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 811-02105
Fidelity Salem Street Trust
(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: | April 30 |
|
|
Date of reporting period: | April 30, 2020 |
Item 1.
Reports to Stockholders
Fidelity® Mid Cap Index Fund
Fidelity® Small Cap Index Fund
Annual Report
April 30, 2020

See the inside front cover for important information about access to your fund’s shareholder reports.

Beginning on January 1, 2021, as permitted by regulations adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission, paper copies of a fund’s shareholder reports will no longer be sent by mail, unless you specifically request paper copies of the reports from the fund or from your financial intermediary, such as a financial advisor, broker-dealer or bank. Instead, the reports will be made available on a website, and you will be notified by mail each time a report is posted and provided with a website link to access the report.
If you already elected to receive shareholder reports electronically, you will not be affected by this change and you need not take any action. You may elect to receive shareholder reports and other communications from a fund electronically, by contacting your financial intermediary. For Fidelity customers, visit Fidelity's web site or call Fidelity using the contact information listed below.
You may elect to receive all future reports in paper free of charge. If you wish to continue receiving paper copies of your shareholder reports, you may contact your financial intermediary or, if you are a Fidelity customer, visit Fidelity’s website, or call Fidelity at the applicable toll-free number listed below. Your election to receive reports in paper will apply to all funds held with the fund complex/your financial intermediary.
Account Type | Website | Phone Number |
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Contents
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 1-800-544-8544 to request a free copy of the proxy voting guidelines.
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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. © 2020 FMR LLC. All rights reserved.
This report and the financial statements contained herein are submitted for the general information of the shareholders of the Funds. This report is not authorized for distribution to prospective investors in the Funds 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 Funds nor Fidelity Distributors Corporation is a bank.
Note to Shareholders:
Early in 2020, the outbreak and spread of a new coronavirus emerged as a public health emergency that had a major influence on financial markets, primarily based on its impact on the global economy and the outlook for corporate earnings. The virus causes a respiratory disease known as COVID-19. On March 11, the World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic, citing sustained risk of further global spread.
In the weeks following, as the crisis worsened, we witnessed an escalating human tragedy with wide-scale social and economic consequences from coronavirus-containment measures. The outbreak of COVID-19 prompted a number of measures to limit the spread, 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. Amid 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.
The situation continues to unfold, and the extent and duration of its impact on financial markets and the economy remain highly uncertain. Extreme events such as the coronavirus 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’re taking extra steps to be responsive to customer needs. We encourage you to visit our websites, where we offer ongoing updates, commentary, and analysis on the markets and our funds.
Fidelity® Mid Cap Index Fund
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 April 30, 2020 | Past 1 year | Past 5 years | Life of fundA |
Fidelity® Mid Cap Index Fund | (9.99)% | 4.81% | 10.82% |
A From September 8, 2011
$10,000 Over Life of Fund
Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity® Mid Cap Index Fund on September 8, 2011, when the fund started.
The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the Russell Midcap® Index performed over the same period.

| Period Ending Values |
| $24,315 | Fidelity® Mid Cap Index Fund |
| $24,364 | Russell Midcap® Index |
Fidelity® Mid Cap Index Fund
Management's Discussion of Fund Performance
Market Recap: The U.S. equity bellwether S&P 500
® index gained 0.86% for the 12 months ending April 30, 2020, as the early-2020 outbreak and spread of the coronavirus hampered global economic growth and the outlook for corporate earnings. Declared a pandemic on March 11, the crisis and containment efforts caused broad contraction in economic activity, along with extreme uncertainty, volatility and dislocation in financial markets. By mid-March, U.S. stocks entered bear-market territory less than a month after hitting an all-time high and extending the longest-running bull market in American history. Following a flattish January to open the year, stocks slid in late February (-8.23%), after a surge in COVID-19 cases outside China pushed investors to safer asset classes. The downtrend continued in March (-12.35%), capping the index’s worst quarterly result since 2008. A historically rapid and expansive U.S. monetary/fiscal-policy response helped mitigate the most acute near-term liquidity issues, and provided a partial offset to the economic disruption. This was evident in April, when the index achieved its highest monthly gain (+12.82%) since 1991, boosted by improving coronavirus trends, plans for reopening the economy and progress on potential treatments. By sector, energy stocks (-38%) fell hard along with the price of crude oil. Financials (-17%) and industrials (-16%) also lagged. In contrast, information technology (+18%) led, followed by health care (+15%), a defensive sector that saw higher demand due to the virus-containment response.
Comments from the Geode Capital Management, LLC, passive equity index team: For the fiscal year, the fund returned -9.99%, essentially in line with the -10.00% return of the benchmark Russell MidCap
® Index. At the individual-stock level, many companies experienced a substantial drawdown in their share price in February and March 2020, as the coronavirus's spread led to a global economic shutdown. Media company ViacomCBS (-65%) was a significant detractor, hurt by weak financial results and, in the wake of the virus, an increasingly unfavorable business environment. Shares of natural gas transportation company ONEOK (-52%), oil and natural gas exploration firms Concho Resources (-50%) and Pioneer Natural Resources (-41%), and energy services business Halliburton (-52%) plunged along with the energy sector in February and March. Meanwhile, travel-related businesses, including United Airlines Holdings (-67%) and Royal Caribbean Cruises (-60%) saw big stock-price declines as business and leisure travel dried up. Other notable detractors included DXC Technology (-71%), a provider of business-to-business IT services, and consumer finance company Discover Financial Services (-46%). In contrast, shares of chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices (+90%) rose sharply, as the company produced favorable financial results and gains in market share. Gold mining company Newmont (+94%) rose particularly sharply in the period's final months, as uncertainty about the global economic environment boosted the price of gold. Dexcom (+177%), which makes continuous glucose monitoring systems for diabetics, gained on extremely strong financial performance amid robust demand for its product. Discount retailer Dollar General (+40%) benefited from its status as an essential retailer, as customers stocked up on supplies while sheltering at home. Other notable contributors were real estate investment trusts (REITs) SBA Communications (+43%) and Digital Realty Trust (+32%), both of whose businesses benefited from increased demand for data usage.
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.
Fidelity® Mid Cap Index Fund
Investment Summary (Unaudited)
Top Ten Stocks as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Fiserv, Inc. | 0.9 |
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. | 0.8 |
Global Payments, Inc. | 0.8 |
Newmont Corp. | 0.7 |
Dollar General Corp. | 0.7 |
Harris Corp. | 0.6 |
Digital Realty Trust, Inc. | 0.6 |
Centene Corp. | 0.6 |
Lam Research Corp. | 0.5 |
Sempra Energy | 0.5 |
| 6.7 |
Top Market Sectors as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Information Technology | 20.0 |
Industrials | 13.5 |
Health Care | 12.2 |
Financials | 11.0 |
Consumer Discretionary | 10.6 |
Real Estate | 8.8 |
Utilities | 7.0 |
Materials | 5.2 |
Consumer Staples | 4.5 |
Communication Services | 4.0 |
Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)
As of April 30, 2020* |
| Stocks and Equity Futures | 99.9% |
| Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities) | 0.1% |

* Foreign investments – 4.4%
Fidelity® Mid Cap Index Fund
Schedule of Investments April 30, 2020
Showing Percentage of Net Assets
Common Stocks - 99.5% | | | |
| | Shares | Value |
COMMUNICATION SERVICES - 4.0% | | | |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.2% | | | |
CenturyLink, Inc. | | 1,956,099 | $20,773,771 |
GCI Liberty, Inc. (a) | | 176,163 | 10,715,995 |
| | | 31,489,766 |
Entertainment - 1.0% | | | |
Cinemark Holdings, Inc. | | 191,616 | 2,736,276 |
Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.: | | | |
Class A (a)(b) | | 97,607 | 696,914 |
Class B (a) | | 196,846 | 1,314,931 |
Live Nation Entertainment, Inc. (a)(b) | | 231,605 | 10,392,116 |
Madison Square Garden Entertainment Corp. (a) | | 33,775 | 2,793,193 |
Roku, Inc. Class A (a) | | 153,621 | 18,623,474 |
Spotify Technology SA (a)(b) | | 233,473 | 35,387,503 |
Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc. (a) | | 201,566 | 24,399,564 |
The Madison Square Garden Co. (a) | | 33,734 | 5,779,309 |
World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. Class A (b) | | 77,121 | 3,429,571 |
Zynga, Inc. (a) | | 1,539,553 | 11,608,230 |
| | | 117,161,081 |
Interactive Media & Services - 0.8% | | | |
IAC/InterActiveCorp (a) | | 133,431 | 29,819,160 |
Match Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 96,713 | 7,443,032 |
TripAdvisor, Inc. | | 186,771 | 3,729,817 |
Twitter, Inc. (a) | | 1,365,961 | 39,175,761 |
Zillow Group, Inc.: | | | |
Class A (a) | | 102,680 | 4,470,687 |
Class C (a)(b) | | 224,910 | 9,887,044 |
| | | 94,525,501 |
Media - 2.0% | | | |
Altice U.S.A., Inc. Class A (a) | | 541,920 | 14,073,662 |
AMC Networks, Inc. Class A (a) | | 77,871 | 1,857,223 |
Cable One, Inc. | | 7,841 | 14,998,735 |
Discovery Communications, Inc.: | | | |
Class A (a)(b) | | 278,783 | 6,250,315 |
Class C (non-vtg.) (a) | | 607,299 | 12,394,973 |
DISH Network Corp. Class A (a) | | 466,449 | 11,668,222 |
Fox Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 614,808 | 15,905,083 |
Class B | | 286,253 | 7,316,627 |
Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. | | 692,141 | 11,752,554 |
John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Class A | | 77,933 | 2,926,384 |
Liberty Broadband Corp.: | | | |
Class A (a) | | 43,893 | 5,268,038 |
Class C (a) | | 189,483 | 23,245,774 |
Liberty Media Corp.: | | | |
Liberty Formula One Group Series C (a) | | 354,544 | 11,412,771 |
Liberty Media Class A (a) | | 44,520 | 1,346,730 |
Liberty SiriusXM Series A (a) | | 150,683 | 5,079,524 |
Liberty SiriusXM Series C (a) | | 277,789 | 9,464,271 |
News Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 690,914 | 6,846,958 |
Class B | | 216,852 | 2,216,227 |
Nexstar Broadcasting Group, Inc. Class A | | 80,090 | 5,609,504 |
Omnicom Group, Inc. | | 387,178 | 22,080,761 |
Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc. Class A | | 115,894 | 2,045,529 |
Sirius XM Holdings, Inc. | | 2,457,678 | 14,524,877 |
The New York Times Co. Class A | | 290,654 | 9,452,068 |
ViacomCBS, Inc.: | | | |
Class A | | 27,862 | 546,931 |
Class B | | 968,546 | 16,717,104 |
| | | 235,000,845 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.0% | | | |
Telephone & Data Systems, Inc. | | 179,518 | 3,522,143 |
U.S. Cellular Corp. (a) | | 27,365 | 871,028 |
| | | 4,393,171 |
|
TOTAL COMMUNICATION SERVICES | | | 482,570,364 |
|
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 10.6% | | | |
Auto Components - 0.6% | | | |
Aptiv PLC | | 462,164 | 32,143,506 |
BorgWarner, Inc. | | 370,421 | 10,582,928 |
Gentex Corp. | | 454,928 | 11,027,455 |
Lear Corp. | | 109,526 | 10,695,214 |
The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. | | 415,475 | 2,978,956 |
| | | 67,428,059 |
Automobiles - 0.1% | | | |
Harley-Davidson, Inc. | | 274,851 | 5,999,997 |
Thor Industries, Inc. (b) | | 95,041 | 6,291,714 |
| | | 12,291,711 |
Distributors - 0.4% | | | |
Genuine Parts Co. | | 252,444 | 20,013,760 |
LKQ Corp. (a) | | 551,284 | 14,416,077 |
Pool Corp. | | 69,130 | 14,632,056 |
| | | 49,061,893 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.5% | | | |
Bright Horizons Family Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 103,147 | 12,011,468 |
Frontdoor, Inc. (a) | | 152,631 | 5,908,346 |
Graham Holdings Co. | | 7,513 | 2,930,145 |
Grand Canyon Education, Inc. (a) | | 85,169 | 7,326,237 |
H&R Block, Inc. | | 350,395 | 5,834,077 |
Service Corp. International | | 318,301 | 11,694,379 |
ServiceMaster Global Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 244,668 | 8,330,945 |
| | | 54,035,597 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 2.4% | | | |
ARAMARK Holdings Corp. | | 449,695 | 12,281,170 |
Caesars Entertainment Corp. (a) | | 1,033,855 | 9,987,039 |
Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc. (a) | | 45,930 | 40,351,802 |
Choice Hotels International, Inc. | | 59,931 | 4,497,822 |
Darden Restaurants, Inc. | | 232,426 | 17,150,715 |
Domino's Pizza, Inc. | | 73,574 | 26,628,638 |
Dunkin' Brands Group, Inc. | | 148,227 | 9,314,585 |
Extended Stay America, Inc. unit | | 327,045 | 3,554,979 |
Hilton Grand Vacations, Inc. (a) | | 153,988 | 3,172,153 |
Hilton Worldwide Holdings, Inc. | | 492,804 | 37,310,191 |
Hyatt Hotels Corp. Class A (b) | | 64,688 | 3,639,347 |
International Game Technology PLC (b) | | 173,903 | 1,311,229 |
MGM Mirage, Inc. | | 874,368 | 14,715,613 |
Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd. (a) | | 391,604 | 6,422,306 |
Planet Fitness, Inc. (a) | | 147,189 | 8,879,912 |
Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. (b) | | 312,395 | 14,610,714 |
Six Flags Entertainment Corp. | | 141,814 | 2,837,698 |
Vail Resorts, Inc. | | 72,118 | 12,332,178 |
Wendy's Co. | | 333,145 | 6,616,260 |
Wyndham Destinations, Inc. | | 160,653 | 4,107,897 |
Wyndham Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 164,958 | 6,220,566 |
Wynn Resorts Ltd. | | 175,614 | 15,020,265 |
Yum China Holdings, Inc. | | 650,268 | 31,511,987 |
| | | 292,475,066 |
Household Durables - 1.3% | | | |
D.R. Horton, Inc. | | 603,207 | 28,483,435 |
Garmin Ltd. | | 260,449 | 21,138,041 |
Leggett & Platt, Inc. | | 235,112 | 8,259,485 |
Lennar Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 497,382 | 24,903,917 |
Class B | | 16,759 | 639,356 |
Mohawk Industries, Inc. (a) | | 105,774 | 9,278,495 |
Newell Brands, Inc. | | 681,067 | 9,453,210 |
NVR, Inc. (a) | | 5,770 | 17,887,000 |
PulteGroup, Inc. | | 451,877 | 12,774,563 |
Tempur Sealy International, Inc. (a) | | 81,395 | 4,374,981 |
Toll Brothers, Inc. | | 178,203 | 4,280,436 |
Whirlpool Corp. | | 111,144 | 12,419,231 |
| | | 153,892,150 |
Internet & Direct Marketing Retail - 0.5% | | | |
Etsy, Inc. (a) | | 211,248 | 13,703,658 |
Expedia, Inc. | | 240,741 | 17,087,796 |
GrubHub, Inc. (a)(b) | | 163,705 | 7,823,462 |
Liberty Interactive Corp. QVC Group Series A (a) | | 693,679 | 5,587,584 |
Wayfair LLC Class A (a)(b) | | 113,283 | 14,051,623 |
| | | 58,254,123 |
Leisure Products - 0.3% | | | |
Brunswick Corp. | | 146,894 | 7,009,782 |
Hasbro, Inc. | | 226,498 | 16,355,421 |
Mattel, Inc. (a)(b) | | 617,309 | 5,382,934 |
Polaris, Inc. | | 103,281 | 7,325,721 |
| | | 36,073,858 |
Multiline Retail - 1.1% | | | |
Dollar General Corp. | | 457,887 | 80,267,591 |
Dollar Tree, Inc. (a) | | 423,428 | 33,734,509 |
Kohl's Corp. (b) | | 284,073 | 5,243,988 |
Macy's, Inc. (b) | | 571,358 | 3,348,158 |
Nordstrom, Inc. (b) | | 193,721 | 3,638,080 |
Ollie's Bargain Outlet Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 94,466 | 6,415,186 |
| | | 132,647,512 |
Specialty Retail - 2.6% | | | |
Advance Auto Parts, Inc. | | 118,939 | 14,380,914 |
AutoNation, Inc. (a) | | 96,748 | 3,602,896 |
AutoZone, Inc. (a) | | 42,616 | 43,481,957 |
Best Buy Co., Inc. | | 397,180 | 30,475,621 |
Burlington Stores, Inc. (a) | | 117,362 | 21,440,864 |
CarMax, Inc. (a)(b) | | 295,716 | 21,779,483 |
Carvana Co. Class A (a)(b) | | 80,967 | 6,486,266 |
Dick's Sporting Goods, Inc. | | 110,156 | 3,237,485 |
Five Below, Inc. (a) | | 98,197 | 8,853,442 |
Floor & Decor Holdings, Inc. Class A (a) | | 123,152 | 5,221,645 |
Foot Locker, Inc. | | 185,982 | 4,766,719 |
Gap, Inc. | | 381,636 | 3,098,884 |
L Brands, Inc. (b) | | 408,075 | 4,852,012 |
O'Reilly Automotive, Inc. (a) | | 133,870 | 51,719,336 |
Penske Automotive Group, Inc. (b) | | 60,493 | 2,176,538 |
Tiffany & Co., Inc. | | 216,789 | 27,423,809 |
Tractor Supply Co. | | 214,049 | 21,710,990 |
Ulta Beauty, Inc. (a) | | 98,552 | 21,476,452 |
Urban Outfitters, Inc. (a) | | 123,053 | 2,133,739 |
Williams-Sonoma, Inc. | | 138,453 | 8,561,934 |
| | | 306,880,986 |
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 0.8% | | | |
Capri Holdings Ltd. (a) | | 254,570 | 3,882,193 |
Carter's, Inc. | | 78,060 | 6,104,292 |
Columbia Sportswear Co. | | 52,881 | 3,854,496 |
Hanesbrands, Inc. | | 645,754 | 6,418,795 |
lululemon athletica, Inc. (a) | | 211,954 | 47,367,480 |
PVH Corp. | | 132,413 | 6,518,692 |
Ralph Lauren Corp. | | 86,693 | 6,396,210 |
Skechers U.S.A., Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a) | | 236,072 | 6,652,509 |
Tapestry, Inc. | | 495,989 | 7,380,316 |
Under Armour, Inc.: | | | |
Class A (sub. vtg.) (a) | | 346,312 | 3,608,571 |
Class C (non-vtg.) (a) | | 339,745 | 3,149,436 |
| | | 101,332,990 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | | 1,264,373,945 |
|
CONSUMER STAPLES - 4.5% | | | |
Beverages - 0.3% | | | |
Brown-Forman Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 80,190 | 4,548,377 |
Class B (non-vtg.) | | 309,351 | 19,241,632 |
Molson Coors Beverage Co. Class B | | 312,476 | 12,814,641 |
| | | 36,604,650 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 0.6% | | | |
Casey's General Stores, Inc. | | 65,660 | 9,941,581 |
Grocery Outlet Holding Corp. | | 121,618 | 4,046,231 |
Kroger Co. | | 1,427,541 | 45,124,571 |
Sprouts Farmers Market LLC (a) | | 210,306 | 4,370,159 |
U.S. Foods Holding Corp. (a) | | 391,591 | 8,419,207 |
| | | 71,901,749 |
Food Products - 2.8% | | | |
Archer Daniels Midland Co. | | 1,000,606 | 37,162,507 |
Beyond Meat, Inc. (b) | | 85,191 | 8,433,057 |
Bunge Ltd. | | 247,087 | 9,801,941 |
Campbell Soup Co. | | 300,416 | 15,014,792 |
Conagra Brands, Inc. | | 866,256 | 28,967,601 |
Flowers Foods, Inc. | | 349,715 | 7,791,650 |
Hormel Foods Corp. | | 498,954 | 23,375,995 |
Ingredion, Inc. | | 119,860 | 9,732,632 |
Kellogg Co. | | 442,161 | 28,961,546 |
Lamb Weston Holdings, Inc. | | 262,439 | 16,103,257 |
McCormick & Co., Inc. (non-vtg.) | | 220,389 | 34,565,811 |
Pilgrim's Pride Corp. (a) | | 95,029 | 2,090,638 |
Post Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 117,194 | 10,764,269 |
Seaboard Corp. | | 464 | 1,397,150 |
The Hain Celestial Group, Inc. (a) | | 149,349 | 3,859,178 |
The Hershey Co. | | 259,400 | 34,352,342 |
The J.M. Smucker Co. | | 197,168 | 22,656,575 |
TreeHouse Foods, Inc. (a) | | 99,608 | 5,152,722 |
Tyson Foods, Inc. Class A | | 516,829 | 32,141,596 |
| | | 332,325,259 |
Household Products - 0.7% | | | |
Church & Dwight Co., Inc. | | 441,851 | 30,925,151 |
Clorox Co. | | 226,181 | 42,169,186 |
Energizer Holdings, Inc. | | 112,383 | 4,378,442 |
Reynolds Consumer Products, Inc. | | 84,917 | 2,753,858 |
Spectrum Brands Holdings, Inc. | | 80,713 | 3,475,502 |
| | | 83,702,139 |
Personal Products - 0.1% | | | |
Coty, Inc. Class A | | 526,832 | 2,871,234 |
Herbalife Nutrition Ltd. (a)(b) | | 178,690 | 6,674,072 |
Nu Skin Enterprises, Inc. Class A | | 98,798 | 2,885,890 |
| | | 12,431,196 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | | 536,964,993 |
|
ENERGY - 2.7% | | | |
Energy Equipment & Services - 0.4% | | | |
Apergy Corp. (a)(b) | | 150,294 | 1,384,208 |
Baker Hughes Co. Class A | | 1,176,564 | 16,413,068 |
Halliburton Co. | | 1,580,389 | 16,594,085 |
Helmerich & Payne, Inc. | | 197,920 | 3,912,878 |
National Oilwell Varco, Inc. | | 709,535 | 8,968,522 |
Patterson-UTI Energy, Inc. | | 342,480 | 1,263,751 |
| | | 48,536,512 |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 2.3% | | | |
Antero Midstream GP LP | | 321,669 | 1,527,928 |
Antero Resources Corp. (a)(b) | | 447,139 | 1,332,474 |
Apache Corp. | | 683,710 | 8,942,927 |
Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. | | 721,003 | 15,588,085 |
Cheniere Energy, Inc. (a) | | 413,608 | 19,311,358 |
Cimarex Energy Co. | | 184,592 | 4,692,329 |
Concho Resources, Inc. | | 359,553 | 20,393,846 |
Continental Resources, Inc. | | 157,817 | 2,586,621 |
Devon Energy Corp. | | 698,250 | 8,707,178 |
Diamondback Energy, Inc. | | 290,504 | 12,648,544 |
EQT Corp. | | 457,113 | 6,669,279 |
Equitrans Midstream Corp. | | 365,011 | 3,058,792 |
Hess Corp. | | 482,415 | 23,464,666 |
HollyFrontier Corp. | | 268,349 | 8,866,251 |
Kosmos Energy Ltd. | | 655,425 | 1,081,451 |
Marathon Oil Corp. | | 1,468,299 | 8,985,990 |
Murphy Oil Corp. | | 272,414 | 3,230,830 |
Noble Energy, Inc. | | 861,568 | 8,451,982 |
ONEOK, Inc. | | 738,403 | 22,100,402 |
Parsley Energy, Inc. Class A | | 545,729 | 5,157,139 |
PBF Energy, Inc. Class A | | 213,410 | 2,432,874 |
Pioneer Natural Resources Co. | | 297,364 | 26,557,579 |
Range Resources Corp. (b) | | 373,222 | 2,175,884 |
Targa Resources Corp. | | 419,429 | 5,435,800 |
The Williams Companies, Inc. | | 2,180,113 | 42,228,789 |
WPX Energy, Inc. (a) | | 754,802 | 4,626,936 |
| | | 270,255,934 |
|
TOTAL ENERGY | | | 318,792,446 |
|
FINANCIALS - 11.0% | | | |
Banks - 2.9% | | | |
Associated Banc-Corp. | | 275,785 | 3,899,600 |
Bank of Hawaii Corp. | | 70,927 | 4,835,803 |
Bank OZK | | 217,398 | 4,917,543 |
BankUnited, Inc. | | 167,973 | 3,327,545 |
BOK Financial Corp. | | 56,787 | 2,940,999 |
CIT Group, Inc. | | 173,017 | 3,283,863 |
Citizens Financial Group, Inc. | | 779,735 | 17,458,267 |
Comerica, Inc. | | 252,723 | 8,809,924 |
Commerce Bancshares, Inc. | | 182,010 | 11,137,192 |
Cullen/Frost Bankers, Inc. | | 101,213 | 7,273,166 |
East West Bancorp, Inc. | | 260,226 | 9,126,126 |
Fifth Third Bancorp | | 1,280,406 | 23,930,788 |
First Citizens Bancshares, Inc. | | 12,497 | 4,773,854 |
First Hawaiian, Inc. | | 234,287 | 4,121,108 |
First Horizon National Corp. | | 551,595 | 5,008,483 |
First Republic Bank | | 305,948 | 31,907,317 |
FNB Corp., Pennsylvania | | 578,403 | 4,679,280 |
Huntington Bancshares, Inc. | | 1,819,957 | 16,816,403 |
KeyCorp | | 1,759,387 | 20,496,859 |
M&T Bank Corp. | | 235,656 | 26,412,324 |
PacWest Bancorp | | 211,164 | 4,273,959 |
Peoples United Financial, Inc. | | 790,902 | 10,036,546 |
Pinnacle Financial Partners, Inc. | | 134,405 | 5,409,801 |
Popular, Inc. | | 168,531 | 6,503,611 |
Prosperity Bancshares, Inc. | | 163,579 | 9,803,289 |
Regions Financial Corp. | | 1,731,078 | 18,609,089 |
Signature Bank | | 94,955 | 10,177,277 |
Sterling Bancorp | | 355,170 | 4,379,246 |
SVB Financial Group (a) | | 93,192 | 18,001,899 |
Synovus Financial Corp. | | 251,218 | 5,278,090 |
TCF Financial Corp. | | 271,383 | 8,057,361 |
Texas Capital Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 89,364 | 2,482,532 |
Umpqua Holdings Corp. | | 393,496 | 4,928,537 |
Webster Financial Corp. | | 163,868 | 4,629,271 |
Western Alliance Bancorp. | | 170,183 | 6,106,166 |
Wintrust Financial Corp. | | 102,934 | 4,312,935 |
Zions Bancorp NA | | 291,266 | 9,206,918 |
| | | 347,352,971 |
Capital Markets - 3.3% | | | |
Affiliated Managers Group, Inc. | | 88,037 | 6,159,069 |
Ameriprise Financial, Inc. | | 227,210 | 26,115,517 |
BGC Partners, Inc. Class A | | 531,827 | 1,646,005 |
Cboe Global Markets, Inc. | | 198,885 | 19,765,191 |
E*TRADE Financial Corp. | | 400,053 | 16,246,152 |
Eaton Vance Corp. (non-vtg.) | | 191,156 | 7,015,425 |
Evercore, Inc. Class A | | 69,207 | 3,571,081 |
FactSet Research Systems, Inc. | | 67,312 | 18,510,800 |
Franklin Resources, Inc. | | 495,833 | 9,341,494 |
Interactive Brokers Group, Inc. | | 133,738 | 5,483,258 |
Invesco Ltd. | | 685,673 | 5,910,501 |
Janus Henderson Group PLC | | 283,108 | 5,067,633 |
Lazard Ltd. Class A | | 182,436 | 5,016,990 |
Legg Mason, Inc. | | 154,028 | 7,675,215 |
LPL Financial | | 144,460 | 8,699,381 |
MarketAxess Holdings, Inc. | | 66,113 | 30,082,076 |
Morningstar, Inc. | | 35,251 | 5,497,746 |
MSCI, Inc. | | 147,268 | 48,156,636 |
Northern Trust Corp. | | 346,273 | 27,410,971 |
Raymond James Financial, Inc. | | 223,157 | 14,710,509 |
SEI Investments Co. | | 228,281 | 11,633,200 |
State Street Corp. | | 640,905 | 40,402,651 |
T. Rowe Price Group, Inc. | | 413,484 | 47,811,155 |
The NASDAQ OMX Group, Inc. | | 205,811 | 22,571,292 |
Virtu Financial, Inc. Class A | | 91,349 | 2,134,826 |
| | | 396,634,774 |
Consumer Finance - 0.7% | | | |
Ally Financial, Inc. | | 672,109 | 11,015,867 |
Credit Acceptance Corp. (a)(b) | | 18,078 | 5,632,562 |
Discover Financial Services | | 558,851 | 24,013,827 |
LendingTree, Inc. (a) | | 13,796 | 3,440,309 |
Navient Corp. | | 347,120 | 2,645,054 |
OneMain Holdings, Inc. | | 116,604 | 2,822,983 |
Santander Consumer U.S.A. Holdings, Inc. | | 182,981 | 2,852,674 |
SLM Corp. | | 756,235 | 6,307,000 |
Synchrony Financial | | 1,099,916 | 21,767,338 |
| | | 80,497,614 |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.2% | | | |
AXA Equitable Holdings, Inc. | | 744,085 | 13,631,637 |
Jefferies Financial Group, Inc. | | 450,162 | 6,176,223 |
Voya Financial, Inc. | | 241,289 | 10,899,024 |
| | | 30,706,884 |
Insurance - 3.4% | | | |
Alleghany Corp. | | 25,102 | 13,397,188 |
American Financial Group, Inc. | | 132,050 | 8,746,992 |
American National Insurance Co. | | 13,306 | 1,071,133 |
Arch Capital Group Ltd. (a) | | 687,995 | 16,532,520 |
Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. | | 335,506 | 26,337,221 |
Assurant, Inc. | | 108,700 | 11,548,288 |
Assured Guaranty Ltd. | | 166,767 | 4,957,983 |
Athene Holding Ltd. (a) | | 246,279 | 6,649,533 |
Axis Capital Holdings Ltd. | | 147,779 | 5,408,711 |
Brighthouse Financial, Inc. (a) | | 193,369 | 4,971,517 |
Brown & Brown, Inc. | | 423,167 | 15,195,927 |
Cincinnati Financial Corp. | | 273,413 | 17,990,575 |
CNA Financial Corp. | | 50,073 | 1,581,305 |
Erie Indemnity Co. Class A | | 44,175 | 7,865,801 |
Everest Re Group Ltd. | | 72,140 | 12,489,598 |
First American Financial Corp. | | 195,833 | 9,031,818 |
FNF Group | | 474,121 | 12,824,973 |
Globe Life, Inc. | | 191,494 | 15,767,616 |
Hanover Insurance Group, Inc. | | 68,757 | 6,901,828 |
Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc. | | 647,267 | 24,589,673 |
Kemper Corp. | | 112,886 | 7,588,197 |
Lincoln National Corp. | | 361,905 | 12,836,770 |
Loews Corp. | | 444,819 | 15,417,427 |
Markel Corp. (a) | | 24,342 | 21,076,277 |
Mercury General Corp. | | 49,346 | 2,021,212 |
Old Republic International Corp. | | 505,851 | 8,068,323 |
Primerica, Inc. | | 73,821 | 7,670,740 |
Principal Financial Group, Inc. | | 489,064 | 17,806,820 |
Reinsurance Group of America, Inc. | | 112,200 | 11,745,096 |
RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd. | | 78,259 | 11,426,597 |
Unum Group | | 367,943 | 6,420,605 |
W.R. Berkley Corp. | | 258,058 | 13,935,132 |
White Mountains Insurance Group Ltd. | | 5,544 | 5,394,312 |
Willis Group Holdings PLC | | 231,672 | 41,304,801 |
| | | 406,572,509 |
Mortgage Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.4% | | | |
AGNC Investment Corp. | | 981,440 | 12,189,485 |
Annaly Capital Management, Inc. | | 2,594,324 | 16,214,525 |
Chimera Investment Corp. | | 375,416 | 2,916,982 |
New Residential Investment Corp. | | 798,253 | 4,861,361 |
Starwood Property Trust, Inc. | | 499,667 | 6,465,691 |
Two Harbors Investment Corp. | | 553,745 | 2,530,615 |
| | | 45,178,659 |
Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.1% | | | |
MGIC Investment Corp. | | 623,651 | 4,558,889 |
New York Community Bancorp, Inc. | | 813,572 | 8,835,392 |
TFS Financial Corp. | | 88,623 | 1,209,704 |
| | | 14,603,985 |
|
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | | 1,321,547,396 |
|
HEALTH CARE - 12.2% | | | |
Biotechnology - 2.0% | | | |
Agios Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 107,424 | 4,419,423 |
Alkermes PLC (a) | | 280,458 | 3,845,079 |
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 193,046 | 25,424,158 |
BioMarin Pharmaceutical, Inc. (a) | | 321,009 | 29,539,248 |
bluebird bio, Inc. (a)(b) | | 98,806 | 5,323,667 |
Exact Sciences Corp. (a) | | 251,082 | 19,830,456 |
Exelixis, Inc. (a) | | 535,783 | 13,231,161 |
Incyte Corp. (a) | | 322,586 | 31,503,749 |
Ionis Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 229,676 | 12,753,908 |
Moderna, Inc. (a)(b) | | 400,436 | 18,416,052 |
Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 164,040 | 16,098,886 |
Sage Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 91,462 | 3,565,189 |
Sarepta Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 126,652 | 14,929,738 |
Seattle Genetics, Inc. (a) | | 209,226 | 28,712,084 |
United Therapeutics Corp. (a) | | 77,500 | 8,490,900 |
| | | 236,083,698 |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 3.9% | | | |
Abiomed, Inc. (a) | | 79,616 | 15,226,560 |
Align Technology, Inc. (a) | | 140,027 | 30,084,801 |
Cantel Medical Corp. (b) | | 67,780 | 2,507,860 |
Dentsply Sirona, Inc. | | 400,236 | 16,986,016 |
DexCom, Inc. (a) | | 162,607 | 54,505,866 |
Envista Holdings Corp. (a) | | 258,722 | 5,037,317 |
Hill-Rom Holdings, Inc. | | 119,962 | 13,494,525 |
Hologic, Inc. (a) | | 470,006 | 23,547,301 |
ICU Medical, Inc. (a) | | 34,484 | 7,562,686 |
IDEXX Laboratories, Inc. (a) | | 152,594 | 42,360,094 |
Insulet Corp. (a) | | 106,563 | 21,282,762 |
Integra LifeSciences Holdings Corp. (a) | | 127,319 | 6,499,635 |
Masimo Corp. (a) | | 84,537 | 18,083,310 |
Penumbra, Inc. (a) | | 56,437 | 10,007,409 |
ResMed, Inc. | | 254,971 | 39,602,096 |
STERIS PLC | | 150,474 | 21,442,545 |
Teleflex, Inc. | | 82,884 | 27,799,294 |
The Cooper Companies, Inc. | | 87,383 | 25,052,706 |
Varian Medical Systems, Inc. (a) | | 163,224 | 18,669,561 |
West Pharmaceutical Services, Inc. | | 131,323 | 24,854,191 |
Zimmer Biomet Holdings, Inc. | | 368,435 | 44,101,670 |
| | | 468,708,205 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 2.6% | | | |
Acadia Healthcare Co., Inc. (a)(b) | | 155,347 | 3,729,881 |
AmerisourceBergen Corp. | | 267,027 | 23,941,641 |
Cardinal Health, Inc. | | 525,388 | 25,996,198 |
Centene Corp. (a) | | 1,038,692 | 69,156,113 |
Chemed Corp. | | 27,920 | 11,630,634 |
Covetrus, Inc. (a)(b) | | 173,424 | 2,062,011 |
DaVita HealthCare Partners, Inc. (a) | | 156,392 | 12,356,532 |
Encompass Health Corp. | | 175,759 | 11,644,034 |
Guardant Health, Inc. (a) | | 66,331 | 5,104,834 |
Henry Schein, Inc. (a) | | 262,666 | 14,331,057 |
Laboratory Corp. of America Holdings (a) | | 173,761 | 28,574,996 |
McKesson Corp. | | 290,089 | 40,975,071 |
MEDNAX, Inc. (a)(b) | | 151,226 | 2,195,802 |
Molina Healthcare, Inc. (a) | | 108,622 | 17,810,749 |
Premier, Inc. (a) | | 110,895 | 3,677,278 |
Quest Diagnostics, Inc. | | 238,079 | 26,214,879 |
Universal Health Services, Inc. Class B | | 140,503 | 14,849,762 |
| | | 314,251,472 |
Health Care Technology - 0.8% | | | |
Cerner Corp. | | 561,487 | 38,961,583 |
Change Healthcare, Inc. | | 402,629 | 4,686,602 |
Veeva Systems, Inc. Class A (a) | | 234,372 | 44,718,178 |
| | | 88,366,363 |
Life Sciences Tools & Services - 2.1% | | | |
Adaptive Biotechnologies Corp. | | 120,096 | 3,844,273 |
Agilent Technologies, Inc. | | 556,861 | 42,688,964 |
Avantor, Inc. | | 565,735 | 9,510,005 |
Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc. Class A (a) | | 38,109 | 16,771,771 |
Bio-Techne Corp. | | 68,111 | 15,324,975 |
Bruker Corp. | | 183,459 | 7,213,608 |
Charles River Laboratories International, Inc. (a) | | 86,418 | 12,502,092 |
IQVIA Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 317,240 | 45,235,252 |
Mettler-Toledo International, Inc. (a) | | 42,585 | 30,658,645 |
PerkinElmer, Inc. | | 198,733 | 17,991,298 |
PPD, Inc. | | 122,076 | 2,917,616 |
PRA Health Sciences, Inc. (a) | | 112,643 | 10,870,050 |
QIAGEN NV (a) | | 397,085 | 16,554,474 |
Waters Corp. (a) | | 114,656 | 21,440,672 |
| | | 253,523,695 |
Pharmaceuticals - 0.8% | | | |
Catalent, Inc. (a) | | 275,391 | 19,043,288 |
Elanco Animal Health, Inc. (a) | | 711,699 | 17,586,082 |
Horizon Pharma PLC (a) | | 333,787 | 12,029,683 |
Jazz Pharmaceuticals PLC (a) | | 99,360 | 10,954,440 |
Mylan NV (a) | | 923,647 | 15,489,560 |
Nektar Therapeutics (a)(b) | | 301,165 | 5,782,368 |
Perrigo Co. PLC | | 226,447 | 12,069,625 |
| | | 92,955,046 |
|
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | | 1,453,888,479 |
|
INDUSTRIALS - 13.5% | | | |
Aerospace & Defense - 1.7% | | | |
BWX Technologies, Inc. | | 170,550 | 9,049,383 |
Curtiss-Wright Corp. | | 76,376 | 7,916,372 |
Harris Corp. | | 396,831 | 76,866,165 |
HEICO Corp. | | 77,906 | 6,824,566 |
HEICO Corp. Class A | | 138,352 | 10,007,000 |
Hexcel Corp. | | 149,018 | 5,154,533 |
Howmet Aerospace, Inc. | | 691,151 | 9,033,344 |
Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc. | | 71,792 | 13,741,707 |
Spirit AeroSystems Holdings, Inc. Class A | | 184,403 | 4,086,370 |
Teledyne Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 64,243 | 20,922,018 |
Textron, Inc. | | 414,902 | 10,936,817 |
TransDigm Group, Inc. | | 92,191 | 33,472,708 |
| | | 208,010,983 |
Air Freight & Logistics - 0.4% | | | |
C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc. | | 241,762 | 17,140,926 |
Expeditors International of Washington, Inc. | | 307,785 | 22,038,945 |
XPO Logistics, Inc. (a) | | 164,444 | 10,974,993 |
| | | 50,154,864 |
Airlines - 0.3% | | | |
Alaska Air Group, Inc. | | 216,995 | 7,056,677 |
American Airlines Group, Inc. (b) | | 705,441 | 8,472,346 |
Copa Holdings SA Class A | | 56,111 | 2,480,667 |
JetBlue Airways Corp. (a) | | 515,922 | 5,025,080 |
United Airlines Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 480,526 | 14,213,959 |
| | | 37,248,729 |
Building Products - 1.1% | | | |
A.O. Smith Corp. | | 243,583 | 10,323,048 |
Allegion PLC | | 166,616 | 16,751,573 |
Armstrong World Industries, Inc. | | 87,809 | 6,768,318 |
Fortune Brands Home & Security, Inc. | | 250,122 | 12,055,880 |
Lennox International, Inc. | | 62,907 | 11,743,479 |
Masco Corp. | | 497,472 | 20,416,251 |
Owens Corning | | 192,749 | 8,357,597 |
Resideo Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 237,565 | 1,218,708 |
Trane Technologies PLC | | 427,338 | 37,357,888 |
| | | 124,992,742 |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 1.1% | | | |
ADT, Inc. (b) | | 201,663 | 1,155,529 |
Cintas Corp. | | 152,122 | 33,745,223 |
Clean Harbors, Inc. (a) | | 92,501 | 4,942,328 |
Copart, Inc. (a) | | 360,826 | 28,905,771 |
IAA Spinco, Inc. (a) | | 238,320 | 9,199,152 |
KAR Auction Services, Inc. | | 229,547 | 3,438,614 |
Republic Services, Inc. | | 382,831 | 29,990,981 |
Rollins, Inc. | | 254,276 | 10,171,040 |
Stericycle, Inc. (a) | | 160,232 | 7,819,322 |
| | | 129,367,960 |
Construction & Engineering - 0.4% | | | |
AECOM (a) | | 269,374 | 9,767,501 |
Fluor Corp. | | 250,861 | 2,935,074 |
Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc. | | 230,547 | 19,077,764 |
Quanta Services, Inc. | | 253,787 | 9,227,695 |
Valmont Industries, Inc. | | 38,180 | 4,476,223 |
| | | 45,484,257 |
Electrical Equipment - 0.9% | | | |
Acuity Brands, Inc. | | 70,877 | 6,137,239 |
AMETEK, Inc. | | 408,103 | 34,227,599 |
GrafTech International Ltd. | | 101,801 | 826,624 |
Hubbell, Inc. Class B | | 97,377 | 12,116,620 |
nVent Electric PLC | | 272,163 | 5,075,840 |
Regal Beloit Corp. | | 73,193 | 5,197,435 |
Rockwell Automation, Inc. | | 206,710 | 39,167,411 |
Sensata Technologies, Inc. PLC (a) | | 280,390 | 10,200,588 |
| | | 112,949,356 |
Industrial Conglomerates - 0.1% | | | |
Carlisle Companies, Inc. | | 98,805 | 11,951,453 |
Machinery - 3.8% | | | |
AGCO Corp. | | 112,382 | 5,938,265 |
Allison Transmission Holdings, Inc. | | 196,112 | 7,126,710 |
Colfax Corp. (a) | | 166,544 | 4,295,170 |
Crane Co. | | 89,956 | 4,898,104 |
Cummins, Inc. | | 263,525 | 43,086,338 |
Donaldson Co., Inc. | | 226,487 | 9,926,925 |
Dover Corp. | | 260,027 | 24,351,529 |
Flowserve Corp. | | 234,567 | 6,607,752 |
Fortive Corp. | | 530,387 | 33,944,768 |
Gardner Denver Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 617,960 | 17,970,277 |
Gates Industrial Corp. PLC (a) | | 82,371 | 707,567 |
Graco, Inc. | | 296,083 | 13,223,067 |
IDEX Corp. | | 135,652 | 20,840,217 |
ITT, Inc. | | 157,356 | 8,295,808 |
Lincoln Electric Holdings, Inc. (b) | | 105,281 | 8,476,173 |
Middleby Corp. (a)(b) | | 99,217 | 5,519,442 |
Nordson Corp. | | 102,795 | 16,540,743 |
Oshkosh Corp. | | 121,974 | 8,236,904 |
PACCAR, Inc. | | 609,222 | 42,176,439 |
Parker Hannifin Corp. | | 230,169 | 36,394,322 |
Pentair PLC | | 300,214 | 10,384,402 |
Snap-On, Inc. | | 97,495 | 12,702,624 |
Stanley Black & Decker, Inc. | | 272,005 | 29,974,951 |
Timken Co. | | 119,195 | 4,479,348 |
Toro Co. | | 192,273 | 12,268,940 |
Trinity Industries, Inc. | | 180,482 | 3,481,498 |
WABCO Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 91,708 | 12,323,721 |
Westinghouse Air Brake Co. | | 322,362 | 18,187,664 |
Woodward, Inc. | | 98,488 | 5,964,433 |
Xylem, Inc. | | 321,635 | 23,125,557 |
| | | 451,449,658 |
Marine - 0.1% | | | |
Kirby Corp. (a) | | 106,281 | 5,677,531 |
Professional Services - 1.9% | | | |
CoreLogic, Inc. | | 142,202 | 5,463,401 |
CoStar Group, Inc. (a) | | 64,615 | 41,887,320 |
Equifax, Inc. | | 216,057 | 30,010,317 |
IHS Markit Ltd. | | 699,720 | 47,091,156 |
Manpower, Inc. | | 105,473 | 7,830,316 |
Nielsen Holdings PLC | | 638,479 | 9,404,796 |
Robert Half International, Inc. | | 203,659 | 9,626,961 |
TransUnion Holding Co., Inc. | | 336,077 | 26,479,507 |
Verisk Analytics, Inc. | | 286,642 | 43,807,497 |
| | | 221,601,271 |
Road & Rail - 0.8% | | | |
AMERCO | | 15,919 | 4,459,389 |
J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc. | | 152,815 | 15,452,653 |
Kansas City Southern | | 172,237 | 22,485,540 |
Knight-Swift Transportation Holdings, Inc. Class A | | 221,139 | 8,221,948 |
Landstar System, Inc. | | 70,620 | 7,295,752 |
Lyft, Inc. (a) | | 350,217 | 11,497,624 |
Old Dominion Freight Lines, Inc. | | 174,716 | 25,384,488 |
Ryder System, Inc. | | 93,378 | 3,305,581 |
Schneider National, Inc. Class B | | 99,426 | 2,178,424 |
| | | 100,281,399 |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.9% | | | |
Air Lease Corp. Class A | | 189,828 | 4,964,002 |
Fastenal Co. | | 1,026,757 | 37,189,139 |
HD Supply Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 290,913 | 8,634,298 |
MSC Industrial Direct Co., Inc. Class A | | 78,518 | 4,682,814 |
United Rentals, Inc. (a) | | 133,368 | 17,137,788 |
Univar, Inc. (a) | | 302,922 | 4,398,427 |
W.W. Grainger, Inc. | | 77,558 | 21,373,434 |
Watsco, Inc. | | 58,204 | 9,370,262 |
WESCO International, Inc. (a) | | 74,851 | 1,936,395 |
| | | 109,686,559 |
Transportation Infrastructure - 0.0% | | | |
Macquarie Infrastructure Co. LLC | | 131,809 | 3,636,610 |
|
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | | 1,612,493,372 |
|
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 20.0% | | | |
Communications Equipment - 1.0% | | | |
Arista Networks, Inc. (a) | | 106,446 | 23,343,608 |
Ciena Corp. (a) | | 274,693 | 12,704,551 |
CommScope Holding Co., Inc. (a)(b) | | 341,284 | 3,757,537 |
EchoStar Holding Corp. Class A (a) | | 88,128 | 2,780,438 |
F5 Networks, Inc. (a) | | 109,246 | 15,213,598 |
Juniper Networks, Inc. | | 596,069 | 12,875,090 |
Motorola Solutions, Inc. | | 307,498 | 44,221,287 |
Ubiquiti, Inc. (b) | | 15,443 | 2,502,229 |
ViaSat, Inc. (a) | | 102,283 | 4,336,799 |
| | | 121,735,137 |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 2.2% | | | |
Amphenol Corp. Class A | | 523,734 | 46,224,763 |
Arrow Electronics, Inc. (a) | | 144,958 | 9,120,757 |
Avnet, Inc. | | 177,612 | 5,331,912 |
CDW Corp. | | 256,052 | 28,370,562 |
Cognex Corp. | | 294,272 | 16,255,585 |
Coherent, Inc. (a) | | 43,005 | 5,499,049 |
Corning, Inc. | | 1,359,936 | 29,932,191 |
Dolby Laboratories, Inc. Class A | | 112,753 | 6,768,563 |
FLIR Systems, Inc. | | 242,083 | 10,506,402 |
IPG Photonics Corp. (a) | | 63,736 | 8,242,977 |
Jabil, Inc. | | 267,262 | 7,600,931 |
Keysight Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 336,817 | 32,593,781 |
Littelfuse, Inc. | | 42,291 | 6,142,345 |
National Instruments Corp. | | 233,351 | 8,965,345 |
SYNNEX Corp. | | 73,939 | 6,474,099 |
Trimble, Inc. (a) | | 451,297 | 15,628,415 |
Zebra Technologies Corp. Class A (a) | | 95,994 | 22,045,982 |
| | | 265,703,659 |
IT Services - 5.9% | | | |
Akamai Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 284,261 | 27,775,142 |
Alliance Data Systems Corp. | | 72,129 | 3,611,499 |
Amdocs Ltd. | | 238,889 | 15,394,007 |
Black Knight, Inc. (a) | | 255,841 | 18,054,699 |
Booz Allen Hamilton Holding Corp. Class A | | 244,843 | 17,981,270 |
Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. | | 204,196 | 23,686,736 |
CACI International, Inc. Class A (a) | | 44,112 | 11,034,176 |
DXC Technology Co. | | 463,644 | 8,405,866 |
EPAM Systems, Inc. (a) | | 93,108 | 20,566,626 |
Euronet Worldwide, Inc. (a) | | 89,670 | 8,228,119 |
Fiserv, Inc. (a) | | 1,013,948 | 104,497,479 |
FleetCor Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 153,100 | 36,935,375 |
Gartner, Inc. (a) | | 156,821 | 18,631,903 |
Genpact Ltd. | | 335,512 | 11,551,678 |
Global Payments, Inc. | | 535,680 | 88,933,594 |
GoDaddy, Inc. (a) | | 310,918 | 21,587,037 |
Jack Henry & Associates, Inc. | | 137,887 | 22,551,419 |
Leidos Holdings, Inc. | | 239,963 | 23,710,744 |
MongoDB, Inc. Class A (a) | | 76,082 | 12,335,175 |
Okta, Inc. (a) | | 187,358 | 28,347,265 |
Paychex, Inc. | | 576,677 | 39,513,908 |
Sabre Corp. | | 491,944 | 3,576,433 |
Square, Inc. (a) | | 617,312 | 40,211,704 |
Switch, Inc. Class A | | 105,801 | 1,816,603 |
The Western Union Co. | | 752,206 | 14,344,568 |
Twilio, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 220,252 | 24,734,300 |
VeriSign, Inc. (a) | | 185,951 | 38,954,875 |
WEX, Inc. (a) | | 77,209 | 10,216,295 |
| | | 697,188,495 |
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 4.1% | | | |
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (a) | | 1,853,447 | 97,102,088 |
Cree, Inc. (a) | | 193,273 | 8,335,864 |
Entegris, Inc. | | 241,609 | 13,102,456 |
First Solar, Inc. (a)(b) | | 147,515 | 6,492,135 |
KLA-Tencor Corp. | | 281,825 | 46,244,664 |
Lam Research Corp. | | 259,376 | 66,213,505 |
Marvell Technology Group Ltd. | | 1,191,314 | 31,855,736 |
Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. | | 481,830 | 26,491,013 |
Microchip Technology, Inc. | | 422,051 | 37,026,534 |
MKS Instruments, Inc. | | 96,914 | 9,713,690 |
Monolithic Power Systems, Inc. | | 76,006 | 15,194,359 |
ON Semiconductor Corp. (a) | | 731,849 | 11,742,517 |
Qorvo, Inc. (a) | | 208,317 | 20,421,316 |
Skyworks Solutions, Inc. | | 305,491 | 31,734,405 |
Teradyne, Inc. | | 299,980 | 18,760,749 |
Universal Display Corp. | | 76,511 | 11,485,831 |
Xilinx, Inc. | | 447,446 | 39,106,780 |
| | | 491,023,642 |
Software - 6.1% | | | |
2U, Inc. (a)(b) | | 100,399 | 2,384,476 |
Alteryx, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 81,598 | 9,235,262 |
Anaplan, Inc. (a) | | 155,644 | 6,359,614 |
ANSYS, Inc. (a) | | 150,128 | 39,308,014 |
Aspen Technology, Inc. (a) | | 122,402 | 12,515,605 |
Atlassian Corp. PLC (a) | | 215,133 | 33,451,030 |
Avalara, Inc. (a) | | 84,192 | 7,524,239 |
Bill.Com Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 17,654 | 1,039,644 |
Cadence Design Systems, Inc. (a) | | 497,694 | 40,377,914 |
CDK Global, Inc. | | 218,430 | 8,579,930 |
Cerence, Inc. (a)(b) | | 65,177 | 1,379,145 |
Ceridian HCM Holding, Inc. (a)(b) | | 167,311 | 9,866,330 |
Citrix Systems, Inc. | | 209,454 | 30,372,925 |
Coupa Software, Inc. (a) | | 114,227 | 20,114,232 |
DocuSign, Inc. (a) | | 283,970 | 29,745,858 |
Dropbox, Inc. Class A (a) | | 379,768 | 7,982,723 |
Dynatrace, Inc. | | 233,022 | 6,955,707 |
Elastic NV (a) | | 97,024 | 6,223,119 |
Fair Isaac Corp. (a) | | 50,923 | 17,972,764 |
FireEye, Inc. (a)(b) | | 357,874 | 4,119,130 |
Fortinet, Inc. (a) | | 257,114 | 27,701,462 |
Guidewire Software, Inc. (a) | | 148,532 | 13,492,647 |
HubSpot, Inc. (a) | | 73,450 | 12,385,874 |
LogMeIn, Inc. | | 86,324 | 7,377,249 |
Manhattan Associates, Inc. (a) | | 114,264 | 8,105,888 |
Medallia, Inc. (b) | | 121,670 | 2,613,472 |
New Relic, Inc. (a) | | 90,466 | 4,857,120 |
Nortonlifelock, Inc. | | 1,010,358 | 21,490,315 |
Nuance Communications, Inc. (a) | | 513,251 | 10,367,670 |
Nutanix, Inc. Class A (a) | | 316,555 | 6,486,212 |
Pagerduty, Inc. | | 76,736 | 1,619,897 |
Palo Alto Networks, Inc. (a) | | 170,146 | 33,435,390 |
Parametric Technology Corp. (a) | | 186,590 | 12,921,358 |
Paycom Software, Inc. (a) | | 88,391 | 23,071,819 |
Paylocity Holding Corp. (a) | | 62,008 | 7,101,776 |
Pegasystems, Inc. | | 68,411 | 5,720,528 |
Pluralsight, Inc. (a)(b) | | 111,752 | 1,837,203 |
Proofpoint, Inc. (a) | | 99,935 | 12,165,088 |
RealPage, Inc. (a) | | 142,539 | 9,192,340 |
RingCentral, Inc. (a) | | 133,636 | 30,539,835 |
Smartsheet, Inc. (a) | | 156,805 | 8,266,760 |
SolarWinds, Inc. (a)(b) | | 80,575 | 1,368,164 |
Splunk, Inc. (a) | | 279,852 | 39,280,027 |
SS&C Technologies Holdings, Inc. | | 397,448 | 21,923,232 |
Synopsys, Inc. (a) | | 265,711 | 41,748,512 |
Teradata Corp. (a) | | 201,388 | 4,952,131 |
The Trade Desk, Inc. (a)(b) | | 70,707 | 20,687,454 |
Tyler Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 68,873 | 22,086,882 |
Zendesk, Inc. (a) | | 200,476 | 15,412,595 |
Zscaler, Inc. (a)(b) | | 124,325 | 8,339,721 |
| | | 732,056,282 |
Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals - 0.7% | | | |
Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. | | 2,351,789 | 23,658,997 |
NCR Corp. (a) | | 227,911 | 4,676,734 |
NetApp, Inc. | | 410,172 | 17,953,228 |
Pure Storage, Inc. Class A (a) | | 423,067 | 6,092,165 |
Western Digital Corp. | | 534,780 | 24,642,662 |
Xerox Holdings Corp. | | 316,090 | 5,781,286 |
| | | 82,805,072 |
|
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | | 2,390,512,287 |
|
MATERIALS - 5.2% | | | |
Chemicals - 1.9% | | | |
Albemarle Corp. U.S. (b) | | 188,797 | 11,597,800 |
Ashland Global Holdings, Inc. | | 99,438 | 6,134,330 |
Axalta Coating Systems Ltd. (a) | | 370,268 | 7,309,090 |
Cabot Corp. | | 100,535 | 3,407,131 |
Celanese Corp. Class A | | 215,521 | 17,903,329 |
CF Industries Holdings, Inc. | | 391,398 | 10,763,445 |
Corteva, Inc. | | 1,347,702 | 35,296,315 |
Eastman Chemical Co. | | 245,315 | 14,844,011 |
Element Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 393,702 | 4,035,446 |
FMC Corp. | | 232,131 | 21,332,839 |
Huntsman Corp. | | 386,192 | 6,491,888 |
International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc. (b) | | 191,717 | 25,120,679 |
NewMarket Corp. | | 12,290 | 5,056,598 |
Olin Corp. | | 282,976 | 3,777,730 |
RPM International, Inc. | | 229,176 | 15,219,578 |
The Chemours Co. LLC | | 298,098 | 3,496,690 |
The Mosaic Co. | | 620,407 | 7,140,885 |
The Scotts Miracle-Gro Co. Class A | | 70,892 | 8,792,735 |
Valvoline, Inc. | | 337,533 | 5,802,192 |
W.R. Grace & Co. | | 102,413 | 4,836,966 |
Westlake Chemical Corp. | | 63,374 | 2,753,600 |
| | | 221,113,277 |
Construction Materials - 0.4% | | | |
Eagle Materials, Inc. | | 74,976 | 4,574,286 |
Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. | | 112,215 | 21,346,659 |
Vulcan Materials Co. | | 236,011 | 26,662,163 |
| | | 52,583,108 |
Containers & Packaging - 1.5% | | | |
Aptargroup, Inc. | | 114,846 | 12,297,710 |
Ardagh Group SA | | 10,486 | 130,446 |
Avery Dennison Corp. | | 149,595 | 16,513,792 |
Ball Corp. | | 579,950 | 38,038,921 |
Berry Global Group, Inc. (a) | | 236,550 | 9,412,325 |
Crown Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 233,592 | 15,045,661 |
Graphic Packaging Holding Co. | | 519,032 | 6,929,077 |
International Paper Co. | | 705,294 | 24,156,320 |
O-I Glass, Inc. | | 276,261 | 2,276,391 |
Packaging Corp. of America | | 167,984 | 16,235,654 |
Sealed Air Corp. | | 279,166 | 7,981,356 |
Silgan Holdings, Inc. | | 139,562 | 4,814,889 |
Sonoco Products Co. | | 178,035 | 8,695,229 |
WestRock Co. | | 456,893 | 14,707,386 |
| | | 177,235,157 |
Metals & Mining - 1.4% | | | |
Alcoa Corp. (a) | | 335,929 | 2,737,821 |
Arconic Rolled Products Corp. (a) | | 174,949 | 1,525,555 |
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. | | 2,610,179 | 23,047,881 |
Newmont Corp. | | 1,463,176 | 87,029,708 |
Nucor Corp. | | 548,002 | 22,572,202 |
Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co. | | 117,146 | 10,493,939 |
Royal Gold, Inc. | | 117,280 | 14,370,318 |
Steel Dynamics, Inc. | | 370,055 | 8,981,235 |
United States Steel Corp. (b) | | 304,084 | 2,335,365 |
| | | 173,094,024 |
Paper & Forest Products - 0.0% | | | |
Domtar Corp. | | 103,582 | 2,419,676 |
|
TOTAL MATERIALS | | | 626,445,242 |
|
REAL ESTATE - 8.8% | | | |
Equity Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) - 8.5% | | | |
Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc. | | 217,736 | 34,204,148 |
American Campus Communities, Inc. | | 245,426 | 8,661,084 |
American Homes 4 Rent Class A | | 461,183 | 11,132,958 |
Americold Realty Trust | | 343,765 | 10,515,771 |
Apartment Investment & Management Co. Class A | | 264,975 | 9,981,608 |
Apple Hospitality (REIT), Inc. | | 375,839 | 3,638,122 |
AvalonBay Communities, Inc. | | 250,009 | 40,738,967 |
Boston Properties, Inc. | | 277,964 | 27,012,542 |
Brandywine Realty Trust (SBI) | | 311,208 | 3,473,081 |
Brixmor Property Group, Inc. | | 538,741 | 6,168,584 |
Brookfield Property REIT, Inc. Class A (b) | | 129,145 | 1,264,975 |
Camden Property Trust (SBI) | | 167,456 | 14,747,850 |
Colony Capital, Inc. | | 889,509 | 2,054,766 |
Columbia Property Trust, Inc. | | 205,767 | 2,940,410 |
CoreSite Realty Corp. | | 67,223 | 8,146,755 |
Corporate Office Properties Trust (SBI) | | 200,410 | 5,294,832 |
Cousins Properties, Inc. | | 261,436 | 7,887,524 |
CubeSmart | | 344,566 | 8,683,063 |
CyrusOne, Inc. | | 200,825 | 14,087,874 |
Digital Realty Trust, Inc. | | 468,785 | 70,078,670 |
Douglas Emmett, Inc. | | 297,387 | 9,067,330 |
Duke Realty Corp. | | 659,779 | 22,894,331 |
Empire State Realty Trust, Inc. | | 267,126 | 2,233,173 |
EPR Properties | | 143,186 | 4,212,532 |
Equity Commonwealth | | 209,822 | 7,123,457 |
Equity Lifestyle Properties, Inc. | | 311,101 | 18,762,501 |
Equity Residential (SBI) | | 656,826 | 42,733,100 |
Essex Property Trust, Inc. | | 117,426 | 28,663,687 |
Extra Space Storage, Inc. | | 225,505 | 19,898,561 |
Federal Realty Investment Trust (SBI) | | 133,877 | 11,147,938 |
Gaming & Leisure Properties | | 363,060 | 10,252,814 |
HCP, Inc. | | 910,208 | 23,792,837 |
Healthcare Trust of America, Inc. | | 385,816 | 9,502,648 |
Highwoods Properties, Inc. (SBI) | | 183,173 | 7,108,944 |
Hospitality Properties Trust (SBI) | | 291,780 | 2,022,035 |
Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 1,275,889 | 15,706,194 |
Hudson Pacific Properties, Inc. | | 272,789 | 6,705,154 |
Invitation Homes, Inc. | | 959,162 | 22,684,181 |
Iron Mountain, Inc. | | 511,552 | 12,369,327 |
JBG SMITH Properties | | 219,517 | 7,452,602 |
Kilroy Realty Corp. | | 186,395 | 11,604,953 |
Kimco Realty Corp. | | 743,136 | 8,107,614 |
Lamar Advertising Co. Class A | | 152,714 | 8,803,962 |
Life Storage, Inc. | | 83,277 | 7,294,232 |
Medical Properties Trust, Inc. | | 921,143 | 15,788,391 |
Mid-America Apartment Communities, Inc. | | 203,936 | 22,824,517 |
National Retail Properties, Inc. | | 306,721 | 10,011,373 |
Omega Healthcare Investors, Inc. | | 405,056 | 11,807,382 |
Outfront Media, Inc. | | 256,953 | 4,031,593 |
Paramount Group, Inc. | | 348,116 | 3,359,319 |
Park Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 436,004 | 4,146,398 |
Rayonier, Inc. | | 232,644 | 5,590,435 |
Realty Income Corp. | | 585,509 | 32,156,154 |
Regency Centers Corp. | | 300,857 | 13,210,631 |
Retail Properties America, Inc. | | 385,080 | 2,387,496 |
SBA Communications Corp. Class A | | 201,436 | 58,400,325 |
SITE Centers Corp. | | 268,100 | 1,624,686 |
SL Green Realty Corp. | | 141,681 | 7,516,177 |
Spirit Realty Capital, Inc. | | 177,889 | 5,471,866 |
Store Capital Corp. | | 384,626 | 7,719,444 |
Sun Communities, Inc. | | 162,452 | 21,833,549 |
Taubman Centers, Inc. | | 104,616 | 4,508,950 |
The Macerich Co. (b) | | 254,549 | 1,901,481 |
UDR, Inc. | | 520,614 | 19,507,407 |
Ventas, Inc. | | 668,710 | 21,632,769 |
VEREIT, Inc. | | 1,928,085 | 10,565,906 |
VICI Properties, Inc. | | 828,563 | 14,433,567 |
Vornado Realty Trust | | 310,046 | 13,586,216 |
Weingarten Realty Investors (SBI) | | 216,983 | 3,946,921 |
Welltower, Inc. | | 737,620 | 37,788,273 |
Weyerhaeuser Co. | | 1,338,010 | 29,262,279 |
WP Carey, Inc. | | 306,753 | 20,178,212 |
| | | 1,016,049,408 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.3% | | | |
CBRE Group, Inc. (a) | | 601,554 | 25,824,713 |
Howard Hughes Corp. (a) | | 71,708 | 3,883,705 |
Jones Lang LaSalle, Inc. | | 92,047 | 9,718,322 |
| | | 39,426,740 |
|
TOTAL REAL ESTATE | | | 1,055,476,148 |
|
UTILITIES - 7.0% | | | |
Electric Utilities - 3.1% | | | |
Alliant Energy Corp. | | 431,361 | 20,942,577 |
Avangrid, Inc. (b) | | 100,530 | 4,322,790 |
Edison International | | 628,890 | 36,922,132 |
Entergy Corp. | | 356,977 | 34,094,873 |
Evergy, Inc. | | 408,871 | 23,890,333 |
Eversource Energy | | 581,836 | 46,954,165 |
FirstEnergy Corp. | | 970,102 | 40,036,110 |
Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc. | | 194,393 | 7,672,692 |
IDACORP, Inc. | | 90,209 | 8,279,382 |
NRG Energy, Inc. | | 452,787 | 15,181,948 |
OGE Energy Corp. | | 362,104 | 11,413,518 |
PG&E Corp. (a) | | 951,888 | 10,128,088 |
Pinnacle West Capital Corp. | | 201,183 | 15,489,079 |
PPL Corp. | | 1,381,544 | 35,118,848 |
Xcel Energy, Inc. | | 941,837 | 59,863,160 |
| | | 370,309,695 |
Gas Utilities - 0.3% | | | |
Atmos Energy Corp. | | 216,988 | 22,126,266 |
National Fuel Gas Co. | | 146,921 | 6,023,761 |
UGI Corp. | | 373,892 | 11,284,061 |
| | | 39,434,088 |
Independent Power and Renewable Electricity Producers - 0.2% | | | |
The AES Corp. | | 1,191,014 | 15,780,936 |
Vistra Energy Corp. | | 760,328 | 14,856,809 |
| | | 30,637,745 |
Multi-Utilities - 2.9% | | | |
Ameren Corp. | | 439,799 | 31,995,377 |
CenterPoint Energy, Inc. | | 901,680 | 15,355,610 |
CMS Energy Corp. | | 508,167 | 29,011,254 |
Consolidated Edison, Inc. | | 597,783 | 47,105,300 |
DTE Energy Co. | | 332,727 | 34,517,099 |
MDU Resources Group, Inc. | | 357,242 | 8,023,655 |
NiSource, Inc. | | 669,145 | 16,802,231 |
Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc. | | 906,587 | 45,973,027 |
Sempra Energy | | 506,817 | 62,769,285 |
WEC Energy Group, Inc. | | 566,665 | 51,311,516 |
| | | 342,864,354 |
Water Utilities - 0.5% | | | |
American Water Works Co., Inc. | | 324,305 | 39,464,675 |
Aqua America, Inc. | | 387,298 | 16,185,183 |
| | | 55,649,858 |
|
TOTAL UTILITIES | | | 838,895,740 |
|
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS | | | |
(Cost $12,039,621,970) | | | 11,901,960,412 |
|
Money Market Funds - 2.9% | | | |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund 0.16% (c) | | 51,901,266 | 51,916,836 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund 0.11% (c)(d) | | 290,314,996 | 290,344,027 |
TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS | | | |
(Cost $342,256,085) | | | 342,260,863 |
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES - 102.4% | | | |
(Cost $12,381,878,055) | | | 12,244,221,275 |
NET OTHER ASSETS (LIABILITIES) - (2.4)% | | | (288,816,858) |
NET ASSETS - 100% | | | $11,955,404,417 |
Futures Contracts | | | | | |
| Number of contracts | Expiration Date | Notional Amount | Value | Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation) |
Purchased | | | | | |
Equity Index Contracts | | | | | |
CME E-mini S&P MidCap 400 Index Contracts (United States) | 306 | June 2020 | $50,223,780 | $5,341,508 | $5,341,508 |
The notional amount of futures purchased as a percentage of Net Assets is 0.4%
Legend
(a) Non-income producing
(b) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.
(c) 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.
(d) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.
Affiliated Central Funds
Information regarding fiscal year to date income earned by the Fund from investments in Fidelity Central Funds is as follows:
Fund | Income earned |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund | $685,466 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund | 2,088,910 |
Total | $2,774,376 |
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 April 30, 2020, 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 |
Investments in Securities: | | | | |
Equities: | | | | |
Communication Services | $482,570,364 | $482,570,364 | $-- | $-- |
Consumer Discretionary | 1,264,373,945 | 1,264,373,945 | -- | -- |
Consumer Staples | 536,964,993 | 536,964,993 | -- | -- |
Energy | 318,792,446 | 318,792,446 | -- | -- |
Financials | 1,321,547,396 | 1,321,547,396 | -- | -- |
Health Care | 1,453,888,479 | 1,453,888,479 | -- | -- |
Industrials | 1,612,493,372 | 1,612,493,372 | -- | -- |
Information Technology | 2,390,512,287 | 2,390,512,287 | -- | -- |
Materials | 626,445,242 | 626,445,242 | -- | -- |
Real Estate | 1,055,476,148 | 1,055,476,148 | -- | -- |
Utilities | 838,895,740 | 838,895,740 | -- | -- |
Money Market Funds | 342,260,863 | 342,260,863 | -- | -- |
Total Investments in Securities: | $12,244,221,275 | $12,244,221,275 | $-- | $-- |
Derivative Instruments: | | | | |
Assets | | | | |
Futures Contracts | $5,341,508 | $5,341,508 | $-- | $-- |
Total Assets | $5,341,508 | $5,341,508 | $-- | $-- |
Total Derivative Instruments: | $5,341,508 | $5,341,508 | $-- | $-- |
Value of Derivative Instruments
The following table is a summary of the Fund's value of derivative instruments by primary risk exposure as of April 30, 2020. 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 |
Equity Risk | | |
Futures Contracts(a) | $5,341,508 | $0 |
Total Equity Risk | 5,341,508 | 0 |
Total Value of Derivatives | $5,341,508 | $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).
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Fidelity® Mid Cap Index Fund
Financial Statements
Statement of Assets and Liabilities
| | April 30, 2020 |
Assets | | |
Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $275,331,591) — See accompanying schedule: Unaffiliated issuers (cost $12,039,621,970) | $11,901,960,411 | |
Fidelity Central Funds (cost $342,256,085) | 342,260,864 | |
Total Investment in Securities (cost $12,381,878,055) | | $12,244,221,275 |
Segregated cash with brokers for derivative instruments | | 3,043,000 |
Cash | | 461,964 |
Receivable for investments sold | | 6,175,749 |
Receivable for fund shares sold | | 36,983,251 |
Dividends receivable | | 5,471,867 |
Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds | | 124,060 |
Total assets | | 12,296,481,166 |
Liabilities | | |
Payable for investments purchased | $36,388,987 | |
Payable for fund shares redeemed | 13,142,971 | |
Accrued management fee | 229,325 | |
Payable for daily variation margin on futures contracts | 985,366 | |
Collateral on securities loaned | 290,330,100 | |
Total liabilities | | 341,076,749 |
Net Assets | | $11,955,404,417 |
Net Assets consist of: | | |
Paid in capital | | $12,185,983,450 |
Total accumulated earnings (loss) | | (230,579,033) |
Net Assets | | $11,955,404,417 |
Net Asset Value and Maximum Offering Price | | |
Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($11,955,404,417 ÷ 606,628,403 shares) | | $19.71 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Operations
| | Year ended April 30, 2020 |
Investment Income | | |
Dividends | | $208,501,938 |
Interest | | 32,790 |
Income from Fidelity Central Funds (including $2,088,910 from security lending) | | 2,774,376 |
Total income | | 211,309,104 |
Expenses | | |
Management fee | $2,868,393 | |
Independent trustees' fees and expenses | 42,129 | |
Interest | 13,935 | |
Commitment fees | 27,920 | |
Total expenses before reductions | 2,952,377 | |
Expense reductions | (2,221) | |
Total expenses after reductions | | 2,950,156 |
Net investment income (loss) | | 208,358,948 |
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) | | |
Net realized gain (loss) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | 142,077,684 | |
Fidelity Central Funds | 6,303 | |
Futures contracts | (12,335,496) | |
Total net realized gain (loss) | | 129,748,491 |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | (1,650,782,306) | |
Fidelity Central Funds | (1,360) | |
Futures contracts | 4,134,839 | |
Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | | (1,646,648,827) |
Net gain (loss) | | (1,516,900,336) |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | | $(1,308,541,388) |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Changes in Net Assets
| Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 |
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets | | |
Operations | | |
Net investment income (loss) | $208,358,948 | $124,269,152 |
Net realized gain (loss) | 129,748,491 | (6,611,355) |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | (1,646,648,827) | 768,960,020 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | (1,308,541,388) | 886,617,817 |
Distributions to shareholders | (359,085,200) | (158,764,159) |
Share transactions - net increase (decrease) | 3,917,041,659 | 3,086,023,803 |
Total increase (decrease) in net assets | 2,249,415,071 | 3,813,877,461 |
Net Assets | | |
Beginning of period | 9,705,989,346 | 5,892,111,885 |
End of period | $11,955,404,417 | $9,705,989,346 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Financial Highlights
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund
Years ended April 30, | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 |
Selected Per–Share Data | | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $22.53 | $20.85 | $19.25 | $16.87 | $17.98 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | | |
Net investment income (loss)A | .40 | .36 | .34 | .31 | .31 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | (2.54) | 1.80 | 1.79 | 2.48 | (.72) |
Total from investment operations | (2.14) | 2.16 | 2.13 | 2.79 | (.41) |
Distributions from net investment income | (.34) | (.34) | (.28) | (.25) | (.24) |
Distributions from net realized gain | (.34) | (.14) | (.25) | (.16) | (.46) |
Total distributions | (.68) | (.48) | (.53) | (.41) | (.70) |
Redemption fees added to paid in capitalA | – | – | – | –B | –B |
Net asset value, end of period | $19.71 | $22.53 | $20.85 | $19.25 | $16.87 |
Total ReturnC | (9.99)% | 10.68% | 11.13% | 16.70% | (2.13)% |
Ratios to Average Net AssetsD,E | | | | | |
Expenses before reductions | .03% | .03% | .04% | .05% | .12% |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any | .03% | .03% | .04% | .04% | .04% |
Expenses net of all reductions | .03% | .03% | .04% | .04% | .04% |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.82% | 1.71% | 1.66% | 1.67% | 1.76% |
Supplemental Data | | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (000 omitted) | $11,955,404 | $9,705,989 | $393,979 | $191,401 | $7,598 |
Portfolio turnover rateF | 14% | 12% | 10%G | 14% | 16% |
A Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
B Amount represents less than $.005 per share.
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 Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
E Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the Fund. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the Fund during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the Fund.
F Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
G Portfolio turnover rate excludes securities received or delivered in-kind.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Fidelity® Small Cap Index Fund
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 April 30, 2020 | Past 1 year | Past 5 years | Life of fundA |
Fidelity® Small Cap Index Fund | (16.27)% | 3.07% | 9.28% |
A From September 8, 2011
$10,000 Over Life of Fund
Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity® Small Cap Index Fund on September 8, 2011, when the fund started.
The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the Russell 2000® Index performed over the same period.

| Period Ending Values |
| $21,551 | Fidelity® Small Cap Index Fund |
| $21,285 | Russell 2000® Index |
Fidelity® Small Cap Index Fund
Management's Discussion of Fund Performance
Market Recap: The U.S. equity bellwether S&P 500
® index gained 0.86% for the 12 months ending April 30, 2020, as the early-2020 outbreak and spread of the coronavirus hampered global economic growth and the outlook for corporate earnings. Declared a pandemic on March 11, the crisis and containment efforts caused broad contraction in economic activity, along with extreme uncertainty, volatility and dislocation in financial markets. By mid-March, U.S. stocks entered bear-market territory less than a month after hitting an all-time high and extending the longest-running bull market in American history. Following a flattish January to open the year, stocks slid in late February (-8.23%), after a surge in COVID-19 cases outside China pushed investors to safer asset classes. The downtrend continued in March (-12.35%), capping the index’s worst quarterly result since 2008. A historically rapid and expansive U.S. monetary/fiscal-policy response helped mitigate the most acute near-term liquidity issues, and provided a partial offset to the economic disruption. This was evident in April, when the index achieved its highest monthly gain (+12.82%) since 1991, boosted by improving coronavirus trends, plans for reopening the economy and progress on potential treatments. By sector, energy stocks (-38%) fell hard along with the price of crude oil. Financials (-17%) and industrials (-16%) also lagged. In contrast, information technology (+18%) led, followed by health care (+15%), a defensive sector that saw higher demand due to the virus-containment response.
Comments from the Geode Capital Management, LLC, passive equity index team: For the fiscal year, the fund returned -16.27%, roughly in line with the -16.39% return of the benchmark Russell 2000
® Index. At the individual-stock level, the biggest detractor was Insperity (-59%), a provider of human resources services. Among its challenges during the 12 months, Insperity reported weaker-than-expected third-quarter financial results. Several companies with exposure to the travel industry significantly detracted, as stocks such as Spirit Airlines (-72%) and Pebblebook Hotel Trust (-62%), an owner of hotel properties, saw big declines as business and leisure travel dried up with the spread of the coronavirus. As states mandated the closure of many businesses along with stay-at-home orders, apparel retailers such as American Eagle Outfitters (-66%) saw big share-price declines. Shares of many energy stocks, including exploration and production companies PDC Energy (-71%) and Callon Petroleum (-87%) plunged along with the energy sector in February and March, while Ingevity (-55%), a chemical manufacturer, also detracted. In contrast, Teladoc Health (+189%), a provider of virtual health care services, gained as investors anticipated increased demand for remote doctor visits amid the mounting coronavirus crisis. Shares of Array Biopharma (+112%), a biotechnology company specializing in cancer treatments, rose sharply last June after the company agreed to be acquired by Pfizer in a deal that ultimately closed in July. Similarly, drugmaker Medicines Co. (+166%) agreed in November to an acquisition by Novartis; the transaction closed in January. Other contributors included Enphase Energy (+366%), a producer of renewable energy products that reported strong financial results, and biotechnology company Immunomedics (+90%), whose promising breast cancer drug received early regulatory approval.
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.
Fidelity® Small Cap Index Fund
Investment Summary (Unaudited)
Top Ten Stocks as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Teladoc Health, Inc. | 0.7 |
Repligen Corp. | 0.4 |
Lumentum Holdings, Inc. | 0.4 |
Generac Holdings, Inc. | 0.4 |
Amedisys, Inc. | 0.4 |
Immunomedics, Inc. | 0.4 |
Haemonetics Corp. | 0.4 |
Novocure Ltd. | 0.4 |
Trex Co., Inc. | 0.3 |
Five9, Inc. | 0.3 |
| 4.1 |
Top Market Sectors as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Health Care | 21.6 |
Financials | 15.8 |
Information Technology | 15.2 |
Industrials | 14.9 |
Consumer Discretionary | 9.7 |
Real Estate | 7.2 |
Utilities | 3.9 |
Materials | 3.4 |
Consumer Staples | 3.3 |
Communication Services | 2.2 |
Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)
As of April 30, 2020* |
| Stocks and Equity Futures | 100.0% |

