Net AssetsE,F           
Expenses before reductions  .83%  .85%  .86%  .87%  .89% 
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any  .83%  .85%  .86%  .87%  .89% 
Expenses net of all reductions  .82%  .84%  .86%  .86%  .88% 
Net investment income (loss)  .63%  1.21%  1.46%  1.18%  1.28% 
Supplemental Data           
Net assets, end of period (in millions)  $1,723  $1,080  $818  $681  $593 
Portfolio turnover rateG  37%  92%  57%  62%H  86% 

 A Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

 B Total distributions per share do not sum due to rounding.

 C Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.

 D Total returns do not include the effect of the sales charges.

 E Fees and expenses of any underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of these expenses. For additional expense information related to investments in Fidelity Central Funds, please refer to the "Investments in Fidelity Central Funds" note found in the Notes to Financial Statements section of the most recent Annual or Semi-Annual report.

 F Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed, waived, or reduced through arrangements with the investment adviser, brokerage services, or other offset arrangements, if applicable, and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements, waivers or reductions occur.

 G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

 H Portfolio turnover rate excludes securities received or delivered in-kind.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.


Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund Class M

Years ended August 31,  2021  2020  2019  2018  2017 
Selected Per–Share Data           
Net asset value, beginning of period  $25.19  $21.40  $22.47  $21.31  $19.37 
Income from Investment Operations           
Net investment income (loss)A  .10  .22  .25  .20  .21 
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)  5.76  4.15  .09  2.24  2.01 
Total from investment operations  5.86  4.37  .34  2.44  2.22 
Distributions from net investment income  (.10)  (.23)  (.23)  (.19)  (.20) 
Distributions from net realized gain  (.88)  (.35)  (1.18)  (1.09)  (.09) 
Total distributions  (.97)B  (.58)  (1.41)  (1.28)  (.28)B 
Net asset value, end of period  $30.08  $25.19  $21.40  $22.47  $21.31 
Total ReturnC,D  24.11%  20.85%  1.91%  11.99%  11.59% 
Ratios to Average Net AssetsE,F           
Expenses before reductions  1.07%  1.10%  1.11%  1.12%  1.13% 
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any  1.07%  1.10%  1.11%  1.11%  1.13% 
Expenses net of all reductions  1.07%  1.09%  1.11%  1.11%  1.13% 
Net investment income (loss)  .38%  .97%  1.21%  .94%  1.04% 
Supplemental Data           
Net assets, end of period (in millions)  $1,744  $1,455  $1,273  $1,257  $1,163 
Portfolio turnover rateG  37%  92%  57%  62%H  86% 

 A Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

 B Total distributions per share do not sum due to rounding.

 C Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.

 D Total returns do not include the effect of the sales charges.

 E Fees and expenses of any underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of these expenses. For additional expense information related to investments in Fidelity Central Funds, please refer to the "Investments in Fidelity Central Funds" note found in the Notes to Financial Statements section of the most recent Annual or Semi-Annual report.

 F Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed, waived, or reduced through arrangements with the investment adviser, brokerage services, or other offset arrangements, if applicable, and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements, waivers or reductions occur.

 G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

 H Portfolio turnover rate excludes securities received or delivered in-kind.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.


Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund Class C

Years ended August 31,  2021  2020  2019  2018  2017 
Selected Per–Share Data           
Net asset value, beginning of period  $24.67  $20.97  $22.05  $20.93  $19.04 
Income from Investment Operations           
Net investment income (loss)A  (.03)  .10  .14  .09  .10 
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)  5.62  4.07  .09  2.20  1.98 
Total from investment operations  5.59  4.17  .23  2.29  2.08 
Distributions from net investment income  (.02)  (.13)  (.13)  (.08)  (.10) 
Distributions from net realized gain  (.87)  (.35)  (1.18)  (1.09)  (.09) 
Total distributions  (.89)  (.47)B  (1.31)  (1.17)  (.19) 
Net asset value, end of period  $29.37  $24.67  $20.97  $22.05  $20.93 
Total ReturnC,D  23.43%  20.25%  1.40%  11.41%  10.99% 
Ratios to Average Net AssetsE,F           
Expenses before reductions  1.58%  1.60%  1.62%  1.62%  1.64% 
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any  1.58%  1.60%  1.62%  1.62%  1.64% 
Expenses net of all reductions  1.58%  1.60%  1.62%  1.62%  1.64% 
Net investment income (loss)  (.13)%  .46%  .70%  .43%  .53% 
Supplemental Data           
Net assets, end of period (in millions)  $1,118  $769  $635  $620  $479 
Portfolio turnover rateG  37%  92%  57%  62%H  86% 

 A Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

 B Total distributions per share do not sum due to rounding.

 C Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.

 D Total returns do not include the effect of the contingent deferred sales charge.

 E Fees and expenses of any underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of these expenses. For additional expense information related to investments in Fidelity Central Funds, please refer to the "Investments in Fidelity Central Funds" note found in the Notes to Financial Statements section of the most recent Annual or Semi-Annual report.

 F Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed, waived, or reduced through arrangements with the investment adviser, brokerage services, or other offset arrangements, if applicable, and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements, waivers or reductions occur.

 G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

 H Portfolio turnover rate excludes securities received or delivered in-kind.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.


Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund Class I

Years ended August 31,  2021  2020  2019  2018  2017 
Selected Per–Share Data           
Net asset value, beginning of period  $25.42  $21.59  $22.66  $21.48  $19.53 
Income from Investment Operations           
Net investment income (loss)A  .24  .33  .36  .31  .31 
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)  5.81  4.19  .08  2.26  2.02 
Total from investment operations  6.05  4.52  .44  2.57  2.33 
Distributions from net investment income  (.23)  (.34)  (.34)  (.30)  (.30) 
Distributions from net realized gain  (.88)  (.35)  (1.18)  (1.09)  (.09) 
Total distributions  (1.11)  (.69)  (1.51)B  (1.39)  (.38)B 
Net asset value, end of period  $30.36  $25.42  $21.59  $22.66  $21.48 
Total ReturnC  24.68%  21.48%  2.41%  12.56%  12.12% 
Ratios to Average Net AssetsD,E           
Expenses before reductions  .57%  .59%  .61%  .61%  .63% 
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any  .57%  .59%  .61%  .61%  .63% 
Expenses net of all reductions  .57%  .58%  .60%  .61%  .62% 
Net investment income (loss)  .88%  1.47%  1.71%  1.44%  1.54% 
Supplemental Data           
Net assets, end of period (in millions)  $1,831  $1,070  $785  $621  $422 
Portfolio turnover rateF  37%  92%  57%  62%G  86% 

 A Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

 B Total distributions per share do not sum due to rounding.

 C Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.

 D Fees and expenses of any underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of these expenses. For additional expense information related to investments in Fidelity Central Funds, please refer to the "Investments in Fidelity Central Funds" note found in the Notes to Financial Statements section of the most recent Annual or Semi-Annual report.

 E Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed, waived, or reduced through arrangements with the investment adviser, brokerage services, or other offset arrangements, if applicable, and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements, waivers or reductions occur.

 F Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

 G Portfolio turnover rate excludes securities received or delivered in-kind.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.


Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund Class Z

Years ended August 31,  2021  2020  2019  2018  2017 
Selected Per–Share Data           
Net asset value, beginning of period  $25.43  $21.60  $22.66  $21.48  $19.53 
Income from Investment Operations           
Net investment income (loss)A  .28  .36  .38  .34  .34 
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)  5.80  4.19  .10  2.26  2.02 
Total from investment operations  6.08  4.55  .48  2.60  2.36 
Distributions from net investment income  (.26)  (.37)  (.36)  (.33)  (.33) 
Distributions from net realized gain  (.88)  (.35)  (1.18)  (1.09)  (.09) 
Total distributions  (1.14)  (.72)  (1.54)  (1.42)  (.41)B 
Net asset value, end of period  $30.37  $25.43  $21.60  $22.66  $21.48 
Total ReturnC,D  24.82%  21.62%  2.57%  12.70%  12.26% 
Ratios to Average Net AssetsE,F           
Expenses before reductions  .45%  .47%  .48%  .49%  .50% 
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any  .45%  .47%  .48%  .49%  .50% 
Expenses net of all reductions  .45%  .46%  .48%  .48%  .49% 
Net investment income (loss)  1.00%  1.59%  1.84%  1.56%  1.67% 
Supplemental Data           
Net assets, end of period (in millions)  $749  $388  $280  $224  $68 
Portfolio turnover rateG  37%  92%  57%  62%H  86% 

 A Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

 B Total distributions per share do not sum due to rounding.

 C Total returns for periods of less than one year are not annualized.

 D Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.

 E Fees and expenses of any underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of these expenses. For additional expense information related to investments in Fidelity Central Funds, please refer to the "Investments in Fidelity Central Funds" note found in the Notes to Financial Statements section of the most recent Annual or Semi-Annual report.

 F Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed, waived, or reduced through arrangements with the investment adviser, brokerage services, or other offset arrangements, if applicable, and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements, waivers or reductions occur.

 G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

 H Portfolio turnover rate excludes securities received or delivered in-kind.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.


Notes to Financial Statements

For the period ended August 31, 2021
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)

1. Organization.

Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund (the Fund) is a fund of Fidelity Advisor Series I (the Trust) and is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares. The Trust is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act), as an open-end management investment company organized as a Massachusetts business trust. The Fund offers Class A, Class M, Class C, Class I and Class Z shares, each of which has equal rights as to assets and voting privileges. Each class has exclusive voting rights with respect to matters that affect that class. Effective June 21, 2021, Class C shares will automatically convert to Class A shares after a holding period of eight years from the initial date of purchase, with certain exceptions. Prior to June 21, 2021, Class C shares automatically converted to Class A shares after a holding period of ten years from the initial date of purchase, with certain exceptions.

2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds.

Funds may invest in Fidelity Central Funds, which are open-end investment companies generally available only to other investment companies and accounts managed by the investment adviser and its affiliates. The Schedule of Investments lists any Fidelity Central Funds held as an investment as of period end, but does not include the underlying holdings of each Fidelity Central Fund. An investing fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

Based on its investment objective, each Fidelity Central Fund may invest or participate in various investment vehicles or strategies that are similar to those of the investing fund. These strategies are consistent with the investment objectives of the investing fund and may involve certain economic risks which may cause a decline in value of each of the Fidelity Central Funds and thus a decline in the value of the investing fund.

Fidelity Central Fund  Investment Manager  Investment Objective  Investment Practices  Expense Ratio(a) 
Fidelity Investment Grade Bond Central Fund  Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (FMR)  Seeks a high level of income by normally investing in investment–grade debt securities.  Delayed Delivery & When Issued Securities
Futures
Options
Restricted Securities
Swaps 
Less than .005% 
Fidelity Money Market Central Funds  Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (FMR)  Each fund seeks to obtain a high level of current income consistent with the preservation of capital and liquidity.  Short-term Investments  Less than .005% to .01% 

 (a) Expenses expressed as a percentage of average net assets and are as of each underlying Central Fund's most recent annual or semi-annual shareholder report.

An unaudited holdings listing for the investing fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of any securities and other investments held indirectly through its investment in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com and/or institutional.fidelity.com, as applicable. A complete unaudited list of holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is available upon request or at the Securities and Exchange Commission website at www.sec.gov. In addition, the financial statements of the Fidelity Central Funds which contain the significant accounting policies (including investment valuation policies) of those funds, and are not covered by the Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the Securities and Exchange Commission website or upon request.

3. Significant Accounting Policies.

The Fund is an investment company and applies the accounting and reporting guidance of the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) Accounting Standards Codification Topic 946 Financial Services - Investment Companies. The financial statements have been prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (GAAP), which require management to make certain estimates and assumptions at the date of the financial statements. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Subsequent events, if any, through the date that the financial statements were issued have been evaluated in the preparation of the financial statements. The Fund's Schedule of Investments lists any underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs) but does not include the underlying holdings of these funds. The following summarizes the significant accounting policies of the Fund:

Investment Valuation. Investments are valued as of 4:00 p.m. Eastern time on the last calendar day of the period. The Board of Trustees (the Board) has delegated the day to day responsibility for the valuation of the Fund's investments to the Fair Value Committee (the Committee) established by the Fund's investment adviser. In accordance with valuation policies and procedures approved by the Board, the Fund attempts to obtain prices from one or more third party pricing vendors or brokers to value its investments. When current market prices, quotations or currency exchange rates are not readily available or reliable, investments will be fair valued in good faith by the Committee, in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board. Factors used in determining fair value vary by investment type and may include market or investment specific events, changes in interest rates and credit quality. The frequency with which these procedures are used cannot be predicted and they may be utilized to a significant extent. The Committee oversees the Fund's valuation policies and procedures and reports to the Board on the Committee's activities and fair value determinations. The Board monitors the appropriateness of the procedures used in valuing the Fund's investments and ratifies the fair value determinations of the Committee.