* Foreign investments – 4.6%
Fidelity® Small Cap Index Fund
Schedule of Investments April 30, 2020
Showing Percentage of Net Assets
Common Stocks - 99.3% | | | |
| | Shares | Value |
COMMUNICATION SERVICES - 2.2% | | | |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.7% | | | |
ATN International, Inc. | | 66,168 | $4,110,356 |
Bandwidth, Inc. (a)(b) | | 96,350 | 7,858,306 |
Cincinnati Bell, Inc. (a) | | 296,805 | 4,348,193 |
Cogent Communications Group, Inc. | | 254,444 | 21,330,041 |
Consolidated Communications Holdings, Inc. (b) | | 421,330 | 2,641,739 |
IDT Corp. Class B (a) | | 96,625 | 521,775 |
Intelsat SA (a)(b) | | 399,879 | 499,849 |
Iridium Communications, Inc. (a) | | 594,363 | 13,376,139 |
Ooma, Inc. (a) | | 125,143 | 1,459,167 |
ORBCOMM, Inc. (a) | | 442,003 | 1,166,888 |
PDVWireless, Inc. (a) | | 64,566 | 3,389,715 |
Vonage Holdings Corp. (a) | | 1,358,827 | 11,359,794 |
| | | 72,061,962 |
Entertainment - 0.2% | | | |
AMC Entertainment Holdings, Inc. Class A (b) | | 309,540 | 1,522,937 |
Eros International PLC (a)(b) | | 431,100 | 1,099,305 |
Gaia, Inc. Class A (a) | | 64,904 | 589,977 |
Glu Mobile, Inc. (a) | | 691,792 | 5,395,978 |
IMAX Corp. (a) | | 313,589 | 3,606,274 |
LiveXLive Media, Inc. (a) | | 192,840 | 491,742 |
Marcus Corp. | | 134,056 | 1,949,174 |
Reading International, Inc. Class A (a) | | 97,141 | 414,306 |
Rosetta Stone, Inc. (a) | | 124,790 | 2,131,413 |
| | | 17,201,106 |
Interactive Media & Services - 0.3% | | | |
CarGurus, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 449,038 | 10,273,989 |
Cars.com, Inc. (a)(b) | | 398,476 | 2,064,106 |
DHI Group, Inc. (a) | | 298,720 | 830,442 |
Eventbrite, Inc. (a) | | 218,653 | 1,994,115 |
EverQuote, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 52,813 | 2,058,123 |
Liberty TripAdvisor Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 437,964 | 1,029,215 |
MeetMe, Inc. (a) | | 414,675 | 2,558,545 |
QuinStreet, Inc. (a) | | 281,292 | 2,857,927 |
Travelzoo, Inc. (a) | | 29,526 | 164,460 |
TrueCar, Inc. (a) | | 624,383 | 1,598,420 |
Yelp, Inc. (a) | | 411,515 | 9,197,360 |
| | | 34,626,702 |
Media - 0.8% | | | |
Boston Omaha Corp. (a)(b) | | 65,921 | 1,069,898 |
Cardlytics, Inc. (a) | | 86,059 | 3,868,352 |
Cbdmd, Inc. (a) | | 182,081 | 175,399 |
Central European Media Enterprises Ltd. Class A (a) | | 535,083 | 2,081,473 |
Clear Channel Outdoor Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 288,258 | 278,111 |
comScore, Inc. (a)(b) | | 291,928 | 843,672 |
Cumulus Media, Inc. (a)(b) | | 81,143 | 359,463 |
Daily Journal Corp. (a)(b) | | 6,551 | 1,817,903 |
E.W. Scripps Co. Class A | | 329,077 | 2,655,651 |
Emerald Expositions Events, Inc. | | 147,365 | 335,992 |
Entercom Communications Corp. Class A | | 698,012 | 851,575 |
Entravision Communication Corp. Class A | | 343,383 | 501,339 |
Fluent, Inc. (a) | | 252,220 | 506,962 |
Gray Television, Inc. (a) | | 544,586 | 6,322,643 |
Hemisphere Media Group, Inc. (a) | | 103,569 | 961,120 |
Lee Enterprises, Inc. (a)(b) | | 313,943 | 287,666 |
Liberty Latin America Ltd.: | | | |
Class A (a) | | 226,069 | 2,418,938 |
Class C (a) | | 736,297 | 7,613,311 |
Liberty Media Corp.: | | | |
Liberty Braves Class A (a) | | 2,261 | 46,667 |
Liberty Braves Class C (a) | | 274,976 | 5,524,268 |
Loral Space & Communications Ltd. | | 79,050 | 1,739,100 |
Marchex, Inc. Class B (a) | | 210,773 | 351,991 |
MDC Partners, Inc. Class A (a) | | 305,564 | 436,957 |
Meredith Corp. (b) | | 237,235 | 3,518,195 |
MSG Network, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 255,798 | 3,038,880 |
National CineMedia, Inc. | | 371,725 | 1,226,693 |
New Media Investment Group, Inc. (b) | | 684,866 | 773,899 |
Saga Communications, Inc. Class A | | 22,424 | 630,563 |
Scholastic Corp. | | 177,031 | 5,146,291 |
TechTarget, Inc. (a) | | 140,200 | 3,269,464 |
Tegna, Inc. | | 1,304,771 | 13,987,145 |
Tribune Publishing Co. | | 106,485 | 912,576 |
WideOpenWest, Inc. (a) | | 149,513 | 885,117 |
| | | 74,437,274 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.2% | | | |
Boingo Wireless, Inc. (a) | | 260,792 | 3,635,440 |
Gogo, Inc. (a)(b) | | 326,845 | 532,757 |
Shenandoah Telecommunications Co. | | 287,664 | 15,392,901 |
Spok Holdings, Inc. | | 104,510 | 1,072,273 |
| | | 20,633,371 |
|
TOTAL COMMUNICATION SERVICES | | | 218,960,415 |
|
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 9.7% | | | |
Auto Components - 0.9% | | | |
Adient PLC (a) | | 526,411 | 7,885,637 |
American Axle & Manufacturing Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 673,120 | 2,907,878 |
Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. | | 301,546 | 6,389,760 |
Cooper-Standard Holding, Inc. (a) | | 101,665 | 1,306,395 |
Dana, Inc. | | 866,201 | 9,961,312 |
Dorman Products, Inc. (a) | | 161,757 | 10,203,632 |
Fox Factory Holding Corp. (a) | | 225,964 | 11,526,424 |
Gentherm, Inc. (a) | | 197,995 | 7,412,933 |
LCI Industries | | 146,398 | 12,695,635 |
Modine Manufacturing Co. (a) | | 297,892 | 1,379,240 |
Motorcar Parts of America, Inc. (a)(b) | | 111,384 | 1,584,994 |
Standard Motor Products, Inc. | | 126,344 | 5,140,937 |
Stoneridge, Inc. (a) | | 158,653 | 3,177,820 |
Tenneco, Inc. (a)(b) | | 304,909 | 1,582,478 |
Visteon Corp. (a)(b) | | 167,560 | 10,103,868 |
| | | 93,258,943 |
Automobiles - 0.1% | | | |
Winnebago Industries, Inc. | | 186,218 | 8,262,493 |
Distributors - 0.1% | | | |
Core-Mark Holding Co., Inc. | | 271,966 | 7,816,303 |
Funko, Inc. (a)(b) | | 124,585 | 533,224 |
Weyco Group, Inc. | | 35,627 | 677,982 |
| | | 9,027,509 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 1.0% | | | |
Adtalem Global Education, Inc. (a) | | 316,649 | 10,059,939 |
American Public Education, Inc. (a) | | 90,609 | 2,334,994 |
Career Education Corp. (a) | | 411,291 | 5,346,783 |
Carriage Services, Inc. | | 98,072 | 1,473,041 |
Chegg, Inc. (a)(b) | | 710,081 | 30,355,963 |
Collectors Universe, Inc. | | 54,168 | 1,190,071 |
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Co. (a) | | 637,000 | 1,019,200 |
K12, Inc. (a) | | 235,492 | 5,348,023 |
Laureate Education, Inc. Class A (a) | | 674,352 | 6,386,113 |
OneSpaWorld Holdings Ltd. (b) | | 274,353 | 1,786,038 |
Regis Corp. (a)(b) | | 139,724 | 1,735,372 |
Select Interior Concepts, Inc. (a) | | 116,532 | 372,902 |
Strategic Education, Inc. | | 127,926 | 20,378,612 |
Weight Watchers International, Inc. (a) | | 279,686 | 7,134,790 |
| | | 94,921,841 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 2.2% | | | |
BFC Financial Corp. Class A | | 363,317 | 770,232 |
Biglari Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 5,416 | 379,066 |
BJ's Restaurants, Inc. (b) | | 114,107 | 2,494,379 |
Bloomin' Brands, Inc. | | 521,395 | 6,282,810 |
Bluegreen Vacations Corp. | | 37,977 | 206,975 |
Boyd Gaming Corp. | | 482,849 | 8,058,750 |
Brinker International, Inc. (b) | | 223,453 | 5,201,986 |
Carrols Restaurant Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 219,782 | 802,204 |
Century Casinos, Inc. (a) | | 159,610 | 723,831 |
Churchill Downs, Inc. | | 210,662 | 21,112,546 |
Chuy's Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 101,280 | 1,697,453 |
Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc. | | 144,093 | 14,034,658 |
Dave & Buster's Entertainment, Inc. (b) | | 185,280 | 2,712,499 |
Del Taco Restaurants, Inc. (a) | | 179,599 | 1,056,042 |
Denny's Corp. (a) | | 346,552 | 3,905,641 |
Dine Brands Global, Inc. (b) | | 95,602 | 4,243,773 |
Drive Shack, Inc. (a) | | 344,964 | 455,352 |
El Pollo Loco Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 118,127 | 1,444,693 |
Eldorado Resorts, Inc. (a) | | 393,430 | 8,435,139 |
Everi Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 484,291 | 2,397,240 |
Fiesta Restaurant Group, Inc. (a) | | 145,284 | 1,056,941 |
Golden Entertainment, Inc. (a) | | 104,920 | 990,445 |
Inspired Entertainment, Inc. (a) | | 42,370 | 108,891 |
J. Alexanders Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 73,675 | 389,741 |
Jack in the Box, Inc. | | 138,352 | 8,342,626 |
Kura Sushi U.S.A., Inc. Class A (a) | | 20,042 | 337,307 |
Lindblad Expeditions Holdings (a) | | 140,217 | 936,650 |
Marriott Vacations Worldwide Corp. | | 248,417 | 20,618,611 |
Monarch Casino & Resort, Inc. (a) | | 67,856 | 2,262,319 |
Nathan's Famous, Inc. | | 17,248 | 970,545 |
Noodles & Co. (a) | | 175,023 | 1,093,894 |
Papa John's International, Inc. | | 132,603 | 9,536,808 |
Penn National Gaming, Inc. (a) | | 659,089 | 11,744,966 |
PlayAGS, Inc. (a) | | 154,534 | 678,404 |
Potbelly Corp. (a) | | 119,090 | 410,861 |
RCI Hospitality Holdings, Inc. | | 53,010 | 664,215 |
Red Lion Hotels Corp. (a)(b) | | 131,458 | 211,647 |
Red Robin Gourmet Burgers, Inc. (a)(b) | | 77,544 | 1,134,469 |
Red Rock Resorts, Inc. | | 418,377 | 4,585,412 |
Ruth's Hospitality Group, Inc. | | 167,447 | 1,884,616 |
Scientific Games Corp. Class A (a)(b) | | 334,442 | 4,217,314 |
SeaWorld Entertainment, Inc. (a)(b) | | 281,119 | 4,129,638 |
Shake Shack, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 173,860 | 9,477,109 |
Target Hospitality Corp. (a) | | 194,388 | 392,664 |
Texas Roadhouse, Inc. Class A | | 396,028 | 18,648,959 |
The Cheesecake Factory, Inc. (b) | | 248,224 | 5,532,913 |
Twin River Worldwide Holdings, Inc. | | 104,846 | 1,654,470 |
Wingstop, Inc. | | 175,953 | 20,634,008 |
| | | 219,061,712 |
Household Durables - 1.7% | | | |
Bassett Furniture Industries, Inc. | | 53,657 | 367,014 |
Beazer Homes U.S.A., Inc. (a) | | 176,295 | 1,241,117 |
Casper Sleep, Inc. | | 39,747 | 276,242 |
Cavco Industries, Inc. (a) | | 51,828 | 8,016,755 |
Century Communities, Inc. (a) | | 172,642 | 3,697,992 |
Ethan Allen Interiors, Inc. | | 140,134 | 1,584,916 |
Flexsteel Industries, Inc. | | 40,888 | 392,525 |
GoPro, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 761,248 | 2,679,593 |
Green Brick Partners, Inc. (a) | | 145,969 | 1,300,584 |
Hamilton Beach Brands Holding Co. Class A | | 37,172 | 490,299 |
Helen of Troy Ltd. (a) | | 150,552 | 24,732,683 |
Hooker Furniture Corp. | | 69,065 | 1,035,284 |
Installed Building Products, Inc. (a) | | 136,085 | 6,710,351 |
iRobot Corp. (a)(b) | | 166,168 | 10,129,601 |
KB Home | | 519,872 | 13,641,441 |
La-Z-Boy, Inc. | | 267,493 | 6,272,711 |
Legacy Housing Corp. (a) | | 34,275 | 335,210 |
LGI Homes, Inc. (a) | | 120,388 | 7,293,105 |
Lifetime Brands, Inc. | | 55,891 | 318,579 |
Lovesac (a)(b) | | 52,812 | 630,047 |
M.D.C. Holdings, Inc. | | 303,144 | 8,866,962 |
M/I Homes, Inc. (a) | | 161,953 | 4,123,323 |
Meritage Homes Corp. (a) | | 216,866 | 11,398,477 |
Purple Innovation, Inc. (a)(b) | | 54,740 | 550,684 |
Skyline Champion Corp. (a) | | 303,196 | 5,975,993 |
Sonos, Inc. (a) | | 480,451 | 4,910,209 |
Taylor Morrison Home Corp. (a) | | 782,543 | 11,386,001 |
TopBuild Corp. (a) | | 200,689 | 18,702,208 |
TRI Pointe Homes, Inc. (a) | | 827,843 | 9,503,638 |
Tupperware Brands Corp. (b) | | 295,894 | 952,779 |
Universal Electronics, Inc. (a) | | 80,404 | 3,319,077 |
Zagg, Inc. (a)(b) | | 177,034 | 584,212 |
| | | 171,419,612 |
Internet & Direct Marketing Retail - 0.5% | | | |
1-800-FLOWERS.com, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 148,961 | 2,858,562 |
Duluth Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 58,343 | 233,955 |
Groupon, Inc. (a) | | 2,723,180 | 3,322,280 |
Lands' End, Inc. (a)(b) | | 69,807 | 594,058 |
Leaf Group Ltd. (a)(b) | | 88,068 | 127,699 |
Liquidity Services, Inc. (a) | | 155,838 | 779,190 |
Overstock.com, Inc. (a)(b) | | 210,581 | 2,657,532 |
PetMed Express, Inc. (b) | | 117,538 | 4,650,979 |
Quotient Technology, Inc. (a) | | 451,314 | 3,240,435 |
Shutterstock, Inc. | | 114,268 | 4,342,184 |
Stamps.com, Inc. (a) | | 99,110 | 15,686,140 |
Stitch Fix, Inc. (a)(b) | | 246,787 | 3,960,931 |
The RealReal, Inc. (b) | | 310,953 | 3,650,588 |
The Rubicon Project, Inc. (a) | | 587,916 | 4,215,358 |
Waitr Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 356,526 | 477,745 |
| | | 50,797,636 |
Leisure Products - 0.4% | | | |
Acushnet Holdings Corp. | | 211,468 | 5,794,223 |
American Outdoor Brands Corp. (a) | | 324,448 | 3,070,900 |
Callaway Golf Co. | | 560,241 | 8,022,651 |
Clarus Corp. | | 148,381 | 1,584,709 |
Escalade, Inc. | | 61,030 | 521,807 |
Johnson Outdoors, Inc. Class A | | 32,645 | 2,231,612 |
Malibu Boats, Inc. Class A (a) | | 122,637 | 4,216,260 |
Marine Products Corp. | | 44,017 | 427,845 |
MCBC Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 113,869 | 1,189,931 |
Sturm, Ruger & Co., Inc. | | 99,908 | 5,315,106 |
Vista Outdoor, Inc. (a) | | 347,040 | 3,512,045 |
YETI Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 334,117 | 9,224,970 |
| | | 45,112,059 |
Multiline Retail - 0.1% | | | |
Big Lots, Inc. | | 232,961 | 5,462,935 |
Dillard's, Inc. Class A (b) | | 59,067 | 1,741,295 |
JC Penney Corp., Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,974,396 | 501,497 |
| | | 7,705,727 |
Specialty Retail - 1.9% | | | |
Aaron's, Inc. Class A | | 405,355 | 12,934,878 |
Abercrombie & Fitch Co. Class A (b) | | 377,661 | 3,995,653 |
America's Car Mart, Inc. (a) | | 36,627 | 2,415,551 |
American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. | | 944,141 | 7,505,921 |
Asbury Automotive Group, Inc. (a) | | 115,815 | 7,817,513 |
Ascena Retail Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 20,873 | 30,266 |
At Home Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 289,213 | 679,651 |
Barnes & Noble Education, Inc. (a) | | 248,742 | 445,248 |
Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc. (b) | | 732,774 | 4,535,871 |
Boot Barn Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 170,713 | 3,151,362 |
Caleres, Inc. | | 234,379 | 1,900,814 |
Camping World Holdings, Inc. (b) | | 198,050 | 1,756,704 |
Chico's FAS, Inc. | | 694,793 | 1,042,190 |
Citi Trends, Inc. | | 65,525 | 744,364 |
Conn's, Inc. (a)(b) | | 108,889 | 736,090 |
DSW, Inc. Class A (b) | | 368,526 | 2,340,140 |
Express, Inc. (a)(b) | | 376,018 | 778,357 |
GameStop Corp. Class A (a)(b) | | 394,654 | 2,261,367 |
Genesco, Inc. (a) | | 84,760 | 1,604,507 |
GNC Holdings, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 389,736 | 224,293 |
Group 1 Automotive, Inc. | | 105,751 | 5,984,449 |
Guess?, Inc. (b) | | 276,140 | 2,581,909 |
Haverty Furniture Companies, Inc. | | 105,861 | 1,432,299 |
Hibbett Sports, Inc. (a)(b) | | 104,680 | 1,615,212 |
Hudson Ltd. (a) | | 235,814 | 1,155,489 |
J.Jill, Inc. (b) | | 54,405 | 24,776 |
Lithia Motors, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) | | 134,512 | 14,871,647 |
Lumber Liquidators Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 170,635 | 1,202,977 |
MarineMax, Inc. (a) | | 125,688 | 1,811,164 |
Michaels Companies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 467,691 | 1,421,781 |
Monro, Inc. | | 195,967 | 10,874,209 |
Murphy U.S.A., Inc. (a) | | 174,872 | 18,676,330 |
National Vision Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 470,047 | 12,456,246 |
Office Depot, Inc. | | 3,265,120 | 7,248,566 |
OneWater Marine, Inc. Class A (b) | | 26,125 | 300,176 |
Party City Holdco, Inc. (a)(b) | | 197,157 | 149,544 |
Rent-A-Center, Inc. | | 294,840 | 5,868,790 |
RH (a) | | 101,414 | 14,581,305 |
RTW Retailwinds, Inc. (a)(b) | | 127,852 | 39,877 |
Sally Beauty Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 701,333 | 6,809,943 |
Shoe Carnival, Inc. (b) | | 54,790 | 1,294,140 |
Signet Jewelers Ltd. (b) | | 308,902 | 3,107,554 |
Sleep Number Corp. (a) | | 167,364 | 5,004,184 |
Sonic Automotive, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) | | 145,907 | 3,126,787 |
Sportsman's Warehouse Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 255,151 | 1,826,881 |
Tailored Brands, Inc. (b) | | 250,587 | 415,974 |
The Buckle, Inc. (b) | | 172,150 | 2,635,617 |
The Cato Corp. Class A (sub. vtg.) | | 133,012 | 1,497,715 |
The Children's Place Retail Stores, Inc. (b) | | 87,919 | 2,598,886 |
The Container Store Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 90,077 | 189,162 |
Tilly's, Inc. | | 136,117 | 801,729 |
Winmark Corp. | | 14,650 | 2,197,500 |
Zumiez, Inc. (a) | | 119,972 | 2,536,208 |
| | | 193,239,766 |
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 0.8% | | | |
Centric Brands, Inc. (a)(b) | | 67,358 | 55,934 |
Crocs, Inc. (a) | | 412,890 | 10,012,583 |
Culp, Inc. | | 62,326 | 443,138 |
Deckers Outdoor Corp. (a) | | 168,473 | 25,062,043 |
Delta Apparel, Inc. (a) | | 36,235 | 466,707 |
Fossil Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 279,446 | 1,106,606 |
G-III Apparel Group Ltd. (a) | | 264,657 | 2,998,564 |
Kontoor Brands, Inc. (b) | | 265,568 | 5,154,675 |
Movado Group, Inc. | | 95,416 | 983,739 |
Oxford Industries, Inc. | | 99,850 | 4,185,712 |
Rocky Brands, Inc. | | 42,983 | 921,985 |
Steven Madden Ltd. | | 503,503 | 12,622,820 |
Superior Group of Companies, Inc. | | 63,753 | 555,926 |
Unifi, Inc. (a) | | 87,175 | 902,261 |
Vera Bradley, Inc. (a) | | 124,064 | 683,593 |
Vince Holding Corp. (a) | | 18,145 | 108,326 |
Wolverine World Wide, Inc. | | 477,730 | 9,788,688 |
| | | 76,053,300 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | | 968,860,598 |
|
CONSUMER STAPLES - 3.3% | | | |
Beverages - 0.4% | | | |
Boston Beer Co., Inc. Class A (a) | | 50,103 | 23,373,551 |
Celsius Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 192,121 | 964,447 |
Coca-Cola Bottling Co. Consolidated | | 28,082 | 6,612,469 |
Craft Brew Alliance, Inc. (a)(b) | | 68,407 | 1,032,946 |
MGP Ingredients, Inc. | | 77,995 | 2,942,751 |
National Beverage Corp. (a)(b) | | 70,706 | 3,551,562 |
New Age Beverages Corp. (a)(b) | | 491,224 | 692,626 |
| | | 39,170,352 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 0.8% | | | |
Andersons, Inc. | | 189,777 | 3,220,516 |
BJ's Wholesale Club Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 669,273 | 17,608,573 |
Chefs' Warehouse Holdings (a)(b) | | 146,027 | 2,056,060 |
HF Foods Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 134,456 | 1,093,127 |
Ingles Markets, Inc. Class A | | 85,488 | 3,490,475 |
Natural Grocers by Vitamin Cottage, Inc. (b) | | 52,961 | 596,870 |
Performance Food Group Co. (a) | | 767,210 | 22,517,614 |
PriceSmart, Inc. | | 134,563 | 8,550,133 |
Rite Aid Corp. (a)(b) | | 330,327 | 4,733,586 |
SpartanNash Co. | | 214,171 | 3,673,033 |
United Natural Foods, Inc. (a)(b) | | 320,258 | 3,407,545 |
Village Super Market, Inc. Class A (b) | | 49,122 | 1,180,402 |
Weis Markets, Inc. | | 56,893 | 2,846,357 |
| | | 74,974,291 |
Food Products - 1.4% | | | |
Alico, Inc. | | 28,482 | 834,807 |
B&G Foods, Inc. Class A (b) | | 379,767 | 7,375,075 |
Bridgford Foods Corp. (a) | | 10,375 | 189,033 |
Cal-Maine Foods, Inc. | | 188,825 | 7,838,126 |
Calavo Growers, Inc. (b) | | 97,107 | 5,632,206 |
Darling International, Inc. (a) | | 984,811 | 20,277,258 |
Farmer Brothers Co. (a) | | 64,958 | 600,212 |
Fresh Del Monte Produce, Inc. | | 184,095 | 5,248,548 |
Freshpet, Inc. (a) | | 206,424 | 15,566,434 |
Hostess Brands, Inc. Class A (a) | | 714,386 | 8,586,920 |
J&J Snack Foods Corp. | | 90,665 | 11,517,175 |
John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. | | 51,673 | 4,243,903 |
Lancaster Colony Corp. | | 113,352 | 15,260,580 |
Landec Corp. (a) | | 156,080 | 1,740,292 |
Limoneira Co. | | 93,703 | 1,250,935 |
Sanderson Farms, Inc. | | 119,356 | 16,249,126 |
Seneca Foods Corp. Class A (a) | | 39,758 | 1,430,493 |
The Simply Good Foods Co. (a) | | 494,592 | 9,323,059 |
Tootsie Roll Industries, Inc. (b) | | 99,424 | 3,492,765 |
| | | 136,656,947 |
Household Products - 0.2% | | | |
Central Garden & Pet Co. (a) | | 14,964 | 492,914 |
Central Garden & Pet Co. Class A (non-vtg.) (a) | | 289,298 | 8,797,552 |
Oil-Dri Corp. of America | | 31,345 | 1,171,990 |
WD-40 Co. (b) | | 82,364 | 14,354,398 |
| | | 24,816,854 |
Personal Products - 0.3% | | | |
BellRing Brands, Inc. Class A (a) | | 237,636 | 4,165,759 |
Edgewell Personal Care Co. (a) | | 324,427 | 8,957,429 |
elf Beauty, Inc. (a)(b) | | 155,081 | 2,026,909 |
Inter Parfums, Inc. | | 105,187 | 4,700,807 |
LifeVantage Corp. (a) | | 82,545 | 1,279,448 |
MediFast, Inc. (b) | | 66,384 | 5,037,218 |
Nature's Sunshine Products, Inc. (a) | | 45,151 | 397,329 |
Revlon, Inc. (a)(b) | | 39,993 | 532,707 |
USANA Health Sciences, Inc. (a) | | 75,173 | 6,706,935 |
Youngevity International, Inc. (a)(b) | | 46,148 | 76,144 |
| | | 33,880,685 |
Tobacco - 0.2% | | | |
22nd Century Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 675,793 | 635,381 |
Pyxus International, Inc. (a)(b) | | 48,139 | 126,124 |
Turning Point Brands, Inc. (b) | | 50,001 | 1,165,023 |
Universal Corp. | | 144,802 | 7,004,073 |
Vector Group Ltd. | | 662,812 | 7,092,088 |
| | | 16,022,689 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | | 325,521,818 |
|
ENERGY - 2.1% | | | |
Energy Equipment & Services - 0.5% | | | |
Archrock, Inc. | | 775,154 | 3,728,491 |
Cactus, Inc. | | 284,805 | 5,063,833 |
COVIA Corp. (a)(b) | | 177,202 | 115,181 |
DMC Global, Inc. (b) | | 84,697 | 2,186,030 |
Dril-Quip, Inc. (a) | | 217,543 | 7,207,200 |
Era Group, Inc. (a) | | 113,174 | 579,451 |
Exterran Corp. (a) | | 176,588 | 1,200,798 |
Forum Energy Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 446,301 | 191,909 |
Frank's International NV (a) | | 637,256 | 1,548,532 |
FTS International, Inc. (a) | | 185,687 | 76,132 |
Geospace Technologies Corp. (a) | | 80,677 | 501,004 |
Helix Energy Solutions Group, Inc. (a) | | 846,637 | 2,150,458 |
Independence Contract Drilling, Inc. (a)(b) | | 15,570 | 121,290 |
KLX Energy Services Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 89,624 | 116,511 |
Liberty Oilfield Services, Inc. Class A (b) | | 315,938 | 1,491,227 |
Mammoth Energy Services, Inc. (b) | | 47,650 | 40,026 |
Matrix Service Co. (a) | | 158,504 | 1,654,782 |
Nabors Industries Ltd. | | 42,846 | 631,122 |
Natural Gas Services Group, Inc. (a) | | 72,094 | 457,797 |
NCS Multistage Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 43,586 | 29,203 |
Newpark Resources, Inc. (a) | | 541,239 | 828,096 |
Nextier Oilfield Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 954,522 | 2,214,491 |
Nine Energy Service, Inc. (a)(b) | | 56,480 | 81,896 |
Noble Corp. (a) | | 1,351,815 | 348,768 |
Oceaneering International, Inc. (a) | | 592,361 | 3,044,736 |
Oil States International, Inc. (a) | | 366,324 | 1,260,155 |
Pacific Drilling SA (a) | | 139,800 | 89,584 |
ProPetro Holding Corp. (a) | | 478,794 | 2,030,087 |
RigNet, Inc. (a) | | 73,048 | 98,615 |
RPC, Inc. (b) | | 350,584 | 1,195,491 |
SEACOR Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 104,862 | 2,963,400 |
SEACOR Marine Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 106,172 | 332,318 |
Seadrill Ltd. (a)(b) | | 357,404 | 205,007 |
Select Energy Services, Inc. Class A (a) | | 350,348 | 1,681,670 |
Smart Sand, Inc. (a)(b) | | 98,114 | 81,435 |
Solaris Oilfield Infrastructure, Inc. Class A | | 190,468 | 1,302,801 |
TETRA Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 614,224 | 298,697 |
Tidewater, Inc. (a) | | 237,898 | 1,370,292 |
U.S. Silica Holdings, Inc. (b) | | 451,391 | 866,671 |
U.S. Well Services, Inc. (a)(b) | | 144,844 | 66,874 |
| | | 49,452,061 |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 1.6% | | | |
Abraxas Petroleum Corp. (a)(b) | | 936,740 | 294,792 |
Altus Midstream Co. (a)(b) | | 289,701 | 220,173 |
Amplify Energy Corp. New (b) | | 53,617 | 70,774 |
Arch Coal, Inc. (b) | | 90,235 | 2,633,960 |
Ardmore Shipping Corp. | | 201,984 | 1,329,055 |
Berry Petroleum Corp. | | 371,285 | 1,273,508 |
Bonanza Creek Energy, Inc. (a) | | 114,209 | 1,994,089 |
Brigham Minerals, Inc. Class A | | 170,295 | 2,195,103 |
California Resources Corp. (a)(b) | | 297,684 | 833,515 |
Callon Petroleum Co. (a)(b) | | 2,325,779 | 2,185,535 |
Chaparral Energy, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 163,292 | 79,948 |
Clean Energy Fuels Corp. (a) | | 812,141 | 1,750,164 |
CNX Resources Corp. (a) | | 1,118,890 | 11,860,234 |
Comstock Resources, Inc. (a)(b) | | 93,736 | 718,018 |
CONSOL Energy, Inc. (a)(b) | | 154,204 | 1,170,408 |
CVR Energy, Inc. | | 177,762 | 4,239,624 |
Delek U.S. Holdings, Inc. | | 443,864 | 10,364,224 |
Denbury Resources, Inc. (a)(b) | | 2,904,134 | 1,032,420 |
DHT Holdings, Inc. | | 660,302 | 4,793,793 |
Diamond S Shipping, Inc. (a)(b) | | 163,983 | 2,035,029 |
Dorian LPG Ltd. (a) | | 162,212 | 1,539,392 |
Earthstone Energy, Inc. (a)(b) | | 113,496 | 262,176 |
Energy Fuels, Inc. (a) | | 579,910 | 1,029,044 |
Evolution Petroleum Corp. | | 153,753 | 456,646 |
Extraction Oil & Gas, Inc. (a)(b) | | 462,033 | 244,693 |
Falcon Minerals Corp. | | 231,626 | 566,326 |
GasLog Ltd. | | 246,194 | 1,137,416 |
Golar LNG Ltd. (b) | | 569,129 | 4,035,125 |
Goodrich Petroleum Corp. (a) | | 51,599 | 439,107 |
Green Plains, Inc. (b) | | 207,735 | 1,219,404 |
Gulfport Energy Corp. (a)(b) | | 994,499 | 2,540,945 |
Hallador Energy Co. (b) | | 98,648 | 75,140 |
Highpoint Resources, Inc. (a) | | 617,703 | 204,830 |
International Seaways, Inc. | | 151,476 | 3,665,719 |
Laredo Petroleum, Inc. (a) | | 1,105,571 | 1,205,072 |
Magnolia Oil & Gas Corp. Class A (a) | | 606,769 | 3,925,795 |
Matador Resources Co. (a)(b) | | 665,420 | 4,684,557 |
Montage Resources Corp. (a)(b) | | 131,404 | 897,489 |
NACCO Industries, Inc. Class A | | 22,074 | 775,901 |
National Energy Services Reunited Corp. (a) | | 141,977 | 725,502 |
Nextdecade Corp. (a) | | 57,879 | 96,658 |
Nordic American Tanker Shipping Ltd. (b) | | 834,296 | 5,022,462 |
Northern Oil & Gas, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,762,246 | 1,475,352 |
Oasis Petroleum, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,980,713 | 1,394,224 |
Overseas Shipholding Group, Inc. (a) | | 379,930 | 949,825 |
Panhandle Royalty Co. Class A | | 82,936 | 359,113 |
Par Pacific Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 212,107 | 2,061,680 |
PDC Energy, Inc. (a) | | 599,358 | 7,785,660 |
Peabody Energy Corp. (b) | | 383,104 | 1,298,723 |
Penn Virginia Corp. (a) | | 83,484 | 525,114 |
PrimeEnergy Corp. (a) | | 2,693 | 168,259 |
QEP Resources, Inc. | | 1,426,738 | 1,406,764 |
Renewable Energy Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 220,717 | 5,475,989 |
Rex American Resources Corp. (a) | | 33,415 | 1,987,524 |
Ring Energy, Inc. (a)(b) | | 307,561 | 277,205 |
Rosehill Resources, Inc. (a)(b) | | 54,469 | 24,838 |
SandRidge Energy, Inc. (a) | | 170,049 | 338,398 |
Scorpio Tankers, Inc. (b) | | 264,619 | 5,792,510 |
Ship Finance International Ltd. (NY Shares) (b) | | 485,982 | 5,486,737 |
SilverBow Resources, Inc. (a)(b) | | 42,288 | 228,778 |
SM Energy Co. | | 665,236 | 2,694,206 |
Southwestern Energy Co. (a)(b) | | 3,262,576 | 10,538,120 |
Talos Energy, Inc. (a)(b) | | 120,906 | 1,377,119 |
Teekay Corp. (a)(b) | | 414,623 | 1,542,398 |
Teekay Tankers Ltd. (a) | | 142,864 | 2,901,568 |
Tellurian, Inc. (a)(b) | | 573,591 | 814,499 |
Unit Corp. (a) | | 126,945 | 42,907 |
Uranium Energy Corp. (a)(b) | | 1,084,777 | 1,193,255 |
W&T Offshore, Inc. (a)(b) | | 565,923 | 1,567,607 |
Whiting Petroleum Corp. (a)(b) | | 541,951 | 682,858 |
World Fuel Services Corp. | | 386,885 | 9,672,125 |
| | | 155,887,120 |
|
TOTAL ENERGY | | | 205,339,181 |
|
FINANCIALS - 15.8% | | | |
Banks - 8.6% | | | |
1st Constitution Bancorp | | 50,830 | 645,541 |
1st Source Corp. | | 86,155 | 2,992,163 |
ACNB Corp. | | 47,645 | 1,332,154 |
Allegiance Bancshares, Inc. | | 113,927 | 2,857,289 |
Amalgamated Bank | | 85,857 | 918,670 |
American National Bankshares, Inc. | | 62,914 | 1,682,950 |
Ameris Bancorp | | 366,329 | 9,315,746 |
Ames National Corp. | | 51,743 | 1,096,952 |
Arrow Financial Corp. | | 79,063 | 2,253,296 |
Atlantic Capital Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 132,046 | 1,657,177 |
Banc of California, Inc. | | 271,601 | 2,830,082 |
BancFirst Corp. | | 112,918 | 4,348,472 |
Bancorp, Inc., Delaware (a) | | 306,194 | 2,134,172 |
BancorpSouth Bank | | 595,347 | 13,032,146 |
Bank First National Corp. (b) | | 34,073 | 1,745,219 |
Bank of Commerce Holdings | | 100,150 | 770,154 |
Bank of Marin Bancorp | | 81,390 | 2,682,614 |
Bank7 Corp. | | 20,972 | 209,720 |
BankFinancial Corp. | | 82,211 | 679,885 |
Bankwell Financial Group, Inc. | | 36,413 | 555,298 |
Banner Corp. | | 209,907 | 8,066,726 |
Bar Harbor Bankshares | | 91,876 | 1,688,681 |
BayCom Corp. (a) | | 65,692 | 809,982 |
BCB Bancorp, Inc. | | 85,316 | 863,398 |
Berkshire Hills Bancorp, Inc. | | 269,155 | 4,586,401 |
Boston Private Financial Holdings, Inc. | | 493,231 | 3,748,556 |
Bridge Bancorp, Inc. | | 100,611 | 2,081,642 |
Brookline Bancorp, Inc., Delaware | | 468,690 | 4,785,325 |
Bryn Mawr Bank Corp. | | 121,238 | 3,529,844 |
Business First Bancshares, Inc. | | 74,969 | 1,048,067 |
Byline Bancorp, Inc. | | 141,378 | 1,741,777 |
C & F Financial Corp. | | 19,651 | 698,790 |
Cadence Bancorp Class A | | 748,468 | 4,954,858 |
Cambridge Bancorp | | 30,176 | 1,683,217 |
Camden National Corp. | | 91,602 | 2,999,966 |
Capital Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 45,229 | 491,187 |
Capital City Bank Group, Inc. | | 80,932 | 1,783,741 |
Capstar Financial Holdings, Inc. | | 83,724 | 955,291 |
Carolina Financial Corp. | | 142,334 | 4,815,159 |
Carter Bank & Trust | | 132,746 | 1,258,432 |
Cathay General Bancorp | | 458,089 | 12,789,845 |
CBTX, Inc. | | 109,687 | 1,980,947 |
Centerstate Banks of Florida, Inc. | | 723,697 | 12,585,091 |
Central Pacific Financial Corp. | | 166,345 | 2,909,374 |
Central Valley Community Bancorp | | 65,037 | 951,491 |
Century Bancorp, Inc. Class A (non-vtg.) | | 17,248 | 1,288,253 |
Chemung Financial Corp. | | 21,034 | 515,333 |
Citizens & Northern Corp. | | 70,863 | 1,267,030 |
City Holding Co. | | 95,132 | 6,429,972 |
Civista Bancshares, Inc. | | 93,435 | 1,432,359 |
CNB Financial Corp., Pennsylvania | | 87,088 | 1,544,941 |
Coastal Financial Corp. of Washington (a) | | 44,365 | 582,512 |
Codorus Valley Bancorp, Inc. | | 52,566 | 738,552 |
Colony Bankcorp, Inc. | | 40,565 | 511,119 |
Columbia Banking Systems, Inc. | | 431,386 | 11,643,108 |
Community Bank System, Inc. | | 304,594 | 19,034,079 |
Community Bankers Trust Corp. | | 128,624 | 719,008 |
Community Financial Corp. | | 25,182 | 584,222 |
Community Trust Bancorp, Inc. | | 92,998 | 3,152,632 |
ConnectOne Bancorp, Inc. | | 204,354 | 3,053,049 |
CrossFirst Bankshares, Inc. (a)(b) | | 284,410 | 2,750,245 |
Customers Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 171,715 | 2,191,083 |
CVB Financial Corp. | | 799,436 | 16,616,277 |
Eagle Bancorp, Inc. | | 193,155 | 6,775,877 |
Enterprise Bancorp, Inc. | | 53,121 | 1,282,872 |
Enterprise Financial Services Corp. | | 146,640 | 4,507,714 |
Equity Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 91,998 | 1,724,043 |
Esquire Financial Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 38,506 | 632,269 |
Evans Bancorp, Inc. (b) | | 27,511 | 763,980 |
Farmers & Merchants Bancorp, Inc. | | 57,166 | 1,371,984 |
Farmers National Banc Corp. | | 158,672 | 1,965,946 |
FB Financial Corp. | | 104,264 | 2,329,258 |
Fidelity D & D Bancorp, Inc. (b) | | 15,324 | 591,200 |
Financial Institutions, Inc. | | 92,558 | 1,790,997 |
First Bancorp, North Carolina | | 177,003 | 4,706,510 |
First Bancorp, Puerto Rico | | 1,283,031 | 7,480,071 |
First Bancshares, Inc. | | 113,375 | 2,258,430 |
First Bank Hamilton New Jersey | | 95,951 | 759,932 |
First Busey Corp. | | 310,495 | 5,719,318 |
First Business Finance Services, Inc. | | 47,081 | 808,852 |
First Capital, Inc. (b) | | 18,781 | 936,233 |
First Choice Bancorp | | 59,466 | 905,073 |
First Commonwealth Financial Corp. | | 586,240 | 5,581,005 |
First Community Bankshares, In | | 108,384 | 2,554,611 |
First Financial Bancorp, Ohio | | 584,740 | 8,993,301 |
First Financial Bankshares, Inc. | | 778,172 | 21,672,090 |
First Financial Corp., Indiana | | 80,175 | 2,847,816 |
First Financial Northwest, Inc. | | 40,539 | 398,093 |
First Foundation, Inc. | | 239,934 | 3,301,492 |
First Guaranty Bancshares, Inc. (b) | | 25,968 | 350,828 |
First Internet Bancorp | | 56,253 | 883,172 |
First Interstate Bancsystem, Inc. | | 226,939 | 7,670,538 |
First Merchants Corp. | | 323,934 | 9,170,572 |
First Mid-Illinois Bancshares, Inc. | | 88,442 | 2,361,401 |
First Midwest Bancorp, Inc., Delaware | | 637,794 | 9,426,595 |
First Northwest Bancorp | | 51,124 | 595,595 |
First of Long Island Corp. | | 140,242 | 2,214,421 |
Flushing Financial Corp. | | 162,894 | 2,034,546 |
FNCM Bancorp, Inc. | | 89,947 | 557,671 |
Franklin Financial Network, Inc. | | 81,228 | 1,926,728 |
Franklin Financial Services Corp. | | 24,099 | 696,461 |
Fulton Financial Corp. | | 961,371 | 11,238,427 |
FVCBankcorp, Inc. (a) | | 71,953 | 828,179 |
German American Bancorp, Inc. | | 149,667 | 4,449,600 |
Glacier Bancorp, Inc. | | 520,858 | 19,834,273 |
Great Southern Bancorp, Inc. | | 66,904 | 2,848,103 |
Great Western Bancorp, Inc. | | 337,930 | 6,353,084 |
Guaranty Bancshares, Inc. Texas | | 50,012 | 1,348,824 |
Hancock Whitney Corp. | | 519,337 | 10,859,337 |
Hanmi Financial Corp. | | 183,599 | 2,216,040 |
HarborOne Bancorp, Inc. | | 157,675 | 1,264,554 |
Hawthorn Bancshares, Inc. | | 30,007 | 546,127 |
HBT Financial, Inc. | | 53,272 | 620,619 |
Heartland Financial U.S.A., Inc. | | 209,594 | 7,119,908 |
Heritage Commerce Corp. | | 336,896 | 2,991,636 |
Heritage Financial Corp., Washington | | 220,740 | 4,425,837 |
Hilltop Holdings, Inc. | | 417,931 | 8,066,068 |
Home Bancshares, Inc. | | 929,577 | 14,250,415 |
HomeTrust Bancshares, Inc. | | 94,924 | 1,458,982 |
Hope Bancorp, Inc. | | 719,885 | 7,162,856 |
Horizon Bancorp, Inc. Indiana | | 230,640 | 2,624,683 |
Howard Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 74,976 | 837,482 |
IBERIABANK Corp. | | 313,460 | 12,996,052 |
Independent Bank Corp. | | 135,811 | 1,995,064 |
Independent Bank Corp., Massachusetts | | 198,822 | 14,492,136 |
Independent Bank Group, Inc. | | 215,925 | 6,544,687 |
International Bancshares Corp. | | 332,780 | 9,647,292 |
Investar Holding Corp. | | 53,818 | 675,416 |
Investors Bancorp, Inc. | | 1,360,764 | 12,668,713 |
Lakeland Bancorp, Inc. | | 303,210 | 3,392,920 |
Lakeland Financial Corp. | | 148,172 | 6,272,121 |
LCNB Corp. | | 69,663 | 998,967 |
Level One Bancorp, Inc. | | 29,132 | 527,581 |
Live Oak Bancshares, Inc. | | 159,120 | 2,219,724 |
Macatawa Bank Corp. | | 147,169 | 1,130,258 |
Mackinac Financial Corp. | | 51,943 | 536,052 |
Mainstreet Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 40,139 | 602,888 |
Malvern Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 44,222 | 581,519 |
Mercantil Bank Holding Corp. Class A (a)(b) | | 115,786 | 1,565,427 |
Mercantile Bank Corp. | | 97,559 | 2,302,392 |
Metrocity Bankshares, Inc. | | 94,446 | 999,711 |
Metropolitan Bank Holding Corp. (a) | | 42,366 | 1,062,963 |
Mid Penn Bancorp, Inc. | | 39,129 | 766,928 |
Midland States Bancorp, Inc. | | 132,975 | 2,156,855 |
MidWestOne Financial Group, Inc. | | 72,238 | 1,507,607 |
MVB Financial Corp. | | 55,964 | 768,386 |
National Bank Holdings Corp. | | 177,673 | 4,722,548 |
National Bankshares, Inc. | | 37,625 | 1,127,998 |
NBT Bancorp, Inc. | | 255,281 | 8,457,460 |
Nicolet Bankshares, Inc. (a) | | 56,371 | 3,101,532 |
Northeast Bank | | 48,730 | 816,228 |
Northrim Bancorp, Inc. | | 37,743 | 885,073 |
Norwood Financial Corp. | | 33,986 | 802,919 |
Oak Valley Bancorp Oakdale California | | 35,955 | 469,572 |
OFG Bancorp | | 306,392 | 3,854,411 |
Ohio Valley Banc Corp. | | 20,997 | 529,124 |
Old National Bancorp, Indiana | | 1,011,703 | 14,335,832 |
Old Second Bancorp, Inc. | | 175,231 | 1,442,151 |
Opus Bank | | 133,399 | 2,563,929 |
Origin Bancorp, Inc. | | 115,145 | 2,566,582 |
Orrstown Financial Services, Inc. | | 56,699 | 873,165 |
Pacific City Financial Corp. | | 71,908 | 674,497 |
Pacific Mercantile Bancorp (a) | | 111,432 | 446,842 |
Pacific Premier Bancorp, Inc. | | 350,475 | 7,482,641 |
Park National Corp. | | 79,218 | 6,335,856 |
Parke Bancorp, Inc. | | 57,607 | 811,683 |
Peapack-Gladstone Financial Corp. | | 113,769 | 2,146,821 |
Penns Woods Bancorp, Inc. | | 37,030 | 847,987 |
People's Utah Bancorp | | 94,353 | 2,026,702 |
Peoples Bancorp of North Carolina | | 27,036 | 470,426 |
Peoples Bancorp, Inc. | | 110,865 | 2,695,128 |
Peoples Financial Services Corp. | | 38,409 | 1,421,517 |
Preferred Bank, Los Angeles | | 82,473 | 3,146,345 |
Premier Financial Bancorp, Inc. | | 77,303 | 1,004,939 |
Professional Holdings Corp. (A Shares) | | 19,739 | 289,966 |
QCR Holdings, Inc. | | 91,037 | 2,802,119 |
RBB Bancorp | | 98,997 | 1,279,041 |
Red River Bancshares, Inc. | | 29,226 | 1,119,064 |
Reliant Bancorp, Inc. | | 61,205 | 891,145 |
Renasant Corp. | | 333,634 | 8,751,220 |
Republic Bancorp, Inc., Kentucky Class A | | 59,138 | 1,971,070 |
Republic First Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 234,763 | 617,427 |
Richmond Mutual Bancorp., Inc. (a) | | 75,219 | 803,339 |
S&T Bancorp, Inc. | | 227,875 | 6,086,541 |
Sandy Spring Bancorp, Inc. | | 207,844 | 5,300,022 |
SB One Bancorp | | 51,385 | 947,026 |
Seacoast Banking Corp., Florida (a) | | 305,488 | 6,864,315 |
Select Bancorp, Inc. New (a) | | 99,300 | 814,260 |
ServisFirst Bancshares, Inc. | | 285,292 | 10,133,572 |
Shore Bancshares, Inc. | | 72,532 | 805,105 |
Sierra Bancorp | | 88,270 | 1,791,881 |
Silvergate Capital Corp. (a)(b) | | 19,607 | 311,751 |
Simmons First National Corp. Class A | | 571,518 | 10,687,387 |
SmartFinancial, Inc. | | 74,144 | 1,072,122 |
South Plains Financial, Inc. | | 58,564 | 727,951 |
South State Corp. | | 200,274 | 11,583,848 |
Southern First Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 44,088 | 1,285,606 |
Southern National Bancorp of Virginia, Inc. | | 121,452 | 1,223,022 |
Southside Bancshares, Inc. | | 191,739 | 5,830,783 |
Spirit of Texas Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 86,929 | 998,814 |
Stock Yards Bancorp, Inc. | | 124,151 | 4,101,949 |
Summit Financial Group, Inc. | | 64,510 | 1,139,247 |
The Bank of NT Butterfield & Son Ltd. | | 317,283 | 6,983,399 |
The Bank of Princeton | | 31,175 | 654,675 |
The First Bancorp, Inc. | | 57,496 | 1,259,162 |
Tompkins Financial Corp. | | 86,142 | 5,815,446 |
TowneBank | | 400,139 | 8,082,808 |
Trico Bancshares | | 161,335 | 4,859,410 |
TriState Capital Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 165,041 | 2,346,883 |
Triumph Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 136,342 | 3,778,037 |
Trustmark Corp. | | 385,466 | 10,257,250 |
UMB Financial Corp. | | 265,502 | 13,498,122 |
Union Bankshares Corp. | | 479,249 | 11,439,674 |
Union Bankshares, Inc. | | 19,630 | 471,709 |
United Bankshares, Inc., West Virginia (b) | | 585,071 | 17,528,727 |
United Community Bank, Inc. | | 472,252 | 9,985,769 |
United Security Bancshares, California | | 75,155 | 500,532 |
Unity Bancorp, Inc. | | 46,558 | 668,573 |
Univest Corp. of Pennsylvania | | 174,018 | 3,080,119 |
Valley National Bancorp | | 2,323,412 | 19,423,724 |
Veritex Holdings, Inc. | | 302,407 | 5,310,267 |
Washington Trust Bancorp, Inc. | | 91,383 | 3,199,319 |
WesBanco, Inc. | | 387,614 | 9,566,314 |
West Bancorp., Inc. | | 92,785 | 1,725,801 |
Westamerica Bancorp. | | 155,800 | 9,815,400 |
| | | 856,446,071 |
Capital Markets - 1.5% | | | |
Ares Management Corp. (b) | | 428,762 | 14,384,965 |
Artisan Partners Asset Management, Inc. | | 299,769 | 8,825,199 |
Assetmark Financial Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 81,867 | 1,963,989 |
Associated Capital Group, Inc. | | 11,160 | 427,093 |
B. Riley Financial, Inc. | | 124,792 | 2,482,113 |
Blucora, Inc. (a) | | 292,560 | 4,116,319 |
BrightSphere Investment Group, Inc. | | 391,168 | 2,898,555 |
Cohen & Steers, Inc. | | 136,591 | 7,886,764 |
Cowen Group, Inc. Class A | | 168,089 | 1,840,575 |
Diamond Hill Investment Group, Inc. | | 18,556 | 2,032,995 |
Donnelley Financial Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 185,288 | 1,348,897 |
Federated Hermes, Inc. Class B (non-vtg.) | | 578,287 | 13,167,595 |
Focus Financial Partners, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 183,830 | 4,386,184 |
Gain Capital Holdings, Inc. | | 117,777 | 770,262 |
GAMCO Investors, Inc. Class A | | 30,959 | 400,609 |
Greenhill & Co., Inc. (b) | | 89,016 | 949,801 |
Hamilton Lane, Inc. Class A | | 131,736 | 8,543,080 |
Houlihan Lokey | | 252,226 | 14,977,180 |
INTL FCStone, Inc. (a) | | 95,456 | 3,814,422 |
Moelis & Co. Class A | | 284,203 | 8,489,144 |
Och-Ziff Capital Management Group LLC Class A | | 101,411 | 1,486,685 |
Oppenheimer Holdings, Inc. Class A (non-vtg.) | | 59,234 | 1,219,036 |
Piper Jaffray Companies | | 79,530 | 4,287,462 |
PJT Partners, Inc. | | 135,795 | 6,605,069 |
Pzena Investment Management, Inc. | | 104,439 | 513,840 |
Safeguard Scientifics, Inc. | | 108,893 | 772,051 |
Siebert Financial Corp. (a)(b) | | 46,926 | 267,478 |
Silvercrest Asset Management Group Class A | | 47,906 | 487,683 |
Stifel Financial Corp. | | 398,556 | 17,648,060 |
Value Line, Inc. | | 6,577 | 203,755 |
Virtus Investment Partners, Inc. | | 38,795 | 3,152,870 |
Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc. Class A | | 406,992 | 5,921,734 |
Westwood Holdings Group, Inc. | | 48,334 | 1,113,132 |
WisdomTree Investments, Inc. | | 800,916 | 2,594,968 |
| | | 149,979,564 |
Consumer Finance - 0.6% | | | |
CURO Group Holdings Corp. | | 94,468 | 880,442 |
Elevate Credit, Inc. (a) | | 122,578 | 229,221 |
Encore Capital Group, Inc. (a) | | 185,063 | 4,807,937 |
Enova International, Inc. (a) | | 193,144 | 3,098,030 |
EZCORP, Inc. (non-vtg.) Class A (a)(b) | | 303,421 | 1,699,158 |
First Cash Financial Services, Inc. | | 247,444 | 17,776,377 |
Green Dot Corp. Class A (a) | | 290,137 | 8,849,179 |
LendingClub Corp. (a) | | 403,306 | 3,093,357 |
Medallion Financial Corp. (a) | | 121,550 | 350,064 |
Nelnet, Inc. Class A | | 107,385 | 5,170,588 |
Oportun Financial Corp. (a)(b) | | 45,824 | 342,764 |
PRA Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 269,863 | 7,486,000 |
Regional Management Corp. (a) | | 50,768 | 809,242 |
World Acceptance Corp. (a)(b) | | 32,505 | 2,205,464 |
| | | 56,797,823 |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.3% | | | |
Alerus Financial Corp. (b) | | 16,947 | 288,099 |
Banco Latinoamericano de Comercio Exterior SA Series E | | 185,237 | 2,115,407 |
Cannae Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 443,210 | 13,983,276 |
FGL Holdings Class A | | 871,999 | 9,051,350 |
GWG Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 12,594 | 108,057 |
Marlin Business Services Corp. | | 49,612 | 527,872 |
On Deck Capital, Inc. (a) | | 357,032 | 432,009 |
Rafael Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 62,818 | 886,362 |
| | | 27,392,432 |
Insurance - 2.3% | | | |
AMBAC Financial Group, Inc. (a) | | 270,729 | 4,656,539 |
American Equity Investment Life Holding Co. | | 540,733 | 11,366,208 |
Amerisafe, Inc. | | 114,525 | 7,291,807 |
Argo Group International Holdings, Ltd. | | 195,749 | 6,921,685 |
BRP Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 111,504 | 1,117,270 |
Citizens, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 294,984 | 1,640,111 |
CNO Financial Group, Inc. | | 888,023 | 12,485,603 |
Crawford & Co. Class A | | 95,283 | 678,415 |
Donegal Group, Inc. Class A | | 59,256 | 848,546 |
eHealth, Inc. (a) | | 136,694 | 14,585,250 |
Employers Holdings, Inc. | | 188,301 | 5,718,701 |
Enstar Group Ltd. (a) | | 68,627 | 9,924,837 |
FBL Financial Group, Inc. Class A | | 58,355 | 2,280,513 |
Fednat Holding Co. | | 69,552 | 842,970 |
Genworth Financial, Inc. Class A | | 3,036,056 | 11,020,883 |
Global Indemnity Ltd. | | 46,371 | 1,140,263 |
Goosehead Insurance (b) | | 69,324 | 3,891,849 |
Greenlight Capital Re, Ltd. (a)(b) | | 178,099 | 1,161,205 |
Hallmark Financial Services, Inc. (a) | | 73,292 | 316,621 |
HCI Group, Inc. | | 36,488 | 1,519,725 |
Health Insurance Innovations, Inc. (a)(b) | | 59,021 | 1,542,219 |
Heritage Insurance Holdings, Inc. | | 158,441 | 1,796,721 |
Horace Mann Educators Corp. | | 247,705 | 8,709,308 |
Independence Holding Co. | | 28,438 | 786,595 |
Investors Title Co. | | 8,602 | 1,151,808 |
James River Group Holdings Ltd. | | 177,945 | 6,313,489 |
Kinsale Capital Group, Inc. | | 122,799 | 13,338,427 |
MBIA, Inc. (a)(b) | | 450,750 | 3,669,105 |
National General Holdings Corp. | | 405,953 | 7,725,286 |
National Western Life Group, Inc. | | 13,668 | 2,634,234 |
NI Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 54,505 | 736,363 |
Palomar Holdings, Inc. | | 111,568 | 6,526,728 |
ProAssurance Corp. | | 319,901 | 6,842,682 |
ProSight Global, Inc. | | 50,108 | 418,903 |
Protective Insurance Corp. Class B | | 53,628 | 837,669 |
RLI Corp. | | 239,269 | 17,425,961 |
Safety Insurance Group, Inc. | | 88,295 | 7,427,375 |
Selective Insurance Group, Inc. | | 350,667 | 17,578,937 |
State Auto Financial Corp. | | 104,667 | 2,626,095 |
Stewart Information Services Corp. | | 140,985 | 4,491,782 |
Third Point Reinsurance Ltd. (a) | | 440,300 | 3,275,832 |
Tiptree, Inc. | | 134,729 | 860,918 |
Trupanion, Inc. (a)(b) | | 172,568 | 5,161,509 |
United Fire Group, Inc. | | 126,954 | 3,630,884 |
United Insurance Holdings Corp. | | 125,806 | 1,075,641 |
Universal Insurance Holdings, Inc. | | 178,339 | 3,251,120 |
Watford Holdings Ltd. (a) | | 108,499 | 1,339,963 |
| | | 230,584,555 |
Mortgage Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.8% | | | |
AG Mortgage Investment Trust, Inc. | | 184,717 | 589,247 |
Anworth Mortgage Asset Corp. | | 596,718 | 1,026,355 |
Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance, Inc. | | 920,046 | 7,498,375 |
Ares Commercial Real Estate Corp. | | 195,617 | 1,516,032 |
Arlington Asset Investment Corp. | | 200,416 | 567,177 |
Armour Residential REIT, Inc. | | 354,018 | 3,129,519 |
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. | | 768,093 | 18,073,228 |
Capstead Mortgage Corp. | | 560,595 | 2,909,488 |
Cherry Hill Mortgage Investment Corp. | | 102,882 | 716,059 |
Colony NorthStar Credit Real Estate, Inc. | | 488,775 | 2,351,008 |
Dynex Capital, Inc. | | 134,079 | 1,918,670 |
Ellington Financial LLC | | 235,375 | 2,445,546 |
Exantas Capital Corp. | | 181,582 | 537,483 |
Granite Point Mortgage Trust, Inc. | | 328,234 | 1,634,605 |
Great Ajax Corp. | | 100,911 | 877,926 |
Invesco Mortgage Capital, Inc. | | 992,198 | 3,016,282 |
KKR Real Estate Finance Trust, Inc. (b) | | 154,704 | 2,441,229 |
Ladder Capital Corp. Class A | | 614,659 | 4,886,539 |
New York Mortgage Trust, Inc. | | 2,260,620 | 4,928,152 |
Orchid Island Capital, Inc. | | 396,856 | 1,563,613 |
PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust | | 590,149 | 6,137,550 |
Redwood Trust, Inc. | | 658,642 | 2,700,432 |
TPG RE Finance Trust, Inc. | | 298,424 | 2,294,881 |
Western Asset Mortgage Capital Corp. | | 274,231 | 836,405 |
ZAIS Financial Corp. | | 234,759 | 1,565,843 |
| | | 76,161,644 |
Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 1.7% | | | |
Axos Financial, Inc. (a) | | 348,251 | 8,027,186 |
Bridgewater Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 129,959 | 1,316,485 |
Capitol Federal Financial, Inc. | | 790,661 | 9,480,025 |
Columbia Financial, Inc. (a)(b) | | 313,013 | 4,430,699 |
Dime Community Bancshares, Inc. | | 185,519 | 3,048,077 |
ESSA Bancorp, Inc. | | 48,301 | 579,612 |
Essent Group Ltd. | | 577,881 | 15,787,709 |
Farmer Mac Class C (non-vtg.) | | 54,116 | 3,605,749 |
First Defiance Financial Corp. | | 226,257 | 3,932,347 |
Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. | | 206,696 | 5,355,493 |
FS Bancorp, Inc. | | 25,096 | 1,052,777 |
Greene County Bancorp, Inc. | | 16,501 | 346,356 |
Hingham Institution for Savings | | 8,728 | 1,335,559 |
Home Bancorp, Inc. | | 46,720 | 1,186,688 |
HomeStreet, Inc. | | 132,178 | 3,377,148 |
Kearny Financial Corp. | | 464,798 | 4,322,621 |
Luther Burbank Corp. | | 121,234 | 1,304,478 |
Merchants Bancorp/IN (b) | | 50,545 | 778,393 |
Meridian Bancorp, Inc. Maryland | | 294,972 | 3,474,770 |
Meta Financial Group, Inc. | | 205,939 | 3,793,396 |
MMA Capital Management, LLC (a) | | 28,151 | 718,132 |
NMI Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 395,719 | 5,350,121 |
Northfield Bancorp, Inc. | | 264,964 | 2,986,144 |
Northwest Bancshares, Inc. | | 744,297 | 7,896,991 |
OceanFirst Financial Corp. | | 328,841 | 5,540,971 |
Ocwen Financial Corp. (a) | | 708,452 | 298,754 |
OP Bancorp | | 76,405 | 539,419 |
PCSB Financial Corp. | | 98,124 | 1,339,393 |
PDL Community Bancorp (a) | | 41,057 | 378,135 |
Pennymac Financial Services, Inc. | | 150,229 | 4,532,409 |
Pioneer Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 62,818 | 664,614 |
Provident Bancorp, Inc. | | 50,082 | 477,782 |
Provident Financial Holdings, Inc. | | 33,431 | 436,275 |
Provident Financial Services, Inc. | | 365,427 | 5,243,877 |
Prudential Bancorp, Inc. | | 50,152 | 616,870 |
Radian Group, Inc. | | 1,214,004 | 18,185,780 |
Riverview Bancorp, Inc. | | 129,462 | 715,925 |
Southern Missouri Bancorp, Inc. | | 45,792 | 1,086,644 |
Sterling Bancorp, Inc. | | 100,872 | 364,148 |
Territorial Bancorp, Inc. | | 45,069 | 1,132,584 |
Timberland Bancorp, Inc. | | 44,728 | 865,487 |
Trustco Bank Corp., New York | | 580,512 | 3,657,226 |
Velocity Financial, Inc. (b) | | 43,777 | 165,915 |
Walker & Dunlop, Inc. | | 165,659 | 6,366,275 |
Washington Federal, Inc. | | 464,425 | 12,418,725 |
Waterstone Financial, Inc. | | 140,134 | 2,034,746 |
Westfield Financial, Inc. | | 138,365 | 831,574 |
WMI Holdings Corp. (a) | | 457,021 | 4,378,261 |
WSFS Financial Corp. | | 304,824 | 8,894,764 |
| | | 174,653,509 |
|
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | | 1,572,015,598 |
|
HEALTH CARE - 21.6% | | | |
Biotechnology - 9.9% | | | |
89Bio, Inc. (a)(b) | | 17,596 | 413,682 |
Abeona Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 328,370 | 781,521 |
ACADIA Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 675,127 | 32,615,385 |
Acceleron Pharma, Inc. (a) | | 270,018 | 24,444,730 |
Acorda Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 233,844 | 225,075 |
Adamas Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 140,522 | 453,886 |
ADMA Biologics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 417,065 | 1,230,342 |
Aduro Biotech, Inc. (a) | | 389,066 | 1,075,767 |
Adverum Biotechnologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 378,448 | 4,484,609 |
Aeglea BioTherapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 149,313 | 1,160,162 |
Affimed NV (a) | | 461,082 | 1,009,770 |
Agenus, Inc. (a)(b) | | 640,026 | 1,705,669 |
AgeX Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 104,693 | 88,382 |
Aimmune Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 269,469 | 4,613,309 |
Akebia Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 706,247 | 5,720,601 |
Akero Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 50,731 | 1,034,912 |
Albireo Pharma, Inc. (a) | | 77,320 | 1,736,607 |
Aldeyra Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 135,604 | 427,153 |
Alector, Inc. (a)(b) | | 207,130 | 5,120,254 |
Allakos, Inc. (a)(b) | | 116,875 | 7,685,700 |
Allogene Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 232,413 | 6,716,736 |
AMAG Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 201,258 | 1,616,102 |
Amicus Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,535,330 | 18,132,247 |
AnaptysBio, Inc. (a)(b) | | 146,713 | 2,291,657 |
Anavex Life Sciences Corp. (a)(b) | | 295,235 | 1,021,513 |
Anika Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 80,152 | 2,663,451 |
Apellis Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 343,282 | 11,764,274 |
Applied Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 48,670 | 1,739,953 |
Aprea Therapeutics, Inc. (b) | | 39,199 | 1,246,136 |
Arcus Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 194,103 | 5,126,260 |
Arcutis Biotherapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 62,263 | 1,850,456 |
Ardelyx, Inc. (a) | | 373,363 | 2,456,729 |
Arena Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 302,559 | 14,816,314 |
Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 600,590 | 20,678,314 |
Assembly Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 170,789 | 2,990,515 |
Atara Biotherapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 309,838 | 2,568,557 |
Athenex, Inc. (a)(b) | | 409,091 | 3,657,274 |
Athersys, Inc. (a)(b) | | 796,481 | 1,831,906 |
Atreca, Inc. (b) | | 102,730 | 1,569,714 |
Avid Bioservices, Inc. (a)(b) | | 339,532 | 2,071,145 |
AVROBIO, Inc. (a) | | 140,012 | 1,801,954 |
Axcella Health, Inc. | | 46,613 | 217,217 |
Beam Therapeutics, Inc. (b) | | 72,091 | 1,149,851 |
BeyondSpring, Inc. (a)(b) | | 76,419 | 1,096,613 |
BioCryst Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 921,646 | 3,603,636 |
Biohaven Pharmaceutical Holding Co. Ltd. (a)(b) | | 256,696 | 12,090,382 |
Biospecifics Technologies Corp. (a) | | 37,168 | 2,115,231 |
BioTime, Inc. (a)(b) | | 623,478 | 529,956 |
BioXcel Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 41,371 | 1,530,727 |
Black Diamond Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 72,187 | 2,673,806 |
Blueprint Medicines Corp. (a) | | 321,199 | 18,896,137 |
Bridgebio Pharma, Inc. (b) | | 449,592 | 13,726,044 |
Cabaletta Bio, Inc. (a) | | 38,155 | 276,624 |
Calithera Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 335,993 | 2,059,637 |
Calyxt, Inc. (a) | | 51,106 | 222,822 |
CareDx, Inc. (a)(b) | | 246,680 | 6,260,738 |
CASI Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 292,039 | 543,193 |
Castle Biosciences, Inc. (b) | | 56,917 | 1,760,443 |
Catalyst Pharmaceutical Partners, Inc. (a)(b) | | 581,863 | 2,758,031 |
Cel-Sci Corp. (a)(b) | | 196,387 | 3,456,411 |
Celcuity, Inc. (a) | | 30,029 | 180,474 |
Cellular Biomedicine Group, Inc. (a) | | 72,368 | 1,049,336 |
Centogene NV (a)(b) | | 10,793 | 210,464 |
Checkpoint Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 182,427 | 321,072 |
ChemoCentryx, Inc. (a) | | 244,015 | 12,935,235 |
Chimerix, Inc. (a) | | 259,444 | 596,721 |
Clovis Oncology, Inc. (a)(b) | | 301,435 | 2,293,920 |
Coherus BioSciences, Inc. (a) | | 375,638 | 6,235,591 |
Concert Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 161,243 | 1,609,205 |
Constellation Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 113,278 | 4,075,742 |
Corbus Pharmaceuticals Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 395,355 | 2,561,900 |
Cortexyme, Inc. (b) | | 67,806 | 3,093,310 |
Crinetics Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 65,432 | 1,091,406 |
Cue Biopharma, Inc. (a) | | 119,694 | 3,061,773 |
Cyclerion Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 137,395 | 531,719 |
Cytokinetics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 333,992 | 5,046,619 |
CytomX Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 272,500 | 2,812,200 |
Deciphera Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 125,226 | 7,260,603 |
Denali Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 312,835 | 6,838,573 |
Dicerna Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 320,853 | 6,320,804 |
Dynavax Technologies Corp. (a)(b) | | 497,890 | 2,116,033 |
Eagle Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 54,317 | 2,769,081 |
Editas Medicine, Inc. (a)(b) | | 309,137 | 7,147,247 |
Eidos Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 67,584 | 3,138,601 |
Eiger Biopharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 141,997 | 1,056,458 |
Emergent BioSolutions, Inc. (a) | | 273,677 | 20,238,414 |
Enanta Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 113,872 | 5,280,245 |
Enochian Biosciences, Inc. (a)(b) | | 78,553 | 268,651 |
Epizyme, Inc. (a)(b) | | 465,323 | 7,659,217 |
Esperion Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 151,722 | 6,008,191 |
Evelo Biosciences, Inc. (a)(b) | | 80,569 | 446,352 |
Fate Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 363,997 | 9,966,238 |
FibroGen, Inc. (a) | | 471,207 | 17,382,826 |
Five Prime Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 189,540 | 621,691 |
Flexion Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 204,808 | 2,179,157 |
Frequency Therapeutics, Inc. (b) | | 36,551 | 581,526 |
G1 Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 202,125 | 2,653,901 |
Galectin Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 240,306 | 597,160 |
Galera Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 10,149 | 138,635 |
Geron Corp. (a)(b) | | 1,114,094 | 1,325,772 |
Global Blood Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 347,494 | 26,590,241 |
GlycoMimetics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 191,552 | 534,430 |
Gossamer Bio, Inc. (a) | | 257,519 | 3,352,897 |
Gritstone Oncology, Inc. (a)(b) | | 151,329 | 1,060,816 |
Halozyme Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 805,978 | 18,259,432 |
Harpoon Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 43,278 | 545,303 |
Heron Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 503,784 | 7,183,960 |
Homology Medicines, Inc. (a)(b) | | 149,950 | 1,809,897 |
Hookipa Pharma, Inc. | | 59,206 | 524,565 |
IGM Biosciences, Inc. (a)(b) | | 29,551 | 1,618,508 |
ImmunoGen, Inc. (a) | | 1,007,626 | 4,111,114 |
Immunomedics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,140,313 | 34,642,709 |
Inovio Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 567,794 | 6,830,562 |
Insmed, Inc. (a) | | 533,222 | 12,264,106 |
Intellia Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 232,913 | 3,137,338 |
Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 150,677 | 12,343,460 |
Invitae Corp. (a)(b) | | 519,173 | 8,592,313 |
Iovance Biotherapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 702,724 | 22,592,577 |
Ironwood Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 936,147 | 9,361,470 |
Jounce Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 94,685 | 463,957 |
Kadmon Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 959,489 | 4,125,803 |
Kalvista Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 78,063 | 851,667 |
Karuna Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 62,959 | 5,230,634 |
Karyopharm Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 357,308 | 7,878,641 |
Kezar Life Sciences, Inc. (a)(b) | | 182,979 | 860,001 |
Kindred Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 222,029 | 1,114,586 |
Kiniksa Pharmaceuticals Ltd. (a)(b) | | 83,760 | 1,671,012 |
Kodiak Sciences, Inc. (a)(b) | | 167,914 | 9,159,709 |
Krystal Biotech, Inc. (a)(b) | | 62,686 | 2,958,152 |
Kura Oncology, Inc. (a)(b) | | 203,067 | 2,954,625 |
La Jolla Pharmaceutical Co. (a)(b) | | 124,588 | 904,509 |
Lexicon Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 238,759 | 451,255 |
Ligand Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Class B (a)(b) | | 102,592 | 10,112,493 |
LogicBio Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 48,673 | 278,410 |
Macrogenics, Inc. (a) | | 284,890 | 2,051,208 |
Madrigal Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 53,870 | 4,507,842 |
Magenta Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 115,119 | 938,220 |
MannKind Corp. (a)(b) | | 1,113,036 | 1,446,947 |
Marker Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 153,152 | 421,934 |
MediciNova, Inc. (a)(b) | | 248,738 | 1,281,001 |
MEI Pharma, Inc. (a)(b) | | 608,082 | 1,647,902 |
MeiraGTx Holdings PLC (a) | | 102,369 | 1,409,621 |
Mersana Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 216,289 | 1,953,090 |
Minerva Neurosciences, Inc. (a) | | 179,120 | 1,606,706 |
Mirati Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 178,387 | 15,170,030 |
Mirum Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 31,142 | 526,300 |
Molecular Templates, Inc. (a) | | 121,178 | 1,966,719 |
Momenta Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 680,526 | 21,572,674 |
Morphic Holding, Inc. (b) | | 65,724 | 894,504 |
Mustang Bio, Inc. (a) | | 162,536 | 448,599 |
Myriad Genetics, Inc. (a) | | 426,640 | 6,595,854 |
Natera, Inc. (a) | | 373,904 | 13,849,404 |
Neon Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 84,483 | 244,156 |
NextCure, Inc. | | 85,892 | 2,784,619 |
Novavax, Inc. (a) | | 192,215 | 3,484,858 |
OncoCyte Corp. (a) | | 132,596 | 358,009 |
Oncternal Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 775 | 2,093 |
Oncternal Therapeutics, Inc. rights (a)(c) | | 4,336 | 0 |
Opko Health, Inc. (a)(b) | | 2,311,816 | 5,132,232 |
Organogenesis Holdings, Inc. Class A (a) | | 65,612 | 243,421 |
OvaScience, Inc. (a) | | 71,774 | 119,863 |
Oyster Point Pharma, Inc. (a)(b) | | 33,536 | 985,958 |
Palatin Technologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,338,797 | 648,647 |
PDL BioPharma, Inc. (a)(b) | | 672,726 | 2,280,541 |
Pfenex, Inc. (a) | | 181,758 | 1,045,109 |
PhaseBio Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 81,048 | 312,845 |
Pieris Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 280,544 | 743,442 |
Polarityte, Inc. (a) | | 106,727 | 109,929 |
Portola Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 456,737 | 3,233,698 |
Precigen, Inc. (a)(b) | | 436,115 | 1,570,014 |
Precision BioSciences, Inc. (a)(b) | | 215,417 | 1,482,069 |
Prevail Therapeutics, Inc. | | 85,545 | 1,236,125 |
Principia Biopharma, Inc. (a) | | 110,108 | 6,846,515 |
Progenics Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 524,619 | 2,066,999 |
Protagonist Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 106,991 | 722,189 |
Prothena Corp. PLC (a) | | 240,635 | 2,699,925 |
PTC Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 362,149 | 18,440,627 |
Puma Biotechnology, Inc. (a)(b) | | 186,379 | 1,873,109 |
Radius Health, Inc. (a) | | 270,160 | 4,238,810 |
RAPT Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 10,862 | 164,994 |
Recro Pharma, Inc. (a) | | 118,647 | 1,003,754 |
REGENXBIO, Inc. (a) | | 199,601 | 7,948,112 |
Repligen Corp. (a) | | 313,466 | 36,409,076 |
Replimune Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 80,347 | 1,453,477 |
Retrophin, Inc. (a)(b) | | 247,065 | 3,760,329 |
Revolution Medicines, Inc. | | 84,195 | 2,632,778 |
Rhythm Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 175,209 | 3,300,938 |
Rigel Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,029,530 | 1,842,859 |
Rocket Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 192,120 | 2,843,376 |
Rubius Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 211,070 | 1,276,974 |
Sangamo Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 686,553 | 5,595,407 |
Savara, Inc. (a)(b) | | 201,823 | 486,393 |
Scholar Rock Holding Corp. (a)(b) | | 106,435 | 1,748,727 |
Seres Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 219,122 | 806,369 |
Solid Biosciences, Inc. (a)(b) | | 106,026 | 245,980 |
Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 780,150 | 1,770,941 |
Spectrum Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 671,120 | 1,946,248 |
Spero Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 76,178 | 946,893 |
Springworks Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 63,238 | 1,913,582 |
Stemline Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 281,008 | 1,469,672 |
Stoke Therapeutics, Inc. (b) | | 101,984 | 2,144,724 |
Sutro Biopharma, Inc. (a) | | 64,493 | 635,256 |
Syndax Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 135,148 | 2,432,664 |
Synlogic, Inc. (a)(b) | | 90,402 | 188,036 |
Syros Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 206,630 | 1,741,891 |
TCR2 Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 68,902 | 657,325 |
TG Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 516,517 | 6,074,240 |
Tobira Therapeutics, Inc. rights (a)(c) | | 9,663 | 79,526 |
Tocagen, Inc. (a)(b) | | 119,743 | 140,099 |
Translate Bio, Inc. (a)(b) | | 208,153 | 2,672,685 |
Turning Point Therapeutics, Inc. (b) | | 166,163 | 8,559,056 |
Twist Bioscience Corp. (a) | | 156,840 | 5,130,236 |
Tyme, Inc. (a)(b) | | 355,459 | 575,844 |
Ultragenyx Pharmaceutical, Inc. (a)(b) | | 327,823 | 19,810,344 |
UNITY Biotechnology, Inc. (a)(b) | | 173,577 | 1,126,515 |
UroGen Pharma Ltd. (a)(b) | | 111,958 | 2,486,587 |
Vanda Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 310,517 | 3,570,946 |
VBI Vaccines, Inc. (a)(b) | | 922,696 | 1,125,689 |
Veracyte, Inc. (a) | | 282,824 | 7,627,763 |
Vericel Corp. (a)(b) | | 267,521 | 3,879,055 |
Viela Bio, Inc. (b) | | 33,186 | 1,348,347 |
Viking Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 388,817 | 2,239,586 |
Vir Biotechnology, Inc. (a) | | 43,053 | 1,313,547 |
Voyager Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 147,077 | 1,589,902 |
X4 Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 87,868 | 818,051 |
Xbiotech, Inc. (a) | | 78,298 | 1,238,674 |
Xencor, Inc. (a) | | 283,199 | 8,277,907 |
Y-mAbs Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 141,760 | 4,760,301 |
ZIOPHARM Oncology, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,106,236 | 3,097,461 |
| | | 979,782,930 |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 4.8% | | | |
Accuray, Inc. (a) | | 538,296 | 1,203,092 |
Alphatec Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 239,835 | 1,086,453 |
Angiodynamics, Inc. (a) | | 222,273 | 2,318,307 |
Antares Pharma, Inc. (a) | | 974,606 | 3,157,723 |
Atricure, Inc. (a) | | 227,831 | 9,824,073 |
Atrion Corp. | | 8,587 | 5,425,524 |
Avanos Medical, Inc. (a)(b) | | 283,167 | 8,792,335 |
AxoGen, Inc. (a) | | 206,160 | 2,010,060 |
Axonics Modulation Technologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 111,472 | 3,590,513 |
BioLife Solutions, Inc. (a)(b) | | 43,328 | 473,575 |
BioSig Technologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 97,158 | 753,946 |
Bovie Medical Corp. (a) | | 198,913 | 676,304 |
Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. (a) | | 206,916 | 8,690,472 |
Cerus Corp. (a)(b) | | 941,299 | 5,788,989 |
ConforMis, Inc. (a)(b) | | 373,006 | 286,730 |
CONMED Corp. | | 163,252 | 12,065,955 |
Cryolife, Inc. (a) | | 218,449 | 4,877,966 |
CryoPort, Inc. (a)(b) | | 189,781 | 3,575,474 |
Cutera, Inc. (a) | | 84,746 | 1,139,834 |
CytoSorbents Corp. (a)(b) | | 184,263 | 1,577,291 |
electroCore, Inc. (a)(b) | | 75,362 | 72,355 |
Genmark Diagnostics, Inc. (a) | | 331,355 | 4,145,251 |
Glaukos Corp. (a)(b) | | 233,445 | 8,565,097 |
Globus Medical, Inc. (a) | | 455,885 | 21,636,302 |
Haemonetics Corp. (a) | | 302,875 | 34,461,118 |
Heska Corp. (a) | | 42,044 | 2,976,715 |
Inogen, Inc. (a) | | 109,407 | 5,470,350 |
Integer Holdings Corp. (a) | | 194,880 | 14,510,765 |
IntriCon Corp. (a)(b) | | 46,329 | 611,543 |
Invacare Corp. | | 202,968 | 1,526,319 |
IRadimed Corp. (a)(b) | | 27,760 | 604,058 |
iRhythm Technologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 158,857 | 16,781,653 |
Lantheus Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 230,526 | 3,008,364 |
LeMaitre Vascular, Inc. | | 98,298 | 2,800,510 |
LivaNova PLC (a) | | 291,200 | 15,468,544 |
Meridian Bioscience, Inc. (a) | | 252,682 | 3,032,184 |
Merit Medical Systems, Inc. (a) | | 321,592 | 13,127,385 |
Mesa Laboratories, Inc. (b) | | 23,876 | 5,682,488 |
Misonix, Inc. (a)(b) | | 54,581 | 687,175 |
Natus Medical, Inc. (a) | | 201,732 | 5,041,283 |
Neogen Corp. (a) | | 311,090 | 19,471,123 |
Neuronetics, Inc. (a) | | 63,078 | 157,695 |
Nevro Corp. (a) | | 179,316 | 21,094,734 |
Novocure Ltd. (a) | | 521,210 | 34,295,618 |
NuVasive, Inc. (a) | | 311,385 | 18,957,119 |
OraSure Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 368,930 | 5,880,744 |
Orthofix International NV (a) | | 108,396 | 3,842,638 |
OrthoPediatrics Corp. (a)(b) | | 59,800 | 2,921,230 |
Pulse Biosciences, Inc. (a)(b) | | 64,772 | 727,390 |
Quidel Corp. (a) | | 214,633 | 29,833,987 |
Rockwell Medical Technologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 389,314 | 907,102 |
RTI Biologics, Inc. (a) | | 331,401 | 896,440 |
Seaspine Holdings Corp. (a) | | 131,297 | 1,352,359 |
Senseonics Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 706,082 | 402,467 |
Shockwave Medical, Inc. (a) | | 153,086 | 6,141,810 |
SI-BONE, Inc. (a) | | 115,191 | 1,862,638 |
Sientra, Inc. (a) | | 238,890 | 549,447 |
Silk Road Medical, Inc. (b) | | 95,969 | 4,019,182 |
Soliton, Inc. (a)(b) | | 33,203 | 299,823 |
Staar Surgical Co. (a)(b) | | 266,062 | 10,195,496 |
SurModics, Inc. (a) | | 78,601 | 2,994,698 |
Tactile Systems Technology, Inc. (a)(b) | | 109,902 | 5,673,141 |
Tandem Diabetes Care, Inc. (a) | | 336,300 | 26,830,014 |
TransEnterix, Inc. (a)(b) | | 106,752 | 44,270 |
TransMedics Group, Inc. (b) | | 85,279 | 1,542,697 |
Utah Medical Products, Inc. | | 21,038 | 1,746,154 |
Vapotherm, Inc. (a) | | 89,398 | 1,812,991 |
Varex Imaging Corp. (a) | | 225,711 | 5,897,828 |
ViewRay, Inc. (a)(b) | | 627,192 | 1,304,559 |
Wright Medical Group NV (a) | | 755,741 | 22,007,178 |
Zynex, Inc. (a)(b) | | 95,258 | 1,682,256 |
| | | 472,868,903 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 2.3% | | | |
1Life Healthcare, Inc. (a)(b) | | 115,428 | 2,847,609 |
Addus HomeCare Corp. (a) | | 74,553 | 6,040,284 |
Amedisys, Inc. (a) | | 188,148 | 34,649,336 |
American Renal Associates Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 107,614 | 804,953 |
AMN Healthcare Services, Inc. (a) | | 276,136 | 12,972,869 |
Apollo Medical Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 50,231 | 780,590 |
Avalon GloboCare Corp. (a) | | 117,412 | 216,038 |
BioScrip, Inc. (a) | | 185,689 | 2,655,353 |
BioTelemetry, Inc. (a) | | 198,849 | 9,288,237 |
Brookdale Senior Living, Inc. (a) | | 1,105,877 | 3,992,216 |
Catasys, Inc. (a)(b) | | 43,360 | 1,319,878 |
Community Health Systems, Inc. (a)(b) | | 519,410 | 1,573,812 |
Corvel Corp. (a) | | 52,742 | 2,778,976 |
Cross Country Healthcare, Inc. (a) | | 214,017 | 1,346,167 |
Enzo Biochem, Inc. (a) | | 268,860 | 811,957 |
Exagen, Inc. (a)(b) | | 20,031 | 312,484 |
Genesis HealthCare, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 463,981 | 403,663 |
Hanger, Inc. (a) | | 216,399 | 3,973,086 |
HealthEquity, Inc. (a) | | 415,503 | 23,380,354 |
LHC Group, Inc. (a) | | 180,488 | 23,461,635 |
Magellan Health Services, Inc. (a) | | 131,126 | 7,963,282 |
National Healthcare Corp. | | 73,133 | 5,000,103 |
National Research Corp. Class A | | 71,934 | 3,711,075 |
Owens & Minor, Inc. (b) | | 366,517 | 2,594,940 |
Patterson Companies, Inc. | | 501,328 | 9,164,276 |
Pennant Group, Inc. (a) | | 151,801 | 3,004,142 |
PetIQ, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 118,945 | 3,401,827 |
Progyny, Inc. (a)(b) | | 71,653 | 1,678,830 |
Providence Service Corp. (a) | | 69,701 | 4,043,355 |
R1 RCM, Inc. (a) | | 621,606 | 6,414,974 |
RadNet, Inc. (a) | | 250,322 | 3,534,547 |
Select Medical Holdings Corp. (a) | | 659,176 | 11,252,134 |
Surgery Partners, Inc. (a)(b) | | 145,019 | 1,711,224 |
Tenet Healthcare Corp. (a) | | 617,023 | 12,451,524 |
The Ensign Group, Inc. | | 303,561 | 11,356,217 |
The Joint Corp. (a)(b) | | 80,410 | 972,961 |
Tivity Health, Inc. (a)(b) | | 285,932 | 2,564,810 |
Triple-S Management Corp. (b) | | 137,063 | 2,320,477 |
U.S. Physical Therapy, Inc. | | 74,923 | 5,656,687 |
| | | 232,406,882 |
Health Care Technology - 1.7% | | | |
Allscripts Healthcare Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 968,580 | 6,295,770 |
Castlight Health, Inc. Class B (a) | | 576,832 | 422,818 |
Computer Programs & Systems, Inc. | | 77,315 | 1,857,879 |
Evolent Health, Inc. (a)(b) | | 443,009 | 3,194,095 |
Health Catalyst, Inc. (b) | | 114,672 | 3,058,302 |
HealthStream, Inc. (a) | | 155,701 | 3,553,875 |
HMS Holdings Corp. (a) | | 526,644 | 15,101,517 |
Inovalon Holdings, Inc. Class A (a) | | 436,615 | 7,640,763 |
Inspire Medical Systems, Inc. (a) | | 80,387 | 5,760,532 |
Livongo Health, Inc. (b) | | 308,841 | 12,356,728 |
Nextgen Healthcare, Inc. (a) | | 327,648 | 3,456,686 |
Omnicell, Inc. (a) | | 248,543 | 18,118,785 |
OptimizeRx Corp. (a)(b) | | 81,069 | 754,752 |
Phreesia, Inc. | | 162,583 | 4,127,982 |
Schrodinger, Inc. | | 82,362 | 3,821,597 |
Simulations Plus, Inc. (b) | | 71,735 | 2,729,517 |
Tabula Rasa HealthCare, Inc. (a)(b) | | 117,016 | 7,411,793 |
Teladoc Health, Inc. (a)(b) | | 433,208 | 71,301,662 |
Vocera Communications, Inc. (a)(b) | | 186,422 | 3,534,561 |
| | | 174,499,614 |
Life Sciences Tools & Services - 0.8% | | | |
Accelerate Diagnostics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 165,395 | 1,804,459 |
ChromaDex, Inc. (a)(b) | | 246,058 | 1,230,290 |
Codexis, Inc. (a)(b) | | 315,387 | 3,661,643 |
Fluidigm Corp. (a) | | 415,833 | 931,466 |
Luminex Corp. | | 251,809 | 9,077,714 |
Medpace Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 165,501 | 13,216,910 |
Nanostring Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 204,098 | 6,482,152 |
NeoGenomics, Inc. (a) | | 571,886 | 15,635,363 |
Pacific Biosciences of California, Inc. (a)(b) | | 858,004 | 2,835,703 |
Personalis, Inc. (a)(b) | | 112,717 | 1,168,875 |
Quanterix Corp. (a) | | 80,203 | 2,101,319 |
Syneos Health, Inc. (a) | | 373,330 | 20,828,081 |
| | | 78,973,975 |
Pharmaceuticals - 2.1% | | | |
AcelRx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 468,999 | 755,088 |
Acer Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 17,655 | 42,372 |
Aclaris Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 149,250 | 198,503 |
Aerie Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 253,824 | 3,868,278 |
Akcea Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 77,329 | 1,319,233 |
Akorn, Inc. (a) | | 537,499 | 112,875 |
Amneal Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 706,645 | 2,565,121 |
Amphastar Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 215,687 | 3,655,895 |
ANI Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 55,341 | 2,214,193 |
Arvinas Holding Co. LLC (a) | | 127,083 | 6,671,858 |
Assertio Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 352,326 | 308,285 |
AstraZeneca PLC rights (a)(c) | | 1,000 | 0 |
Axsome Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 162,016 | 15,396,380 |
Baudax Bio, Inc. (a)(b) | | 49,228 | 151,376 |
Biodelivery Sciences International, Inc. (a) | | 505,369 | 2,304,483 |
Cara Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 240,173 | 3,559,364 |
Cerecor, Inc. (a)(b) | | 136,494 | 323,491 |
Chiasma, Inc. (a)(b) | | 202,255 | 1,045,658 |
Collegium Pharmaceutical, Inc. (a)(b) | | 193,007 | 3,991,385 |
Corcept Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 573,634 | 7,262,206 |
CorMedix, Inc. (a)(b) | | 150,883 | 626,164 |
CymaBay Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 430,225 | 761,498 |
Eloxx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 144,814 | 422,857 |
Endo International PLC (a) | | 1,348,120 | 6,201,352 |
Evofem Biosciences, Inc. (a)(b) | | 87,844 | 416,381 |
Evolus, Inc. (a)(b) | | 114,858 | 477,809 |
Eyepoint Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 372,827 | 360,859 |
Fulcrum Therapeutics, Inc. (b) | | 76,135 | 960,824 |
Innoviva, Inc. (a) | | 379,912 | 5,387,152 |
Intersect ENT, Inc. (a) | | 184,807 | 2,121,584 |
Intra-Cellular Therapies, Inc. (a) | | 316,173 | 5,586,777 |
Kala Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 141,969 | 1,414,011 |
Kaleido Biosciences, Inc. (a)(b) | | 68,080 | 443,201 |
Lannett Co., Inc. (a)(b) | | 193,458 | 1,845,589 |
Liquidia Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 77,810 | 387,494 |
Mallinckrodt PLC (a)(b) | | 501,589 | 2,036,451 |
Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 497,091 | 1,014,066 |
Menlo Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 289,820 | 527,472 |
MyoKardia, Inc. (a) | | 266,472 | 16,739,771 |
NGM Biopharmaceuticals, Inc. (b) | | 146,869 | 2,681,828 |
Ocular Therapeutix, Inc. (a)(b) | | 255,574 | 1,472,106 |
Odonate Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 57,260 | 1,611,869 |
Omeros Corp. (a)(b) | | 306,360 | 5,091,703 |
OptiNose, Inc. (a)(b) | | 164,749 | 665,586 |
Osmotica Pharmaceuticals PLC (a)(b) | | 53,712 | 214,848 |
Pacira Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 245,590 | 10,140,411 |
Paratek Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 197,355 | 807,182 |
Phathom Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 64,887 | 2,195,776 |
Phibro Animal Health Corp. Class A | | 121,951 | 3,257,311 |
Prestige Brands Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 302,084 | 12,291,798 |
Reata Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 135,936 | 21,499,638 |
resTORbio, Inc. (a)(b) | | 66,636 | 101,953 |
Revance Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 308,999 | 5,719,571 |
Satsuma Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 25,557 | 500,917 |
SIGA Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 337,644 | 1,995,476 |
Strongbridge Biopharma PLC (a) | | 213,212 | 609,786 |
Supernus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 295,487 | 6,914,396 |
TherapeuticsMD, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,339,191 | 2,115,922 |
Theravance Biopharma, Inc. (a)(b) | | 294,381 | 8,584,150 |
Tricida, Inc. (a) | | 131,004 | 3,962,871 |
Verrica Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 76,700 | 925,769 |
WAVE Life Sciences (a)(b) | | 136,801 | 1,187,433 |
Xeris Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 200,884 | 542,387 |
Zogenix, Inc. (a) | | 255,585 | 7,215,165 |
Zynerba Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 138,161 | 534,683 |
| | | 206,317,891 |
|
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | | 2,144,850,195 |
|
INDUSTRIALS - 14.9% | | | |
Aerospace & Defense - 1.3% | | | |
AAR Corp. | | 199,048 | 3,897,360 |
Aerojet Rocketdyne Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 438,179 | 18,026,684 |
AeroVironment, Inc. (a)(b) | | 127,502 | 7,683,271 |
Astronics Corp. (a) | | 136,606 | 1,226,722 |
Axon Enterprise, Inc. (a)(b) | | 349,978 | 25,446,900 |
Cubic Corp. | | 187,099 | 7,149,053 |
Ducommun, Inc. (a) | | 64,141 | 1,811,342 |
Kratos Defense & Security Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 539,526 | 8,103,681 |
Maxar Technologies, Inc. (b) | | 358,422 | 4,519,701 |
Mercury Systems, Inc. (a) | | 325,480 | 29,019,797 |
Moog, Inc. Class A | | 185,949 | 9,200,757 |
National Presto Industries, Inc. | | 29,832 | 2,425,640 |
Park Aerospace Corp. | | 110,447 | 1,470,050 |
Parsons Corp. | | 114,949 | 4,299,093 |
Triumph Group, Inc. (b) | | 298,414 | 2,100,835 |
Vectrus, Inc. (a) | | 67,597 | 3,515,720 |
| | | 129,896,606 |
Air Freight & Logistics - 0.3% | | | |
Air Transport Services Group, Inc. (a) | | 349,310 | 7,070,034 |
Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 139,296 | 4,575,874 |
Echo Global Logistics, Inc. (a) | | 163,630 | 2,868,434 |
Forward Air Corp. | | 168,849 | 8,712,608 |
Hub Group, Inc. Class A (a) | | 193,345 | 9,301,828 |
Radiant Logistics, Inc. (a) | | 230,565 | 986,818 |
| | | 33,515,596 |
Airlines - 0.3% | | | |
Allegiant Travel Co. (b) | | 77,916 | 6,114,848 |
Hawaiian Holdings, Inc. | | 272,719 | 3,927,154 |
Mesa Air Group, Inc. (a) | | 173,939 | 790,553 |
SkyWest, Inc. | | 296,069 | 9,163,336 |
Spirit Airlines, Inc. (a)(b) | | 411,140 | 6,175,323 |
| | | 26,171,214 |
Building Products - 1.6% | | | |
AAON, Inc. | | 246,424 | 11,739,639 |
Advanced Drain Systems, Inc. | | 260,367 | 10,555,278 |
American Woodmark Corp. (a) | | 101,090 | 5,197,037 |
Apogee Enterprises, Inc. | | 156,857 | 3,206,157 |
Armstrong Flooring, Inc. (a) | | 91,536 | 192,226 |
Builders FirstSource, Inc. (a) | | 682,187 | 12,518,131 |
Caesarstone Sdot-Yam Ltd. | | 133,720 | 1,311,793 |
CSW Industrials, Inc. | | 89,169 | 5,906,555 |
Gibraltar Industries, Inc. (a) | | 193,426 | 8,955,624 |
Griffon Corp. | | 218,133 | 3,579,563 |
Insteel Industries, Inc. | | 111,046 | 1,951,078 |
Jeld-Wen Holding, Inc. (a) | | 404,592 | 5,138,318 |
Masonite International Corp. (a) | | 147,333 | 8,704,434 |
NCI Building Systems, Inc. (a) | | 278,293 | 1,483,302 |
Patrick Industries, Inc. | | 135,559 | 5,587,742 |
PGT, Inc. (a) | | 339,606 | 3,511,526 |
Quanex Building Products Corp. | | 201,121 | 2,507,979 |
Simpson Manufacturing Co. Ltd. | | 268,525 | 19,360,653 |
Trex Co., Inc. (a)(b) | | 352,520 | 33,566,954 |
Universal Forest Products, Inc. | | 357,259 | 14,690,490 |
| | | 159,664,479 |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 2.5% | | | |
ABM Industries, Inc. | | 399,513 | 13,779,203 |
ACCO Brands Corp. | | 575,072 | 4,255,533 |
ADS Waste Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 432,548 | 13,949,673 |
Brady Corp. Class A | | 290,665 | 12,655,554 |
BrightView Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 190,539 | 2,442,710 |
Casella Waste Systems, Inc. Class A (a) | | 274,662 | 12,738,824 |
CECO Environmental Corp. (a) | | 182,198 | 987,513 |
Charah Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 45,474 | 73,213 |
Cimpress PLC (a)(b) | | 112,198 | 8,166,892 |
CompX International, Inc. Class A | | 9,148 | 126,059 |
Covanta Holding Corp. | | 707,611 | 5,505,214 |
Deluxe Corp. | | 253,162 | 7,131,574 |
Ennis, Inc. (b) | | 153,013 | 2,847,572 |
Harsco Corp. (a) | | 467,530 | 4,665,949 |
Healthcare Services Group, Inc. | | 445,823 | 11,364,028 |
Heritage-Crystal Clean, Inc. (a) | | 92,172 | 1,691,356 |
Herman Miller, Inc. | | 352,750 | 7,950,985 |
HNI Corp. | | 256,467 | 6,242,407 |
Interface, Inc. | | 347,846 | 3,214,097 |
Kimball International, Inc. Class B | | 218,898 | 2,685,878 |
Knoll, Inc. | | 293,566 | 3,422,980 |
Matthews International Corp. Class A | | 181,989 | 4,356,817 |
McGrath RentCorp. | | 145,741 | 7,950,172 |
Mobile Mini, Inc. | | 262,891 | 7,510,796 |
MSA Safety, Inc. | | 211,755 | 23,828,790 |
NL Industries, Inc. | | 33,027 | 110,640 |
PICO Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 105,368 | 901,950 |
Pitney Bowes, Inc. | | 1,020,089 | 3,600,914 |
Quad/Graphics, Inc. | | 200,101 | 744,376 |
R.R. Donnelley & Sons Co. | | 441,098 | 754,278 |
SP Plus Corp. (a) | | 137,423 | 2,898,251 |
Steelcase, Inc. Class A | | 527,978 | 5,781,359 |
Team, Inc. (a)(b) | | 179,339 | 1,106,522 |
Tetra Tech, Inc. | | 327,540 | 24,657,211 |
The Brink's Co. | | 299,492 | 15,310,031 |
U.S. Ecology, Inc. | | 143,956 | 4,718,878 |
UniFirst Corp. | | 90,829 | 15,272,896 |
Viad Corp. | | 120,503 | 2,888,457 |
VSE Corp. | | 51,886 | 997,249 |
| | | 249,286,801 |
Construction & Engineering - 1.0% | | | |
Aegion Corp. (a) | | 182,743 | 2,933,025 |
Ameresco, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 134,379 | 2,426,885 |
Arcosa, Inc. | | 291,486 | 10,863,683 |
Argan, Inc. | | 87,728 | 3,293,309 |
Comfort Systems U.S.A., Inc. | | 217,804 | 7,252,873 |
Concrete Pumping Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 127,274 | 361,458 |
Construction Partners, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 112,977 | 2,070,868 |
Dycom Industries, Inc. (a)(b) | | 182,340 | 5,944,284 |
EMCOR Group, Inc. | | 334,360 | 21,241,891 |
Granite Construction, Inc. | | 281,386 | 4,625,986 |
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Corp. (a) | | 365,396 | 3,230,101 |
Ies Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 49,530 | 978,218 |
MasTec, Inc. (a)(b) | | 359,804 | 12,916,964 |
MYR Group, Inc. (a) | | 97,778 | 2,933,340 |
Northwest Pipe Co. (a) | | 58,711 | 1,427,852 |
NV5 Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 62,561 | 2,924,727 |
Primoris Services Corp. | | 266,858 | 4,165,653 |
Sterling Construction Co., Inc. (a) | | 160,233 | 1,583,102 |
Tutor Perini Corp. (a)(b) | | 239,002 | 1,673,014 |
Williams Scotsman Corp. (a) | | 312,227 | 3,637,445 |
| | | 96,484,678 |
Electrical Equipment - 1.1% | | | |
Allied Motion Technologies, Inc. | | 43,086 | 1,241,739 |
American Superconductor Corp. (a)(b) | | 127,962 | 735,782 |
Atkore International Group, Inc. (a) | | 283,843 | 6,908,739 |
AZZ, Inc. | | 155,881 | 4,893,105 |
Bloom Energy Corp. Class A (a)(b) | | 332,001 | 2,546,448 |
Encore Wire Corp. | | 121,757 | 5,574,035 |
Energous Corp. (a)(b) | | 167,602 | 373,752 |
EnerSys | | 255,989 | 14,947,198 |
Generac Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 366,824 | 35,743,331 |
Plug Power, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,783,835 | 7,465,349 |
Powell Industries, Inc. | | 53,669 | 1,361,583 |
Preformed Line Products Co. | | 18,356 | 911,926 |
Sunrun, Inc. (a) | | 677,890 | 9,510,797 |
Thermon Group Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 194,679 | 2,974,695 |
TPI Composites, Inc. (a)(b) | | 173,208 | 3,036,336 |
Vicor Corp. (a) | | 106,767 | 5,676,801 |
Vivint Solar, Inc. (a)(b) | | 265,380 | 1,682,509 |
| | | 105,584,125 |
Industrial Conglomerates - 0.0% | | | |
Raven Industries, Inc. | | 215,351 | 4,795,867 |
Machinery - 3.5% | | | |
Alamo Group, Inc. | | 58,151 | 5,724,384 |
Albany International Corp. Class A | | 183,711 | 9,394,981 |
Altra Industrial Motion Corp. | | 386,618 | 10,790,508 |
Astec Industries, Inc. | | 134,043 | 5,376,465 |
Barnes Group, Inc. | | 283,007 | 10,861,809 |
Blue Bird Corp. (a) | | 93,102 | 1,142,362 |
Briggs & Stratton Corp. (b) | | 230,417 | 523,047 |
Chart Industries, Inc. (a) | | 215,952 | 7,713,805 |
CIRCOR International, Inc. (a) | | 117,488 | 1,754,096 |
Columbus McKinnon Corp. (NY Shares) | | 138,723 | 3,756,619 |
Commercial Vehicle Group, Inc. (a) | | 171,690 | 415,490 |
Douglas Dynamics, Inc. | | 134,009 | 4,952,973 |
Eastern Co. | | 28,916 | 520,488 |
Energy Recovery, Inc. (a)(b) | | 226,297 | 1,842,058 |
Enerpac Tool Group Corp. Class A | | 329,891 | 5,627,940 |
EnPro Industries, Inc. | | 123,701 | 5,609,840 |
ESCO Technologies, Inc. | | 153,138 | 11,684,429 |
Evoqua Water Technologies Corp. (a) | | 454,635 | 7,296,892 |
Federal Signal Corp. | | 358,443 | 9,652,870 |
Franklin Electric Co., Inc. | | 277,400 | 14,091,920 |
Gencor Industries, Inc. (a) | | 50,863 | 616,460 |
Gorman-Rupp Co. | | 106,025 | 3,127,738 |
Graham Corp. | | 58,011 | 759,944 |
Greenbrier Companies, Inc. | | 193,123 | 3,279,229 |
Hillenbrand, Inc. | | 438,699 | 9,190,744 |
Hurco Companies, Inc. | | 39,334 | 1,285,828 |
Hyster-Yale Materials Handling Class A | | 60,702 | 2,369,806 |
John Bean Technologies Corp. | | 187,267 | 14,370,870 |
Kadant, Inc. | | 65,939 | 5,544,811 |
Kennametal, Inc. | | 492,886 | 12,622,810 |
L.B. Foster Co. Class A (a) | | 60,141 | 865,429 |
Lindsay Corp. | | 64,777 | 5,829,930 |
Luxfer Holdings PLC sponsored | | 164,923 | 2,238,005 |
Lydall, Inc. (a) | | 101,352 | 1,135,142 |
Manitowoc Co., Inc. (a) | | 208,920 | 1,926,242 |
Mayville Engineering Co., Inc. | | 37,677 | 196,674 |
Meritor, Inc. (a)(b) | | 426,001 | 8,733,021 |
Miller Industries, Inc. | | 67,012 | 2,035,825 |
Mueller Industries, Inc. | | 333,381 | 8,634,568 |
Mueller Water Products, Inc. Class A | | 941,034 | 8,930,413 |
Navistar International Corp. (a) | | 297,004 | 7,059,785 |
NN, Inc. (b) | | 254,626 | 878,460 |
Omega Flex, Inc. | | 17,392 | 1,567,019 |
Park-Ohio Holdings Corp. | | 51,709 | 947,826 |
Proto Labs, Inc. (a)(b) | | 161,754 | 16,432,589 |
RBC Bearings, Inc. (a) | | 145,552 | 18,438,527 |
REV Group, Inc. | | 160,422 | 853,445 |
Rexnord Corp. | | 638,535 | 17,412,849 |
Spartan Motors, Inc. | | 202,839 | 2,858,002 |
SPX Corp. (a) | | 261,854 | 9,984,493 |
SPX Flow, Inc. (a) | | 251,266 | 8,183,734 |
Standex International Corp. | | 74,275 | 3,701,866 |
Sun Hydraulics Corp. | | 176,051 | 6,262,134 |
Tennant Co. | | 108,056 | 6,393,674 |
Terex Corp. | | 380,536 | 5,780,342 |
Titan International, Inc. | | 277,005 | 390,577 |
TriMas Corp. (a) | | 269,073 | 6,414,700 |
Twin Disc, Inc. (a) | | 59,302 | 356,405 |
Wabash National Corp. (b) | | 317,247 | 2,601,425 |
Watts Water Technologies, Inc. Class A | | 165,426 | 13,631,102 |
Welbilt, Inc. (a) | | 778,016 | 3,835,619 |
| | | 346,411,038 |
Marine - 0.1% | | | |
Costamare, Inc. (b) | | 308,648 | 1,549,413 |
Eagle Bulk Shipping, Inc. (a)(b) | | 254,658 | 427,825 |
Genco Shipping & Trading Ltd. | | 94,997 | 553,833 |
Matson, Inc. | | 254,941 | 7,709,416 |
Safe Bulkers, Inc. (a)(b) | | 294,487 | 306,266 |
Scorpio Bulkers, Inc. | | 33,980 | 870,907 |
| | | 11,417,660 |
Professional Services - 1.5% | | | |
Acacia Research Corp. (a) | | 270,641 | 684,722 |
ASGN, Inc. (a) | | 306,627 | 14,242,824 |
Barrett Business Services, Inc. | | 43,059 | 2,106,446 |
BG Staffing, Inc. | | 58,818 | 714,639 |
CBIZ, Inc. (a) | | 306,578 | 7,281,228 |
CRA International, Inc. | | 45,691 | 1,924,962 |
Exponent, Inc. | | 310,197 | 21,816,155 |
Forrester Research, Inc. (a) | | 64,773 | 2,027,395 |
Franklin Covey Co. (a) | | 58,682 | 1,217,652 |
FTI Consulting, Inc. (a) | | 223,318 | 28,441,780 |
GP Strategies Corp. (a) | | 72,045 | 573,478 |
Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc. | | 112,819 | 2,531,658 |
Huron Consulting Group, Inc. (a) | | 134,454 | 7,534,802 |
ICF International, Inc. | | 108,788 | 8,000,270 |
InnerWorkings, Inc. (a) | | 243,934 | 431,763 |
Insperity, Inc. | | 221,922 | 10,587,899 |
Kelly Services, Inc. Class A (non-vtg.) | | 199,623 | 3,084,175 |
Kforce, Inc. | | 121,084 | 3,626,466 |
Korn Ferry | | 331,305 | 9,551,523 |
MISTRAS Group, Inc. (a) | | 102,910 | 488,823 |
Resources Connection, Inc. | | 182,172 | 1,982,031 |
TriNet Group, Inc. (a) | | 263,359 | 12,896,690 |
TrueBlue, Inc. (a) | | 231,586 | 3,596,531 |
Upwork, Inc. (a) | | 343,620 | 2,862,355 |
Willdan Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 60,788 | 1,541,584 |
| | | 149,747,851 |
Road & Rail - 0.5% | | | |
ArcBest Corp. | | 152,508 | 3,106,588 |
Avis Budget Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 343,814 | 5,666,055 |
Covenant Transport Group, Inc. Class A (a) | | 77,737 | 690,305 |
Daseke, Inc. (a) | | 260,112 | 443,491 |
Heartland Express, Inc. | | 273,298 | 5,353,908 |
Hertz Global Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 603,095 | 2,436,504 |
Marten Transport Ltd. | | 235,501 | 5,279,932 |
P.A.M. Transportation Services, Inc. (a) | | 10,528 | 401,959 |
Saia, Inc. (a) | | 155,592 | 14,395,372 |
U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. (a)(b) | | 132,840 | 579,182 |
Universal Logistics Holdings, Inc. | | 47,545 | 662,302 |
Werner Enterprises, Inc. | | 270,759 | 10,862,851 |
YRC Worldwide, Inc. (a)(b) | | 208,124 | 357,973 |
| | | 50,236,422 |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 1.2% | | | |
Applied Industrial Technologies, Inc. | | 229,879 | 12,043,361 |
Beacon Roofing Supply, Inc. (a) | | 325,075 | 7,151,650 |
BlueLinx Corp. (a)(b) | | 49,870 | 272,789 |
BMC Stock Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 397,901 | 8,455,396 |
CAI International, Inc. (a) | | 98,577 | 1,625,535 |
DXP Enterprises, Inc. (a) | | 98,110 | 1,463,801 |
EVI Industries, Inc. (a)(b) | | 27,627 | 504,745 |
Foundation Building Materials, Inc. (a) | | 124,412 | 1,455,620 |
GATX Corp. (b) | | 210,101 | 12,458,989 |
General Finance Corp. (a) | | 60,129 | 350,552 |
GMS, Inc. (a) | | 242,415 | 4,455,588 |
H&E Equipment Services, Inc. | | 191,225 | 3,109,319 |
Herc Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 144,149 | 4,069,326 |
Kaman Corp. | | 165,876 | 6,429,354 |
Lawson Products, Inc. (a) | | 25,075 | 842,771 |
MRC Global, Inc. (a) | | 470,169 | 2,520,106 |
Now, Inc. (a) | | 649,207 | 4,005,607 |
Rush Enterprises, Inc.: | | | |
Class A | | 174,729 | 6,552,338 |
Class B | | 14,328 | 505,922 |
SiteOne Landscape Supply, Inc. (a)(b) | | 245,124 | 21,725,340 |
Systemax, Inc. | | 74,224 | 1,474,089 |
Textainer Group Holdings Ltd. (a)(b) | | 310,404 | 2,725,347 |
Titan Machinery, Inc. (a) | | 114,689 | 1,078,077 |
Transcat, Inc. (a) | | 41,005 | 1,151,830 |
Triton International Ltd. | | 323,902 | 10,034,484 |
Veritiv Corp. (a) | | 77,887 | 729,801 |
Willis Lease Finance Corp. (a) | | 16,639 | 332,946 |
| | | 117,524,683 |
|
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | | 1,480,737,020 |
|
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 15.2% | | | |
Communications Equipment - 1.3% | | | |
Acacia Communications, Inc. (a) | | 226,527 | 15,333,613 |
ADTRAN, Inc. | | 286,835 | 2,948,664 |
Applied Optoelectronics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 116,078 | 1,244,356 |
CalAmp Corp. (a) | | 199,445 | 1,340,270 |
Calix Networks, Inc. (a) | | 285,907 | 3,287,931 |
Cambium Networks Corp. (a) | | 34,849 | 199,685 |
Casa Systems, Inc. (a)(b) | | 186,714 | 957,843 |
Clearfield, Inc. (a) | | 60,204 | 784,458 |
Comtech Telecommunications Corp. | | 141,537 | 2,619,850 |
Dasan Zhone Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 45,927 | 294,392 |
Digi International, Inc. (a) | | 171,798 | 1,949,907 |
Extreme Networks, Inc. (a) | | 708,018 | 2,407,261 |
Harmonic, Inc. (a) | | 538,058 | 3,120,736 |
Infinera Corp. (a)(b) | | 1,069,940 | 6,596,180 |
Inseego Corp. (a)(b) | | 273,528 | 3,268,660 |
InterDigital, Inc. | | 187,185 | 10,813,677 |
KVH Industries, Inc. (a) | | 98,361 | 912,790 |
Lumentum Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 448,812 | 36,313,379 |
NETGEAR, Inc. (a) | | 178,697 | 4,285,154 |
NetScout Systems, Inc. (a) | | 425,681 | 11,272,033 |
Plantronics, Inc. (b) | | 202,055 | 2,853,017 |
Sonus Networks, Inc. (a) | | 362,287 | 1,320,536 |
Tessco Technologies, Inc. | | 37,976 | 233,932 |
Viavi Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 1,377,689 | 16,642,483 |
| | | 131,000,807 |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 2.8% | | | |
Airgain, Inc. (a) | | 50,846 | 411,344 |
Akoustis Technologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 185,608 | 1,681,608 |
Anixter International, Inc. (a) | | 182,371 | 16,934,971 |
Arlo Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 461,249 | 1,263,822 |
Badger Meter, Inc. | | 171,160 | 10,103,575 |
Bel Fuse, Inc. Class B (non-vtg.) | | 56,561 | 421,945 |
Belden, Inc. | | 234,053 | 8,002,272 |
Benchmark Electronics, Inc. | | 221,604 | 4,578,339 |
Coda Octopus Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 34,650 | 211,365 |
CTS Corp. | | 194,794 | 4,511,429 |
Daktronics, Inc. (b) | | 222,251 | 1,004,575 |
ePlus, Inc. (a) | | 79,790 | 5,645,143 |
Fabrinet (a) | | 218,741 | 13,725,998 |
FARO Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 103,121 | 5,660,312 |
Fitbit, Inc. (a) | | 1,385,957 | 9,272,052 |
II-VI, Inc. (a) | | 542,320 | 18,666,654 |
Insight Enterprises, Inc. (a) | | 209,418 | 11,369,303 |
Iteris, Inc. (a) | | 238,265 | 950,677 |
Itron, Inc. (a) | | 205,657 | 14,358,972 |
KEMET Corp. | | 340,239 | 9,189,855 |
Kimball Electronics, Inc. (a) | | 147,397 | 1,992,807 |
Knowles Corp. (a) | | 486,700 | 7,568,185 |
Methode Electronics, Inc. Class A | | 219,096 | 6,577,262 |
MTS Systems Corp. | | 115,583 | 2,458,450 |
Napco Security Technolgies, Inc. (a) | | 69,972 | 1,402,239 |
nLIGHT, Inc. (a)(b) | | 198,401 | 3,126,800 |
Novanta, Inc. (a) | | 202,194 | 17,568,637 |
OSI Systems, Inc. (a) | | 100,829 | 7,298,003 |
Par Technology Corp. (a)(b) | | 68,377 | 1,293,009 |
PC Connection, Inc. | | 67,360 | 3,095,192 |
Plexus Corp. (a) | | 172,929 | 10,840,919 |
Rogers Corp. (a) | | 111,059 | 12,331,991 |
Sanmina Corp. (a) | | 411,866 | 11,421,044 |
ScanSource, Inc. (a) | | 152,277 | 3,947,020 |
Tech Data Corp. (a) | | 212,724 | 29,917,503 |
TTM Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 593,825 | 6,882,432 |
Vishay Intertechnology, Inc. | | 795,232 | 13,192,899 |
Vishay Precision Group, Inc. (a) | | 62,478 | 1,444,491 |
Wrap Technologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 49,053 | 237,907 |
| | | 280,561,001 |
IT Services - 2.3% | | | |
3PEA International, Inc. (a)(b) | | 181,211 | 1,558,415 |
Brightcove, Inc. (a) | | 234,670 | 1,830,426 |
Cardtronics PLC (a) | | 220,214 | 5,042,901 |
Cass Information Systems, Inc. | | 84,250 | 3,379,268 |
Conduent, Inc. (a) | | 1,040,143 | 2,621,160 |
CSG Systems International, Inc. | | 196,939 | 9,567,297 |
Endurance International Group Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 431,382 | 1,106,495 |
EVERTEC, Inc. | | 363,602 | 9,213,675 |
EVO Payments, Inc. Class A (a) | | 239,366 | 4,765,777 |
Exela Technologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 125,712 | 44,628 |
ExlService Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 200,698 | 12,389,088 |
GTT Communications, Inc. (a)(b) | | 202,525 | 2,300,684 |
Hackett Group, Inc. | | 147,215 | 2,183,198 |
i3 Verticals, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 88,984 | 2,067,988 |
Information Services Group, Inc. (a) | | 184,231 | 460,578 |
International Money Express, Inc. (a) | | 114,621 | 926,138 |
KBR, Inc. | | 849,457 | 17,209,999 |
Limelight Networks, Inc. (a) | | 694,059 | 3,518,879 |
Liveramp Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 402,246 | 15,229,034 |
ManTech International Corp. Class A | | 160,559 | 11,971,279 |
Maximus, Inc. | | 381,253 | 25,665,952 |
NIC, Inc. | | 394,263 | 9,552,992 |
Perficient, Inc. (a) | | 191,577 | 6,672,627 |
Perspecta, Inc. | | 838,920 | 18,095,504 |
PRG-Schultz International, Inc. (a) | | 116,219 | 466,038 |
Priority Technology Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 32,741 | 52,713 |
Science Applications International Corp. | | 347,097 | 28,343,941 |
StarTek, Inc. (a) | | 98,998 | 412,822 |
Sykes Enterprises, Inc. (a) | | 229,344 | 6,566,119 |
Ttec Holdings, Inc. | | 104,673 | 4,080,154 |
Tucows, Inc. (a) | | 56,394 | 2,983,807 |
Unisys Corp. (a) | | 305,867 | 3,850,866 |
Verra Mobility Corp. (a) | | 764,723 | 6,851,918 |
Virtusa Corp. (a) | | 172,043 | 5,677,419 |
| | | 226,659,779 |
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 3.5% | | | |
Adesto Technologies Corp. (a)(b) | | 163,154 | 1,933,375 |
Advanced Energy Industries, Inc. (a) | | 227,922 | 12,672,463 |
Alpha & Omega Semiconductor Ltd. (a) | | 120,972 | 1,455,293 |
Ambarella, Inc. (a) | | 194,205 | 10,211,299 |
Amkor Technology, Inc. (a) | | 589,678 | 5,826,019 |
Axcelis Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 192,966 | 4,507,686 |
AXT, Inc. (a) | | 229,550 | 1,269,412 |
Brooks Automation, Inc. | | 434,585 | 16,727,177 |
Cabot Microelectronics Corp. | | 174,047 | 21,327,719 |
Ceva, Inc. (a) | | 129,826 | 4,070,045 |
Cirrus Logic, Inc. (a) | | 349,453 | 26,418,647 |
Cohu, Inc. | | 240,488 | 3,975,267 |
Diodes, Inc. (a) | | 248,448 | 12,643,519 |
DSP Group, Inc. (a) | | 132,027 | 2,277,466 |
Enphase Energy, Inc. (a) | | 550,915 | 25,799,349 |
FormFactor, Inc. (a) | | 452,783 | 10,549,844 |
GSI Technology, Inc. (a) | | 93,155 | 720,088 |
Ichor Holdings Ltd. (a) | | 134,364 | 3,345,664 |
Impinj, Inc. (a)(b) | | 99,849 | 2,242,609 |
Inphi Corp. (a) | | 269,515 | 26,018,978 |
Lattice Semiconductor Corp. (a) | | 756,774 | 17,034,983 |
MACOM Technology Solutions Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 274,898 | 8,428,373 |
MaxLinear, Inc. Class A (a) | | 395,525 | 6,522,207 |
NeoPhotonics Corp. (a) | | 236,850 | 2,278,497 |
NVE Corp. | | 28,349 | 1,609,373 |
Onto Innovation, Inc. (a) | | 288,325 | 9,359,030 |
PDF Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 168,454 | 2,690,210 |
Photronics, Inc. (a) | | 382,354 | 4,569,130 |
Power Integrations, Inc. | | 169,824 | 17,381,486 |
Rambus, Inc. (a) | | 662,332 | 8,299,020 |
Semtech Corp. (a) | | 395,565 | 17,895,361 |
Silicon Laboratories, Inc. (a) | | 257,972 | 25,080,038 |
SiTime Corp. | | 30,199 | 654,110 |
SMART Global Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 81,127 | 2,051,702 |
SunPower Corp. (a)(b) | | 444,700 | 3,268,545 |
Synaptics, Inc. (a) | | 205,270 | 13,422,605 |
Ultra Clean Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 238,192 | 4,380,351 |
Veeco Instruments, Inc. (a) | | 290,693 | 3,177,274 |
Xperi Corp. | | 295,296 | 4,512,123 |
| | | 346,606,337 |
Software - 5.1% | | | |
8x8, Inc. (a)(b) | | 580,527 | 9,845,738 |
A10 Networks, Inc. (a) | | 300,779 | 2,054,321 |
ACI Worldwide, Inc. (a) | | 690,766 | 18,926,988 |
Agilysys, Inc. (a) | | 124,496 | 2,438,877 |
Alarm.com Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 220,000 | 9,840,600 |
Altair Engineering, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 239,959 | 7,916,247 |
American Software, Inc. Class A | | 177,943 | 2,932,501 |
AppFolio, Inc. (a)(b) | | 94,468 | 10,378,254 |
Appian Corp. Class A (a)(b) | | 204,055 | 9,319,192 |
Avaya Holdings Corp. (a)(b) | | 573,046 | 5,696,077 |
Benefitfocus, Inc. (a) | | 177,013 | 1,917,051 |
Blackbaud, Inc. | | 293,097 | 16,196,540 |
BlackLine, Inc. (a)(b) | | 259,173 | 15,742,168 |
Bottomline Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 260,182 | 10,831,377 |
Box, Inc. Class A (a) | | 878,072 | 14,172,082 |
ChannelAdvisor Corp. (a) | | 163,426 | 1,688,191 |
Cloudera, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,480,830 | 12,261,272 |
CommVault Systems, Inc. (a) | | 249,820 | 10,664,816 |
Cornerstone OnDemand, Inc. (a) | | 340,634 | 11,431,677 |
Digimarc Corp. (a)(b) | | 70,521 | 1,181,227 |
Digital Turbine, Inc. (a) | | 476,174 | 2,790,380 |
Domo, Inc. Class B (a)(b) | | 106,777 | 2,076,813 |
Ebix, Inc. (b) | | 140,295 | 2,936,374 |
eGain Communications Corp. (a) | | 126,681 | 1,051,452 |
Envestnet, Inc. (a) | | 289,457 | 18,096,852 |
Everbridge, Inc. (a)(b) | | 199,408 | 22,210,063 |
Five9, Inc. (a) | | 358,649 | 33,236,003 |
Forescout Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 258,633 | 8,214,184 |
GTY Govtech, Inc. (a)(b) | | 233,811 | 914,201 |
Ideanomics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 611,151 | 368,157 |
Intelligent Systems Corp. (a)(b) | | 41,263 | 1,383,961 |
j2 Global, Inc. | | 279,464 | 22,535,977 |
LivePerson, Inc. (a) | | 371,634 | 8,896,918 |
Majesco (a) | | 39,980 | 223,088 |
MicroStrategy, Inc. Class A (a) | | 48,651 | 6,146,081 |
Mitek Systems, Inc. (a) | | 242,789 | 2,265,221 |
MobileIron, Inc. (a) | | 591,859 | 3,012,562 |
Model N, Inc. (a) | | 201,068 | 5,802,822 |
Onespan, Inc. (a) | | 195,715 | 3,288,012 |
Pareteum Corp. (a)(b) | | 753,814 | 477,767 |
Phunware, Inc. (a) | | 170,349 | 123,503 |
Ping Identity Holding Corp. (a)(b) | | 82,958 | 2,067,313 |
Progress Software Corp. | | 269,423 | 11,022,095 |
PROS Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 199,295 | 6,853,755 |
Q2 Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 261,927 | 20,880,820 |
QAD, Inc. Class A | | 68,301 | 2,890,498 |
Qualys, Inc. (a)(b) | | 201,742 | 21,271,676 |
Rapid7, Inc. (a) | | 295,049 | 13,439,482 |
Rimini Street, Inc. (a) | | 120,557 | 556,973 |
SailPoint Technologies Holding, Inc. (a)(b) | | 514,296 | 9,560,763 |
SecureWorks Corp. (a) | | 51,423 | 585,194 |
SharpSpring, Inc. (a)(b) | | 62,608 | 431,369 |
ShotSpotter, Inc. (a)(b) | | 49,459 | 1,699,906 |
Sprout Social, Inc. (a)(b) | | 59,225 | 996,165 |
SPS Commerce, Inc. (a) | | 209,591 | 11,634,396 |
SurveyMonkey (a) | | 520,300 | 8,168,710 |
Synchronoss Technologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 230,636 | 795,694 |
TeleNav, Inc. (a) | | 204,430 | 954,688 |
Tenable Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 226,211 | 5,895,059 |
TiVo Corp. | | 746,199 | 5,245,779 |
Upland Software, Inc. (a) | | 138,099 | 4,368,071 |
Varonis Systems, Inc. (a) | | 179,335 | 12,024,412 |
Verint Systems, Inc. (a) | | 398,289 | 17,022,872 |
VirnetX Holding Corp. (a)(b) | | 370,107 | 2,057,795 |
Workiva, Inc. (a) | | 220,088 | 8,440,375 |
Yext, Inc. (a) | | 575,129 | 7,361,651 |
Zix Corp. (a) | | 319,334 | 1,749,950 |
Zuora, Inc. (a) | | 529,897 | 5,601,011 |
| | | 505,062,059 |
Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals - 0.2% | | | |
3D Systems Corp. (a)(b) | | 689,386 | 5,852,887 |
Astro-Med, Inc. (b) | | 36,802 | 258,718 |
Avid Technology, Inc. (a) | | 170,779 | 1,198,869 |
Diebold Nixdorf, Inc. (a)(b) | | 463,049 | 2,282,832 |
Immersion Corp. (a) | | 188,765 | 1,313,804 |
Sonim Technologies, Inc. (b) | | 51,298 | 50,272 |
Stratasys Ltd. (a)(b) | | 308,536 | 5,461,087 |
| | | 16,418,469 |
|
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | | 1,506,308,452 |
|
MATERIALS - 3.4% | | | |
Chemicals - 1.7% | | | |
Advanced Emissions Solutions, Inc. | | 99,942 | 742,569 |
AdvanSix, Inc. (a) | | 165,386 | 2,014,401 |
American Vanguard Corp. | | 176,164 | 2,214,381 |
Amyris, Inc. (a)(b) | | 356,798 | 963,355 |
Balchem Corp. | | 193,160 | 17,237,598 |
Chase Corp. | | 44,282 | 4,174,021 |
Ferro Corp. (a) | | 489,784 | 4,883,146 |
Flotek Industries, Inc. (a)(b) | | 287,859 | 258,325 |
FutureFuel Corp. | | 155,532 | 1,614,422 |
GCP Applied Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 325,710 | 5,576,155 |
H.B. Fuller Co. | | 305,300 | 11,231,987 |
Hawkins, Inc. | | 58,877 | 2,203,766 |
Ingevity Corp. (a) | | 252,358 | 13,102,427 |
Innospec, Inc. | | 145,675 | 10,564,351 |
Intrepid Potash, Inc. (a) | | 558,248 | 537,649 |
Koppers Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 113,501 | 1,788,776 |
Kraton Performance Polymers, Inc. (a) | | 187,430 | 2,925,782 |
Kronos Worldwide, Inc. (b) | | 137,608 | 1,305,900 |
Livent Corp. (a) | | 879,439 | 5,452,522 |
LSB Industries, Inc. (a)(b) | | 115,630 | 230,104 |
Marrone Bio Innovations, Inc. (a)(b) | | 289,420 | 211,334 |
Minerals Technologies, Inc. | | 207,206 | 9,125,352 |
Orion Engineered Carbons SA | | 360,137 | 3,280,848 |
PolyOne Corp. | | 552,874 | 12,876,435 |
PQ Group Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 227,586 | 2,667,308 |
Quaker Chemical Corp. (b) | | 78,724 | 11,975,495 |
Rayonier Advanced Materials, Inc. | | 253,369 | 450,997 |
Sensient Technologies Corp. | | 253,989 | 12,138,134 |
Stepan Co. | | 122,817 | 11,716,742 |
Trecora Resources (a) | | 114,395 | 674,931 |
Tredegar Corp. | | 158,440 | 2,611,091 |
Trinseo SA | | 236,046 | 4,827,141 |
Tronox Holdings PLC | | 549,329 | 3,746,424 |
Valhi, Inc. | | 152,265 | 134,100 |
| | | 165,457,969 |
Construction Materials - 0.1% | | | |
Forterra, Inc. (a) | | 112,378 | 917,004 |
Summit Materials, Inc. (a) | | 681,010 | 10,290,061 |
U.S. Concrete, Inc. (a) | | 95,140 | 1,824,785 |
United States Lime & Minerals, Inc. | | 12,344 | 988,754 |
| | | 14,020,604 |
Containers & Packaging - 0.1% | | | |
Greif, Inc.: | | | |
Class A | | 174,406 | 5,910,619 |
Class B | | 18,758 | 745,631 |
Myers Industries, Inc. | | 216,734 | 2,678,832 |
UFP Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 41,314 | 1,776,502 |
| | | 11,111,584 |
Metals & Mining - 1.1% | | | |
Allegheny Technologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 753,703 | 5,660,310 |
Carpenter Technology Corp. | | 281,414 | 6,238,948 |
Century Aluminum Co. (a)(b) | | 302,586 | 1,316,249 |
Cleveland-Cliffs, Inc. (b) | | 2,368,854 | 10,375,581 |
Coeur d'Alene Mines Corp. (a) | | 1,428,344 | 6,013,328 |
Commercial Metals Co. | | 707,060 | 11,270,536 |
Compass Minerals International, Inc. | | 204,614 | 10,058,824 |
Contura Energy, Inc. (a)(b) | | 101,160 | 386,431 |
Ferroglobe Representation & Warranty Insurance (a)(c) | | 73,951 | 1 |
Gold Resource Corp. | | 369,191 | 1,524,759 |
Haynes International, Inc. | | 73,787 | 1,630,693 |
Hecla Mining Co. | | 3,109,342 | 8,177,569 |
Kaiser Aluminum Corp. | | 94,376 | 6,816,778 |
Materion Corp. | | 121,501 | 6,286,462 |
Novagold Resources, Inc. (a) | | 1,388,498 | 15,581,263 |
Olympic Steel, Inc. | | 52,721 | 497,686 |
Ramaco Resources, Inc. (a)(b) | | 46,121 | 108,846 |
Ryerson Holding Corp. (a) | | 91,711 | 423,705 |
Schnitzer Steel Industries, Inc. Class A | | 157,279 | 2,447,261 |
SunCoke Energy, Inc. | | 425,683 | 1,340,901 |
Synalloy Corp. (a) | | 47,492 | 419,829 |
TimkenSteel Corp. (a)(b) | | 241,556 | 628,046 |
Warrior Metropolitan Coal, Inc. | | 309,315 | 3,881,903 |
Worthington Industries, Inc. | | 232,163 | 6,138,390 |
| | | 107,224,299 |
Paper & Forest Products - 0.4% | | | |
Boise Cascade Co. | | 233,175 | 7,291,382 |
Clearwater Paper Corp. (a) | | 95,947 | 2,296,971 |
Louisiana-Pacific Corp. | | 674,541 | 13,490,820 |
Neenah, Inc. | | 99,867 | 4,879,502 |
P.H. Glatfelter Co. | | 260,398 | 3,801,811 |
Schweitzer-Mauduit International, Inc. | | 185,204 | 5,967,273 |
Verso Corp. (a) | | 208,606 | 2,897,537 |
| | | 40,625,296 |
|
TOTAL MATERIALS | | | 338,439,752 |
|
REAL ESTATE - 7.2% | | | |
Equity Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) - 6.6% | | | |
Acadia Realty Trust (SBI) | | 513,852 | 6,366,626 |
Agree Realty Corp. | | 250,375 | 16,301,916 |
Alexander & Baldwin, Inc. | | 412,770 | 5,423,798 |
Alexanders, Inc. | | 12,838 | 4,047,308 |
American Assets Trust, Inc. | | 295,015 | 8,354,825 |
American Finance Trust, Inc. | | 644,677 | 4,970,460 |
Armada Hoffler Properties, Inc. | | 345,570 | 3,320,928 |
Ashford Hospitality Trust, Inc. | | 468,682 | 385,397 |
Bluerock Residential Growth (REIT), Inc. | | 129,219 | 752,055 |
Braemar Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 194,372 | 608,384 |
BRT Realty Trust | | 53,404 | 528,700 |
CareTrust (REIT), Inc. | | 577,210 | 9,512,421 |
CatchMark Timber Trust, Inc. | | 300,907 | 2,365,129 |
CBL & Associates Properties, Inc. (b) | | 865,544 | 250,142 |
Cedar Realty Trust, Inc. | | 459,480 | 482,454 |
Chatham Lodging Trust | | 259,378 | 1,947,929 |
CIM Commercial Trust Corp. | | 64,050 | 652,670 |
City Office REIT, Inc. | | 324,402 | 3,276,460 |
Clipper Realty, Inc. | | 72,454 | 384,006 |
Community Healthcare Trust, Inc. | | 119,614 | 4,449,641 |
CoreCivic, Inc. | | 716,615 | 9,401,989 |
CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust, Inc. | | 81,656 | 991,304 |
CorePoint Lodging, Inc. | | 247,888 | 1,078,313 |
DiamondRock Hospitality Co. | | 1,213,355 | 7,559,202 |
Easterly Government Properties, Inc. | | 449,242 | 12,089,102 |
EastGroup Properties, Inc. | | 230,960 | 24,481,760 |
Essential Properties Realty Trust, Inc. | | 554,290 | 8,142,520 |
Farmland Partners, Inc. | | 173,630 | 1,139,013 |
First Industrial Realty Trust, Inc. | | 755,631 | 28,540,183 |
Four Corners Property Trust, Inc. | | 425,967 | 9,537,401 |
Franklin Street Properties Corp. | | 632,462 | 3,440,593 |
Front Yard Residential Corp. Class B | | 300,677 | 3,430,725 |
Getty Realty Corp. | | 204,619 | 5,557,452 |
Gladstone Commercial Corp. | | 203,400 | 3,213,720 |
Gladstone Land Corp. | | 116,044 | 1,557,310 |
Global Medical REIT, Inc. | | 246,047 | 2,563,810 |
Global Net Lease, Inc. | | 546,641 | 7,866,164 |
Government Properties Income Trust | | 288,524 | 7,905,558 |
Hannon Armstrong Sustainable Infrastructure Capital, Inc. | | 381,228 | 10,670,572 |
Healthcare Realty Trust, Inc. | | 793,641 | 23,325,109 |
Hersha Hospitality Trust | | 204,541 | 1,069,749 |
Independence Realty Trust, Inc. | | 556,110 | 5,600,028 |
Industrial Logistics Properties Trust | | 393,200 | 7,348,908 |
Investors Real Estate Trust | | 70,433 | 4,411,219 |
iStar Financial, Inc. | | 360,977 | 3,616,990 |
Jernigan Capital, Inc. | | 140,634 | 1,856,369 |
Kite Realty Group Trust | | 500,310 | 5,118,171 |
Lexington Corporate Properties Trust | | 1,450,510 | 15,157,830 |
LTC Properties, Inc. | | 239,227 | 8,516,481 |
Mack-Cali Realty Corp. | | 521,144 | 8,437,321 |
Monmouth Real Estate Investment Corp. Class A | | 578,586 | 7,862,984 |
National Health Investors, Inc. | | 255,901 | 14,089,909 |
National Storage Affiliates Trust | | 357,535 | 10,182,597 |
New Senior Investment Group, Inc. | | 509,431 | 1,686,217 |
NexPoint Residential Trust, Inc. | | 119,973 | 3,607,588 |
One Liberty Properties, Inc. | | 88,324 | 1,388,453 |
Pebblebrook Hotel Trust | | 780,226 | 9,237,876 |
Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust (SBI) (b) | | 428,627 | 432,913 |
Physicians Realty Trust | | 1,138,221 | 17,551,368 |
Piedmont Office Realty Trust, Inc. Class A | | 758,750 | 13,164,313 |
Potlatch Corp. | | 398,165 | 13,979,573 |
Preferred Apartment Communities, Inc. Class A | | 275,859 | 2,044,115 |
PS Business Parks, Inc. | | 120,354 | 15,536,498 |
QTS Realty Trust, Inc. Class A | | 343,234 | 21,462,422 |
Ramco-Gershenson Properties Trust (SBI) | | 470,583 | 3,209,376 |
Retail Opportunity Investments Corp. | | 697,725 | 6,771,421 |
Retail Value, Inc. | | 92,538 | 1,339,025 |
Rexford Industrial Realty, Inc. | | 683,016 | 27,812,412 |
RLJ Lodging Trust | | 1,014,930 | 9,428,700 |
Ryman Hospitality Properties, Inc. | | 293,601 | 10,375,859 |
Sabra Health Care REIT, Inc. | | 1,209,399 | 15,504,495 |
Safety Income and Growth, Inc. | | 77,629 | 4,483,851 |
Saul Centers, Inc. | | 75,721 | 2,470,019 |
Senior Housing Properties Trust (SBI) | | 1,417,088 | 4,407,144 |
Seritage Growth Properties (b) | | 202,957 | 2,147,285 |
Stag Industrial, Inc. | | 900,791 | 23,645,764 |
Summit Hotel Properties, Inc. | | 625,617 | 3,791,239 |
Sunstone Hotel Investors, Inc. | | 1,348,207 | 12,390,022 |
Tanger Factory Outlet Centers, Inc. (b) | | 540,255 | 4,062,718 |
Terreno Realty Corp. | | 396,231 | 21,721,383 |
The GEO Group, Inc. | | 714,039 | 9,054,015 |
UMH Properties, Inc. | | 222,714 | 2,893,055 |
Uniti Group, Inc. | | 1,107,001 | 7,815,427 |
Universal Health Realty Income Trust (SBI) | | 77,866 | 8,328,547 |
Urban Edge Properties | | 693,894 | 7,979,781 |
Urstadt Biddle Properties, Inc. Class A | | 187,307 | 2,736,555 |
Washington Prime Group, Inc. (b) | | 1,144,809 | 984,307 |
Washington REIT (SBI) | | 493,588 | 11,510,472 |
Whitestone REIT Class B | | 197,061 | 1,336,074 |
Xenia Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 679,670 | 6,592,799 |
| | | 653,024,686 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.6% | | | |
Altisource Portfolio Solutions SA (a)(b) | | 31,080 | 259,518 |
American Realty Investments, Inc. (a) | | 11,469 | 91,179 |
Consolidated-Tomoka Land Co. | | 28,681 | 1,205,462 |
Cushman & Wakefield PLC (a) | | 674,909 | 8,213,643 |
eXp World Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 129,521 | 1,189,003 |
Forestar Group, Inc. (a) | | 102,348 | 1,349,970 |
FRP Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 41,733 | 1,814,968 |
Griffin Industrial Realty, Inc. | | 5,893 | 226,409 |
Kennedy-Wilson Holdings, Inc. | | 733,227 | 10,375,162 |
Marcus & Millichap, Inc. (a) | | 137,392 | 3,991,238 |
Maui Land & Pineapple, Inc. (a) | | 39,623 | 414,060 |
Newmark Group, Inc. | | 861,430 | 3,342,348 |
RE/MAX Holdings, Inc. | | 107,753 | 2,832,826 |
Realogy Holdings Corp. (b) | | 677,893 | 2,942,056 |
Redfin Corp. (a) | | 535,978 | 11,325,215 |
Stratus Properties, Inc. (a) | | 31,575 | 529,513 |
Tejon Ranch Co. (a) | | 126,418 | 1,731,927 |
The RMR Group, Inc. | | 91,298 | 2,707,899 |
The St. Joe Co. (a)(b) | | 201,219 | 3,682,308 |
Transcontinental Realty Investors, Inc. (a) | | 4,293 | 81,009 |
| | | 58,305,713 |
|
TOTAL REAL ESTATE | | | 711,330,399 |
|
UTILITIES - 3.9% | | | |
Electric Utilities - 1.0% | | | |
Allete, Inc. | | 310,453 | 17,869,675 |
El Paso Electric Co. | | 242,434 | 16,485,512 |
Genie Energy Ltd. Class B | | 88,047 | 693,810 |
MGE Energy, Inc. | | 209,306 | 13,533,726 |
Otter Tail Corp. | | 237,731 | 10,550,502 |
PNM Resources, Inc. | | 475,832 | 19,266,438 |
Portland General Electric Co. | | 537,195 | 25,135,354 |
Spark Energy, Inc. Class A, | | 71,355 | 515,183 |
| | | 104,050,200 |
Gas Utilities - 1.3% | | | |
Chesapeake Utilities Corp. | | 96,627 | 8,491,581 |
New Jersey Resources Corp. | | 570,393 | 19,267,876 |
Northwest Natural Holding Co. | | 181,922 | 11,843,122 |
ONE Gas, Inc. | | 312,597 | 24,917,107 |
RGC Resources, Inc. | | 44,553 | 1,108,033 |
South Jersey Industries, Inc. | | 554,330 | 15,848,295 |
Southwest Gas Holdings, Inc. | | 325,391 | 24,664,638 |
Spire, Inc. | | 297,591 | 21,712,239 |
| | | 127,852,891 |
Independent Power and Renewable Electricity Producers - 0.4% | | | |
Atlantic Power Corp. (a) | | 652,576 | 1,298,626 |
Clearway Energy, Inc.: | | | |
Class A | | 148,268 | 2,772,612 |
Class C | | 530,000 | 10,615,900 |
Ormat Technologies, Inc. | | 237,721 | 14,836,168 |
Sunnova Energy International, Inc. (b) | | 191,907 | 2,418,028 |
Terraform Power, Inc. | | 474,575 | 8,219,639 |
| | | 40,160,973 |
Multi-Utilities - 0.6% | | | |
Avista Corp. | | 398,619 | 17,156,562 |
Black Hills Corp. | | 365,410 | 22,633,495 |
NorthWestern Energy Corp. | | 302,234 | 17,435,879 |
Unitil Corp. | | 88,446 | 4,449,718 |
| | | 61,675,654 |
Water Utilities - 0.6% | | | |
American States Water Co. | | 219,178 | 17,396,158 |
Artesian Resources Corp. Class A | | 46,850 | 1,617,731 |
Cadiz, Inc. (a)(b) | | 81,907 | 873,948 |
California Water Service Group | | 287,643 | 12,920,924 |
Consolidated Water Co., Inc. | | 89,900 | 1,350,298 |
Global Water Resources, Inc. | | 71,519 | 768,829 |
Middlesex Water Co. | | 102,576 | 6,185,333 |
Pure Cycle Corp. (a) | | 121,506 | 1,247,867 |
SJW Corp. | | 158,694 | 9,447,054 |
York Water Co. | | 79,331 | 3,198,626 |
| | | 55,006,768 |
|
TOTAL UTILITIES | | | 388,746,486 |
|
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS | | | |
(Cost $11,042,998,616) | | | 9,861,109,914 |
|
Money Market Funds - 12.4% | | | |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund 0.16% (d) | | 57,861,368 | 57,878,726 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund 0.11% (d)(e) | | 1,172,050,166 | 1,172,167,371 |
TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS | | | |
(Cost $1,230,024,189) | | | 1,230,046,097 |
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES - 111.7% | | | |
(Cost $12,273,022,805) | | | 11,091,156,011 |
NET OTHER ASSETS (LIABILITIES) - (11.7)% | | | (1,163,860,828) |
NET ASSETS - 100% | | | $9,927,295,183 |
Futures Contracts | | | | | |
| Number of contracts | Expiration Date | Notional Amount | Value | Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation) |
Purchased | | | | | |
Equity Index Contracts | | | | | |
CME E-mini Russell 2000 Index Contracts (United States) | 1,057 | June 2020 | $69,059,095 | $8,668,448 | $8,668,448 |
The notional amount of futures purchased as a percentage of Net Assets is 0.7%
Legend
(a) Non-income producing
(b) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.
(c) Level 3 security
(d) 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.
(e) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.
Affiliated Central Funds
Information regarding fiscal year to date income earned by the Fund from investments in Fidelity Central Funds is as follows:
Fund | Income earned |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund | $1,222,834 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund | 14,888,905 |
Total | $16,111,739 |
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 April 30, 2020, 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 |
Investments in Securities: | | | | |
Equities: | | | | |
Communication Services | $218,960,415 | $218,960,415 | $-- | $-- |
Consumer Discretionary | 968,860,598 | 968,860,598 | -- | -- |
Consumer Staples | 325,521,818 | 325,521,818 | -- | -- |
Energy | 205,339,181 | 205,339,181 | -- | -- |
Financials | 1,572,015,598 | 1,572,015,598 | -- | -- |
Health Care | 2,144,850,195 | 2,144,770,669 | -- | 79,526 |
Industrials | 1,480,737,020 | 1,480,737,020 | -- | -- |
Information Technology | 1,506,308,452 | 1,506,308,452 | -- | -- |
Materials | 338,439,752 | 338,439,751 | -- | 1 |
Real Estate | 711,330,399 | 711,330,399 | -- | -- |
Utilities | 388,746,486 | 388,746,486 | -- | -- |
Money Market Funds | 1,230,046,097 | 1,230,046,097 | -- | -- |
Total Investments in Securities: | $11,091,156,011 | $11,091,076,484 | $-- | $79,527 |
Derivative Instruments: | | | | |
Assets | | | | |
Futures Contracts | $8,668,448 | $8,668,448 | $-- | $-- |
Total Assets | $8,668,448 | $8,668,448 | $-- | $-- |
Total Derivative Instruments: | $8,668,448 | $8,668,448 | $-- | $-- |
Value of Derivative Instruments
The following table is a summary of the Fund's value of derivative instruments by primary risk exposure as of April 30, 2020. 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 |
Equity Risk | | |
Futures Contracts(a) | $8,668,448 | $0 |
Total Equity Risk | 8,668,448 | 0 |
Total Value of Derivatives | $8,668,448 | $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).
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Fidelity® Small Cap Index Fund
Financial Statements
Statement of Assets and Liabilities
| | April 30, 2020 |
Assets | | |
Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $1,092,189,411) — See accompanying schedule: Unaffiliated issuers (cost $11,042,998,616) | $9,861,109,914 | |
Fidelity Central Funds (cost $1,230,024,189) | 1,230,046,097 | |
Total Investment in Securities (cost $12,273,022,805) | | $11,091,156,011 |
Segregated cash with brokers for derivative instruments | | 6,271,430 |
Receivable for investments sold | | 4,482,040 |
Receivable for fund shares sold | | 41,852,084 |
Dividends receivable | | 3,108,218 |
Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds | | 1,132,545 |
Other receivables | | 19,360 |
Total assets | | 11,148,021,688 |
Liabilities | | |
Payable to custodian bank | $77,431 | |
Payable for investments purchased | 31,164,139 | |
Payable for fund shares redeemed | 15,172,287 | |
Accrued management fee | 186,954 | |
Payable for daily variation margin on futures contracts | 2,002,251 | |
Collateral on securities loaned | 1,172,123,443 | |
Total liabilities | | 1,220,726,505 |
Net Assets | | $9,927,295,183 |
Net Assets consist of: | | |
Paid in capital | | $11,339,857,099 |
Total accumulated earnings (loss) | | (1,412,561,916) |
Net Assets | | $9,927,295,183 |
Net Asset Value and Maximum Offering Price | | |
Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($9,927,295,183 ÷ 598,039,986 shares) | | $16.60 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Operations
| | Year ended April 30, 2020 |
Investment Income | | |
Dividends | | $122,261,016 |
Interest | | 56,329 |
Income from Fidelity Central Funds (including $14,888,905 from security lending) | | 16,111,739 |
Total income | | 138,429,084 |
Expenses | | |
Management fee | $2,402,282 | |
Independent trustees' fees and expenses | 35,702 | |
Interest | 14,826 | |
Commitment fees | 23,487 | |
Total expenses before reductions | 2,476,297 | |
Expense reductions | (7,003) | |
Total expenses after reductions | | 2,469,294 |
Net investment income (loss) | | 135,959,790 |
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) | | |
Net realized gain (loss) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | 61,095,692 | |
Fidelity Central Funds | 12,170 | |
Foreign currency transactions | 26 | |
Futures contracts | (25,777,684) | |
Total net realized gain (loss) | | 35,330,204 |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | (1,917,440,908) | |
Fidelity Central Funds | 3,391 | |
Futures contracts | 7,618,247 | |
Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | | (1,909,819,270) |
Net gain (loss) | | (1,874,489,066) |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | | $(1,738,529,276) |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Changes in Net Assets
| Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 |
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets | | |
Operations | | |
Net investment income (loss) | $135,959,790 | $88,831,138 |
Net realized gain (loss) | 35,330,204 | 166,016,455 |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | (1,909,819,270) | 51,609,542 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | (1,738,529,276) | 306,457,135 |
Distributions to shareholders | (307,438,333) | (290,813,119) |
Share transactions - net increase (decrease) | 3,408,692,103 | 4,115,619,318 |
Total increase (decrease) in net assets | 1,362,724,494 | 4,131,263,334 |
Net Assets | | |
Beginning of period | 8,564,570,689 | 4,433,307,355 |
End of period | $9,927,295,183 | $8,564,570,689 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Financial Highlights
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund
Years ended April 30, | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 |
Selected Per–Share Data | | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $20.43 | $20.49 | $19.03 | $15.48 | $17.07 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | | |
Net investment income (loss)A | .27 | .27 | .28 | .25 | .24 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | (3.48) | .60 | 1.93 | 3.72 | (1.20) |
Total from investment operations | (3.21) | .87 | 2.21 | 3.97 | (.96) |
Distributions from net investment income | (.28) | (.23) | (.23) | (.23) | (.22) |
Distributions from net realized gain | (.35) | (.70) | (.51) | (.19) | (.41) |
Total distributions | (.62)B | (.93) | (.75)C | (.42) | (.63) |
Redemption fees added to paid in capitalA | – | – | – | –D | –D |
Net asset value, end of period | $16.60 | $20.43 | $20.49 | $19.03 | $15.48 |
Total ReturnE | (16.27)% | 4.74% | 11.73% | 25.90% | (5.69)% |
Ratios to Average Net AssetsF,G | | | | | |
Expenses before reductions | .03% | .03% | .04% | .05% | .15% |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any | .03% | .03% | .04% | .04% | .05% |
Expenses net of all reductions | .03% | .03% | .04% | .04% | .05% |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.42% | 1.37% | 1.38% | 1.44% | 1.56% |
Supplemental Data | | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (000 omitted) | $9,927,295 | $8,564,571 | $353,568 | $169,906 | $116,939 |
Portfolio turnover rateH | 17% | 18% | 14%I | 11% | 13% |
A Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
B Total distributions of $.62 per share is comprised of distributions from net investment income of $.278 and distributions from net realized gain of $.345 per share.
C Total distributions of $.75 per share is comprised of distributions from net investment income of $.233 and distributions from net realized gain of $.512 per share.
D Amount represents less than $.005 per share.
E Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.
F Fees and expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
G Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the Fund. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the Fund during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the Fund.
H Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
I 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 April 30, 2020
1. Organization.
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund and Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund (the Funds) are funds of Fidelity Salem Street Trust (the Trust) and are 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.
Effective after the close of business November 9, 2018, each Fund's publicly offered shares classes were consolidated into a single share class. The surviving class is Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund and Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund (formerly Institutional Premium class). All prior fiscal period dollar and share amounts for the classes that closed, which are presented in the Notes to Financial Statements, are for the period May 1, 2018 through November 9, 2018.
Effective January 1, 2020:
Investment advisers Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc., FMR Co., Inc., and Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, merged with and into Fidelity Management & Research Company. In connection with the merger transactions, the resulting, merged investment adviser was then redomiciled from Massachusetts to Delaware, changed its corporate structure from a corporation to a limited liability company, and changed its name to "Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC".
2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds.
The Funds 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 Funds' Schedules of Investments list each of the Fidelity Central Funds held as of period end, if any, as an investment of each Fund, but do not include the underlying holdings of each Fidelity Central Fund. As an Investing Fund, each Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by the investment adviser. Annualized expenses of the Money Market Central Funds as of their most recent shareholder report date ranged from less than .005% to .01%.
A complete unaudited list of holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is available upon request or at the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) website at www.sec.gov. In addition, the financial statements of the Fidelity Central Funds, which are not covered by the Funds' Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC website or upon request.
3. Significant Accounting Policies.
Each 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 – Investments 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 following summarizes the significant accounting policies of the Funds:
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 each Fund's investments to the Fair Value Committee (the Committee) established by each Fund's investment adviser. In accordance with valuation policies and procedures approved by the Board, each 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. The frequency with which these procedures are used cannot be predicted and they may be utilized to a significant extent. The Committee oversees each 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 each Fund's investments and ratifies the fair value determinations of the Committee.
Each 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 each 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.
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 April 30, 2020 is included at the end of each Fund's Schedule of Investments.
Foreign Currency. The 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 Funds' 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 for certain Funds 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 Funds are 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 Funds represent a return of capital or capital gain. The Funds determine 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.
Expenses. 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. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.
Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders. Each year, each 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 April 30, 2020, each Fund did not have any unrecognized tax benefits in the financial statements; nor is each 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. Each Fund files a U.S. federal tax return, in addition to state and local tax returns as required. Each 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 each Fund's understanding of the tax rules and rates that exist in the foreign markets in which it invests.
Distributions are declared and recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from GAAP. In addition, the Funds 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 futures contracts, foreign currency transactions, certain deemed distributions, passive foreign investment companies (PFIC), market discount, partnerships, 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 for each Fund:
| Tax cost | Gross unrealized appreciation | Gross unrealized depreciation | Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | $12,552,432,561 | $1,845,531,413 | $(2,153,742,699) | $(308,211,286) |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | 12,505,453,035 | 1,411,438,425 | (2,825,735,449) | (1,414,297,024) |
The tax-based components of distributable earnings as of period end were as follows for each Fund:
| Undistributed ordinary income | Undistributed long-term capital gain | Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities and other investments |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | $65,589,651 | $12,042,601 | $(308,211,286) |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | 23,786,380 | – | (1,414,297,024) |
At period end, certain of the Funds were required to defer losses on futures contracts. In addition, certain of the Funds intend to elect to defer to the next fiscal year capital losses recognized during the period November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020. Loss deferrals were as follows:
| Capital losses |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | $(22,051,273) |
The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:
April 30, 2020 | | | |
| Ordinary Income | Long-term Capital Gains | Total |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | $189,709,803 | $169,375,397 | $359,085,200 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | 173,003,055 | 134,435,278 | 307,438,333 |
April 30, 2019 | | | |
| Ordinary Income | Long-term Capital Gains | Total |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | $128,770,058 | $29,994,101 | $158,764,159 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | 99,068,466 | 191,744,653 | 290,813,119 |
4. Derivative Instruments.
Risk Exposures and the Use of Derivative Instruments. The Funds' investment objective allows the Funds 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 Funds 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 Funds may not achieve their objectives.
The Funds' use of derivatives increased or decreased their 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 Funds are also exposed to additional risks from investing in derivatives, such as liquidity risk and counterparty credit risk. Liquidity risk is the risk that the Funds 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 Funds. 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 Funds used futures contracts to manage their 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. Cash deposited to meet initial margin requirements is presented as segregated cash with brokers for derivative instruments in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.
5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.
Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities, are noted in the table below.
| Purchases ($) | Sales ($) |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | 5,479,968,801 | 1,621,384,631 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | 5,186,453,740 | 1,621,255,915 |
6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.
Management Fee and Expense Contract. Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (the investment adviser) and its affiliates provide the Funds with investment management related services for which the Funds pay a monthly management fee. The management fee is based on an annual rate of .025% of each Fund's average net assets. Under the management contract, the investment adviser pays all other operating expenses, except the compensation of the independent Trustees and certain other expenses such as interest expense, including commitment fees.
Effective April 29, 2020, the Board approved to add an expense contract to each Fund. Under the expense contract, the investment adviser pays all other operating expenses, except the compensation of the independent Trustees, as necessary so that the total expenses do not exceed .025% of each Fund's average net assets. These expense contracts will remain in place through June 30, 2021. In addition, the management fee is reduced by an amount equal to the fees and expenses paid by each Fund to the independent Trustees.
Effective August 1, 2019, the Board approved to change the management fee structure from a flat fee to a unitary fee, and the expense contract was eliminated. There was no change to the total expenses paid by the shareholders.
For the period May 1, 2019 through July 31, 2019, under the expense contract, the investment adviser paid other expenses as necessary so that the total expenses did not exceed .025% of each Fund's average net assets on an annual basis with certain exceptions.
Sub-Adviser. Geode Capital Management, LLC (Geode), serves as sub-adviser for the Funds. Geode provides discretionary investment advisory services to the Funds and is paid by the investment adviser for providing these services.
Interfund Lending Program. Pursuant to an Exemptive Order issued by the SEC, each fund, along with other registered investment companies having management contracts with Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (FMR), or other affiliated entities of FMR, may participate in an interfund lending program. This program provides an alternative credit facility allowing each fund to borrow from, or lend money to, other participating affiliated funds. At period end, there were no interfund loans outstanding. Activity in this program during the period for which loans were outstanding was as follows:
| Borrower or Lender | Average Loan Balance | Weighted Average Interest Rate | Interest Expense |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | Borrower | $26,480,727 | 1.72% | $13,935 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | Borrower | $30,393,286 | 2.51% | $14,826 |
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. Interfund trades are included within the respective purchases and sales amounts shown in the Purchases and Sales of Investments note.
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. The participating funds have agreed to pay commitment fees on their pro-rata portion of the line of credit, which are reflected in Commitment fees on the Statement of Operations, and are as follows:
| Amount |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | $27,920 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | 23,487 |
During the period, there were no borrowings on this line of credit.
8. Security Lending.
Certain Funds lend portfolio securities from time to time in order to earn additional income. For equity securities, lending agents are used, including National Financial Services (NFS), an affiliate of the Funds. 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. The Funds may lend securities to certain qualified borrowers, including NFS. On the settlement date of the loan, each applicable 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 the Funds and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Funds on the next business day. The Funds 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, the Funds may apply collateral received from the borrower against the obligation. The Funds may experience delays and costs in recovering the securities loaned. Any cash collateral received is invested in the Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund. The value of loaned securities and cash collateral at period end are disclosed on each applicable Fund's 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 on each applicable Fund's Statement of Operations as a component of income from Fidelity Central Funds. Affiliated security lending activity was as follows:
| Total Security Lending Income Fees Paid to NFS | Security Lending Income From Securities Loaned to NFS | Value of Securities Loaned to NFS at Period End |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | $164,167 | $18,225 | $3,087,453 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | 1,259,417 | 1,499,141 | 18,818,550 |
9. Expense Reductions.
Through arrangements with each applicable Fund's custodian, credits realized as a result of certain uninvested cash balances were used to reduce each applicable Fund's or class' expenses. All of the applicable expense reductions are noted in the table below.
| Custodian credits |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | $2,221 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | 7,003 |
10. Distributions to Shareholders.
Distributions to shareholders of each class were as follows:
| Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | | |
Distributions to shareholders | | |
Investor Class | $– | $509,563 |
Premium Class | – | 27,258,985 |
Institutional Class | – | 14,971,406 |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | 359,085,200 | 116,024,205 |
Total | $359,085,200 | $158,764,159 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | | |
Distributions to shareholders | | |
Investor Class | $– | $827,727 |
Premium Class | – | 21,076,778 |
Institutional Class | – | 6,517,784 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | 307,438,333 | 262,390,830 |
Total | $307,438,333 | $290,813,119 |
11. Share Transactions.
Share transactions for each class were as follows and may contain automatic conversions between classes or exchanges between affiliated funds:
| Shares | Shares | Dollars | Dollars |
| Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 | Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | | | | |
Investor Class | | | | |
Shares sold | – | 1,415,951 | $– | $30,593,918 |
Reinvestment of distributions | – | 22,477 | – | 487,986 |
Shares redeemed | – | (4,877,518) | – | (103,063,527) |
Net increase (decrease) | – | (3,439,090) | $– | $(71,981,623) |
Premium Class | | | | |
Shares sold | – | 39,635,020 | $– | $861,339,889 |
Reinvestment of distributions | – | 1,211,112 | – | 26,317,465 |
Shares redeemed | – | (211,177,744) | – | (4,524,773,468) |
Net increase (decrease) | – | (170,331,612) | $– | $(3,637,116,114) |
Institutional Class | | | | |
Shares sold | – | 33,782,432 | $– | $736,852,357 |
Reinvestment of distributions | – | 661,370 | – | 14,378,201 |
Shares redeemed | – | (124,457,627) | – | (2,628,735,786) |
Net increase (decrease) | – | (90,013,825) | $– | $(1,877,505,228) |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | | | | |
Shares sold | 324,448,236 | 467,292,728 | $7,065,636,806 | $9,828,209,701 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 14,582,920 | 5,715,154 | 341,790,373 | 111,270,694 |
Shares redeemed | (163,171,799) | (61,139,095) | (3,490,385,520) | (1,266,853,627) |
Net increase (decrease) | 175,859,357 | 411,868,787 | $3,917,041,659 | $8,672,626,768 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | | | | |
Investor Class | | | | |
Shares sold | – | 14,271,528 | $– | $316,523,201 |
Reinvestment of distributions | – | 35,872 | – | 792,763 |
Shares redeemed | – | (17,004,666) | – | (360,915,167) |
Net increase (decrease) | – | (2,697,266) | $– | $(43,599,203) |
Premium Class | | | | |
Shares sold | – | 58,076,683 | $– | $1,284,593,169 |
Reinvestment of distributions | – | 920,492 | – | 20,361,287 |
Shares redeemed | – | (212,344,172) | – | (4,493,116,136) |
Net increase (decrease) | – | (153,346,997) | $– | $(3,188,161,680) |
Institutional Class | | | | |
Shares sold | – | 23,785,274 | $– | $525,644,806 |
Reinvestment of distributions | – | 287,884 | – | 6,370,885 |
Shares redeemed | – | (67,163,430) | – | (1,402,563,634) |
Net increase (decrease) | – | (43,090,272) | $– | $(870,547,943) |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | | | | |
Shares sold | 363,294,524 | 466,513,661 | $6,859,771,158 | $9,492,114,830 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 14,543,925 | 14,113,254 | 298,048,546 | 255,226,696 |
Shares redeemed | (199,115,229) | (78,565,140) | (3,749,127,601) | (1,529,413,382) |
Net increase (decrease) | 178,723,220 | 402,061,775 | $3,408,692,103 | $8,217,928,144 |
12. Other.
The Funds' 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 Funds. In the normal course of business, the Funds may also enter into contracts that provide general indemnifications. The Funds' maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would be dependent on future claims that may be made against the Funds. 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 Funds' performance.
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
To the Board of Trustees of Fidelity Salem Street Trust and the Shareholders of Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund and Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund
Opinion on the Financial Statements and Financial Highlights
We have audited the accompanying statements of assets and liabilities of Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund and Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund (the "Funds"), each a fund of Fidelity Salem Street Trust, including the schedules of investments, as of April 30, 2020, the related statements of operations for the year then ended, the statements 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 each of the Funds as of April 30, 2020, and the results of their operations for the year then ended, the changes in their 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 Funds’ management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Funds’ 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 Funds 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 Funds are not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of their 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 Funds’ 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 April 30, 2020, by correspondence with the custodian and brokers; when replies were not received from brokers, we performed other auditing procedures. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
/s/ Deloitte & Touche LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
June 10, 2020
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 funds, as applicable, are listed below. The Board of Trustees governs each fund and is responsible for protecting the interests of shareholders. The Trustees are experienced executives who meet periodically throughout the year to oversee each fund's activities, review contractual arrangements with companies that provide services to each fund, oversee management of the risks associated with such activities and contractual arrangements, and review each fund's performance. Except for Jonathan Chiel, each of the Trustees oversees 282 funds. Mr. Chiel oversees 175 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 funds 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.
Each fund’s Statement of Additional Information (SAI) includes more information about the Trustees. To request a free copy, call Fidelity at 1-800-544-8544.
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 each 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 funds, is provided below.
Board Structure and Oversight Function. Abigail P. Johnson is an interested person and currently serves as 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 funds. 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. Arthur E. Johnson serves as Chairman of the Independent Trustees 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 funds' Board oversees Fidelity's investment-grade bond, money market, asset allocation and certain equity funds, and other Boards oversee Fidelity's high income and other equity funds. The asset allocation funds may invest in Fidelity® funds that are overseen by such other Boards. 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, each fund, and fund shareholders and to facilitate compliance with legal and regulatory requirements and oversight of the funds' 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 funds' 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 funds are carried out by or through FMR, its affiliates, and other service providers, the funds' 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 funds' activities, oversight is exercised primarily through the Operations and Audit Committees. In addition, an ad hoc Board committee of Independent Trustees has worked with FMR to enhance the Board's oversight of investment and financial risks, legal and regulatory risks, technology risks, and operational risks, including the development of additional risk reporting to the Board. Appropriate personnel, including but not limited to the funds' Chief Compliance Officer (CCO), FMR's internal auditor, the independent accountants, the funds' 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+
Jonathan Chiel (1957)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Mr. Chiel also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Mr. Chiel is Executive Vice President and General Counsel for FMR LLC (diversified financial services company, 2012-present). Previously, Mr. Chiel served as general counsel (2004-2012) and senior vice president and deputy general counsel (2000-2004) for John Hancock Financial Services; a partner with Choate, Hall & Stewart (1996-2000) (law firm); and an Assistant United States Attorney for the United States Attorney’s Office of the District of Massachusetts (1986-95), including Chief of the Criminal Division (1993-1995). Mr. Chiel is a director on the boards of the Boston Bar Foundation and the Maimonides School.
Abigail P. Johnson (1961)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2009
Trustee
Chairman of the Board of Trustees
Ms. Johnson also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Ms. Johnson serves as Chairman (2016-present), Chief Executive Officer (2014-present), and Director (2007-present) of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company), President of Fidelity Financial Services (2012-present) and President of Personal, Workplace and Institutional Services (2005-present). Ms. Johnson is Chairman and Director of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm, 2011-present). Previously, Ms. Johnson served as Chairman and Director of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2011-2019), Vice Chairman (2007-2016) and President (2013-2016) of FMR LLC, President and a Director of Fidelity Management & Research Company (2001-2005), a Trustee of other investment companies advised by Fidelity Management & Research Company, Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firm), and FMR Co., Inc. (2001-2005), Senior Vice President of the Fidelity® funds (2001-2005), and managed a number of Fidelity® funds. Ms. Abigail P. Johnson and Mr. Arthur E. Johnson are not related.
Jennifer Toolin McAuliffe (1959)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Ms. McAuliffe also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Ms. McAuliffe served as Co-Head of Fixed Income of Fidelity Investments Limited (now known as FIL Limited (FIL)) (diversified financial services company), Director of Research for FIL’s credit and quantitative teams in London, Hong Kong and Tokyo and Director of Research for taxable and municipal bonds at Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. Ms. McAuliffe previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2016). Ms. McAuliffe was previously a lawyer at Ropes & Gray LLP and currently serves as director or trustee of several not-for-profit entities.
* 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 each 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+
Elizabeth S. Acton (1951)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2013
Trustee
Ms. Acton also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Acton served as Executive Vice President, Finance (2011-2012), Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer (2002-2011) and Treasurer (2004-2005) of Comerica Incorporated (financial services). Prior to joining Comerica, Ms. Acton held a variety of positions at Ford Motor Company (1983-2002), including Vice President and Treasurer (2000-2002) and Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Ford Motor Credit Company (1998-2000). Ms. Acton currently serves as a member of the Board and Audit and Finance Committees of Beazer Homes USA, Inc. (homebuilding, 2012-present). Ms. Acton previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2013-2016).
Ann E. Dunwoody (1953)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2018
Trustee
General Dunwoody also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. General Dunwoody (United States Army, Retired) was the first woman in U.S. military history to achieve the rank of four-star general and prior to her retirement in 2012 held a variety of positions within the U.S. Army, including Commanding General, U.S. Army Material Command (2008-2012). General Dunwoody currently serves as President of First to Four LLC (leadership and mentoring services, 2012-present), a member of the Board and Nomination and Corporate Governance Committees of Kforce Inc. (professional staffing services, 2016-present) and a member of the Board of Automattic Inc. (software engineering, 2018-present). Previously, General Dunwoody served as a member of the Advisory Board and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of L3 Technologies, Inc. (communication, electronic, sensor and aerospace systems, 2013-2019) and a member of the Board and Audit and Sustainability and Corporate Responsibility Committees of Republic Services, Inc. (waste collection, disposal and recycling, 2013-2016). Ms. Dunwoody also serves on several boards for non-profit organizations, including as a member of the Board, Chair of the Nomination and Governance Committee and a member of the Audit Committee of Logistics Management Institute (consulting non-profit, 2012-present), a member of the Council of Trustees for the Association of the United States Army (advocacy non-profit, 2013-present), a member of the Board of Florida Institute of Technology (2015-present) and a member of the Board of ThanksUSA (military family education non-profit, 2014-present). General Dunwoody previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2018).
John Engler (1948)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2014
Trustee
Mr. Engler also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Engler served as Governor of Michigan (1991-2003), President of the Business Roundtable (2011-2017) and interim President of Michigan State University (2018-2019). Mr. Engler currently serves as a member of the Board of K12 Inc. (technology-based education company, 2012-present). Previously, Mr. Engler served as a member of the Board of Universal Forest Products (manufacturer and distributor of wood and wood-alternative products, 2003-2019) and Trustee of The Munder Funds (2003-2014). Mr. Engler previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2014-2016).
Robert F. Gartland (1951)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2010
Trustee
Mr. Gartland also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Gartland held a variety of positions at Morgan Stanley (financial services, 1979-2007), including Managing Director (1987-2007) and Chase Manhattan Bank (1975-1978). Mr. Gartland previously served as Chairman and an investor in Gartland & Mellina Group Corp. (consulting, 2009-2019), as a member of the Board of National Securities Clearing Corporation (1993-1996) and as Chairman of TradeWeb (2003-2004).
Arthur E. Johnson (1947)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2008
Trustee
Chairman of the Independent Trustees
Mr. Johnson also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Johnson served as Senior Vice President of Corporate Strategic Development of Lockheed Martin Corporation (defense contractor, 1999-2009). Mr. Johnson currently serves as a member of the Board of Booz Allen Hamilton (management consulting, 2011-present). Mr. Johnson previously served as a member of the Board of Eaton Corporation plc (diversified power management, 2009-2019) and a member of the Board of AGL Resources, Inc. (holding company, 2002-2016). Mr. Johnson previously served as Vice Chairman (2015-2018) of the Independent Trustees of certain Fidelity® funds. Mr. Arthur E. Johnson is not related to Ms. Abigail P. Johnson.
Michael E. Kenneally (1954)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2009
Trustee
Vice Chairman of the Independent Trustees
Mr. Kenneally also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Kenneally served as Chairman and Global Chief Executive Officer of Credit Suisse Asset Management and Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer of Bank of America Corporation. Earlier roles at Bank of America included Director of Research, Senior Portfolio Manager for various institutional equity accounts and mutual funds and Portfolio Manager for a number of institutional fixed-income clients. Mr. Kenneally began his career as a Research Analyst in 1983 and was awarded the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation in 1991.
Marie L. Knowles (1946)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2001
Trustee
Ms. Knowles also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Knowles held several positions at Atlantic Richfield Company (diversified energy), including Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (1996-2000), Senior Vice President (1993-1996) and President of ARCO Transportation Company (pipeline and tanker operations, 1993-1996). Ms. Knowles currently serves as a member of the Board of McKesson Corporation (healthcare service, since 2002), a member of the Board of the Santa Catalina Island Company (real estate, 2009-present), a member of the Investment Company Institute Board of Governors and a member of the Governing Council of the Independent Directors Council (2014-present). Ms. Knowles also serves as a member of the Advisory Board for the School of Engineering of the University of Southern California. Ms. Knowles previously served as Chairman (2015-2018) and Vice Chairman (2012-2015) of the Independent Trustees of certain Fidelity® funds.
Mark A. Murray (1954)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Mr. Murray also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Murray served as Co-Chief Executive Officer (2013-2016), President (2006-2013) and Vice Chairman (2013-2020) of Meijer, Inc. Mr. Murray serves as a member of the Board and Nuclear Review and Public Policy and Responsibility Committees of DTE Energy Company (diversified energy company, 2009-present) and a member of the Board and Audit Committee and Chairman of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of Universal Forest Products, Inc. (manufacturer and distributor of wood and wood-alternative products, 2004-2016). Mr. Murray previously served as a member of the Board of Spectrum Health (not-for-profit health system, 2015-2019). Mr. Murray also serves as a member of the Board of many community and professional organizations. Mr. Murray previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2016).
+ 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 each fund.
Advisory Board Members and Officers:
Correspondence intended for an officer may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 245 Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210. Officers appear below in alphabetical order.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupation
Elizabeth Paige Baumann (1968)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2017
Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Officer
Ms. Baumann also serves as AML Officer of other funds. She is Chief AML Officer (2012-present) and Senior Vice President (2014-present) of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Ms. Baumann served as AML Officer of certain funds (2017-2019), as AML Officer of the funds (2012-2016), and Vice President (2007-2014) and Deputy Anti-Money Laundering Officer (2007-2012) of FMR LLC.
Craig S. Brown (1977)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2019
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Brown also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Brown 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).
David J. Carter (1973)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2020
Assistant Secretary
Mr. Carter also serves as Assistant Secretary of other funds. Mr. Carter serves as Vice President, Associate General Counsel (2010-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2005-present).
Jonathan Davis (1968)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2010
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Davis also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Davis serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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
President and Treasurer
Ms. Del Prato also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Del Prato is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2017-present). 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: 2016
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Hogan also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Hogan serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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).
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: 2013
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Maher also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Maher serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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).
Nancy D. Prior (1967)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2014
Vice President
Ms. Prior also serves as Vice President of other funds. Ms. Prior serves as President of Fixed Income (2014-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2002-present). Previously, Ms. Prior served as President (2016-2019) and Director (2014-2019) of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (investment adviser firm), Vice President of Global Asset Allocation Funds (2017-2019); Vice Chairman of FIAM LLC (investment adviser firm, 2014-2018), a Director of FMR Investment Management (UK) Limited (investment adviser firm, 2015-2018), President Multi-Asset Class Strategies of FMR's Global Asset Allocation Division (2017-2018), Vice President of Fidelity's Money Market Funds (2012-2014), and President, Money Market and Short Duration Bond Group of Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) (investment adviser firm, 2013-2014).
Kenneth B. Robins (1969)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2020
Chief Compliance Officer
Mr. Robins also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Robins serves as Compliance Officer of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm, 2016-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2004-present). Previously, Mr. Robins served as Compliance Officer of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2016-2019), as Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2013-2016) and served in other fund officer roles.
Stacie M. Smith (1974)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2013
Assistant Treasurer
Ms. Smith also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Smith serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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
Deputy Treasurer
Mr. Spector also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Spector serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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 Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Wegmann is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2011-present).
Shareholder Expense Example
As a shareholder of a Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees and other Fund expenses. This Example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the Funds 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 (November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020).
Actual Expenses
The first line of the accompanying table for each fund 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 fund under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. In addition, each Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro-rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's 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 for each fund provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on a fund's actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Fund's 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. In addition, each Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro-rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's 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.
| Annualized Expense Ratio-A | Beginning Account Value November 1, 2019 | Ending Account Value April 30, 2020 | Expenses Paid During Period-B November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020 |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | .03% | | | |
Actual | | $1,000.00 | $883.70 | $.14 |
Hypothetical-C | | $1,000.00 | $1,024.71 | $.15 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | .03% | | | |
Actual | | $1,000.00 | $846.00 | $.14 |
Hypothetical-C | | $1,000.00 | $1,024.71 | $.15 |
A Annualized expense ratio reflects expenses net of applicable fee waivers.
B Expenses are equal to each Fund's annualized expense ratio, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/ 366 (to reflect the one-half year period).
C 5% return per year before expenses
Distributions (Unaudited)
The Board of Trustees of each 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 Mid Cap Index Fund | 06/08/20 | 06/05/20 | $0.108 | $0.021 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | 06/08/20 | 06/05/20 | $0.041 | $0.000 |
|
The funds hereby designate as capital gain dividend the amounts noted below for the taxable year ended April 30, 2020, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | $193,595,864 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | $134,112,820 |
|
A percentage of the dividends distributed during the fiscal year for the following funds qualify for the dividends–received deduction for corporate shareholders:
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | |
June 2019 | 93% |
December 2019 | 67% |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | |
June 2019 | 68% |
December 2019 | 43% |
|
A percentage of the dividends distributed during the fiscal year for the following funds may be taken into account as a dividend for purposes of the maximum rate under section 1(h)(11) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | |
June 2019 | 97% |
December 2019 | 71% |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | |
June 2019 | 68% |
December 2019 | 48% |
|
A percentage of the dividends distributed during the fiscal year for the following funds qualify as a section 199A dividend:
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | |
June 2019 | 4% |
December 2019 | 20% |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | |
June 2019 | 32% |
December 2019 | 19% |
|
The funds will notify shareholders in January 2021 of amounts for use in preparing 2020 income tax returns.
Liquidity Risk Management Program
The Securities and Exchange Commission adopted Rule 22e-4 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the Liquidity Rule) to promote effective liquidity risk management throughout the open-end investment company industry, thereby reducing the risk that funds will be unable to meet their redemption obligations and mitigating dilution of the interests of fund shareholders.
The Funds have adopted and implemented a liquidity risk management program pursuant to the Liquidity Rule (the Program) effective December 1, 2018. The Program is reasonably designed to assess and manage each Fund’s liquidity risk and to comply with the requirements of the Liquidity Rule. Each Fund’s Board of Trustees (the Board) has designated each Fund’s investment adviser as administrator of the Program. The Fidelity advisers have established a Liquidity Risk Management Committee (the LRM Committee) to manage the Program for each of the Fidelity Funds. The LRM Committee monitors the adequacy and effectiveness of implementation of the Program and on a periodic basis assesses each Fund’s liquidity risk based on a variety of factors including (1) the Fund’s investment strategy, (2) portfolio liquidity and cash flow projections during normal and reasonably foreseeable stressed conditions, (3) shareholder redemptions, (4) borrowings and other funding sources and (5) in the case of exchange-traded funds, certain additional factors including the effect of the Fund’s prices and spreads, market participants, and basket compositions on the overall liquidity of the Fund’s portfolio, as applicable.
In accordance with the Program, each of the Fund’s portfolio investments is classified into one of four liquidity categories described below based on a determination of a reasonable expectation for how long it would take to convert the investment to cash (or sell or dispose of the investment) without significantly changing its market value.
- Highly liquid investments – cash or convertible to cash within three business days or less
- Moderately liquid investments – convertible to cash in three to seven calendar days
- Less liquid investments – can be sold or disposed of, but not settled, within seven calendar days
- Illiquid investments – cannot be sold or disposed of within seven calendar days
Liquidity classification determinations take into account a variety of factors including various market, trading and investment-specific considerations, as well as market depth, and generally utilize analysis from a third-party liquidity metrics service.
The Liquidity Rule places a 15% limit on a fund’s illiquid investments and requires funds that do not primarily hold assets that are highly liquid investments to determine and maintain a minimum percentage of the fund’s net assets to be invested in highly liquid investments (highly liquid investment minimum or HLIM). The Program includes provisions reasonably designed to comply with the 15% limit on illiquid investments and for determining, periodically reviewing and complying with the HLIM requirement as applicable.
At a recent meeting of the Fund’s Board of Trustees, the LRM Committee provided a written report to the Board pertaining to the operation, adequacy, and effectiveness of implementation of the Program for the annual period from December 1, 2018 through November 30, 2019. The report concluded that the Program has been implemented and is operating effectively and is reasonably designed to assess and manage the Fund’s liquidity risk.