The Fund categorizes the inputs to valuation techniques used to value its investments into a disclosure hierarchy consisting of three levels as shown below:

  • Level 1 – quoted prices in active markets for identical investments
  • Level 2 – other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar investments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, etc.)
  • Level 3 – unobservable inputs (including the Fund's own assumptions based on the best information available)

Valuation techniques used to value the Fund's investments by major category are as follows:

Equity securities, including restricted securities, for which market quotations are readily available, are valued at the last reported sale price or official closing price as reported by a third party pricing vendor on the primary market or exchange on which they are traded and are categorized as Level 1 in the hierarchy. In the event there were no sales during the day or closing prices are not available, securities are valued at the last quoted bid price or may be valued using the last available price and are generally categorized as Level 2 in the hierarchy. For foreign equity securities, when market or security specific events arise, comparisons to the valuation of American Depositary Receipts (ADRs), futures contracts, Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) and certain indexes as well as quoted prices for similar securities may be used and would be categorized as Level 2 in the hierarchy. For equity securities, including restricted securities, where observable inputs are limited, assumptions about market activity and risk are used and these securities may be categorized as Level 3 in the hierarchy.

Debt securities, including restricted securities, are valued based on evaluated prices received from third party pricing vendors or from brokers who make markets in such securities. Preferred securities and U.S. government and government agency obligations are valued by pricing vendors who utilize matrix pricing which considers yield or price of bonds of comparable quality, coupon, maturity and type or by broker-supplied prices. When independent prices are unavailable or unreliable, debt securities may be valued utilizing pricing methodologies which consider similar factors that would be used by third party pricing vendors. Debt securities are generally categorized as Level 2 in the hierarchy but may be Level 3 depending on the circumstances.

Futures contracts are valued at the settlement price established each day by the board of trade or exchange on which they are traded and are categorized as Level 1 in the hierarchy. Investments in open-end mutual funds, including the Fidelity Central Funds, are valued at their closing net asset value (NAV) each business day and are categorized as Level 1 in the hierarchy.

Changes in valuation techniques may result in transfers in or out of an assigned level within the disclosure hierarchy. The aggregate value of investments by input level as of August 31, 2021 is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.

Foreign Currency. Certain Funds may use foreign currency contracts to facilitate transactions in foreign-denominated securities. Gains and losses from these transactions may arise from changes in the value of the foreign currency or if the counterparties do not perform under the contracts' terms.

Foreign-denominated assets, including investment securities, and liabilities are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rates at period end. Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and dividends received, and expenses denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate in effect on the transaction date.

The effects of exchange rate fluctuations on investments are included with the net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investment securities. Other foreign currency transactions resulting in realized and unrealized gain (loss) are disclosed separately.

Investment Transactions and Income. For financial reporting purposes, the Fund's investment holdings and NAV include trades executed through the end of the last business day of the period. The NAV per share for processing shareholder transactions is calculated as of the close of business of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time and includes trades executed through the end of the prior business day. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of identified cost and include proceeds received from litigation. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date, except for certain dividends from foreign securities where the ex-dividend date may have passed, which are recorded as soon as the Fund is informed of the ex-dividend date. Non-cash dividends included in dividend income, if any, are recorded at the fair market value of the securities received. Income and capital gain distributions from Fidelity Central Funds, if any, are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Certain distributions received by the Fund represent a return of capital or capital gain. The Fund determines the components of these distributions subsequent to the ex-dividend date, based upon receipt of tax filings or other correspondence relating to the underlying investment. These distributions are recorded as a reduction of cost of investments and/or as a realized gain. Interest income is accrued as earned and includes coupon interest and amortization of premium and accretion of discount on debt securities as applicable. Investment income is recorded net of foreign taxes withheld where recovery of such taxes is uncertain. Debt obligations may be placed on non-accrual status and related interest income may be reduced by ceasing current accruals and writing off interest receivables when the collection of all or a portion of interest has become doubtful based on consistently applied procedures. A debt obligation is removed from non-accrual status when the issuer resumes interest payments or when collectability of interest is reasonably assured.

Class Allocations and Expenses. Investment income, realized and unrealized capital gains and losses, common expenses of a fund, and certain fund-level expense reductions, if any, are allocated daily on a pro-rata basis to each class based on the relative net assets of each class to the total net assets of a fund. Each class differs with respect to transfer agent and distribution and service plan fees incurred, as applicable. Certain expense reductions may also differ by class, if applicable. For the reporting period, the allocated portion of income and expenses to each class as a percent of its average net assets may vary due to the timing of recording these transactions in relation to fluctuating net assets of the classes. Expenses directly attributable to a fund are charged to that fund. Expenses attributable to more than one fund are allocated among the respective funds on the basis of relative net assets or other appropriate methods. Expenses included in the accompanying financial statements reflect the expenses of that fund and do not include any expenses associated with any underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds. Although not included in a fund's expenses, a fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of these expenses through the net asset value of each underlying mutual fund or exchange-traded fund. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.

Deferred Trustee Compensation. Under a Deferred Compensation Plan (the Plan) for certain Funds, certain independent Trustees have elected to defer receipt of a portion of their annual compensation. Deferred amounts are invested in affiliated mutual funds, are marked-to-market and remain in a fund until distributed in accordance with the Plan. The investment of deferred amounts and the offsetting payable to the Trustees presented below are included in the accompanying Statement of Assets and Liabilities in other receivables and other payables and accrued expenses, as applicable.

Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund  $11 

Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders. Each year, the Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code, including distributing substantially all of its taxable income and realized gains. As a result, no provision for U.S. Federal income taxes is required. As of August 31, 2021, the Fund did not have any unrecognized tax benefits in the financial statements; nor is the Fund aware of any tax positions for which it is reasonably possible that the total amounts of unrecognized tax benefits will significantly change in the next twelve months. The Fund files a U.S. federal tax return, in addition to state and local tax returns as required. The Fund's federal income tax returns are subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for a period of three fiscal years after they are filed. State and local tax returns may be subject to examination for an additional fiscal year depending on the jurisdiction. Foreign taxes are provided for based on the Fund's understanding of the tax rules and rates that exist in the foreign markets in which it invests. The Fund is subject to a tax imposed on capital gains by certain countries in which it invests. An estimated deferred tax liability for net unrealized appreciation on the applicable securities is included in Other payables and accrued expenses on the Statement of Assets & Liabilities.

Distributions are declared and recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income and capital gain distributions are declared separately for each class. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from GAAP. In addition, the Fund claimed a portion of the payment made to redeeming shareholders as a distribution for income tax purposes.

Capital accounts within the financial statements are adjusted for permanent book-tax differences. These adjustments have no impact on net assets or the results of operations. Capital accounts are not adjusted for temporary book-tax differences which will reverse in a subsequent period.

Book-tax differences are primarily due to the short-term gain distributions from the underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs), futures contracts, foreign currency transactions, certain foreign taxes, passive foreign investment companies (PFIC), market discount, partnerships, deferred Trustees compensation and losses deferred due to wash sales and excise tax regulations.

As of period end, the cost and unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in securities, and derivatives if applicable, for federal income tax purposes were as follows:

Gross unrealized appreciation  $1,885,487 
Gross unrealized depreciation  (63,744) 
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)  $1,821,743 
Tax Cost  $5,341,222 

The tax-based components of distributable earnings as of period end were as follows:

Undistributed ordinary income  $173,612 
Undistributed long-term capital gain  $238,230 
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities and other investments  $1,821,764 

The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:

  August 31, 2021  August 31, 2020 
Ordinary Income  $55,666  $ 54,882 
Long-term Capital Gains  145,832  55,582 
Total  $201,498  $ 110,464 

Restricted Securities (including Private Placements). Funds may invest in securities that are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale. These securities generally may be resold in transactions exempt from registration or to the public if the securities are registered. Disposal of these securities may involve time-consuming negotiations and expense, and prompt sale at an acceptable price may be difficult. Information regarding restricted securities held at period end is included at the end of the Schedule of Investments, if applicable.

Special Purpose Acquisition Companies. Funds may invest in stock, warrants, and other securities of special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) or similar special purpose entities. A SPAC is a publicly traded company that raises investment capital via an initial public offering (IPO) for the purpose of acquiring the equity securities of one or more existing companies via merger, business combination, acquisition or other similar transactions within a designated time frame.

Private Investment in Public Equity. Funds may acquire equity securities of an issuer through a private investment in a public equity (PIPE) transaction, including through commitments to purchase securities on a when-issued basis. A PIPE typically involves the purchase of securities directly from a publicly traded company in a private placement transaction. Securities purchased through PIPE transactions will be restricted from trading and considered illiquid until a resale registration statement for the shares is filed and declared effective.

At period end, the Fund had commitments to purchase when-issued securities through PIPE transactions with SPACs. The commitments are contingent upon the SPACs acquiring the securities of target companies. Unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on these commitments is separately presented in the Statements of Assets and Liabilities as Unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on unfunded commitments, and in the Statement of Operations as Change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on unfunded commitments.

4. Derivative Instruments.

Risk Exposures and the Use of Derivative Instruments. The Fund's investment objective allows the Fund to enter into various types of derivative contracts, including futures contracts. Derivatives are investments whose value is primarily derived from underlying assets, indices or reference rates and may be transacted on an exchange or over-the-counter (OTC). Derivatives may involve a future commitment to buy or sell a specified asset based on specified terms, to exchange future cash flows at periodic intervals based on a notional principal amount, or for one party to make one or more payments upon the occurrence of specified events in exchange for periodic payments from the other party.

The Fund used derivatives to increase returns and to manage exposure to certain risks as defined below. The success of any strategy involving derivatives depends on analysis of numerous economic factors, and if the strategies for investment do not work as intended, the Fund may not achieve its objectives.

The Fund's use of derivatives increased or decreased its exposure to the following risk:

Equity Risk  Equity risk relates to the fluctuations in the value of financial instruments as a result of changes in market prices (other than those arising from interest rate risk or foreign exchange risk), whether caused by factors specific to an individual investment, its issuer, or all factors affecting all instruments traded in a market or market segment.
 

The Fund is also exposed to additional risks from investing in derivatives, such as liquidity risk and counterparty credit risk. Liquidity risk is the risk that the Fund will be unable to close out the derivative in the open market in a timely manner. Counterparty credit risk is the risk that the counterparty will not be able to fulfill its obligation to the Fund. Counterparty credit risk related to exchange-traded futures contracts may be mitigated by the protection provided by the exchange on which they trade.

Investing in derivatives may involve greater risks than investing in the underlying assets directly and, to varying degrees, may involve risk of loss in excess of any initial investment and collateral received and amounts recognized in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. In addition, there may be the risk that the change in value of the derivative contract does not correspond to the change in value of the underlying instrument.

Futures Contracts. A futures contract is an agreement between two parties to buy or sell a specified underlying instrument for a fixed price at a specified future date. The Fund used futures contracts to manage its exposure to the stock market.

Upon entering into a futures contract, a fund is required to deposit either cash or securities (initial margin) with a clearing broker in an amount equal to a certain percentage of the face value of the contract. Futures contracts are marked-to-market daily and subsequent daily payments (variation margin) are made or received by a fund depending on the daily fluctuations in the value of the futures contracts and are recorded as unrealized appreciation or (depreciation). This receivable and/or payable, if any, is included in daily variation margin on futures contracts in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Realized gain or (loss) is recorded upon the expiration or closing of a futures contract. The net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on futures contracts during the period is presented in the Statement of Operations.

Any open futures contracts at period end are presented in the Schedule of Investments under the caption "Futures Contracts". The notional amount at value reflects each contract's exposure to the underlying instrument or index at period end and is representative of volume of activity during the period. Securities deposited to meet initial margin requirements are identified in the Schedule of Investments.

5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.

Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities, U.S. government securities and in-kind transactions, as applicable, are noted in the table below.

  Purchases ($)  Sales ($) 
Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund  3,226,790  2,093,374 

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.