MCX-I-SCX-I-ANN-0620
1.929320.108
Fidelity Flex® Funds
Fidelity Flex® Mid Cap Index Fund
Annual Report
April 30, 2020

See the inside front cover for important information about access to your fund’s shareholder reports.

Beginning on January 1, 2021, as permitted by regulations adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission, paper copies of a fund’s shareholder reports will no longer be sent by mail, unless you specifically request paper copies of the reports from the fund or from your financial intermediary, such as a financial advisor, broker-dealer or bank. Instead, the reports will be made available on a website, and you will be notified by mail each time a report is posted and provided with a website link to access the report.
If you already elected to receive shareholder reports electronically, you will not be affected by this change and you need not take any action. You may elect to receive shareholder reports and other communications from a fund electronically, by contacting your financial intermediary. For Fidelity customers, visit Fidelity's web site or call Fidelity using the contact information listed below.
You may elect to receive all future reports in paper free of charge. If you wish to continue receiving paper copies of your shareholder reports, you may contact your financial intermediary or, if you are a Fidelity customer, visit Fidelity’s website, or call Fidelity at the applicable toll-free number listed below. Your election to receive reports in paper will apply to all funds held with the fund complex/your financial intermediary.
Account Type | Website | Phone Number |
Brokerage, Mutual Fund, or Annuity Contracts: | fidelity.com/mailpreferences | 1-800-343-3548 |
Employer Provided Retirement Accounts: | netbenefits.fidelity.com/preferences (choose 'no' under Required Disclosures to continue to print) | 1-800-343-0860 |
Advisor Sold Accounts Serviced Through Your Financial Intermediary: | Contact Your Financial Intermediary | Your Financial Intermediary's phone number |
Advisor Sold Accounts Serviced by Fidelity: | institutional.fidelity.com | 1-877-208-0098 |
Contents
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 1-800-544-3455 (for managed account clients) or 1-800-835-5092 (for retirement plan participants) 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. © 2020 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 a new coronavirus emerged as a public health emergency that had a major influence on financial markets, primarily based on its impact on the global economy and the outlook for corporate earnings. The virus causes a respiratory disease known as COVID-19. On March 11, the World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic, citing sustained risk of further global spread.
In the weeks following, as the crisis worsened, we witnessed an escalating human tragedy with wide-scale social and economic consequences from coronavirus-containment measures. The outbreak of COVID-19 prompted a number of measures to limit the spread, 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. Amid 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.
The situation continues to unfold, and the extent and duration of its impact on financial markets and the economy remain highly uncertain. Extreme events such as the coronavirus 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’re taking extra steps to be responsive to customer needs. We encourage you to visit our websites, 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 April 30, 2020 | Past 1 year | Life of fundA |
Fidelity Flex® Mid Cap Index Fund | (9.88)% | 3.99% |
A From March 9, 2017
$10,000 Over Life of Fund
Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity Flex® Mid Cap Index Fund on March 9, 2017, when the fund started.
The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the Russell Midcap® Index performed over the same period.

| Period Ending Values |
| $11,309 | Fidelity Flex® Mid Cap Index Fund |
| $11,288 | Russell Midcap® Index |
Management's Discussion of Fund Performance
Market Recap: The U.S. equity bellwether S&P 500
® index gained 0.86% for the 12 months ending April 30, 2020, as the early-2020 outbreak and spread of the coronavirus hampered global economic growth and the outlook for corporate earnings. Declared a pandemic on March 11, the crisis and containment efforts caused broad contraction in economic activity, along with extreme uncertainty, volatility and dislocation in financial markets. By mid-March, U.S. stocks entered bear-market territory less than a month after hitting an all-time high and extending the longest-running bull market in American history. Following a flattish January to open the year, stocks slid in late February (-8.23%), after a surge in COVID-19 cases outside China pushed investors to safer asset classes. The downtrend continued in March (-12.35%), capping the index’s worst quarterly result since 2008. A historically rapid and expansive U.S. monetary/fiscal-policy response helped mitigate the most acute near-term liquidity issues, and provided a partial offset to the economic disruption. This was evident in April, when the index achieved its highest monthly gain (+12.82%) since 1991, boosted by improving coronavirus trends, plans for reopening the economy and progress on potential treatments. By sector, energy stocks (-38%) fell hard along with the price of crude oil. Financials (-17%) and industrials (-16%) also lagged. In contrast, information technology (+18%) led, followed by health care (+15%), a defensive sector that saw higher demand due to the virus-containment response.
Comments from the Geode Capital Management, LLC, passive equity index team: For the fiscal year, the fund returned -9.88%, roughly in line with the -10.00% return of the benchmark Russell MidCap
® Index. At the individual-stock level, many companies experienced a substantial drawdown in their share price in February and March 2020, as the coronavirus's spread led to a global economic shutdown. Media company ViacomCBS (-65%) was a significant detractor, hurt by weak financial results and, in the wake of the virus, an increasingly unfavorable business environment. Shares of natural gas transportation company ONEOK (-53%), oil and natural gas exploration firms Concho Resources (-51%) and Pioneer Natural Resources (-41%), and energy services business Halliburton (-52%) plunged along with the energy sector in February and March. Meanwhile, travel-related businesses, including United Airlines Holdings (-67%) and Royal Caribbean Cruises (-60%) saw big stock-price declines as business and leisure travel dried up. Other notable detractors included DXC Technology (-71%), a provider of business-to-business IT services, and consumer finance company Discover Financial Services (-46%). In contrast, shares of chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices (+89%) rose sharply, as the company produced favorable financial results and gains in market share. Gold mining company Newmont (+94%) rose particularly sharply in the period's final months, as uncertainty about the global economic environment boosted the price of gold. Dexcom (+177%), which makes continuous glucose monitoring systems for diabetics, gained on extremely strong financial performance amid robust demand for its product. Discount retailer Dollar General (+40%) benefited from its status as an essential retailer, as customers stocked up on supplies while sheltering at home. Other notable contributors were real estate investment trusts (REITs) SBA Communications (+43%) and Digital Realty Trust (+32%), both of whose businesses benefited from increased demand for data usage.
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)
Top Ten Stocks as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Fiserv, Inc. | 0.9 |
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. | 0.8 |
Global Payments, Inc. | 0.8 |
Newmont Corp. | 0.8 |
Dollar General Corp. | 0.7 |
Harris Corp. | 0.6 |
Digital Realty Trust, Inc. | 0.6 |
Centene Corp. | 0.6 |
Lam Research Corp. | 0.5 |
Sempra Energy | 0.5 |
| 6.8 |
Top Market Sectors as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Information Technology | 20.1 |
Industrials | 13.5 |
Health Care | 12.2 |
Financials | 11.1 |
Consumer Discretionary | 10.6 |
Real Estate | 8.9 |
Utilities | 7.0 |
Materials | 5.3 |
Consumer Staples | 4.5 |
Communication Services | 4.1 |
Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)
As of April 30, 2020* |
| Stocks and Equity Futures | 100.2% |
| Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities)** | (0.2)% |

* Foreign investments – 4.3%
** Net Other Assets (Liabilities) are not included in the pie chart
Schedule of Investments April 30, 2020
Showing Percentage of Net Assets
Common Stocks - 100.0% | | | |
| | Shares | Value |
COMMUNICATION SERVICES - 4.1% | | | |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.3% | | | |
CenturyLink, Inc. | | 14,592 | $154,967 |
GCI Liberty, Inc. (a) | | 1,294 | 78,714 |
| | | 233,681 |
Entertainment - 1.0% | | | |
Cinemark Holdings, Inc. | | 1,448 | 20,677 |
Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.: | | | |
Class A (a) | | 654 | 4,670 |
Class B (a) | | 1,568 | 10,474 |
Live Nation Entertainment, Inc. (a) | | 1,730 | 77,625 |
Madison Square Garden Entertainment Corp. (a) | | 250 | 20,675 |
Roku, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,143 | 138,566 |
Spotify Technology SA (a) | | 1,730 | 262,216 |
Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc. (a) | | 1,493 | 180,728 |
The Madison Square Garden Co. (a) | | 250 | 42,830 |
World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. Class A | | 568 | 25,259 |
Zynga, Inc. (a) | | 11,438 | 86,243 |
| | | 869,963 |
Interactive Media & Services - 0.8% | | | |
IAC/InterActiveCorp (a) | | 990 | 221,245 |
Match Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 723 | 55,642 |
TripAdvisor, Inc. | | 1,412 | 28,198 |
Twitter, Inc. (a) | | 10,185 | 292,106 |
Zillow Group, Inc.: | | | |
Class A (a) | | 739 | 32,176 |
Class C (a) | | 1,696 | 74,556 |
| | | 703,923 |
Media - 2.0% | | | |
Altice U.S.A., Inc. Class A (a) | | 4,055 | 105,308 |
AMC Networks, Inc. Class A (a) | | 573 | 13,666 |
Cable One, Inc. | | 57 | 109,033 |
Discovery Communications, Inc.: | | | |
Class A (a) | | 2,114 | 47,396 |
Class C (non-vtg.) (a) | | 4,503 | 91,906 |
DISH Network Corp. Class A (a) | | 3,458 | 86,502 |
Fox Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 4,634 | 119,882 |
Class B | | 2,093 | 53,497 |
Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. | | 5,177 | 87,905 |
John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Class A | | 592 | 22,230 |
Liberty Broadband Corp.: | | | |
Class A (a) | | 304 | 36,486 |
Class C (a) | | 1,419 | 174,083 |
Liberty Media Corp.: | | | |
Liberty Formula One Group Series C (a) | | 2,673 | 86,044 |
Liberty Media Class A (a) | | 312 | 9,438 |
Liberty SiriusXM Series A (a) | | 1,119 | 37,721 |
Liberty SiriusXM Series C (a) | | 2,052 | 69,912 |
News Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 5,140 | 50,937 |
Class B | | 1,608 | 16,434 |
Nexstar Broadcasting Group, Inc. Class A | | 603 | 42,234 |
Omnicom Group, Inc. | | 2,890 | 164,817 |
Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc. Class A | | 830 | 14,650 |
Sirius XM Holdings, Inc. | | 18,076 | 106,829 |
The New York Times Co. Class A | | 2,170 | 70,568 |
ViacomCBS, Inc.: | | | |
Class A | | 487 | 9,560 |
Class B | | 6,924 | 119,508 |
| | | 1,746,546 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.0% | | | |
Telephone & Data Systems, Inc. | | 1,356 | 26,605 |
U.S. Cellular Corp. (a) | | 207 | 6,589 |
| | | 33,194 |
|
TOTAL COMMUNICATION SERVICES | | | 3,587,307 |
|
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 10.6% | | | |
Auto Components - 0.6% | | | |
Aptiv PLC | | 3,455 | 240,295 |
BorgWarner, Inc. | | 2,787 | 79,625 |
Gentex Corp. | | 3,376 | 81,834 |
Lear Corp. | | 774 | 75,581 |
The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. | | 3,092 | 22,170 |
| | | 499,505 |
Automobiles - 0.1% | | | |
Harley-Davidson, Inc. | | 2,064 | 45,057 |
Thor Industries, Inc. | | 705 | 46,671 |
| | | 91,728 |
Distributors - 0.4% | | | |
Genuine Parts Co. | | 1,887 | 149,601 |
LKQ Corp. (a) | | 4,142 | 108,313 |
Pool Corp. | | 513 | 108,582 |
| | | 366,496 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.4% | | | |
Bright Horizons Family Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 763 | 88,851 |
Frontdoor, Inc. (a) | | 1,139 | 44,091 |
Graham Holdings Co. | | 56 | 21,841 |
Grand Canyon Education, Inc. (a) | | 637 | 54,795 |
H&R Block, Inc. | | 2,623 | 43,673 |
Service Corp. International | | 2,336 | 85,825 |
ServiceMaster Global Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,829 | 62,277 |
| | | 401,353 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 2.5% | | | |
ARAMARK Holdings Corp. | | 3,368 | 91,980 |
Caesars Entertainment Corp. (a) | | 7,683 | 74,218 |
Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc. (a) | | 341 | 299,586 |
Choice Hotels International, Inc. | | 443 | 33,247 |
Darden Restaurants, Inc. | | 1,745 | 128,764 |
Domino's Pizza, Inc. | | 545 | 197,252 |
Dunkin' Brands Group, Inc. | | 1,099 | 69,061 |
Extended Stay America, Inc. unit | | 2,419 | 26,295 |
Hilton Grand Vacations, Inc. (a) | | 1,139 | 23,463 |
Hilton Worldwide Holdings, Inc. | | 3,668 | 277,704 |
Hyatt Hotels Corp. Class A | | 525 | 29,537 |
International Game Technology PLC | | 1,523 | 11,483 |
MGM Mirage, Inc. | | 6,299 | 106,012 |
Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd. (a) | | 2,391 | 39,212 |
Planet Fitness, Inc. (a) | | 1,113 | 67,147 |
Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. (b) | | 2,197 | 102,754 |
Six Flags Entertainment Corp. | | 1,133 | 22,671 |
Vail Resorts, Inc. | | 539 | 92,169 |
Wendy's Co. | | 2,498 | 49,610 |
Wyndham Destinations, Inc. | | 1,213 | 31,016 |
Wyndham Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 1,289 | 48,608 |
Wynn Resorts Ltd. | | 1,330 | 113,755 |
Yum China Holdings, Inc. | | 4,823 | 233,723 |
| | | 2,169,267 |
Household Durables - 1.3% | | | |
D.R. Horton, Inc. | | 4,506 | 212,773 |
Garmin Ltd. | | 1,925 | 156,233 |
Leggett & Platt, Inc. | | 1,734 | 60,915 |
Lennar Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 3,721 | 186,310 |
Class B | | 182 | 6,943 |
Mohawk Industries, Inc. (a) | | 728 | 63,860 |
Newell Brands, Inc. | | 5,086 | 70,594 |
NVR, Inc. (a) | | 43 | 133,300 |
PulteGroup, Inc. | | 3,392 | 95,892 |
Tempur Sealy International, Inc. (a) | | 615 | 33,056 |
Toll Brothers, Inc. | | 1,666 | 40,017 |
Whirlpool Corp. | | 831 | 92,856 |
| | | 1,152,749 |
Internet & Direct Marketing Retail - 0.5% | | | |
Etsy, Inc. (a) | | 1,580 | 102,495 |
Expedia, Inc. | | 1,802 | 127,906 |
GrubHub, Inc. (a) | | 1,212 | 57,921 |
Liberty Interactive Corp. QVC Group Series A (a) | | 5,112 | 41,177 |
Wayfair LLC Class A (a)(b) | | 843 | 104,566 |
| | | 434,065 |
Leisure Products - 0.3% | | | |
Brunswick Corp. | | 1,097 | 52,349 |
Hasbro, Inc. | | 1,692 | 122,179 |
Mattel, Inc. (a) | | 4,614 | 40,234 |
Polaris, Inc. | | 775 | 54,971 |
| | | 269,733 |
Multiline Retail - 1.1% | | | |
Dollar General Corp. | | 3,401 | 596,195 |
Dollar Tree, Inc. (a) | | 3,159 | 251,678 |
Kohl's Corp. | | 1,910 | 35,259 |
Macy's, Inc. (b) | | 2,940 | 17,228 |
Nordstrom, Inc. (b) | | 1,451 | 27,250 |
Ollie's Bargain Outlet Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 709 | 48,148 |
| | | 975,758 |
Specialty Retail - 2.6% | | | |
Advance Auto Parts, Inc. | | 891 | 107,731 |
AutoNation, Inc. (a) | | 709 | 26,403 |
AutoZone, Inc. (a) | | 317 | 323,441 |
Best Buy Co., Inc. | | 2,968 | 227,735 |
Burlington Stores, Inc. (a) | | 877 | 160,219 |
CarMax, Inc. (a) | | 2,204 | 162,325 |
Carvana Co. Class A (a)(b) | | 605 | 48,467 |
Dick's Sporting Goods, Inc. | | 877 | 25,775 |
Five Below, Inc. (a) | | 730 | 65,817 |
Floor & Decor Holdings, Inc. Class A (a) | | 933 | 39,559 |
Foot Locker, Inc. | | 1,401 | 35,908 |
Gap, Inc. | | 2,823 | 22,923 |
L Brands, Inc. | | 2,865 | 34,065 |
O'Reilly Automotive, Inc. (a) | | 996 | 384,795 |
Penske Automotive Group, Inc. | | 433 | 15,579 |
Tiffany & Co., Inc. | | 1,604 | 202,906 |
Tractor Supply Co. | | 1,598 | 162,085 |
Ulta Beauty, Inc. (a) | | 736 | 160,389 |
Urban Outfitters, Inc. (a) | | 901 | 15,623 |
Williams-Sonoma, Inc. | | 1,040 | 64,314 |
| | | 2,286,059 |
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 0.8% | | | |
Capri Holdings Ltd. (a) | | 1,867 | 28,472 |
Carter's, Inc. | | 584 | 45,669 |
Columbia Sportswear Co. | | 392 | 28,573 |
Hanesbrands, Inc. | | 4,841 | 48,120 |
lululemon athletica, Inc. (a) | | 1,582 | 353,545 |
PVH Corp. | | 857 | 42,190 |
Ralph Lauren Corp. | | 649 | 47,883 |
Skechers U.S.A., Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a) | | 1,724 | 48,582 |
Tapestry, Inc. | | 3,382 | 50,324 |
Under Armour, Inc.: | | | |
Class A (sub. vtg.) (a) | | 2,252 | 23,466 |
Class C (non-vtg.) (a) | | 2,799 | 25,947 |
| | | 742,771 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | | 9,389,484 |
|
CONSUMER STAPLES - 4.5% | | | |
Beverages - 0.3% | | | |
Brown-Forman Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 629 | 35,677 |
Class B (non-vtg.) | | 2,258 | 140,448 |
Molson Coors Beverage Co. Class B | | 2,338 | 95,881 |
| | | 272,006 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 0.6% | | | |
Casey's General Stores, Inc. | | 488 | 73,888 |
Grocery Outlet Holding Corp. | | 912 | 30,342 |
Kroger Co. | | 10,600 | 335,066 |
Sprouts Farmers Market LLC (a) | | 1,583 | 32,895 |
U.S. Foods Holding Corp. (a) | | 2,930 | 62,995 |
| | | 535,186 |
Food Products - 2.8% | | | |
Archer Daniels Midland Co. | | 7,466 | 277,287 |
Beyond Meat, Inc. (b) | | 632 | 62,562 |
Bunge Ltd. | | 1,835 | 72,794 |
Campbell Soup Co. | | 2,213 | 110,606 |
Conagra Brands, Inc. | | 6,431 | 215,053 |
Flowers Foods, Inc. | | 2,554 | 56,903 |
Hormel Foods Corp. | | 3,653 | 171,143 |
Ingredion, Inc. | | 896 | 72,755 |
Kellogg Co. | | 3,268 | 214,054 |
Lamb Weston Holdings, Inc. | | 1,959 | 120,204 |
McCormick & Co., Inc. (non-vtg.) | | 1,633 | 256,120 |
Pilgrim's Pride Corp. (a) | | 708 | 15,576 |
Post Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 876 | 80,461 |
Seaboard Corp. | | 3 | 9,033 |
The Hain Celestial Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,116 | 28,837 |
The Hershey Co. | | 1,919 | 254,133 |
The J.M. Smucker Co. | | 1,472 | 169,148 |
TreeHouse Foods, Inc. (a) | | 747 | 38,642 |
Tyson Foods, Inc. Class A | | 3,856 | 239,805 |
| | | 2,465,116 |
Household Products - 0.7% | | | |
Church & Dwight Co., Inc. | | 3,272 | 229,007 |
Clorox Co. | | 1,675 | 312,287 |
Energizer Holdings, Inc. | | 846 | 32,960 |
Reynolds Consumer Products, Inc. | | 604 | 19,588 |
Spectrum Brands Holdings, Inc. | | 611 | 26,310 |
| | | 620,152 |
Personal Products - 0.1% | | | |
Coty, Inc. Class A | | 3,929 | 21,413 |
Herbalife Nutrition Ltd. (a) | | 1,334 | 49,825 |
Nu Skin Enterprises, Inc. Class A | | 743 | 21,703 |
| | | 92,941 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | | 3,985,401 |
|
ENERGY - 2.7% | | | |
Energy Equipment & Services - 0.4% | | | |
Apergy Corp. (a)(b) | | 1,158 | 10,665 |
Baker Hughes Co. Class A | | 8,681 | 121,100 |
Halliburton Co. | | 11,601 | 121,811 |
Helmerich & Payne, Inc. | | 1,448 | 28,627 |
National Oilwell Varco, Inc. | | 4,747 | 60,002 |
Patterson-UTI Energy, Inc. | | 3,305 | 12,195 |
Transocean Ltd. (United States) (a) | | 10,221 | 13,083 |
| | | 367,483 |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 2.3% | | | |
Antero Midstream GP LP | | 3,296 | 15,656 |
Antero Resources Corp. (a) | | 3,637 | 10,838 |
Apache Corp. | | 4,859 | 63,556 |
Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. | | 5,440 | 117,613 |
Centennial Resource Development, Inc. Class A (a) | | 2,361 | 2,786 |
Cheniere Energy, Inc. (a) | | 3,132 | 146,233 |
Chesapeake Energy Corp. (a) | | 80 | 1,400 |
Cimarex Energy Co. | | 1,113 | 28,292 |
Concho Resources, Inc. | | 2,543 | 144,239 |
Continental Resources, Inc. (b) | | 1,314 | 21,536 |
Devon Energy Corp. | | 4,823 | 60,143 |
Diamondback Energy, Inc. | | 2,060 | 89,692 |
EQT Corp. | | 3,406 | 49,694 |
Equitrans Midstream Corp. | | 2,732 | 22,894 |
Hess Corp. | | 3,606 | 175,396 |
HollyFrontier Corp. | | 2,059 | 68,029 |
Kosmos Energy Ltd. | | 4,955 | 8,176 |
Marathon Oil Corp. | | 9,673 | 59,199 |
Murphy Oil Corp. | | 2,268 | 26,898 |
Noble Energy, Inc. | | 5,989 | 58,752 |
ONEOK, Inc. | | 5,518 | 165,154 |
Parsley Energy, Inc. Class A | | 4,248 | 40,144 |
PBF Energy, Inc. Class A | | 1,769 | 20,167 |
Pioneer Natural Resources Co. | | 2,212 | 197,554 |
Range Resources Corp. | | 2,802 | 16,336 |
Targa Resources Corp. | | 2,647 | 34,305 |
The Williams Companies, Inc. | | 16,262 | 314,995 |
WPX Energy, Inc. (a) | | 5,608 | 34,377 |
| | | 1,994,054 |
|
TOTAL ENERGY | | | 2,361,537 |
|
FINANCIALS - 11.1% | | | |
Banks - 2.9% | | | |
Associated Banc-Corp. | | 2,087 | 29,510 |
Bank of Hawaii Corp. | | 539 | 36,749 |
Bank OZK | | 1,637 | 37,029 |
BankUnited, Inc. | | 1,284 | 25,436 |
BOK Financial Corp. | | 423 | 21,907 |
CIT Group, Inc. | | 1,431 | 27,160 |
Citizens Financial Group, Inc. | | 5,682 | 127,220 |
Comerica, Inc. | | 1,633 | 56,926 |
Commerce Bancshares, Inc. | | 1,343 | 82,178 |
Cullen/Frost Bankers, Inc. | | 719 | 51,667 |
East West Bancorp, Inc. | | 1,952 | 68,457 |
Fifth Third Bancorp | | 9,509 | 177,723 |
First Citizens Bancshares, Inc. | | 92 | 35,144 |
First Hawaiian, Inc. | | 1,760 | 30,958 |
First Horizon National Corp. | | 4,541 | 41,232 |
First Republic Bank | | 2,266 | 236,321 |
FNB Corp., Pennsylvania | | 4,373 | 35,378 |
Huntington Bancshares, Inc. | | 13,619 | 125,840 |
KeyCorp | | 13,157 | 153,279 |
M&T Bank Corp. | | 1,705 | 191,096 |
PacWest Bancorp | | 1,728 | 34,975 |
Peoples United Financial, Inc. | | 5,901 | 74,884 |
Pinnacle Financial Partners, Inc. | | 1,003 | 40,371 |
Popular, Inc. | | 1,278 | 49,318 |
Prosperity Bancshares, Inc. | | 1,219 | 73,055 |
Regions Financial Corp. | | 12,609 | 135,547 |
Signature Bank | | 715 | 76,634 |
Sterling Bancorp | | 2,878 | 35,486 |
SVB Financial Group (a) | | 697 | 134,639 |
Synovus Financial Corp. | | 1,899 | 39,898 |
TCF Financial Corp. | | 2,036 | 60,449 |
Texas Capital Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 704 | 19,557 |
Umpqua Holdings Corp. | | 2,967 | 37,162 |
Webster Financial Corp. | | 1,226 | 34,635 |
Western Alliance Bancorp. | | 1,270 | 45,568 |
Wintrust Financial Corp. | | 778 | 32,598 |
Zions Bancorp NA | | 2,174 | 68,720 |
| | | 2,584,706 |
Capital Markets - 3.3% | | | |
Affiliated Managers Group, Inc. | | 659 | 46,104 |
Ameriprise Financial, Inc. | | 1,696 | 194,938 |
BGC Partners, Inc. Class A | | 3,905 | 12,086 |
Cboe Global Markets, Inc. | | 1,472 | 146,287 |
E*TRADE Financial Corp. | | 2,988 | 121,343 |
Eaton Vance Corp. (non-vtg.) | | 1,447 | 53,105 |
Evercore, Inc. Class A | | 525 | 27,090 |
FactSet Research Systems, Inc. | | 499 | 137,225 |
Franklin Resources, Inc. | | 3,689 | 69,501 |
Interactive Brokers Group, Inc. | | 1,000 | 41,000 |
Invesco Ltd. | | 3,744 | 32,273 |
Janus Henderson Group PLC | | 2,119 | 37,930 |
Lazard Ltd. Class A | | 1,377 | 37,868 |
Legg Mason, Inc. | | 1,143 | 56,956 |
LPL Financial | | 1,067 | 64,255 |
MarketAxess Holdings, Inc. | | 490 | 222,955 |
Morningstar, Inc. | | 252 | 39,302 |
MSCI, Inc. | | 1,096 | 358,392 |
Northern Trust Corp. | | 2,577 | 203,995 |
Raymond James Financial, Inc. | | 1,671 | 110,152 |
SEI Investments Co. | | 1,706 | 86,938 |
State Street Corp. | | 4,775 | 301,016 |
T. Rowe Price Group, Inc. | | 3,072 | 355,215 |
The NASDAQ OMX Group, Inc. | | 1,523 | 167,027 |
Virtu Financial, Inc. Class A | | 686 | 16,032 |
| | | 2,938,985 |
Consumer Finance - 0.7% | | | |
Ally Financial, Inc. | | 5,306 | 86,965 |
Credit Acceptance Corp. (a) | | 139 | 43,308 |
Discover Financial Services | | 3,944 | 169,474 |
LendingTree, Inc. (a) | | 104 | 25,934 |
Navient Corp. | | 2,881 | 21,953 |
OneMain Holdings, Inc. | | 914 | 22,128 |
Santander Consumer U.S.A. Holdings, Inc. | | 1,507 | 23,494 |
SLM Corp. | | 5,667 | 47,263 |
Synchrony Financial | | 7,918 | 156,697 |
| | | 597,216 |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.3% | | | |
AXA Equitable Holdings, Inc. | | 5,687 | 104,186 |
Jefferies Financial Group, Inc. | | 3,381 | 46,387 |
Voya Financial, Inc. | | 1,816 | 82,029 |
| | | 232,602 |
Insurance - 3.4% | | | |
Alleghany Corp. | | 188 | 100,337 |
American Financial Group, Inc. | | 904 | 59,881 |
American National Insurance Co. | | 94 | 7,567 |
Arch Capital Group Ltd. (a) | | 4,992 | 119,958 |
Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. | | 2,477 | 194,445 |
Assurant, Inc. | | 813 | 86,373 |
Assured Guaranty Ltd. | | 1,305 | 38,798 |
Athene Holding Ltd. (a) | | 1,935 | 52,245 |
Axis Capital Holdings Ltd. | | 1,108 | 40,553 |
Brighthouse Financial, Inc. (a) | | 1,498 | 38,514 |
Brown & Brown, Inc. | | 3,098 | 111,249 |
Cincinnati Financial Corp. | | 2,045 | 134,561 |
CNA Financial Corp. | | 374 | 11,811 |
Erie Indemnity Co. Class A | | 328 | 58,404 |
Everest Re Group Ltd. | | 540 | 93,490 |
First American Financial Corp. | | 1,464 | 67,520 |
FNF Group | | 3,549 | 96,000 |
Globe Life, Inc. | | 1,434 | 118,076 |
Hanover Insurance Group, Inc. | | 511 | 51,294 |
Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc. | | 4,802 | 182,428 |
Kemper Corp. | | 843 | 56,666 |
Lincoln National Corp. | | 2,605 | 92,399 |
Loews Corp. | | 3,332 | 115,487 |
Markel Corp. (a) | | 180 | 155,851 |
Mercury General Corp. | | 369 | 15,114 |
Old Republic International Corp. | | 3,761 | 59,988 |
Primerica, Inc. | | 546 | 56,735 |
Principal Financial Group, Inc. | | 3,538 | 128,819 |
Reinsurance Group of America, Inc. | | 842 | 88,141 |
RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd. | | 579 | 84,540 |
Unum Group | | 2,648 | 46,208 |
W.R. Berkley Corp. | | 1,934 | 104,436 |
White Mountains Insurance Group Ltd. | | 41 | 39,893 |
Willis Group Holdings PLC | | 1,717 | 306,124 |
| | | 3,013,905 |
Mortgage Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.4% | | | |
AGNC Investment Corp. | | 7,206 | 89,499 |
Annaly Capital Management, Inc. | | 19,019 | 118,869 |
Chimera Investment Corp. | | 2,563 | 19,915 |
MFA Financial, Inc. | | 9,464 | 16,562 |
New Residential Investment Corp. | | 4,222 | 25,712 |
Starwood Property Trust, Inc. | | 3,342 | 43,245 |
Two Harbors Investment Corp. | | 4,923 | 22,498 |
| | | 336,300 |
Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.1% | | | |
MGIC Investment Corp. | | 4,690 | 34,284 |
New York Community Bancorp, Inc. | | 5,951 | 64,628 |
TFS Financial Corp. | | 575 | 7,849 |
| | | 106,761 |
|
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | | 9,810,475 |
|
HEALTH CARE - 12.2% | | | |
Biotechnology - 2.0% | | | |
Agios Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 807 | 33,200 |
Alkermes PLC (a) | | 2,104 | 28,846 |
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,430 | 188,331 |
BioMarin Pharmaceutical, Inc. (a) | | 2,378 | 218,824 |
bluebird bio, Inc. (a) | | 724 | 39,009 |
Exact Sciences Corp. (a) | | 1,869 | 147,614 |
Exelixis, Inc. (a) | | 3,987 | 98,459 |
Incyte Corp. (a) | | 2,391 | 233,505 |
Ionis Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,711 | 95,012 |
Moderna, Inc. (a) | | 2,987 | 137,372 |
Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 1,210 | 118,749 |
Sage Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 605 | 23,583 |
Sarepta Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 945 | 111,397 |
Seattle Genetics, Inc. (a) | | 1,547 | 212,295 |
United Therapeutics Corp. (a) | | 577 | 63,216 |
| | | 1,749,412 |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 3.9% | | | |
Abiomed, Inc. (a) | | 592 | 113,220 |
Align Technology, Inc. (a) | | 1,044 | 224,303 |
Cantel Medical Corp. | | 510 | 18,870 |
Dentsply Sirona, Inc. | | 2,995 | 127,108 |
DexCom, Inc. (a) | | 1,205 | 403,916 |
Envista Holdings Corp. (a) | | 1,938 | 37,733 |
Hill-Rom Holdings, Inc. | | 886 | 99,666 |
Hologic, Inc. (a) | | 3,485 | 174,599 |
ICU Medical, Inc. (a) | | 253 | 55,485 |
IDEXX Laboratories, Inc. (a) | | 1,132 | 314,243 |
Insulet Corp. (a) | | 787 | 157,180 |
Integra LifeSciences Holdings Corp. (a) | | 935 | 47,732 |
Masimo Corp. (a) | | 622 | 133,052 |
Penumbra, Inc. (a) | | 416 | 73,765 |
ResMed, Inc. | | 1,884 | 292,623 |
STERIS PLC | | 1,108 | 157,890 |
Teleflex, Inc. | | 613 | 205,600 |
The Cooper Companies, Inc. | | 642 | 184,061 |
Varian Medical Systems, Inc. (a) | | 1,218 | 139,315 |
West Pharmaceutical Services, Inc. | | 967 | 183,014 |
Zimmer Biomet Holdings, Inc. | | 2,746 | 328,696 |
| | | 3,472,071 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 2.6% | | | |
Acadia Healthcare Co., Inc. (a) | | 1,159 | 27,828 |
AmerisourceBergen Corp. | | 1,978 | 177,347 |
Cardinal Health, Inc. | | 3,898 | 192,873 |
Centene Corp. (a) | | 7,716 | 513,731 |
Chemed Corp. | | 204 | 84,980 |
Covetrus, Inc. (a) | | 1,297 | 15,421 |
DaVita HealthCare Partners, Inc. (a) | | 1,154 | 91,178 |
Encompass Health Corp. | | 1,293 | 85,661 |
Guardant Health, Inc. (a) | | 497 | 38,249 |
Henry Schein, Inc. (a) | | 1,962 | 107,047 |
Laboratory Corp. of America Holdings (a) | | 1,295 | 212,963 |
McKesson Corp. | | 2,157 | 304,676 |
MEDNAX, Inc. (a) | | 1,123 | 16,306 |
Molina Healthcare, Inc. (a) | | 811 | 132,980 |
Premier, Inc. (a) | | 796 | 26,395 |
Quest Diagnostics, Inc. | | 1,768 | 194,674 |
Universal Health Services, Inc. Class B | | 1,049 | 110,869 |
| | | 2,333,178 |
Health Care Technology - 0.8% | | | |
Cerner Corp. | | 4,147 | 287,760 |
Change Healthcare, Inc. | | 3,035 | 35,327 |
Veeva Systems, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,741 | 332,183 |
| | | 655,270 |
Life Sciences Tools & Services - 2.1% | | | |
Adaptive Biotechnologies Corp. | | 896 | 28,681 |
Agilent Technologies, Inc. | | 4,136 | 317,066 |
Avantor, Inc. | | 4,177 | 70,215 |
Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc. Class A (a) | | 283 | 124,548 |
Bio-Techne Corp. | | 503 | 113,175 |
Bruker Corp. | | 1,374 | 54,026 |
Charles River Laboratories International, Inc. (a) | | 648 | 93,746 |
IQVIA Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,363 | 336,940 |
Mettler-Toledo International, Inc. (a) | | 317 | 228,221 |
PerkinElmer, Inc. | | 1,484 | 134,347 |
PPD, Inc. | | 917 | 21,916 |
PRA Health Sciences, Inc. (a) | | 844 | 81,446 |
QIAGEN NV (a) | | 2,942 | 122,652 |
Waters Corp. (a) | | 852 | 159,324 |
| | | 1,886,303 |
Pharmaceuticals - 0.8% | | | |
Catalent, Inc. (a) | | 2,040 | 141,066 |
Elanco Animal Health, Inc. (a) | | 5,314 | 131,309 |
Horizon Pharma PLC (a) | | 2,487 | 89,631 |
Jazz Pharmaceuticals PLC (a) | | 742 | 81,806 |
Mylan NV (a) | | 6,730 | 112,862 |
Nektar Therapeutics (a) | | 2,201 | 42,259 |
Perrigo Co. PLC | | 1,688 | 89,970 |
| | | 688,903 |
|
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | | 10,785,137 |
|
INDUSTRIALS - 13.5% | | | |
Aerospace & Defense - 1.7% | | | |
BWX Technologies, Inc. | | 1,272 | 67,492 |
Curtiss-Wright Corp. | | 567 | 58,770 |
Harris Corp. | | 2,948 | 571,028 |
HEICO Corp. | | 588 | 51,509 |
HEICO Corp. Class A | | 1,032 | 74,645 |
Hexcel Corp. | | 1,121 | 38,775 |
Howmet Aerospace, Inc. | | 5,161 | 67,454 |
Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc. | | 534 | 102,213 |
Spirit AeroSystems Holdings, Inc. Class A | | 1,191 | 26,393 |
Teledyne Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 476 | 155,019 |
Textron, Inc. | | 3,014 | 79,449 |
TransDigm Group, Inc. | | 688 | 249,799 |
| | | 1,542,546 |
Air Freight & Logistics - 0.4% | | | |
C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc. | | 1,809 | 128,258 |
Expeditors International of Washington, Inc. | | 2,285 | 163,617 |
XPO Logistics, Inc. (a) | | 1,230 | 82,090 |
| | | 373,965 |
Airlines - 0.3% | | | |
Alaska Air Group, Inc. | | 1,812 | 58,926 |
American Airlines Group, Inc. (b) | | 4,341 | 52,135 |
Copa Holdings SA Class A | | 470 | 20,779 |
JetBlue Airways Corp. (a) | | 4,284 | 41,726 |
United Airlines Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 3,287 | 97,229 |
| | | 270,795 |
Building Products - 1.1% | | | |
A.O. Smith Corp. | | 1,824 | 77,301 |
Allegion PLC | | 1,236 | 124,267 |
Armstrong World Industries, Inc. | | 648 | 49,948 |
Fortune Brands Home & Security, Inc. | | 1,840 | 88,688 |
Lennox International, Inc. | | 471 | 87,926 |
Masco Corp. | | 3,699 | 151,807 |
Owens Corning | | 1,423 | 61,701 |
Resideo Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 1,728 | 8,865 |
Trane Technologies PLC | | 3,171 | 277,209 |
| | | 927,712 |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 1.1% | | | |
ADT, Inc. | | 1,584 | 9,076 |
Cintas Corp. | | 1,133 | 251,333 |
Clean Harbors, Inc. (a) | | 694 | 37,080 |
Copart, Inc. (a) | | 2,685 | 215,095 |
IAA Spinco, Inc. (a) | | 1,797 | 69,364 |
KAR Auction Services, Inc. | | 1,699 | 25,451 |
Republic Services, Inc. | | 2,818 | 220,762 |
Rollins, Inc. | | 1,867 | 74,680 |
Stericycle, Inc. (a) | | 1,184 | 57,779 |
| | | 960,620 |
Construction & Engineering - 0.4% | | | |
AECOM (a) | | 2,024 | 73,390 |
Fluor Corp. | | 1,883 | 22,031 |
Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc. | | 1,705 | 141,089 |
Quanta Services, Inc. | | 1,884 | 68,502 |
Valmont Industries, Inc. | | 273 | 32,007 |
| | | 337,019 |
Electrical Equipment - 1.0% | | | |
Acuity Brands, Inc. | | 531 | 45,979 |
AMETEK, Inc. | | 3,031 | 254,210 |
GrafTech International Ltd. | | 772 | 6,269 |
Hubbell, Inc. Class B | | 725 | 90,212 |
nVent Electric PLC | | 2,042 | 38,083 |
Regal Beloit Corp. | | 548 | 38,913 |
Rockwell Automation, Inc. | | 1,537 | 291,231 |
Sensata Technologies, Inc. PLC (a) | | 2,088 | 75,961 |
| | | 840,858 |
Industrial Conglomerates - 0.1% | | | |
Carlisle Companies, Inc. | | 739 | 89,389 |
Machinery - 3.8% | | | |
AGCO Corp. | | 842 | 44,491 |
Allison Transmission Holdings, Inc. | | 1,478 | 53,711 |
Colfax Corp. (a) | | 1,227 | 31,644 |
Crane Co. | | 673 | 36,645 |
Cummins, Inc. | | 1,953 | 319,316 |
Donaldson Co., Inc. | | 1,676 | 73,459 |
Dover Corp. | | 1,937 | 181,400 |
Flowserve Corp. | | 1,771 | 49,889 |
Fortive Corp. | | 3,944 | 252,416 |
Gardner Denver Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 4,586 | 133,361 |
Gates Industrial Corp. PLC (a) | | 561 | 4,819 |
Graco, Inc. | | 2,183 | 97,493 |
IDEX Corp. | | 1,004 | 154,245 |
ITT, Inc. | | 1,183 | 62,368 |
Lincoln Electric Holdings, Inc. | | 783 | 63,039 |
Middleby Corp. (a) | | 688 | 38,273 |
Nordson Corp. | | 760 | 122,292 |
Oshkosh Corp. | | 906 | 61,182 |
PACCAR, Inc. | | 4,513 | 312,435 |
Parker Hannifin Corp. | | 1,718 | 271,650 |
Pentair PLC | | 2,236 | 77,343 |
Snap-On, Inc. | | 730 | 95,112 |
Stanley Black & Decker, Inc. | | 2,033 | 224,037 |
Timken Co. | | 908 | 34,123 |
Toro Co. | | 1,413 | 90,164 |
Trinity Industries, Inc. | | 1,365 | 26,331 |
WABCO Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 659 | 88,556 |
Westinghouse Air Brake Co. | | 2,413 | 136,141 |
Woodward, Inc. | | 748 | 45,299 |
Xylem, Inc. | | 2,390 | 171,841 |
| | | 3,353,075 |
Marine - 0.0% | | | |
Kirby Corp. (a) | | 807 | 43,110 |
Professional Services - 1.9% | | | |
CoreLogic, Inc. | | 1,066 | 40,956 |
CoStar Group, Inc. (a) | | 479 | 310,517 |
Equifax, Inc. | | 1,614 | 224,185 |
IHS Markit Ltd. | | 5,187 | 349,085 |
Manpower, Inc. | | 777 | 57,684 |
Nielsen Holdings PLC | | 4,542 | 66,904 |
Robert Half International, Inc. | | 1,523 | 71,992 |
TransUnion Holding Co., Inc. | | 2,497 | 196,739 |
Verisk Analytics, Inc. | | 2,119 | 323,847 |
| | | 1,641,909 |
Road & Rail - 0.8% | | | |
AMERCO | | 117 | 32,775 |
J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc. | | 1,133 | 114,569 |
Kansas City Southern | | 1,278 | 166,843 |
Knight-Swift Transportation Holdings, Inc. Class A | | 1,657 | 61,607 |
Landstar System, Inc. | | 518 | 53,515 |
Lyft, Inc. (a) | | 2,619 | 85,982 |
Old Dominion Freight Lines, Inc. | | 1,292 | 187,715 |
Ryder System, Inc. | | 686 | 24,284 |
Schneider National, Inc. Class B | | 723 | 15,841 |
| | | 743,131 |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.9% | | | |
Air Lease Corp. Class A | | 1,425 | 37,264 |
Fastenal Co. | | 7,619 | 275,960 |
HD Supply Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,162 | 64,168 |
MSC Industrial Direct Co., Inc. Class A | | 580 | 34,591 |
United Rentals, Inc. (a) | | 999 | 128,372 |
Univar, Inc. (a) | | 2,232 | 32,409 |
W.W. Grainger, Inc. | | 576 | 158,734 |
Watsco, Inc. | | 432 | 69,548 |
WESCO International, Inc. (a) | | 574 | 14,849 |
| | | 815,895 |
Transportation Infrastructure - 0.0% | | | |
Macquarie Infrastructure Co. LLC | | 1,019 | 28,114 |
|
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | | 11,968,138 |
|
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 20.1% | | | |
Communications Equipment - 1.0% | | | |
Arista Networks, Inc. (a) | | 791 | 173,466 |
Ciena Corp. (a) | | 2,028 | 93,795 |
CommScope Holding Co., Inc. (a) | | 2,559 | 28,175 |
EchoStar Holding Corp. Class A (a) | | 665 | 20,981 |
F5 Networks, Inc. (a) | | 816 | 113,636 |
Juniper Networks, Inc. | | 4,470 | 96,552 |
Motorola Solutions, Inc. | | 2,280 | 327,887 |
Ubiquiti, Inc. | | 108 | 17,499 |
ViaSat, Inc. (a) | | 773 | 32,775 |
| | | 904,766 |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 2.2% | | | |
Amphenol Corp. Class A | | 3,880 | 342,449 |
Arrow Electronics, Inc. (a) | | 1,075 | 67,639 |
Avnet, Inc. | | 1,349 | 40,497 |
CDW Corp. | | 1,903 | 210,852 |
Cognex Corp. | | 2,182 | 120,534 |
Coherent, Inc. (a) | | 324 | 41,430 |
Corning, Inc. | | 10,161 | 223,644 |
Dolby Laboratories, Inc. Class A | | 815 | 48,924 |
FLIR Systems, Inc. | | 1,799 | 78,077 |
IPG Photonics Corp. (a) | | 471 | 60,914 |
Jabil, Inc. | | 2,019 | 57,420 |
Keysight Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 2,496 | 241,538 |
Littelfuse, Inc. | | 313 | 45,460 |
National Instruments Corp. | | 1,737 | 66,736 |
SYNNEX Corp. | | 555 | 48,596 |
Trimble, Inc. (a) | | 3,344 | 115,803 |
Zebra Technologies Corp. Class A (a) | | 712 | 163,518 |
| | | 1,974,031 |
IT Services - 5.9% | | | |
Akamai Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 2,109 | 206,070 |
Alliance Data Systems Corp. | | 384 | 19,227 |
Amdocs Ltd. | | 1,772 | 114,188 |
Black Knight, Inc. (a) | | 1,902 | 134,224 |
Booz Allen Hamilton Holding Corp. Class A | | 1,814 | 133,220 |
Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. | | 1,525 | 176,900 |
CACI International, Inc. Class A (a) | | 325 | 81,296 |
DXC Technology Co. | | 2,926 | 53,048 |
EPAM Systems, Inc. (a) | | 691 | 152,635 |
Euronet Worldwide, Inc. (a) | | 680 | 62,397 |
Fiserv, Inc. (a) | | 7,531 | 776,146 |
FleetCor Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 1,141 | 275,266 |
Gartner, Inc. (a) | | 1,172 | 139,245 |
Genpact Ltd. | | 2,504 | 86,213 |
Global Payments, Inc. | | 3,984 | 661,424 |
GoDaddy, Inc. (a) | | 2,320 | 161,078 |
Jack Henry & Associates, Inc. | | 1,021 | 166,985 |
Leidos Holdings, Inc. | | 1,781 | 175,981 |
MongoDB, Inc. Class A (a) | | 568 | 92,090 |
Okta, Inc. (a) | | 1,397 | 211,366 |
Paychex, Inc. | | 4,295 | 294,293 |
Sabre Corp. | | 3,641 | 26,470 |
Square, Inc. (a) | | 4,598 | 299,514 |
Switch, Inc. Class A | | 776 | 13,324 |
The Western Union Co. | | 5,619 | 107,154 |
Twilio, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,641 | 184,284 |
VeriSign, Inc. (a) | | 1,379 | 288,887 |
WEX, Inc. (a) | | 580 | 76,746 |
| | | 5,169,671 |
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 4.1% | | | |
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (a) | | 13,757 | 720,729 |
Cree, Inc. (a) | | 1,434 | 61,848 |
Entegris, Inc. | | 1,774 | 96,204 |
First Solar, Inc. (a) | | 1,107 | 48,719 |
KLA-Tencor Corp. | | 2,091 | 343,112 |
Lam Research Corp. | | 1,927 | 491,925 |
Marvell Technology Group Ltd. | | 8,879 | 237,424 |
Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. | | 3,572 | 196,389 |
Microchip Technology, Inc. | | 3,144 | 275,823 |
MKS Instruments, Inc. | | 716 | 71,765 |
Monolithic Power Systems, Inc. | | 558 | 111,550 |
ON Semiconductor Corp. (a) | | 5,450 | 87,445 |
Qorvo, Inc. (a) | | 1,542 | 151,162 |
Skyworks Solutions, Inc. | | 2,272 | 236,015 |
Teradyne, Inc. | | 2,217 | 138,651 |
Universal Display Corp. | | 572 | 85,869 |
Xilinx, Inc. | | 3,325 | 290,605 |
| | | 3,645,235 |
Software - 6.2% | | | |
2U, Inc. (a) | | 740 | 17,575 |
Alteryx, Inc. Class A (a) | | 606 | 68,587 |
Anaplan, Inc. (a) | | 1,166 | 47,643 |
ANSYS, Inc. (a) | | 1,111 | 290,893 |
Aspen Technology, Inc. (a) | | 915 | 93,559 |
Atlassian Corp. PLC (a) | | 1,594 | 247,851 |
Avalara, Inc. (a) | | 623 | 55,678 |
Bill.Com Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 133 | 7,832 |
Cadence Design Systems, Inc. (a) | | 3,704 | 300,506 |
CDK Global, Inc. | | 1,532 | 60,177 |
Cerence, Inc. (a) | | 492 | 10,411 |
Ceridian HCM Holding, Inc. (a) | | 1,241 | 73,182 |
Citrix Systems, Inc. | | 1,547 | 224,330 |
Coupa Software, Inc. (a) | | 847 | 149,148 |
DocuSign, Inc. (a) | | 2,103 | 220,289 |
Dropbox, Inc. Class A (a) | | 2,816 | 59,192 |
Dynatrace, Inc. | | 1,746 | 52,118 |
Elastic NV (a) | | 727 | 46,630 |
Fair Isaac Corp. (a) | | 378 | 133,411 |
FireEye, Inc. (a) | | 2,690 | 30,962 |
Fortinet, Inc. (a) | | 1,902 | 204,921 |
Guidewire Software, Inc. (a) | | 1,111 | 100,923 |
HubSpot, Inc. (a) | | 550 | 92,747 |
LogMeIn, Inc. | | 627 | 53,583 |
Manhattan Associates, Inc. (a) | | 859 | 60,937 |
Medallia, Inc. | | 917 | 19,697 |
New Relic, Inc. (a) | | 680 | 36,509 |
Nortonlifelock, Inc. | | 7,475 | 158,993 |
Nuance Communications, Inc. (a) | | 3,813 | 77,023 |
Nutanix, Inc. Class A (a) | | 2,339 | 47,926 |
Pagerduty, Inc. | | 568 | 11,990 |
Palo Alto Networks, Inc. (a) | | 1,264 | 248,389 |
Parametric Technology Corp. (a) | | 1,395 | 96,604 |
Paycom Software, Inc. (a) | | 657 | 171,490 |
Paylocity Holding Corp. (a) | | 464 | 53,142 |
Pegasystems, Inc. | | 515 | 43,064 |
Pluralsight, Inc. (a) | | 822 | 13,514 |
Proofpoint, Inc. (a) | | 737 | 89,715 |
RealPage, Inc. (a) | | 1,042 | 67,199 |
RingCentral, Inc. (a) | | 990 | 226,245 |
Smartsheet, Inc. (a) | | 1,163 | 61,313 |
SolarWinds, Inc. (a) | | 603 | 10,239 |
Splunk, Inc. (a) | | 2,078 | 291,668 |
SS&C Technologies Holdings, Inc. | | 2,952 | 162,832 |
Synopsys, Inc. (a) | | 1,983 | 311,569 |
Teradata Corp. (a) | | 1,509 | 37,106 |
The Trade Desk, Inc. (a) | | 526 | 153,897 |
Tyler Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 500 | 160,345 |
Zendesk, Inc. (a) | | 1,499 | 115,243 |
Zscaler, Inc. (a) | | 929 | 62,317 |
| | | 5,431,114 |
Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals - 0.7% | | | |
Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. | | 17,545 | 176,503 |
NCR Corp. (a) | | 1,693 | 34,740 |
NetApp, Inc. | | 3,068 | 134,286 |
Pure Storage, Inc. Class A (a) | | 3,168 | 45,619 |
Western Digital Corp. | | 3,955 | 182,246 |
Xerox Holdings Corp. | | 2,373 | 43,402 |
| | | 616,796 |
|
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | | 17,741,613 |
|
MATERIALS - 5.3% | | | |
Chemicals - 1.9% | | | |
Albemarle Corp. U.S. | | 1,409 | 86,555 |
Ashland Global Holdings, Inc. | | 747 | 46,082 |
Axalta Coating Systems Ltd. (a) | | 2,713 | 53,555 |
Cabot Corp. | | 751 | 25,451 |
Celanese Corp. Class A | | 1,606 | 133,410 |
CF Industries Holdings, Inc. | | 2,922 | 80,355 |
Corteva, Inc. | | 10,031 | 262,712 |
Eastman Chemical Co. | | 1,846 | 111,701 |
Element Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 2,913 | 29,858 |
FMC Corp. | | 1,725 | 158,528 |
Huntsman Corp. | | 2,908 | 48,883 |
International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc. (b) | | 1,432 | 187,635 |
NewMarket Corp. | | 89 | 36,618 |
Olin Corp. | | 2,079 | 27,755 |
RPM International, Inc. | | 1,697 | 112,698 |
The Chemours Co. LLC | | 1,849 | 21,689 |
The Mosaic Co. | | 4,586 | 52,785 |
The Scotts Miracle-Gro Co. Class A | | 524 | 64,992 |
Valvoline, Inc. | | 2,546 | 43,766 |
W.R. Grace & Co. | | 770 | 36,367 |
Westlake Chemical Corp. | | 463 | 20,117 |
| | | 1,641,512 |
Construction Materials - 0.4% | | | |
Eagle Materials, Inc. | | 564 | 34,410 |
Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. | | 839 | 159,603 |
Vulcan Materials Co. | | 1,754 | 198,149 |
| | | 392,162 |
Containers & Packaging - 1.5% | | | |
Aptargroup, Inc. | | 847 | 90,697 |
Ardagh Group SA | | 233 | 2,899 |
Avery Dennison Corp. | | 1,111 | 122,643 |
Ball Corp. | | 4,305 | 282,365 |
Berry Global Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,759 | 69,991 |
Crown Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,751 | 112,782 |
Graphic Packaging Holding Co. | | 3,926 | 52,412 |
International Paper Co. | | 5,199 | 178,066 |
O-I Glass, Inc. | | 2,060 | 16,974 |
Packaging Corp. of America | | 1,258 | 121,586 |
Sealed Air Corp. | | 2,077 | 59,381 |
Silgan Holdings, Inc. | | 992 | 34,224 |
Sonoco Products Co. | | 1,342 | 65,543 |
WestRock Co. | | 3,305 | 106,388 |
| | | 1,315,951 |
Metals & Mining - 1.5% | | | |
Alcoa Corp. (a) | | 2,451 | 19,976 |
Arconic Rolled Products Corp. (a) | | 1,252 | 10,917 |
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. | | 19,440 | 171,655 |
Newmont Corp. | | 10,885 | 647,440 |
Nucor Corp. | | 4,092 | 168,549 |
Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co. | | 872 | 78,114 |
Royal Gold, Inc. | | 868 | 106,356 |
Steel Dynamics, Inc. | | 2,754 | 66,840 |
United States Steel Corp. (b) | | 2,319 | 17,810 |
| | | 1,287,657 |
Paper & Forest Products - 0.0% | | | |
Domtar Corp. | | 751 | 17,543 |
|
TOTAL MATERIALS | | | 4,654,825 |
|
REAL ESTATE - 8.9% | | | |
Equity Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) - 8.5% | | | |
Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc. | | 1,608 | 252,601 |
American Campus Communities, Inc. | | 1,853 | 65,392 |
American Homes 4 Rent Class A | | 3,395 | 81,955 |
Americold Realty Trust | | 2,535 | 77,546 |
Apartment Investment & Management Co. Class A | | 1,972 | 74,285 |
Apple Hospitality (REIT), Inc. | | 2,779 | 26,901 |
AvalonBay Communities, Inc. | | 1,862 | 303,413 |
Boston Properties, Inc. | | 2,065 | 200,677 |
Brandywine Realty Trust (SBI) | | 2,323 | 25,925 |
Brixmor Property Group, Inc. | | 4,009 | 45,903 |
Brookfield Property REIT, Inc. Class A | | 1,172 | 11,480 |
Camden Property Trust (SBI) | | 1,255 | 110,528 |
Colony Capital, Inc. | | 6,594 | 15,232 |
Columbia Property Trust, Inc. | | 1,502 | 21,464 |
CoreSite Realty Corp. | | 492 | 59,625 |
Corporate Office Properties Trust (SBI) | | 1,486 | 39,260 |
Cousins Properties, Inc. | | 1,940 | 58,530 |
CubeSmart | | 2,548 | 64,210 |
CyrusOne, Inc. | | 1,488 | 104,383 |
Digital Realty Trust, Inc. | | 3,479 | 520,076 |
Douglas Emmett, Inc. | | 2,169 | 66,133 |
Duke Realty Corp. | | 4,872 | 169,058 |
Empire State Realty Trust, Inc. | | 2,011 | 16,812 |
EPR Properties | | 1,063 | 31,273 |
Equity Commonwealth | | 1,552 | 52,690 |
Equity Lifestyle Properties, Inc. | | 2,291 | 138,170 |
Equity Residential (SBI) | | 4,894 | 318,404 |
Essex Property Trust, Inc. | | 875 | 213,588 |
Extra Space Storage, Inc. | | 1,669 | 147,273 |
Federal Realty Investment Trust (SBI) | | 944 | 78,607 |
Gaming & Leisure Properties | | 2,723 | 76,898 |
HCP, Inc. | | 6,803 | 177,830 |
Healthcare Trust of America, Inc. | | 2,836 | 69,851 |
Highwoods Properties, Inc. (SBI) | | 1,336 | 51,850 |
Hospitality Properties Trust (SBI) | | 2,626 | 18,198 |
Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 9,540 | 117,437 |
Hudson Pacific Properties, Inc. | | 2,019 | 49,627 |
Invitation Homes, Inc. | | 7,086 | 167,584 |
Iron Mountain, Inc. | | 3,842 | 92,900 |
JBG SMITH Properties | | 1,618 | 54,931 |
Kilroy Realty Corp. | | 1,383 | 86,106 |
Kimco Realty Corp. | | 5,595 | 61,041 |
Lamar Advertising Co. Class A | | 1,127 | 64,972 |
Life Storage, Inc. | | 619 | 54,218 |
Medical Properties Trust, Inc. | | 6,889 | 118,077 |
Mid-America Apartment Communities, Inc. | | 1,515 | 169,559 |
National Retail Properties, Inc. | | 2,270 | 74,093 |
Omega Healthcare Investors, Inc. | | 3,036 | 88,499 |
Outfront Media, Inc. | | 1,934 | 30,344 |
Paramount Group, Inc. | | 2,607 | 25,158 |
Park Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 2,684 | 25,525 |
Rayonier, Inc. | | 1,738 | 41,764 |
Realty Income Corp. | | 4,357 | 239,286 |
Regency Centers Corp. | | 2,148 | 94,319 |
Retail Properties America, Inc. | | 2,857 | 17,713 |
SBA Communications Corp. Class A | | 1,492 | 432,561 |
SITE Centers Corp. | | 1,924 | 11,659 |
SL Green Realty Corp. | | 1,069 | 56,710 |
Spirit Realty Capital, Inc. | | 1,340 | 41,218 |
Store Capital Corp. | | 2,855 | 57,300 |
Sun Communities, Inc. | | 1,201 | 161,414 |
Taubman Centers, Inc. | | 783 | 33,747 |
The Macerich Co. | | 1,875 | 14,006 |
UDR, Inc. | | 3,867 | 144,896 |
Ventas, Inc. | | 4,884 | 157,997 |
VEREIT, Inc. | | 14,477 | 79,334 |
VICI Properties, Inc. | | 6,211 | 108,196 |
Vornado Realty Trust | | 2,284 | 100,085 |
Weingarten Realty Investors (SBI) | | 1,633 | 29,704 |
Welltower, Inc. | | 5,509 | 282,226 |
Weyerhaeuser Co. | | 9,920 | 216,950 |
WP Carey, Inc. | | 2,296 | 151,031 |
| | | 7,538,208 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.4% | | | |
CBRE Group, Inc. (a) | | 4,474 | 192,069 |
Howard Hughes Corp. (a) | | 543 | 29,409 |
Jones Lang LaSalle, Inc. | | 694 | 73,273 |
| | | 294,751 |
|
TOTAL REAL ESTATE | | | 7,832,959 |
|
UTILITIES - 7.0% | | | |
Electric Utilities - 3.1% | | | |
Alliant Energy Corp. | | 3,154 | 153,127 |
Avangrid, Inc. | | 729 | 31,347 |
Edison International | | 4,687 | 275,174 |
Entergy Corp. | | 2,650 | 253,102 |
Evergy, Inc. | | 3,034 | 177,277 |
Eversource Energy | | 4,306 | 347,494 |
FirstEnergy Corp. | | 7,174 | 296,071 |
Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc. | | 1,424 | 56,205 |
IDACORP, Inc. | | 659 | 60,483 |
NRG Energy, Inc. | | 3,387 | 113,566 |
OGE Energy Corp. | | 2,689 | 84,757 |
PG&E Corp. (a) | | 7,096 | 75,501 |
Pinnacle West Capital Corp. | | 1,505 | 115,870 |
PPL Corp. | | 10,318 | 262,284 |
Xcel Energy, Inc. | | 6,965 | 442,695 |
| | | 2,744,953 |
Gas Utilities - 0.3% | | | |
Atmos Energy Corp. | | 1,606 | 163,764 |
National Fuel Gas Co. | | 1,098 | 45,018 |
UGI Corp. | | 2,773 | 83,689 |
| | | 292,471 |
Independent Power and Renewable Electricity Producers - 0.2% | | | |
The AES Corp. | | 8,904 | 117,978 |
Vistra Energy Corp. | | 5,663 | 110,655 |
| | | 228,633 |
Multi-Utilities - 2.9% | | | |
Ameren Corp. | | 3,261 | 237,238 |
CenterPoint Energy, Inc. | | 6,736 | 114,714 |
CMS Energy Corp. | | 3,756 | 214,430 |
Consolidated Edison, Inc. | | 4,446 | 350,345 |
DTE Energy Co. | | 2,478 | 257,068 |
MDU Resources Group, Inc. | | 2,653 | 59,586 |
NiSource, Inc. | | 5,004 | 125,650 |
Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc. | | 6,741 | 341,836 |
Sempra Energy | | 3,769 | 466,791 |
WEC Energy Group, Inc. | | 4,193 | 379,676 |
| | | 2,547,334 |
Water Utilities - 0.5% | | | |
American Water Works Co., Inc. | | 2,410 | 293,273 |
Aqua America, Inc. | | 2,880 | 120,355 |
| | | 413,628 |
|
TOTAL UTILITIES | | | 6,227,019 |
|
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS | | | |
(Cost $90,018,307) | | | 88,343,895 |
|
Money Market Funds - 0.7% | | | |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund 0.11% (c)(d) | | | |
(Cost $677,025) | | 676,957 | 677,025 |
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES - 100.7% | | | |
(Cost $90,695,332) | | | 89,020,920 |
NET OTHER ASSETS (LIABILITIES) - (0.7)% | | | (656,307) |
NET ASSETS - 100% | | | $88,364,613 |
Futures Contracts | | | | | |
| Number of contracts | Expiration Date | Notional Amount | Value | Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation) |
Purchased | | | | | |
Equity Index Contracts | | | | | |
CME E-mini S&P MidCap 400 Index Contracts (United States) | 1 | June 2020 | $164,130 | $(5,402) | $(5,402) |
The notional amount of futures purchased as a percentage of Net Assets is 0.2%
Legend
(a) Non-income producing
(b) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.
(c) 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.
(d) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.
Affiliated Central Funds
Information regarding fiscal year to date income earned by the Fund from investments in Fidelity Central Funds is as follows:
Fund | Income earned |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund | $6,116 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund | 9,592 |
Total | $15,708 |
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 April 30, 2020, 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 |
Investments in Securities: | | | | |
Equities: | | | | |
Communication Services | $3,587,307 | $3,587,307 | $-- | $-- |
Consumer Discretionary | 9,389,484 | 9,389,484 | -- | -- |
Consumer Staples | 3,985,401 | 3,985,401 | -- | -- |
Energy | 2,361,537 | 2,361,537 | -- | -- |
Financials | 9,810,475 | 9,810,475 | -- | -- |
Health Care | 10,785,137 | 10,785,137 | -- | -- |
Industrials | 11,968,138 | 11,968,138 | -- | -- |
Information Technology | 17,741,613 | 17,741,613 | -- | -- |
Materials | 4,654,825 | 4,654,825 | -- | -- |
Real Estate | 7,832,959 | 7,832,959 | -- | -- |
Utilities | 6,227,019 | 6,227,019 | -- | -- |
Money Market Funds | 677,025 | 677,025 | -- | -- |
Total Investments in Securities: | $89,020,920 | $89,020,920 | $-- | $-- |
Derivative Instruments: | | | | |
Liabilities | | | | |
Futures Contracts | $(5,402) | $(5,402) | $-- | $-- |
Total Liabilities | $(5,402) | $(5,402) | $-- | $-- |
Total Derivative Instruments: | $(5,402) | $(5,402) | $-- | $-- |
Value of Derivative Instruments
The following table is a summary of the Fund's value of derivative instruments by primary risk exposure as of April 30, 2020. 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 |
Equity Risk | | |
Futures Contracts(a) | $0 | $(5,402) |
Total Equity Risk | 0 | (5,402) |
Total Value of Derivatives | $0 | $(5,402) |
(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).
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Financial Statements
Statement of Assets and Liabilities
| | April 30, 2020 |
Assets | | |
Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $640,445) — See accompanying schedule: Unaffiliated issuers (cost $90,018,307) | $88,343,895 | |
Fidelity Central Funds (cost $677,025) | 677,025 | |
Total Investment in Securities (cost $90,695,332) | | $89,020,920 |
Segregated cash with brokers for derivative instruments | | 17,000 |
Cash | | 3,112 |
Receivable for investments sold | | 657,793 |
Receivable for fund shares sold | | 255,144 |
Dividends receivable | | 41,109 |
Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds | | 663 |
Total assets | | 89,995,741 |
Liabilities | | |
Payable for investments purchased | $133,510 | |
Payable for fund shares redeemed | 815,173 | |
Payable for daily variation margin on futures contracts | 5,450 | |
Collateral on securities loaned | 676,995 | |
Total liabilities | | 1,631,128 |
Net Assets | | $88,364,613 |
Net Assets consist of: | | |
Paid in capital | | $91,557,117 |
Total accumulated earnings (loss) | | (3,192,504) |
Net Assets | | $88,364,613 |
Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($88,364,613 ÷ 8,195,323 shares) | | $10.78 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Operations
| | Year ended April 30, 2020 |
Investment Income | | |
Dividends | | $1,606,434 |
Interest | | 188 |
Income from Fidelity Central Funds (including $9,592 from security lending) | | 15,708 |
Total income | | 1,622,330 |
Expenses | | |
Independent trustees' fees and expenses | $326 | |
Commitment fees | 215 | |
Total expenses before reductions | 541 | |
Expense reductions | (119) | |
Total expenses after reductions | | 422 |
Net investment income (loss) | | 1,621,908 |
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) | | |
Net realized gain (loss) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | (282,248) | |
Fidelity Central Funds | 49 | |
Futures contracts | (58,168) | |
Total net realized gain (loss) | | (340,367) |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | (8,072,095) | |
Fidelity Central Funds | (38) | |
Futures contracts | (23,710) | |
Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | | (8,095,843) |
Net gain (loss) | | (8,436,210) |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | | $(6,814,302) |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Changes in Net Assets
| Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 |
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets | | |
Operations | | |
Net investment income (loss) | $1,621,908 | $1,106,843 |
Net realized gain (loss) | (340,367) | (146,494) |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | (8,095,843) | 6,353,794 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | (6,814,302) | 7,314,143 |
Distributions to shareholders | (2,114,423) | (1,190,626) |
Share transactions | | |
Proceeds from sales of shares | 76,636,711 | 45,261,175 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 1,506,366 | 322,533 |
Cost of shares redeemed | (57,615,855) | (29,828,891) |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from share transactions | 20,527,222 | 15,754,817 |
Total increase (decrease) in net assets | 11,598,497 | 21,878,334 |
Net Assets | | |
Beginning of period | 76,766,116 | 54,887,782 |
End of period | $88,364,613 | $76,766,116 |
Other Information | | |
Shares | | |
Sold | 6,607,879 | 3,946,892 |
Issued in reinvestment of distributions | 119,168 | 29,694 |
Redeemed | (4,806,215) | (2,567,677) |
Net increase (decrease) | 1,920,832 | 1,408,909 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Financial Highlights
Fidelity Flex Mid Cap Index Fund
| | | | |
Years ended April 30, | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 A |
Selected Per–Share Data | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $12.23 | $11.28 | $10.19 | $10.00 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | |
Net investment income (loss)B | .22 | .20 | .16 | .02 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | (1.39) | .98 | .98 | .17 |
Total from investment operations | (1.17) | 1.18 | 1.14 | .19 |
Distributions from net investment income | (.18) | (.19) | (.04) | – |
Distributions from net realized gain | (.10) | (.05) | (.01) | – |
Total distributions | (.28) | (.23)C | (.05) | – |
Net asset value, end of period | $10.78 | $12.23 | $11.28 | $10.19 |
Total ReturnD,E | (9.88)% | 10.75% | 11.19% | 1.90% |
Ratios to Average Net AssetsF,G | | | | |
Expenses before reductionsH | -% | -% | -% | - %I |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if anyH | -% | -% | -% | - %I |
Expenses net of all reductionsH | -% | -% | -% | - %I |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.84% | 1.76% | 1.46% | 1.24%I |
Supplemental Data | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (000 omitted) | $88,365 | $76,766 | $54,888 | $306 |
Portfolio turnover rateJ | 38% | 25% | 25%K | 1%L |
A For the period March 9, 2017 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017.
B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
C Total distributions of $.23 per share is comprised of distributions from net investment income of $.186 and distributions from net realized gain of $.046 per share.
D Total returns for periods of less than one year are not annualized.
E Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.
F Fees and expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
G Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the Fund. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the Fund during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the Fund.
H Amount represents less than .005%.
I Annualized
J Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
K Portfolio turnover rate excludes securities received or delivered in-kind.
L Amount not annualized.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Notes to Financial Statements
For the period ended April 30, 2020
1. Organization.
Fidelity Flex Mid Cap Index Fund (the Fund) is a fund of Fidelity Salem Street Trust (the Trust) and is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares. Share transactions on the Statement of Changes in Net Assets may contain exchanges between affiliated funds. 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 is available only to certain fee-based accounts offered by Fidelity.
Effective January 1, 2020:
Investment advisers Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc., FMR Co., Inc., and Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, merged with and into Fidelity Management & Research Company. In connection with the merger transactions, the resulting, merged investment adviser was then redomiciled from Massachusetts to Delaware, changed its corporate structure from a corporation to a limited liability company, and changed its name to "Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC".
2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds.
The Fund invests 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 Fund's Schedule of Investments lists each of the Fidelity Central Funds held as of period end, if any, as an investment of the Fund, but does not include the underlying holdings of each Fidelity Central Fund. As an Investing Fund, the Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by the investment adviser. Annualized expenses of the Money Market Central Funds as of their most recent shareholder report date ranged from less than .005% to .01%.
A complete unaudited list of holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is available upon request or at the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) website at www.sec.gov. In addition, the financial statements of the Fidelity Central Funds, which are not covered by the Fund's Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC 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 – Investments 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 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. 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.
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 April 30, 2020 is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
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. 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.
Expenses. 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. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.
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 April 30, 2020, 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.
Distributions are declared and recorded on the ex-dividend date. 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, futures contracts, partnerships, short-term gain distribution from underlying funds 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 | $11,462,334 |
Gross unrealized depreciation | (15,251,427) |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | $(3,789,093) |
Tax Cost | $92,810,013 |
The tax-based components of distributable earnings as of period end were as follows:
Undistributed ordinary income | $492,018 |
Undistributed long-term capital gain | $104,571 |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities and other investments | $(3,789,093) |
The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:
| April 30, 2020 | April 30, 2019 |
Ordinary Income | $1,327,844 | $ 1,164,859 |
Long-term Capital Gains | 786,579 | 25,767 |
Total | $2,114,423 | $ 1,190,626 |
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.
A summary of the value of derivatives by primary risk exposure as of period end is included at the end of the Schedule of Investments.
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. Cash deposited to meet initial margin requirements is presented as segregated cash with brokers for derivative instruments in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.
5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.
Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities, are noted in the table below.
| Purchases ($) | Sales ($) |
Fidelity Flex Mid Cap Index Fund | 55,063,226 | 33,586,743 |
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 and the Fund does not pay any fees for these services. Under the management contract, the investment adviser or an affiliate pays all other expenses of the Fund, excluding fees and expenses of the independent Trustees, and certain miscellaneous expenses such as proxy and shareholder meeting expenses.
Sub-Adviser. Geode Capital Management, LLC (Geode), serves as sub-adviser for the Fund. Geode provides discretionary investment advisory services to the Fund and is paid by the investment adviser for providing these services.
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. Interfund trades are included within the respective purchases and sales amounts shown in the Purchases and Sales of Investments note.
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. The participating funds have agreed to pay commitment fees on their pro-rata portion of the line of credit, which are reflected in Commitment fees on the Statement of Operations, and are as follows:
| Amount |
Fidelity Flex Mid Cap Index Fund | $215 |
During the period, there were no borrowings on this line of credit.
8. Security Lending.
The Fund lends portfolio securities from time to time in order to earn additional income. For equity securities, lending agents are used, including National Financial Services (NFS), an affiliate of the Fund. Pursuant to a securities lending agreement, NFS will receive a fee, which is capped at 9.9% of daily lending revenue, for its services as lending agent. The Fund may lend securities to certain qualified borrowers, including NFS. On the settlement date of the loan, the 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 the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. The 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, the Fund may apply collateral received from the borrower against the obligation. The 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. The value of loaned securities and cash collateral at period end are disclosed on the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities. At period end, there were no security loans outstanding with NFS, as affiliated borrower. 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, and includes $14 from securities loaned to NFS, as affiliated borrower.
9. Expense Reductions.
Through arrangements with the Fund's custodian, credits realized as a result of certain uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses by $119.
10. Other.
The 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.
11. 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 Salem Street Trust and Shareholders of Fidelity Flex Mid Cap Index Fund
Opinion on the Financial Statements and Financial Highlights
We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of Fidelity Flex Mid Cap Index Fund (the "Fund"), a fund of Fidelity Salem Street Trust, including the schedule of investments, as of April 30, 2020, 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 three years in the period then ended and for the period from March 9, 2017 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017, 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 April 30, 2020, 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 three years in the period then ended and for the period from March 9, 2017 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017, 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 April 30, 2020, by correspondence with the custodian and brokers; when replies were not received from brokers, we performed other auditing procedures. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
/s/ Deloitte & Touche LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
June 15, 2020
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. Except for Jonathan Chiel, each of the Trustees oversees 282 funds. Mr. Chiel oversees 175 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 1-800-544-3455 (for managed account clients) or 1-800-835-5092 (for retirement plan participants).
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. Abigail P. Johnson is an interested person and currently serves as 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. Arthur E. Johnson serves as Chairman of the Independent Trustees 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 investment-grade bond, money market, asset allocation and certain equity funds, and other Boards oversee Fidelity's high income and other equity funds. The asset allocation funds may invest in Fidelity® funds that are overseen by such other Boards. 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 and Audit Committees. In addition, an ad hoc Board committee of Independent Trustees has worked with FMR to enhance the Board's oversight of investment and financial risks, legal and regulatory risks, technology risks, and operational risks, including the development of additional risk reporting to the Board. 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+
Jonathan Chiel (1957)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Mr. Chiel also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Mr. Chiel is Executive Vice President and General Counsel for FMR LLC (diversified financial services company, 2012-present). Previously, Mr. Chiel served as general counsel (2004-2012) and senior vice president and deputy general counsel (2000-2004) for John Hancock Financial Services; a partner with Choate, Hall & Stewart (1996-2000) (law firm); and an Assistant United States Attorney for the United States Attorney’s Office of the District of Massachusetts (1986-95), including Chief of the Criminal Division (1993-1995). Mr. Chiel is a director on the boards of the Boston Bar Foundation and the Maimonides School.
Abigail P. Johnson (1961)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2009
Trustee
Chairman of the Board of Trustees
Ms. Johnson also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Ms. Johnson serves as Chairman (2016-present), Chief Executive Officer (2014-present), and Director (2007-present) of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company), President of Fidelity Financial Services (2012-present) and President of Personal, Workplace and Institutional Services (2005-present). Ms. Johnson is Chairman and Director of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm, 2011-present). Previously, Ms. Johnson served as Chairman and Director of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2011-2019), Vice Chairman (2007-2016) and President (2013-2016) of FMR LLC, President and a Director of Fidelity Management & Research Company (2001-2005), a Trustee of other investment companies advised by Fidelity Management & Research Company, Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firm), and FMR Co., Inc. (2001-2005), Senior Vice President of the Fidelity® funds (2001-2005), and managed a number of Fidelity® funds. Ms. Abigail P. Johnson and Mr. Arthur E. Johnson are not related.
Jennifer Toolin McAuliffe (1959)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Ms. McAuliffe also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Ms. McAuliffe served as Co-Head of Fixed Income of Fidelity Investments Limited (now known as FIL Limited (FIL)) (diversified financial services company), Director of Research for FIL’s credit and quantitative teams in London, Hong Kong and Tokyo and Director of Research for taxable and municipal bonds at Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. Ms. McAuliffe previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2016). Ms. McAuliffe was previously a lawyer at Ropes & Gray LLP and currently serves as director or trustee of several not-for-profit entities.
* 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+
Elizabeth S. Acton (1951)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2013
Trustee
Ms. Acton also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Acton served as Executive Vice President, Finance (2011-2012), Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer (2002-2011) and Treasurer (2004-2005) of Comerica Incorporated (financial services). Prior to joining Comerica, Ms. Acton held a variety of positions at Ford Motor Company (1983-2002), including Vice President and Treasurer (2000-2002) and Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Ford Motor Credit Company (1998-2000). Ms. Acton currently serves as a member of the Board and Audit and Finance Committees of Beazer Homes USA, Inc. (homebuilding, 2012-present). Ms. Acton previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2013-2016).
Ann E. Dunwoody (1953)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2018
Trustee
General Dunwoody also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. General Dunwoody (United States Army, Retired) was the first woman in U.S. military history to achieve the rank of four-star general and prior to her retirement in 2012 held a variety of positions within the U.S. Army, including Commanding General, U.S. Army Material Command (2008-2012). General Dunwoody currently serves as President of First to Four LLC (leadership and mentoring services, 2012-present), a member of the Board and Nomination and Corporate Governance Committees of Kforce Inc. (professional staffing services, 2016-present) and a member of the Board of Automattic Inc. (software engineering, 2018-present). Previously, General Dunwoody served as a member of the Advisory Board and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of L3 Technologies, Inc. (communication, electronic, sensor and aerospace systems, 2013-2019) and a member of the Board and Audit and Sustainability and Corporate Responsibility Committees of Republic Services, Inc. (waste collection, disposal and recycling, 2013-2016). Ms. Dunwoody also serves on several boards for non-profit organizations, including as a member of the Board, Chair of the Nomination and Governance Committee and a member of the Audit Committee of Logistics Management Institute (consulting non-profit, 2012-present), a member of the Council of Trustees for the Association of the United States Army (advocacy non-profit, 2013-present), a member of the Board of Florida Institute of Technology (2015-present) and a member of the Board of ThanksUSA (military family education non-profit, 2014-present). General Dunwoody previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2018).
John Engler (1948)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2014
Trustee
Mr. Engler also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Engler served as Governor of Michigan (1991-2003), President of the Business Roundtable (2011-2017) and interim President of Michigan State University (2018-2019). Mr. Engler currently serves as a member of the Board of K12 Inc. (technology-based education company, 2012-present). Previously, Mr. Engler served as a member of the Board of Universal Forest Products (manufacturer and distributor of wood and wood-alternative products, 2003-2019) and Trustee of The Munder Funds (2003-2014). Mr. Engler previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2014-2016).
Robert F. Gartland (1951)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2010
Trustee
Mr. Gartland also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Gartland held a variety of positions at Morgan Stanley (financial services, 1979-2007), including Managing Director (1987-2007) and Chase Manhattan Bank (1975-1978). Mr. Gartland previously served as Chairman and an investor in Gartland & Mellina Group Corp. (consulting, 2009-2019), as a member of the Board of National Securities Clearing Corporation (1993-1996) and as Chairman of TradeWeb (2003-2004).
Arthur E. Johnson (1947)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2008
Trustee
Chairman of the Independent Trustees
Mr. Johnson also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Johnson served as Senior Vice President of Corporate Strategic Development of Lockheed Martin Corporation (defense contractor, 1999-2009). Mr. Johnson currently serves as a member of the Board of Booz Allen Hamilton (management consulting, 2011-present). Mr. Johnson previously served as a member of the Board of Eaton Corporation plc (diversified power management, 2009-2019) and a member of the Board of AGL Resources, Inc. (holding company, 2002-2016). Mr. Johnson previously served as Vice Chairman (2015-2018) of the Independent Trustees of certain Fidelity® funds. Mr. Arthur E. Johnson is not related to Ms. Abigail P. Johnson.
Michael E. Kenneally (1954)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2009
Trustee
Vice Chairman of the Independent Trustees
Mr. Kenneally also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Kenneally served as Chairman and Global Chief Executive Officer of Credit Suisse Asset Management and Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer of Bank of America Corporation. Earlier roles at Bank of America included Director of Research, Senior Portfolio Manager for various institutional equity accounts and mutual funds and Portfolio Manager for a number of institutional fixed-income clients. Mr. Kenneally began his career as a Research Analyst in 1983 and was awarded the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation in 1991.
Marie L. Knowles (1946)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2001
Trustee
Ms. Knowles also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Knowles held several positions at Atlantic Richfield Company (diversified energy), including Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (1996-2000), Senior Vice President (1993-1996) and President of ARCO Transportation Company (pipeline and tanker operations, 1993-1996). Ms. Knowles currently serves as a member of the Board of McKesson Corporation (healthcare service, since 2002), a member of the Board of the Santa Catalina Island Company (real estate, 2009-present), a member of the Investment Company Institute Board of Governors and a member of the Governing Council of the Independent Directors Council (2014-present). Ms. Knowles also serves as a member of the Advisory Board for the School of Engineering of the University of Southern California. Ms. Knowles previously served as Chairman (2015-2018) and Vice Chairman (2012-2015) of the Independent Trustees of certain Fidelity® funds.
Mark A. Murray (1954)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Mr. Murray also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Murray served as Co-Chief Executive Officer (2013-2016), President (2006-2013) and Vice Chairman (2013-2020) of Meijer, Inc. Mr. Murray serves as a member of the Board and Nuclear Review and Public Policy and Responsibility Committees of DTE Energy Company (diversified energy company, 2009-present) and a member of the Board and Audit Committee and Chairman of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of Universal Forest Products, Inc. (manufacturer and distributor of wood and wood-alternative products, 2004-2016). Mr. Murray previously served as a member of the Board of Spectrum Health (not-for-profit health system, 2015-2019). Mr. Murray also serves as a member of the Board of many community and professional organizations. Mr. Murray previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2016).
+ 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 an officer may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 245 Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210. Officers appear below in alphabetical order.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupation
Elizabeth Paige Baumann (1968)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2017
Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Officer
Ms. Baumann also serves as AML Officer of other funds. She is Chief AML Officer (2012-present) and Senior Vice President (2014-present) of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Ms. Baumann served as AML Officer of certain funds (2017-2019), as AML Officer of the funds (2012-2016), and Vice President (2007-2014) and Deputy Anti-Money Laundering Officer (2007-2012) of FMR LLC.
Craig S. Brown (1977)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2019
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Brown also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Brown 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).
David J. Carter (1973)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2020
Assistant Secretary
Mr. Carter also serves as Assistant Secretary of other funds. Mr. Carter serves as Vice President, Associate General Counsel (2010-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2005-present).
Jonathan Davis (1968)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2010
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Davis also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Davis serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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
President and Treasurer
Ms. Del Prato also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Del Prato is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2017-present). 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: 2016
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Hogan also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Hogan serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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).
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: 2013
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Maher also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Maher serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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).
Nancy D. Prior (1967)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2014
Vice President
Ms. Prior also serves as Vice President of other funds. Ms. Prior serves as President of Fixed Income (2014-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2002-present). Previously, Ms. Prior served as President (2016-2019) and Director (2014-2019) of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (investment adviser firm), Vice President of Global Asset Allocation Funds (2017-2019); Vice Chairman of FIAM LLC (investment adviser firm, 2014-2018), a Director of FMR Investment Management (UK) Limited (investment adviser firm, 2015-2018), President Multi-Asset Class Strategies of FMR's Global Asset Allocation Division (2017-2018), Vice President of Fidelity's Money Market Funds (2012-2014), and President, Money Market and Short Duration Bond Group of Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) (investment adviser firm, 2013-2014).
Kenneth B. Robins (1969)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2020
Chief Compliance Officer
Mr. Robins also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Robins serves as Compliance Officer of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm, 2016-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2004-present). Previously, Mr. Robins served as Compliance Officer of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2016-2019), as Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2013-2016) and served in other fund officer roles.
Stacie M. Smith (1974)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2013
Assistant Treasurer
Ms. Smith also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Smith serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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
Deputy Treasurer
Mr. Spector also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Spector serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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 Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Wegmann is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2011-present).
Shareholder Expense Example
As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, and (2) ongoing costs, including other Fund expenses. This Example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the 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 (November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020).
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 under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro-rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's 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 Fund's actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Fund's 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. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro-rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's 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.
| Annualized Expense Ratio-A | Beginning Account Value November 1, 2019 | Ending Account Value April 30, 2020 | Expenses Paid During Period-B November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020 |
Actual | - %-C | $1,000.00 | $884.20 | $--D |
Hypothetical-E | | $1,000.00 | $1,024.86 | $--D |
A Annualized expense ratio reflects expenses net of applicable fee waivers.
B Expenses are equal to the Fund's annualized expense ratio, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period).
C Amount represents less than .005%.
D Amount represents less than $.005.
E 5% return per year before expenses
Distributions (Unaudited)
The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Flex Mid Cap Index Fund voted to pay on June 8, 2020, to shareholders of record at the opening of business on June 5, 2020, a distribution of $0.014 per share derived from capital gains realized from sales of portfolio securities and a dividend of $0.063 per share from net investment income.
The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended April 30, 2020, $978,886, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.
The fund designates 99% and 74% of the dividends distributed in June and December 2019, respectively during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends–received deduction for corporate shareholders.
The fund designates 100% and 78% of the dividends distributed in June and December 2019, respectively during the fiscal year as amounts which may be taken into account as a dividend for the purposes of the maximum rate under section 1(h)(11) of the Internal Revenue Code.
The fund designates 1% and 22% of the dividends distributed in June and December 2019, respectively during the fiscal year as a section 199A dividend.
The fund will notify shareholders in January 2021 of amounts for use in preparing 2020 income tax returns.
Liquidity Risk Management Program
The Securities and Exchange Commission adopted Rule 22e-4 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the Liquidity Rule) to promote effective liquidity risk management throughout the open-end investment company industry, thereby reducing the risk that funds will be unable to meet their redemption obligations and mitigating dilution of the interests of fund shareholders.
The Fund has adopted and implemented a liquidity risk management program pursuant to the Liquidity Rule (the Program) effective December 1, 2018. The Program is reasonably designed to assess and manage the Fund’s liquidity risk and to comply with the requirements of the Liquidity Rule. The Fund’s Board of Trustees (the Board) has designated the Fund’s investment adviser as administrator of the Program. The Fidelity advisers have established a Liquidity Risk Management Committee (the LRM Committee) to manage the Program for each of the Fidelity Funds. The LRM Committee monitors the adequacy and effectiveness of implementation of the Program and on a periodic basis assesses each Fund’s liquidity risk based on a variety of factors including (1) the Fund’s investment strategy, (2) portfolio liquidity and cash flow projections during normal and reasonably foreseeable stressed conditions, (3) shareholder redemptions, (4) borrowings and other funding sources and (5) in the case of exchange-traded funds, certain additional factors including the effect of the Fund’s prices and spreads, market participants, and basket compositions on the overall liquidity of the Fund’s portfolio, as applicable.
In accordance with the Program, each of the Fund’s portfolio investments is classified into one of four liquidity categories described below based on a determination of a reasonable expectation for how long it would take to convert the investment to cash (or sell or dispose of the investment) without significantly changing its market value.
- Highly liquid investments – cash or convertible to cash within three business days or less
- Moderately liquid investments – convertible to cash in three to seven calendar days
- Less liquid investments – can be sold or disposed of, but not settled, within seven calendar days
- Illiquid investments – cannot be sold or disposed of within seven calendar days
Liquidity classification determinations take into account a variety of factors including various market, trading and investment-specific considerations, as well as market depth, and generally utilize analysis from a third-party liquidity metrics service.
The Liquidity Rule places a 15% limit on a fund’s illiquid investments and requires funds that do not primarily hold assets that are highly liquid investments to determine and maintain a minimum percentage of the fund’s net assets to be invested in highly liquid investments (highly liquid investment minimum or HLIM). The Program includes provisions reasonably designed to comply with the 15% limit on illiquid investments and for determining, periodically reviewing and complying with the HLIM requirement as applicable.
At a recent meeting of the Fund’s Board of Trustees, the LRM Committee provided a written report to the Board pertaining to the operation, adequacy, and effectiveness of implementation of the Program for the annual period from December 1, 2018 through November 30, 2019. The report concluded that the Program has been implemented and is operating effectively and is reasonably designed to assess and manage the Fund’s liquidity risk.

ZMP-ANN-0620
1.9881627.103
Fidelity Flex® Funds
Fidelity Flex® Small Cap Index Fund
Annual Report
April 30, 2020

See the inside front cover for important information about access to your fund’s shareholder reports.

Beginning on January 1, 2021, as permitted by regulations adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission, paper copies of a fund’s shareholder reports will no longer be sent by mail, unless you specifically request paper copies of the reports from the fund or from your financial intermediary, such as a financial advisor, broker-dealer or bank. Instead, the reports will be made available on a website, and you will be notified by mail each time a report is posted and provided with a website link to access the report.
If you already elected to receive shareholder reports electronically, you will not be affected by this change and you need not take any action. You may elect to receive shareholder reports and other communications from a fund electronically, by contacting your financial intermediary. For Fidelity customers, visit Fidelity's web site or call Fidelity using the contact information listed below.
You may elect to receive all future reports in paper free of charge. If you wish to continue receiving paper copies of your shareholder reports, you may contact your financial intermediary or, if you are a Fidelity customer, visit Fidelity’s website, or call Fidelity at the applicable toll-free number listed below. Your election to receive reports in paper will apply to all funds held with the fund complex/your financial intermediary.
Account Type | Website | Phone Number |
Brokerage, Mutual Fund, or Annuity Contracts: | fidelity.com/mailpreferences | 1-800-343-3548 |
Employer Provided Retirement Accounts: | netbenefits.fidelity.com/preferences (choose 'no' under Required Disclosures to continue to print) | 1-800-343-0860 |
Advisor Sold Accounts Serviced Through Your Financial Intermediary: | Contact Your Financial Intermediary | Your Financial Intermediary's phone number |
Advisor Sold Accounts Serviced by Fidelity: | institutional.fidelity.com | 1-877-208-0098 |
Contents
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 1-800-544-3455 (for managed account clients) or 1-800-835-5092 (for retirement plan participants) 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. © 2020 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 a new coronavirus emerged as a public health emergency that had a major influence on financial markets, primarily based on its impact on the global economy and the outlook for corporate earnings. The virus causes a respiratory disease known as COVID-19. On March 11, the World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic, citing sustained risk of further global spread.
In the weeks following, as the crisis worsened, we witnessed an escalating human tragedy with wide-scale social and economic consequences from coronavirus-containment measures. The outbreak of COVID-19 prompted a number of measures to limit the spread, 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. Amid 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.
The situation continues to unfold, and the extent and duration of its impact on financial markets and the economy remain highly uncertain. Extreme events such as the coronavirus 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’re taking extra steps to be responsive to customer needs. We encourage you to visit our websites, 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 April 30, 2020 | Past 1 year | Life of fundA |
Fidelity Flex® Small Cap Index Fund | (16.23)% | 0.31% |
A From March 9, 2017
$10,000 Over Life of Fund
Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity Flex® Small Cap Index Fund on March 9, 2017, when the fund started.
The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the Russell 2000® Index performed over the same period.

| Period Ending Values |
| $10,096 | Fidelity Flex® Small Cap Index Fund |
| $10,064 | Russell 2000® Index |
Management's Discussion of Fund Performance
Market Recap: The U.S. equity bellwether S&P 500
® index gained 0.86% for the 12 months ending April 30, 2020, as the early-2020 outbreak and spread of the coronavirus hampered global economic growth and the outlook for corporate earnings. Declared a pandemic on March 11, the crisis and containment efforts caused broad contraction in economic activity, along with extreme uncertainty, volatility and dislocation in financial markets. By mid-March, U.S. stocks entered bear-market territory less than a month after hitting an all-time high and extending the longest-running bull market in American history. Following a flattish January to open the year, stocks slid in late February (-8.23%), after a surge in COVID-19 cases outside China pushed investors to safer asset classes. The downtrend continued in March (-12.35%), capping the index’s worst quarterly result since 2008. A historically rapid and expansive U.S. monetary/fiscal-policy response helped mitigate the most acute near-term liquidity issues, and provided a partial offset to the economic disruption. This was evident in April, when the index achieved its highest monthly gain (+12.82%) since 1991, boosted by improving coronavirus trends, plans for reopening the economy and progress on potential treatments. By sector, energy stocks (-38%) fell hard along with the price of crude oil. Financials (-17%) and industrials (-16%) also lagged. In contrast, information technology (+18%) led, followed by health care (+15%), a defensive sector that saw higher demand due to the virus-containment response.
Comments from the Geode Capital Management, LLC, passive equity index team: For the fiscal year, the fund returned -16.23%, roughly in line with the -16.39% return of the benchmark Russell 2000
® Index. At the individual-stock level, the biggest detractor was Insperity (-59%), a provider of human resources services. Among its challenges during the 12 months, Insperity reported weaker-than-expected third-quarter financial results. Several companies with exposure to the travel industry significantly detracted, as stocks such as Spirit Airlines (-72%) and Pebblebook Hotel Trust (-62%), an owner of hotel properties, saw big declines as business and leisure travel dried up with the spread of the coronavirus. As states mandated the closure of many businesses along with stay-at-home orders, apparel retailers such as American Eagle Outfitters (-66%) saw big share-price declines. Shares of many energy stocks, including exploration and production companies PDC Energy (-71%) and Callon Petroleum (-87%) plunged along with the energy sector in February and March, while Ingevity (-55%), a chemical manufacturer, also detracted. In contrast, Teladoc Health (+189%), a provider of virtual health care services, gained as investors anticipated increased demand for remote doctor visits amid the mounting coronavirus crisis. Shares of Array Biopharma (+112%), a biotechnology company specializing in cancer treatments, rose sharply last June after the company agreed to be acquired by Pfizer in a deal that ultimately closed in July. Similarly, drugmaker Medicines Co. (+166%) agreed in November to an acquisition by Novartis; the transaction closed in January. Other contributors included Enphase Energy (+366%), a producer of renewable energy products that reported strong financial results, and biotechnology company Immunomedics (+90%), whose promising breast cancer drug received early regulatory approval.
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)
Top Ten Stocks as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Teladoc Health, Inc. | 0.7 |
Repligen Corp. | 0.4 |
Lumentum Holdings, Inc. | 0.4 |
Generac Holdings, Inc. | 0.4 |
Amedisys, Inc. | 0.4 |
Immunomedics, Inc. | 0.4 |
Haemonetics Corp. | 0.4 |
Novocure Ltd. | 0.4 |
Five9, Inc. | 0.4 |
Trex Co., Inc. | 0.3 |
| 4.2 |
Top Market Sectors as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Health Care | 21.7 |
Financials | 15.9 |
Information Technology | 15.3 |
Industrials | 15.0 |
Consumer Discretionary | 9.8 |
Real Estate | 7.2 |
Utilities | 4.0 |
Materials | 3.4 |
Consumer Staples | 3.3 |
Communication Services | 2.2 |
Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)
As of April 30, 2020* |
| Stocks and Equity Futures | 100.4% |
| Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities)** | (0.4)% |