Management Fee. Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (the investment adviser) and its affiliates provide the Fund with investment management related services for which the Fund pays a monthly management fee. The management fee is the sum of an individual fund fee rate that is based on an annual rate of .15% of the Fund's average net assets and an annualized group fee rate that averaged .23% during the period. The group fee rate is based upon the monthly average net assets of a group of registered investment companies with which the investment adviser has management contracts. The group fee rate decreases as assets under management increase and increases as assets under management decrease. For the reporting period, the total annual management fee rate was .38% of the Fund's average net assets.

Distribution and Service Plan Fees. In accordance with Rule 12b-1 of the 1940 Act, the Fund has adopted separate Distribution and Service Plans for each class of shares. Certain classes pay Fidelity Distributors Company LLC (FDC), an affiliate of the investment adviser, separate Distribution and Service Fees, each of which is based on an annual percentage of each class' average net assets. In addition, FDC may pay financial intermediaries for selling shares of the Fund and providing shareholder support services. For the period, the Distribution and Service Fee rates, total fees and amounts retained by FDC were as follows:

  Distribution Fee  Service Fee  Total Fees  Retained by FDC 
Class A  -%  .25%  $3,423  $229 
Class M  .25%  .25%  8,001  81 
Class C  .75%  .25%  9,287  2,253 
      $20,711  $2,563 

Sales Load. FDC may receive a front-end sales charge of up to 5.75% for selling Class A shares and 3.50% for selling Class M shares, some of which is paid to financial intermediaries for selling shares of the Fund. Depending on the holding period, FDC may receive contingent deferred sales charges levied on Class A, Class M and Class C redemptions. The deferred sales charges are 1.00% for Class C shares, 1.00% for certain purchases of Class A shares and .25% for certain purchases of Class M shares.

For the period, sales charge amounts retained by FDC were as follows:

  Retained by FDC 
Class A  $1,054 
Class M  96 
Class C(a)  59 
  $1,209 

 (a) When Class C shares are initially sold, FDC pays commissions from its own resources to financial intermediaries through which the sales are made.

Transfer Agent Fees. Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company LLC (FIIOC), an affiliate of the investment adviser, is the transfer, dividend disbursing and shareholder servicing agent for each class of the Fund. FIIOC receives account fees and asset-based fees that vary according to the account size and type of account of the shareholders of the respective classes of the Fund, except for Class Z. FIIOC receives an asset-based fee of Class Z's average net assets. FIIOC pays for typesetting, printing and mailing of shareholder reports, except proxy statements.

For the period, transfer agent fees for each class were as follows:

  Amount  % of Class-Level Average Net Assets 
Class A  $2,263  .17 
Class M  2,616  .16 
Class C  1,573  .17 
Class I  2,331  .16 
Class Z  233  .04 
  $9,016   

Accounting Fees. Fidelity Service Company, Inc. (FSC), an affiliate of the investment adviser, maintains the Fund's accounting records. The accounting fee is based on the level of average net assets for each month. For the period, the fees were equivalent to the following annual rates:

  % of Average Net Assets 
Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund  .02 

Brokerage Commissions. A portion of portfolio transactions were placed with brokerage firms which are affiliates of the investment adviser. Brokerage commissions are included in net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in the Statement of Operations. The commissions paid to these affiliated firms were as follows:

  Amount 
Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund  $44 

Interfund Trades. Funds may purchase from or sell securities to other Fidelity Funds under procedures adopted by the Board. The procedures have been designed to ensure these interfund trades are executed in accordance with Rule 17a-7 of the 1940 Act. Any interfund trades are included within the respective purchases and sales amounts shown in the Purchases and Sales of Investments note and are noted in the table below.

  Purchases ($)  Sales ($) 
Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund  166,897  99,328 

Prior Fiscal Year Affiliated Exchanges In-Kind. During the prior period, the Fund completed exchanges in-kind with Fidelity Investment Grade Bond Central Fund. The Fund delivered investments, including accrued interest, and cash valued at $874,641 to Fidelity Investment Grade Bond Central Fund in exchange for 7,773 shares. The fund had a net realized gain of $41,637 on investments delivered through in-kind redemptions. The Fund recognized gains for federal income tax purposes.

In addition, the Fund redeemed 2,597 shares of Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund in exchange for investments and cash with a value of $284,489 and a non-taxable exchange of those investments for 2,529 shares of Fidelity Investment Grade Bond Central Fund. The fund had a net realized gains of $7,898 on the Fund's redemptions of Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund shares. The Fund recognized gains on the redemption of Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund for federal income tax purposes.

7. Committed Line of Credit.

Certain Funds participate with other funds managed by the investment adviser or an affiliate in a $4.25 billion credit facility (the "line of credit") to be utilized for temporary or emergency purposes to fund shareholder redemptions or for other short-term liquidity purposes. During the period, there were no borrowings on this line of credit.

  Amount 
Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund  $10 

8. Security Lending.

Funds lend portfolio securities from time to time in order to earn additional income. Lending agents are used, including National Financial Services (NFS), an affiliate of the investment adviser. Pursuant to a securities lending agreement, NFS will receive a fee, which is capped at 9.9% of a fund's daily lending revenue, for its services as lending agent. A fund may lend securities to certain qualified borrowers, including NFS. On the settlement date of the loan, a fund receives collateral (in the form of U.S. Treasury obligations, letters of credit and/or cash) against the loaned securities and maintains collateral in an amount not less than 100% of the market value of the loaned securities during the period of the loan. The market value of the loaned securities is determined at the close of business of a fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to a fund on the next business day. A fund or borrower may terminate the loan at any time, and if the borrower defaults on its obligation to return the securities loaned because of insolvency or other reasons, a fund may apply collateral received from the borrower against the obligation. A fund may experience delays and costs in recovering the securities loaned. Any cash collateral received is invested in the Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund. Any loaned securities are identified as such in the Schedule of Investments, and the value of loaned securities and cash collateral at period end, as applicable, are presented in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less rebates paid to borrowers and any lending agent fees associated with the loan, plus any premium payments received for lending certain types of securities. Security lending income is presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of income from Fidelity Central Funds. Affiliated security lending activity, if any, was as follows:

  Total Security Lending Fees Paid to NFS  Security Lending Income From Securities Loaned to NFS  Value of Securities Loaned to NFS at Period End 
Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund  $6  $–(a)  $– 

 (a) In the amount of less than five hundred dollars.

9. Expense Reductions.

Commissions paid to certain brokers with whom the investment adviser, or its affiliates, places trades on behalf of the Fund include an amount in addition to trade execution, which may be rebated back to the Fund to offset expenses. This amount totaled $184 for the period.

In addition, during the period the investment adviser or an affiliate reimbursed and/or waived a portion of fund-level operating expenses in the amount of $56.

10. Distributions to Shareholders.

Distributions to shareholders of each class were as follows:

  Year ended
August 31, 2021 
Year ended
August 31, 2020 
Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund     
Distributions to shareholders     
Class A  $47,534  $25,430 
Class M  56,522  34,161 
Class C  28,342  14,844 
Class I  50,343  26,047 
Class Z  18,757  9,981 
Total  $201,498  $110,464 

11. Share Transactions.

Share transactions for each class were as follows and may contain in-kind transactions, automatic conversions between classes or exchanges between affiliated funds:

  Shares  Shares  Dollars  Dollars 
  Year ended August 31, 2021  Year ended August 31, 2020  Year ended August 31, 2021  Year ended August 31, 2020 
Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund         
Class A         
Shares sold  22,051  12,906  $593,897  $285,278 
Reinvestment of distributions  1,841  1,144  45,631  24,560 
Shares redeemed  (9,229)  (9,351)  (246,231)  (200,560) 
Net increase (decrease)  14,663  4,699  $393,297  $109,278 
Class M         
Shares sold  9,785  10,468  $265,142  $231,602 
Reinvestment of distributions  2,232  1,542  55,721  33,597 
Shares redeemed  (11,805)  (13,737)  (321,240)  (302,913) 
Net increase (decrease)  212  (1,727)  $(377)  $(37,714) 
Class C         
Shares sold  13,228  8,147  $353,988  $177,503 
Reinvestment of distributions  1,107  653  26,946  14,019 
Shares redeemed  (7,458)  (7,916)  (199,240)  (168,970) 
Net increase (decrease)  6,877  884  $181,694  $22,552 
Class I         
Shares sold  27,164  16,930  $746,743  $381,101 
Reinvestment of distributions  1,724  1,033  43,904  22,623 
Shares redeemed  (10,654)  (12,218)  (293,201)  (265,764) 
Net increase (decrease)  18,234  5,745  $497,446  $137,960 
Class Z         
Shares sold  12,328  6,222  $341,897  $138,757 
Reinvestment of distributions  641  394  16,391  8,617 
Shares redeemed  (3,564)  (4,308)  (97,495)  (93,139) 
Net increase (decrease)  9,405  2,308  $260,793  $54,235 

12. Other.

Fund's organizational documents provide former and current trustees and officers with a limited indemnification against liabilities arising in connection with the performance of their duties to the fund. In the normal course of business, the fund may also enter into contracts that provide general indemnifications. The fund's maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would be dependent on future claims that may be made against the fund. The risk of material loss from such claims is considered remote.

13. Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic.

An outbreak of COVID-19 first detected in China during December 2019 has since spread globally and was declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization during March 2020. Developments that disrupt global economies and financial markets, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, may magnify factors that affect the Fund's performance.

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Board of Trustees of Fidelity Advisor Series I and Shareholders of Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund

Opinion on the Financial Statements and Financial Highlights

We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund (the "Fund"), a fund of Fidelity Advisor Series I, including the schedule of investments, as of August 31, 2021, the related statement of operations for the year then ended, the statement of changes in net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, and the related notes. In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Fund as of August 31, 2021, and the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.

Basis for Opinion

These financial statements and financial highlights are the responsibility of the Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Fund's financial statements and financial highlights based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB) and are required to be independent with respect to the Fund in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements and financial highlights are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. The Fund is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its internal control over financial reporting. As part of our audits we are required to obtain an understanding of internal control over financial reporting but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Fund’s internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion.

Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements and financial highlights, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements and financial highlights. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements and financial highlights. Our procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of August 31, 2021, by correspondence with the custodian, issuers of privately offered securities, and brokers; when replies were not received from issuers of privately offered securities and brokers, we performed other auditing procedures. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

/s/ Deloitte & Touche LLP

Boston, Massachusetts

October 14, 2021


We have served as the auditor of one or more of the Fidelity investment companies since 1999.

Trustees and Officers

The Trustees, Members of the Advisory Board (if any), and officers of the trust and fund, as applicable, are listed below. The Board of Trustees governs the fund and is responsible for protecting the interests of shareholders. The Trustees are experienced executives who meet periodically throughout the year to oversee the fund's activities, review contractual arrangements with companies that provide services to the fund, oversee management of the risks associated with such activities and contractual arrangements, and review the fund's performance.  Each of the Trustees oversees 313 funds. 

The Trustees hold office without limit in time except that (a) any Trustee may resign; (b) any Trustee may be removed by written instrument, signed by at least two-thirds of the number of Trustees prior to such removal; (c) any Trustee who requests to be retired or who has become incapacitated by illness or injury may be retired by written instrument signed by a majority of the other Trustees; and (d) any Trustee may be removed at any special meeting of shareholders by a two-thirds vote of the outstanding voting securities of the trust.  Each Trustee who is not an interested person (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the trust and the fund is referred to herein as an Independent Trustee.  Each Independent Trustee shall retire not later than the last day of the calendar year in which his or her 75th birthday occurs.  The Independent Trustees may waive this mandatory retirement age policy with respect to individual Trustees.  Officers and Advisory Board Members hold office without limit in time, except that any officer or Advisory Board Member may resign or may be removed by a vote of a majority of the Trustees at any regular meeting or any special meeting of the Trustees. Except as indicated, each individual has held the office shown or other offices in the same company for the past five years. 

The fund’s Statement of Additional Information (SAI) includes more information about the Trustees. To request a free copy, call Fidelity at 1-877-208-0098.