* Foreign investments – 4.7%
** Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities) are not included in the pie chart
Schedule of Investments April 30, 2020
Showing Percentage of Net Assets
Common Stocks - 99.9% | | | |
| | Shares | Value |
COMMUNICATION SERVICES - 2.2% | | | |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.7% | | | |
ATN International, Inc. | | 706 | $43,857 |
Bandwidth, Inc. (a) | | 1,025 | 83,599 |
Cincinnati Bell, Inc. (a) | | 3,153 | 46,191 |
Cogent Communications Group, Inc. | | 2,667 | 223,575 |
Consolidated Communications Holdings, Inc. | | 4,508 | 28,265 |
IDT Corp. Class B (a) | | 1,210 | 6,534 |
Intelsat SA (a)(b) | | 4,442 | 5,553 |
Iridium Communications, Inc. (a) | | 6,113 | 137,573 |
Ooma, Inc. (a) | | 1,356 | 15,811 |
ORBCOMM, Inc. (a) | | 4,684 | 12,366 |
PDVWireless, Inc. (a) | | 683 | 35,858 |
Vonage Holdings Corp. (a) | | 14,426 | 120,601 |
| | | 759,783 |
Entertainment - 0.2% | | | |
AMC Entertainment Holdings, Inc. Class A (b) | | 3,343 | 16,448 |
Eros International PLC (a) | | 4,858 | 12,388 |
Gaia, Inc. Class A (a) | | 644 | 5,854 |
Glu Mobile, Inc. (a) | | 7,393 | 57,665 |
IMAX Corp. (a) | | 3,352 | 38,548 |
LiveXLive Media, Inc. (a) | | 2,454 | 6,258 |
Marcus Corp. | | 1,442 | 20,967 |
Reading International, Inc. Class A (a) | | 545 | 2,324 |
Rosetta Stone, Inc. (a) | | 1,338 | 22,853 |
| | | 183,305 |
Interactive Media & Services - 0.3% | | | |
CarGurus, Inc. Class A (a) | | 4,782 | 109,412 |
Cars.com, Inc. (a) | | 4,328 | 22,419 |
DHI Group, Inc. (a) | | 3,237 | 8,999 |
Eventbrite, Inc. (a) | | 2,397 | 21,861 |
EverQuote, Inc. Class A (a) | | 560 | 21,823 |
Liberty TripAdvisor Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 3,882 | 9,123 |
MeetMe, Inc. (a) | | 4,490 | 27,703 |
QuinStreet, Inc. (a) | | 2,962 | 30,094 |
Travelzoo, Inc. (a) | | 336 | 1,872 |
TrueCar, Inc. (a) | | 6,761 | 17,308 |
Yelp, Inc. (a) | | 4,363 | 97,513 |
| | | 368,127 |
Media - 0.8% | | | |
Boston Omaha Corp. (a) | | 680 | 11,036 |
Cardlytics, Inc. (a) | | 916 | 41,174 |
Cbdmd, Inc. (a) | | 1,948 | 1,877 |
Central European Media Enterprises Ltd. Class A (a) | | 5,642 | 21,947 |
Clear Channel Outdoor Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 3,134 | 3,024 |
comScore, Inc. (a) | | 3,263 | 9,430 |
Cumulus Media, Inc. (a) | | 972 | 4,306 |
Daily Journal Corp. (a) | | 75 | 20,813 |
E.W. Scripps Co. Class A | | 3,500 | 28,245 |
Emerald Expositions Events, Inc. | | 468 | 1,067 |
Entercom Communications Corp. Class A | | 7,923 | 9,666 |
Entravision Communication Corp. Class A | | 4,053 | 5,917 |
Fluent, Inc. (a) | | 2,508 | 5,041 |
Gray Television, Inc. (a) | | 5,811 | 67,466 |
Hemisphere Media Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,145 | 10,626 |
Lee Enterprises, Inc. (a) | | 2,680 | 2,456 |
Liberty Latin America Ltd.: | | | |
Class A (a) | | 2,903 | 31,062 |
Class C (a) | | 7,371 | 76,216 |
Liberty Media Corp.: | | | |
Liberty Braves Class A (a) | | 822 | 16,966 |
Liberty Braves Class C (a) | | 2,093 | 42,048 |
Loral Space & Communications Ltd. | | 892 | 19,624 |
Marchex, Inc. Class B (a) | | 2,389 | 3,990 |
MDC Partners, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,755 | 2,510 |
Meredith Corp. | | 2,573 | 38,158 |
MSG Network, Inc. Class A (a) | | 2,754 | 32,718 |
National CineMedia, Inc. | | 4,187 | 13,817 |
New Media Investment Group, Inc. | | 7,739 | 8,745 |
Saga Communications, Inc. Class A | | 243 | 6,833 |
Scholastic Corp. | | 1,879 | 54,623 |
TechTarget, Inc. (a) | | 1,481 | 34,537 |
Tegna, Inc. | | 13,503 | 144,752 |
Tribune Publishing Co. | | 1,116 | 9,564 |
WideOpenWest, Inc. (a) | | 1,677 | 9,928 |
| | | 790,182 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.2% | | | |
Boingo Wireless, Inc. (a) | | 2,787 | 38,851 |
Gogo, Inc. (a)(b) | | 2,667 | 4,347 |
Shenandoah Telecommunications Co. | | 2,985 | 159,727 |
Spok Holdings, Inc. | | 1,153 | 11,830 |
| | | 214,755 |
|
TOTAL COMMUNICATION SERVICES | | | 2,316,152 |
|
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 9.8% | | | |
Auto Components - 0.9% | | | |
Adient PLC (a) | | 5,602 | 83,918 |
American Axle & Manufacturing Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 7,255 | 31,342 |
Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. | | 3,119 | 66,092 |
Cooper-Standard Holding, Inc. (a) | | 1,118 | 14,366 |
Dana, Inc. | | 8,861 | 101,902 |
Dorman Products, Inc. (a) | | 1,694 | 106,858 |
Fox Factory Holding Corp. (a) | | 2,365 | 120,639 |
Gentherm, Inc. (a) | | 2,071 | 77,538 |
LCI Industries | | 1,525 | 132,248 |
Modine Manufacturing Co. (a) | | 2,613 | 12,098 |
Motorcar Parts of America, Inc. (a) | | 1,223 | 17,403 |
Standard Motor Products, Inc. | | 1,309 | 53,263 |
Stoneridge, Inc. (a) | | 1,718 | 34,412 |
Tenneco, Inc. (a) | | 3,295 | 17,101 |
Visteon Corp. (a) | | 1,739 | 104,862 |
| | | 974,042 |
Automobiles - 0.1% | | | |
Winnebago Industries, Inc. | | 1,979 | 87,808 |
Distributors - 0.1% | | | |
Core-Mark Holding Co., Inc. | | 2,887 | 82,972 |
Funko, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,527 | 6,536 |
Weyco Group, Inc. | | 397 | 7,555 |
| | | 97,063 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 1.0% | | | |
Adtalem Global Education, Inc. (a) | | 3,363 | 106,843 |
American Public Education, Inc. (a) | | 965 | 24,868 |
Career Education Corp. (a) | | 4,372 | 56,836 |
Carriage Services, Inc. | | 1,044 | 15,681 |
Chegg, Inc. (a) | | 7,436 | 317,889 |
Collectors Universe, Inc. | | 569 | 12,501 |
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Co. (a) | | 6,929 | 11,086 |
K12, Inc. (a) | | 2,501 | 56,798 |
Laureate Education, Inc. Class A (a) | | 7,187 | 68,061 |
OneSpaWorld Holdings Ltd. | | 3,038 | 19,777 |
Regis Corp. (a) | | 1,530 | 19,003 |
Select Interior Concepts, Inc. (a) | | 1,532 | 4,902 |
Strategic Education, Inc. | | 1,331 | 212,028 |
Weight Watchers International, Inc. (a) | | 2,982 | 76,071 |
| | | 1,002,344 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 2.2% | | | |
BFC Financial Corp. Class A | | 4,429 | 9,389 |
Biglari Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 50 | 3,500 |
BJ's Restaurants, Inc. | | 1,244 | 27,194 |
Bloomin' Brands, Inc. | | 5,552 | 66,902 |
Bluegreen Vacations Corp. | | 166 | 905 |
Boyd Gaming Corp. | | 5,133 | 85,670 |
Brinker International, Inc. | | 2,378 | 55,360 |
Carrols Restaurant Group, Inc. (a) | | 2,485 | 9,070 |
Century Casinos, Inc. (a) | | 1,509 | 6,843 |
Churchill Downs, Inc. | | 2,187 | 219,181 |
Chuy's Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,059 | 17,749 |
Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc. | | 1,475 | 143,665 |
Dave & Buster's Entertainment, Inc. | | 1,969 | 28,826 |
Del Taco Restaurants, Inc. (a) | | 2,053 | 12,072 |
Denny's Corp. (a) | | 3,638 | 41,000 |
Dine Brands Global, Inc. | | 1,014 | 45,011 |
Drive Shack, Inc. (a) | | 4,019 | 5,305 |
El Pollo Loco Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,227 | 15,006 |
Eldorado Resorts, Inc. (a)(b) | | 4,202 | 90,091 |
Everi Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 5,123 | 25,359 |
Fiesta Restaurant Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,377 | 10,018 |
Golden Entertainment, Inc. (a) | | 965 | 9,110 |
Inspired Entertainment, Inc. (a) | | 396 | 1,018 |
J. Alexanders Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 914 | 4,835 |
Jack in the Box, Inc. | | 1,473 | 88,822 |
Kura Sushi U.S.A., Inc. Class A (a) | | 218 | 3,669 |
Lindblad Expeditions Holdings (a) | | 1,490 | 9,953 |
Marriott Vacations Worldwide Corp. | | 2,579 | 214,057 |
Monarch Casino & Resort, Inc. (a) | | 725 | 24,172 |
Nathan's Famous, Inc. | | 198 | 11,141 |
Noodles & Co. (a) | | 1,908 | 11,925 |
Papa John's International, Inc. (b) | | 1,411 | 101,479 |
Penn National Gaming, Inc. (a)(b) | | 7,002 | 124,776 |
PlayAGS, Inc. (a) | | 1,412 | 6,199 |
Potbelly Corp. (a) | | 1,613 | 5,565 |
RCI Hospitality Holdings, Inc. | | 576 | 7,217 |
Red Lion Hotels Corp. (a) | | 1,731 | 2,787 |
Red Robin Gourmet Burgers, Inc. (a) | | 855 | 12,509 |
Red Rock Resorts, Inc. | | 4,460 | 48,882 |
Ruth's Hospitality Group, Inc. | | 1,756 | 19,764 |
Scientific Games Corp. Class A (a) | | 3,539 | 44,627 |
SeaWorld Entertainment, Inc. (a) | | 3,006 | 44,158 |
Shake Shack, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,849 | 100,789 |
Target Hospitality Corp. (a) | | 2,184 | 4,412 |
Texas Roadhouse, Inc. Class A | | 4,112 | 193,634 |
The Cheesecake Factory, Inc. | | 2,660 | 59,291 |
Twin River Worldwide Holdings, Inc. | | 1,108 | 17,484 |
Wingstop, Inc. | | 1,828 | 214,370 |
| | | 2,304,761 |
Household Durables - 1.7% | | | |
Bassett Furniture Industries, Inc. | | 654 | 4,473 |
Beazer Homes U.S.A., Inc. (a) | | 1,885 | 13,270 |
Casper Sleep, Inc. (b) | | 447 | 3,107 |
Cavco Industries, Inc. (a) | | 550 | 85,074 |
Century Communities, Inc. (a) | | 1,823 | 39,049 |
Ethan Allen Interiors, Inc. | | 1,507 | 17,044 |
Flexsteel Industries, Inc. | | 282 | 2,707 |
GoPro, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 8,186 | 28,815 |
Green Brick Partners, Inc. (a) | | 1,599 | 14,247 |
Hamilton Beach Brands Holding Co. Class A | | 422 | 5,566 |
Helen of Troy Ltd. (a) | | 1,570 | 257,920 |
Hooker Furniture Corp. | | 750 | 11,243 |
Installed Building Products, Inc. (a) | | 1,453 | 71,647 |
iRobot Corp. (a)(b) | | 1,772 | 108,021 |
KB Home | | 5,522 | 144,897 |
La-Z-Boy, Inc. | | 2,854 | 66,926 |
Legacy Housing Corp. (a) | | 377 | 3,687 |
LGI Homes, Inc. (a) | | 1,282 | 77,664 |
Lifetime Brands, Inc. | | 794 | 4,526 |
Lovesac (a) | | 541 | 6,454 |
M.D.C. Holdings, Inc. | | 3,226 | 94,361 |
M/I Homes, Inc. (a) | | 1,720 | 43,791 |
Meritage Homes Corp. (a) | | 2,312 | 121,519 |
Purple Innovation, Inc. (a) | | 527 | 5,302 |
Skyline Champion Corp. (a) | | 3,238 | 63,821 |
Sonos, Inc. (a) | | 5,100 | 52,122 |
Taylor Morrison Home Corp. (a) | | 8,350 | 121,493 |
TopBuild Corp. (a) | | 2,084 | 194,208 |
TRI Pointe Homes, Inc. (a) | | 8,806 | 101,093 |
Tupperware Brands Corp. | | 1,559 | 5,020 |
Universal Electronics, Inc. (a) | | 858 | 35,418 |
Zagg, Inc. (a) | | 1,893 | 6,247 |
| | | 1,810,732 |
Internet & Direct Marketing Retail - 0.5% | | | |
1-800-FLOWERS.com, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,614 | 30,973 |
Duluth Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 530 | 2,125 |
Groupon, Inc. (a) | | 29,236 | 35,668 |
Lands' End, Inc. (a) | | 627 | 5,336 |
Leaf Group Ltd. (a) | | 1,237 | 1,794 |
Liquidity Services, Inc. (a) | | 1,747 | 8,735 |
Overstock.com, Inc. (a)(b) | | 2,236 | 28,218 |
PetMed Express, Inc. (b) | | 1,252 | 49,542 |
Quotient Technology, Inc. (a) | | 4,808 | 34,521 |
Shutterstock, Inc. | | 1,226 | 46,588 |
Stamps.com, Inc. (a) | | 1,032 | 163,335 |
Stitch Fix, Inc. (a)(b) | | 2,644 | 42,436 |
The RealReal, Inc. (b) | | 3,346 | 39,282 |
The Rubicon Project, Inc. (a) | | 6,256 | 44,856 |
Waitr Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 3,762 | 5,041 |
| | | 538,450 |
Leisure Products - 0.5% | | | |
Acushnet Holdings Corp. | | 2,236 | 61,266 |
American Outdoor Brands Corp. (a) | | 3,467 | 32,815 |
Callaway Golf Co. | | 5,958 | 85,319 |
Clarus Corp. | | 1,509 | 16,116 |
Escalade, Inc. | | 711 | 6,079 |
Johnson Outdoors, Inc. Class A | | 342 | 23,379 |
Malibu Boats, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,302 | 44,763 |
Marine Products Corp. | | 515 | 5,006 |
MCBC Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,274 | 13,313 |
Sturm, Ruger & Co., Inc. | | 1,066 | 56,711 |
Vista Outdoor, Inc. (a) | | 3,710 | 37,545 |
YETI Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 3,553 | 98,098 |
| | | 480,410 |
Multiline Retail - 0.1% | | | |
Big Lots, Inc. | | 2,499 | 58,602 |
Dillard's, Inc. Class A | | 637 | 18,779 |
JC Penney Corp., Inc. (a) | | 11,807 | 2,999 |
| | | 80,380 |
Specialty Retail - 1.9% | | | |
Aaron's, Inc. Class A | | 4,195 | 133,862 |
Abercrombie & Fitch Co. Class A | | 4,059 | 42,944 |
America's Car Mart, Inc. (a) | | 394 | 25,984 |
American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. | | 10,082 | 80,152 |
Asbury Automotive Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,229 | 82,958 |
At Home Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,929 | 4,533 |
Barnes & Noble Education, Inc. (a) | | 2,928 | 5,241 |
Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc. (b) | | 7,841 | 48,536 |
Boot Barn Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,809 | 33,394 |
Caleres, Inc. | | 2,545 | 20,640 |
Camping World Holdings, Inc. | | 2,118 | 18,787 |
Chico's FAS, Inc. | | 5,586 | 8,379 |
Citi Trends, Inc. | | 722 | 8,202 |
Conn's, Inc. (a) | | 669 | 4,522 |
DSW, Inc. Class A | | 3,945 | 25,051 |
Express, Inc. (a) | | 4,138 | 8,566 |
GameStop Corp. Class A (a)(b) | | 4,224 | 24,204 |
Genesco, Inc. (a) | | 923 | 17,472 |
GNC Holdings, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 5,296 | 3,048 |
Group 1 Automotive, Inc. | | 1,129 | 63,890 |
Guess?, Inc. | | 2,988 | 27,938 |
Haverty Furniture Companies, Inc. | | 1,159 | 15,681 |
Hibbett Sports, Inc. (a) | | 1,123 | 17,328 |
Hudson Ltd. (a) | | 2,607 | 12,774 |
Lithia Motors, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) | | 1,385 | 153,126 |
Lumber Liquidators Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,924 | 13,564 |
MarineMax, Inc. (a) | | 1,388 | 20,001 |
Michaels Companies, Inc. (a) | | 5,230 | 15,899 |
Monro, Inc. | | 2,016 | 111,868 |
Murphy U.S.A., Inc. (a) | | 1,836 | 196,085 |
National Vision Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 4,879 | 129,294 |
Office Depot, Inc. | | 34,814 | 77,287 |
OneWater Marine, Inc. Class A | | 309 | 3,550 |
Party City Holdco, Inc. (a)(b) | | 372 | 282 |
Rent-A-Center, Inc. | | 3,152 | 62,741 |
RH (a)(b) | | 1,052 | 151,257 |
Sally Beauty Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 7,469 | 72,524 |
Shoe Carnival, Inc. | | 581 | 13,723 |
Signet Jewelers Ltd. | | 3,343 | 33,631 |
Sleep Number Corp. (a) | | 1,791 | 53,551 |
Sonic Automotive, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) | | 1,557 | 33,367 |
Sportsman's Warehouse Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,714 | 19,432 |
Tailored Brands, Inc. | | 3,303 | 5,483 |
The Buckle, Inc. | | 1,853 | 28,369 |
The Cato Corp. Class A (sub. vtg.) | | 1,460 | 16,440 |
The Children's Place Retail Stores, Inc. (b) | | 953 | 28,171 |
The Container Store Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,145 | 2,405 |
Tilly's, Inc. | | 1,143 | 6,732 |
Winmark Corp. | | 157 | 23,550 |
Zumiez, Inc. (a) | | 1,293 | 27,334 |
| | | 2,033,752 |
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 0.8% | | | |
Centric Brands, Inc. (a) | | 524 | 435 |
Crocs, Inc. (a) | | 4,402 | 106,749 |
Culp, Inc. | | 759 | 5,396 |
Deckers Outdoor Corp. (a) | | 1,774 | 263,900 |
Delta Apparel, Inc. (a) | | 416 | 5,358 |
Fossil Group, Inc. (a) | | 3,067 | 12,145 |
G-III Apparel Group Ltd. (a) | | 2,832 | 32,087 |
Kontoor Brands, Inc. | | 2,835 | 55,027 |
Movado Group, Inc. | | 818 | 8,434 |
Oxford Industries, Inc. | | 1,068 | 44,771 |
Rocky Brands, Inc. | | 460 | 9,867 |
Steven Madden Ltd. | | 5,209 | 130,590 |
Superior Group of Companies, Inc. | | 735 | 6,409 |
Unifi, Inc. (a) | | 945 | 9,781 |
Vera Bradley, Inc. (a) | | 1,310 | 7,218 |
Vince Holding Corp. (a) | | 118 | 704 |
Wolverine World Wide, Inc. | | 4,868 | 99,745 |
| | | 798,616 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | | 10,208,358 |
|
CONSUMER STAPLES - 3.3% | | | |
Beverages - 0.4% | | | |
Boston Beer Co., Inc. Class A (a) | | 527 | 245,851 |
Celsius Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,083 | 10,457 |
Coca-Cola Bottling Co. Consolidated | | 299 | 70,406 |
Craft Brew Alliance, Inc. (a) | | 735 | 11,099 |
MGP Ingredients, Inc. | | 825 | 31,127 |
National Beverage Corp. (a)(b) | | 752 | 37,773 |
New Age Beverages Corp. (a) | | 4,376 | 6,170 |
| | | 412,883 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 0.8% | | | |
Andersons, Inc. | | 2,009 | 34,093 |
BJ's Wholesale Club Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 6,973 | 183,460 |
Chefs' Warehouse Holdings (a) | | 1,572 | 22,134 |
HF Foods Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,391 | 11,309 |
Ingles Markets, Inc. Class A | | 910 | 37,155 |
Natural Grocers by Vitamin Cottage, Inc. | | 598 | 6,739 |
Performance Food Group Co. (a) | | 7,985 | 234,360 |
PriceSmart, Inc. | | 1,426 | 90,608 |
Rite Aid Corp. (a)(b) | | 3,526 | 50,528 |
SpartanNash Co. | | 2,302 | 39,479 |
United Natural Foods, Inc. (a) | | 3,423 | 36,421 |
Village Super Market, Inc. Class A | | 536 | 12,880 |
Weis Markets, Inc. | | 600 | 30,018 |
| | | 789,184 |
Food Products - 1.4% | | | |
Alico, Inc. | | 326 | 9,555 |
B&G Foods, Inc. Class A (b) | | 4,053 | 78,709 |
Bridgford Foods Corp. (a) | | 135 | 2,460 |
Cal-Maine Foods, Inc. | | 2,000 | 83,020 |
Calavo Growers, Inc. | | 1,028 | 59,624 |
Darling International, Inc. (a) | | 10,315 | 212,386 |
Farmer Brothers Co. (a) | | 762 | 7,041 |
Fresh Del Monte Produce, Inc. | | 1,953 | 55,680 |
Freshpet, Inc. (a) | | 2,190 | 165,148 |
Hostess Brands, Inc. Class A (a) | | 7,569 | 90,979 |
J&J Snack Foods Corp. | | 936 | 118,900 |
John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. | | 546 | 44,843 |
Lancaster Colony Corp. | | 1,192 | 160,479 |
Landec Corp. (a) | | 1,691 | 18,855 |
Limoneira Co. | | 997 | 13,310 |
Sanderson Farms, Inc. | | 1,248 | 169,903 |
Seneca Foods Corp. Class A (a) | | 410 | 14,752 |
The Simply Good Foods Co. (a) | | 5,266 | 99,264 |
Tootsie Roll Industries, Inc. | | 1,044 | 36,676 |
| | | 1,441,584 |
Household Products - 0.2% | | | |
Central Garden & Pet Co. (a) | | 1,017 | 33,500 |
Central Garden & Pet Co. Class A (non-vtg.) (a) | | 2,168 | 65,929 |
Oil-Dri Corp. of America | | 337 | 12,600 |
WD-40 Co. | | 859 | 149,707 |
| | | 261,736 |
Personal Products - 0.3% | | | |
BellRing Brands, Inc. Class A (a) | | 2,519 | 44,158 |
Edgewell Personal Care Co. (a) | | 3,443 | 95,061 |
elf Beauty, Inc. (a) | | 1,647 | 21,526 |
Inter Parfums, Inc. | | 1,115 | 49,829 |
LifeVantage Corp. (a) | | 923 | 14,307 |
MediFast, Inc. | | 704 | 53,420 |
Nature's Sunshine Products, Inc. (a) | | 543 | 4,778 |
Revlon, Inc. (a)(b) | | 429 | 5,714 |
USANA Health Sciences, Inc. (a) | | 799 | 71,287 |
Youngevity International, Inc. (a) | | 632 | 1,043 |
| | | 361,123 |
Tobacco - 0.2% | | | |
22nd Century Group, Inc. (a) | | 7,745 | 7,282 |
Pyxus International, Inc. (a) | | 603 | 1,580 |
Turning Point Brands, Inc. | | 544 | 12,675 |
Universal Corp. | | 1,542 | 74,587 |
Vector Group Ltd. | | 7,061 | 75,553 |
| | | 171,677 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | | 3,438,187 |
|
ENERGY - 2.1% | | | |
Energy Equipment & Services - 0.5% | | | |
Archrock, Inc. | | 8,423 | 40,515 |
Cactus, Inc. | | 3,010 | 53,518 |
COVIA Corp. (a) | | 2,148 | 1,396 |
DMC Global, Inc. | | 931 | 24,029 |
Dril-Quip, Inc. (a) | | 2,315 | 76,696 |
Era Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,313 | 6,723 |
Exterran Corp. (a) | | 1,992 | 13,546 |
Forum Energy Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 3,706 | 1,594 |
Frank's International NV (a) | | 7,042 | 17,112 |
FTS International, Inc. (a) | | 1,997 | 819 |
Geospace Technologies Corp. (a) | | 870 | 5,403 |
Helix Energy Solutions Group, Inc. (a) | | 9,077 | 23,056 |
Independence Contract Drilling, Inc. (a) | | 73 | 569 |
KLX Energy Services Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 950 | 1,235 |
Liberty Oilfield Services, Inc. Class A | | 2,504 | 11,819 |
Mammoth Energy Services, Inc. | | 426 | 358 |
Matrix Service Co. (a) | | 1,755 | 18,322 |
Nabors Industries Ltd. (b) | | 307 | 4,522 |
Natural Gas Services Group, Inc. (a) | | 505 | 3,207 |
NCS Multistage Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 359 | 241 |
Newpark Resources, Inc. (a) | | 6,303 | 9,644 |
Nextier Oilfield Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 8,906 | 20,662 |
Nine Energy Service, Inc. (a) | | 736 | 1,067 |
Noble Corp. (a) | | 12,532 | 3,233 |
Oceaneering International, Inc. (a) | | 6,368 | 32,732 |
Oil States International, Inc. (a) | | 3,995 | 13,743 |
Pacific Drilling SA (a) | | 1,406 | 901 |
ProPetro Holding Corp. (a) | | 5,133 | 21,764 |
RigNet, Inc. (a) | | 873 | 1,179 |
RPC, Inc. | | 3,509 | 11,966 |
SEACOR Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,115 | 31,510 |
SEACOR Marine Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,518 | 4,751 |
Seadrill Ltd. (a)(b) | | 2,872 | 1,647 |
Select Energy Services, Inc. Class A (a) | | 3,708 | 17,798 |
Smart Sand, Inc. (a) | | 1,156 | 959 |
Solaris Oilfield Infrastructure, Inc. Class A | | 2,011 | 13,755 |
TETRA Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 5,723 | 2,783 |
Tidewater, Inc. (a) | | 2,792 | 16,082 |
U.S. Silica Holdings, Inc. | | 5,387 | 10,343 |
U.S. Well Services, Inc. (a) | | 745 | 344 |
| | | 521,543 |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 1.6% | | | |
Abraxas Petroleum Corp. (a) | | 7,851 | 2,471 |
Altus Midstream Co. (a) | | 3,375 | 2,565 |
Amplify Energy Corp. New | | 731 | 965 |
Arch Coal, Inc. | | 965 | 28,168 |
Ardmore Shipping Corp. | | 2,235 | 14,706 |
Berry Petroleum Corp. | | 4,036 | 13,843 |
Bonanza Creek Energy, Inc. (a) | | 1,225 | 21,389 |
Brigham Minerals, Inc. Class A | | 1,799 | 23,189 |
California Resources Corp. (a)(b) | | 3,202 | 8,966 |
Callon Petroleum Co. (a) | | 25,126 | 23,611 |
Chaparral Energy, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,168 | 572 |
Clean Energy Fuels Corp. (a) | | 8,726 | 18,805 |
CNX Resources Corp. (a) | | 11,684 | 123,850 |
Comstock Resources, Inc. (a)(b) | | 980 | 7,507 |
CONSOL Energy, Inc. (a) | | 1,651 | 12,531 |
CVR Energy, Inc. | | 1,897 | 45,243 |
Delek U.S. Holdings, Inc. | | 4,730 | 110,446 |
Denbury Resources, Inc. (a)(b) | | 30,775 | 10,941 |
DHT Holdings, Inc. | | 7,037 | 51,089 |
Diamond S Shipping, Inc. (a) | | 1,765 | 21,904 |
Dorian LPG Ltd. (a) | | 1,793 | 17,016 |
Earthstone Energy, Inc. (a) | | 714 | 1,649 |
Energy Fuels, Inc. (a) | | 6,244 | 11,080 |
Evolution Petroleum Corp. | | 1,762 | 5,233 |
Extraction Oil & Gas, Inc. (a) | | 5,488 | 2,906 |
Falcon Minerals Corp. | | 2,679 | 6,550 |
GasLog Ltd. | | 2,660 | 12,289 |
Golar LNG Ltd. | | 6,076 | 43,079 |
Goodrich Petroleum Corp. (a) | | 589 | 5,012 |
Green Plains, Inc. | | 2,267 | 13,307 |
Gulfport Energy Corp. (a) | | 10,232 | 26,143 |
Hallador Energy Co. | | 760 | 579 |
Highpoint Resources, Inc. (a) | | 5,938 | 1,969 |
International Seaways, Inc. | | 1,612 | 39,010 |
Laredo Petroleum, Inc. (a) | | 11,238 | 12,249 |
Magnolia Oil & Gas Corp. Class A (a) | | 5,596 | 36,206 |
Matador Resources Co. (a) | | 7,110 | 50,054 |
Montage Resources Corp. (a) | | 1,375 | 9,391 |
NACCO Industries, Inc. Class A | | 234 | 8,225 |
National Energy Services Reunited Corp. (a) | | 1,548 | 7,910 |
Nextdecade Corp. (a) | | 836 | 1,396 |
Nordic American Tanker Shipping Ltd. (b) | | 8,882 | 53,470 |
Northern Oil & Gas, Inc. (a) | | 18,735 | 15,685 |
Oasis Petroleum, Inc. (a) | | 21,222 | 14,938 |
Overseas Shipholding Group, Inc. (a) | | 4,066 | 10,165 |
Panhandle Royalty Co. Class A | | 392 | 1,697 |
Par Pacific Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,026 | 19,693 |
PDC Energy, Inc. (a) | | 6,387 | 82,967 |
Peabody Energy Corp. | | 4,170 | 14,136 |
Penn Virginia Corp. (a) | | 970 | 6,101 |
PrimeEnergy Corp. (a) | | 21 | 1,312 |
QEP Resources, Inc. | | 15,738 | 15,518 |
Renewable Energy Group, Inc. (a) | | 2,339 | 58,031 |
Rex American Resources Corp. (a) | | 366 | 21,770 |
Ring Energy, Inc. (a) | | 3,213 | 2,896 |
Rosehill Resources, Inc. (a) | | 391 | 178 |
SandRidge Energy, Inc. (a) | | 2,038 | 4,056 |
Scorpio Tankers, Inc. (b) | | 2,815 | 61,620 |
Ship Finance International Ltd. (NY Shares) | | 5,163 | 58,290 |
SilverBow Resources, Inc. (a) | | 505 | 2,732 |
SM Energy Co. | | 6,415 | 25,981 |
Southwestern Energy Co. (a) | | 34,720 | 112,146 |
Talos Energy, Inc. (a) | | 1,298 | 14,784 |
Teekay Corp. (a) | | 4,463 | 16,602 |
Teekay Tankers Ltd. (a) | | 1,515 | 30,770 |
Tellurian, Inc. (a)(b) | | 5,366 | 7,620 |
Unit Corp. (a) | | 2,034 | 687 |
Uranium Energy Corp. (a) | | 11,252 | 12,377 |
W&T Offshore, Inc. (a) | | 6,108 | 16,919 |
Whiting Petroleum Corp. (a)(b) | | 5,910 | 7,447 |
World Fuel Services Corp. | | 4,115 | 102,875 |
| | | 1,647,477 |
|
TOTAL ENERGY | | | 2,169,020 |
|
FINANCIALS - 15.9% | | | |
Banks - 8.6% | | | |
1st Constitution Bancorp | | 465 | 5,906 |
1st Source Corp. | | 878 | 30,493 |
ACNB Corp. | | 526 | 14,707 |
Allegiance Bancshares, Inc. | | 1,219 | 30,573 |
Amalgamated Bank | | 885 | 9,470 |
American National Bankshares, Inc. | | 683 | 18,270 |
Ameris Bancorp | | 3,914 | 99,533 |
Ames National Corp. | | 569 | 12,063 |
Arrow Financial Corp. | | 820 | 23,370 |
Atlantic Capital Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 1,433 | 17,984 |
Banc of California, Inc. | | 2,920 | 30,426 |
BancFirst Corp. | | 1,182 | 45,519 |
Bancorp, Inc., Delaware (a) | | 3,207 | 22,353 |
BancorpSouth Bank | | 6,204 | 135,806 |
Bank First National Corp. | | 364 | 18,644 |
Bank of Commerce Holdings | | 943 | 7,252 |
Bank of Marin Bancorp | | 836 | 27,555 |
Bank7 Corp. | | 241 | 2,410 |
BankFinancial Corp. | | 910 | 7,526 |
Bankwell Financial Group, Inc. | | 432 | 6,588 |
Banner Corp. | | 2,246 | 86,314 |
Bar Harbor Bankshares | | 1,003 | 18,435 |
BayCom Corp. (a) | | 553 | 6,818 |
BCB Bancorp, Inc. | | 963 | 9,746 |
Berkshire Hills Bancorp, Inc. | | 2,919 | 49,740 |
Boston Private Financial Holdings, Inc. | | 5,280 | 40,128 |
Bridge Bancorp, Inc. | | 1,058 | 21,890 |
Brookline Bancorp, Inc., Delaware | | 4,966 | 50,703 |
Bryn Mawr Bank Corp. | | 1,266 | 36,860 |
Business First Bancshares, Inc. | | 806 | 11,268 |
Byline Bancorp, Inc. | | 1,467 | 18,073 |
C & F Financial Corp. | | 193 | 6,863 |
Cadence Bancorp Class A | | 8,076 | 53,463 |
Cambridge Bancorp | | 266 | 14,837 |
Camden National Corp. | | 968 | 31,702 |
Capital Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 469 | 5,093 |
Capital City Bank Group, Inc. | | 917 | 20,211 |
Capstar Financial Holdings, Inc. | | 944 | 10,771 |
Carolina Financial Corp. | | 1,511 | 51,117 |
Carter Bank & Trust | | 1,460 | 13,841 |
Cathay General Bancorp | | 4,672 | 130,442 |
CBTX, Inc. | | 1,143 | 20,643 |
Centerstate Banks of Florida, Inc. | | 7,535 | 131,034 |
Central Pacific Financial Corp. | | 1,756 | 30,712 |
Central Valley Community Bancorp | | 732 | 10,709 |
Century Bancorp, Inc. Class A (non-vtg.) | | 181 | 13,519 |
Chemung Financial Corp. | | 209 | 5,121 |
Citizens & Northern Corp. | | 816 | 14,590 |
City Holding Co. | | 1,008 | 68,131 |
Civista Bancshares, Inc. | | 1,084 | 16,618 |
CNB Financial Corp., Pennsylvania | | 943 | 16,729 |
Coastal Financial Corp. of Washington (a) | | 475 | 6,237 |
Codorus Valley Bancorp, Inc. | | 606 | 8,514 |
Colony Bankcorp, Inc. | | 464 | 5,846 |
Columbia Banking Systems, Inc. | | 4,505 | 121,590 |
Community Bank System, Inc. | | 3,218 | 201,093 |
Community Bankers Trust Corp. | | 1,534 | 8,575 |
Community Financial Corp. | | 248 | 5,754 |
Community Trust Bancorp, Inc. | | 984 | 33,358 |
ConnectOne Bancorp, Inc. | | 2,212 | 33,047 |
CrossFirst Bankshares, Inc. (a) | | 3,041 | 29,406 |
Customers Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 1,845 | 23,542 |
CVB Financial Corp. | | 8,445 | 175,529 |
Eagle Bancorp, Inc. | | 2,064 | 72,405 |
Enterprise Bancorp, Inc. | | 579 | 13,983 |
Enterprise Financial Services Corp. | | 1,544 | 47,463 |
Equity Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 985 | 18,459 |
Esquire Financial Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 373 | 6,125 |
Evans Bancorp, Inc. | | 258 | 7,165 |
Farmers & Merchants Bancorp, Inc. | | 641 | 15,384 |
Farmers National Banc Corp. | | 1,614 | 19,997 |
FB Financial Corp. | | 1,073 | 23,971 |
Fidelity D & D Bancorp, Inc. | | 161 | 6,211 |
Financial Institutions, Inc. | | 1,032 | 19,969 |
First Bancorp, North Carolina | | 1,686 | 44,831 |
First Bancorp, Puerto Rico | | 13,679 | 79,749 |
First Bancshares, Inc. | | 1,203 | 23,964 |
First Bank Hamilton New Jersey | | 1,185 | 9,385 |
First Busey Corp. | | 3,258 | 60,012 |
First Business Finance Services, Inc. | | 571 | 9,810 |
First Capital, Inc. | | 215 | 10,718 |
First Choice Bancorp | | 666 | 10,137 |
First Commonwealth Financial Corp. | | 6,240 | 59,405 |
First Community Bankshares, In | | 1,152 | 27,153 |
First Financial Bancorp, Ohio | | 6,244 | 96,033 |
First Financial Bankshares, Inc. | | 8,223 | 229,011 |
First Financial Corp., Indiana | | 826 | 29,340 |
First Financial Northwest, Inc. | | 517 | 5,077 |
First Foundation, Inc. | | 2,494 | 34,317 |
First Guaranty Bancshares, Inc. | | 346 | 4,674 |
First Internet Bancorp | | 618 | 9,703 |
First Interstate Bancsystem, Inc. | | 2,408 | 81,390 |
First Merchants Corp. | | 3,439 | 97,358 |
First Mid-Illinois Bancshares, Inc. | | 932 | 24,884 |
First Midwest Bancorp, Inc., Delaware | | 6,390 | 94,444 |
First Northwest Bancorp | | 506 | 5,895 |
First of Long Island Corp. | | 1,463 | 23,101 |
Flushing Financial Corp. | | 1,723 | 21,520 |
FNCM Bancorp, Inc. | | 1,126 | 6,981 |
Franklin Financial Network, Inc. | | 861 | 20,423 |
Franklin Financial Services Corp. | | 261 | 7,543 |
Fulton Financial Corp. | | 9,932 | 116,105 |
FVCBankcorp, Inc. (a) | | 787 | 9,058 |
German American Bancorp, Inc. | | 1,563 | 46,468 |
Glacier Bancorp, Inc. | | 5,501 | 209,478 |
Great Southern Bancorp, Inc. | | 694 | 29,544 |
Great Western Bancorp, Inc. | | 3,628 | 68,206 |
Guaranty Bancshares, Inc. Texas | | 516 | 13,917 |
Hancock Whitney Corp. | | 5,531 | 115,653 |
Hanmi Financial Corp. | | 1,966 | 23,730 |
HarborOne Bancorp, Inc. | | 1,648 | 13,217 |
Hawthorn Bancshares, Inc. | | 373 | 6,789 |
HBT Financial, Inc. | | 585 | 6,815 |
Heartland Financial U.S.A., Inc. | | 2,080 | 70,658 |
Heritage Commerce Corp. | | 3,572 | 31,719 |
Heritage Financial Corp., Washington | | 2,343 | 46,977 |
Hilltop Holdings, Inc. | | 4,454 | 85,962 |
Home Bancshares, Inc. | | 9,635 | 147,705 |
HomeTrust Bancshares, Inc. | | 1,016 | 15,616 |
Hope Bancorp, Inc. | | 7,731 | 76,923 |
Horizon Bancorp, Inc. Indiana | | 2,425 | 27,597 |
Howard Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 838 | 9,360 |
IBERIABANK Corp. | | 3,215 | 133,294 |
Independent Bank Corp. | | 1,401 | 20,581 |
Independent Bank Corp., Massachusetts | | 2,082 | 151,757 |
Independent Bank Group, Inc. | | 2,304 | 69,834 |
International Bancshares Corp. | | 3,538 | 102,567 |
Investar Holding Corp. | | 597 | 7,492 |
Investors Bancorp, Inc. | | 14,244 | 132,612 |
Lakeland Bancorp, Inc. | | 3,133 | 35,058 |
Lakeland Financial Corp. | | 1,568 | 66,373 |
LCNB Corp. | | 781 | 11,200 |
Level One Bancorp, Inc. | | 357 | 6,465 |
Live Oak Bancshares, Inc. | | 1,651 | 23,031 |
Macatawa Bank Corp. | | 1,699 | 13,048 |
Mackinac Financial Corp. | | 615 | 6,347 |
Mainstreet Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 458 | 6,879 |
Malvern Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 379 | 4,984 |
Mercantil Bank Holding Corp. Class A (a) | | 1,244 | 16,819 |
Mercantile Bank Corp. | | 1,033 | 24,379 |
Metrocity Bankshares, Inc. | | 1,033 | 10,934 |
Metropolitan Bank Holding Corp. (a) | | 470 | 11,792 |
Mid Penn Bancorp, Inc. | | 405 | 7,938 |
Midland States Bancorp, Inc. | | 1,414 | 22,935 |
MidWestOne Financial Group, Inc. | | 650 | 13,566 |
MVB Financial Corp. | | 539 | 7,400 |
National Bank Holdings Corp. | | 1,695 | 45,053 |
National Bankshares, Inc. | | 414 | 12,412 |
NBT Bancorp, Inc. | | 2,645 | 87,629 |
Nicolet Bankshares, Inc. (a) | | 591 | 32,517 |
Northeast Bank | | 497 | 8,325 |
Northrim Bancorp, Inc. | | 418 | 9,802 |
Norwood Financial Corp. | | 373 | 8,812 |
Oak Valley Bancorp Oakdale California | | 461 | 6,021 |
OFG Bancorp | | 3,289 | 41,376 |
Ohio Valley Banc Corp. | | 263 | 6,628 |
Old National Bancorp, Indiana | | 10,613 | 150,386 |
Old Second Bancorp, Inc. | | 1,927 | 15,859 |
Opus Bank | | 1,401 | 26,927 |
Origin Bancorp, Inc. | | 1,222 | 27,238 |
Orrstown Financial Services, Inc. | | 657 | 10,118 |
Pacific City Financial Corp. | | 508 | 4,765 |
Pacific Mercantile Bancorp (a) | | 890 | 3,569 |
Pacific Premier Bancorp, Inc. | | 3,757 | 80,212 |
Park National Corp. | | 812 | 64,944 |
Parke Bancorp, Inc. | | 662 | 9,328 |
Peapack-Gladstone Financial Corp. | | 1,199 | 22,625 |
Penns Woods Bancorp, Inc. | | 438 | 10,030 |
People's Utah Bancorp | | 998 | 21,437 |
Peoples Bancorp of North Carolina | | 309 | 5,377 |
Peoples Bancorp, Inc. | | 1,147 | 27,884 |
Peoples Financial Services Corp. | | 440 | 16,284 |
Preferred Bank, Los Angeles | | 876 | 33,419 |
Premier Financial Bancorp, Inc. | | 830 | 10,790 |
Professional Holdings Corp. (A Shares) | | 216 | 3,173 |
QCR Holdings, Inc. | | 946 | 29,118 |
RBB Bancorp | | 1,097 | 14,173 |
Red River Bancshares, Inc. | | 321 | 12,291 |
Reliant Bancorp, Inc. | | 709 | 10,323 |
Renasant Corp. | | 3,423 | 89,785 |
Republic Bancorp, Inc., Kentucky Class A | | 623 | 20,765 |
Republic First Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 1,109 | 2,917 |
Richmond Mutual Bancorp., Inc. (a) | | 827 | 8,832 |
S&T Bancorp, Inc. | | 2,422 | 64,692 |
Sandy Spring Bancorp, Inc. | | 2,183 | 55,667 |
SB One Bancorp | | 526 | 9,694 |
Seacoast Banking Corp., Florida (a) | | 3,201 | 71,926 |
Select Bancorp, Inc. New (a) | | 862 | 7,068 |
ServisFirst Bancshares, Inc. | | 2,934 | 104,216 |
Shore Bancshares, Inc. | | 791 | 8,780 |
Sierra Bancorp | | 940 | 19,082 |
Silvergate Capital Corp. (a) | | 201 | 3,196 |
Simmons First National Corp. Class A | | 6,082 | 113,733 |
SmartFinancial, Inc. | | 697 | 10,079 |
South Plains Financial, Inc. | | 665 | 8,266 |
South State Corp. | | 2,087 | 120,712 |
Southern First Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 476 | 13,880 |
Southern National Bancorp of Virginia, Inc. | | 1,367 | 13,766 |
Southside Bancshares, Inc. | | 2,042 | 62,097 |
Spirit of Texas Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 905 | 10,398 |
Stock Yards Bancorp, Inc. | | 1,272 | 42,027 |
Summit Financial Group, Inc. | | 735 | 12,980 |
The Bank of NT Butterfield & Son Ltd. | | 3,372 | 74,218 |
The Bank of Princeton | | 398 | 8,358 |
The First Bancorp, Inc. | | 652 | 14,279 |
Tompkins Financial Corp. | | 915 | 61,772 |
TowneBank | | 3,996 | 80,719 |
Trico Bancshares | | 1,680 | 50,602 |
TriState Capital Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,768 | 25,141 |
Triumph Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 1,454 | 40,290 |
Trustmark Corp. | | 3,947 | 105,030 |
UMB Financial Corp. | | 2,746 | 139,607 |
Union Bankshares Corp. | | 4,925 | 117,560 |
Union Bankshares, Inc. | | 255 | 6,128 |
United Bankshares, Inc., West Virginia | | 6,110 | 183,056 |
United Community Bank, Inc. | | 5,020 | 106,148 |
United Security Bancshares, California | | 974 | 6,487 |
Unity Bancorp, Inc. | | 474 | 6,807 |
Univest Corp. of Pennsylvania | | 1,820 | 32,214 |
Valley National Bancorp | | 24,444 | 204,352 |
Veritex Holdings, Inc. | | 3,201 | 56,210 |
Washington Trust Bancorp, Inc. | | 964 | 33,750 |
WesBanco, Inc. | | 3,940 | 97,239 |
West Bancorp., Inc. | | 1,036 | 19,270 |
Westamerica Bancorp. | | 1,639 | 103,257 |
| | | 9,007,729 |
Capital Markets - 1.5% | | | |
Ares Management Corp. | | 4,518 | 151,579 |
Artisan Partners Asset Management, Inc. | | 3,177 | 93,531 |
Assetmark Financial Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 856 | 20,535 |
Associated Capital Group, Inc. | | 128 | 4,899 |
B. Riley Financial, Inc. | | 1,298 | 25,817 |
Blucora, Inc. (a) | | 3,103 | 43,659 |
BrightSphere Investment Group, Inc. | | 4,205 | 31,159 |
Cohen & Steers, Inc. | | 1,440 | 83,146 |
Cowen Group, Inc. Class A | | 1,797 | 19,677 |
Diamond Hill Investment Group, Inc. | | 198 | 21,693 |
Donnelley Financial Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 2,006 | 14,604 |
Federated Hermes, Inc. Class B (non-vtg.) | | 6,040 | 137,531 |
Focus Financial Partners, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,957 | 46,694 |
Gain Capital Holdings, Inc. | | 1,296 | 8,476 |
GAMCO Investors, Inc. Class A | | 336 | 4,348 |
Greenhill & Co., Inc. | | 998 | 10,649 |
Hamilton Lane, Inc. Class A | | 1,395 | 90,466 |
Houlihan Lokey | | 2,659 | 157,891 |
INTL FCStone, Inc. (a) | | 1,017 | 40,639 |
Moelis & Co. Class A | | 2,981 | 89,042 |
Och-Ziff Capital Management Group LLC Class A | | 1,093 | 16,023 |
Oppenheimer Holdings, Inc. Class A (non-vtg.) | | 611 | 12,574 |
Piper Jaffray Companies | | 844 | 45,500 |
PJT Partners, Inc. | | 1,446 | 70,333 |
Pzena Investment Management, Inc. | | 1,106 | 5,442 |
Safeguard Scientifics, Inc. | | 937 | 6,643 |
Siebert Financial Corp. (a) | | 514 | 2,930 |
Silvercrest Asset Management Group Class A | | 540 | 5,497 |
Stifel Financial Corp. | | 4,211 | 186,463 |
Value Line, Inc. | | 60 | 1,859 |
Virtus Investment Partners, Inc. | | 414 | 33,646 |
Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc. Class A | | 4,057 | 59,029 |
Westwood Holdings Group, Inc. | | 525 | 12,091 |
WisdomTree Investments, Inc. | | 8,571 | 27,770 |
| | | 1,581,835 |
Consumer Finance - 0.6% | | | |
CURO Group Holdings Corp. | | 913 | 8,509 |
Elevate Credit, Inc. (a) | | 702 | 1,313 |
Encore Capital Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,965 | 51,051 |
Enova International, Inc. (a) | | 2,092 | 33,556 |
EZCORP, Inc. (non-vtg.) Class A (a) | | 3,289 | 18,418 |
First Cash Financial Services, Inc. | | 2,619 | 188,149 |
Green Dot Corp. Class A (a) | | 3,088 | 94,184 |
LendingClub Corp. (a) | | 4,324 | 33,165 |
Medallion Financial Corp. (a) | | 1,424 | 4,101 |
Nelnet, Inc. Class A | | 1,085 | 52,243 |
Oportun Financial Corp. (a) | | 278 | 2,079 |
PRA Group, Inc. (a) | | 2,863 | 79,420 |
Regional Management Corp. (a) | | 570 | 9,086 |
World Acceptance Corp. (a) | | 351 | 23,815 |
| | | 599,089 |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.3% | | | |
Alerus Financial Corp. | | 181 | 3,077 |
Banco Latinoamericano de Comercio Exterior SA Series E | | 2,008 | 22,931 |
Cannae Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 4,653 | 146,802 |
FGL Holdings Class A | | 9,325 | 96,794 |
GWG Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 196 | 1,682 |
Marlin Business Services Corp. | | 314 | 3,341 |
On Deck Capital, Inc. (a) | | 3,944 | 4,772 |
Rafael Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 721 | 10,173 |
| | | 289,572 |
Insurance - 2.3% | | | |
AMBAC Financial Group, Inc. (a) | | 2,898 | 49,846 |
American Equity Investment Life Holding Co. | | 5,562 | 116,913 |
Amerisafe, Inc. | | 1,185 | 75,449 |
Argo Group International Holdings, Ltd. | | 2,080 | 73,549 |
BRP Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,224 | 12,264 |
Citizens, Inc. Class A (a) | | 3,139 | 17,453 |
CNO Financial Group, Inc. | | 9,086 | 127,749 |
Crawford & Co. Class A | | 1,009 | 7,184 |
Donegal Group, Inc. Class A | | 635 | 9,093 |
eHealth, Inc. (a) | | 1,440 | 153,648 |
Employers Holdings, Inc. | | 2,006 | 60,922 |
Enstar Group Ltd. (a) | | 726 | 104,994 |
FBL Financial Group, Inc. Class A | | 613 | 23,956 |
Fednat Holding Co. | | 739 | 8,957 |
Genworth Financial, Inc. Class A | | 32,253 | 117,078 |
Global Indemnity Ltd. | | 524 | 12,885 |
Goosehead Insurance | | 737 | 41,375 |
Greenlight Capital Re, Ltd. (a) | | 1,928 | 12,571 |
Hallmark Financial Services, Inc. (a) | | 448 | 1,935 |
HCI Group, Inc. | | 382 | 15,910 |
Health Insurance Innovations, Inc. (a) | | 631 | 16,488 |
Heritage Insurance Holdings, Inc. | | 1,645 | 18,654 |
Horace Mann Educators Corp. | | 2,622 | 92,190 |
Independence Holding Co. | | 311 | 8,602 |
Investors Title Co. | | 92 | 12,319 |
James River Group Holdings Ltd. | | 1,893 | 67,164 |
Kinsale Capital Group, Inc. | | 1,290 | 140,120 |
MBIA, Inc. (a) | | 4,794 | 39,023 |
National General Holdings Corp. | | 4,318 | 82,172 |
National Western Life Group, Inc. | | 144 | 27,753 |
NI Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 529 | 7,147 |
Palomar Holdings, Inc. | | 1,192 | 69,732 |
ProAssurance Corp. | | 3,409 | 72,919 |
ProSight Global, Inc. | | 567 | 4,740 |
Protective Insurance Corp. Class B | | 579 | 9,044 |
RLI Corp. | | 2,532 | 184,406 |
Safety Insurance Group, Inc. | | 898 | 75,540 |
Selective Insurance Group, Inc. | | 3,705 | 185,732 |
State Auto Financial Corp. | | 1,113 | 27,925 |
Stewart Information Services Corp. | | 1,499 | 47,758 |
Third Point Reinsurance Ltd. (a) | | 4,659 | 34,663 |
Tiptree, Inc. | | 1,678 | 10,722 |
Trupanion, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,833 | 54,825 |
United Fire Group, Inc. | | 1,344 | 38,438 |
United Insurance Holdings Corp. | | 1,131 | 9,670 |
Universal Insurance Holdings, Inc. | | 1,885 | 34,364 |
Watford Holdings Ltd. (a) | | 1,149 | 14,190 |
| | | 2,430,031 |
Mortgage Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.8% | | | |
AG Mortgage Investment Trust, Inc. | | 48 | 153 |
Anworth Mortgage Asset Corp. | | 7,438 | 12,793 |
Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance, Inc. | | 9,993 | 81,443 |
Ares Commercial Real Estate Corp. | | 1,700 | 13,175 |
Arlington Asset Investment Corp. | | 2,654 | 7,511 |
Armour Residential REIT, Inc. | | 3,888 | 34,370 |
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. | | 7,925 | 186,475 |
Capstead Mortgage Corp. | | 6,116 | 31,742 |
Cherry Hill Mortgage Investment Corp. | | 823 | 5,728 |
Colony NorthStar Credit Real Estate, Inc. | | 5,221 | 25,113 |
Dynex Capital, Inc. | | 1,533 | 21,937 |
Ellington Financial LLC | | 2,647 | 27,502 |
Exantas Capital Corp. | | 654 | 1,936 |
Granite Point Mortgage Trust, Inc. | | 3,813 | 18,989 |
Great Ajax Corp. | | 1,188 | 10,336 |
Invesco Mortgage Capital, Inc. | | 11,217 | 34,100 |
KKR Real Estate Finance Trust, Inc. | | 1,675 | 26,432 |
Ladder Capital Corp. Class A | | 6,702 | 53,281 |
New York Mortgage Trust, Inc. | | 24,981 | 54,459 |
Orchid Island Capital, Inc. | | 4,322 | 17,029 |
PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust | | 6,389 | 66,446 |
Redwood Trust, Inc. | | 7,413 | 30,393 |
TPG RE Finance Trust, Inc. | | 3,485 | 26,800 |
ZAIS Financial Corp. | | 2,151 | 14,347 |
| | | 802,490 |
Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 1.8% | | | |
Axos Financial, Inc. (a) | | 3,709 | 85,492 |
Bridgewater Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 1,552 | 15,722 |
Capitol Federal Financial, Inc. | | 8,067 | 96,723 |
Columbia Financial, Inc. (a) | | 3,111 | 44,036 |
Dime Community Bancshares, Inc. | | 2,002 | 32,893 |
ESSA Bancorp, Inc. | | 610 | 7,320 |
Essent Group Ltd. | | 6,050 | 165,286 |
Farmer Mac Class C (non-vtg.) | | 575 | 38,312 |
First Defiance Financial Corp. | | 2,417 | 42,007 |
Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. | | 2,209 | 57,235 |
FS Bancorp, Inc. | | 287 | 12,040 |
Greene County Bancorp, Inc. | | 174 | 3,652 |
Hingham Institution for Savings | | 94 | 14,384 |
Home Bancorp, Inc. | | 524 | 13,310 |
HomeStreet, Inc. | | 1,405 | 35,898 |
Kearny Financial Corp. | | 4,952 | 46,054 |
Luther Burbank Corp. | | 1,269 | 13,654 |
Merchants Bancorp/IN | | 554 | 8,532 |
Meridian Bancorp, Inc. Maryland | | 3,014 | 35,505 |
Meta Financial Group, Inc. | | 2,203 | 40,579 |
MMA Capital Management, LLC (a) | | 313 | 7,985 |
NMI Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 4,213 | 56,960 |
Northfield Bancorp, Inc. | | 2,774 | 31,263 |
Northwest Bancshares, Inc. | | 7,269 | 77,124 |
OceanFirst Financial Corp. | | 3,491 | 58,823 |
Ocwen Financial Corp. (a) | | 9,284 | 3,915 |
OP Bancorp | | 703 | 4,963 |
PCSB Financial Corp. | | 837 | 11,425 |
PDL Community Bancorp (a) | | 519 | 4,780 |
Pennymac Financial Services, Inc. | | 1,590 | 47,970 |
Pioneer Bancorp, Inc. (a) | | 583 | 6,168 |
Provident Bancorp, Inc. | | 485 | 4,627 |
Provident Financial Holdings, Inc. | | 389 | 5,076 |
Provident Financial Services, Inc. | | 3,885 | 55,750 |
Prudential Bancorp, Inc. | | 501 | 6,162 |
Radian Group, Inc. | | 12,688 | 190,066 |
Riverview Bancorp, Inc. | | 1,651 | 9,130 |
Southern Missouri Bancorp, Inc. | | 534 | 12,672 |
Sterling Bancorp, Inc. | | 426 | 1,538 |
Territorial Bancorp, Inc. | | 504 | 12,666 |
Timberland Bancorp, Inc. | | 518 | 10,023 |
Trustco Bank Corp., New York | | 6,076 | 38,279 |
Velocity Financial, Inc. | | 454 | 1,721 |
Walker & Dunlop, Inc. | | 1,770 | 68,021 |
Washington Federal, Inc. | | 4,758 | 127,229 |
Waterstone Financial, Inc. | | 1,462 | 21,228 |
Westfield Financial, Inc. | | 1,570 | 9,436 |
WMI Holdings Corp. (a) | | 4,881 | 46,760 |
WSFS Financial Corp. | | 3,251 | 94,864 |
| | | 1,835,258 |
|
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | | 16,546,004 |
|
HEALTH CARE - 21.7% | | | |
Biotechnology - 9.9% | | | |
89Bio, Inc. (a) | | 208 | 4,890 |
Abeona Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 3,639 | 8,661 |
ACADIA Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 7,082 | 342,131 |
Acceleron Pharma, Inc. (a) | | 2,828 | 256,019 |
Acorda Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 817 | 786 |
Adamas Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,486 | 4,800 |
ADMA Biologics, Inc. (a) | | 4,502 | 13,281 |
Aduro Biotech, Inc. (a) | | 4,265 | 11,793 |
Adverum Biotechnologies, Inc. (a) | | 4,026 | 47,708 |
Aeglea BioTherapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,075 | 8,353 |
Affimed NV (a) | | 5,107 | 11,184 |
Agenus, Inc. (a) | | 6,965 | 18,562 |
AgeX Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,458 | 1,231 |
Aimmune Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 2,863 | 49,015 |
Akebia Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 7,535 | 61,034 |
Akero Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 533 | 10,873 |
Albireo Pharma, Inc. (a) | | 852 | 19,136 |
Aldeyra Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,663 | 5,238 |
Alector, Inc. (a) | | 2,204 | 54,483 |
Allakos, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,242 | 81,674 |
Allogene Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 2,465 | 71,239 |
AMAG Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 2,163 | 17,369 |
Amicus Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 15,868 | 187,401 |
AnaptysBio, Inc. (a) | | 1,571 | 24,539 |
Anavex Life Sciences Corp. (a) | | 3,249 | 11,242 |
Anika Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 848 | 28,179 |
Apellis Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 3,537 | 121,213 |
Applied Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 520 | 18,590 |
Aprea Therapeutics, Inc. | | 408 | 12,970 |
Arcus Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 2,068 | 54,616 |
Arcutis Biotherapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 670 | 19,912 |
Ardelyx, Inc. (a) | | 3,980 | 26,188 |
Arena Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 3,116 | 152,591 |
Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 6,292 | 216,634 |
Assembly Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 1,834 | 32,113 |
Atara Biotherapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 3,283 | 27,216 |
Athenex, Inc. (a) | | 4,378 | 39,139 |
Athersys, Inc. (a)(b) | | 8,545 | 19,654 |
Atreca, Inc. | | 1,111 | 16,976 |
Avid Bioservices, Inc. (a) | | 3,540 | 21,594 |
AVROBIO, Inc. (a) | | 1,499 | 19,292 |
Axcella Health, Inc. | | 524 | 2,442 |
Beam Therapeutics, Inc. | | 779 | 12,425 |
BeyondSpring, Inc. (a) | | 840 | 12,054 |
BioCryst Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 9,841 | 38,478 |
Biohaven Pharmaceutical Holding Co. Ltd. (a) | | 2,628 | 123,779 |
Biospecifics Technologies Corp. (a) | | 388 | 22,081 |
BioTime, Inc. (a) | | 7,056 | 5,998 |
BioXcel Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 448 | 16,576 |
Black Diamond Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 769 | 28,484 |
Blueprint Medicines Corp. (a) | | 3,343 | 196,669 |
Bridgebio Pharma, Inc. (b) | | 4,686 | 143,064 |
Cabaletta Bio, Inc. (a) | | 430 | 3,118 |
Calithera Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 3,561 | 21,829 |
Calyxt, Inc. (a) | | 592 | 2,581 |
CareDx, Inc. (a) | | 2,612 | 66,293 |
CASI Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 2,399 | 4,462 |
Castle Biosciences, Inc. | | 614 | 18,991 |
Catalyst Pharmaceutical Partners, Inc. (a) | | 6,209 | 29,431 |
Cel-Sci Corp. (a)(b) | | 2,096 | 36,890 |
Celcuity, Inc. (a) | | 197 | 1,184 |
Cellular Biomedicine Group, Inc. (a) | | 769 | 11,151 |
Centogene NV (a) | | 119 | 2,321 |
Checkpoint Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 2,172 | 3,823 |
ChemoCentryx, Inc. (a) | | 2,533 | 134,274 |
Chimerix, Inc. (a) | | 3,487 | 8,020 |
Clovis Oncology, Inc. (a)(b) | | 3,240 | 24,656 |
Coherus BioSciences, Inc. (a) | | 3,972 | 65,935 |
Concert Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,726 | 17,225 |
Constellation Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,200 | 43,176 |
Corbus Pharmaceuticals Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 4,176 | 27,060 |
Cortexyme, Inc. | | 726 | 33,120 |
Crinetics Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 706 | 11,776 |
Cue Biopharma, Inc. (a) | | 1,267 | 32,410 |
Cyclerion Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,636 | 6,331 |
Cytokinetics, Inc. (a) | | 3,551 | 53,656 |
CytomX Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 2,866 | 29,577 |
Deciphera Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,332 | 77,229 |
Denali Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 3,320 | 72,575 |
Dicerna Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 3,413 | 67,236 |
Dynavax Technologies Corp. (a) | | 5,404 | 22,967 |
Eagle Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 574 | 29,263 |
Editas Medicine, Inc. (a) | | 3,300 | 76,296 |
Eidos Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 717 | 33,297 |
Eiger Biopharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,617 | 12,030 |
Emergent BioSolutions, Inc. (a) | | 2,862 | 211,645 |
Enanta Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,209 | 56,061 |
Enochian Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 976 | 3,338 |
Epizyme, Inc. (a) | | 4,951 | 81,493 |
Esperion Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,612 | 63,835 |
Evelo Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 918 | 5,086 |
Fate Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 3,864 | 105,796 |
FibroGen, Inc. (a) | | 4,887 | 180,281 |
Five Prime Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,702 | 5,583 |
Flexion Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 2,210 | 23,514 |
Frequency Therapeutics, Inc. | | 366 | 5,823 |
G1 Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 2,165 | 28,426 |
Galectin Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 2,580 | 6,411 |
Galera Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 110 | 1,503 |
Geron Corp. (a) | | 12,009 | 14,291 |
Global Blood Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 3,607 | 276,008 |
GlycoMimetics, Inc. (a) | | 2,215 | 6,180 |
Gossamer Bio, Inc. (a) | | 2,738 | 35,649 |
Gritstone Oncology, Inc. (a) | | 1,687 | 11,826 |
Halozyme Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 8,322 | 188,535 |
Harpoon Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 502 | 6,325 |
Heron Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 5,356 | 76,377 |
Homology Medicines, Inc. (a) | | 1,592 | 19,215 |
Hookipa Pharma, Inc. | | 664 | 5,883 |
IGM Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 315 | 17,253 |
ImmunoGen, Inc. (a) | | 10,763 | 43,913 |
Immunomedics, Inc. (a) | | 11,972 | 363,709 |
Inovio Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 6,050 | 72,782 |
Insmed, Inc. (a) | | 5,674 | 130,502 |
Intellia Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 2,470 | 33,271 |
Intercept Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,604 | 131,400 |
Invitae Corp. (a) | | 5,524 | 91,422 |
Iovance Biotherapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 7,372 | 237,010 |
Ironwood Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Class A (a) | | 9,934 | 99,340 |
Jounce Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,034 | 5,067 |
Kadmon Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 10,153 | 43,658 |
Kalvista Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 828 | 9,033 |
Karuna Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 670 | 55,664 |
Karyopharm Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 3,792 | 83,614 |
Kezar Life Sciences, Inc. (a) | | 2,038 | 9,579 |
Kindred Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 2,124 | 10,662 |
Kiniksa Pharmaceuticals Ltd. (a) | | 901 | 17,975 |
Kodiak Sciences, Inc. (a) | | 1,788 | 97,535 |
Krystal Biotech, Inc. (a) | | 671 | 31,664 |
Kura Oncology, Inc. (a) | | 2,156 | 31,370 |
La Jolla Pharmaceutical Co. (a) | | 1,222 | 8,872 |
Lexicon Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 2,371 | 4,481 |
Ligand Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Class B (a) | | 1,059 | 104,386 |
LogicBio Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 555 | 3,175 |
Macrogenics, Inc. (a) | | 3,058 | 22,018 |
Madrigal Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 574 | 48,032 |
Magenta Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,279 | 10,424 |
MannKind Corp. (a) | | 12,386 | 16,102 |
Marker Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,860 | 5,124 |
MediciNova, Inc. (a) | | 2,750 | 14,163 |
MEI Pharma, Inc. (a) | | 6,612 | 17,919 |
MeiraGTx Holdings PLC (a) | | 1,083 | 14,913 |
Mersana Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 2,281 | 20,597 |
Minerva Neurosciences, Inc. (a) | | 1,889 | 16,944 |
Mirati Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,852 | 157,494 |
Mirum Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 330 | 5,577 |
Molecular Templates, Inc. (a) | | 1,305 | 21,180 |
Momenta Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 7,107 | 225,292 |
Morphic Holding, Inc. | | 704 | 9,581 |
Mustang Bio, Inc. (a) | | 1,912 | 5,277 |
Myriad Genetics, Inc. (a) | | 4,536 | 70,127 |
Natera, Inc. (a) | | 3,889 | 144,049 |
Neon Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 938 | 2,711 |
NextCure, Inc. | | 917 | 29,729 |
Novavax, Inc. (a)(b) | | 2,049 | 37,148 |
OncoCyte Corp. (a) | | 1,449 | 3,912 |
Oncternal Therapeutics, Inc. rights (a)(c) | | 19 | 0 |
Opko Health, Inc. (a)(b) | | 24,603 | 54,619 |
Organogenesis Holdings, Inc. Class A (a) | | 794 | 2,946 |
OvaScience, Inc. (a) | | 340 | 568 |
Oyster Point Pharma, Inc. (a) | | 361 | 10,613 |
Palatin Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 12,418 | 6,017 |
PDL BioPharma, Inc. (a) | | 7,172 | 24,313 |
Pfenex, Inc. (a) | | 1,910 | 10,983 |
PhaseBio Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,006 | 3,883 |
Pieris Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 2,972 | 7,876 |
Polarityte, Inc. (a) | | 369 | 380 |
Portola Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 4,888 | 34,607 |
Precigen, Inc. (a)(b) | | 4,615 | 16,614 |
Precision BioSciences, Inc. (a) | | 2,346 | 16,140 |
Prevail Therapeutics, Inc. | | 908 | 13,121 |
Principia Biopharma, Inc. (a) | | 1,171 | 72,813 |
Progenics Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 5,528 | 21,780 |
Protagonist Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,168 | 7,884 |
Prothena Corp. PLC (a) | | 2,568 | 28,813 |
PTC Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 3,762 | 191,561 |
Puma Biotechnology, Inc. (a) | | 2,006 | 20,160 |
Radius Health, Inc. (a) | | 2,881 | 45,203 |
RAPT Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 105 | 1,595 |
Recro Pharma, Inc. (a) | | 1,300 | 10,998 |
REGENXBIO, Inc. (a) | | 2,129 | 84,777 |
Repligen Corp. (a) | | 3,304 | 383,760 |
Replimune Group, Inc. (a) | | 876 | 15,847 |
Retrophin, Inc. (a) | | 2,623 | 39,922 |
Revolution Medicines, Inc. | | 893 | 27,924 |
Rhythm Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,859 | 35,024 |
Rigel Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 10,763 | 19,266 |
Rocket Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 2,043 | 30,236 |
Rubius Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 2,228 | 13,479 |
Sangamo Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 7,309 | 59,568 |
Savara, Inc. (a) | | 2,253 | 5,430 |
Scholar Rock Holding Corp. (a) | | 1,139 | 18,714 |
Seres Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 2,322 | 8,545 |
Solid Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 897 | 2,081 |
Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 8,350 | 18,955 |
Spectrum Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 7,135 | 20,692 |
Spero Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 814 | 10,118 |
Springworks Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 661 | 20,002 |
Stemline Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 2,707 | 14,158 |
Stoke Therapeutics, Inc. | | 1,088 | 22,881 |
Sutro Biopharma, Inc. (a) | | 738 | 7,269 |
Syndax Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,420 | 25,560 |
Synlogic, Inc. (a) | | 794 | 1,652 |
Syros Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 2,242 | 18,900 |
TCR2 Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 785 | 7,489 |
TG Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 5,487 | 64,527 |
Tocagen, Inc. (a) | | 846 | 990 |
Translate Bio, Inc. (a) | | 2,208 | 28,351 |
Turning Point Therapeutics, Inc. | | 1,686 | 86,846 |
Twist Bioscience Corp. (a) | | 1,673 | 54,724 |
Tyme, Inc. (a) | | 4,197 | 6,799 |
Ultragenyx Pharmaceutical, Inc. (a) | | 3,395 | 205,160 |
UNITY Biotechnology, Inc. (a) | | 1,829 | 11,870 |
UroGen Pharma Ltd. (a) | | 1,192 | 26,474 |
Vanda Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 3,300 | 37,950 |
VBI Vaccines, Inc. (a) | | 9,797 | 11,952 |
Veracyte, Inc. (a) | | 2,995 | 80,775 |
Vericel Corp. (a) | | 2,843 | 41,224 |
Viela Bio, Inc. | | 348 | 14,139 |
Viking Therapeutics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 4,258 | 24,526 |
Vir Biotechnology, Inc. (a) | | 469 | 14,309 |
Voyager Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,655 | 17,891 |
X4 Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 988 | 9,198 |
Xbiotech, Inc. (a) | | 839 | 13,273 |
Xencor, Inc. (a) | | 3,011 | 88,012 |
Y-mAbs Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,506 | 50,571 |
ZIOPHARM Oncology, Inc. (a) | | 11,852 | 33,186 |
| | | 10,324,969 |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 4.8% | | | |
Accuray, Inc. (a) | | 5,905 | 13,198 |
Alphatec Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,475 | 11,212 |
Angiodynamics, Inc. (a) | | 2,377 | 24,792 |
Antares Pharma, Inc. (a) | | 10,290 | 33,340 |
Atricure, Inc. (a) | | 2,419 | 104,307 |
Atrion Corp. | | 91 | 57,497 |
Avanos Medical, Inc. (a) | | 3,015 | 93,616 |
AxoGen, Inc. (a) | | 2,179 | 21,245 |
Axonics Modulation Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 1,188 | 38,265 |
BioLife Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 511 | 5,585 |
BioSig Technologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,031 | 8,001 |
Bovie Medical Corp. (a) | | 2,177 | 7,402 |
Cardiovascular Systems, Inc. (a) | | 2,202 | 92,484 |
Cerus Corp. (a) | | 10,005 | 61,531 |
ConforMis, Inc. (a) | | 2,188 | 1,682 |
CONMED Corp. | | 1,687 | 124,686 |
Cryolife, Inc. (a) | | 2,325 | 51,917 |
CryoPort, Inc. (a)(b) | | 2,034 | 38,321 |
Cutera, Inc. (a) | | 906 | 12,186 |
CytoSorbents Corp. (a) | | 1,983 | 16,974 |
electroCore, Inc. (a) | | 888 | 853 |
Genmark Diagnostics, Inc. (a) | | 3,537 | 44,248 |
Glaukos Corp. (a) | | 2,484 | 91,138 |
Globus Medical, Inc. (a) | | 4,795 | 227,571 |
Haemonetics Corp. (a) | | 3,196 | 363,641 |
Heska Corp. (a) | | 449 | 31,789 |
Inogen, Inc. (a) | | 1,169 | 58,450 |
Integer Holdings Corp. (a) | | 2,019 | 150,335 |
IntriCon Corp. (a) | | 393 | 5,188 |
Invacare Corp. | | 2,154 | 16,198 |
IRadimed Corp. (a) | | 307 | 6,680 |
iRhythm Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 1,653 | 174,623 |
Lantheus Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,465 | 32,168 |
LeMaitre Vascular, Inc. | | 1,038 | 29,573 |
LivaNova PLC (a) | | 3,026 | 160,741 |
Meridian Bioscience, Inc. (a) | | 2,696 | 32,352 |
Merit Medical Systems, Inc. (a) | | 3,335 | 136,135 |
Mesa Laboratories, Inc. | | 255 | 60,690 |
Misonix, Inc. (a) | | 526 | 6,622 |
Natus Medical, Inc. (a) | | 2,146 | 53,629 |
Neogen Corp. (a) | | 3,270 | 204,669 |
Neuronetics, Inc. (a) | | 1,010 | 2,525 |
Nevro Corp. (a) | | 1,882 | 221,398 |
Novocure Ltd. (a) | | 5,474 | 360,189 |
NuVasive, Inc. (a) | | 3,263 | 198,651 |
OraSure Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 3,935 | 62,724 |
Orthofix International NV (a) | | 1,156 | 40,980 |
OrthoPediatrics Corp. (a) | | 638 | 31,166 |
Pulse Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 788 | 8,849 |
Quidel Corp. (a) | | 2,263 | 314,557 |
Rockwell Medical Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 4,303 | 10,026 |
RTI Biologics, Inc. (a) | | 3,759 | 10,168 |
Seaspine Holdings Corp. (a) | | 1,411 | 14,533 |
Senseonics Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 8,215 | 4,683 |
Shockwave Medical, Inc. (a) | | 1,623 | 65,115 |
SI-BONE, Inc. (a) | | 1,222 | 19,760 |
Sientra, Inc. (a) | | 1,860 | 4,278 |
Silk Road Medical, Inc. | | 1,022 | 42,801 |
Soliton, Inc. (a)(b) | | 356 | 3,215 |
Staar Surgical Co. (a) | | 2,832 | 108,522 |
SurModics, Inc. (a) | | 835 | 31,814 |
Tactile Systems Technology, Inc. (a) | | 1,166 | 60,189 |
Tandem Diabetes Care, Inc. (a) | | 3,526 | 281,304 |
TransEnterix, Inc. (a) | | 719 | 298 |
TransMedics Group, Inc. | | 923 | 16,697 |
Utah Medical Products, Inc. | | 226 | 18,758 |
Vapotherm, Inc. (a) | | 956 | 19,388 |
Varex Imaging Corp. (a) | | 2,399 | 62,686 |
ViewRay, Inc. (a) | | 6,784 | 14,111 |
Wright Medical Group NV (a) | | 8,006 | 233,135 |
Zynex, Inc. (a) | | 1,006 | 17,766 |
| | | 4,985,820 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 2.3% | | | |
1Life Healthcare, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,228 | 30,295 |
Addus HomeCare Corp. (a) | | 789 | 63,925 |
Amedisys, Inc. (a) | | 1,982 | 365,005 |
American Renal Associates Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,180 | 8,826 |
AMN Healthcare Services, Inc. (a) | | 2,899 | 136,195 |
Apollo Medical Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 593 | 9,215 |
Avalon GloboCare Corp. (a) | | 1,391 | 2,559 |
BioScrip, Inc. (a) | | 1,954 | 27,942 |
BioTelemetry, Inc. (a) | | 2,113 | 98,698 |
Brookdale Senior Living, Inc. (a) | | 11,775 | 42,508 |
Catasys, Inc. (a) | | 461 | 14,033 |
Community Health Systems, Inc. (a) | | 5,467 | 16,565 |
Corvel Corp. (a) | | 563 | 29,664 |
Cross Country Healthcare, Inc. (a) | | 2,297 | 14,448 |
Enzo Biochem, Inc. (a) | | 2,822 | 8,522 |
Exagen, Inc. (a) | | 216 | 3,370 |
Genesis HealthCare, Inc. Class A (a) | | 5,151 | 4,481 |
Hanger, Inc. (a) | | 2,304 | 42,301 |
HealthEquity, Inc. (a) | | 4,312 | 242,636 |
LHC Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,894 | 246,201 |
Magellan Health Services, Inc. (a) | | 1,395 | 84,718 |
National Healthcare Corp. | | 775 | 52,987 |
National Research Corp. Class A | | 764 | 39,415 |
Owens & Minor, Inc. | | 3,937 | 27,874 |
Patterson Companies, Inc. | | 5,328 | 97,396 |
Pennant Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,621 | 32,080 |
PetIQ, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,274 | 36,436 |
Progyny, Inc. (a) | | 764 | 17,901 |
Providence Service Corp. (a) | | 744 | 43,159 |
R1 RCM, Inc. (a) | | 6,619 | 68,308 |
RadNet, Inc. (a) | | 2,683 | 37,884 |
Select Medical Holdings Corp. (a) | | 6,713 | 114,591 |
Surgery Partners, Inc. (a) | | 1,544 | 18,219 |
Tenet Healthcare Corp. (a) | | 6,553 | 132,240 |
The Ensign Group, Inc. | | 3,222 | 120,535 |
The Joint Corp. (a) | | 890 | 10,769 |
Tivity Health, Inc. (a) | | 3,042 | 27,287 |
Triple-S Management Corp. | | 1,464 | 24,786 |
U.S. Physical Therapy, Inc. | | 798 | 60,249 |
| | | 2,454,223 |
Health Care Technology - 1.8% | | | |
Allscripts Healthcare Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 10,353 | 67,295 |
Castlight Health, Inc. Class B (a) | | 4,433 | 3,249 |
Computer Programs & Systems, Inc. | | 817 | 19,633 |
Evolent Health, Inc. (a) | | 4,756 | 34,291 |
Health Catalyst, Inc. | | 1,219 | 32,511 |
HealthStream, Inc. (a) | | 1,661 | 37,912 |
HMS Holdings Corp. (a) | | 5,420 | 155,419 |
Inovalon Holdings, Inc. Class A (a) | | 4,430 | 77,525 |
Inspire Medical Systems, Inc. (a) | | 855 | 61,269 |
Livongo Health, Inc. | | 3,283 | 131,353 |
Nextgen Healthcare, Inc. (a) | | 3,479 | 36,703 |
Omnicell, Inc. (a) | | 2,589 | 188,738 |
OptimizeRx Corp. (a) | | 910 | 8,472 |
Phreesia, Inc. | | 1,735 | 44,052 |
Schrodinger, Inc. | | 880 | 40,832 |
Simulations Plus, Inc. | | 760 | 28,918 |
Tabula Rasa HealthCare, Inc. (a) | | 1,247 | 78,985 |
Teladoc Health, Inc. (a)(b) | | 4,562 | 750,806 |
Vocera Communications, Inc. (a) | | 1,988 | 37,692 |
| | | 1,835,655 |
Life Sciences Tools & Services - 0.8% | | | |
Accelerate Diagnostics, Inc. (a) | | 1,799 | 19,627 |
ChromaDex, Inc. (a) | | 2,627 | 13,135 |
Codexis, Inc. (a) | | 3,377 | 39,207 |
Fluidigm Corp. (a) | | 4,573 | 10,244 |
Luminex Corp. | | 2,671 | 96,290 |
Medpace Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,727 | 137,918 |
Nanostring Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 2,171 | 68,951 |
NeoGenomics, Inc. (a) | | 5,981 | 163,521 |
Pacific Biosciences of California, Inc. (a) | | 9,081 | 30,013 |
Personalis, Inc. (a) | | 1,258 | 13,045 |
Quanterix Corp. (a) | | 865 | 22,663 |
Syneos Health, Inc. (a) | | 3,904 | 217,804 |
| | | 832,418 |
Pharmaceuticals - 2.1% | | | |
AcelRx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)(b) | | 5,044 | 8,121 |
Acer Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 290 | 696 |
Aclaris Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 572 | 761 |
Aerie Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 2,707 | 41,255 |
Akcea Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 852 | 14,535 |
Akorn, Inc. (a) | | 1,549 | 325 |
Amneal Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 7,599 | 27,584 |
Amphastar Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 2,266 | 38,409 |
ANI Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 594 | 23,766 |
Arvinas Holding Co. LLC (a) | | 1,351 | 70,928 |
Assertio Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 4,482 | 3,922 |
Axsome Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,691 | 160,696 |
Baudax Bio, Inc. (a) | | 525 | 1,614 |
Biodelivery Sciences International, Inc. (a) | | 5,525 | 25,194 |
Cara Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 2,609 | 38,665 |
Cerecor, Inc. (a) | | 1,508 | 3,574 |
Chiasma, Inc. (a) | | 2,411 | 12,465 |
Collegium Pharmaceutical, Inc. (a) | | 2,052 | 42,435 |
Corcept Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 6,101 | 77,239 |
CorMedix, Inc. (a) | | 1,512 | 6,275 |
CymaBay Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 4,584 | 8,114 |
Eloxx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,635 | 4,774 |
Endo International PLC (a) | | 14,354 | 66,028 |
Evofem Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 999 | 4,735 |
Evolus, Inc. (a) | | 1,351 | 5,620 |
Eyepoint Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 4,125 | 3,993 |
Fulcrum Therapeutics, Inc. | | 822 | 10,374 |
Innoviva, Inc. (a) | | 4,043 | 57,330 |
Intersect ENT, Inc. (a) | | 1,972 | 22,639 |
Intra-Cellular Therapies, Inc. (a) | | 3,372 | 59,583 |
Kala Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,527 | 15,209 |
Kaleido Biosciences, Inc. (a)(b) | | 716 | 4,661 |
Lannett Co., Inc. (a) | | 2,061 | 19,662 |
Liquidia Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 929 | 4,626 |
Mallinckrodt PLC (a)(b) | | 5,439 | 22,082 |
Marinus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 5,347 | 10,908 |
Menlo Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 3,019 | 5,495 |
MyoKardia, Inc. (a) | | 2,728 | 171,373 |
NGM Biopharmaceuticals, Inc. | | 1,555 | 28,394 |
Ocular Therapeutix, Inc. (a) | | 2,708 | 15,598 |
Odonate Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 609 | 17,143 |
Omeros Corp. (a)(b) | | 3,270 | 54,347 |
OptiNose, Inc. (a) | | 1,405 | 5,676 |
Osmotica Pharmaceuticals PLC (a) | | 515 | 2,060 |
Pacira Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 2,612 | 107,849 |
Paratek Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 2,171 | 8,879 |
Phathom Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 690 | 23,350 |
Phibro Animal Health Corp. Class A | | 1,296 | 34,616 |
Prestige Brands Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 3,063 | 124,633 |
Reata Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,417 | 224,113 |
Revance Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 3,297 | 61,027 |
Satsuma Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 296 | 5,802 |
SIGA Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 3,653 | 21,589 |
Strongbridge Biopharma PLC (a) | | 2,314 | 6,618 |
Supernus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 3,153 | 73,780 |
TherapeuticsMD, Inc. (a)(b) | | 14,396 | 22,746 |
Theravance Biopharma, Inc. (a) | | 3,134 | 91,387 |
Tricida, Inc. (a) | | 1,389 | 42,017 |
Verrica Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 848 | 10,235 |
WAVE Life Sciences (a) | | 1,477 | 12,820 |
Xeris Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,755 | 4,739 |
Zogenix, Inc. (a) | | 2,721 | 76,814 |
Zynerba Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,527 | 5,909 |
| | | 2,177,806 |
|
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | | 22,610,891 |
|
INDUSTRIALS - 15.0% | | | |
Aerospace & Defense - 1.3% | | | |
AAR Corp. | | 2,124 | 41,588 |
Aerojet Rocketdyne Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 4,609 | 189,614 |
AeroVironment, Inc. (a) | | 1,358 | 81,833 |
Astronics Corp. (a) | | 1,479 | 13,281 |
Axon Enterprise, Inc. (a) | | 3,671 | 266,918 |
Cubic Corp. | | 1,993 | 76,153 |
Ducommun, Inc. (a) | | 708 | 19,994 |
Kratos Defense & Security Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 5,744 | 86,275 |
Maxar Technologies, Inc. | | 3,820 | 48,170 |
Mercury Systems, Inc. (a) | | 3,417 | 304,660 |
Moog, Inc. Class A | | 1,973 | 97,624 |
National Presto Industries, Inc. | | 319 | 25,938 |
Park Aerospace Corp. | | 1,196 | 15,919 |
Parsons Corp. | | 1,204 | 45,030 |
Triumph Group, Inc. | | 3,161 | 22,253 |
Vectrus, Inc. (a) | | 716 | 37,239 |
| | | 1,372,489 |
Air Freight & Logistics - 0.3% | | | |
Air Transport Services Group, Inc. (a) | | 3,729 | 75,475 |
Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,494 | 49,078 |
Echo Global Logistics, Inc. (a) | | 1,735 | 30,415 |
Forward Air Corp. | | 1,733 | 89,423 |
Hub Group, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,999 | 96,172 |
Radiant Logistics, Inc. (a) | | 2,606 | 11,154 |
| | | 351,717 |
Airlines - 0.3% | | | |
Allegiant Travel Co. | | 831 | 65,217 |
Hawaiian Holdings, Inc. | | 2,918 | 42,019 |
Mesa Air Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,884 | 8,563 |
SkyWest, Inc. | | 3,141 | 97,214 |
Spirit Airlines, Inc. (a) | | 4,374 | 65,697 |
| | | 278,710 |
Building Products - 1.6% | | | |
AAON, Inc. | | 2,579 | 122,864 |
Advanced Drain Systems, Inc. | | 2,657 | 107,715 |
American Woodmark Corp. (a) | | 1,076 | 55,317 |
Apogee Enterprises, Inc. | | 1,673 | 34,196 |
Armstrong Flooring, Inc. (a) | | 1,318 | 2,768 |
Builders FirstSource, Inc. (a) | | 7,067 | 129,679 |
Caesarstone Sdot-Yam Ltd. | | 1,452 | 14,244 |
CSW Industrials, Inc. | | 943 | 62,464 |
Gibraltar Industries, Inc. (a) | | 1,985 | 91,906 |
Griffon Corp. | | 2,334 | 38,301 |
Insteel Industries, Inc. | | 1,183 | 20,785 |
Jeld-Wen Holding, Inc. (a) | | 4,324 | 54,915 |
Masonite International Corp. (a) | | 1,569 | 92,697 |
NCI Building Systems, Inc. (a) | | 3,041 | 16,209 |
Patrick Industries, Inc. | | 1,437 | 59,233 |
PGT, Inc. (a) | | 3,694 | 38,196 |
Quanex Building Products Corp. | | 2,136 | 26,636 |
Simpson Manufacturing Co. Ltd. | | 2,827 | 203,827 |
Trex Co., Inc. (a) | | 3,718 | 354,028 |
Universal Forest Products, Inc. | | 3,684 | 151,486 |
| | | 1,677,466 |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 2.5% | | | |
ABM Industries, Inc. | | 4,121 | 142,133 |
ACCO Brands Corp. | | 6,147 | 45,488 |
ADS Waste Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 4,576 | 147,576 |
Brady Corp. Class A | | 2,971 | 129,357 |
BrightView Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,021 | 25,909 |
Casella Waste Systems, Inc. Class A (a) | | 2,923 | 135,569 |
CECO Environmental Corp. (a) | | 1,808 | 9,799 |
Charah Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 474 | 763 |
Cimpress PLC (a) | | 1,195 | 86,984 |
CompX International, Inc. Class A | | 124 | 1,709 |
Covanta Holding Corp. | | 7,618 | 59,268 |
Deluxe Corp. | | 2,701 | 76,087 |
Ennis, Inc. | | 1,616 | 30,074 |
Harsco Corp. (a) | | 5,005 | 49,950 |
Healthcare Services Group, Inc. | | 4,743 | 120,899 |
Heritage-Crystal Clean, Inc. (a) | | 993 | 18,222 |
Herman Miller, Inc. | | 3,752 | 84,570 |
HNI Corp. | | 2,742 | 66,740 |
Interface, Inc. | | 3,697 | 34,160 |
Kimball International, Inc. Class B | | 2,289 | 28,086 |
Knoll, Inc. | | 3,151 | 36,741 |
Matthews International Corp. Class A | | 1,959 | 46,898 |
McGrath RentCorp. | | 1,548 | 84,443 |
Mobile Mini, Inc. | | 2,798 | 79,939 |
MSA Safety, Inc. | | 2,218 | 249,592 |
NL Industries, Inc. | | 581 | 1,946 |
PICO Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 996 | 8,526 |
Pitney Bowes, Inc. | | 10,979 | 38,756 |
Quad/Graphics, Inc. | | 1,465 | 5,450 |
R.R. Donnelley & Sons Co. | | 4,798 | 8,205 |
SP Plus Corp. (a) | | 1,452 | 30,623 |
Steelcase, Inc. Class A | | 5,624 | 61,583 |
Team, Inc. (a) | | 1,982 | 12,229 |
Tetra Tech, Inc. | | 3,424 | 257,759 |
The Brink's Co. | | 3,095 | 158,216 |
U.S. Ecology, Inc. | | 1,548 | 50,743 |
UniFirst Corp. | | 947 | 159,238 |
Viad Corp. | | 1,299 | 31,137 |
VSE Corp. | | 587 | 11,282 |
| | | 2,626,649 |
Construction & Engineering - 1.0% | | | |
Aegion Corp. (a) | | 1,950 | 31,298 |
Ameresco, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,435 | 25,916 |
Arcosa, Inc. | | 3,101 | 115,574 |
Argan, Inc. | | 943 | 35,400 |
Comfort Systems U.S.A., Inc. | | 2,312 | 76,990 |
Concrete Pumping Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,738 | 4,936 |
Construction Partners, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,184 | 21,703 |
Dycom Industries, Inc. (a) | | 1,943 | 63,342 |
EMCOR Group, Inc. | | 3,469 | 220,386 |
Granite Construction, Inc. | | 3,008 | 49,452 |
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Corp. (a) | | 3,922 | 34,670 |
Ies Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 509 | 10,053 |
MasTec, Inc. (a) | | 3,703 | 132,938 |
MYR Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,028 | 30,840 |
Northwest Pipe Co. (a) | | 618 | 15,030 |
NV5 Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 657 | 30,715 |
Primoris Services Corp. | | 2,827 | 44,129 |
Sterling Construction Co., Inc. (a) | | 1,695 | 16,747 |
Tutor Perini Corp. (a) | | 2,568 | 17,976 |
Williams Scotsman Corp. (a) | | 3,356 | 39,097 |
| | | 1,017,192 |
Electrical Equipment - 1.1% | | | |
Allied Motion Technologies, Inc. | | 458 | 13,200 |
American Superconductor Corp. (a) | | 1,408 | 8,096 |
Atkore International Group, Inc. (a) | | 3,030 | 73,750 |
AZZ, Inc. | | 1,664 | 52,233 |
Bloom Energy Corp. Class A (a) | | 3,524 | 27,029 |
Encore Wire Corp. | | 1,295 | 59,285 |
Energous Corp. (a) | | 1,089 | 2,428 |
EnerSys | | 2,645 | 154,442 |
Generac Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 3,888 | 378,847 |
Plug Power, Inc. (a)(b) | | 19,046 | 79,708 |
Powell Industries, Inc. | | 576 | 14,613 |
Preformed Line Products Co. | | 198 | 9,837 |
Sunrun, Inc. (a) | | 7,209 | 101,142 |
Thermon Group Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,096 | 32,027 |
TPI Composites, Inc. (a) | | 1,843 | 32,308 |
Vicor Corp. (a) | | 1,134 | 60,295 |
Vivint Solar, Inc. (a) | | 2,843 | 18,025 |
| | | 1,117,265 |
Industrial Conglomerates - 0.1% | | | |
Raven Industries, Inc. | | 2,279 | 50,753 |
Machinery - 3.5% | | | |
Alamo Group, Inc. | | 605 | 59,556 |
Albany International Corp. Class A | | 1,919 | 98,138 |
Altra Industrial Motion Corp. | | 3,951 | 110,272 |
Astec Industries, Inc. | | 1,423 | 57,077 |
Barnes Group, Inc. | | 2,938 | 112,760 |
Blue Bird Corp. (a) | | 986 | 12,098 |
Briggs & Stratton Corp. | | 2,751 | 6,245 |
Chart Industries, Inc. (a) | | 2,297 | 82,049 |
CIRCOR International, Inc. (a) | | 1,261 | 18,827 |
Columbus McKinnon Corp. (NY Shares) | | 1,488 | 40,295 |
Commercial Vehicle Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,409 | 3,410 |
Douglas Dynamics, Inc. | | 1,423 | 52,594 |
Eastern Co. | | 385 | 6,930 |
Energy Recovery, Inc. (a) | | 2,391 | 19,463 |
Enerpac Tool Group Corp. Class A | | 3,345 | 57,066 |
EnPro Industries, Inc. | | 1,318 | 59,771 |
ESCO Technologies, Inc. | | 1,611 | 122,919 |
Evoqua Water Technologies Corp. (a) | | 4,842 | 77,714 |
Federal Signal Corp. | | 3,776 | 101,688 |
Franklin Electric Co., Inc. | | 2,921 | 148,387 |
Gencor Industries, Inc. (a) | | 524 | 6,351 |
Gorman-Rupp Co. | | 1,109 | 32,716 |
Graham Corp. | | 644 | 8,436 |
Greenbrier Companies, Inc. | | 2,071 | 35,166 |
Hillenbrand, Inc. | | 4,419 | 92,578 |
Hurco Companies, Inc. | | 419 | 13,697 |
Hyster-Yale Materials Handling Class A | | 651 | 25,415 |
John Bean Technologies Corp. | | 1,957 | 150,180 |
Kadant, Inc. | | 699 | 58,779 |
Kennametal, Inc. | | 5,113 | 130,944 |
L.B. Foster Co. Class A (a) | | 652 | 9,382 |
Lindsay Corp. | | 677 | 60,930 |
Luxfer Holdings PLC sponsored | | 1,767 | 23,978 |
Lydall, Inc. (a) | | 1,118 | 12,522 |
Manitowoc Co., Inc. (a) | | 2,277 | 20,994 |
Mayville Engineering Co., Inc. | | 442 | 2,307 |
Meritor, Inc. (a) | | 4,520 | 92,660 |
Miller Industries, Inc. | | 704 | 21,388 |
Mueller Industries, Inc. | | 3,406 | 88,215 |
Mueller Water Products, Inc. Class A | | 9,724 | 92,281 |
Navistar International Corp. (a) | | 3,159 | 75,089 |
NN, Inc. | | 2,776 | 9,577 |
Omega Flex, Inc. | | 187 | 16,849 |
Park-Ohio Holdings Corp. | | 564 | 10,338 |
Proto Labs, Inc. (a) | | 1,695 | 172,195 |
RBC Bearings, Inc. (a) | | 1,534 | 194,327 |
REV Group, Inc. | | 1,798 | 9,565 |
Rexnord Corp. | | 6,711 | 183,009 |
Spartan Motors, Inc. | | 2,181 | 30,730 |
SPX Corp. (a) | | 2,743 | 104,591 |
SPX Flow, Inc. (a) | | 2,665 | 86,799 |
Standex International Corp. | | 792 | 39,473 |
Sun Hydraulics Corp. | | 1,874 | 66,658 |
Tennant Co. | | 1,104 | 65,324 |
Terex Corp. | | 4,071 | 61,838 |
Titan International, Inc. | | 1,608 | 2,267 |
TriMas Corp. (a) | | 2,779 | 66,251 |
Twin Disc, Inc. (a) | | 700 | 4,207 |
Wabash National Corp. | | 3,425 | 28,085 |
Watts Water Technologies, Inc. Class A | | 1,743 | 143,623 |
Welbilt, Inc. (a) | | 8,318 | 41,008 |
| | | 3,637,981 |
Marine - 0.1% | | | |
Costamare, Inc. | | 3,246 | 16,295 |
Eagle Bulk Shipping, Inc. (a) | | 1,949 | 3,274 |
Genco Shipping & Trading Ltd. | | 1,088 | 6,343 |
Matson, Inc. | | 2,649 | 80,106 |
Safe Bulkers, Inc. (a) | | 3,585 | 3,728 |
Scorpio Bulkers, Inc. | | 372 | 9,534 |
| | | 119,280 |
Professional Services - 1.5% | | | |
Acacia Research Corp. (a) | | 3,177 | 8,038 |
ASGN, Inc. (a) | | 3,189 | 148,129 |
Barrett Business Services, Inc. | | 469 | 22,943 |
BG Staffing, Inc. | | 664 | 8,068 |
CBIZ, Inc. (a) | | 3,181 | 75,549 |
CRA International, Inc. | | 476 | 20,054 |
Exponent, Inc. | | 3,278 | 230,542 |
Forrester Research, Inc. (a) | | 681 | 21,315 |
Franklin Covey Co. (a) | | 622 | 12,907 |
FTI Consulting, Inc. (a) | | 2,365 | 301,206 |
GP Strategies Corp. (a) | | 882 | 7,021 |
Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc. | | 1,203 | 26,995 |
Huron Consulting Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,426 | 79,913 |
ICF International, Inc. | | 1,153 | 84,792 |
InnerWorkings, Inc. (a) | | 2,897 | 5,128 |
Insperity, Inc. | | 2,364 | 112,786 |
Kelly Services, Inc. Class A (non-vtg.) | | 2,144 | 33,125 |
Kforce, Inc. | | 1,282 | 38,396 |
Korn Ferry | | 3,369 | 97,128 |
MISTRAS Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,262 | 5,995 |
Resources Connection, Inc. | | 1,962 | 21,347 |
TriNet Group, Inc. (a) | | 2,765 | 135,402 |
TrueBlue, Inc. (a) | | 2,476 | 38,452 |
Upwork, Inc. (a) | | 3,639 | 30,313 |
Willdan Group, Inc. (a) | | 652 | 16,535 |
| | | 1,582,079 |
Road & Rail - 0.5% | | | |
ArcBest Corp. | | 1,639 | 33,386 |
Avis Budget Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 3,678 | 60,613 |
Covenant Transport Group, Inc. Class A (a) | | 884 | 7,850 |
Daseke, Inc. (a) | | 2,282 | 3,891 |
Heartland Express, Inc. | | 2,903 | 56,870 |
Hertz Global Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 6,526 | 26,365 |
Marten Transport Ltd. | | 2,489 | 55,803 |
P.A.M. Transportation Services, Inc. (a) | | 110 | 4,200 |
Saia, Inc. (a) | | 1,619 | 149,790 |
U.S. Xpress Enterprises, Inc. (a) | | 1,469 | 6,405 |
Universal Logistics Holdings, Inc. | | 511 | 7,118 |
Werner Enterprises, Inc. | | 2,839 | 113,901 |
YRC Worldwide, Inc. (a) | | 1,611 | 2,771 |
| | | 528,963 |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 1.2% | | | |
Applied Industrial Technologies, Inc. | | 2,350 | 123,117 |
Beacon Roofing Supply, Inc. (a) | | 3,462 | 76,164 |
BlueLinx Corp. (a) | | 277 | 1,515 |
BMC Stock Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 4,262 | 90,568 |
CAI International, Inc. (a) | | 1,064 | 17,545 |
DXP Enterprises, Inc. (a) | | 1,084 | 16,173 |
EVI Industries, Inc. (a) | | 355 | 6,486 |
Foundation Building Materials, Inc. (a) | | 1,308 | 15,304 |
GATX Corp. | | 2,158 | 127,969 |
General Finance Corp. (a) | | 736 | 4,291 |
GMS, Inc. (a) | | 2,579 | 47,402 |
H&E Equipment Services, Inc. | | 2,040 | 33,170 |
Herc Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,538 | 43,418 |
Kaman Corp. | | 1,754 | 67,985 |
Lawson Products, Inc. (a) | | 284 | 9,545 |
MRC Global, Inc. (a) | | 5,031 | 26,966 |
Now, Inc. (a) | | 6,915 | 42,666 |
Rush Enterprises, Inc.: | | | |
Class A | | 1,967 | 73,763 |
Class B | | 19 | 671 |
SiteOne Landscape Supply, Inc. (a) | | 2,575 | 228,222 |
Systemax, Inc. | | 777 | 15,431 |
Textainer Group Holdings Ltd. (a) | | 3,354 | 29,448 |
Titan Machinery, Inc. (a) | | 1,227 | 11,534 |
Transcat, Inc. (a) | | 453 | 12,725 |
Triton International Ltd. | | 3,437 | 106,478 |
Veritiv Corp. (a) | | 868 | 8,133 |
Willis Lease Finance Corp. (a) | | 124 | 2,481 |
| | | 1,239,170 |
|
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | | 15,599,714 |
|
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 15.3% | | | |
Communications Equipment - 1.3% | | | |
Acacia Communications, Inc. (a) | | 2,391 | 161,847 |
ADTRAN, Inc. | | 3,037 | 31,220 |
Applied Optoelectronics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,300 | 13,936 |
CalAmp Corp. (a) | | 2,183 | 14,670 |
Calix Networks, Inc. (a) | | 2,958 | 34,017 |
Cambium Networks Corp. (a) | | 313 | 1,793 |
Casa Systems, Inc. (a) | | 2,219 | 11,383 |
Clearfield, Inc. (a) | | 708 | 9,225 |
Comtech Telecommunications Corp. | | 1,535 | 28,413 |
Dasan Zhone Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 510 | 3,269 |
Digi International, Inc. (a) | | 1,834 | 20,816 |
Extreme Networks, Inc. (a) | | 7,454 | 25,344 |
Harmonic, Inc. (a) | | 5,705 | 33,089 |
Infinera Corp. (a) | | 11,379 | 70,152 |
Inseego Corp. (a)(b) | | 2,906 | 34,727 |
InterDigital, Inc. | | 1,898 | 109,647 |
KVH Industries, Inc. (a) | | 1,056 | 9,800 |
Lumentum Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 4,733 | 382,947 |
NETGEAR, Inc. (a) | | 1,901 | 45,586 |
NetScout Systems, Inc. (a) | | 4,366 | 115,612 |
Plantronics, Inc. | | 2,167 | 30,598 |
Sonus Networks, Inc. (a) | | 3,944 | 14,376 |
Tessco Technologies, Inc. | | 457 | 2,815 |
Viavi Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 14,401 | 173,964 |
| | | 1,379,246 |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 2.9% | | | |
Airgain, Inc. (a) | | 583 | 4,716 |
Akoustis Technologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,931 | 17,495 |
Anixter International, Inc. (a) | | 1,927 | 178,941 |
Arlo Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 4,902 | 13,431 |
Badger Meter, Inc. | | 1,821 | 107,494 |
Bel Fuse, Inc. Class B (non-vtg.) | | 661 | 4,931 |
Belden, Inc. | | 2,485 | 84,962 |
Benchmark Electronics, Inc. | | 2,361 | 48,778 |
Coda Octopus Group, Inc. (a) | | 240 | 1,464 |
CTS Corp. | | 2,056 | 47,617 |
Daktronics, Inc. | | 2,401 | 10,853 |
ePlus, Inc. (a) | | 850 | 60,138 |
Fabrinet (a) | | 2,280 | 143,070 |
FARO Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 1,093 | 59,995 |
Fitbit, Inc. (a) | | 14,713 | 98,430 |
II-VI, Inc. (a) | | 5,645 | 194,301 |
Insight Enterprises, Inc. (a) | | 2,173 | 117,972 |
Iteris, Inc. (a) | | 2,565 | 10,234 |
Itron, Inc. (a) | | 2,145 | 149,764 |
KEMET Corp. | | 3,584 | 96,804 |
Kimball Electronics, Inc. (a) | | 1,579 | 21,348 |
Knowles Corp. (a) | | 5,182 | 80,580 |
Methode Electronics, Inc. Class A | | 2,323 | 69,736 |
MTS Systems Corp. | | 1,240 | 26,375 |
Napco Security Technolgies, Inc. (a) | | 741 | 14,850 |
nLIGHT, Inc. (a) | | 2,113 | 33,301 |
Novanta, Inc. (a) | | 2,113 | 183,599 |
OSI Systems, Inc. (a) | | 1,073 | 77,664 |
Par Technology Corp. (a) | | 750 | 14,183 |
PC Connection, Inc. | | 718 | 32,992 |
Plexus Corp. (a) | | 1,834 | 114,973 |
Rogers Corp. (a) | | 1,154 | 128,140 |
Sanmina Corp. (a) | | 4,230 | 117,298 |
ScanSource, Inc. (a) | | 1,629 | 42,224 |
Tech Data Corp. (a) | | 2,254 | 317,003 |
TTM Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 6,323 | 73,284 |
Vishay Intertechnology, Inc. | | 8,062 | 133,749 |
Vishay Precision Group, Inc. (a) | | 681 | 15,745 |
Wrap Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 500 | 2,425 |
| | | 2,950,859 |
IT Services - 2.3% | | | |
3PEA International, Inc. (a) | | 1,965 | 16,899 |
Brightcove, Inc. (a) | | 2,474 | 19,297 |
Cardtronics PLC (a) | | 2,344 | 53,678 |
Cass Information Systems, Inc. | | 774 | 31,045 |
Conduent, Inc. (a) | | 11,163 | 28,131 |
CSG Systems International, Inc. | | 2,019 | 98,083 |
Endurance International Group Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 4,744 | 12,168 |
EVERTEC, Inc. | | 3,855 | 97,686 |
EVO Payments, Inc. Class A (a) | | 2,541 | 50,591 |
ExlService Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,110 | 130,250 |
GTT Communications, Inc. (a)(b) | | 2,165 | 24,594 |
Hackett Group, Inc. | | 1,567 | 23,239 |
i3 Verticals, Inc. Class A (a) | | 919 | 21,358 |
Information Services Group, Inc. (a) | | 2,436 | 6,090 |
International Money Express, Inc. (a) | | 1,268 | 10,245 |
KBR, Inc. | | 8,899 | 180,294 |
Limelight Networks, Inc. (a) | | 7,329 | 37,158 |
Liveramp Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 4,137 | 156,627 |
ManTech International Corp. Class A | | 1,692 | 126,156 |
Maximus, Inc. | | 4,033 | 271,502 |
NIC, Inc. | | 4,172 | 101,088 |
Perficient, Inc. (a) | | 2,042 | 71,123 |
Perspecta, Inc. | | 8,849 | 190,873 |
PRG-Schultz International, Inc. (a) | | 1,350 | 5,414 |
Science Applications International Corp. | | 3,657 | 298,631 |
StarTek, Inc. (a) | | 1,099 | 4,583 |
Sykes Enterprises, Inc. (a) | | 2,430 | 69,571 |
Ttec Holdings, Inc. | | 1,098 | 42,800 |
Tucows, Inc. (a) | | 604 | 31,958 |
Unisys Corp. (a) | | 3,252 | 40,943 |
Verra Mobility Corp. (a) | | 8,104 | 72,612 |
Virtusa Corp. (a) | | 1,827 | 60,291 |
| | | 2,384,978 |
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 3.5% | | | |
Adesto Technologies Corp. (a) | | 1,770 | 20,975 |
Advanced Energy Industries, Inc. (a) | | 2,371 | 131,828 |
Alpha & Omega Semiconductor Ltd. (a) | | 1,344 | 16,168 |
Ambarella, Inc. (a) | | 2,001 | 105,213 |
Amkor Technology, Inc. (a) | | 6,251 | 61,760 |
Axcelis Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 2,049 | 47,865 |
AXT, Inc. (a) | | 2,590 | 14,323 |
Brooks Automation, Inc. | | 4,503 | 173,320 |
Cabot Microelectronics Corp. | | 1,826 | 223,758 |
Ceva, Inc. (a) | | 1,379 | 43,232 |
Cirrus Logic, Inc. (a) | | 3,700 | 279,720 |
Cohu, Inc. | | 2,578 | 42,614 |
Diodes, Inc. (a) | | 2,600 | 132,314 |
DSP Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,389 | 23,960 |
Enphase Energy, Inc. (a)(b) | | 5,802 | 271,708 |
FormFactor, Inc. (a) | | 4,721 | 109,999 |
GSI Technology, Inc. (a) | | 1,014 | 7,838 |
Ichor Holdings Ltd. (a) | | 1,443 | 35,931 |
Impinj, Inc. (a) | | 1,078 | 24,212 |
Inphi Corp. (a) | | 2,853 | 275,429 |
Lattice Semiconductor Corp. (a) | | 7,940 | 178,729 |
MACOM Technology Solutions Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,923 | 89,619 |
MaxLinear, Inc. Class A (a) | | 4,222 | 69,621 |
NeoPhotonics Corp. (a) | | 2,497 | 24,021 |
NVE Corp. | | 305 | 17,315 |
Onto Innovation, Inc. (a) | | 3,067 | 99,555 |
PDF Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 1,777 | 28,379 |
Photronics, Inc. (a) | | 4,055 | 48,457 |
Power Integrations, Inc. | | 1,794 | 183,616 |
Rambus, Inc. (a) | | 6,774 | 84,878 |
Semtech Corp. (a) | | 4,124 | 186,570 |
Silicon Laboratories, Inc. (a) | | 2,717 | 264,147 |
SiTime Corp. | | 326 | 7,061 |
SMART Global Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 864 | 21,851 |
SunPower Corp. (a)(b) | | 4,743 | 34,861 |
Synaptics, Inc. (a) | | 2,150 | 140,589 |
Ultra Clean Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,501 | 45,993 |
Veeco Instruments, Inc. (a) | | 3,080 | 33,664 |
Xperi Corp. | | 3,148 | 48,101 |
| | | 3,649,194 |
Software - 5.1% | | | |
8x8, Inc. (a) | | 6,173 | 104,694 |
A10 Networks, Inc. (a) | | 3,163 | 21,603 |
ACI Worldwide, Inc. (a) | | 7,193 | 197,088 |
Agilysys, Inc. (a) | | 1,344 | 26,329 |
Alarm.com Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,341 | 104,713 |
Altair Engineering, Inc. Class A (a) | | 2,549 | 84,092 |
American Software, Inc. Class A | | 1,909 | 31,460 |
AppFolio, Inc. (a) | | 1,005 | 110,409 |
Appian Corp. Class A (a)(b) | | 2,173 | 99,241 |
Avaya Holdings Corp. (a) | | 6,115 | 60,783 |
Benefitfocus, Inc. (a) | | 1,980 | 21,443 |
Blackbaud, Inc. | | 3,065 | 169,372 |
BlackLine, Inc. (a) | | 2,716 | 164,970 |
Bottomline Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 2,764 | 115,065 |
Box, Inc. Class A (a) | | 9,079 | 146,535 |
ChannelAdvisor Corp. (a) | | 1,772 | 18,305 |
Cloudera, Inc. (a) | | 15,765 | 130,534 |
CommVault Systems, Inc. (a) | | 2,570 | 109,713 |
Cornerstone OnDemand, Inc. (a) | | 3,629 | 121,789 |
Digimarc Corp. (a) | | 788 | 13,199 |
Digital Turbine, Inc. (a) | | 5,113 | 29,962 |
Domo, Inc. Class B (a) | | 1,154 | 22,445 |
Ebix, Inc. | | 1,484 | 31,060 |
eGain Communications Corp. (a) | | 1,354 | 11,238 |
Envestnet, Inc. (a) | | 3,029 | 189,373 |
Everbridge, Inc. (a) | | 2,095 | 233,341 |
Five9, Inc. (a) | | 3,792 | 351,405 |
Forescout Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 2,759 | 87,626 |
GTY Govtech, Inc. (a) | | 2,582 | 10,096 |
Ideanomics, Inc. (a) | | 6,589 | 3,969 |
Intelligent Systems Corp. (a) | | 436 | 14,623 |
j2 Global, Inc. | | 2,934 | 236,598 |
LivePerson, Inc. (a) | | 3,957 | 94,731 |
Majesco (a) | | 451 | 2,517 |
MicroStrategy, Inc. Class A (a) | | 514 | 64,934 |
Mitek Systems, Inc. (a) | | 2,557 | 23,857 |
MobileIron, Inc. (a) | | 6,340 | 32,271 |
Model N, Inc. (a) | | 2,134 | 61,587 |
Onespan, Inc. (a) | | 2,078 | 34,910 |
Pareteum Corp. (a) | | 8,881 | 5,629 |
Phunware, Inc. (a) | | 2,068 | 1,499 |
Ping Identity Holding Corp. (a) | | 889 | 22,154 |
Progress Software Corp. | | 2,864 | 117,166 |
PROS Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,124 | 73,044 |
Q2 Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,730 | 217,636 |
QAD, Inc. Class A | | 715 | 30,259 |
Qualys, Inc. (a) | | 2,113 | 222,795 |
Rapid7, Inc. (a) | | 3,142 | 143,118 |
Rimini Street, Inc. (a) | | 1,055 | 4,874 |
SailPoint Technologies Holding, Inc. (a) | | 5,448 | 101,278 |
SecureWorks Corp. (a) | | 480 | 5,462 |
SharpSpring, Inc. (a) | | 657 | 4,527 |
ShotSpotter, Inc. (a) | | 531 | 18,250 |
Sprout Social, Inc. (a) | | 600 | 10,092 |
SPS Commerce, Inc. (a) | | 2,229 | 123,732 |
SurveyMonkey (a) | | 5,535 | 86,900 |
Synchronoss Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 2,519 | 8,691 |
TeleNav, Inc. (a) | | 2,209 | 10,316 |
Tenable Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,403 | 62,622 |
TiVo Corp. | | 7,953 | 55,910 |
Upland Software, Inc. (a) | | 1,487 | 47,034 |
Varonis Systems, Inc. (a) | | 1,834 | 122,970 |
Verint Systems, Inc. (a) | | 4,146 | 177,200 |
VirnetX Holding Corp. (a) | | 3,924 | 21,817 |
Workiva, Inc. (a) | | 2,336 | 89,586 |
Yext, Inc. (a) | | 6,130 | 78,464 |
Zix Corp. (a) | | 3,445 | 18,879 |
Zuora, Inc. (a) | | 5,646 | 59,678 |
| | | 5,329,462 |
Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals - 0.2% | | | |
3D Systems Corp. (a) | | 7,331 | 62,240 |
Astro-Med, Inc. | | 189 | 1,329 |
Avid Technology, Inc. (a) | | 1,818 | 12,762 |
Diebold Nixdorf, Inc. (a) | | 4,914 | 24,226 |
Immersion Corp. (a) | | 2,074 | 14,435 |
Sonim Technologies, Inc. | | 300 | 294 |
Stratasys Ltd. (a)(b) | | 3,292 | 58,268 |
| | | 173,554 |
|
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | | 15,867,293 |
|
MATERIALS - 3.4% | | | |
Chemicals - 1.7% | | | |
Advanced Emissions Solutions, Inc. | | 1,109 | 8,240 |
AdvanSix, Inc. (a) | | 1,807 | 22,009 |
American Vanguard Corp. | | 1,837 | 23,091 |
Amyris, Inc. (a) | | 3,856 | 10,411 |
Balchem Corp. | | 2,039 | 181,960 |
Chase Corp. | | 466 | 43,925 |
Ferro Corp. (a) | | 5,218 | 52,023 |
Flotek Industries, Inc. (a) | | 2,600 | 2,333 |
FutureFuel Corp. | | 1,645 | 17,075 |
GCP Applied Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 3,460 | 59,235 |
H.B. Fuller Co. | | 3,129 | 115,116 |
Hawkins, Inc. | | 625 | 23,394 |
Ingevity Corp. (a) | | 2,683 | 139,301 |
Innospec, Inc. | | 1,522 | 110,375 |
Intrepid Potash, Inc. (a) | | 6,634 | 6,389 |
Koppers Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,227 | 19,338 |
Kraton Performance Polymers, Inc. (a) | | 2,009 | 31,360 |
Kronos Worldwide, Inc. | | 1,484 | 14,083 |
Livent Corp. (a) | | 9,359 | 58,026 |
LSB Industries, Inc. (a) | | 1,612 | 3,208 |
Marrone Bio Innovations, Inc. (a) | | 2,026 | 1,479 |
Minerals Technologies, Inc. | | 2,100 | 92,484 |
Orion Engineered Carbons SA | | 3,885 | 35,392 |
PolyOne Corp. | | 5,744 | 133,778 |
PQ Group Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 2,424 | 28,409 |
Quaker Chemical Corp. | | 821 | 124,891 |
Rayonier Advanced Materials, Inc. | | 760 | 1,353 |
Sensient Technologies Corp. | | 2,636 | 125,974 |
Stepan Co. | | 1,287 | 122,780 |
Trecora Resources (a) | | 1,426 | 8,413 |
Tredegar Corp. | | 1,676 | 27,620 |
Trinseo SA | | 2,529 | 51,718 |
Tronox Holdings PLC | | 5,899 | 40,231 |
Valhi, Inc. | | 237 | 209 |
| | | 1,735,623 |
Construction Materials - 0.1% | | | |
Forterra, Inc. (a) | | 1,197 | 9,768 |
Summit Materials, Inc. (a) | | 7,255 | 109,623 |
U.S. Concrete, Inc. (a) | | 1,025 | 19,660 |
United States Lime & Minerals, Inc. | | 131 | 10,493 |
| | | 149,544 |
Containers & Packaging - 0.1% | | | |
Greif, Inc.: | | | |
Class A | | 1,627 | 55,139 |
Class B | | 377 | 14,986 |
Myers Industries, Inc. | | 2,284 | 28,230 |
UFP Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 425 | 18,275 |
| | | 116,630 |
Metals & Mining - 1.1% | | | |
Allegheny Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 8,030 | 60,305 |
Carpenter Technology Corp. | | 3,011 | 66,754 |
Century Aluminum Co. (a) | | 3,297 | 14,342 |
Cleveland-Cliffs, Inc. | | 25,275 | 110,705 |
Coeur d'Alene Mines Corp. (a) | | 15,208 | 64,026 |
Commercial Metals Co. | | 7,308 | 116,490 |
Compass Minerals International, Inc. | | 2,087 | 102,597 |
Contura Energy, Inc. (a) | | 408 | 1,559 |
Gold Resource Corp. | | 4,009 | 16,557 |
Haynes International, Inc. | | 802 | 17,724 |
Hecla Mining Co. | | 33,099 | 87,050 |
Kaiser Aluminum Corp. | | 1,004 | 72,519 |
Materion Corp. | | 1,298 | 67,159 |
Novagold Resources, Inc. (a) | | 14,576 | 163,567 |
Olympic Steel, Inc. | | 624 | 5,891 |
Ramaco Resources, Inc. (a) | | 590 | 1,392 |
Ryerson Holding Corp. (a) | | 1,038 | 4,796 |
Schnitzer Steel Industries, Inc. Class A | | 1,703 | 26,499 |
SunCoke Energy, Inc. | | 4,700 | 14,805 |
Synalloy Corp. (a) | | 554 | 4,897 |
TimkenSteel Corp. (a) | | 1,676 | 4,358 |
Warrior Metropolitan Coal, Inc. | | 3,297 | 41,377 |
Worthington Industries, Inc. | | 2,270 | 60,019 |
| | | 1,125,388 |
Paper & Forest Products - 0.4% | | | |
Boise Cascade Co. | | 2,473 | 77,331 |
Clearwater Paper Corp. (a) | | 1,040 | 24,898 |
Louisiana-Pacific Corp. | | 6,990 | 139,800 |
Neenah, Inc. | | 1,061 | 51,840 |
P.H. Glatfelter Co. | | 2,772 | 40,471 |
Schweitzer-Mauduit International, Inc. | | 1,986 | 63,989 |
Verso Corp. (a) | | 2,244 | 31,169 |
| | | 429,498 |
|
TOTAL MATERIALS | | | 3,556,683 |
|
REAL ESTATE - 7.2% | | | |
Equity Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) - 6.6% | | | |
Acadia Realty Trust (SBI) | | 5,496 | 68,095 |
Agree Realty Corp. | | 2,678 | 174,365 |
Alexander & Baldwin, Inc. | | 4,440 | 58,342 |
Alexanders, Inc. | | 137 | 43,191 |
American Assets Trust, Inc. | | 3,136 | 88,812 |
American Finance Trust, Inc. | | 6,837 | 52,713 |
Armada Hoffler Properties, Inc. | | 3,674 | 35,307 |
Ashford Hospitality Trust, Inc. | | 2,663 | 2,190 |
Bluerock Residential Growth (REIT), Inc. | | 1,748 | 10,173 |
Braemar Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 2,257 | 7,064 |
BRT Realty Trust | | 476 | 4,712 |
CareTrust (REIT), Inc. | | 6,147 | 101,303 |
CatchMark Timber Trust, Inc. | | 3,353 | 26,355 |
CBL & Associates Properties, Inc. | | 10,836 | 3,132 |
Cedar Realty Trust, Inc. | | 5,980 | 6,279 |
Chatham Lodging Trust | | 2,980 | 22,380 |
CIM Commercial Trust Corp. | | 800 | 8,152 |
City Office REIT, Inc. | | 3,497 | 35,320 |
Clipper Realty, Inc. | | 465 | 2,465 |
Community Healthcare Trust, Inc. | | 1,289 | 47,951 |
CoreCivic, Inc. | | 7,632 | 100,132 |
CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust, Inc. | | 860 | 10,440 |
CorePoint Lodging, Inc. | | 1,829 | 7,956 |
DiamondRock Hospitality Co. | | 12,904 | 80,392 |
Easterly Government Properties, Inc. | | 4,794 | 129,007 |
EastGroup Properties, Inc. | | 2,455 | 260,230 |
Essential Properties Realty Trust, Inc. | | 5,907 | 86,774 |
Farmland Partners, Inc. | | 1,563 | 10,253 |
First Industrial Realty Trust, Inc. | | 7,986 | 301,631 |
Four Corners Property Trust, Inc. | | 4,542 | 101,695 |
Franklin Street Properties Corp. | | 6,549 | 35,627 |
Front Yard Residential Corp. Class B | | 3,170 | 36,170 |
Getty Realty Corp. | | 2,162 | 58,720 |
Gladstone Commercial Corp. | | 2,156 | 34,065 |
Gladstone Land Corp. | | 1,279 | 17,164 |
Global Medical REIT, Inc. | | 1,776 | 18,506 |
Global Net Lease, Inc. | | 5,815 | 83,678 |
Government Properties Income Trust | | 3,061 | 83,871 |
Hannon Armstrong Sustainable Infrastructure Capital, Inc. | | 4,070 | 113,919 |
Healthcare Realty Trust, Inc. | | 8,415 | 247,317 |
Hersha Hospitality Trust | | 2,370 | 12,395 |
Independence Realty Trust, Inc. | | 5,861 | 59,020 |
Industrial Logistics Properties Trust | | 4,186 | 78,236 |
Investors Real Estate Trust | | 749 | 46,910 |
iStar Financial, Inc. | | 3,879 | 38,868 |
Jernigan Capital, Inc. | | 1,558 | 20,566 |
Kite Realty Group Trust | | 5,334 | 54,567 |
Lexington Corporate Properties Trust | | 15,182 | 158,652 |
LTC Properties, Inc. | | 2,549 | 90,744 |
Mack-Cali Realty Corp. | | 5,553 | 89,903 |
Monmouth Real Estate Investment Corp. Class A | | 6,167 | 83,810 |
National Health Investors, Inc. | | 2,728 | 150,204 |
National Storage Affiliates Trust | | 3,817 | 108,708 |
New Senior Investment Group, Inc. | | 5,463 | 18,083 |
NexPoint Residential Trust, Inc. | | 1,274 | 38,309 |
One Liberty Properties, Inc. | | 481 | 7,561 |
Pebblebrook Hotel Trust | | 8,319 | 98,497 |
Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust (SBI) (b) | | 2,469 | 2,494 |
Physicians Realty Trust | | 12,168 | 187,631 |
Piedmont Office Realty Trust, Inc. Class A | | 8,065 | 139,928 |
Potlatch Corp. | | 4,242 | 148,937 |
Preferred Apartment Communities, Inc. Class A | | 2,972 | 22,023 |
PS Business Parks, Inc. | | 1,282 | 165,493 |
QTS Realty Trust, Inc. Class A | | 3,619 | 226,296 |
Ramco-Gershenson Properties Trust (SBI) | | 5,071 | 34,584 |
Retail Opportunity Investments Corp. | | 7,336 | 71,196 |
Retail Value, Inc. | | 743 | 10,751 |
Rexford Industrial Realty, Inc. | | 7,248 | 295,139 |
RLJ Lodging Trust | | 10,673 | 99,152 |
Ryman Hospitality Properties, Inc. | | 3,049 | 107,752 |
Sabra Health Care REIT, Inc. | | 12,893 | 165,288 |
Safety Income and Growth, Inc. | | 816 | 47,132 |
Saul Centers, Inc. | | 811 | 26,455 |
Senior Housing Properties Trust (SBI) | | 15,015 | 46,697 |
Seritage Growth Properties (b) | | 2,226 | 23,551 |
Stag Industrial, Inc. | | 9,619 | 252,499 |
Summit Hotel Properties, Inc. | | 6,654 | 40,323 |
Sunstone Hotel Investors, Inc. | | 14,335 | 131,739 |
Tanger Factory Outlet Centers, Inc. | | 5,726 | 43,060 |
Terreno Realty Corp. | | 4,198 | 230,134 |
The GEO Group, Inc. | | 7,606 | 96,444 |
UMH Properties, Inc. | | 2,387 | 31,007 |
Uniti Group, Inc. | | 11,740 | 82,884 |
Universal Health Realty Income Trust (SBI) | | 825 | 88,242 |
Urban Edge Properties | | 7,408 | 85,192 |
Urstadt Biddle Properties, Inc. Class A | | 1,980 | 28,928 |
Washington Prime Group, Inc. (b) | | 12,461 | 10,714 |
Washington REIT (SBI) | | 5,230 | 121,964 |
Whitestone REIT Class B | | 1,436 | 9,736 |
Xenia Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 7,263 | 70,451 |
| | | 6,914,697 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.6% | | | |
Altisource Portfolio Solutions SA (a) | | 375 | 3,131 |
American Realty Investments, Inc. (a) | | 109 | 867 |
Consolidated-Tomoka Land Co. | | 315 | 13,239 |
Cushman & Wakefield PLC (a) | | 7,189 | 87,490 |
eXp World Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,374 | 12,613 |
Forestar Group, Inc. (a) | | 1,083 | 14,285 |
FRP Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 439 | 19,092 |
Griffin Industrial Realty, Inc. | | 50 | 1,921 |
Kennedy-Wilson Holdings, Inc. | | 7,627 | 107,922 |
Marcus & Millichap, Inc. (a) | | 1,471 | 42,733 |
Maui Land & Pineapple, Inc. (a) | | 414 | 4,326 |
Newmark Group, Inc. | | 9,109 | 35,343 |
RE/MAX Holdings, Inc. | | 1,147 | 30,155 |
Realogy Holdings Corp. | | 7,307 | 31,712 |
Redfin Corp. (a) | | 5,712 | 120,695 |
Stratus Properties, Inc. (a) | | 375 | 6,289 |
Tejon Ranch Co. (a) | | 1,348 | 18,468 |
The RMR Group, Inc. | | 967 | 28,681 |
The St. Joe Co. (a) | | 2,120 | 38,796 |
Transcontinental Realty Investors, Inc. (a) | | 25 | 472 |
| | | 618,230 |
|
TOTAL REAL ESTATE | | | 7,532,927 |
|
UTILITIES - 4.0% | | | |
Electric Utilities - 1.1% | | | |
Allete, Inc. | | 3,246 | 186,840 |
El Paso Electric Co. | | 2,557 | 173,876 |
Genie Energy Ltd. Class B | | 959 | 7,557 |
MGE Energy, Inc. | | 2,223 | 143,739 |
Otter Tail Corp. | | 2,511 | 111,438 |
PNM Resources, Inc. | | 5,016 | 203,098 |
Portland General Electric Co. | | 5,695 | 266,469 |
Spark Energy, Inc. Class A, | | 778 | 5,617 |
| | | 1,098,634 |
Gas Utilities - 1.3% | | | |
Chesapeake Utilities Corp. | | 1,020 | 89,638 |
New Jersey Resources Corp. | | 5,914 | 199,775 |
Northwest Natural Holding Co. | | 1,934 | 125,903 |
ONE Gas, Inc. | | 3,322 | 264,797 |
RGC Resources, Inc. | | 500 | 12,435 |
South Jersey Industries, Inc. | | 5,904 | 168,795 |
Southwest Gas Holdings, Inc. | | 3,410 | 258,478 |
Spire, Inc. | | 3,117 | 227,416 |
| | | 1,347,237 |
Independent Power and Renewable Electricity Producers - 0.4% | | | |
Atlantic Power Corp. (a) | | 7,284 | 14,495 |
Clearway Energy, Inc.: | | | |
Class A | | 1,807 | 33,791 |
Class C | | 5,401 | 108,182 |
Ormat Technologies, Inc. | | 2,500 | 156,025 |
Sunnova Energy International, Inc. | | 2,016 | 25,402 |
Terraform Power, Inc. | | 5,047 | 87,414 |
| | | 425,309 |
Multi-Utilities - 0.6% | | | |
Avista Corp. | | 4,194 | 180,510 |
Black Hills Corp. | | 3,869 | 239,646 |
NorthWestern Energy Corp. | | 3,204 | 184,839 |
Unitil Corp. | | 944 | 47,493 |
| | | 652,488 |
Water Utilities - 0.6% | | | |
American States Water Co. | | 2,320 | 184,138 |
Artesian Resources Corp. Class A | | 507 | 17,507 |
Cadiz, Inc. (a) | | 718 | 7,661 |
California Water Service Group | | 3,015 | 135,434 |
Consolidated Water Co., Inc. | | 958 | 14,389 |
Global Water Resources, Inc. | | 718 | 7,719 |
Middlesex Water Co. | | 1,082 | 65,245 |
Pure Cycle Corp. (a) | | 1,311 | 13,464 |
SJW Corp. | | 1,683 | 100,189 |
York Water Co. | | 834 | 33,627 |
| | | 579,373 |
|
TOTAL UTILITIES | | | 4,103,041 |
|
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS | | | |
(Cost $116,905,436) | | | 103,948,270 |
|
Money Market Funds - 3.6% | | | |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund 0.16% (d) | | 351,544 | 351,650 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund 0.11% (d)(e) | | 3,423,729 | 3,424,072 |
TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS | | | |
(Cost $3,775,704) | | | 3,775,722 |
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES - 103.5% | | | |
(Cost $120,681,140) | | | 107,723,992 |
NET OTHER ASSETS (LIABILITIES) - (3.5)% | | | (3,604,841) |
NET ASSETS - 100% | | | $104,119,151 |
Futures Contracts | | | | | |
| Number of contracts | Expiration Date | Notional Amount | Value | Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation) |
Purchased | | | | | |
Equity Index Contracts | | | | | |
CME E-mini Russell 2000 Index Contracts (United States) | 8 | June 2020 | $522,680 | $65,726 | $65,726 |
The notional amount of futures purchased as a percentage of Net Assets is 0.5%
Legend
(a) Non-income producing
(b) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.
(c) Level 3 security
(d) 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.
(e) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.
Affiliated Central Funds
Information regarding fiscal year to date income earned by the Fund from investments in Fidelity Central Funds is as follows:
Fund | Income earned |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund | $10,274 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund | 59,243 |
Total | $69,517 |
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 April 30, 2020, 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 |
Investments in Securities: | | | | |
Equities: | | | | |
Communication Services | $2,316,152 | $2,316,152 | $-- | $-- |
Consumer Discretionary | 10,208,358 | 10,208,358 | -- | -- |
Consumer Staples | 3,438,187 | 3,438,187 | -- | -- |
Energy | 2,169,020 | 2,169,020 | -- | -- |
Financials | 16,546,004 | 16,546,004 | -- | -- |
Health Care | 22,610,891 | 22,610,891 | -- | -- |
Industrials | 15,599,714 | 15,599,714 | -- | -- |
Information Technology | 15,867,293 | 15,867,293 | -- | -- |
Materials | 3,556,683 | 3,556,683 | -- | -- |
Real Estate | 7,532,927 | 7,532,927 | -- | -- |
Utilities | 4,103,041 | 4,103,041 | -- | -- |
Money Market Funds | 3,775,722 | 3,775,722 | -- | -- |
Total Investments in Securities: | $107,723,992 | $107,723,992 | $-- | $-- |
Derivative Instruments: | | | | |
Assets | | | | |
Futures Contracts | $65,726 | $65,726 | $-- | $-- |
Total Assets | $65,726 | $65,726 | $-- | $-- |
Total Derivative Instruments: | $65,726 | $65,726 | $-- | $-- |
Value of Derivative Instruments
The following table is a summary of the Fund's value of derivative instruments by primary risk exposure as of April 30, 2020. 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 |
Equity Risk | | |
Futures Contracts(a) | $65,726 | $0 |
Total Equity Risk | 65,726 | 0 |
Total Value of Derivatives | $65,726 | $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).
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Financial Statements
Statement of Assets and Liabilities
| | April 30, 2020 |
Assets | | |
Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $3,149,383) — See accompanying schedule: Unaffiliated issuers (cost $116,905,436) | $103,948,270 | |
Fidelity Central Funds (cost $3,775,704) | 3,775,722 | |
Total Investment in Securities (cost $120,681,140) | | $107,723,992 |
Segregated cash with brokers for derivative instruments | | 28,400 |
Receivable for investments sold | | 1,196,339 |
Receivable for fund shares sold | | 281,656 |
Dividends receivable | | 32,456 |
Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds | | 6,405 |
Other receivables | | 87 |
Total assets | | 109,269,335 |
Liabilities | | |
Payable to custodian bank | $1,164 | |
Payable for investments purchased | 374,580 | |
Payable for fund shares redeemed | 1,339,889 | |
Payable for daily variation margin on futures contracts | 10,498 | |
Collateral on securities loaned | 3,424,053 | |
Total liabilities | | 5,150,184 |
Net Assets | | $104,119,151 |
Net Assets consist of: | | |
Paid in capital | | $118,969,712 |
Total accumulated earnings (loss) | | (14,850,561) |
Net Assets | | $104,119,151 |
Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($104,119,151 ÷ 10,936,433 shares) | | $9.52 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Operations
| | Year ended April 30, 2020 |
Investment Income | | |
Dividends | | $1,085,796 |
Interest | | 423 |
Income from Fidelity Central Funds (including $59,243 from security lending) | | 69,517 |
Total income | | 1,155,736 |
Expenses | | |
Independent trustees' fees and expenses | $311 | |
Commitment fees | 205 | |
Total expenses before reductions | 516 | |
Expense reductions | (45) | |
Total expenses after reductions | | 471 |
Net investment income (loss) | | 1,155,265 |
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) | | |
Net realized gain (loss) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | (188,089) | |
Fidelity Central Funds | (20) | |
Futures contracts | 167,366 | |
Total net realized gain (loss) | | (20,743) |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | (15,580,378) | |
Fidelity Central Funds | 18 | |
Futures contracts | 52,712 | |
Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | | (15,527,648) |
Net gain (loss) | | (15,548,391) |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | | $(14,393,126) |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Changes in Net Assets
| Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 |
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets | | |
Operations | | |
Net investment income (loss) | $1,155,265 | $825,097 |
Net realized gain (loss) | (20,743) | 256,226 |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | (15,527,648) | 2,477,025 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | (14,393,126) | 3,558,348 |
Distributions to shareholders | (2,598,410) | (1,224,370) |
Share transactions | | |
Proceeds from sales of shares | 77,612,289 | 49,620,872 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 1,596,989 | 131,994 |
Cost of shares redeemed | (33,035,934) | (28,075,810) |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from share transactions | 46,173,344 | 21,677,056 |
Total increase (decrease) in net assets | 29,181,808 | 24,011,034 |
Net Assets | | |
Beginning of period | 74,937,343 | 50,926,309 |
End of period | $104,119,151 | $74,937,343 |
Other Information | | |
Shares | | |
Sold | 7,561,438 | 4,332,111 |
Issued in reinvestment of distributions | 135,175 | 12,361 |
Redeemed | (3,165,687) | (2,396,168) |
Net increase (decrease) | 4,530,926 | 1,948,304 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Financial Highlights
Fidelity Flex Small Cap Index Fund
| | | | |
Years ended April 30, | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 A |
Selected Per–Share Data | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $11.70 | $11.43 | $10.31 | $10.00 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | |
Net investment income (loss)B | .15 | .16 | .11 | .02 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | (1.98) | .35 | 1.10 | .29 |
Total from investment operations | (1.83) | .51 | 1.21 | .31 |
Distributions from net investment income | (.16) | (.11) | (.06) | – |
Distributions from net realized gain | (.19) | (.12) | (.03) | – |
Total distributions | (.35) | (.24)C | (.09) | – |
Net asset value, end of period | $9.52 | $11.70 | $11.43 | $10.31 |
Total ReturnD,E | (16.23)% | 4.63% | 11.72% | 3.10% |
Ratios to Average Net AssetsF,G | | | | |
Expenses before reductionsH | -% | -% | -% | - %I |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if anyH | -% | -% | -% | - %I |
Expenses net of all reductionsH | -% | -% | -% | - %I |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.36% | 1.36% | .97% | 1.38%I |
Supplemental Data | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (000 omitted) | $104,119 | $74,937 | $50,926 | $619 |
Portfolio turnover rateJ | 18% | 23% | 34%K | 2%L |
A For the period March 9, 2017 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017.
B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
C Total distributions of $.24 per share is comprised of distributions from net investment income of $.114 and distributions from net realized gain of $.123 per share.
D Total returns for periods of less than one year are not annualized.
E Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.
F Fees and expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
G Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the Fund. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the Fund during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the Fund.
H Amount represents less than .005%.
I Annualized
J Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
K Portfolio turnover rate excludes securities received or delivered in-kind.
L Amount not annualized.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Notes to Financial Statements
For the period ended April 30, 2020
1. Organization.
Fidelity Flex Small Cap Index Fund (the Fund) is a fund of Fidelity Salem Street Trust (the Trust) and is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares. Share transactions on the Statement of Changes in Net Assets may contain exchanges between affiliated funds. 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 is available only to certain fee-based accounts offered by Fidelity.
Effective January 1, 2020:
Investment advisers Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc., FMR Co., Inc., and Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, merged with and into Fidelity Management & Research Company. In connection with the merger transactions, the resulting, merged investment adviser was then redomiciled from Massachusetts to Delaware, changed its corporate structure from a corporation to a limited liability company, and changed its name to "Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC".
2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds.
The Fund invests 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 Fund's Schedule of Investments lists each of the Fidelity Central Funds held as of period end, if any, as an investment of the Fund, but does not include the underlying holdings of each Fidelity Central Fund. As an Investing Fund, the Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by the investment adviser. Annualized expenses of the Money Market Central Funds as of their most recent shareholder report date ranged from less than .005% to .01%.
A complete unaudited list of holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is available upon request or at the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) website at www.sec.gov. In addition, the financial statements of the Fidelity Central Funds, which are not covered by the Fund's Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC 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 – Investments 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 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. 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.
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 April 30, 2020 is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
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. 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.
Expenses. 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. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.
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 April 30, 2020, 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.
Distributions are declared and recorded on the ex-dividend date. 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 futures contracts, passive foreign investment companies (PFIC), certain deemed distributions 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 | $11,950,713 |
Gross unrealized depreciation | (26,817,498) |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | $(14,866,785) |
Tax Cost | $122,590,777 |
The tax-based components of distributable earnings as of period end were as follows:
Undistributed ordinary income | $257,035 |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities and other investments | $(14,866,785) |
The Fund intends to elect to defer to its next fiscal year $240,810 of capital losses recognized during the period November 1, 2019 to April, 30 2020.
The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:
| April 30, 2020 | April 30, 2019 |
Ordinary Income | $1,574,236 | $ 1,183,443 |
Long-term Capital Gains | 1,024,174 | 40,927 |
Total | $2,598,410 | $ 1,224,370 |
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. Cash deposited to meet initial margin requirements is presented as segregated cash with brokers for derivative instruments in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.
5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.
Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities, are noted in the table below.
| Purchases ($) | Sales ($) |
Fidelity Flex Small Cap Index Fund | 63,155,297 | 15,511,491 |
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 and the Fund does not pay any fees for these services. Under the management contract, the investment adviser or an affiliate pays all other expenses of the Fund, excluding fees and expenses of the independent Trustees, and certain miscellaneous expenses such as proxy and shareholder meeting expenses.
Sub-Adviser. Geode Capital Management, LLC (Geode), serves as sub-adviser for the Fund. Geode provides discretionary investment advisory services to the Fund and is paid by the investment adviser for providing these services.
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. Interfund trades are included within the respective purchases and sales amounts shown in the Purchases and Sales of Investments note.
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. The participating funds have agreed to pay commitment fees on their pro-rata portion of the line of credit, which are reflected in Commitment fees on the Statement of Operations, and are as follows:
| Amount |
Fidelity Flex Small Cap Index Fund | $205 |
During the period, there were no borrowings on this line of credit.
8. Security Lending.
The Fund lends portfolio securities from time to time in order to earn additional income. For equity securities, lending agents are used, including National Financial Services (NFS), an affiliate of the Fund. Pursuant to a securities lending agreement, NFS will receive a fee, which is capped at 9.9% of daily lending revenue, for its services as lending agent. The Fund may lend securities to certain qualified borrowers, including NFS. On the settlement date of the loan, the 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 the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. The 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, the Fund may apply collateral received from the borrower against the obligation. The 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. The value of loaned securities and cash collateral at period end are disclosed on the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities. The value of securities loaned to NFS, as affiliated borrower, at period end was $30,138. 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, and includes $2,728 from securities loaned to NFS, as affiliated borrower.
9. Expense Reductions.
Through arrangements with the Fund's custodian, credits realized as a result of certain uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses by $45.
10. Other.
The 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.
11. 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 Salem Street Trust and Shareholders of Fidelity Flex Small Cap Index Fund
Opinion on the Financial Statements and Financial Highlights
We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of Fidelity Flex Small Cap Index Fund (the "Fund"), a fund of Fidelity Salem Street Trust, including the schedule of investments, as of April 30, 2020, 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 three years in the period then ended and for the period from March 9, 2017 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017, 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 April 30, 2020, 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 three years in the period then ended and for the period from March 9, 2017 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017, 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 April 30, 2020, by correspondence with the custodian and brokers; when replies were not received from brokers, we performed other auditing procedures. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
/s/ Deloitte & Touche LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
June 15, 2020
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. Except for Jonathan Chiel, each of the Trustees oversees 282 funds. Mr. Chiel oversees 175 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 1-800-544-3455 (for managed account clients) or 1-800-835-5092 (for retirement plan participants).
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. Abigail P. Johnson is an interested person and currently serves as 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. Arthur E. Johnson serves as Chairman of the Independent Trustees 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 investment-grade bond, money market, asset allocation and certain equity funds, and other Boards oversee Fidelity's high income and other equity funds. The asset allocation funds may invest in Fidelity® funds that are overseen by such other Boards. 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 and Audit Committees. In addition, an ad hoc Board committee of Independent Trustees has worked with FMR to enhance the Board's oversight of investment and financial risks, legal and regulatory risks, technology risks, and operational risks, including the development of additional risk reporting to the Board. 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+
Jonathan Chiel (1957)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Mr. Chiel also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Mr. Chiel is Executive Vice President and General Counsel for FMR LLC (diversified financial services company, 2012-present). Previously, Mr. Chiel served as general counsel (2004-2012) and senior vice president and deputy general counsel (2000-2004) for John Hancock Financial Services; a partner with Choate, Hall & Stewart (1996-2000) (law firm); and an Assistant United States Attorney for the United States Attorney’s Office of the District of Massachusetts (1986-95), including Chief of the Criminal Division (1993-1995). Mr. Chiel is a director on the boards of the Boston Bar Foundation and the Maimonides School.
Abigail P. Johnson (1961)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2009
Trustee
Chairman of the Board of Trustees
Ms. Johnson also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Ms. Johnson serves as Chairman (2016-present), Chief Executive Officer (2014-present), and Director (2007-present) of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company), President of Fidelity Financial Services (2012-present) and President of Personal, Workplace and Institutional Services (2005-present). Ms. Johnson is Chairman and Director of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm, 2011-present). Previously, Ms. Johnson served as Chairman and Director of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2011-2019), Vice Chairman (2007-2016) and President (2013-2016) of FMR LLC, President and a Director of Fidelity Management & Research Company (2001-2005), a Trustee of other investment companies advised by Fidelity Management & Research Company, Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firm), and FMR Co., Inc. (2001-2005), Senior Vice President of the Fidelity® funds (2001-2005), and managed a number of Fidelity® funds. Ms. Abigail P. Johnson and Mr. Arthur E. Johnson are not related.
Jennifer Toolin McAuliffe (1959)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Ms. McAuliffe also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Ms. McAuliffe served as Co-Head of Fixed Income of Fidelity Investments Limited (now known as FIL Limited (FIL)) (diversified financial services company), Director of Research for FIL’s credit and quantitative teams in London, Hong Kong and Tokyo and Director of Research for taxable and municipal bonds at Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. Ms. McAuliffe previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2016). Ms. McAuliffe was previously a lawyer at Ropes & Gray LLP and currently serves as director or trustee of several not-for-profit entities.
* 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+
Elizabeth S. Acton (1951)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2013
Trustee
Ms. Acton also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Acton served as Executive Vice President, Finance (2011-2012), Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer (2002-2011) and Treasurer (2004-2005) of Comerica Incorporated (financial services). Prior to joining Comerica, Ms. Acton held a variety of positions at Ford Motor Company (1983-2002), including Vice President and Treasurer (2000-2002) and Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Ford Motor Credit Company (1998-2000). Ms. Acton currently serves as a member of the Board and Audit and Finance Committees of Beazer Homes USA, Inc. (homebuilding, 2012-present). Ms. Acton previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2013-2016).
Ann E. Dunwoody (1953)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2018
Trustee
General Dunwoody also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. General Dunwoody (United States Army, Retired) was the first woman in U.S. military history to achieve the rank of four-star general and prior to her retirement in 2012 held a variety of positions within the U.S. Army, including Commanding General, U.S. Army Material Command (2008-2012). General Dunwoody currently serves as President of First to Four LLC (leadership and mentoring services, 2012-present), a member of the Board and Nomination and Corporate Governance Committees of Kforce Inc. (professional staffing services, 2016-present) and a member of the Board of Automattic Inc. (software engineering, 2018-present). Previously, General Dunwoody served as a member of the Advisory Board and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of L3 Technologies, Inc. (communication, electronic, sensor and aerospace systems, 2013-2019) and a member of the Board and Audit and Sustainability and Corporate Responsibility Committees of Republic Services, Inc. (waste collection, disposal and recycling, 2013-2016). Ms. Dunwoody also serves on several boards for non-profit organizations, including as a member of the Board, Chair of the Nomination and Governance Committee and a member of the Audit Committee of Logistics Management Institute (consulting non-profit, 2012-present), a member of the Council of Trustees for the Association of the United States Army (advocacy non-profit, 2013-present), a member of the Board of Florida Institute of Technology (2015-present) and a member of the Board of ThanksUSA (military family education non-profit, 2014-present). General Dunwoody previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2018).
John Engler (1948)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2014
Trustee
Mr. Engler also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Engler served as Governor of Michigan (1991-2003), President of the Business Roundtable (2011-2017) and interim President of Michigan State University (2018-2019). Mr. Engler currently serves as a member of the Board of K12 Inc. (technology-based education company, 2012-present). Previously, Mr. Engler served as a member of the Board of Universal Forest Products (manufacturer and distributor of wood and wood-alternative products, 2003-2019) and Trustee of The Munder Funds (2003-2014). Mr. Engler previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2014-2016).
Robert F. Gartland (1951)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2010
Trustee
Mr. Gartland also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Gartland held a variety of positions at Morgan Stanley (financial services, 1979-2007), including Managing Director (1987-2007) and Chase Manhattan Bank (1975-1978). Mr. Gartland previously served as Chairman and an investor in Gartland & Mellina Group Corp. (consulting, 2009-2019), as a member of the Board of National Securities Clearing Corporation (1993-1996) and as Chairman of TradeWeb (2003-2004).
Arthur E. Johnson (1947)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2008
Trustee
Chairman of the Independent Trustees
Mr. Johnson also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Johnson served as Senior Vice President of Corporate Strategic Development of Lockheed Martin Corporation (defense contractor, 1999-2009). Mr. Johnson currently serves as a member of the Board of Booz Allen Hamilton (management consulting, 2011-present). Mr. Johnson previously served as a member of the Board of Eaton Corporation plc (diversified power management, 2009-2019) and a member of the Board of AGL Resources, Inc. (holding company, 2002-2016). Mr. Johnson previously served as Vice Chairman (2015-2018) of the Independent Trustees of certain Fidelity® funds. Mr. Arthur E. Johnson is not related to Ms. Abigail P. Johnson.
Michael E. Kenneally (1954)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2009
Trustee
Vice Chairman of the Independent Trustees
Mr. Kenneally also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Kenneally served as Chairman and Global Chief Executive Officer of Credit Suisse Asset Management and Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer of Bank of America Corporation. Earlier roles at Bank of America included Director of Research, Senior Portfolio Manager for various institutional equity accounts and mutual funds and Portfolio Manager for a number of institutional fixed-income clients. Mr. Kenneally began his career as a Research Analyst in 1983 and was awarded the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation in 1991.
Marie L. Knowles (1946)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2001
Trustee
Ms. Knowles also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Knowles held several positions at Atlantic Richfield Company (diversified energy), including Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (1996-2000), Senior Vice President (1993-1996) and President of ARCO Transportation Company (pipeline and tanker operations, 1993-1996). Ms. Knowles currently serves as a member of the Board of McKesson Corporation (healthcare service, since 2002), a member of the Board of the Santa Catalina Island Company (real estate, 2009-present), a member of the Investment Company Institute Board of Governors and a member of the Governing Council of the Independent Directors Council (2014-present). Ms. Knowles also serves as a member of the Advisory Board for the School of Engineering of the University of Southern California. Ms. Knowles previously served as Chairman (2015-2018) and Vice Chairman (2012-2015) of the Independent Trustees of certain Fidelity® funds.
Mark A. Murray (1954)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Mr. Murray also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Murray served as Co-Chief Executive Officer (2013-2016), President (2006-2013) and Vice Chairman (2013-2020) of Meijer, Inc. Mr. Murray serves as a member of the Board and Nuclear Review and Public Policy and Responsibility Committees of DTE Energy Company (diversified energy company, 2009-present) and a member of the Board and Audit Committee and Chairman of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of Universal Forest Products, Inc. (manufacturer and distributor of wood and wood-alternative products, 2004-2016). Mr. Murray previously served as a member of the Board of Spectrum Health (not-for-profit health system, 2015-2019). Mr. Murray also serves as a member of the Board of many community and professional organizations. Mr. Murray previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2016).
+ 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 an officer may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 245 Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210. Officers appear below in alphabetical order.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupation
Elizabeth Paige Baumann (1968)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2017
Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Officer
Ms. Baumann also serves as AML Officer of other funds. She is Chief AML Officer (2012-present) and Senior Vice President (2014-present) of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Ms. Baumann served as AML Officer of certain funds (2017-2019), as AML Officer of the funds (2012-2016), and Vice President (2007-2014) and Deputy Anti-Money Laundering Officer (2007-2012) of FMR LLC.
Craig S. Brown (1977)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2019
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Brown also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Brown 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).
David J. Carter (1973)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2020
Assistant Secretary
Mr. Carter also serves as Assistant Secretary of other funds. Mr. Carter serves as Vice President, Associate General Counsel (2010-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2005-present).
Jonathan Davis (1968)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2010
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Davis also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Davis serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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
President and Treasurer
Ms. Del Prato also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Del Prato is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2017-present). 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: 2016
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Hogan also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Hogan serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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).
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: 2013
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Maher also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Maher serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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).
Nancy D. Prior (1967)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2014
Vice President
Ms. Prior also serves as Vice President of other funds. Ms. Prior serves as President of Fixed Income (2014-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2002-present). Previously, Ms. Prior served as President (2016-2019) and Director (2014-2019) of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (investment adviser firm), Vice President of Global Asset Allocation Funds (2017-2019); Vice Chairman of FIAM LLC (investment adviser firm, 2014-2018), a Director of FMR Investment Management (UK) Limited (investment adviser firm, 2015-2018), President Multi-Asset Class Strategies of FMR's Global Asset Allocation Division (2017-2018), Vice President of Fidelity's Money Market Funds (2012-2014), and President, Money Market and Short Duration Bond Group of Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) (investment adviser firm, 2013-2014).
Kenneth B. Robins (1969)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2020
Chief Compliance Officer
Mr. Robins also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Robins serves as Compliance Officer of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm, 2016-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2004-present). Previously, Mr. Robins served as Compliance Officer of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2016-2019), as Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2013-2016) and served in other fund officer roles.
Stacie M. Smith (1974)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2013
Assistant Treasurer
Ms. Smith also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Smith serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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
Deputy Treasurer
Mr. Spector also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Spector serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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 Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Wegmann is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2011-present).
Shareholder Expense Example
As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs and (2) ongoing costs, including other Fund expenses. This Example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the 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 (November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020).
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 under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro-rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's 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 Fund's actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Fund's 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. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro-rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's 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.
| Annualized Expense Ratio-A | Beginning Account Value November 1, 2019 | Ending Account Value April 30, 2020 | Expenses Paid During Period-B November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020 |
Actual | - %-C | $1,000.00 | $846.60 | $--D |
Hypothetical-E | | $1,000.00 | $1,024.86 | $--D |
A Annualized expense ratio reflects expenses net of applicable fee waivers.
B Expenses are equal to the Fund's annualized expense ratio, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period).
C Amount represents less than .005%.
D Amount represents less than $.005.
E 5% return per year before expenses
Distributions (Unaudited)
The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended April 30, 2020, $1,016,539 or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.
The fund designates 67% and 43% of the dividends distributed in June and December, respectively during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends–received deduction for corporate shareholders.
The fund designates 71% and 48% of the dividends distributed in June and December, respectively during the fiscal year as amounts which may be taken into account as a dividend for the purposes of the maximum rate under section 1(h)(11) of the Internal Revenue Code.
The fund designates 29% and 18% of the dividends distributed in June and December, respectively during the fiscal year as a section 199A dividend.
The fund will notify shareholders in January 2021 of amounts for use in preparing 2020 income tax returns.
Liquidity Risk Management Program
The Securities and Exchange Commission adopted Rule 22e-4 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the Liquidity Rule) to promote effective liquidity risk management throughout the open-end investment company industry, thereby reducing the risk that funds will be unable to meet their redemption obligations and mitigating dilution of the interests of fund shareholders.
The Fund has adopted and implemented a liquidity risk management program pursuant to the Liquidity Rule (the Program) effective December 1, 2018. The Program is reasonably designed to assess and manage the Fund’s liquidity risk and to comply with the requirements of the Liquidity Rule. The Fund’s Board of Trustees (the Board) has designated the Fund’s investment adviser as administrator of the Program. The Fidelity advisers have established a Liquidity Risk Management Committee (the LRM Committee) to manage the Program for each of the Fidelity Funds. The LRM Committee monitors the adequacy and effectiveness of implementation of the Program and on a periodic basis assesses each Fund’s liquidity risk based on a variety of factors including (1) the Fund’s investment strategy, (2) portfolio liquidity and cash flow projections during normal and reasonably foreseeable stressed conditions, (3) shareholder redemptions, (4) borrowings and other funding sources and (5) in the case of exchange-traded funds, certain additional factors including the effect of the Fund’s prices and spreads, market participants, and basket compositions on the overall liquidity of the Fund’s portfolio, as applicable.
In accordance with the Program, each of the Fund’s portfolio investments is classified into one of four liquidity categories described below based on a determination of a reasonable expectation for how long it would take to convert the investment to cash (or sell or dispose of the investment) without significantly changing its market value.
- Highly liquid investments – cash or convertible to cash within three business days or less
- Moderately liquid investments – convertible to cash in three to seven calendar days
- Less liquid investments – can be sold or disposed of, but not settled, within seven calendar days
- Illiquid investments – cannot be sold or disposed of within seven calendar days
Liquidity classification determinations take into account a variety of factors including various market, trading and investment-specific considerations, as well as market depth, and generally utilize analysis from a third-party liquidity metrics service.
The Liquidity Rule places a 15% limit on a fund’s illiquid investments and requires funds that do not primarily hold assets that are highly liquid investments to determine and maintain a minimum percentage of the fund’s net assets to be invested in highly liquid investments (highly liquid investment minimum or HLIM). The Program includes provisions reasonably designed to comply with the 15% limit on illiquid investments and for determining, periodically reviewing and complying with the HLIM requirement as applicable.
At a recent meeting of the Fund’s Board of Trustees, the LRM Committee provided a written report to the Board pertaining to the operation, adequacy, and effectiveness of implementation of the Program for the annual period from December 1, 2018 through November 30, 2019. The report concluded that the Program has been implemented and is operating effectively and is reasonably designed to assess and manage the Fund’s liquidity risk.

ZAP-ANN-0620
1.9881631.103
Fidelity® Large Cap Value Index Fund
Annual Report
April 30, 2020

See the inside front cover for important information about access to your fund’s shareholder reports.

Beginning on January 1, 2021, as permitted by regulations adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission, paper copies of a fund’s shareholder reports will no longer be sent by mail, unless you specifically request paper copies of the reports from the fund or from your financial intermediary, such as a financial advisor, broker-dealer or bank. Instead, the reports will be made available on a website, and you will be notified by mail each time a report is posted and provided with a website link to access the report.
If you already elected to receive shareholder reports electronically, you will not be affected by this change and you need not take any action. You may elect to receive shareholder reports and other communications from a fund electronically, by contacting your financial intermediary. For Fidelity customers, visit Fidelity's web site or call Fidelity using the contact information listed below.
You may elect to receive all future reports in paper free of charge. If you wish to continue receiving paper copies of your shareholder reports, you may contact your financial intermediary or, if you are a Fidelity customer, visit Fidelity’s website, or call Fidelity at the applicable toll-free number listed below. Your election to receive reports in paper will apply to all funds held with the fund complex/your financial intermediary.
Account Type | Website | Phone Number |
Brokerage, Mutual Fund, or Annuity Contracts: | fidelity.com/mailpreferences | 1-800-343-3548 |
Employer Provided Retirement Accounts: | netbenefits.fidelity.com/preferences (choose 'no' under Required Disclosures to continue to print) | 1-800-343-0860 |
Advisor Sold Accounts Serviced Through Your Financial Intermediary: | Contact Your Financial Intermediary | Your Financial Intermediary's phone number |
Advisor Sold Accounts Serviced by Fidelity: | institutional.fidelity.com | 1-877-208-0098 |
Contents
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 1-800-544-8544 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. © 2020 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 a new coronavirus emerged as a public health emergency that had a major influence on financial markets, primarily based on its impact on the global economy and the outlook for corporate earnings. The virus causes a respiratory disease known as COVID-19. On March 11, the World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic, citing sustained risk of further global spread.
In the weeks following, as the crisis worsened, we witnessed an escalating human tragedy with wide-scale social and economic consequences from coronavirus-containment measures. The outbreak of COVID-19 prompted a number of measures to limit the spread, 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. Amid 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.
The situation continues to unfold, and the extent and duration of its impact on financial markets and the economy remain highly uncertain. Extreme events such as the coronavirus 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’re taking extra steps to be responsive to customer needs. We encourage you to visit our websites, 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 April 30, 2020 | Past 1 year | Life of fundA |
Fidelity® Large Cap Value Index Fund | (11.04)% | 4.45% |
A From June 7, 2016
$10,000 Over Life of Fund
Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity® Large Cap Value Index Fund on June 7, 2016, when the fund started.
The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the Russell 1000® Value Index performed over the same period.

| Period Ending Values |
| $11,850 | Fidelity® Large Cap Value Index Fund |
| $11,848 | Russell 1000® Value Index |
Management's Discussion of Fund Performance
Market Recap: The U.S. equity bellwether S&P 500
® index gained 0.86% for the 12 months ending April 30, 2020, as the early-2020 outbreak and spread of the coronavirus hampered global economic growth and the outlook for corporate earnings. Declared a pandemic on March 11, the crisis and containment efforts caused broad contraction in economic activity, along with extreme uncertainty, volatility and dislocation in financial markets. By mid-March, U.S. stocks entered bear-market territory less than a month after hitting an all-time high and extending the longest-running bull market in American history. Following a flattish January to open the year, stocks slid in late February (-8.23%), after a surge in COVID-19 cases outside China pushed investors to safer asset classes. The downtrend continued in March (-12.35%), capping the index’s worst quarterly result since 2008. A historically rapid and expansive U.S. monetary/fiscal-policy response helped mitigate the most acute near-term liquidity issues, and provided a partial offset to the economic disruption. This was evident in April, when the index achieved its highest monthly gain (+12.82%) since 1991, boosted by improving coronavirus trends, plans for reopening the economy and progress on potential treatments. By sector, energy stocks (-38%) fell hard along with the price of crude oil. Financials (-17%) and industrials (-16%) also lagged. In contrast, information technology (+18%) led, followed by health care (+15%), a defensive sector that saw higher demand due to the virus-containment response.
Comments from the Geode Capital Management, LLC, passive equity index team: For the fiscal year, the fund returned -11.04%, roughly in line with the -11.01% return of the benchmark Russell 1000
® Value Index. At the individual-stock level, oil-price weakness, exacerbated by a Saudi/Russian oil-price war initiated in February, weighed on various energy stocks, especially integrated energy companies Exxon Mobil (-39%) and Chevron (-20%), exploration and production firm Occidental Petroleum (-68%), and oilfield services company Schlumberger (-58%). Banks, including Wells Fargo (-37%), JPMorgan Chase (-15%), Bank of America (-19%) and Citigroup (-29%) also experienced a challenging performance backdrop, reflecting lower net interest income – a function of declining short-term interest rates – and investors' concern about declining consumer credit quality in an increasingly challenging economic environment. Other notable detractors this period included conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway (-13%), a collection of insurance and other businesses run by investor Warren Buffett, and media company Disney (-19%). On the positive side, the top individual contributor was Intel (+20%), whose shares gained on better-than-expected sales and earnings, among other factors. Certain stocks were well positioned to take advantage of increased demand fueled by the pandemic-related economic shutdown. Consumer-goods company Procter & Gamble (+15%), for example, benefited as consumers increased their purchases of cleaning products, while shares of Walmart (+21%) rose as the retail giant benefited from its ability to capitalize on consumers needing food and supplies while stuck at home. Several health care companies also added value, led by pharmaceutical and medical products firm Johnson & Johnson (+10%) and biotechnology company Gilead Sciences (+35%).
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)
Top Ten Stocks as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Class B | 3.1 |
Johnson & Johnson | 2.9 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 2.6 |
Procter & Gamble Co. | 2.3 |
Intel Corp. | 2.2 |
Verizon Communications, Inc. | 2.0 |
AT&T, Inc. | 1.9 |
Pfizer, Inc. | 1.8 |
Exxon Mobil Corp. | 1.7 |
Bank of America Corp. | 1.7 |
| 22.2 |
Top Market Sectors as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Financials | 20.8 |
Health Care | 15.7 |
Consumer Staples | 10.1 |
Industrials | 9.2 |
Communication Services | 8.4 |
Utilities | 7.2 |
Information Technology | 6.8 |
Energy | 6.4 |
Consumer Discretionary | 5.5 |
Real Estate | 5.0 |
Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)
As of April 30, 2020* |
| Stocks and Equity Futures | 99.8% |
| Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities) | 0.2% |

* Foreign investments - 5.3%
Schedule of Investments April 30, 2020
Showing Percentage of Net Assets
Common Stocks - 99.4% | | | |
| | Shares | Value |
COMMUNICATION SERVICES - 8.4% | | | |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 4.1% | | | |
AT&T, Inc. | | 1,439,623 | $43,865,313 |
CenturyLink, Inc. | | 214,740 | 2,280,539 |
GCI Liberty, Inc. (a) | | 19,334 | 1,176,087 |
Verizon Communications, Inc. | | 816,143 | 46,887,415 |
| | | 94,209,354 |
Entertainment - 2.2% | | | |
Activision Blizzard, Inc. | | 141,209 | 8,999,250 |
Cinemark Holdings, Inc. | | 20,463 | 292,212 |
Electronic Arts, Inc. (a) | | 5,437 | 621,232 |
Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.: | | | |
Class A (a)(b) | | 9,682 | 69,129 |
Class B (a) | | 21,673 | 144,776 |
Madison Square Garden Entertainment Corp. (a) | | 3,329 | 275,308 |
Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc. (a) | | 11,896 | 1,440,011 |
The Madison Square Garden Co. (a) | | 3,393 | 581,289 |
The Walt Disney Co. | | 344,273 | 37,233,125 |
Zynga, Inc. (a) | | 131,940 | 994,828 |
| | | 50,651,160 |
Interactive Media & Services - 0.1% | | | |
IAC/InterActiveCorp (a) | | 6,140 | 1,372,167 |
TripAdvisor, Inc. | | 2,071 | 41,358 |
Zillow Group, Inc.: | | | |
Class A (a) | | 11,215 | 488,301 |
Class C (a)(b) | | 24,609 | 1,081,812 |
| | | 2,983,638 |
Media - 1.8% | | | |
Charter Communications, Inc. Class A (a) | | 12,180 | 6,031,901 |
Comcast Corp. Class A | | 470,714 | 17,712,968 |
Discovery Communications, Inc.: | | | |
Class A (a)(b) | | 30,191 | 676,882 |
Class C (non-vtg.) (a) | | 67,258 | 1,372,736 |
DISH Network Corp. Class A (a) | | 51,257 | 1,282,194 |
Fox Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 61,300 | 1,585,831 |
Class B | | 28,062 | 717,265 |
Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. | | 68,669 | 1,166,000 |
John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Class A (b) | | 8,707 | 326,948 |
Liberty Broadband Corp.: | | | |
Class A (a) | | 4,613 | 553,652 |
Class C (a) | | 20,971 | 2,572,722 |
Liberty Media Corp.: | | | |
Liberty Formula One Group Series C (a) | | 39,009 | 1,255,700 |
Liberty Media Class A (a) | | 4,812 | 145,563 |
Liberty SiriusXM Series A (a) | | 16,700 | 562,957 |
Liberty SiriusXM Series C (a) | | 30,384 | 1,035,183 |
News Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 76,984 | 762,911 |
Class B | | 22,067 | 225,525 |
Nexstar Broadcasting Group, Inc. Class A | | 2,071 | 145,053 |
Omnicom Group, Inc. | | 19,847 | 1,131,874 |
Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc. Class A | | 841 | 14,844 |
The New York Times Co. Class A | | 25,701 | 835,797 |
ViacomCBS, Inc.: | | | |
Class A | | 2,228 | 43,736 |
Class B | | 46,243 | 798,154 |
| | | 40,956,396 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.2% | | | |
T-Mobile U.S., Inc. (a) | | 40,856 | 3,587,157 |
Telephone & Data Systems, Inc. | | 19,891 | 390,261 |
U.S. Cellular Corp. (a) | | 3,175 | 101,060 |
| | | 4,078,478 |
|
TOTAL COMMUNICATION SERVICES | | | 192,879,026 |
|
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 5.5% | | | |
Auto Components - 0.3% | | | |
Aptiv PLC | | 47,254 | 3,286,516 |
BorgWarner, Inc. | | 40,610 | 1,160,228 |
Gentex Corp. | | 49,975 | 1,211,394 |
Lear Corp. | | 11,989 | 1,170,726 |
The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. | | 46,672 | 334,638 |
| | | 7,163,502 |
Automobiles - 0.5% | | | |
Ford Motor Co. | | 770,607 | 3,922,390 |
General Motors Co. | | 244,626 | 5,452,714 |
Harley-Davidson, Inc. | | 30,019 | 655,315 |
Thor Industries, Inc. (b) | | 10,332 | 683,978 |
| | | 10,714,397 |
Distributors - 0.1% | | | |
Genuine Parts Co. | | 27,751 | 2,200,099 |
LKQ Corp. (a) | | 51,840 | 1,355,616 |
| | | 3,555,715 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.2% | | | |
Frontdoor, Inc. (a) | | 16,686 | 645,915 |
Graham Holdings Co. | | 841 | 327,998 |
Grand Canyon Education, Inc. (a) | | 8,406 | 723,084 |
H&R Block, Inc. | | 32,593 | 542,673 |
Service Corp. International | | 22,240 | 817,098 |
ServiceMaster Global Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 22,403 | 762,822 |
| | | 3,819,590 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 1.6% | | | |
ARAMARK Holdings Corp. | | 49,400 | 1,349,114 |
Caesars Entertainment Corp. (a) | | 113,175 | 1,093,271 |
Carnival Corp. (b) | | 87,748 | 1,395,193 |
Choice Hotels International, Inc. | | 3,637 | 272,957 |
Dunkin' Brands Group, Inc. | | 1,077 | 67,679 |
Extended Stay America, Inc. unit | | 35,645 | 387,461 |
Hilton Grand Vacations, Inc. (a) | | 14,163 | 291,758 |
Hyatt Hotels Corp. Class A (b) | | 7,195 | 404,791 |
International Game Technology PLC (b) | | 19,691 | 148,470 |
Las Vegas Sands Corp. | | 34,625 | 1,662,693 |
McDonald's Corp. | | 124,663 | 23,381,792 |
MGM Mirage, Inc. | | 88,021 | 1,481,393 |
Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd. (a)(b) | | 33,645 | 551,778 |
Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. (b) | | 33,834 | 1,582,416 |
Six Flags Entertainment Corp. | | 14,208 | 284,302 |
Vail Resorts, Inc. | | 867 | 148,257 |
Wyndham Destinations, Inc. | | 17,308 | 442,566 |
Wyndham Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 12,981 | 489,514 |
Wynn Resorts Ltd. | | 3,215 | 274,979 |
Yum China Holdings, Inc. | | 13,737 | 665,695 |
Yum! Brands, Inc. | | 6,697 | 578,822 |
| | | 36,954,901 |
Household Durables - 0.6% | | | |
D.R. Horton, Inc. | | 66,085 | 3,120,534 |
Garmin Ltd. | | 28,514 | 2,314,196 |
Leggett & Platt, Inc. | | 25,600 | 899,328 |
Lennar Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 32,067 | 1,605,595 |
Class B | | 1,636 | 62,413 |
Mohawk Industries, Inc. (a) | | 11,547 | 1,012,903 |
Newell Brands, Inc. | | 74,504 | 1,034,116 |
PulteGroup, Inc. | | 49,785 | 1,407,422 |
Toll Brothers, Inc. | | 23,707 | 569,442 |
Whirlpool Corp. | | 12,229 | 1,366,468 |
| | | 13,392,417 |
Internet & Direct Marketing Retail - 0.0% | | | |
Expedia, Inc. | | 3,577 | 253,895 |
Liberty Interactive Corp. QVC Group Series A (a) | | 74,837 | 602,812 |
| | | 856,707 |
Leisure Products - 0.0% | | | |
Brunswick Corp. | | 15,758 | 751,972 |
Mattel, Inc. (a)(b) | | 21,234 | 185,160 |
Polaris, Inc. | | 1,268 | 89,939 |
| | | 1,027,071 |
Multiline Retail - 0.6% | | | |
Dollar General Corp. | | 2,976 | 521,693 |
Dollar Tree, Inc. (a) | | 21,333 | 1,699,600 |
Kohl's Corp. | | 30,975 | 571,799 |
Macy's, Inc. (b) | | 60,873 | 356,716 |
Target Corp. | | 91,433 | 10,033,857 |
| | | 13,183,665 |
Specialty Retail - 1.4% | | | |
Advance Auto Parts, Inc. | | 9,953 | 1,203,417 |
AutoNation, Inc. (a) | | 10,794 | 401,969 |
Best Buy Co., Inc. | | 34,721 | 2,664,142 |
CarMax, Inc. (a)(b) | | 17,078 | 1,257,795 |
Dick's Sporting Goods, Inc. | | 12,303 | 361,585 |
Foot Locker, Inc. | | 20,779 | 532,566 |
Gap, Inc. (b) | | 40,960 | 332,595 |
L Brands, Inc. | | 38,298 | 455,363 |
Penske Automotive Group, Inc. (b) | | 6,620 | 238,188 |
The Home Depot, Inc. | | 92,429 | 20,318,667 |
Tiffany & Co., Inc. | | 23,759 | 3,005,514 |
Urban Outfitters, Inc. (a) | | 13,446 | 233,154 |
Williams-Sonoma, Inc. (b) | | 12,364 | 764,590 |
| | | 31,769,545 |
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 0.2% | | | |
Capri Holdings Ltd. (a) | | 16,385 | 249,871 |
Carter's, Inc. | | 4,785 | 374,187 |
Columbia Sportswear Co. | | 2,057 | 149,935 |
Hanesbrands, Inc. | | 16,311 | 162,131 |
PVH Corp. | | 14,174 | 697,786 |
Ralph Lauren Corp. | | 9,406 | 693,975 |
Skechers U.S.A., Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a) | | 16,574 | 467,055 |
Tapestry, Inc. | | 54,047 | 804,219 |
Under Armour, Inc.: | | | |
Class A (sub. vtg.) (a)(b) | | 11,082 | 115,474 |
Class C (non-vtg.) (a) | | 13,981 | 129,604 |
| | | 3,844,237 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | | 126,281,747 |
|
CONSUMER STAPLES - 10.1% | | | |
Beverages - 1.1% | | | |
Brown-Forman Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 543 | 30,799 |
Class B (non-vtg.) | | 2,309 | 143,620 |
Constellation Brands, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) | | 31,217 | 5,141,128 |
Keurig Dr. Pepper, Inc. | | 46,706 | 1,235,841 |
Molson Coors Beverage Co. Class B | | 34,346 | 1,408,529 |
PepsiCo, Inc. | | 44,213 | 5,848,938 |
The Coca-Cola Co. | | 240,356 | 11,029,937 |
| | | 24,838,792 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 2.0% | | | |
Casey's General Stores, Inc. | | 5,368 | 812,769 |
Grocery Outlet Holding Corp. | | 11,294 | 375,751 |
Kroger Co. | | 156,536 | 4,948,103 |
Sprouts Farmers Market LLC (a) | | 11,911 | 247,511 |
U.S. Foods Holding Corp. (a) | | 42,736 | 918,824 |
Walgreens Boots Alliance, Inc. | | 148,535 | 6,430,080 |
Walmart, Inc. | | 274,047 | 33,310,413 |
| | | 47,043,451 |
Food Products - 2.3% | | | |
Archer Daniels Midland Co. | | 109,655 | 4,072,587 |
Beyond Meat, Inc. (b) | | 9,309 | 921,498 |
Bunge Ltd. | | 27,064 | 1,073,629 |
Campbell Soup Co. | | 14,145 | 706,967 |
Conagra Brands, Inc. | | 94,890 | 3,173,122 |
Flowers Foods, Inc. | | 38,211 | 851,341 |
General Mills, Inc. | | 119,270 | 7,143,080 |
Hormel Foods Corp. | | 54,652 | 2,560,446 |
Ingredion, Inc. | | 13,131 | 1,066,237 |
Kellogg Co. | | 29,983 | 1,963,887 |
Lamb Weston Holdings, Inc. | | 21,362 | 1,310,772 |
McCormick & Co., Inc. (non-vtg.) | | 8,555 | 1,341,766 |
Mondelez International, Inc. | | 280,220 | 14,414,517 |
Pilgrim's Pride Corp. (a) | | 6,906 | 151,932 |
Post Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 7,079 | 650,206 |
Seaboard Corp. | | 52 | 156,577 |
The Hain Celestial Group, Inc. (a) | | 16,163 | 417,652 |
The Hershey Co. | | 3,591 | 475,556 |
The J.M. Smucker Co. | | 21,677 | 2,490,904 |
The Kraft Heinz Co. | | 122,877 | 3,726,859 |
TreeHouse Foods, Inc. (a) | | 9,133 | 472,450 |
Tyson Foods, Inc. Class A | | 56,631 | 3,521,882 |
| | | 52,663,867 |
Household Products - 3.3% | | | |
Clorox Co. | | 4,578 | 853,522 |
Colgate-Palmolive Co. | | 165,794 | 11,650,344 |
Energizer Holdings, Inc. | | 12,191 | 474,961 |
Kimberly-Clark Corp. | | 67,314 | 9,321,643 |
Procter & Gamble Co. | | 452,073 | 53,285,845 |
Reynolds Consumer Products, Inc. | | 5,662 | 183,619 |
Spectrum Brands Holdings, Inc. | | 8,655 | 372,684 |
| | | 76,142,618 |
Personal Products - 0.1% | | | |
Coty, Inc. Class A | | 56,459 | 307,702 |
Herbalife Nutrition Ltd. (a)(b) | | 16,586 | 619,487 |
Nu Skin Enterprises, Inc. Class A | | 10,780 | 314,884 |
| | | 1,242,073 |
Tobacco - 1.3% | | | |
Altria Group, Inc. | | 188,869 | 7,413,108 |
Philip Morris International, Inc. | | 306,476 | 22,863,110 |
| | | 30,276,218 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | | 232,207,019 |
|
ENERGY - 6.4% | | | |
Energy Equipment & Services - 0.4% | | | |
Apergy Corp. (a)(b) | | 14,651 | 134,936 |
Baker Hughes Co. Class A | | 128,241 | 1,788,962 |
Halliburton Co. | | 171,701 | 1,802,861 |
Helmerich & Payne, Inc. | | 21,281 | 420,725 |
National Oilwell Varco, Inc. | | 75,736 | 957,303 |
Patterson-UTI Energy, Inc. | | 35,829 | 132,209 |
Schlumberger Ltd. | | 272,840 | 4,589,169 |
Transocean Ltd. (United States) (a)(b) | | 114,962 | 147,151 |
| | | 9,973,316 |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 6.0% | | | |
Antero Midstream GP LP | | 47,715 | 226,646 |
Antero Resources Corp. (a)(b) | | 47,275 | 140,880 |
Apache Corp. | | 73,416 | 960,281 |
Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. | | 29,212 | 631,563 |
Centennial Resource Development, Inc. Class A (a) | | 38,136 | 45,000 |
Cheniere Energy, Inc. (a) | | 19,219 | 897,335 |
Chesapeake Energy Corp. (a)(b) | | 1,285 | 22,488 |
Chevron Corp. | | 375,953 | 34,587,676 |
Cimarex Energy Co. | | 19,925 | 506,494 |
Concho Resources, Inc. | | 39,234 | 2,225,352 |
ConocoPhillips Co. | | 214,115 | 9,014,242 |
Continental Resources, Inc. | | 16,903 | 277,040 |
Devon Energy Corp. | | 75,072 | 936,148 |
Diamondback Energy, Inc. | | 24,851 | 1,082,013 |
EOG Resources, Inc. | | 114,358 | 5,433,149 |
EQT Corp. | | 49,808 | 726,699 |
Equitrans Midstream Corp. | | 36,357 | 304,672 |
Exxon Mobil Corp. | | 834,805 | 38,793,388 |
Hess Corp. | | 53,026 | 2,579,185 |
HollyFrontier Corp. | | 29,249 | 966,387 |
Kinder Morgan, Inc. | | 384,609 | 5,857,595 |
Kosmos Energy Ltd. | | 74,250 | 122,513 |
Marathon Oil Corp. | | 157,252 | 962,382 |
Marathon Petroleum Corp. | | 126,700 | 4,064,536 |
Murphy Oil Corp. | | 29,284 | 347,308 |
Noble Energy, Inc. | | 92,443 | 906,866 |
Occidental Petroleum Corp. | | 176,810 | 2,935,046 |
ONEOK, Inc. | | 55,278 | 1,654,471 |
Parsley Energy, Inc. Class A | | 25,178 | 237,932 |
PBF Energy, Inc. Class A | | 23,826 | 271,616 |
Phillips 66 Co. | | 86,938 | 6,361,253 |
Pioneer Natural Resources Co. | | 18,660 | 1,666,525 |
Range Resources Corp. (b) | | 41,173 | 240,039 |
Targa Resources Corp. | | 44,747 | 579,921 |
The Williams Companies, Inc. | | 239,028 | 4,629,972 |
Valero Energy Corp. | | 80,794 | 5,118,300 |
WPX Energy, Inc. (a) | | 81,003 | 496,548 |
| | | 136,809,461 |
|
TOTAL ENERGY | | | 146,782,777 |
|
FINANCIALS - 20.8% | | | |
Banks - 8.9% | | | |
Associated Banc-Corp. | | 31,002 | 438,368 |
Bank of America Corp. | | 1,576,525 | 37,915,426 |
Bank of Hawaii Corp. | | 7,710 | 525,668 |
Bank OZK | | 23,784 | 537,994 |
BankUnited, Inc. | | 18,582 | 368,109 |
BOK Financial Corp. | | 6,134 | 317,680 |
CIT Group, Inc. | | 17,466 | 331,505 |
Citigroup, Inc. | | 416,701 | 20,235,001 |
Citizens Financial Group, Inc. | | 85,639 | 1,917,457 |
Comerica, Inc. | | 25,923 | 903,676 |
Commerce Bancshares, Inc. | | 19,993 | 1,223,372 |
Cullen/Frost Bankers, Inc. | | 11,104 | 797,933 |
East West Bancorp, Inc. | | 28,407 | 996,233 |
Fifth Third Bancorp | | 139,765 | 2,612,208 |
First Citizens Bancshares, Inc. | | 1,361 | 519,902 |
First Hawaiian, Inc. | | 25,437 | 447,437 |
First Horizon National Corp. | | 61,333 | 556,904 |
First Republic Bank | | 27,460 | 2,863,803 |
FNB Corp., Pennsylvania | | 64,890 | 524,960 |
Huntington Bancshares, Inc. | | 199,978 | 1,847,797 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. | | 615,005 | 58,892,879 |
KeyCorp | | 193,271 | 2,251,607 |
M&T Bank Corp. | | 25,683 | 2,878,551 |
PacWest Bancorp | | 23,132 | 468,192 |
Peoples United Financial, Inc. | | 86,663 | 1,099,753 |
Pinnacle Financial Partners, Inc. | | 14,636 | 589,099 |
PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. | | 85,285 | 9,097,351 |
Popular, Inc. | | 18,504 | 714,069 |
Prosperity Bancshares, Inc. | | 15,884 | 951,928 |
Regions Financial Corp. | | 190,171 | 2,044,338 |
Signature Bank | | 5,225 | 560,016 |
Sterling Bancorp | | 38,408 | 473,571 |
SVB Financial Group (a) | | 9,486 | 1,832,411 |
Synovus Financial Corp. | | 25,477 | 535,272 |
TCF Financial Corp. | | 29,742 | 883,040 |
Texas Capital Bancshares, Inc. (a) | | 9,817 | 272,716 |
Truist Financial Corp. | | 263,842 | 9,846,583 |
U.S. Bancorp | | 274,722 | 10,027,353 |
Umpqua Holdings Corp. | | 42,761 | 535,582 |
Webster Financial Corp. | | 17,794 | 502,681 |
Wells Fargo & Co. | | 734,699 | 21,343,006 |
Western Alliance Bancorp. | | 16,656 | 597,617 |
Wintrust Financial Corp. | | 11,418 | 478,414 |
Zions Bancorp NA | | 31,952 | 1,010,003 |
| | | 203,767,465 |
Capital Markets - 3.8% | | | |
Affiliated Managers Group, Inc. | | 9,622 | 673,155 |
Ameriprise Financial, Inc. | | 21,535 | 2,475,233 |
Bank of New York Mellon Corp. | | 157,953 | 5,929,556 |
BGC Partners, Inc. Class A | | 58,087 | 179,779 |
BlackRock, Inc. Class A | | 23,342 | 11,718,618 |
Cboe Global Markets, Inc. | | 16,469 | 1,636,689 |
Charles Schwab Corp. | | 90,775 | 3,424,033 |
CME Group, Inc. | | 69,802 | 12,439,414 |
E*TRADE Financial Corp. | | 35,931 | 1,459,158 |
Eaton Vance Corp. (non-vtg.) | | 20,791 | 763,030 |
Evercore, Inc. Class A | | 4,744 | 244,790 |
Franklin Resources, Inc. | | 54,205 | 1,021,222 |
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. | | 62,810 | 11,520,610 |
Interactive Brokers Group, Inc. | | 10,673 | 437,593 |
Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. | | 65,196 | 5,831,782 |
Invesco Ltd. | | 74,399 | 641,319 |
Janus Henderson Group PLC | | 31,386 | 561,809 |
Lazard Ltd. Class A | | 12,758 | 350,845 |
Legg Mason, Inc. | | 16,818 | 838,041 |
Morgan Stanley | | 229,410 | 9,045,636 |
Northern Trust Corp. | | 37,931 | 3,002,618 |
Raymond James Financial, Inc. | | 18,823 | 1,240,812 |
SEI Investments Co. | | 13,100 | 667,576 |
State Street Corp. | | 70,264 | 4,429,443 |
T. Rowe Price Group, Inc. | | 32,262 | 3,730,455 |
TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. | | 6,609 | 259,535 |
The NASDAQ OMX Group, Inc. | | 22,613 | 2,479,968 |
Virtu Financial, Inc. Class A | | 5,829 | 136,224 |
| | | 87,138,943 |
Consumer Finance - 0.7% | | | |
Ally Financial, Inc. | | 73,699 | 1,207,927 |
American Express Co. | | 57,653 | 5,260,836 |
Capital One Financial Corp. | | 89,603 | 5,802,690 |
Credit Acceptance Corp. (a)(b) | | 250 | 77,893 |
Discover Financial Services | | 39,535 | 1,698,819 |
Navient Corp. | | 37,865 | 288,531 |
OneMain Holdings, Inc. | | 12,717 | 307,879 |
Santander Consumer U.S.A. Holdings, Inc. | | 19,949 | 311,005 |
SLM Corp. | | 82,910 | 691,469 |
Synchrony Financial | | 88,040 | 1,742,312 |
| | | 17,389,361 |
Diversified Financial Services - 3.3% | | | |
AXA Equitable Holdings, Inc. | | 81,636 | 1,495,572 |
Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Class B (a) | | 385,799 | 72,283,284 |
Jefferies Financial Group, Inc. | | 48,993 | 672,184 |
Voya Financial, Inc. | | 24,620 | 1,112,085 |
| | | 75,563,125 |
Insurance - 3.8% | | | |
AFLAC, Inc. | | 143,051 | 5,327,219 |
Alleghany Corp. | | 2,474 | 1,320,399 |
Allstate Corp. | | 62,709 | 6,378,759 |
American Financial Group, Inc. | | 14,427 | 955,644 |
American International Group, Inc. | | 171,453 | 4,360,050 |
American National Insurance Co. | | 1,507 | 121,314 |
Arch Capital Group Ltd. (a) | | 65,326 | 1,569,784 |
Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. | | 28,946 | 2,272,261 |
Assurant, Inc. | | 11,961 | 1,270,737 |
Assured Guaranty Ltd. | | 18,248 | 542,513 |
Athene Holding Ltd. (a) | | 16,340 | 441,180 |
Axis Capital Holdings Ltd. | | 14,482 | 530,041 |
Brighthouse Financial, Inc. (a) | | 20,991 | 539,679 |
Brown & Brown, Inc. | | 43,845 | 1,574,474 |
Chubb Ltd. | | 88,854 | 9,597,121 |
Cincinnati Financial Corp. | | 29,915 | 1,968,407 |
CNA Financial Corp. | | 5,593 | 176,627 |
Erie Indemnity Co. Class A | | 1,661 | 295,758 |
Everest Re Group Ltd. | | 5,499 | 952,042 |
First American Financial Corp. | | 21,385 | 986,276 |
FNF Group | | 52,155 | 1,410,793 |
Globe Life, Inc. | | 21,061 | 1,734,163 |
Hanover Insurance Group, Inc. | | 7,506 | 753,452 |
Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc. | | 70,886 | 2,692,959 |
Kemper Corp. | | 9,994 | 671,797 |
Lincoln National Corp. | | 39,332 | 1,395,106 |
Loews Corp. | | 48,851 | 1,693,176 |
Markel Corp. (a) | | 2,442 | 2,114,381 |
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. | | 12,225 | 1,189,859 |
Mercury General Corp. | | 5,376 | 220,201 |
MetLife, Inc. | | 153,200 | 5,527,456 |
Old Republic International Corp. | | 55,230 | 880,919 |
Primerica, Inc. | | 2,255 | 234,317 |
Principal Financial Group, Inc. | | 53,702 | 1,955,290 |
Progressive Corp. | | 77,322 | 5,976,991 |
Prudential Financial, Inc. | | 78,114 | 4,871,970 |
Reinsurance Group of America, Inc. | | 12,328 | 1,290,495 |
RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd. | | 5,275 | 770,203 |
The Travelers Companies, Inc. | | 42,109 | 4,261,852 |
Unum Group | | 39,490 | 689,101 |
W.R. Berkley Corp. | | 28,416 | 1,534,464 |
White Mountains Insurance Group Ltd. | | 604 | 587,692 |
Willis Group Holdings PLC | | 25,406 | 4,529,636 |
| | | 88,166,558 |
Mortgage Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.2% | | | |
AGNC Investment Corp. | | 106,529 | 1,323,090 |
Annaly Capital Management, Inc. | | 281,425 | 1,758,906 |
Chimera Investment Corp. | | 37,479 | 291,212 |
MFA Financial, Inc. | | 86,844 | 151,977 |
New Residential Investment Corp. | | 80,890 | 492,620 |
Starwood Property Trust, Inc. | | 53,066 | 686,674 |
Two Harbors Investment Corp. | | 54,646 | 249,732 |
| | | 4,954,211 |
Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.1% | | | |
MGIC Investment Corp. | | 67,778 | 495,457 |
New York Community Bancorp, Inc. | | 88,947 | 965,964 |
TFS Financial Corp. | | 9,761 | 133,238 |
| | | 1,594,659 |
|
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | | 478,574,322 |
|
HEALTH CARE - 15.7% | | | |
Biotechnology - 1.7% | | | |
Agios Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 10,663 | 438,676 |
Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 10,200 | 1,096,194 |
Alkermes PLC (a) | | 30,560 | 418,978 |
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 3,431 | 451,863 |
Amgen, Inc. | | 9,313 | 2,227,856 |
Biogen, Inc. (a) | | 22,486 | 6,674,519 |
bluebird bio, Inc. (a) | | 10,810 | 582,443 |
Exelixis, Inc. (a) | | 34,652 | 855,731 |
Gilead Sciences, Inc. | | 215,293 | 18,084,612 |
Moderna, Inc. (a)(b) | | 4,370 | 200,976 |
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 12,790 | 6,726,005 |
United Therapeutics Corp. (a) | | 8,492 | 930,384 |
| | | 38,688,237 |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 4.1% | | | |
Abbott Laboratories | | 192,526 | 17,729,719 |
Baxter International, Inc. | | 50,393 | 4,473,891 |
Becton, Dickinson & Co. | | 48,298 | 12,196,694 |
Cantel Medical Corp. | | 3,333 | 123,321 |
Danaher Corp. | | 115,045 | 18,805,256 |
Dentsply Sirona, Inc. | | 44,004 | 1,867,530 |
Envista Holdings Corp. (a) | | 10,191 | 198,419 |
Hill-Rom Holdings, Inc. | | 6,313 | 710,149 |
Hologic, Inc. (a) | | 9,954 | 498,695 |
ICU Medical, Inc. (a) | | 2,626 | 575,908 |
Integra LifeSciences Holdings Corp. (a) | | 13,830 | 706,022 |
Medtronic PLC | | 264,618 | 25,834,655 |
STERIS PLC | | 15,577 | 2,219,723 |
The Cooper Companies, Inc. | | 8,295 | 2,378,177 |
West Pharmaceutical Services, Inc. | | 3,500 | 662,410 |
Zimmer Biomet Holdings, Inc. | | 40,380 | 4,833,486 |
| | | 93,814,055 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 2.8% | | | |
Acadia Healthcare Co., Inc. (a) | | 16,790 | 403,128 |
Anthem, Inc. | | 35,406 | 9,939,526 |
Cardinal Health, Inc. | | 57,534 | 2,846,782 |
Centene Corp. (a) | | 16,430 | 1,093,909 |
Cigna Corp. | | 50,119 | 9,812,298 |
Covetrus, Inc. (a)(b) | | 19,357 | 230,155 |
CVS Health Corp. | | 255,951 | 15,753,784 |
DaVita HealthCare Partners, Inc. (a) | | 17,186 | 1,357,866 |
Encompass Health Corp. | | 9,498 | 629,243 |
HCA Holdings, Inc. | | 21,384 | 2,349,674 |
Henry Schein, Inc. (a) | | 25,230 | 1,376,549 |
Humana, Inc. | | 14,882 | 5,682,245 |
Laboratory Corp. of America Holdings (a) | | 17,891 | 2,942,175 |
McKesson Corp. | | 28,301 | 3,997,516 |
MEDNAX, Inc. (a)(b) | | 16,198 | 235,195 |
Molina Healthcare, Inc. (a) | | 2,667 | 437,308 |
Premier, Inc. (a) | | 11,949 | 396,229 |
Quest Diagnostics, Inc. | | 26,140 | 2,878,275 |
Universal Health Services, Inc. Class B | | 15,448 | 1,632,699 |
| | | 63,994,556 |
Health Care Technology - 0.0% | | | |
Change Healthcare, Inc. | | 21,420 | 249,329 |
Life Sciences Tools & Services - 0.9% | | | |
Adaptive Biotechnologies Corp. | | 3,691 | 118,149 |
Agilent Technologies, Inc. | | 55,167 | 4,229,102 |
Avantor, Inc. | | 17,918 | 301,202 |
Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc. Class A (a) | | 4,187 | 1,842,699 |
IQVIA Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 19,962 | 2,846,382 |
PerkinElmer, Inc. | | 16,948 | 1,534,302 |
PPD, Inc. | | 5,749 | 137,401 |
QIAGEN NV (a) | | 43,628 | 1,818,851 |
Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. | | 25,070 | 8,390,428 |
| | | 21,218,516 |
Pharmaceuticals - 6.2% | | | |
Allergan PLC | | 64,669 | 12,115,090 |
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. | | 190,400 | 11,578,224 |
Catalent, Inc. (a)(b) | | 30,245 | 2,091,442 |
Elanco Animal Health, Inc. (a) | | 78,195 | 1,932,198 |
Horizon Pharma PLC (a) | | 32,422 | 1,168,489 |
Jazz Pharmaceuticals PLC (a) | | 1,260 | 138,915 |
Johnson & Johnson | | 444,751 | 66,730,440 |
Merck & Co., Inc. | | 26,064 | 2,067,918 |
Mylan NV (a) | | 101,461 | 1,701,501 |
Nektar Therapeutics (a)(b) | | 27,591 | 529,747 |
Perrigo Co. PLC | | 24,870 | 1,325,571 |
Pfizer, Inc. | | 1,097,090 | 42,084,372 |
| | | 143,463,907 |
|
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | | 361,428,600 |
|
INDUSTRIALS - 9.2% | | | |
Aerospace & Defense - 1.3% | | | |
BWX Technologies, Inc. | | 4,661 | 247,313 |
Curtiss-Wright Corp. | | 8,320 | 862,368 |
General Dynamics Corp. | | 46,905 | 6,126,731 |
Harris Corp. | | 21,637 | 4,191,087 |
Hexcel Corp. | | 1,104 | 38,187 |
Howmet Aerospace, Inc. | | 75,290 | 984,040 |
Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc. | | 1,651 | 316,018 |
Raytheon Technologies Corp. | | 208,720 | 13,527,143 |
Spirit AeroSystems Holdings, Inc. Class A | | 2,096 | 46,447 |
Teledyne Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 7,033 | 2,290,437 |
Textron, Inc. | | 45,456 | 1,198,220 |
TransDigm Group, Inc. | | 1,895 | 688,037 |
| | | 30,516,028 |
Air Freight & Logistics - 0.4% | | | |
C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc. | | 6,220 | 440,998 |
Expeditors International of Washington, Inc. | | 9,655 | 691,346 |
FedEx Corp. | | 47,506 | 6,022,336 |
XPO Logistics, Inc. (a) | | 7,617 | 508,359 |
| | | 7,663,039 |
Airlines - 0.3% | | | |
Alaska Air Group, Inc. | | 12,985 | 422,272 |
American Airlines Group, Inc. (b) | | 69,099 | 829,879 |
Copa Holdings SA Class A | | 6,211 | 274,588 |
Delta Air Lines, Inc. | | 89,917 | 2,329,749 |
JetBlue Airways Corp. (a) | | 51,186 | 498,552 |
Southwest Airlines Co. | | 37,184 | 1,162,000 |
United Airlines Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 41,180 | 1,218,104 |
| | | 6,735,144 |
Building Products - 0.6% | | | |
A.O. Smith Corp. | | 22,263 | 943,506 |
Allegion PLC | | 4,492 | 451,626 |
Carrier Global Corp. (a) | | 159,682 | 2,827,968 |
Fortune Brands Home & Security, Inc. | | 18,595 | 896,279 |
Johnson Controls International PLC | | 150,590 | 4,383,675 |
Lennox International, Inc. | | 622 | 116,115 |
Masco Corp. | | 54,623 | 2,241,728 |
Owens Corning | | 21,005 | 910,777 |
Resideo Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 24,611 | 126,254 |
Trane Technologies PLC | | 2,757 | 241,017 |
| | | 13,138,945 |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.3% | | | |
ADT, Inc. (b) | | 22,930 | 131,389 |
Clean Harbors, Inc. (a) | | 10,072 | 538,147 |
IAA Spinco, Inc. (a) | | 2,335 | 90,131 |
KAR Auction Services, Inc. | | 2,141 | 32,072 |
Republic Services, Inc. | | 39,341 | 3,081,974 |
Stericycle, Inc. (a) | | 17,469 | 852,487 |
Waste Management, Inc. | | 18,299 | 1,830,266 |
| | | 6,556,466 |
Construction & Engineering - 0.2% | | | |
AECOM (a) | | 29,506 | 1,069,888 |
Fluor Corp. | | 27,627 | 323,236 |
Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc. | | 25,354 | 2,098,044 |
Quanta Services, Inc. | | 21,296 | 774,323 |
Valmont Industries, Inc. | | 4,117 | 482,677 |
| | | 4,748,168 |
Electrical Equipment - 0.7% | | | |
Acuity Brands, Inc. | | 5,806 | 502,742 |
AMETEK, Inc. | | 9,111 | 764,140 |
Eaton Corp. PLC | | 81,351 | 6,792,809 |
Emerson Electric Co. | | 110,208 | 6,285,162 |
GrafTech International Ltd. | | 11,646 | 94,566 |
Hubbell, Inc. Class B | | 4,775 | 594,153 |
nVent Electric PLC | | 29,662 | 553,196 |
Regal Beloit Corp. | | 7,972 | 566,092 |
Sensata Technologies, Inc. PLC (a) | | 17,781 | 646,873 |
| | | 16,799,733 |
Industrial Conglomerates - 1.4% | | | |
3M Co. | | 25,914 | 3,936,855 |
Carlisle Companies, Inc. | | 1,489 | 180,109 |
General Electric Co. | | 1,706,219 | 11,602,289 |
Honeywell International, Inc. | | 72,619 | 10,304,636 |
Roper Technologies, Inc. | | 17,052 | 5,815,244 |
| | | 31,839,133 |
Machinery - 2.4% | | | |
AGCO Corp. | | 12,247 | 647,131 |
Caterpillar, Inc. | | 97,442 | 11,340,300 |
Colfax Corp. (a)(b) | | 18,475 | 476,470 |
Crane Co. | | 10,009 | 544,990 |
Cummins, Inc. | | 28,893 | 4,724,006 |
Deere & Co. | | 49,658 | 7,203,389 |
Dover Corp. | | 16,049 | 1,502,989 |
Flowserve Corp. | | 20,164 | 568,020 |
Fortive Corp. | | 45,077 | 2,884,928 |
Gardner Denver Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 28,274 | 822,208 |
Gates Industrial Corp. PLC (a)(b) | | 9,642 | 82,825 |
IDEX Corp. | | 7,459 | 1,145,926 |
ITT, Inc. | | 17,178 | 905,624 |
Lincoln Electric Holdings, Inc. | | 664 | 53,459 |
Nordson Corp. | | 1,037 | 166,864 |
Oshkosh Corp. | | 13,319 | 899,432 |
Otis Worldwide Corp. (a) | | 79,935 | 4,069,491 |
PACCAR, Inc. | | 66,790 | 4,623,872 |
Parker Hannifin Corp. | | 25,180 | 3,981,462 |
Pentair PLC | | 32,876 | 1,137,181 |
Snap-On, Inc. | | 10,725 | 1,397,360 |
Stanley Black & Decker, Inc. | | 29,804 | 3,284,401 |
Timken Co. | | 12,918 | 485,458 |
Trinity Industries, Inc. (b) | | 19,959 | 385,009 |
WABCO Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,624 | 218,233 |
Westinghouse Air Brake Co. | | 25,528 | 1,440,290 |
Woodward, Inc. | | 1,992 | 120,636 |
| | | 55,111,954 |
Marine - 0.0% | | | |
Kirby Corp. (a) | | 11,648 | 622,236 |
Professional Services - 0.2% | | | |
CoreLogic, Inc. | | 14,646 | 562,699 |
Equifax, Inc. | | 3,586 | 498,095 |
IHS Markit Ltd. | | 28,521 | 1,919,463 |
Manpower, Inc. | | 11,504 | 854,057 |
Nielsen Holdings PLC | | 61,240 | 902,065 |
| | | 4,736,379 |
Road & Rail - 1.2% | | | |
AMERCO | | 1,729 | 484,345 |
CSX Corp. | | 93,047 | 6,162,503 |
J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc. | | 11,662 | 1,179,261 |
Kansas City Southern | | 18,916 | 2,469,484 |
Knight-Swift Transportation Holdings, Inc. Class A | | 24,187 | 899,273 |
Landstar System, Inc. | | 757 | 78,206 |
Lyft, Inc. (a) | | 34,287 | 1,125,642 |
Norfolk Southern Corp. | | 44,003 | 7,528,913 |
Old Dominion Freight Lines, Inc. | | 11,070 | 1,608,360 |
Ryder System, Inc. | | 10,431 | 369,257 |
Schneider National, Inc. Class B | | 10,903 | 238,885 |
Uber Technologies, Inc. | | 166,571 | 5,042,104 |
| | | 27,186,233 |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.2% | | | |
Air Lease Corp. Class A (b) | | 19,011 | 497,138 |
Fastenal Co. | | 10,813 | 391,647 |
HD Supply Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 31,770 | 942,934 |
MSC Industrial Direct Co., Inc. Class A | | 8,549 | 509,862 |
United Rentals, Inc. (a) | | 4,234 | 544,069 |
Univar, Inc. (a) | | 33,669 | 488,874 |
Watsco, Inc. | | 6,372 | 1,025,828 |
WESCO International, Inc. (a) | | 8,220 | 212,651 |
| | | 4,613,003 |
Transportation Infrastructure - 0.0% | | | |
Macquarie Infrastructure Co. LLC | | 14,176 | 391,116 |
|
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | | 210,657,577 |
|
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 6.8% | | | |
Communications Equipment - 0.2% | | | |
Ciena Corp. (a) | | 30,157 | 1,394,761 |
CommScope Holding Co., Inc. (a) | | 38,014 | 418,534 |
EchoStar Holding Corp. Class A (a) | | 9,825 | 309,979 |
F5 Networks, Inc. (a) | | 925 | 128,816 |
Juniper Networks, Inc. | | 65,464 | 1,414,022 |
Motorola Solutions, Inc. | | 8,807 | 1,266,535 |
ViaSat, Inc. (a) | | 11,381 | 482,554 |
| | | 5,415,201 |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 0.5% | | | |
Arrow Electronics, Inc. (a) | | 15,914 | 1,001,309 |
Avnet, Inc. | | 19,296 | 579,266 |
Coherent, Inc. (a) | | 4,719 | 603,419 |
Corning, Inc. | | 102,129 | 2,247,859 |
Dolby Laboratories, Inc. Class A | | 10,717 | 643,342 |
FLIR Systems, Inc. | | 24,321 | 1,055,531 |
IPG Photonics Corp. (a) | | 6,458 | 835,213 |
Jabil, Inc. | | 23,267 | 661,713 |
Littelfuse, Inc. | | 4,593 | 667,087 |
National Instruments Corp. | | 24,149 | 927,805 |
SYNNEX Corp. | | 8,091 | 708,448 |
Trimble, Inc. (a) | | 41,093 | 1,423,051 |
| | | 11,354,043 |
IT Services - 1.3% | | | |
Akamai Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 2,616 | 255,609 |
Alliance Data Systems Corp. | | 6,895 | 345,233 |
Amdocs Ltd. | | 26,285 | 1,693,805 |
CACI International, Inc. Class A (a) | | 4,843 | 1,211,428 |
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. Class A | | 99,961 | 5,799,737 |
DXC Technology Co. | | 50,018 | 906,826 |
Fidelity National Information Services, Inc. | | 46,622 | 6,148,976 |
IBM Corp. | | 69,069 | 8,672,304 |
Jack Henry & Associates, Inc. | | 1,750 | 286,213 |
Leidos Holdings, Inc. | | 26,350 | 2,603,644 |
Sabre Corp. | | 43,403 | 315,540 |
The Western Union Co. | | 64,617 | 1,232,246 |
VeriSign, Inc. (a) | | 6,371 | 1,334,661 |
| | | 30,806,222 |
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 4.0% | | | |
Analog Devices, Inc. | | 62,697 | 6,871,591 |
Applied Materials, Inc. | | 84,295 | 4,187,776 |
Cree, Inc. (a) | | 19,468 | 839,655 |
First Solar, Inc. (a)(b) | | 16,093 | 708,253 |
Intel Corp. | | 844,098 | 50,628,998 |
Lam Research Corp. | | 3,459 | 883,014 |
Marvell Technology Group Ltd. | | 130,546 | 3,490,800 |
Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. | | 33,051 | 1,817,144 |
Microchip Technology, Inc. | | 33,229 | 2,915,180 |
Micron Technology, Inc. (a) | | 217,984 | 10,439,254 |
MKS Instruments, Inc. | | 10,599 | 1,062,338 |
ON Semiconductor Corp. (a) | | 80,463 | 1,291,029 |
Qorvo, Inc. (a) | | 22,895 | 2,244,397 |
Skyworks Solutions, Inc. | | 31,793 | 3,302,657 |
| | | 90,682,086 |
Software - 0.3% | | | |
2U, Inc. (a)(b) | | 7,031 | 166,986 |
Autodesk, Inc. (a) | | 9,911 | 1,854,645 |
Bill.Com Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 390 | 22,967 |
Cerence, Inc. (a)(b) | | 7,362 | 155,780 |
Ceridian HCM Holding, Inc. (a)(b) | | 3,511 | 207,044 |
Citrix Systems, Inc. | | 2,559 | 371,081 |
Dynatrace, Inc. | | 4,613 | 137,698 |
LogMeIn, Inc. | | 9,416 | 804,691 |
Medallia, Inc. (b) | | 2,371 | 50,929 |
Nortonlifelock, Inc. | | 110,952 | 2,359,949 |
Nuance Communications, Inc. (a) | | 56,279 | 1,136,836 |
SolarWinds, Inc. (a)(b) | | 6,620 | 112,408 |
SS&C Technologies Holdings, Inc. | | 4,195 | 231,396 |
| | | 7,612,410 |
Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals - 0.5% | | | |
Dell Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 8,123 | 346,771 |
Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. | | 257,734 | 2,592,804 |
HP, Inc. | | 271,761 | 4,215,013 |
Western Digital Corp. | | 58,697 | 2,704,758 |
Xerox Holdings Corp. | | 34,557 | 632,048 |
| | | 10,491,394 |
|
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | | 156,361,356 |
|
MATERIALS - 4.3% | | | |
Chemicals - 2.9% | | | |
Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. | | 37,216 | 8,395,185 |
Albemarle Corp. U.S. (b) | | 20,744 | 1,274,304 |
Ashland Global Holdings, Inc. | | 10,874 | 670,817 |
Axalta Coating Systems Ltd. (a) | | 27,962 | 551,970 |
Cabot Corp. | | 11,017 | 373,366 |
Celanese Corp. Class A | | 23,506 | 1,952,643 |
CF Industries Holdings, Inc. | | 38,735 | 1,065,213 |
Corteva, Inc. | | 147,681 | 3,867,765 |
Dow, Inc. | | 147,590 | 5,415,077 |
DuPont de Nemours, Inc. | | 146,201 | 6,874,371 |
Eastman Chemical Co. | | 26,929 | 1,629,474 |
Element Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 26,805 | 274,751 |
FMC Corp. | | 25,511 | 2,344,461 |
Huntsman Corp. | | 42,091 | 707,550 |
International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc. (b) | | 21,057 | 2,759,099 |
Linde PLC | | 105,896 | 19,483,805 |
LyondellBasell Industries NV Class A | | 52,479 | 3,041,158 |
NewMarket Corp. | | 99 | 40,733 |
Olin Corp. | | 31,421 | 419,470 |
PPG Industries, Inc. | | 31,326 | 2,845,341 |
RPM International, Inc. | | 20,963 | 1,392,153 |
The Chemours Co. LLC | | 32,688 | 383,430 |
The Mosaic Co. | | 67,545 | 777,443 |
Valvoline, Inc. | | 37,026 | 636,477 |
Westlake Chemical Corp. | | 6,882 | 299,023 |
| | | 67,475,079 |
Construction Materials - 0.1% | | | |
Eagle Materials, Inc. | | 1,468 | 89,563 |
Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. | | 8,533 | 1,623,233 |
Vulcan Materials Co. | | 2,102 | 237,463 |
| | | 1,950,259 |
Containers & Packaging - 0.5% | | | |
Aptargroup, Inc. | | 7,518 | 805,027 |
Ardagh Group SA | | 3,898 | 48,491 |
Avery Dennison Corp. | | 1,113 | 122,864 |
Berry Global Group, Inc. (a) | | 15,941 | 634,292 |
Crown Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 10,844 | 698,462 |
Graphic Packaging Holding Co. | | 56,948 | 760,256 |
International Paper Co. | | 77,422 | 2,651,704 |
O-I Glass, Inc. | | 30,143 | 248,378 |
Packaging Corp. of America | | 18,453 | 1,783,482 |
Sealed Air Corp. | | 28,216 | 806,695 |
Silgan Holdings, Inc. | | 15,164 | 523,158 |
Sonoco Products Co. | | 19,446 | 949,743 |
WestRock Co. | | 50,130 | 1,613,685 |
| | | 11,646,237 |
Metals & Mining - 0.8% | | | |
Alcoa Corp. (a) | | 35,764 | 291,477 |
Arconic Rolled Products Corp. (a) | | 18,757 | 163,561 |
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. | | 285,908 | 2,524,568 |
Newmont Corp. | | 161,005 | 9,576,577 |
Nucor Corp. | | 60,176 | 2,478,649 |
Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co. | | 12,823 | 1,148,684 |
Royal Gold, Inc. | | 8,784 | 1,076,304 |
Southern Copper Corp. | | 4,632 | 150,262 |
Steel Dynamics, Inc. | | 40,449 | 981,697 |
United States Steel Corp. (b) | | 33,329 | 255,967 |
| | | 18,647,746 |
Paper & Forest Products - 0.0% | | | |
Domtar Corp. | | 11,094 | 259,156 |
|
TOTAL MATERIALS | | | 99,978,477 |
|
REAL ESTATE - 5.0% | | | |
Equity Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) - 4.9% | | | |
Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc. | | 23,855 | 3,747,382 |
American Campus Communities, Inc. | | 26,829 | 946,795 |
American Homes 4 Rent Class A | | 28,858 | 696,632 |
Apartment Investment & Management Co. Class A | | 29,101 | 1,096,235 |
Apple Hospitality (REIT), Inc. | | 41,142 | 398,255 |
AvalonBay Communities, Inc. | | 27,411 | 4,466,622 |
Boston Properties, Inc. | | 30,493 | 2,963,310 |
Brandywine Realty Trust (SBI) | | 34,764 | 387,966 |
Brixmor Property Group, Inc. | | 58,089 | 665,119 |
Camden Property Trust (SBI) | | 18,416 | 1,621,897 |
Colony Capital, Inc. | | 91,853 | 212,180 |
Columbia Property Trust, Inc. | | 22,030 | 314,809 |
CoreSite Realty Corp. | | 1,633 | 197,903 |
Corporate Office Properties Trust (SBI) | | 21,966 | 580,342 |
Cousins Properties, Inc. | | 28,506 | 860,026 |
CubeSmart | | 37,780 | 952,056 |
CyrusOne, Inc. | | 22,063 | 1,547,719 |
Digital Realty Trust, Inc. | | 51,410 | 7,685,281 |
Douglas Emmett, Inc. | | 32,579 | 993,334 |
Duke Realty Corp. | | 72,223 | 2,506,138 |
Empire State Realty Trust, Inc. | | 29,017 | 242,582 |
EPR Properties | | 15,189 | 446,860 |
Equity Commonwealth | | 23,617 | 801,797 |
Equity Residential (SBI) | | 72,023 | 4,685,816 |
Essex Property Trust, Inc. | | 12,868 | 3,141,079 |
Extra Space Storage, Inc. | | 4,673 | 412,346 |
Federal Realty Investment Trust (SBI) | | 14,674 | 1,221,904 |
Gaming & Leisure Properties | | 39,787 | 1,123,585 |
HCP, Inc. | | 99,806 | 2,608,929 |
Healthcare Trust of America, Inc. | | 42,244 | 1,040,470 |
Highwoods Properties, Inc. (SBI) | | 19,941 | 773,910 |
Hospitality Properties Trust (SBI) | | 31,862 | 220,804 |
Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 140,289 | 1,726,958 |
Hudson Pacific Properties, Inc. | | 29,830 | 733,221 |
Invitation Homes, Inc. | | 105,359 | 2,491,740 |
Iron Mountain, Inc. | | 49,893 | 1,206,413 |
JBG SMITH Properties | | 23,938 | 812,695 |
Kilroy Realty Corp. | | 20,489 | 1,275,645 |
Kimco Realty Corp. | | 81,319 | 887,190 |
Life Storage, Inc. | | 9,085 | 795,755 |
Medical Properties Trust, Inc. | | 101,156 | 1,733,814 |
Mid-America Apartment Communities, Inc. | | 22,378 | 2,504,546 |
National Retail Properties, Inc. | | 33,613 | 1,097,128 |
Omega Healthcare Investors, Inc. | | 44,503 | 1,297,262 |
Outfront Media, Inc. | | 23,751 | 372,653 |
Paramount Group, Inc. | | 38,951 | 375,877 |
Park Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 47,266 | 449,500 |
Prologis, Inc. | | 144,422 | 12,886,775 |
Public Storage | | 7,054 | 1,308,164 |
Rayonier, Inc. | | 25,351 | 609,185 |
Realty Income Corp. | | 64,136 | 3,522,349 |
Regency Centers Corp. | | 32,790 | 1,439,809 |
Retail Properties America, Inc. | | 40,260 | 249,612 |
Simon Property Group, Inc. | | 6,940 | 463,384 |
SITE Centers Corp. | | 29,597 | 179,358 |
SL Green Realty Corp. | | 15,444 | 819,304 |
Spirit Realty Capital, Inc. | | 19,699 | 605,941 |
Store Capital Corp. | | 42,137 | 845,690 |
Sun Communities, Inc. | | 13,559 | 1,822,330 |
Taubman Centers, Inc. | | 11,418 | 492,116 |
The Macerich Co. (b) | | 28,869 | 215,651 |
UDR, Inc. | | 54,151 | 2,029,038 |
Ventas, Inc. | | 73,463 | 2,376,528 |
VEREIT, Inc. | | 210,540 | 1,153,759 |
VICI Properties, Inc. | | 91,030 | 1,585,743 |
Vornado Realty Trust | | 34,090 | 1,493,824 |
Weingarten Realty Investors (SBI) | | 23,950 | 435,651 |
Welltower, Inc. | | 80,830 | 4,140,921 |
Weyerhaeuser Co. | | 146,439 | 3,202,621 |
WP Carey, Inc. | | 33,660 | 2,214,155 |
| | | 111,412,388 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.1% | | | |
CBRE Group, Inc. (a) | | 41,630 | 1,787,176 |
Howard Hughes Corp. (a) | | 5,382 | 291,489 |
Jones Lang LaSalle, Inc. | | 8,931 | 942,935 |
| | | 3,021,600 |
|
TOTAL REAL ESTATE | | | 114,433,988 |
|
UTILITIES - 7.2% | | | |
Electric Utilities - 4.4% | | | |
Alliant Energy Corp. | | 47,419 | 2,302,192 |
American Electric Power Co., Inc. | | 97,369 | 8,092,338 |
Avangrid, Inc. (b) | | 10,976 | 471,968 |
Duke Energy Corp. | | 143,576 | 12,155,144 |
Edison International | | 68,938 | 4,047,350 |
Entergy Corp. | | 39,129 | 3,737,211 |
Evergy, Inc. | | 44,910 | 2,624,091 |
Eversource Energy | | 63,785 | 5,147,450 |
Exelon Corp. | | 191,168 | 7,088,509 |
FirstEnergy Corp. | | 106,425 | 4,392,160 |
Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc. | | 21,199 | 836,725 |
IDACORP, Inc. | | 9,865 | 905,410 |
NextEra Energy, Inc. | | 96,273 | 22,250,616 |
NRG Energy, Inc. | | 49,789 | 1,669,425 |
OGE Energy Corp. | | 39,415 | 1,242,361 |
PG&E Corp. (a) | | 104,570 | 1,112,625 |
Pinnacle West Capital Corp. | | 22,147 | 1,705,098 |
PPL Corp. | | 151,420 | 3,849,096 |
Southern Co. | | 205,060 | 11,633,054 |
Xcel Energy, Inc. | | 103,311 | 6,566,447 |
| | | 101,829,270 |
Gas Utilities - 0.2% | | | |
Atmos Energy Corp. | | 23,857 | 2,432,698 |
National Fuel Gas Co. | | 15,968 | 654,688 |
UGI Corp. | | 41,116 | 1,240,881 |
| | | 4,328,267 |
Independent Power and Renewable Electricity Producers - 0.1% | | | |
The AES Corp. | | 130,915 | 1,734,624 |
Vistra Energy Corp. | | 83,582 | 1,633,192 |
| | | 3,367,816 |
Multi-Utilities - 2.2% | | | |
Ameren Corp. | | 48,218 | 3,507,860 |
CenterPoint Energy, Inc. | | 99,131 | 1,688,201 |
CMS Energy Corp. | | 55,689 | 3,179,285 |
Consolidated Edison, Inc. | | 65,564 | 5,166,443 |
Dominion Energy, Inc. | | 162,001 | 12,495,137 |
DTE Energy Co. | | 36,480 | 3,784,435 |
MDU Resources Group, Inc. | | 38,990 | 875,715 |
NiSource, Inc. | | 73,624 | 1,848,699 |
Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc. | | 99,408 | 5,040,980 |
Sempra Energy | | 55,558 | 6,880,858 |
WEC Energy Group, Inc. | | 62,099 | 5,623,064 |
| | | 50,090,677 |
Water Utilities - 0.3% | | | |
American Water Works Co., Inc. | | 35,538 | 4,324,619 |
Aqua America, Inc. | | 42,575 | 1,779,209 |
| | | 6,103,828 |
|
TOTAL UTILITIES | | | 165,719,858 |
|
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS | | | |
(Cost $2,454,078,590) | | | 2,285,304,747 |
|
Money Market Funds - 1.3% | | | |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund 0.16% (c) | | 5,648,353 | 5,650,048 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund 0.11% (c)(d) | | 23,742,172 | 23,744,546 |
TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS | | | |
(Cost $29,394,594) | | | 29,394,594 |
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES - 100.7% | | | |
(Cost $2,483,473,184) | | | 2,314,699,341 |
NET OTHER ASSETS (LIABILITIES) - (0.7)% | | | (16,195,467) |
NET ASSETS - 100% | | | $2,298,503,874 |
Futures Contracts | | | | | |
| Number of contracts | Expiration Date | Notional Amount | Value | Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation) |
Purchased | | | | | |
Equity Index Contracts | | | | | |
CME E-mini S&P 500 Index Contracts (United States) | 69 | June 2020 | $10,013,280 | $1,774,669 | $1,774,669 |
The notional amount of futures purchased as a percentage of Net Assets is 0.4%
Legend
(a) Non-income producing
(b) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.
(c) 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.
(d) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.
Affiliated Central Funds
Information regarding fiscal year to date income earned by the Fund from investments in Fidelity Central Funds is as follows:
Fund | Income earned |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund | $171,146 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund | 239,936 |
Total | $411,082 |
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 April 30, 2020, 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 |
Investments in Securities: | | | | |
Equities: | | | | |
Communication Services | $192,879,026 | $192,879,026 | $-- | $-- |
Consumer Discretionary | 126,281,747 | 126,281,747 | -- | -- |
Consumer Staples | 232,207,019 | 232,207,019 | -- | -- |
Energy | 146,782,777 | 146,782,777 | -- | -- |
Financials | 478,574,322 | 478,574,322 | -- | -- |
Health Care | 361,428,600 | 361,428,600 | -- | -- |
Industrials | 210,657,577 | 210,657,577 | -- | -- |
Information Technology | 156,361,356 | 156,361,356 | -- | -- |
Materials | 99,978,477 | 99,978,477 | -- | -- |
Real Estate | 114,433,988 | 114,433,988 | -- | -- |
Utilities | 165,719,858 | 165,719,858 | -- | -- |
Money Market Funds | 29,394,594 | 29,394,594 | -- | -- |
Total Investments in Securities: | $2,314,699,341 | $2,314,699,341 | $-- | $-- |
Derivative Instruments: | | | | |
Assets | | | | |
Futures Contracts | $1,774,669 | $1,774,669 | $-- | $-- |
Total Assets | $1,774,669 | $1,774,669 | $-- | $-- |
Total Derivative Instruments: | $1,774,669 | $1,774,669 | $-- | $-- |
Value of Derivative Instruments
The following table is a summary of the Fund's value of derivative instruments by primary risk exposure as of April 30, 2020. 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 |
Equity Risk | | |
Futures Contracts(a) | $1,774,669 | $0 |
Total Equity Risk | 1,774,669 | 0 |
Total Value of Derivatives | $1,774,669 | $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).
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Financial Statements
Statement of Assets and Liabilities
| | April 30, 2020 |
Assets | | |
Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $22,341,535) — See accompanying schedule: Unaffiliated issuers (cost $2,454,078,590) | $2,285,304,747 | |
Fidelity Central Funds (cost $29,394,594) | 29,394,594 | |
Total Investment in Securities (cost $2,483,473,184) | | $2,314,699,341 |
Segregated cash with brokers for derivative instruments | | 768,000 |
Cash | | 23 |
Receivable for fund shares sold | | 6,019,880 |
Dividends receivable | | 3,159,182 |
Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds | | 8,538 |
Other receivables | | 36 |
Total assets | | 2,324,655,000 |
Liabilities | | |
Payable for fund shares redeemed | $2,219,756 | |
Accrued management fee | 64,729 | |
Payable for daily variation margin on futures contracts | 123,277 | |
Collateral on securities loaned | 23,743,364 | |
Total liabilities | | 26,151,126 |
Net Assets | | $2,298,503,874 |
Net Assets consist of: | | |
Paid in capital | | $2,575,251,227 |
Total accumulated earnings (loss) | | (276,747,353) |
Net Assets | | $2,298,503,874 |
Net Asset Value and Maximum Offering Price | | |
Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($2,298,503,874 ÷ 213,408,127 shares) | | $10.77 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Operations
| | Year ended April 30, 2020 |
Investment Income | | |
Dividends | | $65,374,162 |
Interest | | 8,266 |
Income from Fidelity Central Funds (including $239,936 from security lending) | | 411,082 |
Total income | | 65,793,510 |
Expenses | | |
Management fee | $858,202 | |
Independent trustees' fees and expenses | 9,010 | |
Interest | 6,415 | |
Commitment fees | 5,992 | |
Total expenses before reductions | 879,619 | |
Expense reductions | (1,866) | |
Total expenses after reductions | | 877,753 |
Net investment income (loss) | | 64,915,757 |
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) | | |
Net realized gain (loss) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | (73,433,312) | |
Fidelity Central Funds | (1,469) | |
Futures contracts | 1,094,849 | |
Total net realized gain (loss) | | (72,339,932) |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | (321,820,079) | |
Fidelity Central Funds | (7) | |
Futures contracts | 1,472,054 | |
Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | | (320,348,032) |
Net gain (loss) | | (392,687,964) |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | | $(327,772,207) |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Changes in Net Assets
| Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 |
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets | | |
Operations | | |
Net investment income (loss) | $64,915,757 | $35,515,081 |
Net realized gain (loss) | (72,339,932) | (3,355,151) |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | (320,348,032) | 109,427,127 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | (327,772,207) | 141,587,057 |
Distributions to shareholders | (101,236,448) | (35,228,880) |
Share transactions - net increase (decrease) | 629,521,157 | 972,664,715 |
Total increase (decrease) in net assets | 200,512,502 | 1,079,022,892 |
Net Assets | | |
Beginning of period | 2,097,991,372 | 1,018,968,480 |
End of period | $2,298,503,874 | $2,097,991,372 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Financial Highlights
Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund
Years ended April 30, | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 A |
Selected Per–Share Data | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $12.58 | $11.86 | $11.29 | $10.00 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | |
Net investment income (loss)B | .33 | .30 | .28 | .23 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | (1.64) | .73 | .57 | 1.12 |
Total from investment operations | (1.31) | 1.03 | .85 | 1.35 |
Distributions from net investment income | (.28) | (.25) | (.21) | (.06) |
Distributions from net realized gain | (.22) | (.06) | (.07) | – |
Total distributions | (.50) | (.31) | (.28) | (.06) |
Net asset value, end of period | $10.77 | $12.58 | $11.86 | $11.29 |
Total ReturnC,D | (11.04)% | 9.15% | 7.55% | 13.48% |
Ratios to Average Net AssetsE,F | | | | |
Expenses before reductions | .04% | .04% | .04% | .05%G |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any | .04% | .04% | .04% | .05%G |
Expenses net of all reductions | .04% | .04% | .04% | .05%G |
Net investment income (loss) | 2.65% | 2.55% | 2.35% | 2.28%G |
Supplemental Data | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (000 omitted) | $2,298,504 | $2,097,991 | $355,541 | $2,429 |
Portfolio turnover rateH | 27% | 15% | 12% | 23%G |
A For the period June 7, 2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017.
B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
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 Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
F Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the Fund. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the Fund during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the Fund.
G Annualized
H Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Notes to Financial Statements
For the period ended April 30, 2020
1. Organization.
Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund (the Fund) is a fund of Fidelity Salem Street Trust (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.
Effective after the close of business November 9, 2018, the Fund's publicly offered shares classes were consolidated into a single share class. The surviving class is Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund (formerly Institutional Premium Class). All prior fiscal period dollar and share amounts for the classes that closed, which are presented in the Notes to Financial Statements, are for the period May 1, 2018 through November 9, 2018.
Effective January 1, 2020, investment advisers Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc., FMR Co., Inc., and Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, merged with and into Fidelity Management & Research Company. In connection with the merger transactions, the resulting, merged investment adviser was then redomiciled from Massachusetts to Delaware, changed its corporate structure from a corporation to a limited liability company, and changed its name to "Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC".
2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds.
The Fund invests 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 Fund's Schedule of Investments lists each of the Fidelity Central Funds held as of period end, if any, as an investment of the Fund, but does not include the underlying holdings of each Fidelity Central Fund. As an Investing Fund, the Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by the investment adviser. Annualized expenses of the Money Market Central Funds as of their most recent shareholder report date ranged from less than .005% to .01%.
A complete unaudited list of holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is available upon request or at the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) website at www.sec.gov. In addition, the financial statements of the Fidelity Central Funds, which are not covered by the Fund's Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC 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 – Investments 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 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. 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.
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 April 30, 2020 is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
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.
Expenses. 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. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.
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 April 30, 2020, 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.
Distributions are declared and recorded on the ex-dividend date. 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 futures contracts, partnerships, certain deemed distributions 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 | $184,294,769 |
Gross unrealized depreciation | (452,186,242) |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | $(267,891,473) |
Tax Cost | $2,582,590,814 |
The tax-based components of distributable earnings as of period end were as follows:
Undistributed ordinary income | $19,744,883 |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities and other investments | $(267,891,473) |
The Fund intends to elect to defer to its next fiscal year $28,600,764 of capital losses recognized during the period November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020.
The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:
| April 30, 2020 | April 30, 2019 |
Ordinary Income | $67,075,811 | $ 32,623,104 |
Long-term Capital Gains | 34,160,637 | 2,605,776 |
Total | $101,236,448 | $ 35,228,880 |
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. Cash deposited to meet initial margin requirements is presented as segregated cash with brokers for derivative instruments in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.
5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.
Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities, are noted in the table below.
| Purchases ($) | Sales ($) |
Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund | 1,262,293,011 | 652,759,396 |
6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.
Management Fee and Expense Contract. 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 based on an annual rate of .035% of the Fund's average net assets. Under the management contract, the investment adviser pays all other operating expenses, except the compensation of the independent Trustees and certain other expenses such as interest expense, including commitment fees.
Effective April 29, 2020, the Board approved to add an expense contract to the Fund. Under the expense contract, the investment adviser pays all other operating expenses, except the compensation of the independent Trustees, as necessary so that the total expenses do not exceed .035% of average net assets. This expense contract will remain in place through June 30, 2021. In addition, the management fee is reduced by an amount equal to the fees and expenses paid by the Fund to the independent Trustees.
Effective August 1, 2019, the Board approved to change the management fee structure from a flat fee to a unitary fee, and the expense contract was eliminated. There was no change to the total expenses paid by the shareholders.
For the period May 1, 2019 through July 31, 2019, under the expense contract, the investment adviser paid expenses as necessary so that the total expenses did not exceed .035% of average net assets on an annual basis with certain exceptions.
Sub-Adviser. Geode Capital Management, LLC (Geode), serves as sub-adviser for the Fund. Geode provides discretionary investment advisory services to the Fund and is paid by the investment adviser for providing these services.
Interfund Lending Program. Pursuant to an Exemptive Order issued by the SEC, the fund, along with other registered investment companies having management contracts with Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (FMR), or other affiliated entities of FMR, may participate in an interfund lending program. This program provides an alternative credit facility allowing the fund to borrow from, or lend money to, other participating affiliated funds. At period end, there were no interfund loans outstanding. Activity in this program during the period for which loans were outstanding was as follows:
| Borrower or Lender | Average Loan Balance | Weighted Average Interest Rate | Interest Expense |
Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund | Borrower | $80,388,875 | .36% | $6,415 |
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. Interfund trades are included within the respective purchases and sales amounts shown in the Purchases and Sales of Investments note.
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. The participating funds have agreed to pay commitment fees on their pro-rata portion of the line of credit, which are reflected in Commitment fees on the Statement of Operations, and are as follows:
| Amount |
Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund | $5,992 |
During the period, there were no borrowings on this line of credit.
8. Security Lending.
The Fund lends portfolio securities from time to time in order to earn additional income. For equity securities, lending agents are used, including National Financial Services (NFS), an affiliate of the Fund. Pursuant to a securities lending agreement, NFS will receive a fee, which is capped at 9.9% of daily lending revenue, for its services as lending agent. The Fund may lend securities to certain qualified borrowers, including NFS. On the settlement date of the loan, the 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 the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. The 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, the Fund may apply collateral received from the borrower against the obligation. The 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. The value of loaned securities and cash collateral at period end are disclosed on the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities. At period end, there were no security loans outstanding with NFS, as affiliated borrower. Total fees paid by the Fund to NFS, as lending agent, amounted to $21,213.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, and includes $8,280 from securities loaned to NFS, as affiliated borrower.
9. Expense Reductions.
Through arrangements with the Fund's custodian, credits realized as a result of certain uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses. During the period, custodian credits reduced the Fund's expenses by $1,866.
10. Distributions to Shareholders.
Distributions to shareholders of each class were as follows:
| Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 |
Distributions to shareholders | | |
Investor Class | $– | $38,931 |
Premium Class | – | 2,888,445 |
Institutional Class | – | 1,154,749 |
Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund | 101,236,448 | 31,146,755 |
Total | $101,236,448 | $35,228,880 |
11. Share Transactions.
Share transactions for each class were as follows and may contain automatic conversions between classes or exchanges between affiliated funds:
| Shares | Shares | Dollars | Dollars |
| Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 | Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 |
Investor Class | | | | |
Shares sold | – | 818,773 | $– | $9,993,220 |
Reinvestment of distributions | – | 2,961 | – | 36,000 |
Shares redeemed | – | (1,573,896) | – | (19,222,885) |
Net increase (decrease) | – | (752,162) | $– | $(9,193,665) |
Premium Class | | | | |
Shares sold | – | 10,306,365 | $– | $126,611,008 |
Reinvestment of distributions | – | 216,278 | – | 2,629,934 |
Shares redeemed | – | (49,684,097) | – | (607,710,921) |
Net increase (decrease) | – | (39,161,454) | $– | $(478,469,979) |
Institutional Class | | | | |
Shares sold | – | 4,580,059 | $– | $55,610,859 |
Reinvestment of distributions | – | 55,632 | – | 676,482 |
Shares redeemed | – | (20,653,358) | – | (253,013,973) |
Net increase (decrease) | – | (16,017,667) | $– | $(196,726,632) |
Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund | | | | |
Shares sold | 120,546,045 | 152,026,875 | $1,410,367,740 | $1,837,410,197 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 6,956,439 | 2,594,518 | 90,516,301 | 27,756,097 |
Shares redeemed | (80,928,864) | (17,759,853) | (871,362,884) | (208,111,303) |
Net increase (decrease) | 46,573,620 | 136,861,540 | $629,521,157 | $1,657,054,991 |
12. Other.
The 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 Salem Street Trust and Shareholders of Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund:
Opinion on the Financial Statements and Financial Highlights
We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund (the "Fund"), a fund of Fidelity Salem Street Trust, including the schedule of investments, as of April 30, 2020, 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 three years in the period then ended and for the period from June 7, 2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017, 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 April 30, 2020, 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 three years in the period then ended and for the period from June 7, 2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017, 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 April 30, 2020, by correspondence with the custodian and brokers; when replies were not received from brokers, we performed other auditing procedures. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
/s/ Deloitte & Touche LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
June 10, 2020
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. Except for Jonathan Chiel, each of the Trustees oversees 282 funds. Mr. Chiel oversees 175 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 1-800-544-8544.
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. Abigail P. Johnson is an interested person and currently serves as 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. Arthur E. Johnson serves as Chairman of the Independent Trustees 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 investment-grade bond, money market, asset allocation and certain equity funds, and other Boards oversee Fidelity's high income and other equity funds. The asset allocation funds may invest in Fidelity® funds that are overseen by such other Boards. 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 and Audit Committees. In addition, an ad hoc Board committee of Independent Trustees has worked with FMR to enhance the Board's oversight of investment and financial risks, legal and regulatory risks, technology risks, and operational risks, including the development of additional risk reporting to the Board. 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+
Jonathan Chiel (1957)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Mr. Chiel also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Mr. Chiel is Executive Vice President and General Counsel for FMR LLC (diversified financial services company, 2012-present). Previously, Mr. Chiel served as general counsel (2004-2012) and senior vice president and deputy general counsel (2000-2004) for John Hancock Financial Services; a partner with Choate, Hall & Stewart (1996-2000) (law firm); and an Assistant United States Attorney for the United States Attorney’s Office of the District of Massachusetts (1986-95), including Chief of the Criminal Division (1993-1995). Mr. Chiel is a director on the boards of the Boston Bar Foundation and the Maimonides School.
Abigail P. Johnson (1961)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2009
Trustee
Chairman of the Board of Trustees
Ms. Johnson also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Ms. Johnson serves as Chairman (2016-present), Chief Executive Officer (2014-present), and Director (2007-present) of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company), President of Fidelity Financial Services (2012-present) and President of Personal, Workplace and Institutional Services (2005-present). Ms. Johnson is Chairman and Director of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm, 2011-present). Previously, Ms. Johnson served as Chairman and Director of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2011-2019), Vice Chairman (2007-2016) and President (2013-2016) of FMR LLC, President and a Director of Fidelity Management & Research Company (2001-2005), a Trustee of other investment companies advised by Fidelity Management & Research Company, Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firm), and FMR Co., Inc. (2001-2005), Senior Vice President of the Fidelity® funds (2001-2005), and managed a number of Fidelity® funds. Ms. Abigail P. Johnson and Mr. Arthur E. Johnson are not related.
Jennifer Toolin McAuliffe (1959)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Ms. McAuliffe also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Ms. McAuliffe served as Co-Head of Fixed Income of Fidelity Investments Limited (now known as FIL Limited (FIL)) (diversified financial services company), Director of Research for FIL’s credit and quantitative teams in London, Hong Kong and Tokyo and Director of Research for taxable and municipal bonds at Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. Ms. McAuliffe previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2016). Ms. McAuliffe was previously a lawyer at Ropes & Gray LLP and currently serves as director or trustee of several not-for-profit entities.
* 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+
Elizabeth S. Acton (1951)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2013
Trustee
Ms. Acton also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Acton served as Executive Vice President, Finance (2011-2012), Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer (2002-2011) and Treasurer (2004-2005) of Comerica Incorporated (financial services). Prior to joining Comerica, Ms. Acton held a variety of positions at Ford Motor Company (1983-2002), including Vice President and Treasurer (2000-2002) and Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Ford Motor Credit Company (1998-2000). Ms. Acton currently serves as a member of the Board and Audit and Finance Committees of Beazer Homes USA, Inc. (homebuilding, 2012-present). Ms. Acton previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2013-2016).
Ann E. Dunwoody (1953)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2018
Trustee
General Dunwoody also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. General Dunwoody (United States Army, Retired) was the first woman in U.S. military history to achieve the rank of four-star general and prior to her retirement in 2012 held a variety of positions within the U.S. Army, including Commanding General, U.S. Army Material Command (2008-2012). General Dunwoody currently serves as President of First to Four LLC (leadership and mentoring services, 2012-present), a member of the Board and Nomination and Corporate Governance Committees of Kforce Inc. (professional staffing services, 2016-present) and a member of the Board of Automattic Inc. (software engineering, 2018-present). Previously, General Dunwoody served as a member of the Advisory Board and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of L3 Technologies, Inc. (communication, electronic, sensor and aerospace systems, 2013-2019) and a member of the Board and Audit and Sustainability and Corporate Responsibility Committees of Republic Services, Inc. (waste collection, disposal and recycling, 2013-2016). Ms. Dunwoody also serves on several boards for non-profit organizations, including as a member of the Board, Chair of the Nomination and Governance Committee and a member of the Audit Committee of Logistics Management Institute (consulting non-profit, 2012-present), a member of the Council of Trustees for the Association of the United States Army (advocacy non-profit, 2013-present), a member of the Board of Florida Institute of Technology (2015-present) and a member of the Board of ThanksUSA (military family education non-profit, 2014-present). General Dunwoody previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2018).
John Engler (1948)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2014
Trustee
Mr. Engler also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Engler served as Governor of Michigan (1991-2003), President of the Business Roundtable (2011-2017) and interim President of Michigan State University (2018-2019). Mr. Engler currently serves as a member of the Board of K12 Inc. (technology-based education company, 2012-present). Previously, Mr. Engler served as a member of the Board of Universal Forest Products (manufacturer and distributor of wood and wood-alternative products, 2003-2019) and Trustee of The Munder Funds (2003-2014). Mr. Engler previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2014-2016).
Robert F. Gartland (1951)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2010
Trustee
Mr. Gartland also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Gartland held a variety of positions at Morgan Stanley (financial services, 1979-2007), including Managing Director (1987-2007) and Chase Manhattan Bank (1975-1978). Mr. Gartland previously served as Chairman and an investor in Gartland & Mellina Group Corp. (consulting, 2009-2019), as a member of the Board of National Securities Clearing Corporation (1993-1996) and as Chairman of TradeWeb (2003-2004).
Arthur E. Johnson (1947)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2008
Trustee
Chairman of the Independent Trustees
Mr. Johnson also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Johnson served as Senior Vice President of Corporate Strategic Development of Lockheed Martin Corporation (defense contractor, 1999-2009). Mr. Johnson currently serves as a member of the Board of Booz Allen Hamilton (management consulting, 2011-present). Mr. Johnson previously served as a member of the Board of Eaton Corporation plc (diversified power management, 2009-2019) and a member of the Board of AGL Resources, Inc. (holding company, 2002-2016). Mr. Johnson previously served as Vice Chairman (2015-2018) of the Independent Trustees of certain Fidelity® funds. Mr. Arthur E. Johnson is not related to Ms. Abigail P. Johnson.
Michael E. Kenneally (1954)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2009
Trustee
Vice Chairman of the Independent Trustees
Mr. Kenneally also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Kenneally served as Chairman and Global Chief Executive Officer of Credit Suisse Asset Management and Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer of Bank of America Corporation. Earlier roles at Bank of America included Director of Research, Senior Portfolio Manager for various institutional equity accounts and mutual funds and Portfolio Manager for a number of institutional fixed-income clients. Mr. Kenneally began his career as a Research Analyst in 1983 and was awarded the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation in 1991.
Marie L. Knowles (1946)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2001
Trustee
Ms. Knowles also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Knowles held several positions at Atlantic Richfield Company (diversified energy), including Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (1996-2000), Senior Vice President (1993-1996) and President of ARCO Transportation Company (pipeline and tanker operations, 1993-1996). Ms. Knowles currently serves as a member of the Board of McKesson Corporation (healthcare service, since 2002), a member of the Board of the Santa Catalina Island Company (real estate, 2009-present), a member of the Investment Company Institute Board of Governors and a member of the Governing Council of the Independent Directors Council (2014-present). Ms. Knowles also serves as a member of the Advisory Board for the School of Engineering of the University of Southern California. Ms. Knowles previously served as Chairman (2015-2018) and Vice Chairman (2012-2015) of the Independent Trustees of certain Fidelity® funds.
Mark A. Murray (1954)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Mr. Murray also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Murray served as Co-Chief Executive Officer (2013-2016), President (2006-2013) and Vice Chairman (2013-2020) of Meijer, Inc. Mr. Murray serves as a member of the Board and Nuclear Review and Public Policy and Responsibility Committees of DTE Energy Company (diversified energy company, 2009-present) and a member of the Board and Audit Committee and Chairman of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of Universal Forest Products, Inc. (manufacturer and distributor of wood and wood-alternative products, 2004-2016). Mr. Murray previously served as a member of the Board of Spectrum Health (not-for-profit health system, 2015-2019). Mr. Murray also serves as a member of the Board of many community and professional organizations. Mr. Murray previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2016).
+ 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 an officer may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 245 Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210. Officers appear below in alphabetical order.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupation
Elizabeth Paige Baumann (1968)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2017
Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Officer
Ms. Baumann also serves as AML Officer of other funds. She is Chief AML Officer (2012-present) and Senior Vice President (2014-present) of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Ms. Baumann served as AML Officer of certain funds (2017-2019), as AML Officer of the funds (2012-2016), and Vice President (2007-2014) and Deputy Anti-Money Laundering Officer (2007-2012) of FMR LLC.
Craig S. Brown (1977)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2019
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Brown also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Brown 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).
David J. Carter (1973)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2020
Assistant Secretary
Mr. Carter also serves as Assistant Secretary of other funds. Mr. Carter serves as Vice President, Associate General Counsel (2010-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2005-present).
Jonathan Davis (1968)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2010
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Davis also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Davis serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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
President and Treasurer
Ms. Del Prato also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Del Prato is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2017-present). 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: 2016
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Hogan also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Hogan serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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).
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: 2013
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Maher also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Maher serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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).
Nancy D. Prior (1967)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2014
Vice President
Ms. Prior also serves as Vice President of other funds. Ms. Prior serves as President of Fixed Income (2014-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2002-present). Previously, Ms. Prior served as President (2016-2019) and Director (2014-2019) of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (investment adviser firm), Vice President of Global Asset Allocation Funds (2017-2019); Vice Chairman of FIAM LLC (investment adviser firm, 2014-2018), a Director of FMR Investment Management (UK) Limited (investment adviser firm, 2015-2018), President Multi-Asset Class Strategies of FMR's Global Asset Allocation Division (2017-2018), Vice President of Fidelity's Money Market Funds (2012-2014), and President, Money Market and Short Duration Bond Group of Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) (investment adviser firm, 2013-2014).
Kenneth B. Robins (1969)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2020
Chief Compliance Officer
Mr. Robins also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Robins serves as Compliance Officer of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm, 2016-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2004-present). Previously, Mr. Robins served as Compliance Officer of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2016-2019), as Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2013-2016) and served in other fund officer roles.
Stacie M. Smith (1974)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2013
Assistant Treasurer
Ms. Smith also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Smith serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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
Deputy Treasurer
Mr. Spector also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Spector serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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 Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Wegmann is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2011-present).
Shareholder Expense Example
As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees and other Fund expenses. This Example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the 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 (November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020).
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 under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro-rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's 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 Fund's actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Fund's 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. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro-rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's 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.
| Annualized Expense Ratio-A | Beginning Account Value November 1, 2019 | Ending Account Value April 30, 2020 | Expenses Paid During Period-B November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020 |
Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund | .04% | | | |
Actual | | $1,000.00 | $863.80 | $.19 |
Hypothetical-C | | $1,000.00 | $1,024.66 | $.20 |
A Annualized expense ratio reflects expenses net of applicable fee waivers.
B Expenses are equal to the Fund's annualized expense ratio, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period).
C 5% return per year before expenses
Distributions (Unaudited)
The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended April 30, 2020, $ 31,648,428, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.
The fund designates 94% and 76% of the dividends distributed in June and December, respectively during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends–received deduction for corporate shareholders.
The fund designates 97%, and 80% of the dividends distributed in June and December, respectively during the fiscal year as amounts which may be taken into account as a dividend for the purposes of the maximum rate under section 1(h)(11) of the Internal Revenue Code.
The fund designates 4%, and 7% of the dividends distributed in June and December, respectively during the fiscal year as a section 199A dividend.
The fund will notify shareholders in January 2021 of amounts for use in preparing 2020 income tax returns.
Liquidity Risk Management Program
The Securities and Exchange Commission adopted Rule 22e-4 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the Liquidity Rule) to promote effective liquidity risk management throughout the open-end investment company industry, thereby reducing the risk that funds will be unable to meet their redemption obligations and mitigating dilution of the interests of fund shareholders.
The Fund has adopted and implemented a liquidity risk management program pursuant to the Liquidity Rule (the Program) effective December 1, 2018. The Program is reasonably designed to assess and manage the Fund’s liquidity risk and to comply with the requirements of the Liquidity Rule. The Fund’s Board of Trustees (the Board) has designated the Fund’s investment adviser as administrator of the Program. The Fidelity advisers have established a Liquidity Risk Management Committee (the LRM Committee) to manage the Program for each of the Fidelity Funds. The LRM Committee monitors the adequacy and effectiveness of implementation of the Program and on a periodic basis assesses each Fund’s liquidity risk based on a variety of factors including (1) the Fund’s investment strategy, (2) portfolio liquidity and cash flow projections during normal and reasonably foreseeable stressed conditions, (3) shareholder redemptions, (4) borrowings and other funding sources and (5) in the case of exchange-traded funds, certain additional factors including the effect of the Fund’s prices and spreads, market participants, and basket compositions on the overall liquidity of the Fund’s portfolio, as applicable.
In accordance with the Program, each of the Fund’s portfolio investments is classified into one of four liquidity categories described below based on a determination of a reasonable expectation for how long it would take to convert the investment to cash (or sell or dispose of the investment) without significantly changing its market value.
- Highly liquid investments – cash or convertible to cash within three business days or less
- Moderately liquid investments – convertible to cash in three to seven calendar days
- Less liquid investments – can be sold or disposed of, but not settled, within seven calendar days
- Illiquid investments – cannot be sold or disposed of within seven calendar days
Liquidity classification determinations take into account a variety of factors including various market, trading and investment-specific considerations, as well as market depth, and generally utilize analysis from a third-party liquidity metrics service.
The Liquidity Rule places a 15% limit on a fund’s illiquid investments and requires funds that do not primarily hold assets that are highly liquid investments to determine and maintain a minimum percentage of the fund’s net assets to be invested in highly liquid investments (highly liquid investment minimum or HLIM). The Program includes provisions reasonably designed to comply with the 15% limit on illiquid investments and for determining, periodically reviewing and complying with the HLIM requirement as applicable.
At a recent meeting of the Fund’s Board of Trustees, the LRM Committee provided a written report to the Board pertaining to the operation, adequacy, and effectiveness of implementation of the Program for the annual period from December 1, 2018 through November 30, 2019. The report concluded that the Program has been implemented and is operating effectively and is reasonably designed to assess and manage the Fund’s liquidity risk.