Experience, Skills, Attributes, and Qualifications of the Trustees. The Governance and Nominating Committee has adopted a statement of policy that describes the experience, qualifications, attributes, and skills that are necessary and desirable for potential Independent Trustee candidates (Statement of Policy). The Board believes that each Trustee satisfied at the time he or she was initially elected or appointed a Trustee, and continues to satisfy, the standards contemplated by the Statement of Policy. The Governance and Nominating Committee also engages professional search firms to help identify potential Independent Trustee candidates who have the experience, qualifications, attributes, and skills consistent with the Statement of Policy. From time to time, additional criteria based on the composition and skills of the current Independent Trustees, as well as experience or skills that may be appropriate in light of future changes to board composition, business conditions, and regulatory or other developments, have also been considered by the professional search firms and the Governance and Nominating Committee. In addition, the Board takes into account the Trustees' commitment and participation in Board and committee meetings, as well as their leadership of standing and ad hoc committees throughout their tenure.

In determining that a particular Trustee was and continues to be qualified to serve as a Trustee, the Board has considered a variety of criteria, none of which, in isolation, was controlling. The Board believes that, collectively, the Trustees have balanced and diverse experience, qualifications, attributes, and skills, which allow the Board to operate effectively in governing the fund and protecting the interests of shareholders. Information about the specific experience, skills, attributes, and qualifications of each Trustee, which in each case led to the Board's conclusion that the Trustee should serve (or continue to serve) as a trustee of the fund, is provided below.

Board Structure and Oversight Function. Robert A. Lawrence is an interested person and currently serves as Acting Chairman. The Trustees have determined that an interested Chairman is appropriate and benefits shareholders because an interested Chairman has a personal and professional stake in the quality and continuity of services provided to the fund. Independent Trustees exercise their informed business judgment to appoint an individual of their choosing to serve as Chairman, regardless of whether the Trustee happens to be independent or a member of management. The Independent Trustees have determined that they can act independently and effectively without having an Independent Trustee serve as Chairman and that a key structural component for assuring that they are in a position to do so is for the Independent Trustees to constitute a substantial majority for the Board. The Independent Trustees also regularly meet in executive session. David M. Thomas serves as Lead Independent Trustee and as such (i) acts as a liaison between the Independent Trustees and management with respect to matters important to the Independent Trustees and (ii) with management prepares agendas for Board meetings.

Fidelity® funds are overseen by different Boards of Trustees. The fund's Board oversees Fidelity's high income and certain equity funds, and other Boards oversee Fidelity's investment-grade bond, money market, asset allocation, and other equity funds. The asset allocation funds may invest in Fidelity® funds overseen by the fund's Board. The use of separate Boards, each with its own committee structure, allows the Trustees of each group of Fidelity® funds to focus on the unique issues of the funds they oversee, including common research, investment, and operational issues. On occasion, the separate Boards establish joint committees to address issues of overlapping consequences for the Fidelity® funds overseen by each Board.

The Trustees operate using a system of committees to facilitate the timely and efficient consideration of all matters of importance to the Trustees, the fund, and fund shareholders and to facilitate compliance with legal and regulatory requirements and oversight of the fund's activities and associated risks.  The Board, acting through its committees, has charged FMR and its affiliates with (i) identifying events or circumstances the occurrence of which could have demonstrably adverse effects on the fund's business and/or reputation; (ii) implementing processes and controls to lessen the possibility that such events or circumstances occur or to mitigate the effects of such events or circumstances if they do occur; and (iii) creating and maintaining a system designed to evaluate continuously business and market conditions in order to facilitate the identification and implementation processes described in (i) and (ii) above.  Because the day-to-day operations and activities of the fund are carried out by or through FMR, its affiliates, and other service providers, the fund's exposure to risks is mitigated but not eliminated by the processes overseen by the Trustees.  While each of the Board's committees has responsibility for overseeing different aspects of the fund's activities, oversight is exercised primarily through the Operations, Audit, and Compliance Committees.  Appropriate personnel, including but not limited to the fund's Chief Compliance Officer (CCO), FMR's internal auditor, the independent accountants, the fund's Treasurer and portfolio management personnel, make periodic reports to the Board's committees, as appropriate, including an annual review of Fidelity's risk management program for the Fidelity® funds.  The responsibilities of each standing committee, including their oversight responsibilities, are described further under "Standing Committees of the Trustees." 

Interested Trustees*:

Correspondence intended for a Trustee who is an interested person may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 245 Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210.

Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupations and Other Relevant Experience+

Bettina Doulton (1964)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2020

Trustee

Ms. Doulton also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Doulton served in a variety of positions at Fidelity Investments, including as a managing director of research (2006-2007), portfolio manager to certain Fidelity® funds (1993-2005), equity analyst and portfolio assistant (1990-1993), and research assistant (1987-1990). Ms. Doulton currently owns and operates Phi Builders + Architects and Cellardoor Winery. Previously, Ms. Doulton served as a member of the Board of Brown Capital Management, LLC (2014-2018).

Robert A. Lawrence (1952)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2020

Trustee

Acting Chairman of the Board of Trustees

Mr. Lawrence also serves as Trustee of other funds. Previously, Mr. Lawrence served as a Member of the Advisory Board of certain funds. Prior to his retirement in 2008, Mr. Lawrence served as Vice President of certain Fidelity® funds (2006-2008), Senior Vice President, Head of High Income Division of Fidelity Management & Research Company (investment adviser firm, 2006-2008), and President of Fidelity Strategic Investments (investment adviser firm, 2002-2005).

 * Determined to be an “Interested Trustee” by virtue of, among other things, his or her affiliation with the trust or various entities under common control with FMR. 

 + The information includes the Trustee's principal occupation during the last five years and other information relating to the experience, attributes, and skills relevant to the Trustee's qualifications to serve as a Trustee, which led to the conclusion that the Trustee should serve as a Trustee for the fund. 

Independent Trustees:

Correspondence intended for an Independent Trustee may be sent to Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 55235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-5235.

Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupations and Other Relevant Experience+

Thomas P. Bostick (1956)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2021

Trustee

Lieutenant General Bostick also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, General Bostick (United States Army, Retired) held a variety of positions within the U.S. Army, including Commanding General and Chief of Engineers, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (2012-2016) and Deputy Chief of Staff and Director of Human Resources, U.S. Army (2009-2012). General Bostick currently serves as a member of the Board and Finance and Governance Committees of CSX Corporation (transportation, 2020-present) and a member of the Board and Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee of Perma-Fix Environmental Services, Inc. (nuclear waste management, 2020-present). General Bostick serves as Chief Executive Officer of Bostick Global Strategies, LLC (consulting, 2016-present) and Managing Partner, Sustainability, of Ridge-Lane Limited Partners (strategic advisory and venture development, 2016-present). Previously, General Bostick served as a Member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2021), President, Intrexon Bioengineering (2018-2020) and Chief Operating Officer (2017-2020) and Senior Vice President of the Environment Sector (2016-2017) of Intrexon Corporation (biopharmaceutical company).

Dennis J. Dirks (1948)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Trustee

Mr. Dirks also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement in May 2003, Mr. Dirks served as Chief Operating Officer and as a member of the Board of The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (financial markets infrastructure), President, Chief Operating Officer and a member of the Board of The Depository Trust Company (DTC), President and a member of the Board of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC), Chief Executive Officer and a member of the Board of the Government Securities Clearing Corporation and Chief Executive Officer and a member of the Board of the Mortgage-Backed Securities Clearing Corporation. Mr. Dirks currently serves as a member of the Finance Committee (2016-present) and Board (2017-present) and is Treasurer (2018-present) of the Asolo Repertory Theatre.

Donald F. Donahue (1950)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2018

Trustee

Mr. Donahue also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Mr. Donahue serves as President and Chief Executive Officer of Miranda Partners, LLC (risk consulting for the financial services industry, 2012-present). Previously, Mr. Donahue served as Chief Executive Officer (2006-2012), Chief Operating Officer (2003-2006) and Managing Director, Customer Marketing and Development (1999-2003) of The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (financial markets infrastructure). Mr. Donahue currently serves as a member (2007-present) and Co-Chairman (2016-present) of the Board of United Way of New York and a member of the Board of NYC Leadership Academy (2012-present). Mr. Donahue previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2015-2018).

Vicki L. Fuller (1957)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2020

Trustee

Ms. Fuller also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Ms. Fuller served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2018-2020), Chief Investment Officer of the New York State Common Retirement Fund (2012-2018) and held a variety of positions at AllianceBernstein L.P. (global asset management, 1985-2012), including Managing Director (2006-2012) and Senior Vice President and Senior Portfolio Manager (2001-2006). Ms. Fuller currently serves as a member of the Board, Audit Committee and Nominating and Governance Committee of The Williams Companies, Inc. (natural gas infrastructure, 2018-present), as a member of the Board, Audit Committee and Nominating and Governance Committee of two Blackstone business development companies (2020-present) and as a member of the Board of Treliant, LLC (consulting, 2019-present).

Patricia L. Kampling (1959)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2020

Trustee

Ms. Kampling also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Kampling served as Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer (2012-2019), President and Chief Operating Officer (2011-2012) and Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (2010-2011) of Alliant Energy Corporation. Ms. Kampling currently serves as a member of the Board, Finance Committee and Governance, Compensation and Nominating Committee of Xcel Energy Inc. (utilities company, 2020-present) and as a member of the Board, Audit, Finance and Risk Committee and Safety, Environmental, Technology and Operations Committee of American Water Works Company, Inc. (utilities company, 2019-present). In addition, Ms. Kampling currently serves as a member of the Board of the Nature Conservancy, Wisconsin Chapter (2019-present). Previously, Ms. Kampling served as a Member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2020), a member of the Board, Compensation Committee and Executive Committee and Chair of the Audit Committee of Briggs & Stratton Corporation (manufacturing, 2011-2021), a member of the Board of Interstate Power and Light Company (2012-2019) and Wisconsin Power and Light Company (2012-2019) (each a subsidiary of Alliant Energy Corporation) and as a member of the Board and Workforce Development Committee of the Business Roundtable (2018-2019).

Thomas A. Kennedy (1955)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2021

Trustee

Mr. Kennedy also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Kennedy served as a Member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2020) and held a variety of positions at Raytheon Company (aerospace and defense, 1983-2020), including Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (2014-2020) and Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer (2013-2014). Mr. Kennedy currently serves as Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors of Raytheon Technologies Corporation (aerospace and defense, 2020-present). He is also a member of the Rutgers School of Engineering Industry Advisory Board (2011-present) and a member of the UCLA Engineering Dean’s Executive Board (2016-present).

Oscar Munoz (1959)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2021

Trustee

Mr. Munoz also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Munoz served as Executive Chairman (2020-2021), Chief Executive Officer (2015-2020), President (2015-2016) and a member of the Board (2010-2021) of United Airlines Holdings, Inc. Mr. Munoz currently serves as a member of the Board of CBRE Group, Inc. (commercial real estate, 2020-present), a member of the Board of Univision Communications, Inc. (Hispanic media, 2020-present) and a member of the Advisory Board of Salesforce.com, Inc. (cloud-based software, 2020-present). Previously, Mr. Munoz served as a Member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2021).

Garnett A. Smith (1947)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2018

Trustee

Mr. Smith also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Smith served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (1990-1997) and President (1986-1990) of Inbrand Corp. (manufacturer of personal absorbent products). Prior to his employment with Inbrand Corp., he was employed by a retail fabric chain and North Carolina National Bank (now Bank of America). Mr. Smith previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2012-2013).

David M. Thomas (1949)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Trustee

Lead Independent Trustee

Mr. Thomas also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Thomas served as Executive Chairman (2005-2006) and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) of IMS Health, Inc. (pharmaceutical and healthcare information solutions). Mr. Thomas currently serves as a member of the Board of Fortune Brands Home and Security (home and security products, 2004-present) and Presiding Director (2013-present) of Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (marketing communication).

Susan Tomasky (1953)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2020

Trustee

Ms. Tomasky also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Tomasky served in various executive officer positions at American Electric Power Company, Inc. (1998-2011), including most recently as President of AEP Transmission (2007-2011). Ms. Tomasky currently serves as a member of the Board and Sustainability Committee and as Chair of the Audit Committee of Marathon Petroleum Corporation (2018-present) and as a member of the Board, Corporate Governance Committee and Organization and Compensation Committee and as Chair of the Audit Committee of Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc. (utilities company, 2012-present). In addition, Ms. Tomasky currently serves as a member (2009-present) and President (2020-present) of the Board of the Royal Shakespeare Company – America (2009-present), as a member of the Board of the Columbus Association for the Performing Arts (2011-present) and as a member of the Board and Investment Committee of Kenyon College (2016-present). Previously, Ms. Tomasky served as a Member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2020), as a member of the Board of the Columbus Regional Airport Authority (2007-2020), as a member of the Board (2011-2018) and Lead Independent Director (2015-2018) of Andeavor Corporation (previously Tesoro Corporation) (independent oil refiner and marketer) and as a member of the Board of Summit Midstream Partners LP (energy, 2012-2018).

Michael E. Wiley (1950)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2018

Trustee

Mr. Wiley also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Wiley served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2018-2020), Chairman, President and CEO of Baker Hughes, Inc. (oilfield services, 2000-2004). Mr. Wiley also previously served as a member of the Board of Andeavor Corporation (independent oil refiner and marketer, 2005-2018), a member of the Board of Andeavor Logistics LP (natural resources logistics, 2015-2018) and a member of the Board of High Point Resources (exploration and production, 2005-2020).

 + The information includes the Trustee's principal occupation during the last five years and other information relating to the experience, attributes, and skills relevant to the Trustee's qualifications to serve as a Trustee, which led to the conclusion that the Trustee should serve as a Trustee for the fund. 

Advisory Board Members and Officers:

Correspondence intended for a Member of the Advisory Board (if any) may be sent to Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 55235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-5235.  Correspondence intended for an officer or Peter S. Lynch may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 245 Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210.  Officers appear below in alphabetical order. 

Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupation

Peter S. Lynch (1944)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2003

Member of the Advisory Board

Mr. Lynch also serves as a Member of the Advisory Board of other Fidelity® funds. Mr. Lynch is Vice Chairman and a Director of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm). In addition, Mr. Lynch serves as a Trustee of Boston College and as the Chairman of the Inner-City Scholarship Fund. Previously, Mr. Lynch served as Vice Chairman and a Director of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm) and on the Special Olympics International Board of Directors (1997-2006).

Craig S. Brown (1977)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2019

Assistant Treasurer

Mr. Brown also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Brown serves as Assistant Treasurer of FIMM, LLC (2021-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2013-present).

John J. Burke III (1964)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2018

Chief Financial Officer

Mr. Burke also serves as Chief Financial Officer of other funds. Mr. Burke serves as Head of Investment Operations for Fidelity Fund and Investment Operations (2018-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (1998-present). Previously Mr. Burke served as head of Asset Management Investment Operations (2012-2018).

William C. Coffey (1969)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2019

Assistant Secretary

Mr. Coffey also serves as Assistant Secretary of other funds. He is Senior Vice President and Deputy General Counsel of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company, 2010-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Coffey served as Secretary and CLO of certain funds (2018-2019); CLO, Secretary, and Senior Vice President of Fidelity Management & Research Company and FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firms, 2018-2019); Secretary of Fidelity SelectCo, LLC and Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firms, 2018-2019); CLO of Fidelity Management & Research (Hong Kong) Limited, FMR Investment Management (UK) Limited, and Fidelity Management & Research (Japan) Limited (investment adviser firms, 2018-2019); and Assistant Secretary of certain funds (2009-2018).

Timothy M. Cohen (1969)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2018

Vice President

Mr. Cohen also serves as Vice President of other funds. Mr. Cohen serves as Co-Head of Equity (2018-present), a Director of Fidelity Management & Research (Japan) Limited (investment adviser firm, 2016-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Cohen served as Executive Vice President of Fidelity SelectCo, LLC (2019), Head of Global Equity Research (2016-2018), Chief Investment Officer - Equity and a Director of Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2013-2015) and as a Director of Fidelity Management & Research (Hong Kong) Limited (investment adviser firm, 2017).

Jonathan Davis (1968)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2010

Assistant Treasurer

Mr. Davis also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Davis serves as Assistant Treasurer of FIMM, LLC (2021-present) and FMR Capital, Inc. (2017-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Davis served as Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company, 2003-2010).

Laura M. Del Prato (1964)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2018

Assistant Treasurer

Ms. Del Prato also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Del Prato serves as Assistant Treasurer of FIMM, LLC (2021-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2017-present). Previously, Ms. Del Prato served as President and Treasurer of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash Portfolio and Term Portfolio (2018-2020). Prior to joining Fidelity Investments, Ms. Del Prato served as a Managing Director and Treasurer of the JPMorgan Mutual Funds (2014-2017). Prior to JPMorgan, Ms. Del Prato served as a partner at Cohen Fund Audit Services (accounting firm, 2012-2013) and KPMG LLP (accounting firm, 2004-2012).

Colm A. Hogan (1973)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2020

Assistant Treasurer

Mr. Hogan also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Hogan serves as Assistant Treasurer of FIMM, LLC (2021-present) and FMR Capital, Inc. (2017-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2005-present). Previously, Mr. Hogan served as Deputy Treasurer of certain Fidelity® funds (2016-2020) and Assistant Treasurer of certain Fidelity® funds (2016-2018). 

Pamela R. Holding (1964)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2018

Vice President

Ms. Holding also serves as Vice President of other funds. Ms. Holding serves as Co-Head of Equity (2018-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2013-present). Previously, Ms. Holding served as Executive Vice President of Fidelity SelectCo, LLC (2019) and as Chief Investment Officer of Fidelity Institutional Asset Management (2013-2018).

Cynthia Lo Bessette (1969)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2019

Secretary and Chief Legal Officer (CLO)

Ms. Lo Bessette also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Lo Bessette serves as CLO, Secretary, and Senior Vice President of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm, 2019-present); and CLO of Fidelity Management & Research (Hong Kong) Limited, FMR Investment Management (UK) Limited, and Fidelity Management & Research (Japan) Limited (investment adviser firms, 2019-present). She is a Senior Vice President and Deputy General Counsel of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company, 2019-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Ms. Lo Bessette served as CLO, Secretary, and Senior Vice President of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2019); Secretary of Fidelity SelectCo, LLC and Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firms, 2019). Prior to joining Fidelity Investments, Ms. Lo Bessette was Executive Vice President, General Counsel (2016-2019) and Senior Vice President, Deputy General Counsel (2015-2016) of OppenheimerFunds (investment management company) and Deputy Chief Legal Officer (2013-2015) of Jennison Associates LLC (investment adviser firm).

Chris Maher (1972)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2020

Deputy Treasurer

Mr. Maher also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Maher serves as Assistant Treasurer of FIMM, LLC (2021-present) and FMR Capital, Inc. (2017-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Maher served as Assistant Treasurer of certain funds (2013-2020); Vice President of Asset Management Compliance (2013), Vice President of the Program Management Group of FMR (investment adviser firm, 2010-2013), and Vice President of Valuation Oversight (2008-2010).

Jason P. Pogorelec (1975)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2020

Chief Compliance Officer

Mr. Pogorelec also serves as Chief Compliance Officer of other funds. Mr. Pogorelec is a senior Vice President of Asset Management Compliance for Fidelity Investments and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2006-present). Previously, Mr. Pogorelec served as Vice President, Associate General Counsel for Fidelity Investments (2010-2020) and Assistant Secretary of certain Fidelity funds (2015-2020).

Brett Segaloff (1972)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2021

Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Officer

Mr. Segaloff also serves as an AML Officer of other funds and other related entities. He is Director, Anti-Money Laundering (2007-present) of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (1996-present).

Stacie M. Smith (1974)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2016

President and Treasurer

Ms. Smith also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Smith serves as Assistant Treasurer of FIMM, LLC (2021-present) and FMR Capital, Inc. (2017-present), is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2009-present), and has served in other fund officer roles. Prior to joining Fidelity Investments, Ms. Smith served as Senior Audit Manager of Ernst & Young LLP (accounting firm, 1996-2009). Previously, Ms. Smith served as Assistant Treasurer (2013-2019) and Deputy Treasurer (2013-2016) of certain Fidelity® funds.

Marc L. Spector (1972)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2016

Assistant Treasurer

Mr. Spector also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Spector serves as Assistant Treasurer of FIMM, LLC (2021-present) and FMR Capital, Inc. (2017-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2016-present). Prior to joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. Spector served as Director at the Siegfried Group (accounting firm, 2013-2016), and prior to Siegfried Group as audit senior manager at Deloitte & Touche LLP (accounting firm, 2005-2013).

Jim Wegmann (1979)

Year of Election or Appointment: 2019

Assistant Treasurer

Mr. Wegmann also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Wegmann serves as Assistant Treasurer of FIMM, LLC (2021-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2011-present).

Shareholder Expense Example

As a shareholder, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, which may include sales charges (loads) on purchase payments or redemption proceeds, as applicable and (2) ongoing costs, which generally include management fees, distribution and/or service (12b-1) fees and other Fund expenses. This Example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in a fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other mutual funds.

The Example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire period (March 1, 2021 to August 31, 2021).

Actual Expenses

The first line of the accompanying table provides information about actual account values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this line, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000.00 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000.00 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number in the first line for a class/Fund under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. If any fund is a shareholder of any underlying mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs) (the Underlying Funds), such fund indirectly bears its proportional share of the expenses of the Underlying Funds in addition to the direct expenses incurred presented in the table. These fees and expenses are not included in the annualized expense ratio used to calculate the expense estimate in the table below.

Hypothetical Example for Comparison Purposes

The second line of the accompanying table provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on the actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the actual return. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period. You may use this information to compare the ongoing costs of investing in the Fund and other funds. To do so, compare this 5% hypothetical example with the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of the other funds. If any fund is a shareholder of any Underlying Funds, such fund indirectly bears its proportional share of the expenses of the Underlying Funds in addition to the direct expenses as presented in the table. These fees and expenses are not included in the annualized expense ratio used to calculate the expense estimate in the table below.

Please note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight your ongoing costs only and do not reflect any transaction costs. Therefore, the second line of the table is useful in comparing ongoing costs only, and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different funds. In addition, if these transactional costs were included, your costs would have been higher.

  Annualized Expense Ratio-A  Beginning
Account Value
March 1, 2021 
Ending
Account Value
August 31, 2021 
Expenses Paid
During Period-B
March 1, 2021
to August 31, 2021 
Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund         
Class A  .82%       
Actual    $1,000.00  $1,122.90  $4.39 
Hypothetical-C    $1,000.00  $1,021.07  $4.18 
Class M  1.07%       
Actual    $1,000.00  $1,121.70  $5.72 
Hypothetical-C    $1,000.00  $1,019.81  $5.45 
Class C  1.57%       
Actual    $1,000.00  $1,118.90  $8.39 
Hypothetical-C    $1,000.00  $1,017.29  $7.98 
Class I  .57%       
Actual    $1,000.00  $1,124.30  $3.05 
Hypothetical-C    $1,000.00  $1,022.33  $2.91 
Class Z  .45%       
Actual    $1,000.00  $1,125.30  $2.41 
Hypothetical-C    $1,000.00  $1,022.94  $2.29 

 A Annualized expense ratio reflects expenses net of applicable fee waivers.

 B Expenses are equal to the annualized expense ratio, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 184/ 365 (to reflect the one-half year period). The fees and expenses of any Underlying Funds are not included in each annualized expense ratio.

 C 5% return per year before expenses

Distributions (Unaudited)

The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund voted to pay to shareholders of record at the opening of business on record date, the following distributions per share derived from capital gains realized from sales of portfolio securities, and dividends derived from net investment income:

  Pay Date  Record Date  Dividends  Capital Gains 
Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund         
Class A  10/11/21  10/08/21  $0.042  $1.664 
Class M  10/11/21  10/08/21  $0.022  $1.664 
Class C  10/11/21  10/08/21  $0.000  $1.664 
Class I  10/11/21  10/08/21  $0.059  $1.664 
Class Z  10/11/21  10/08/21  $0.067  $1.664 

The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended August 31, 2021, $255,249,850, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.

A total of 6.74% of the dividends distributed during the fiscal year was derived from interest on U.S. Government securities which is generally exempt from state income tax.

The fund designates $32,553,903 of distributions paid during the calendar year 2020 as qualifying to be taxed as interest-related dividends for nonresident alien shareholders.

The fund designates 100% of the short-term capital gain dividends distributed in September 2020, during the fiscal year as qualifying to be taxed as short-term capital gain dividends for nonresident alien shareholders.

Class A designates 32%, 32%, 100%, and 100%; Class M designates 42%, 36%, 100%, and 100%; Class C designates 90%, 46%, 0%, and 0%; Class I designates 27%, 29%, 100%, and 100%; and Class Z designates 24%, 28%, 100%, and 100%; of the dividends distributed in October 2020, December 2020, April 2021, and July 2021, respectively during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends–received deduction for corporate shareholders.

Class A designates 47%, 34%, 100%, and 100%; Class M designates 62%, 38%, 100%, and 100%; Class C designates 100%, 49%, 0%, and 0%; Class I designates 39%, 31%, 100%, and 100%; and Class Z designates 36%, 30%, 100%, and 100%; of the dividends distributed in October 2020, December 2020, April 2021, and July 2021, respectively during the fiscal year as amounts which may be taken into account as a dividend for purposes of the maximum rate under section 1(h)(11) of the Internal Revenue Code.

Class A designates 1% and 2%; Class M designates 1% and 2%; Class C designates 0% and 2%; Class I designates 1% and 2%; and Class Z designates 1% and 2% of the dividends distributed in October 2020 and December 2020, respectively during the fiscal year as a section 199A dividend.

The fund will notify shareholders in January 2022 of amounts for use in preparing 2021 income tax returns.

Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and Management Fees

Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund

Each year, the Board of Trustees, including the Independent Trustees (together, the Board), votes on the renewal of the management contract with Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (FMR) and the sub-advisory agreements (together, the Advisory Contracts) for the fund. FMR and the sub-advisers are referred to herein as the Investment Advisers. The Board, assisted by the advice of fund counsel and Independent Trustees' counsel, requests and considers a broad range of information relevant to the renewal of the Advisory Contracts throughout the year.

The Board meets regularly and, at each of its meetings, covers an extensive agenda of topics and materials and considers factors that are relevant to its annual consideration of the renewal of the fund's Advisory Contracts, including the services and support provided to the fund and its shareholders. The Board has established various standing committees (Committees), each composed of and chaired by Independent Trustees with varying backgrounds, to which the Board has assigned specific subject matter responsibilities in order to enhance effective decision-making by the Board. The Board, acting directly and through its Committees, requests and receives information concerning the annual consideration of the renewal of the fund's Advisory Contracts. The Board also meets as needed to review matters specifically related to the Board's annual consideration of the renewal of the Advisory Contracts. Members of the Board may also meet with trustees of other Fidelity funds through joint ad hoc committees to discuss certain matters relevant to all of the Fidelity funds.

At its May 2021 meeting, the Board unanimously determined to renew the fund's Advisory Contracts. In reaching its determination, the Board considered all factors it believed relevant, including (i) the nature, extent, and quality of the services provided to the fund and its shareholders (including the investment performance of the fund); (ii) the competitiveness of the fund's management fee and total expense ratio relative to peer funds; (iii) the total costs of the services provided by and the profits realized by Fidelity from its relationships with the fund; and (iv) the extent to which, if any, economies of scale exist and are realized as the fund grows, and whether any economies of scale are appropriately shared with fund shareholders.

In considering whether to renew the Advisory Contracts for the fund, the Board reached a determination, with the assistance of fund counsel and Independent Trustees' counsel and through the exercise of its business judgment, that the renewal of the Advisory Contracts was in the best interests of the fund and its shareholders and that the compensation payable under the Advisory Contracts was fair and reasonable. The Board's decision to renew the Advisory Contracts was not based on any single factor, but rather was based on a comprehensive consideration of all the information provided to the Board at its meetings throughout the year. The Board, in reaching its determination to renew the Advisory Contracts, was aware that shareholders of the fund have a broad range of investment choices available to them, including a wide choice among funds offered by Fidelity's competitors, and that the fund's shareholders, who have the opportunity to review and weigh the disclosure provided by the fund in its prospectus and other public disclosures, have chosen to invest in this fund, which is part of the Fidelity family of funds.

Nature, Extent, and Quality of Services Provided.  The Board considered Fidelity's staffing as it relates to the fund, including the backgrounds of investment personnel of Fidelity, and also considered the fund's investment objective, strategies, and related investment philosophy. The Independent Trustees also had discussions with senior management of Fidelity's investment operations and investment groups. The Board considered the structure of the investment personnel compensation program and whether this structure provides appropriate incentives to act in the best interests of the fund. Additionally, the Board considered the portfolio managers' investments, if any, in the funds that they manage.

Resources Dedicated to Investment Management and Support Services.  The Board and the Fund Oversight and Research Committees reviewed the general qualifications and capabilities of Fidelity's investment staff, including its size, education, experience, and resources, as well as Fidelity's approach to recruiting, training, managing, and compensating investment personnel. The Board noted that Fidelity has continued to increase the resources devoted to non-U.S. offices, including expansion of Fidelity's global investment organization. The Board also noted that Fidelity's analysts have extensive resources, tools and capabilities that allow them to conduct sophisticated quantitative and fundamental analysis, as well as credit analysis of issuers, counterparties and guarantors. Further, the Board considered that Fidelity's investment professionals have sufficient access to global information and data so as to provide competitive investment results over time, and that those professionals also have access to sophisticated tools that permit them to assess portfolio construction and risk and performance attribution characteristics continuously, as well as to transmit new information and research conclusions rapidly around the world. Additionally, in its deliberations, the Board considered Fidelity's trading, risk management, compliance, and technology and operations capabilities and resources, which are integral parts of the investment management process. The Board also considered Fidelity's investments in business continuity planning, and its success in continuously providing services to the fund notwithstanding the severe disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Shareholder and Administrative Services.  The Board considered (i) the nature, extent, quality, and cost of advisory, administrative, and shareholder services performed by the Investment Advisers and their affiliates under the Advisory Contracts and under separate agreements covering transfer agency, pricing and bookkeeping, and securities lending services for the fund; (ii) the nature and extent of the supervision of third party service providers, principally custodians, subcustodians, and pricing vendors; and (iii) the resources devoted to, and the record of compliance with, the fund's compliance policies and procedures. The Board also reviewed the allocation of fund brokerage, including allocations to brokers affiliated with the Investment Advisers, the use of brokerage commissions to pay fund expenses, and the use of "soft" commission dollars to pay for research services.

The Board noted that the growth of fund assets over time across the complex allows Fidelity to reinvest in the development of services designed to enhance the value and convenience of the Fidelity funds as investment vehicles. These services include 24-hour access to account information and market information over the Internet and through telephone representatives, investor education materials and asset allocation tools, and the expanded availability of Fidelity Investor Centers.

The Board noted that, in the past, it and the boards of certain other Fidelity funds had formed an ad hoc Committee on Transfer Agency Fees to review the variety of transfer agency fee structures throughout the industry and Fidelity's competitive positioning with respect to industry participants.

Investment in a Large Fund Family.  The Board considered the benefits to shareholders of investing in a Fidelity fund, including the benefits of investing in a fund that is part of a large family of funds offering a variety of investment disciplines and providing a large variety of mutual fund investor services. The Board noted that Fidelity had taken, or had made recommendations that resulted in the Fidelity funds taking, a number of actions over the previous year that benefited particular funds, including: (i) continuing to dedicate additional resources to Fidelity's investment research process, which includes meetings with management of issuers of securities in which the funds invest, and to the support of the senior management team that oversees asset management; (ii) continuing efforts to enhance Fidelity's global research capabilities; (iii) launching new funds and ETFs with innovative structures, strategies and pricing and making other enhancements to meet client needs; (iv) launching new share classes of existing funds; (v) eliminating purchase minimums and broadening eligibility requirements for certain funds and share classes; (vi) approving the reduction in the holding period for the Class C to Class A conversion policy; (vii) reducing management fees and total expenses for certain target date funds and classes and index funds; (viii) lowering expenses for certain existing funds and classes by implementing or lowering expense caps; (ix) rationalizing product lines and gaining increased efficiencies from fund mergers, liquidations, and share class consolidations; (x) continuing to develop, acquire and implement systems and technology to improve services to the funds and shareholders, strengthen information security, and increase efficiency; and (xi) continuing to implement enhancements to further strengthen Fidelity's product line to increase investors' probability of success in achieving their investment goals, including retirement income goals.

Investment Performance.  The Board considered whether the fund has operated in accordance with its investment objective, as well as its record of compliance with its investment restrictions and its performance history. The Board noted that there were portfolio management changes for the fund in August 2018, November 2018, March 2019, October 2019, November 2019, and January 2020. The Board will continue to monitor closely the fund's performance, taking into account the portfolio management changes.

The Board took into account discussions that occur at Board meetings throughout the year with representatives of the Investment Advisers about fund investment performance. In this regard the Board noted that as part of regularly scheduled fund reviews and other reports to the Board on fund performance, the Board considers annualized return information for the fund for different time periods, measured against an appropriate securities market index (benchmark index) and an appropriate peer group of funds with similar objectives (peer group). In its evaluation of fund investment performance, the Board gave particular attention to information indicating changes in performance of certain Fidelity funds for specific time periods and discussed with the Investment Advisers the reasons for any overperformance or underperformance.

In addition to reviewing absolute and relative fund performance, the Independent Trustees periodically consider the appropriateness of fund performance metrics in evaluating the results achieved. In general, the Independent Trustees believe that fund performance should be evaluated based on net performance (after fees and expenses) of both the highest performing and lowest performing fund share classes, where applicable, compared to appropriate benchmark indices, over appropriate time periods that may include full market cycles, and compared to peer groups, as applicable, over the same periods, taking into account relevant factors including the following: general market conditions; issuer-specific information; and fund cash flows and other factors.

The Independent Trustees recognize that shareholders evaluate performance on a net basis over their own holding periods, for which one-, three-, and five-year periods are often used as a proxy. For this reason, the performance information reviewed by the Board also included net cumulative total return information for the fund and an appropriate benchmark index and peer group for the most recent one-, three-, and five-year periods ended September 30, 2020, as shown below. Returns are shown compared to the 25th percentile (top of box, 75% beaten) and 75th percentile (bottom of box, 25% beaten) of the peer universe.

Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund


Based on its review, the Board concluded that the nature, extent, and quality of services provided to the fund under the Advisory Contracts should continue to benefit the shareholders of the fund.

Competitiveness of Management Fee and Total Expense Ratio.  The Board considered the fund's management fee and total expense ratio compared to "mapped groups" of competitive funds and classes created for the purpose of facilitating the Trustees' competitive analysis of management fees and total expenses. Fidelity creates "mapped groups" by combining similar Lipper investment objective categories that have comparable investment mandates. Combining Lipper investment objective categories aids the Board's management fee and total expense ratio comparisons by broadening the competitive group used for comparison.

Management Fee.  The Board considered two proprietary management fee comparisons for the 12-month periods ended September 30 (June 30 for periods ended 2019 and 2018 and December 31 for periods prior to 2018) shown in basis points (BP) in the chart below. The group of Lipper funds used by the Board for management fee comparisons is referred to below as the "Total Mapped Group." The Total Mapped Group is broader than the Lipper peer group used by the Board for performance comparisons because the Total Mapped Group combines several Lipper investment objective categories while the Lipper peer group does not. The Total Mapped Group comparison focuses on a fund's standing in terms of gross management fees before expense reimbursements or caps relative to the total universe of funds with comparable investment mandates, regardless of whether their management fee structures also are comparable. Funds with comparable investment mandates offer exposure to similar types of securities. Funds with comparable management fee structures have similar management fee contractual arrangements (e.g., flat rate charged for advisory services, all-inclusive fee rate, etc.). "TMG %" represents the percentage of funds in the Total Mapped Group that had management fees that were lower than the fund's. For example, a hypothetical TMG % of 20% would mean that 80% of the funds in the Total Mapped Group had higher, and 20% had lower, management fees than the fund. The fund's actual TMG %s and the number of funds in the Total Mapped Group are in the chart below. The "Asset-Sized Peer Group" (ASPG) comparison focuses on a fund's standing relative to a subset of non-Fidelity funds within the Total Mapped Group that are similar in size and management fee structure. For example, if a fund is in the first quartile of the ASPG, the fund's management fee ranks in the least expensive or lowest 25% of funds in the ASPG. The ASPG represents at least 15% of the funds in the Total Mapped Group with comparable asset size and management fee structures, subject to a minimum of 50 funds (or all funds in the Total Mapped Group if fewer than 50). Additional information, such as the ASPG quartile in which the fund's management fee rate ranked, is also included in the chart and was considered by the Board.

Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund


The Board noted that the fund's management fee rate ranked below the median of its Total Mapped Group and below the median of its ASPG for the 12-month period ended September 30, 2020.

The Board noted that, in the past, it and the boards of other Fidelity funds had formed an ad hoc Committee on Group Fee to conduct an in-depth review of the "group fee" component of the management fee of funds with such management fee structures. The Committee's focus included the mechanics of the group fee, the competitive landscape of group fee structures, Fidelity funds with no group fee component and investment products not included in group fee assets. The Board also considered that, for funds subject to the group fee, FMR agreed to voluntarily waive fees over a specified period of time in amounts designed to account for assets converted from certain funds to certain collective investment trusts.

The Board also noted that, in 2013, the ad hoc Committee on Management Fees was formed to conduct an in-depth review of the management fee rates of Fidelity's active equity mutual funds. The Committee focused on the following areas: (i) standard fee structures; (ii) research consumption and trading evolution; (iii) management fee competitiveness/profitability by category; and (iv) factors that drive institutional pricing.

Based on its review, the Board concluded that the fund's management fee is fair and reasonable in light of the services that the fund receives and the other factors considered.

Total Expense Ratio.  In its review of each class's total expense ratio, the Board considered the fund's management fee rate as well as other fund or class expenses, as applicable, such as transfer agent fees, pricing and bookkeeping fees, fund-paid 12b-1 fees, and custodial, legal, and audit fees. The Board also noted that Fidelity may agree to waive fees or reimburse expenses from time to time, and the extent to which, if any, it has done so for the fund. As part of its review, the Board also considered the current and historical total expense ratios of a representative class of the fund compared to competitive fund median expenses. The fund's representative class is compared to those funds and classes in the Total Mapped Group (used by the Board for management fee comparisons) that have a similar sales load structure (SLTG). The Board also considered a total expense ASPG comparison for the representative class, which focuses on the total expenses of the representative class relative to a subset of non-Fidelity funds within the total expense SLTG. The total expense ASPG is limited to 15 larger and 15 smaller classes in fund average assets for a total of 30 classes, where possible. The total expense ASPG comparison excludes performance adjustments and fund-paid 12b-1 fees to eliminate variability in fee structures.

The Board noted that the total expense ratio of Class I ranked below the SLTG competitive median and below the ASPG competitive median for the 12-month period ended September 30, 2020.

Fees Charged to Other Fidelity Clients.  The Board also considered Fidelity fee structures and other information with respect to clients of Fidelity, such as other funds advised or subadvised by Fidelity, pension plan clients, and other institutional clients with similar mandates. The Board noted that a joint ad hoc committee created by it and the boards of other Fidelity funds periodically reviews and compares Fidelity's institutional investment advisory business with its business of providing services to the Fidelity funds and also noted the most recent findings of the committee. The Board noted that the committee's review included a consideration of the differences in services provided, fees charged, and costs incurred, as well as competition in the markets serving the different categories of clients.

Based on its review of total expense ratios and fees charged to other Fidelity clients, the Board concluded that the total expense ratio of each class of the fund was reasonable in light of the services that the fund and its shareholders receive and the other factors considered.

Costs of the Services and Profitability.  The Board considered the revenues earned and the expenses incurred by Fidelity in conducting the business of developing, marketing, distributing, managing, administering and servicing the fund and servicing the fund's shareholders. The Board also considered the level of Fidelity's profits in respect of all the Fidelity funds.

On an annual basis, Fidelity presents to the Board information about the profitability of its relationships with the fund. Fidelity calculates profitability information for each fund, as well as aggregate profitability information for groups of Fidelity funds and all Fidelity funds, using a series of detailed revenue and cost allocation methodologies which originate with the books and records of Fidelity on which Fidelity's audited financial statements are based. The Audit Committee of the Board reviews any significant changes from the prior year's methodologies and the full Board approves such changes.

A public accounting firm has been engaged annually by the Board as part of the Board's assessment of Fidelity's profitability analysis. The engagement includes the review and assessment of the methodologies used by Fidelity in determining the revenues and expenses attributable to Fidelity's mutual fund business, and completion of agreed-upon procedures in respect of the mathematical accuracy of certain fund profitability information and its conformity to established allocation methodologies. After considering the reports issued under the engagement and information provided by Fidelity, the Board concluded that while other allocation methods may also be reasonable, Fidelity's profitability methodologies are reasonable in all material respects.

The Board also reviewed Fidelity's non-fund businesses and potential indirect benefits such businesses may have received as a result of their association with Fidelity's mutual fund business (i.e., fall-out benefits) as well as cases where Fidelity's affiliates may benefit from the funds' business. The Board considered areas where potential indirect benefits to the Fidelity funds from their relationships with Fidelity may exist. The Board also considered that in 2019 a joint ad hoc committee created by it and the boards of other Fidelity funds evaluated potential fall-out benefits (PFOB Committee). The Board noted that it considered the PFOB Committee's findings in connection with its consideration of the renewal of the Advisory Contracts.

The Board considered the costs of the services provided by and the profits realized by Fidelity in connection with the operation of the fund, including the conclusions of the PFOB Committee, and was satisfied that the profitability was not excessive.

Economies of Scale.  The Board considered whether there have been economies of scale in respect of the management of the Fidelity funds, whether the Fidelity funds (including the fund) have appropriately benefited from any such economies of scale, and whether there is potential for realization of any further economies of scale. The Board considered the extent to which the fund will benefit from economies of scale as assets grow through increased services to the fund, through waivers or reimbursements, or through fee or expense ratio reductions. The Board also noted that a committee (the Economies of Scale Committee) created by it and the boards of other Fidelity funds periodically analyzes whether Fidelity attains economies of scale in respect of the management and servicing of the Fidelity funds, whether the Fidelity funds have appropriately benefited from such economies of scale, and whether there is potential for realization of any further economies of scale.

The Board recognized that the fund's management contract incorporates a "group fee" structure, which provides for lower group fee rates as total "group assets" increase, and for higher group fee rates as total "group assets" decrease ("group assets" as defined in the management contract). FMR calculates the group fee rates based on a tiered asset "breakpoint" schedule that varies based on asset class. The Board considered that the group fee is designed to deliver the benefits of economies of scale to fund shareholders when total Fidelity fund assets increase, even if assets of any particular fund are unchanged or have declined, because some portion of Fidelity's costs are attributable to services provided to all Fidelity funds, and all funds benefit if those costs can be allocated among more assets. The Board further considered that Fidelity agreed to impose a temporary fee waiver in the form of additional breakpoints to the current breakpoint schedule. The Board concluded that, given the group fee structure, fund shareholders will benefit from lower management fees as "group assets" increase at the fund complex level, regardless of whether Fidelity achieves any such economies of scale.

The Board concluded, taking into account the analysis of the Economies of Scale Committee, that economies of scale, if any, are being appropriately shared between fund shareholders and Fidelity.

Additional Information Requested by the Board.  In order to develop fully the factual basis for consideration of the Fidelity funds' advisory contracts, the Board requested and received additional information on certain topics, including: (i) fund flow and performance trends, in particular the underperformance of certain funds and strategies, and Fidelity's long-term strategies for certain funds; (ii) consideration of expanding the use of performance fees for additional funds; (iii) Fidelity's pricing philosophy compared to competitors; (iv) metrics for evaluating index fund and ETF performance and information about ETF trading characteristics; (v) the methodology with respect to evaluating competitive fund data and peer group classifications and fee and expense comparisons; (vi) the expense structures for different funds and classes and information about the differences between various expense structures; (vii) group fee breakpoints; (viii) information regarding other accounts managed by Fidelity and sub-advisory arrangements; and (ix) Fidelity's philosophies and strategies for evaluating funds and classes with lower or declining asset levels.

Based on its evaluation of all of the conclusions noted above, and after considering all factors it believed relevant, the Board concluded that the advisory fee arrangements are fair and reasonable, and that the fund's Advisory Contracts should be renewed.





FIDELITY INVESTMENTS

AIG-ANN-1021
1.538593.124





Item 2.

Code of Ethics


As of the end of the period, August 31, 2021, Fidelity Advisor Series I (the trust) has adopted a code of ethics, as defined in Item 2 of Form N-CSR, that applies to its President and Treasurer and its Chief Financial Officer.  A copy of the code of ethics is filed as an exhibit to this Form N-CSR.


Item 3.

Audit Committee Financial Expert


The Board of Trustees of the trust has determined that Donald F. Donahue is an audit committee financial expert, as defined in Item 3 of Form N-CSR.  Mr. Donahue is independent for purposes of Item 3 of Form N-CSR.  



Item 4.  

Principal Accountant Fees and Services


Fees and Services


The following table presents fees billed by Deloitte & Touche LLP, the member firms of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, and their respective affiliates (collectively, “Deloitte Entities”) in each of the last two fiscal years for services rendered to Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund (the “Fund”):


Services Billed by Deloitte Entities


August 31, 2021 FeesA

 

Audit Fees

Audit-Related Fees

Tax Fees

All Other Fees

Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund

 $83,700

$-

 $11,600

$1,700


August 31, 2020 FeesA

 

Audit Fees

Audit-Related Fees

Tax Fees

All Other Fees

Fidelity Advisor Balanced Fund

 $84,800

$-

 $12,500

$1,700


A Amounts may reflect rounding.


The following table(s) present(s) fees billed by Deloitte Entities that were required to be approved by the Audit Committee for services that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of the Fund(s) and that are rendered on behalf of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC ("FMR") and entities controlling, controlled by, or under common control with FMR (not including any sub-adviser whose role is primarily portfolio management and is subcontracted with or overseen by another investment adviser) that provide ongoing services to the Fund(s) (“Fund Service Providers”):


Services Billed by Deloitte Entities



 

August 31, 2021A

August 31, 2020A

Audit-Related Fees

$-

$-

Tax Fees

$-

$3,000

All Other Fees

$-

$-


A Amounts may reflect rounding.


“Audit-Related Fees” represent fees billed for assurance and related services that are reasonably related to the performance of the fund audit or the review of the fund's financial statements and that are not reported under Audit Fees.


“Tax Fees” represent fees billed for tax compliance, tax advice or tax planning that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of the fund.


“All Other Fees” represent fees billed for services provided to the fund or Fund Service Provider, a significant portion of which are assurance related, that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of the fund, excluding those services that are reported under Audit Fees, Audit-Related Fees or Tax Fees.  


Assurance services must be performed by an independent public accountant.


* * *


The aggregate non-audit fees billed by Deloitte Entities for services rendered to the Fund(s), FMR (not including any sub-adviser whose role is primarily portfolio management and is subcontracted with or overseen by another investment adviser), and any Fund Service Provider for each of the last two fiscal years of the Fund(s) are as follows:


Billed By

August 31, 2021A

August 31, 2020A

Deloitte Entities

$534,900

$518,800


A Amounts may reflect rounding.


The trust's Audit Committee has considered non-audit services that were not pre-approved that were provided by Deloitte Entities to Fund Service Providers to be compatible with maintaining the independence of Deloitte Entities in its(their) audit of the Fund(s), taking into account representations from Deloitte Entities, in accordance with Public Company Accounting Oversight Board rules, regarding its independence from the Fund(s) and its(their) related entities and FMR’s review of the appropriateness and permissibility under applicable law of such non-audit services prior to their provision to the Fund(s) Service Providers.


Audit Committee Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures

 

The trust’s Audit Committee must pre-approve all audit and non-audit services provided by a fund’s independent registered public accounting firm relating to the operations or financial reporting of the fund. Prior to the commencement of any audit or non-audit services to a fund, the Audit Committee reviews the services to determine whether they are appropriate and permissible under applicable law.


The Audit Committee has adopted policies and procedures to, among other purposes, provide a framework for the Committee’s consideration of non-audit services by the audit firms that audit the Fidelity funds. The policies and procedures require that any non-audit service provided by a fund audit firm to a Fidelity fund and any non-audit service provided by a fund auditor to a Fund Service Provider that relates directly to the operations and financial reporting of a Fidelity fund (“Covered Service”) are subject to approval by the Audit Committee before such service is provided.


All Covered Services must be approved in advance of provision of the service either: (i) by formal resolution of the Audit Committee, or (ii) by oral or written approval of the service by the Chair of the Audit Committee (or if the Chair is unavailable, such other member of the Audit Committee as may be designated by the Chair to act in the Chair’s absence). The approval contemplated by (ii) above is permitted where the Treasurer determines that action on such an engagement is necessary before the next meeting of the Audit Committee.


Non-audit services provided by a fund audit firm to a Fund Service Provider that do not relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of a Fidelity fund are reported to the Audit Committee periodically.


Non-Audit Services Approved Pursuant to Rule 2-01(c)(7)(i)(C) and (ii) of Regulation S-X (“De Minimis Exception”)


There were no non-audit services approved or required to be approved by the Audit Committee pursuant to the De Minimis Exception during the Fund’s(s’) last two fiscal years relating to services provided to (i) the Fund(s) or (ii) any Fund Service Provider that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of the Fund(s).



Item 5.

Audit Committee of Listed Registrants


Not applicable.


Item 6.  

Investments


(a)

Not applicable.


(b)

Not applicable.


Item 7.

Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures for Closed-End Management Investment Companies


Not applicable.


Item 8.

Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Management Investment Companies


Not applicable.


Item 9.  

Purchase of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment Company and Affiliated Purchasers


Not applicable.


Item 10.

Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders


There were no material changes to the procedures by which shareholders may recommend nominees to the trust’s Board of Trustees.


Item 11.

Controls and Procedures


(a)(i)  The President and Treasurer and the Chief Financial Officer have concluded that the trust’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act) provide reasonable assurances that material information relating to the trust is made known to them by the appropriate persons, based on their evaluation of these controls and procedures as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this report.


(a)(ii)  There was no change in the trust’s internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act) that occurred during the period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the trust’s internal control over financial reporting.


Item 12.

Disclosure of Securities Lending Activities for Closed-End Management

Investment Companies


Not applicable.


Item 13.

Exhibits


(a)

(1)

Code of Ethics pursuant to Item 2 of Form N-CSR is filed and attached hereto as EX-99.CODE ETH.

(a)

(2)

Certification pursuant to Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (17 CFR 270.30a-2(a)) is filed and attached hereto as Exhibit 99.CERT.

(a)

(3)

Not applicable.

(b)

 

Certification pursuant to Rule 30a-2(b) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (17 CFR 270.30a-2(b)) is furnished and attached hereto as Exhibit 99.906CERT.








SIGNATURES


Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.


Fidelity Advisor Series I



By:

/s/Stacie M. Smith

 

Stacie M. Smith

 

President and Treasurer

 

 

Date:

October 21, 2021


Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.



By:

/s/Stacie M. Smith

 

Stacie M. Smith

 

President and Treasurer

 

 

Date:

October 21, 2021



By:

/s/John J. Burke III

 

John J. Burke III

 

Chief Financial Officer

 

 

Date:

October 21, 2021

 








                                                      Exhibit EX-99.CERT

     

I, Stacie M. Smith, certify that:


1.

I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of Fidelity Advisor Series I;

2.

Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

3.

Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations, changes in net assets, and cash flows (if the financial statements are required to include a statement of cash flows) of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

4.

The registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) for the registrant and have:

a.

Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

b.

Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

c.

Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of this report based upon such evaluation; and

d.

Disclosed in this report any change in the registrants internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrants internal control over financial reporting; and





5.

The registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

a.

All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial information; and

b.

Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.


Date:

 October 21, 2021

/s/Stacie M. Smith

Stacie M. Smith

President and Treasurer







I, John J. Burke III, certify that:

1.

I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of Fidelity Advisor Series I;

2.

Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

3.

Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations, changes in net assets, and cash flows (if the financial statements are required to include a statement of cash flows) of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

4.

The registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) for the registrant and have:

a.

Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

 b.

Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

c.

Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of this report based upon such evaluation; and

d.

Disclosed in this report any change in the registrants internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrants internal control over financial reporting; and

5.

The registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):





a.

All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial information; and

b.

Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.


Date:

October 21, 2021

/s/John J. Burke III

John J. Burke III

Chief Financial Officer










Exhibit EX-99.906CERT



Certification Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (subsections (a) and (b) of section 1350, chapter 63 of title 18, United States Code)


In connection with the attached Report of Fidelity Advisor Series I (the Trust) on Form N-CSR to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the Report), each of the undersigned officers of the Trust does hereby certify that, to the best of such officers knowledge:


1.

The Report fully complies with the requirements of 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and

2.

The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Trust as of, and for, the periods presented in the Report.


Dated: October 21, 2021



/s/Stacie M. Smith

Stacie M. Smith

President and Treasurer



 

Dated: October 21, 2021



/s/John J. Burke III

John J. Burke III

Chief Financial Officer




A signed original of this written statement required by Section 906, or other document authenticating, acknowledging, or otherwise adopting the signature that appears in typed form within the electronic version of this written statement required by Section 906, has been provided to the Trust and will be retained by the Trust and furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission or its staff upon request.







EXHIBIT EX-99.CODE ETH


FIDELITY FUNDS’ CODE OF ETHICS FOR

PRESIDENT, TREASURER AND PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTING OFFICER



I.  Purposes of the Code/Covered Officers


This document constitutes the Code of Ethics (Code) adopted by the Fidelity Funds (Funds) pursuant to the provisions of Rule 30b2-1(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940), which Rule implements Sections 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 with respect to registered investment companies.  The Code applies to the Fidelity Funds’ President and Treasurer, and Chief Financial Officer (Covered Officers).  Fidelity’s Ethics Office, a part of Corporate Compliance Group within Core Compliance, administers the Code.


The purposes of the Code are to deter wrongdoing and to promote, on the part of the Covered Officers:


·

honest and ethical conduct, including the ethical handling of actual or apparent conflicts of interest between personal and professional relationships;

·

full, fair, accurate, timely and understandable disclosure in reports and documents that the Fidelity Funds submit to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and in other public communications by a Fidelity Fund;

·

compliance with applicable laws and governmental rules and regulations;

·

the prompt internal reporting to an appropriate person or persons identified in the Code of violations of the Code; and

·

accountability for adherence to the Code.


Each Covered Officer should adhere to a high standard of business ethics and should be sensitive to situations that may give rise to actual as well as apparent conflicts of interest.


II.

Covered Officers Should Handle Ethically

Actual and Apparent Conflicts of Interest


Overview.  A “conflict of interest” occurs when a Covered Officer’s private interest interferes with the interests of, or his service to, the Fidelity Funds.  For example, a conflict of interest would arise if a Covered Officer, or a member of his family, receives improper personal benefits as a result of his position with the Fidelity Funds.  


Certain conflicts of interest arise out of the relationships between Covered Officers and the Fidelity Funds and already are subject to conflict of interest provisions in the Investment Company Act of 1940 (Investment Company Act) and the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (Investment Advisers Act).  For example, Covered Officers may not individually engage in certain transactions (such as the purchase or sale of securities or other property) with a Fidelity Fund because of their status as “affiliated persons” of the Fund.  Separate compliance programs and procedures of the Fidelity Funds, Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) and the other Fidelity companies are designed to prevent, or identify and correct, violations of these provisions.  This Code does not, and is not intended to, repeat or replace these programs and procedures, and such conflicts fall outside of the parameters of this Code.


Although typically not presenting an opportunity for improper personal benefit, conflicts arise from, or as a result of, the contractual relationship between the Fidelity Funds and FMR (or another Fidelity company) of which the Covered Officers are also officers or employees.  As a result, this Code recognizes that the Covered Officers will, in the normal course of their duties (whether formally for the Fidelity Funds, FMR or another Fidelity company), be involved in establishing policies and implementing decisions that have different effects on the Fidelity Funds, FMR and other Fidelity companies.  The participation of the Covered Officers in such activities is inherent in the contractual relationship between the Fidelity Funds and FMR (or another Fidelity company), and is consistent with the performance by the Covered Officers of their duties as officers of the Fidelity Funds.  Thus, if performed in conformity with the provisions of the Investment Company Act and the Investment Advisers Act, such activities will be deemed to have been handled ethically.  In addition, it is recognized by the Funds’ Board of Trustees (Board) that the Covered Officers also may be officers or employees of one or more other Fidelity Funds covered by this Code.


Other conflicts of interest are covered by the Code, even if such conflicts of interest are not subject to provisions in the Investment Company Act and the Investment Advisers Act.  The following list provides examples of conflicts of interest under the Code, but Covered Officers should keep in mind that these examples are not exhaustive.  The overarching principle is that the personal interest of a Covered Officer should not be placed improperly before the interest of a Fidelity Fund.  


*               *               *


Each Covered Officer must:


·

not use his or her personal influence or personal relationships improperly to influence investment decisions or financial reporting by any Fidelity Fund whereby the Covered Officer would benefit personally to the detriment of any Fidelity Fund;

·

not cause a Fidelity Fund to take action, or fail to take action, for the individual personal benefit of the Covered Officer rather than the benefit of the Fidelity Fund;

·

not engage in any outside business activity, including serving as a director or trustee, that prevents the Covered Officer from devoting appropriate time and attention to the Covered Officer’s responsibilities with the Fidelity Funds;

·

not have a consulting or employment relationship with any of the Fidelity Funds’ service providers that are not affiliated with Fidelity; and

·

not retaliate against any employee or Covered Officer for reports of actual or potential misconduct, which are made in good faith.


With respect to other fact patterns, if a Covered Officer is in doubt, other potential conflict of interest situations should be described immediately to the Fidelity Ethics Office for resolution.  Similarly, any questions a Covered Officer has generally regarding the application or interpretation of the Code should be directed to the Fidelity Ethics Office immediately.


III.  Disclosure and Compliance


·

Each Covered Officer should familiarize himself with the disclosure requirements generally applicable to the Fidelity Funds.

·

Each Covered Officer should not knowingly misrepresent, or cause others to misrepresent, facts about any Fidelity Fund to others, whether within or outside Fidelity, including to the Board and auditors, and to governmental regulators and self-regulatory organizations;

·

Each Covered Officer should, to the extent appropriate within his area of responsibility, consult with other officers and employees of the Fidelity Funds, FMR and the Fidelity service providers, and with the Board’s Compliance Committee,  with the goal of promoting full, fair, accurate, timely and understandable disclosure in the reports and documents the Fidelity Funds file with, or submit to, the SEC and in other public communications made by the Fidelity Funds; and

·

It is the responsibility of each Covered Officer to promote compliance with the standards and restrictions imposed by applicable laws, rules and regulations.


IV.  Reporting and Accountability


Each Covered Officer must:


·

upon receipt of the Code, and annually thereafter, submit to the Fidelity Ethics Office an acknowledgement stating that he or she has received, read, and understands the Code; and

·

notify the Fidelity Ethics Office promptly if he or she knows of any violation of the Code.  Failure to do so is itself a violation of this Code.  


The Fidelity Ethics Office shall take all action it considers appropriate to investigate any actual or potential violations reported to it.  Upon completion of the investigation, if necessary, the matter will be reviewed with senior management or other appropriate parties, and a determination will be made as to whether any action should be taken as detailed below.  The Covered Officer will be informed of any action determined to be appropriate.  The Fidelity Ethics Office will inform the Personal Trading Committee of all Code violations and actions taken in response.  Without implied limitation, appropriate remedial, disciplinary or preventive action may include a written warning, a letter of censure, suspension, dismissal or, in the event of criminal or other serious violations of law, notification of the SEC or other appropriate law enforcement authorities.  Additionally, other legal remedies may be pursued.  


The policies and procedures described in the Code do not create any obligations to any person or entity other than the Fidelity Funds.  The Code is intended solely for the internal use by the Fidelity Funds and does not constitute a promise, contract or an admission by or on behalf of any Fidelity Fund as to any fact, circumstance, or legal conclusion.  The Fidelity Funds, the Fidelity companies and the Fidelity Chief Ethics Officer retain the discretion to decide whether the Code applies to a specific situation, and how it should be interpreted.


V.  Oversight


Material violations of this Code will be reported promptly by FMR to the Board’s Compliance Committee.  In addition, at least once each year, FMR will provide a written report to the Board, which describes any issues arising under the Code since the last report to the Board, including, but not limited to, information about material violations of the Code and action taken in response to the material violations.



VI.  Other Policies and Procedures


This Code shall be the sole code of ethics adopted by the Fidelity Funds for purposes of Section 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the rules and forms applicable to registered investment companies thereunder.  Other Fidelity policies or procedures that cover the behavior or activities of Covered Officers are separate requirements applying to the Covered Officers (and others), and are not part of this Code.  


VII.  Amendments


Any material amendments or changes to this Code must be approved or ratified by a majority vote of the Board, including a majority of the Trustees who are not interested persons of the Fidelity Funds.


VIII.  Records and Confidentiality


Records of any violation of the Code and of the actions taken as a result of such violations will be kept by the Fidelity Ethics Office.  All reports and records prepared or maintained pursuant to this Code will be considered confidential and shall be maintained and protected accordingly.  Except as otherwise required by law or this Code, such matters shall not be disclosed to anyone other than the Fidelity Ethics Office, the Personal Trading Committee, the Board, appropriate personnel at the relevant Fidelity company or companies and the legal counsel of any or all of the foregoing.