LC2-I-ANN-0620
1.9879609.103
Fidelity® Large Cap Growth Index Fund
Annual Report
April 30, 2020

See the inside front cover for important information about access to your fund’s shareholder reports.

Beginning on January 1, 2021, as permitted by regulations adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission, paper copies of a fund’s shareholder reports will no longer be sent by mail, unless you specifically request paper copies of the reports from the fund or from your financial intermediary, such as a financial advisor, broker-dealer or bank. Instead, the reports will be made available on a website, and you will be notified by mail each time a report is posted and provided with a website link to access the report.
If you already elected to receive shareholder reports electronically, you will not be affected by this change and you need not take any action. You may elect to receive shareholder reports and other communications from a fund electronically, by contacting your financial intermediary. For Fidelity customers, visit Fidelity's web site or call Fidelity using the contact information listed below.
You may elect to receive all future reports in paper free of charge. If you wish to continue receiving paper copies of your shareholder reports, you may contact your financial intermediary or, if you are a Fidelity customer, visit Fidelity’s website, or call Fidelity at the applicable toll-free number listed below. Your election to receive reports in paper will apply to all funds held with the fund complex/your financial intermediary.
Account Type | Website | Phone Number |
Brokerage, Mutual Fund, or Annuity Contracts: | fidelity.com/mailpreferences | 1-800-343-3548 |
Employer Provided Retirement Accounts: | netbenefits.fidelity.com/preferences (choose 'no' under Required Disclosures to continue to print) | 1-800-343-0860 |
Advisor Sold Accounts Serviced Through Your Financial Intermediary: | Contact Your Financial Intermediary | Your Financial Intermediary's phone number |
Advisor Sold Accounts Serviced by Fidelity: | institutional.fidelity.com | 1-877-208-0098 |
Contents
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 1-800-544-8544 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. © 2020 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:
Effective July 1, 2020, the fund may operate as a non-diversified fund, as defined under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (1940 Act), to the approximate extent the Index is non-diversified. The fund may therefore operate as non-diversified solely as a result of a change in relative market capitalization or index weighting of one or more constituents of the Index.
Early in 2020, the outbreak and spread of a new coronavirus emerged as a public health emergency that had a major influence on financial markets, primarily based on its impact on the global economy and the outlook for corporate earnings. The virus causes a respiratory disease known as COVID-19. On March 11, the World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic, citing sustained risk of further global spread.
In the weeks following, as the crisis worsened, we witnessed an escalating human tragedy with wide-scale social and economic consequences from coronavirus-containment measures. The outbreak of COVID-19 prompted a number of measures to limit the spread, 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. Amid 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.
The situation continues to unfold, and the extent and duration of its impact on financial markets and the economy remain highly uncertain. Extreme events such as the coronavirus 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’re taking extra steps to be responsive to customer needs. We encourage you to visit our websites, 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 April 30, 2020 | Past 1 year | Life of fundA |
Fidelity® Large Cap Growth Index Fund | 10.84% | 16.26% |
A From June 7, 2016
$10,000 Over Life of Fund
Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity® Large Cap Growth Index Fund on June 7, 2016, when the fund started.
The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the Russell 1000® Growth Index performed over the same period.

| Period Ending Values |
| $17,990 | Fidelity® Large Cap Growth Index Fund |
| $18,030 | Russell 1000® Growth Index |
Management's Discussion of Fund Performance
Market Recap: The U.S. equity bellwether S&P 500
® index gained 0.86% for the 12 months ending April 30, 2020, as the early-2020 outbreak and spread of the coronavirus hampered global economic growth and the outlook for corporate earnings. Declared a pandemic on March 11, the crisis and containment efforts caused broad contraction in economic activity, along with extreme uncertainty, volatility and dislocation in financial markets. By mid-March, U.S. stocks entered bear-market territory less than a month after hitting an all-time high and extending the longest-running bull market in American history. Following a flattish January to open the year, stocks slid in late February (-8.23%), after a surge in COVID-19 cases outside China pushed investors to safer asset classes. The downtrend continued in March (-12.35%), capping the index’s worst quarterly result since 2008. A historically rapid and expansive U.S. monetary/fiscal-policy response helped mitigate the most acute near-term liquidity issues, and provided a partial offset to the economic disruption. This was evident in April, when the index achieved its highest monthly gain (+12.82%) since 1991, boosted by improving coronavirus trends, plans for reopening the economy and progress on potential treatments. By sector, energy stocks (-38%) fell hard along with the price of crude oil. Financials (-17%) and industrials (-16%) also lagged. In contrast, information technology (+18%) led, followed by health care (+15%), a defensive sector that saw higher demand due to the virus-containment response.
Comments from the Geode Capital Management, LLC, passive equity index team: For the fiscal year, the fund gained 10.84%, matching the return of the benchmark Russell 1000
® Growth Index. At the individual-stock level, Apple (+48%), a maker of consumer electronics and personal computers, reported especially strong growth in services and wearable electronics, while software company Microsoft (+39%) benefited from strong earnings growth, a decision to buy back stock and increase its quarterly dividend, and ongoing strength in the company's cloud computing business. Shares of online retail giant Amazon.com (+28%) gained in response to impressive financial results for its holiday quarter, and they also rose sharply in March and April as consumers around the world shopped online for essential goods to limit exposure to the coronavirus. Other notable contributors were electric-vehicle manufacturer Tesla (+227%), which generated strong financial results amid growing demand for its automobiles, and managed-care insurance provider UnitedHealth Group (+27%), whose shares gained as the political prospects for universal health care appeared to dim. On the negative side, shares of aircraft manufacturer Boeing (-62%) were hampered by continued fallout from the company's beleaguered 737 MAX jet. A coronavirus-fueled decline in air travel – and, likely with it, demand for new planes – also weighed on Boeing shares. Shares of real estate investment trust Simon Property Group (-59%) plunged in the first half of March, as the mall owner temporarily closed all its 200 shopping centers, while the retail environment further weakened amid the spread of the coronavirus. Shares of Altria Group (-22%) were hampered by the firm's 35% ownership of Juul Labs, a maker of e-cigarettes and the subject of widespread scrutiny after a vaping illness crisis gripped the US last summer. Also detracting was network-equipment company Cisco Systems (-20%).
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)
Top Ten Stocks as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Microsoft Corp. | 8.0 |
Apple, Inc. | 7.1 |
Amazon.com, Inc. | 6.0 |
Facebook, Inc. Class A | 2.9 |
Alphabet, Inc. Class C | 2.4 |
Alphabet, Inc. Class A | 2.3 |
Visa, Inc. Class A | 2.1 |
UnitedHealth Group, Inc. | 1.9 |
MasterCard, Inc. Class A | 1.6 |
Merck & Co., Inc. | 1.3 |
| 35.6 |
Top Market Sectors as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Information Technology | 35.7 |
Health Care | 14.2 |
Consumer Discretionary | 13.7 |
Communication Services | 10.2 |
Industrials | 7.5 |
Consumer Staples | 3.9 |
Financials | 2.8 |
Real Estate | 2.3 |
Materials | 1.2 |
Energy | 0.2 |
Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)
As of April 30, 2020* |
| Stocks and Equity Futures | 100.0% |

* Foreign investments - 1.6%
Schedule of Investments April 30, 2020
Showing Percentage of Net Assets
Common Stocks - 91.7% | | | |
| | Shares | Value |
COMMUNICATION SERVICES - 10.2% | | | |
Entertainment - 1.5% | | | |
Electronic Arts, Inc. (a) | | 59,894 | $6,843,488 |
Live Nation Entertainment, Inc. (a)(b) | | 33,620 | 1,508,529 |
Madison Square Garden Entertainment Corp. (a) | | 417 | 34,486 |
Netflix, Inc. (a) | | 97,806 | 41,063,849 |
Roku, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 22,809 | 2,765,135 |
Spotify Technology SA (a) | | 35,157 | 5,328,746 |
Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc. (a) | | 11,510 | 1,393,286 |
The Madison Square Garden Co. (a) | | 417 | 71,440 |
World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. Class A (b) | | 10,286 | 457,418 |
Zynga, Inc. (a) | | 52,924 | 399,047 |
| | | 59,865,424 |
Interactive Media & Services - 7.9% | | | |
Alphabet, Inc.: | | | |
Class A (a) | | 70,292 | 94,662,236 |
Class C (a) | | 71,320 | 96,186,431 |
Facebook, Inc. Class A (a) | | 576,793 | 118,075,295 |
IAC/InterActiveCorp (a) | | 11,749 | 2,625,667 |
Match Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 12,587 | 968,696 |
TripAdvisor, Inc. | | 22,192 | 443,174 |
Twitter, Inc. (a) | | 200,832 | 5,759,862 |
| | | 318,721,361 |
Media - 0.8% | | | |
Altice U.S.A., Inc. Class A (a) | | 78,794 | 2,046,280 |
AMC Networks, Inc. Class A (a) | | 9,913 | 236,425 |
Cable One, Inc. | | 1,168 | 2,234,220 |
Charter Communications, Inc. Class A (a) | | 16,693 | 8,266,874 |
Comcast Corp. Class A | | 416,082 | 15,657,166 |
Fox Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 2,781 | 71,944 |
Class B | | 1,281 | 32,742 |
Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. | | 8,279 | 140,577 |
Nexstar Broadcasting Group, Inc. Class A | | 8,088 | 566,484 |
Omnicom Group, Inc. | | 26,798 | 1,528,290 |
Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc. Class A | | 13,420 | 236,863 |
Sirius XM Holdings, Inc. | | 288,194 | 1,703,227 |
The New York Times Co. Class A (b) | | 7,087 | 230,469 |
ViacomCBS, Inc.: | | | |
Class A | | 566 | 11,111 |
Class B | | 69,874 | 1,206,025 |
| | | 34,168,697 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.0% | | | |
T-Mobile U.S., Inc. (a) | | 15,384 | 1,350,715 |
|
TOTAL COMMUNICATION SERVICES | | | 414,106,197 |
|
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 13.7% | | | |
Auto Components - 0.0% | | | |
Aptiv PLC | | 4,117 | 286,337 |
Automobiles - 0.6% | | | |
Tesla, Inc. (a)(b) | | 32,932 | 25,748,872 |
Distributors - 0.1% | | | |
LKQ Corp. (a) | | 10,922 | 285,610 |
Pool Corp. | | 9,661 | 2,044,847 |
| | | 2,330,457 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.1% | | | |
Bright Horizons Family Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 15,618 | 1,818,716 |
Grand Canyon Education, Inc. (a) | | 1,053 | 90,579 |
H&R Block, Inc. | | 7,090 | 118,049 |
Service Corp. International | | 14,857 | 545,846 |
ServiceMaster Global Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 5,094 | 173,451 |
| | | 2,746,641 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 1.8% | | | |
Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc. (a) | | 7,301 | 6,414,294 |
Choice Hotels International, Inc. | | 3,499 | 262,600 |
Darden Restaurants, Inc. | | 34,232 | 2,525,979 |
Domino's Pizza, Inc. | | 11,300 | 4,089,809 |
Dunkin' Brands Group, Inc. | | 23,373 | 1,468,759 |
Hilton Grand Vacations, Inc. (a) | | 2,961 | 60,997 |
Hilton Worldwide Holdings, Inc. | | 76,148 | 5,765,165 |
Las Vegas Sands Corp. | | 38,149 | 1,831,915 |
Marriott International, Inc. Class A | | 66,531 | 6,050,329 |
McDonald's Corp. | | 32,407 | 6,078,257 |
MGM Mirage, Inc. | | 9,595 | 161,484 |
Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd. (a)(b) | | 10,027 | 164,443 |
Planet Fitness, Inc. (a)(b) | | 20,193 | 1,218,244 |
Six Flags Entertainment Corp. | | 2,048 | 40,980 |
Starbucks Corp. | | 278,922 | 21,401,685 |
Vail Resorts, Inc. | | 9,202 | 1,573,542 |
Wendy's Co. | | 43,324 | 860,415 |
Wyndham Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 6,588 | 248,433 |
Wynn Resorts Ltd. | | 21,710 | 1,856,856 |
Yum China Holdings, Inc. | | 77,434 | 3,752,452 |
Yum! Brands, Inc. | | 72,523 | 6,268,163 |
| | | 72,094,801 |
Household Durables - 0.1% | | | |
Lennar Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 29,376 | 1,470,856 |
Class B | | 1,247 | 47,573 |
NVR, Inc. (a) | | 818 | 2,535,800 |
Tempur Sealy International, Inc. (a) | | 12,636 | 679,185 |
| | | 4,733,414 |
Internet & Direct Marketing Retail - 6.7% | | | |
Amazon.com, Inc. (a) | | 98,182 | 242,902,268 |
eBay, Inc. | | 175,917 | 7,006,774 |
Etsy, Inc. (a) | | 30,900 | 2,004,483 |
Expedia, Inc. | | 28,084 | 1,993,402 |
GrubHub, Inc. (a)(b) | | 21,942 | 1,048,608 |
The Booking Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 9,668 | 14,314,151 |
Wayfair LLC Class A (a)(b) | | 17,469 | 2,166,855 |
| | | 271,436,541 |
Leisure Products - 0.1% | | | |
Hasbro, Inc. | | 35,558 | 2,567,643 |
Mattel, Inc. (a)(b) | | 57,642 | 502,638 |
Polaris, Inc. | | 12,036 | 853,713 |
| | | 3,923,994 |
Multiline Retail - 0.4% | | | |
Dollar General Corp. | | 63,835 | 11,190,276 |
Dollar Tree, Inc. (a) | | 27,747 | 2,210,603 |
Nordstrom, Inc. | | 25,261 | 474,402 |
Ollie's Bargain Outlet Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 12,290 | 834,614 |
Target Corp. | | 6,212 | 681,705 |
| | | 15,391,600 |
Specialty Retail - 2.8% | | | |
Advance Auto Parts, Inc. | | 3,698 | 447,125 |
AutoZone, Inc. (a) | | 6,331 | 6,459,646 |
Best Buy Co., Inc. | | 10,799 | 828,607 |
Burlington Stores, Inc. (a) | | 17,064 | 3,117,422 |
CarMax, Inc. (a)(b) | | 22,557 | 1,661,323 |
Carvana Co. Class A (a)(b) | | 11,790 | 944,497 |
Five Below, Inc. (a)(b) | | 14,675 | 1,323,098 |
Floor & Decor Holdings, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 15,996 | 678,230 |
L Brands, Inc. | | 8,349 | 99,270 |
Lowe's Companies, Inc. | | 210,745 | 22,075,539 |
O'Reilly Automotive, Inc. (a) | | 17,655 | 6,820,833 |
Ross Stores, Inc. | | 84,028 | 7,676,798 |
The Home Depot, Inc. | | 168,886 | 37,126,209 |
TJX Companies, Inc. | | 328,598 | 16,117,732 |
Tractor Supply Co. | | 32,466 | 3,293,026 |
Ulta Beauty, Inc. (a) | | 13,060 | 2,846,035 |
Williams-Sonoma, Inc. (b) | | 3,409 | 210,813 |
| | | 111,726,203 |
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 1.0% | | | |
Capri Holdings Ltd. (a) | | 13,767 | 209,947 |
Carter's, Inc. | | 4,639 | 362,770 |
Columbia Sportswear Co. | | 4,496 | 327,713 |
Hanesbrands, Inc. | | 66,710 | 663,097 |
lululemon athletica, Inc. (a) | | 28,024 | 6,262,804 |
NIKE, Inc. Class B | | 318,528 | 27,769,271 |
Skechers U.S.A., Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a) | | 11,195 | 315,475 |
Under Armour, Inc.: | | | |
Class A (sub. vtg.) (a) | | 27,825 | 289,937 |
Class C (non-vtg.) (a) | | 41,457 | 384,306 |
VF Corp. | | 84,187 | 4,891,265 |
| | | 41,476,585 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | | 551,895,445 |
|
CONSUMER STAPLES - 3.9% | | | |
Beverages - 1.9% | | | |
Brown-Forman Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 9,282 | 526,475 |
Class B (non-vtg.) | | 40,964 | 2,547,961 |
Monster Beverage Corp. (a) | | 87,476 | 5,406,892 |
PepsiCo, Inc. | | 264,187 | 34,949,298 |
The Coca-Cola Co. | | 704,544 | 32,331,524 |
| | | 75,762,150 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 0.9% | | | |
Casey's General Stores, Inc. | | 2,150 | 325,532 |
Costco Wholesale Corp. | | 100,313 | 30,394,839 |
Grocery Outlet Holding Corp. | | 909 | 30,242 |
Sprouts Farmers Market LLC (a) | | 13,413 | 278,722 |
Sysco Corp. | | 120,434 | 6,776,821 |
| | | 37,806,156 |
Food Products - 0.3% | | | |
Campbell Soup Co. | | 22,205 | 1,109,806 |
Kellogg Co. | | 22,046 | 1,444,013 |
Lamb Weston Holdings, Inc. | | 8,846 | 542,791 |
McCormick & Co., Inc. (non-vtg.) | | 19,243 | 3,018,072 |
Pilgrim's Pride Corp. (a) | | 4,700 | 103,400 |
Post Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 6,802 | 624,764 |
The Hershey Co. | | 29,862 | 3,954,625 |
TreeHouse Foods, Inc. (a)(b) | | 2,190 | 113,289 |
| | | 10,910,760 |
Household Products - 0.3% | | | |
Church & Dwight Co., Inc. | | 59,937 | 4,194,991 |
Clorox Co. | | 26,596 | 4,958,558 |
Procter & Gamble Co. | | 32,143 | 3,788,695 |
Reynolds Consumer Products, Inc. | | 4,617 | 149,729 |
| | | 13,091,973 |
Personal Products - 0.3% | | | |
Estee Lauder Companies, Inc. Class A | | 59,036 | 10,413,950 |
Herbalife Nutrition Ltd. (a)(b) | | 3,499 | 130,688 |
| | | 10,544,638 |
Tobacco - 0.2% | | | |
Altria Group, Inc. | | 233,368 | 9,159,694 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | | 157,275,371 |
|
ENERGY - 0.2% | | | |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 0.2% | | | |
Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. | | 68,407 | 1,478,959 |
Cheniere Energy, Inc. (a) | | 35,377 | 1,651,752 |
Diamondback Energy, Inc. | | 7,789 | 339,133 |
Equitrans Midstream Corp. | | 4,262 | 35,716 |
ONEOK, Inc. | | 34,943 | 1,045,844 |
Parsley Energy, Inc. Class A | | 40,257 | 380,429 |
Pioneer Natural Resources Co. | | 20,795 | 1,857,201 |
| | | 6,789,034 |
FINANCIALS - 2.8% | | | |
Banks - 0.0% | | | |
CIT Group, Inc. | | 1,899 | 36,043 |
Comerica, Inc. | | 2,052 | 71,533 |
First Republic Bank | | 8,577 | 894,495 |
Prosperity Bancshares, Inc. | | 2,314 | 138,678 |
Signature Bank | | 8,444 | 905,028 |
SVB Financial Group (a) | | 875 | 169,024 |
Synovus Financial Corp. | | 2,409 | 50,613 |
Western Alliance Bancorp. | | 2,320 | 83,242 |
| | | 2,348,656 |
Capital Markets - 1.7% | | | |
Ameriprise Financial, Inc. | | 4,113 | 472,748 |
Cboe Global Markets, Inc. | | 7,120 | 707,586 |
Charles Schwab Corp. | | 185,388 | 6,992,835 |
E*TRADE Financial Corp. | | 9,994 | 405,856 |
Evercore, Inc. Class A | | 3,314 | 171,002 |
FactSet Research Systems, Inc. | | 10,611 | 2,918,025 |
Interactive Brokers Group, Inc. | | 4,803 | 196,923 |
Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. | | 58,392 | 5,223,164 |
Lazard Ltd. Class A | | 8,731 | 240,103 |
LPL Financial | | 21,253 | 1,279,856 |
MarketAxess Holdings, Inc. | | 9,951 | 4,527,805 |
Moody's Corp. | | 45,147 | 11,011,353 |
Morningstar, Inc. | | 4,817 | 751,259 |
MSCI, Inc. | | 22,638 | 7,402,626 |
Raymond James Financial, Inc. | | 7,599 | 500,926 |
S&P Global, Inc. | | 67,602 | 19,799,274 |
SEI Investments Co. | | 16,686 | 850,319 |
T. Rowe Price Group, Inc. | | 17,191 | 1,987,795 |
TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. | | 61,954 | 2,432,934 |
Virtu Financial, Inc. Class A | | 5,395 | 126,081 |
| | | 67,998,470 |
Consumer Finance - 0.3% | | | |
American Express Co. | | 102,621 | 9,364,166 |
Credit Acceptance Corp. (a)(b) | | 2,801 | 872,708 |
Discover Financial Services | | 25,690 | 1,103,899 |
LendingTree, Inc. (a)(b) | | 2,246 | 560,085 |
Synchrony Financial | | 40,895 | 809,312 |
| | | 12,710,170 |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.0% | | | |
Voya Financial, Inc. | | 2,190 | 98,922 |
Insurance - 0.8% | | | |
Alleghany Corp. | | 328 | 175,057 |
Aon PLC | | 62,352 | 10,766,320 |
Arch Capital Group Ltd. (a) | | 12,174 | 292,541 |
Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. | | 10,433 | 818,991 |
Athene Holding Ltd. (a) | | 13,267 | 358,209 |
Axis Capital Holdings Ltd. | | 1,950 | 71,370 |
Brown & Brown, Inc. | | 6,889 | 247,384 |
Erie Indemnity Co. Class A (b) | | 3,926 | 699,064 |
Everest Re Group Ltd. | | 2,852 | 493,767 |
Kemper Corp. | | 2,814 | 189,157 |
Markel Corp. (a) | | 271 | 234,643 |
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. | | 119,861 | 11,666,071 |
Primerica, Inc. | | 6,937 | 720,824 |
Progressive Corp. | | 50,342 | 3,891,437 |
RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd. | | 3,889 | 567,833 |
The Travelers Companies, Inc. | | 8,468 | 857,046 |
| | | 32,049,714 |
|
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | | 115,205,932 |
|
HEALTH CARE - 14.2% | | | |
Biotechnology - 2.8% | | | |
AbbVie, Inc. | | 400,414 | 32,914,031 |
Agios Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,584 | 65,166 |
Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 37,214 | 3,999,389 |
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 23,001 | 3,029,232 |
Amgen, Inc. | | 125,249 | 29,962,066 |
Biogen, Inc. (a) | | 10,318 | 3,062,692 |
BioMarin Pharmaceutical, Inc. (a) | | 43,039 | 3,960,449 |
Exact Sciences Corp. (a)(b) | | 37,185 | 2,936,871 |
Exelixis, Inc. (a) | | 28,528 | 704,499 |
Gilead Sciences, Inc. | | 8,480 | 712,320 |
Incyte Corp. (a) | | 41,558 | 4,058,554 |
Ionis Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 32,924 | 1,828,270 |
Moderna, Inc. (a)(b) | | 53,940 | 2,480,701 |
Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 23,898 | 2,345,350 |
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,101 | 578,994 |
Sage Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 11,938 | 465,343 |
Sarepta Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 18,264 | 2,152,960 |
Seattle Genetics, Inc. (a) | | 26,538 | 3,641,810 |
Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 60,829 | 15,280,245 |
| | | 114,178,942 |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 3.2% | | | |
Abbott Laboratories | | 201,016 | 18,511,563 |
Abiomed, Inc. (a) | | 11,826 | 2,261,723 |
Align Technology, Inc. (a) | | 18,513 | 3,977,518 |
Baxter International, Inc. | | 59,770 | 5,306,381 |
Becton, Dickinson & Co. | | 5,781 | 1,459,876 |
Boston Scientific Corp. (a) | | 374,095 | 14,021,081 |
Cantel Medical Corp. | | 4,853 | 179,561 |
Danaher Corp. | | 8,564 | 1,399,871 |
DexCom, Inc. (a) | | 24,602 | 8,246,590 |
Edwards Lifesciences Corp. (a) | | 55,655 | 12,104,963 |
Envista Holdings Corp. (a) | | 21,723 | 422,947 |
Hill-Rom Holdings, Inc. | | 8,797 | 989,575 |
Hologic, Inc. (a) | | 59,253 | 2,968,575 |
ICU Medical, Inc. (a) | | 1,394 | 305,718 |
IDEXX Laboratories, Inc. (a) | | 20,142 | 5,591,419 |
Insulet Corp. (a) | | 15,985 | 3,192,524 |
Intuitive Surgical, Inc. (a) | | 27,066 | 13,827,478 |
Masimo Corp. (a) | | 12,167 | 2,602,643 |
Penumbra, Inc. (a)(b) | | 8,042 | 1,426,007 |
ResMed, Inc. | | 38,097 | 5,917,226 |
STERIS PLC | | 1,487 | 211,898 |
Stryker Corp. | | 92,539 | 17,252,046 |
Teleflex, Inc. | | 12,470 | 4,182,438 |
The Cooper Companies, Inc. | | 1,514 | 434,064 |
Varian Medical Systems, Inc. (a) | | 24,280 | 2,777,146 |
West Pharmaceutical Services, Inc. | | 14,742 | 2,790,071 |
| | | 132,360,902 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 2.9% | | | |
AmerisourceBergen Corp. | | 38,612 | 3,461,952 |
Anthem, Inc. | | 19,831 | 5,567,157 |
Centene Corp. (a) | | 133,009 | 8,855,739 |
Chemed Corp. | | 3,998 | 1,665,447 |
Cigna Corp. | | 31,232 | 6,114,601 |
Encompass Health Corp. | | 13,024 | 862,840 |
Guardant Health, Inc. (a) | | 9,128 | 702,491 |
HCA Holdings, Inc. | | 44,778 | 4,920,207 |
Henry Schein, Inc. (a) | | 4,198 | 229,043 |
Humana, Inc. | | 15,427 | 5,890,337 |
Laboratory Corp. of America Holdings (a) | | 1,337 | 219,870 |
McKesson Corp. | | 4,516 | 637,885 |
Molina Healthcare, Inc. (a) | | 12,688 | 2,080,451 |
UnitedHealth Group, Inc. | | 256,974 | 75,157,186 |
| | | 116,365,206 |
Health Care Technology - 0.3% | | | |
Cerner Corp. | | 74,140 | 5,144,575 |
Change Healthcare, Inc. | | 27,725 | 322,719 |
Veeva Systems, Inc. Class A (a) | | 35,177 | 6,711,772 |
| | | 12,179,066 |
Life Sciences Tools & Services - 1.4% | | | |
Adaptive Biotechnologies Corp. | | 12,272 | 392,827 |
Agilent Technologies, Inc. | | 6,975 | 534,704 |
Avantor, Inc. | | 57,688 | 969,735 |
Bio-Techne Corp. | | 9,761 | 2,196,225 |
Bruker Corp. | | 24,741 | 972,816 |
Charles River Laboratories International, Inc. (a) | | 13,140 | 1,900,964 |
Illumina, Inc. (a) | | 34,579 | 11,031,738 |
IQVIA Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 20,235 | 2,885,309 |
Mettler-Toledo International, Inc. (a) | | 6,354 | 4,574,499 |
PerkinElmer, Inc. | | 5,691 | 515,206 |
PPD, Inc. | | 10,167 | 242,991 |
PRA Health Sciences, Inc. (a) | | 15,575 | 1,502,988 |
Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. | | 73,697 | 24,664,912 |
Waters Corp. (a) | | 17,051 | 3,188,537 |
| | | 55,573,451 |
Pharmaceuticals - 3.6% | | | |
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. | | 372,228 | 22,635,185 |
Eli Lilly & Co. | | 230,444 | 35,635,860 |
Horizon Pharma PLC (a) | | 4,855 | 174,974 |
Jazz Pharmaceuticals PLC (a) | | 14,028 | 1,546,587 |
Johnson & Johnson | | 108,253 | 16,242,280 |
Merck & Co., Inc. | | 654,345 | 51,915,732 |
Nektar Therapeutics (a)(b) | | 5,611 | 107,731 |
Zoetis, Inc. Class A | | 129,389 | 16,731,292 |
| | | 144,989,641 |
|
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | | 575,647,208 |
|
INDUSTRIALS - 7.5% | | | |
Aerospace & Defense - 2.1% | | | |
BWX Technologies, Inc. | | 19,431 | 1,031,009 |
General Dynamics Corp. | | 4,852 | 633,768 |
Harris Corp. | | 30,143 | 5,838,699 |
HEICO Corp. (b) | | 13,110 | 1,148,436 |
HEICO Corp. Class A | | 19,159 | 1,385,770 |
Hexcel Corp. | | 24,314 | 841,021 |
Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc. | | 8,429 | 1,613,395 |
Lockheed Martin Corp. | | 67,500 | 26,261,550 |
Northrop Grumman Corp. | | 42,322 | 13,994,616 |
Raytheon Technologies Corp. | | 113,563 | 7,360,018 |
Spirit AeroSystems Holdings, Inc. Class A | | 21,649 | 479,742 |
The Boeing Co. | | 144,189 | 20,333,533 |
TransDigm Group, Inc. | | 12,075 | 4,384,191 |
| | | 85,305,748 |
Air Freight & Logistics - 0.6% | | | |
C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc. | | 28,532 | 2,022,919 |
Expeditors International of Washington, Inc. | | 31,992 | 2,290,787 |
United Parcel Service, Inc. Class B | | 190,061 | 17,991,174 |
XPO Logistics, Inc. (a)(b) | | 14,638 | 976,940 |
| | | 23,281,820 |
Airlines - 0.1% | | | |
Alaska Air Group, Inc. | | 12,919 | 420,126 |
American Airlines Group, Inc. (b) | | 8,983 | 107,886 |
Delta Air Lines, Inc. | | 27,087 | 701,824 |
JetBlue Airways Corp. (a) | | 6,187 | 60,261 |
Southwest Airlines Co. | | 69,809 | 2,181,531 |
United Airlines Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 7,345 | 217,265 |
| | | 3,688,893 |
Building Products - 0.3% | | | |
A.O. Smith Corp. | | 5,292 | 224,275 |
Allegion PLC | | 19,475 | 1,958,017 |
Armstrong World Industries, Inc. | | 11,436 | 881,487 |
Fortune Brands Home & Security, Inc. | | 10,992 | 529,814 |
Lennox International, Inc. (b) | | 8,417 | 1,571,286 |
Trane Technologies PLC | | 61,372 | 5,365,140 |
| | | 10,530,019 |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.5% | | | |
Cintas Corp. | | 19,937 | 4,422,625 |
Copart, Inc. (a) | | 47,722 | 3,823,009 |
IAA Spinco, Inc. (a) | | 30,179 | 1,164,909 |
KAR Auction Services, Inc. | | 27,330 | 409,403 |
Republic Services, Inc. | | 3,088 | 241,914 |
Rollins, Inc. | | 33,089 | 1,323,560 |
Waste Management, Inc. | | 87,555 | 8,757,251 |
| | | 20,142,671 |
Construction & Engineering - 0.0% | | | |
Quanta Services, Inc. | | 7,410 | 269,428 |
Electrical Equipment - 0.3% | | | |
Acuity Brands, Inc. | | 2,469 | 213,791 |
AMETEK, Inc. | | 46,816 | 3,926,458 |
Emerson Electric Co. | | 12,469 | 711,107 |
Hubbell, Inc. Class B | | 10,497 | 1,306,142 |
Rockwell Automation, Inc. | | 31,197 | 5,911,208 |
Sensata Technologies, Inc. PLC (a) | | 15,356 | 558,651 |
| | | 12,627,357 |
Industrial Conglomerates - 0.8% | | | |
3M Co. | | 116,536 | 17,704,149 |
Carlisle Companies, Inc. | | 13,535 | 1,637,194 |
Honeywell International, Inc. | | 96,270 | 13,660,713 |
Roper Technologies, Inc. | | 3,716 | 1,267,267 |
| | | 34,269,323 |
Machinery - 1.0% | | | |
Allison Transmission Holdings, Inc. | | 32,158 | 1,168,622 |
Caterpillar, Inc. | | 11,408 | 1,327,663 |
Deere & Co. | | 8,099 | 1,174,841 |
Donaldson Co., Inc. | | 29,497 | 1,292,854 |
Dover Corp. | | 14,843 | 1,390,047 |
Flowserve Corp. | | 6,690 | 188,457 |
Fortive Corp. | | 15,469 | 990,016 |
Gardner Denver Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 56,662 | 1,647,731 |
Graco, Inc. (b) | | 41,820 | 1,867,681 |
IDEX Corp. | | 10,817 | 1,661,816 |
Illinois Tool Works, Inc. | | 86,712 | 14,090,700 |
Lincoln Electric Holdings, Inc. (b) | | 12,921 | 1,040,270 |
Middleby Corp. (a) | | 15,060 | 837,788 |
Nordson Corp. | | 13,536 | 2,178,078 |
Toro Co. (b) | | 27,030 | 1,724,784 |
WABCO Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 13,242 | 1,779,460 |
Westinghouse Air Brake Co. | | 11,713 | 660,847 |
Woodward, Inc. | | 10,531 | 637,757 |
Xylem, Inc. | | 45,240 | 3,252,756 |
| | | 38,912,168 |
Professional Services - 0.6% | | | |
CoreLogic, Inc. | | 918 | 35,270 |
CoStar Group, Inc. (a) | | 8,543 | 5,538,085 |
Equifax, Inc. | | 28,527 | 3,962,400 |
IHS Markit Ltd. | | 65,194 | 4,387,556 |
Nielsen Holdings PLC | | 10,641 | 156,742 |
Robert Half International, Inc. | | 31,118 | 1,470,948 |
TransUnion Holding Co., Inc. | | 49,736 | 3,918,699 |
Verisk Analytics, Inc. | | 37,824 | 5,780,642 |
| | | 25,250,342 |
Road & Rail - 1.0% | | | |
CSX Corp. | | 47,062 | 3,116,916 |
J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc. | | 6,432 | 650,404 |
Landstar System, Inc. | | 9,046 | 934,542 |
Lyft, Inc. (a) | | 4,699 | 154,268 |
Norfolk Southern Corp. | | 8,186 | 1,400,625 |
Old Dominion Freight Lines, Inc. | | 11,191 | 1,625,940 |
Uber Technologies, Inc. | | 26,342 | 797,372 |
Union Pacific Corp. | | 188,500 | 30,120,415 |
| | | 38,800,482 |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.2% | | | |
Air Lease Corp. Class A (b) | | 1,834 | 47,959 |
Fastenal Co. | | 121,856 | 4,413,624 |
United Rentals, Inc. (a) | | 16,683 | 2,143,766 |
W.W. Grainger, Inc. | | 10,998 | 3,030,829 |
| | | 9,636,178 |
|
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | | 302,714,429 |
|
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 35.7% | | | |
Communications Equipment - 1.3% | | | |
Arista Networks, Inc. (a)(b) | | 15,748 | 3,453,536 |
Cisco Systems, Inc. | | 997,155 | 42,259,429 |
F5 Networks, Inc. (a) | | 13,481 | 1,877,364 |
Motorola Solutions, Inc. | | 33,757 | 4,854,594 |
Ubiquiti, Inc. | | 2,055 | 332,972 |
| | | 52,777,895 |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 0.6% | | | |
Amphenol Corp. Class A | | 75,174 | 6,634,857 |
CDW Corp. | | 33,805 | 3,745,594 |
Cognex Corp. | | 40,983 | 2,263,901 |
Corning, Inc. | | 55,919 | 1,230,777 |
Dolby Laboratories, Inc. Class A | | 1,946 | 116,818 |
FLIR Systems, Inc. | | 2,629 | 114,099 |
IPG Photonics Corp. (a) | | 669 | 86,522 |
Jabil, Inc. | | 7,722 | 219,614 |
Keysight Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 46,548 | 4,504,450 |
National Instruments Corp. | | 1,437 | 55,210 |
Trimble, Inc. (a) | | 9,903 | 342,941 |
Zebra Technologies Corp. Class A (a) | | 14,313 | 3,287,124 |
| | | 22,601,907 |
IT Services - 8.6% | | | |
Accenture PLC Class A | | 172,445 | 31,935,090 |
Akamai Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 40,075 | 3,915,728 |
Alliance Data Systems Corp. | | 905 | 45,313 |
Automatic Data Processing, Inc. | | 101,849 | 14,940,230 |
Black Knight, Inc. (a) | | 37,726 | 2,662,324 |
Booz Allen Hamilton Holding Corp. Class A | | 36,880 | 2,708,467 |
Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. | | 30,685 | 3,559,460 |
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. Class A | | 1,962 | 113,835 |
EPAM Systems, Inc. (a) | | 13,356 | 2,950,207 |
Euronet Worldwide, Inc. (a) | | 12,559 | 1,152,414 |
Fidelity National Information Services, Inc. | | 99,966 | 13,184,516 |
Fiserv, Inc. (a) | | 131,168 | 13,518,174 |
FleetCor Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 23,387 | 5,642,114 |
Gartner, Inc. (a) | | 24,384 | 2,897,063 |
Genpact Ltd. | | 49,937 | 1,719,331 |
Global Payments, Inc. | | 80,426 | 13,352,325 |
GoDaddy, Inc. (a) | | 47,439 | 3,293,690 |
IBM Corp. | | 146,178 | 18,354,110 |
Jack Henry & Associates, Inc. | | 17,664 | 2,888,947 |
MasterCard, Inc. Class A | | 241,507 | 66,407,180 |
MongoDB, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 11,000 | 1,783,430 |
Okta, Inc. (a) | | 28,095 | 4,250,774 |
Paychex, Inc. | | 74,513 | 5,105,631 |
PayPal Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 274,932 | 33,816,636 |
Sabre Corp. | | 11,075 | 80,515 |
Square, Inc. (a) | | 94,215 | 6,137,165 |
Switch, Inc. Class A | | 13,306 | 228,464 |
The Western Union Co. | | 24,668 | 470,419 |
Twilio, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 32,994 | 3,705,226 |
VeriSign, Inc. (a) | | 16,353 | 3,425,790 |
Visa, Inc. Class A | | 466,062 | 83,294,601 |
WEX, Inc. (a) | | 12,008 | 1,588,899 |
| | | 349,128,068 |
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 3.7% | | | |
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (a) | | 235,226 | 12,323,490 |
Applied Materials, Inc. | | 81,899 | 4,068,742 |
Broadcom, Inc. | | 87,590 | 23,791,196 |
Cree, Inc. (a) | | 1,975 | 85,182 |
Entegris, Inc. | | 29,328 | 1,590,457 |
KLA-Tencor Corp. | | 33,742 | 5,536,725 |
Lam Research Corp. | | 26,862 | 6,857,331 |
Microchip Technology, Inc. | | 3,898 | 341,972 |
Monolithic Power Systems, Inc. | | 9,767 | 1,952,521 |
NVIDIA Corp. | | 133,610 | 39,051,531 |
Qualcomm, Inc. | | 259,176 | 20,389,376 |
Teradyne, Inc. | | 38,197 | 2,388,840 |
Texas Instruments, Inc. | | 204,202 | 23,701,726 |
Universal Display Corp. | | 9,966 | 1,496,096 |
Xilinx, Inc. | | 50,052 | 4,374,545 |
| | | 147,949,730 |
Software - 14.3% | | | |
2U, Inc. (a)(b) | | 5,161 | 122,574 |
Adobe, Inc. (a) | | 113,629 | 40,183,760 |
Alteryx, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 12,253 | 1,386,795 |
Anaplan, Inc. (a) | | 22,107 | 903,292 |
ANSYS, Inc. (a) | | 19,810 | 5,186,852 |
Aspen Technology, Inc. (a) | | 19,272 | 1,970,562 |
Atlassian Corp. PLC (a) | | 33,489 | 5,207,205 |
Autodesk, Inc. (a) | | 39,564 | 7,403,611 |
Avalara, Inc. (a) | | 11,996 | 1,072,083 |
Bill.Com Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,263 | 74,378 |
Cadence Design Systems, Inc. (a) | | 66,431 | 5,389,547 |
CDK Global, Inc. | | 37,305 | 1,465,340 |
Ceridian HCM Holding, Inc. (a)(b) | | 19,902 | 1,173,621 |
Citrix Systems, Inc. | | 24,030 | 3,484,590 |
Coupa Software, Inc. (a) | | 16,871 | 2,970,814 |
DocuSign, Inc. (a) | | 42,824 | 4,485,814 |
Dropbox, Inc. Class A (a) | | 55,921 | 1,175,459 |
Dynatrace, Inc. | | 28,808 | 859,919 |
Elastic NV (a)(b) | | 14,485 | 929,068 |
Fair Isaac Corp. (a) | | 7,601 | 2,682,697 |
FireEye, Inc. (a) | | 46,542 | 535,698 |
Fortinet, Inc. (a) | | 39,770 | 4,284,820 |
Guidewire Software, Inc. (a) | | 22,251 | 2,021,281 |
HubSpot, Inc. (a)(b) | | 10,766 | 1,815,471 |
Intuit, Inc. | | 58,571 | 15,803,042 |
Manhattan Associates, Inc. (a) | | 16,315 | 1,157,386 |
Medallia, Inc. (b) | | 14,993 | 322,050 |
Microsoft Corp. | | 1,794,722 | 321,632,119 |
New Relic, Inc. (a) | | 14,467 | 776,733 |
Nutanix, Inc. Class A (a) | | 45,462 | 931,516 |
Oracle Corp. | | 546,011 | 28,922,203 |
Pagerduty, Inc. | | 9,368 | 197,758 |
Palo Alto Networks, Inc. (a) | | 27,095 | 5,324,438 |
Parametric Technology Corp. (a) | | 30,304 | 2,098,552 |
Paycom Software, Inc. (a) | | 12,932 | 3,375,511 |
Paylocity Holding Corp. (a) | | 9,502 | 1,088,264 |
Pegasystems, Inc. | | 8,899 | 744,134 |
Pluralsight, Inc. (a)(b) | | 14,470 | 237,887 |
Proofpoint, Inc. (a) | | 15,334 | 1,866,608 |
RealPage, Inc. (a)(b) | | 22,681 | 1,462,698 |
RingCentral, Inc. (a) | | 20,027 | 4,576,770 |
Salesforce.com, Inc. (a) | | 228,708 | 37,039,261 |
ServiceNow, Inc. (a) | | 50,657 | 17,807,962 |
Smartsheet, Inc. (a) | | 23,071 | 1,216,303 |
SolarWinds, Inc. (a)(b) | | 3,605 | 61,213 |
Splunk, Inc.(a) | | 36,865 | 5,174,371 |
SS&C Technologies Holdings, Inc. | | 53,380 | 2,944,441 |
Synopsys, Inc. (a) | | 35,657 | 5,602,428 |
Teradata Corp. (a)(b) | | 26,139 | 642,758 |
The Trade Desk, Inc. (a)(b) | | 10,399 | 3,042,539 |
Tyler Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 10,321 | 3,309,841 |
VMware, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 20,821 | 2,738,378 |
Workday, Inc. Class A (a) | | 38,689 | 5,954,237 |
Zendesk, Inc. (a) | | 31,287 | 2,405,345 |
Zscaler, Inc. (a)(b) | | 17,967 | 1,205,226 |
| | | 576,447,223 |
Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals - 7.2% | | | |
Apple, Inc. | | 978,349 | 287,438,936 |
Dell Technologies, Inc. (a)(b) | | 32,938 | 1,406,123 |
HP, Inc. | | 21,621 | 335,342 |
NCR Corp. (a) | | 35,740 | 733,385 |
NetApp, Inc. | | 54,077 | 2,366,950 |
Pure Storage, Inc. Class A (a) | | 67,721 | 975,182 |
| | | 293,255,918 |
|
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | | 1,442,160,741 |
|
MATERIALS - 1.2% | | | |
Chemicals - 0.8% | | | |
Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. | | 7,628 | 1,720,724 |
Axalta Coating Systems Ltd. (a) | | 14,513 | 286,487 |
CF Industries Holdings, Inc. | | 5,030 | 138,325 |
Ecolab, Inc. | | 67,947 | 13,147,745 |
Element Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 20,009 | 205,092 |
NewMarket Corp. | | 1,472 | 605,640 |
PPG Industries, Inc. | | 21,053 | 1,912,244 |
RPM International, Inc. | | 4,900 | 325,409 |
Sherwin-Williams Co. | | 22,426 | 12,028,634 |
The Scotts Miracle-Gro Co. Class A | | 9,700 | 1,203,091 |
W.R. Grace & Co. | | 15,968 | 754,169 |
| | | 32,327,560 |
Construction Materials - 0.1% | | | |
Eagle Materials, Inc. | | 8,072 | 492,473 |
Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. | | 4,483 | 852,801 |
Vulcan Materials Co. | | 31,933 | 3,607,471 |
| | | 4,952,745 |
Containers & Packaging - 0.3% | | | |
Aptargroup, Inc. | | 5,997 | 642,159 |
Avery Dennison Corp. | | 20,147 | 2,224,027 |
Ball Corp. | | 85,802 | 5,627,753 |
Berry Global Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 11,820 | 470,318 |
Crown Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 20,354 | 1,311,001 |
Sealed Air Corp. | | 2,645 | 75,621 |
| | | 10,350,879 |
Metals & Mining - 0.0% | | | |
Royal Gold, Inc. | | 4,835 | 592,433 |
Southern Copper Corp. | | 13,932 | 451,954 |
| | | 1,044,387 |
|
TOTAL MATERIALS | | | 48,675,571 |
|
REAL ESTATE - 2.3% | | | |
Equity Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) - 2.2% | | | |
American Homes 4 Rent Class A | | 25,675 | 619,795 |
American Tower Corp. | | 119,122 | 28,351,036 |
Americold Realty Trust | | 48,642 | 1,487,959 |
Brookfield Property REIT, Inc. Class A (b) | | 15,336 | 150,216 |
Colony Capital, Inc. | | 5,294 | 12,229 |
CoreSite Realty Corp. | | 7,491 | 907,834 |
Crown Castle International Corp. | | 111,997 | 17,855,682 |
Equinix, Inc. | | 22,895 | 15,458,704 |
Equity Lifestyle Properties, Inc. | | 45,131 | 2,721,851 |
Extra Space Storage, Inc. | | 25,670 | 2,265,121 |
Iron Mountain, Inc. | | 8,093 | 195,689 |
Lamar Advertising Co. Class A | | 23,106 | 1,332,061 |
Outfront Media, Inc. | | 5,150 | 80,804 |
Public Storage | | 29,008 | 5,379,534 |
SBA Communications Corp. Class A | | 30,341 | 8,796,463 |
Simon Property Group, Inc. | | 74,659 | 4,984,981 |
Sun Communities, Inc. | | 4,982 | 669,581 |
UDR, Inc. | | 3,608 | 135,192 |
| | | 91,404,732 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.1% | | | |
CBRE Group, Inc. (a) | | 43,633 | 1,873,165 |
Howard Hughes Corp. (a) | | 5,201 | 281,686 |
Jones Lang LaSalle, Inc. | | 4,715 | 497,810 |
| | | 2,652,661 |
|
TOTAL REAL ESTATE | | | 94,057,393 |
|
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS | | | |
(Cost $3,064,753,120) | | | 3,708,527,321 |
|
Money Market Funds - 9.2% | | | |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund 0.16% (c) | | 301,981,285 | 302,071,879 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund 0.11% (c)(d) | | 68,694,814 | 68,701,684 |
TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS | | | |
(Cost $370,765,459) | | | 370,773,563 |
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES - 100.9% | | | |
(Cost $3,435,518,579) | | | 4,079,300,884 |
NET OTHER ASSETS (LIABILITIES) - (0.9)% | | | (36,809,227) |
NET ASSETS - 100% | | | $4,042,491,657 |
Futures Contracts | | | | | |
| Number of contracts | Expiration Date | Notional Amount | Value | Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation) |
Purchased | | | | | |
Equity Index Contracts | | | | | |
CME E-mini NASDAQ 100 Index Contracts (United States) | 1,859 | June 2020 | $334,192,430 | $52,916,076 | $52,916,076 |
The notional amount of futures purchased as a percentage of Net Assets is 8.3%
For the period, the average monthly notional amount at value for futures contracts in the aggregate was $78,469,360.
Legend
(a) Non-income producing
(b) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.
(c) 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.
(d) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.
Affiliated Central Funds
Information regarding fiscal year to date income earned by the Fund from investments in Fidelity Central Funds is as follows:
Fund | Income earned |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund | $630,635 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund | 118,848 |
Total | $749,483 |
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 April 30, 2020, 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 |
Investments in Securities: | | | | |
Equities: | | | | |
Communication Services | $414,106,197 | $414,106,197 | $-- | $-- |
Consumer Discretionary | 551,895,445 | 551,895,445 | -- | -- |
Consumer Staples | 157,275,371 | 157,275,371 | -- | -- |
Energy | 6,789,034 | 6,789,034 | -- | -- |
Financials | 115,205,932 | 115,205,932 | -- | -- |
Health Care | 575,647,208 | 575,647,208 | -- | -- |
Industrials | 302,714,429 | 302,714,429 | -- | -- |
Information Technology | 1,442,160,741 | 1,442,160,741 | -- | -- |
Materials | 48,675,571 | 48,675,571 | -- | -- |
Real Estate | 94,057,393 | 94,057,393 | -- | -- |
Money Market Funds | 370,773,563 | 370,773,563 | -- | -- |
Total Investments in Securities: | $4,079,300,884 | $4,079,300,884 | $-- | $-- |
Derivative Instruments: | | | | |
Assets | | | | |
Futures Contracts | $52,916,076 | $52,916,076 | $-- | $-- |
Total Assets | $52,916,076 | $52,916,076 | $-- | $-- |
Total Derivative Instruments: | $52,916,076 | $52,916,076 | $-- | $-- |
Value of Derivative Instruments
The following table is a summary of the Fund's value of derivative instruments by primary risk exposure as of April 30, 2020. 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 |
Equity Risk | | |
Futures Contracts(a) | $52,916,076 | $0 |
Total Equity Risk | 52,916,076 | 0 |
Total Value of Derivatives | $52,916,076 | $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).
The following table is a summary of the Fund's derivatives inclusive of potential netting arrangements.
Counterparty | Value of Derivative Assets | Value of Derivative Liabilities | Collateral Received(a) | Collateral Pledged(a) | Net(b) |
Exchange Traded Futures | $52,916,076 | $-- | $-- | $-- | $52,916,076 |
(a) Reflects collateral received from or pledged to an individual counterparty, excluding any excess or initial collateral amounts.
(b) Net represents the receivable / (payable) that would be due from / (to) the counterparty in an event of default. Netting may be allowed across transactions traded under the same legal agreement with the same legal entity. Please refer to Derivative Instruments - Risk Exposures and the Use of Derivative Instruments section in the accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Financial Statements
Statement of Assets and Liabilities
| | April 30, 2020 |
Assets | | |
Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $65,970,257) — See accompanying schedule: Unaffiliated issuers (cost $3,064,753,120) | $3,708,527,321 | |
Fidelity Central Funds (cost $370,765,459) | 370,773,563 | |
Total Investment in Securities (cost $3,435,518,579) | | $4,079,300,884 |
Segregated cash with brokers for derivative instruments | | 27,405,000 |
Receivable for fund shares sold | | 8,432,369 |
Dividends receivable | | 1,467,769 |
Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds | | 51,590 |
Total assets | | 4,116,657,612 |
Liabilities | | |
Payable for fund shares redeemed | $3,589,418 | |
Accrued management fee | 108,939 | |
Payable for daily variation margin on futures contracts | 1,760,290 | |
Collateral on securities loaned | 68,707,308 | |
Total liabilities | | 74,165,955 |
Net Assets | | $4,042,491,657 |
Net Assets consist of: | | |
Paid in capital | | $3,366,513,149 |
Total accumulated earnings (loss) | | 675,978,508 |
Net Assets | | $4,042,491,657 |
Net Asset Value and Maximum Offering Price | | |
Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($4,042,491,657 ÷ 234,029,146 shares) | | $17.27 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Operations
| | Year ended April 30, 2020 |
Investment Income | | |
Dividends | | $35,677,562 |
Interest | | 26,817 |
Income from Fidelity Central Funds (including $118,848 from security lending) | | 749,483 |
Total income | | 36,453,862 |
Expenses | | |
Management fee | $1,035,534 | |
Independent trustees' fees and expenses | 10,295 | |
Commitment fees | 6,938 | |
Total expenses before reductions | 1,052,767 | |
Expense reductions | (1,353) | |
Total expenses after reductions | | 1,051,414 |
Net investment income (loss) | | 35,402,448 |
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) | | |
Net realized gain (loss) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | (15,964,023) | |
Fidelity Central Funds | (6,284) | |
Futures contracts | (5,721,252) | |
Total net realized gain (loss) | | (21,691,559) |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | 260,686,691 | |
Fidelity Central Funds | 8,104 | |
Futures contracts | 52,570,531 | |
Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | | 313,265,326 |
Net gain (loss) | | 291,573,767 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | | $326,976,215 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Changes in Net Assets
| Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 |
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets | | |
Operations | | |
Net investment income (loss) | $35,402,448 | $18,913,951 |
Net realized gain (loss) | (21,691,559) | (1,590,088) |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | 313,265,326 | 249,457,926 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | 326,976,215 | 266,781,789 |
Distributions to shareholders | (31,763,878) | (18,453,303) |
Share transactions - net increase (decrease) | 1,506,520,543 | 1,035,948,778 |
Total increase (decrease) in net assets | 1,801,732,880 | 1,284,277,264 |
Net Assets | | |
Beginning of period | 2,240,758,777 | 956,481,513 |
End of period | $4,042,491,657 | $2,240,758,777 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Financial Highlights
Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund
Years ended April 30, | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 A |
Selected Per–Share Data | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $15.75 | $13.62 | $11.60 | $10.00 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | |
Net investment income (loss)B | .20 | .19 | .18 | .13 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | 1.50 | 2.13 | 2.00 | 1.50 |
Total from investment operations | 1.70 | 2.32 | 2.18 | 1.63 |
Distributions from net investment income | (.17) | (.15) | (.13) | (.03) |
Distributions from net realized gain | (.01) | (.04) | (.03) | – |
Total distributions | (.18) | (.19) | (.16) | (.03) |
Net asset value, end of period | $17.27 | $15.75 | $13.62 | $11.60 |
Total ReturnC,D | 10.84% | 17.34% | 18.89% | 16.34% |
Ratios to Average Net AssetsE,F | | | | |
Expenses before reductions | .04% | .04% | .04% | .05%G |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any | .04% | .04% | .04% | .05%G |
Expenses net of all reductions | .04% | .04% | .04% | .05%G |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.20% | 1.30% | 1.33% | 1.40%G |
Supplemental Data | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (000 omitted) | $4,042,492 | $2,240,759 | $141,224 | $758 |
Portfolio turnover rateH | 15% | 14% | 24% | 17%G |
A For the period June 7, 2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017.
B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
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 Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
F Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the Fund. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the Fund during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the Fund.
G Annualized
H Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Notes to Financial Statements
For the period ended April 30, 2020
1. Organization.
Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund (the Fund) is a fund of Fidelity Salem Street Trust (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.
Effective after the close of business November 9, 2018, the Fund's publicly offered shares classes were consolidated into a single share class. The surviving class is Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund (formerly Institutional Premium Class). All prior fiscal period dollar and share amounts for the classes that closed, which are presented in the Notes to Financial Statements, are for the period May 1, 2018 through November 9, 2018.
Effective January 1, 2020, investment advisers Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc., FMR Co., Inc., and Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, merged with and into Fidelity Management & Research Company. In connection with the merger transactions, the resulting, merged investment adviser was then redomiciled from Massachusetts to Delaware, changed its corporate structure from a corporation to a limited liability company, and changed its name to "Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC".
2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds.
The Fund invests 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 Fund's Schedule of Investments lists each of the Fidelity Central Funds held as of period end, if any, as an investment of the Fund, but does not include the underlying holdings of each Fidelity Central Fund. As an Investing Fund, the Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by the investment adviser. Annualized expenses of the Money Market Central Funds as of their most recent shareholder report date ranged from less than .005% to .01%.
A complete unaudited list of holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is available upon request or at the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) website at www.sec.gov. In addition, the financial statements of the Fidelity Central Funds, which are not covered by the Fund's Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC 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 – Investments 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 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. 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.
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 April 30, 2020 is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
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.
Expenses. 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. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.
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 April 30, 2020, 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.
Distributions are declared and recorded on the ex-dividend date. 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 futures contracts, market discount, partnerships and losses deferred due to wash sales.
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 | $804,271,939 |
Gross unrealized depreciation | (169,865,870) |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | $634,406,069 |
Tax Cost | $3,444,894,815 |
The tax-based components of distributable earnings as of period end were as follows:
Undistributed ordinary income | $15,838,851 |
Undistributed long-term capital gain | $25,733,588 |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities and other investments | $634,406,069 |
The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:
| April 30, 2020 | April 30, 2019 |
Ordinary Income | $31,763,878 | $ 16,665,057 |
Long-term Capital Gains | – | 1,788,246 |
Total | $31,763,878 | $ 18,453,303 |
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. A summary of the Fund's derivatives inclusive of potential netting arrangements is presented at the end of the Schedule of Investments.
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. Cash deposited to meet initial margin requirements is presented as segregated cash with brokers for derivative instruments in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.
5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.
Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities, are noted in the table below.
| Purchases ($) | Sales ($) |
Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund | 1,689,414,136 | 441,849,487 |
6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.
Management Fee and Expense Contract. 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 based on an annual rate of .035% of the Fund's average net assets. Under the management contract, the investment adviser pays all other operating expenses, except the compensation of the independent Trustees and certain other expenses such as interest expense, including commitment fees.
Effective April 29, 2020, the Board approved to add an expense contract to the Fund. Under the expense contract, the investment adviser pays all other operating expenses, except the compensation of the independent Trustees, as necessary so that the total expenses do not exceed .035% of average net assets. This expense contract will remain in place through June 30, 2021. In addition, the management fee is reduced by an amount equal to the fees and expenses paid by the Fund to the independent Trustees.
Effective August 1, 2019, the Board approved to change the management fee structure from a flat fee to a unitary fee, and the expense contract was eliminated. There was no change to the total expenses paid by the shareholders.
For the period May 1, 2019 through July 31, 2019, under the expense contract, the investment adviser paid expenses as necessary so that the total expenses did not exceed .035% of average net assets on an annual basis with certain exceptions.
Sub-Adviser. Geode Capital Management, LLC (Geode), serves as sub-adviser for the Fund. Geode provides discretionary investment advisory services to the Fund and is paid by the investment adviser for providing these services.
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. Interfund trades are included within the respective purchases and sales amounts shown in the Purchases and Sales of Investments note.
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. The participating funds have agreed to pay commitment fees on their pro-rata portion of the line of credit, which are reflected in Commitment fees on the Statement of Operations, and are as follows:
| Amount |
Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund | $6,938 |
During the period, there were no borrowings on this line of credit.
8. Security Lending.
The Fund lends portfolio securities from time to time in order to earn additional income. For equity securities, lending agents are used, including National Financial Services (NFS), an affiliate of the Fund. Pursuant to a securities lending agreement, NFS will receive a fee, which is capped at 9.9% of daily lending revenue, for its services as lending agent. The Fund may lend securities to certain qualified borrowers, including NFS. On the settlement date of the loan, the 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 the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. The 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, the Fund may apply collateral received from the borrower against the obligation. The 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. The value of loaned securities and cash collateral at period end are disclosed on the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities. At period end, there were no security loans outstanding with NFS, as affiliated borrower. Total fees paid by the Fund to NFS, as lending agent, amounted to $11,149. 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, and includes $323 from securities loaned to NFS, as affiliated borrower.
9. Expense Reductions.
Through arrangements with the Fund's custodian, credits realized as a result of certain uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses. During the period, custodian credits reduced the Fund's expenses by $1,353.
10. Distributions to Shareholders.
Distributions to shareholders of each class were as follows:
| Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 |
Distributions to shareholders | | |
Investor Class | $– | $61,037 |
Premium Class | – | 2,682,926 |
Institutional Class | – | 831,828 |
Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund | 31,763,878 | 14,877,512 |
Total | $31,763,878 | $18,453,303 |
11. Share Transactions.
Share transactions for each class were as follows and may contain automatic conversions between classes or exchanges between affiliated funds:
| Shares | Shares | Dollars | Dollars |
| Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 | Year ended April 30, 2020 | Year ended April 30, 2019 |
Investor Class | | | | |
Shares sold | – | 956,645 | $– | $14,205,933 |
Reinvestment of distributions | – | 3,859 | – | 56,343 |
Shares redeemed | – | (2,380,735) | – | (34,606,130) |
Net increase (decrease) | – | (1,420,231) | $– | $(20,343,854) |
Premium Class | | | | |
Shares sold | – | 11,355,225 | $– | $167,740,807 |
Reinvestment of distributions | – | 167,590 | – | 2,446,815 |
Shares redeemed | – | (56,084,913) | – | (817,705,407) |
Net increase (decrease) | – | (44,562,098) | $– | $(647,517,785) |
Institutional Class | | | | |
Shares sold | – | 8,415,932 | $– | $123,853,329 |
Reinvestment of distributions | – | 37,653 | – | 549,727 |
Shares redeemed | – | (22,320,265) | – | (325,793,352) |
Net increase (decrease) | – | (13,866,680) | $– | $(201,390,296) |
Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund | | | | |
Shares sold | 147,076,458 | 149,051,711 | $2,402,091,356 | $2,153,168,687 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 1,670,269 | 1,059,885 | 28,219,151 | 13,275,800 |
Shares redeemed | (56,946,676) | (18,249,341) | (923,789,964) | (261,243,774) |
Net increase (decrease) | 91,800,051 | 131,862,255 | $1,506,520,543 | $1,905,200,713 |
12. Other.
The 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 Salem Street Trust and Shareholders of Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund:
Opinion on the Financial Statements and Financial Highlights
We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund (the "Fund"), a fund of Fidelity Salem Street Trust, including the schedule of investments, as of April 30, 2020, 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 three years in the period then ended and for the period from June 7, 2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017, 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 April 30, 2020, 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 three years in the period then ended and for the period from June 7, 2016 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2017, 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 April 30, 2020, by correspondence with the custodian and brokers; when replies were not received from brokers, we performed other auditing procedures. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
/s/ Deloitte & Touche LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
June 10, 2020
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. Except for Jonathan Chiel, each of the Trustees oversees 282 funds. Mr. Chiel oversees 175 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 1-800-544-8544.
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. Abigail P. Johnson is an interested person and currently serves as 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. Arthur E. Johnson serves as Chairman of the Independent Trustees 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 investment-grade bond, money market, asset allocation and certain equity funds, and other Boards oversee Fidelity's high income and other equity funds. The asset allocation funds may invest in Fidelity® funds that are overseen by such other Boards. 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 and Audit Committees. In addition, an ad hoc Board committee of Independent Trustees has worked with FMR to enhance the Board's oversight of investment and financial risks, legal and regulatory risks, technology risks, and operational risks, including the development of additional risk reporting to the Board. 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+
Jonathan Chiel (1957)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Mr. Chiel also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Mr. Chiel is Executive Vice President and General Counsel for FMR LLC (diversified financial services company, 2012-present). Previously, Mr. Chiel served as general counsel (2004-2012) and senior vice president and deputy general counsel (2000-2004) for John Hancock Financial Services; a partner with Choate, Hall & Stewart (1996-2000) (law firm); and an Assistant United States Attorney for the United States Attorney’s Office of the District of Massachusetts (1986-95), including Chief of the Criminal Division (1993-1995). Mr. Chiel is a director on the boards of the Boston Bar Foundation and the Maimonides School.
Abigail P. Johnson (1961)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2009
Trustee
Chairman of the Board of Trustees
Ms. Johnson also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Ms. Johnson serves as Chairman (2016-present), Chief Executive Officer (2014-present), and Director (2007-present) of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company), President of Fidelity Financial Services (2012-present) and President of Personal, Workplace and Institutional Services (2005-present). Ms. Johnson is Chairman and Director of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm, 2011-present). Previously, Ms. Johnson served as Chairman and Director of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2011-2019), Vice Chairman (2007-2016) and President (2013-2016) of FMR LLC, President and a Director of Fidelity Management & Research Company (2001-2005), a Trustee of other investment companies advised by Fidelity Management & Research Company, Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firm), and FMR Co., Inc. (2001-2005), Senior Vice President of the Fidelity® funds (2001-2005), and managed a number of Fidelity® funds. Ms. Abigail P. Johnson and Mr. Arthur E. Johnson are not related.
Jennifer Toolin McAuliffe (1959)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Ms. McAuliffe also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Ms. McAuliffe served as Co-Head of Fixed Income of Fidelity Investments Limited (now known as FIL Limited (FIL)) (diversified financial services company), Director of Research for FIL’s credit and quantitative teams in London, Hong Kong and Tokyo and Director of Research for taxable and municipal bonds at Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. Ms. McAuliffe previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2016). Ms. McAuliffe was previously a lawyer at Ropes & Gray LLP and currently serves as director or trustee of several not-for-profit entities.
* 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+
Elizabeth S. Acton (1951)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2013
Trustee
Ms. Acton also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Acton served as Executive Vice President, Finance (2011-2012), Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer (2002-2011) and Treasurer (2004-2005) of Comerica Incorporated (financial services). Prior to joining Comerica, Ms. Acton held a variety of positions at Ford Motor Company (1983-2002), including Vice President and Treasurer (2000-2002) and Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Ford Motor Credit Company (1998-2000). Ms. Acton currently serves as a member of the Board and Audit and Finance Committees of Beazer Homes USA, Inc. (homebuilding, 2012-present). Ms. Acton previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2013-2016).
Ann E. Dunwoody (1953)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2018
Trustee
General Dunwoody also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. General Dunwoody (United States Army, Retired) was the first woman in U.S. military history to achieve the rank of four-star general and prior to her retirement in 2012 held a variety of positions within the U.S. Army, including Commanding General, U.S. Army Material Command (2008-2012). General Dunwoody currently serves as President of First to Four LLC (leadership and mentoring services, 2012-present), a member of the Board and Nomination and Corporate Governance Committees of Kforce Inc. (professional staffing services, 2016-present) and a member of the Board of Automattic Inc. (software engineering, 2018-present). Previously, General Dunwoody served as a member of the Advisory Board and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of L3 Technologies, Inc. (communication, electronic, sensor and aerospace systems, 2013-2019) and a member of the Board and Audit and Sustainability and Corporate Responsibility Committees of Republic Services, Inc. (waste collection, disposal and recycling, 2013-2016). Ms. Dunwoody also serves on several boards for non-profit organizations, including as a member of the Board, Chair of the Nomination and Governance Committee and a member of the Audit Committee of Logistics Management Institute (consulting non-profit, 2012-present), a member of the Council of Trustees for the Association of the United States Army (advocacy non-profit, 2013-present), a member of the Board of Florida Institute of Technology (2015-present) and a member of the Board of ThanksUSA (military family education non-profit, 2014-present). General Dunwoody previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2018).
John Engler (1948)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2014
Trustee
Mr. Engler also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Engler served as Governor of Michigan (1991-2003), President of the Business Roundtable (2011-2017) and interim President of Michigan State University (2018-2019). Mr. Engler currently serves as a member of the Board of K12 Inc. (technology-based education company, 2012-present). Previously, Mr. Engler served as a member of the Board of Universal Forest Products (manufacturer and distributor of wood and wood-alternative products, 2003-2019) and Trustee of The Munder Funds (2003-2014). Mr. Engler previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2014-2016).
Robert F. Gartland (1951)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2010
Trustee
Mr. Gartland also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Gartland held a variety of positions at Morgan Stanley (financial services, 1979-2007), including Managing Director (1987-2007) and Chase Manhattan Bank (1975-1978). Mr. Gartland previously served as Chairman and an investor in Gartland & Mellina Group Corp. (consulting, 2009-2019), as a member of the Board of National Securities Clearing Corporation (1993-1996) and as Chairman of TradeWeb (2003-2004).
Arthur E. Johnson (1947)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2008
Trustee
Chairman of the Independent Trustees
Mr. Johnson also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Johnson served as Senior Vice President of Corporate Strategic Development of Lockheed Martin Corporation (defense contractor, 1999-2009). Mr. Johnson currently serves as a member of the Board of Booz Allen Hamilton (management consulting, 2011-present). Mr. Johnson previously served as a member of the Board of Eaton Corporation plc (diversified power management, 2009-2019) and a member of the Board of AGL Resources, Inc. (holding company, 2002-2016). Mr. Johnson previously served as Vice Chairman (2015-2018) of the Independent Trustees of certain Fidelity® funds. Mr. Arthur E. Johnson is not related to Ms. Abigail P. Johnson.
Michael E. Kenneally (1954)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2009
Trustee
Vice Chairman of the Independent Trustees
Mr. Kenneally also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Kenneally served as Chairman and Global Chief Executive Officer of Credit Suisse Asset Management and Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer of Bank of America Corporation. Earlier roles at Bank of America included Director of Research, Senior Portfolio Manager for various institutional equity accounts and mutual funds and Portfolio Manager for a number of institutional fixed-income clients. Mr. Kenneally began his career as a Research Analyst in 1983 and was awarded the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation in 1991.
Marie L. Knowles (1946)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2001
Trustee
Ms. Knowles also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Knowles held several positions at Atlantic Richfield Company (diversified energy), including Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (1996-2000), Senior Vice President (1993-1996) and President of ARCO Transportation Company (pipeline and tanker operations, 1993-1996). Ms. Knowles currently serves as a member of the Board of McKesson Corporation (healthcare service, since 2002), a member of the Board of the Santa Catalina Island Company (real estate, 2009-present), a member of the Investment Company Institute Board of Governors and a member of the Governing Council of the Independent Directors Council (2014-present). Ms. Knowles also serves as a member of the Advisory Board for the School of Engineering of the University of Southern California. Ms. Knowles previously served as Chairman (2015-2018) and Vice Chairman (2012-2015) of the Independent Trustees of certain Fidelity® funds.
Mark A. Murray (1954)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Mr. Murray also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Murray served as Co-Chief Executive Officer (2013-2016), President (2006-2013) and Vice Chairman (2013-2020) of Meijer, Inc. Mr. Murray serves as a member of the Board and Nuclear Review and Public Policy and Responsibility Committees of DTE Energy Company (diversified energy company, 2009-present) and a member of the Board and Audit Committee and Chairman of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of Universal Forest Products, Inc. (manufacturer and distributor of wood and wood-alternative products, 2004-2016). Mr. Murray previously served as a member of the Board of Spectrum Health (not-for-profit health system, 2015-2019). Mr. Murray also serves as a member of the Board of many community and professional organizations. Mr. Murray previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2016).
+ 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 an officer may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 245 Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210. Officers appear below in alphabetical order.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupation
Elizabeth Paige Baumann (1968)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2017
Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Officer
Ms. Baumann also serves as AML Officer of other funds. She is Chief AML Officer (2012-present) and Senior Vice President (2014-present) of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Ms. Baumann served as AML Officer of certain funds (2017-2019), as AML Officer of the funds (2012-2016), and Vice President (2007-2014) and Deputy Anti-Money Laundering Officer (2007-2012) of FMR LLC.
Craig S. Brown (1977)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2019
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Brown also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Brown 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).
David J. Carter (1973)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2020
Assistant Secretary
Mr. Carter also serves as Assistant Secretary of other funds. Mr. Carter serves as Vice President, Associate General Counsel (2010-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2005-present).
Jonathan Davis (1968)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2010
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Davis also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Davis serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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
President and Treasurer
Ms. Del Prato also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Del Prato is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2017-present). 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: 2016
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Hogan also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Hogan serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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).
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: 2013
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Maher also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Maher serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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).
Nancy D. Prior (1967)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2014
Vice President
Ms. Prior also serves as Vice President of other funds. Ms. Prior serves as President of Fixed Income (2014-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2002-present). Previously, Ms. Prior served as President (2016-2019) and Director (2014-2019) of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (investment adviser firm), Vice President of Global Asset Allocation Funds (2017-2019); Vice Chairman of FIAM LLC (investment adviser firm, 2014-2018), a Director of FMR Investment Management (UK) Limited (investment adviser firm, 2015-2018), President Multi-Asset Class Strategies of FMR's Global Asset Allocation Division (2017-2018), Vice President of Fidelity's Money Market Funds (2012-2014), and President, Money Market and Short Duration Bond Group of Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) (investment adviser firm, 2013-2014).
Kenneth B. Robins (1969)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2020
Chief Compliance Officer
Mr. Robins also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Robins serves as Compliance Officer of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm, 2016-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2004-present). Previously, Mr. Robins served as Compliance Officer of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2016-2019), as Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2013-2016) and served in other fund officer roles.
Stacie M. Smith (1974)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2013
Assistant Treasurer
Ms. Smith also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Smith serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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
Deputy Treasurer
Mr. Spector also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Spector serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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 Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Wegmann is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2011-present).
Shareholder Expense Example
As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees and other Fund expenses. This Example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the 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 (November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020).
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 under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro-rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's 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 Fund's actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Fund's 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. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro-rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's 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.
| Annualized Expense Ratio-A | Beginning Account Value November 1, 2019 | Ending Account Value April 30, 2020 | Expenses Paid During Period-B November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020 |
Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund | .04% | | | |
Actual | | $1,000.00 | $1,060.90 | $.20 |
Hypothetical-C | | $1,000.00 | $1,024.66 | $.20 |
A Annualized expense ratio reflects expenses net of applicable fee waivers.
B Expenses are equal to the Fund's annualized expense ratio, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period).
C 5% return per year before expenses
Distributions (Unaudited)
The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund voted to pay on June 8, 2020, to shareholders of record at the opening of business on June 5, 2020, a distribution of $.122 per share derived from capital gains realized from sales of portfolio securities and a dividend of $.054 per share from net investment income.
The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended April 30, 2020, $25,733,586, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.
The fund designates 83% and 87% of the dividends distributed in June and December, respectively during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends–received deduction for corporate shareholders.
The fund designates 85% and 88% of the dividends distributed in June and December, respectively during the fiscal year as amounts which may be taken into account as a dividend for the purposes of the maximum rate under section 1(h)(11) of the Internal Revenue Code.
The fund designates 12% and 5% of the dividends distributed in June and December, respectively during the fiscal year as a section 199A dividend.
The fund will notify shareholders in January 2021 of amounts for use in preparing 2020 income tax returns.
Liquidity Risk Management Program
The Securities and Exchange Commission adopted Rule 22e-4 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the Liquidity Rule) to promote effective liquidity risk management throughout the open-end investment company industry, thereby reducing the risk that funds will be unable to meet their redemption obligations and mitigating dilution of the interests of fund shareholders.
The Fund has adopted and implemented a liquidity risk management program pursuant to the Liquidity Rule (the Program) effective December 1, 2018. The Program is reasonably designed to assess and manage the Fund’s liquidity risk and to comply with the requirements of the Liquidity Rule. The Fund’s Board of Trustees (the Board) has designated the Fund’s investment adviser as administrator of the Program. The Fidelity advisers have established a Liquidity Risk Management Committee (the LRM Committee) to manage the Program for each of the Fidelity Funds. The LRM Committee monitors the adequacy and effectiveness of implementation of the Program and on a periodic basis assesses each Fund’s liquidity risk based on a variety of factors including (1) the Fund’s investment strategy, (2) portfolio liquidity and cash flow projections during normal and reasonably foreseeable stressed conditions, (3) shareholder redemptions, (4) borrowings and other funding sources and (5) in the case of exchange-traded funds, certain additional factors including the effect of the Fund’s prices and spreads, market participants, and basket compositions on the overall liquidity of the Fund’s portfolio, as applicable.
In accordance with the Program, each of the Fund’s portfolio investments is classified into one of four liquidity categories described below based on a determination of a reasonable expectation for how long it would take to convert the investment to cash (or sell or dispose of the investment) without significantly changing its market value.
- Highly liquid investments – cash or convertible to cash within three business days or less
- Moderately liquid investments – convertible to cash in three to seven calendar days
- Less liquid investments – can be sold or disposed of, but not settled, within seven calendar days
- Illiquid investments – cannot be sold or disposed of within seven calendar days
Liquidity classification determinations take into account a variety of factors including various market, trading and investment-specific considerations, as well as market depth, and generally utilize analysis from a third-party liquidity metrics service.
The Liquidity Rule places a 15% limit on a fund’s illiquid investments and requires funds that do not primarily hold assets that are highly liquid investments to determine and maintain a minimum percentage of the fund’s net assets to be invested in highly liquid investments (highly liquid investment minimum or HLIM). The Program includes provisions reasonably designed to comply with the 15% limit on illiquid investments and for determining, periodically reviewing and complying with the HLIM requirement as applicable.
At a recent meeting of the Fund’s Board of Trustees, the LRM Committee provided a written report to the Board pertaining to the operation, adequacy, and effectiveness of implementation of the Program for the annual period from December 1, 2018 through November 30, 2019. The report concluded that the Program has been implemented and is operating effectively and is reasonably designed to assess and manage the Fund’s liquidity risk.

LC1-I-ANN-0620
1.9879605.103
Fidelity® Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund
Annual Report
April 30, 2020

See the inside front cover for important information about access to your fund’s shareholder reports.

Beginning on January 1, 2021, as permitted by regulations adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission, paper copies of a fund’s shareholder reports will no longer be sent by mail, unless you specifically request paper copies of the reports from the fund or from your financial intermediary, such as a financial advisor, broker-dealer or bank. Instead, the reports will be made available on a website, and you will be notified by mail each time a report is posted and provided with a website link to access the report.
If you already elected to receive shareholder reports electronically, you will not be affected by this change and you need not take any action. You may elect to receive shareholder reports and other communications from a fund electronically, by contacting your financial intermediary. For Fidelity customers, visit Fidelity's web site or call Fidelity using the contact information listed below.
You may elect to receive all future reports in paper free of charge. If you wish to continue receiving paper copies of your shareholder reports, you may contact your financial intermediary or, if you are a Fidelity customer, visit Fidelity’s website, or call Fidelity at the applicable toll-free number listed below. Your election to receive reports in paper will apply to all funds held with the fund complex/your financial intermediary.
Account Type | Website | Phone Number |
Brokerage, Mutual Fund, or Annuity Contracts: | fidelity.com/mailpreferences | 1-800-343-3548 |
Employer Provided Retirement Accounts: | netbenefits.fidelity.com/preferences (choose 'no' under Required Disclosures to continue to print) | 1-800-343-0860 |
Advisor Sold Accounts Serviced Through Your Financial Intermediary: | Contact Your Financial Intermediary | Your Financial Intermediary's phone number |
Advisor Sold Accounts Serviced by Fidelity: | institutional.fidelity.com | 1-877-208-0098 |
Contents
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 1-800-544-8544 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. © 2020 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:
Effective July 1, 2020, the fund may operate as a non-diversified fund, as defined under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (1940 Act), to the approximate extent the Index is non-diversified. The fund may therefore operate as non-diversified solely as a result of a change in relative market capitalization or index weighting of one or more constituents of the Index.
Early in 2020, the outbreak and spread of a new coronavirus emerged as a public health emergency that had a major influence on financial markets, primarily based on its impact on the global economy and the outlook for corporate earnings. The virus causes a respiratory disease known as COVID-19. On March 11, the World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic, citing sustained risk of further global spread.
In the weeks following, as the crisis worsened, we witnessed an escalating human tragedy with wide-scale social and economic consequences from coronavirus-containment measures. The outbreak of COVID-19 prompted a number of measures to limit the spread, 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. Amid 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.
The situation continues to unfold, and the extent and duration of its impact on financial markets and the economy remain highly uncertain. Extreme events such as the coronavirus 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’re taking extra steps to be responsive to customer needs. We encourage you to visit our websites, 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 April 30, 2020 | Past 1 year | Life of fundA |
Fidelity® Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund | 10.77% | 9.86% |
A From August 17, 2018
The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the Russell 1000® Growth Index performed over the same period.

| Period Ending Values |
| $11,738 | Fidelity® Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund |
| $11,735 | Russell 1000® Growth Index |
Management's Discussion of Fund Performance
Market Recap: The U.S. equity bellwether S&P 500
® index gained 0.86% for the 12 months ending April 30, 2020, as the early-2020 outbreak and spread of the coronavirus hampered global economic growth and the outlook for corporate earnings. Declared a pandemic on March 11, the crisis and containment efforts caused broad contraction in economic activity, along with extreme uncertainty, volatility and dislocation in financial markets. By mid-March, U.S. stocks entered bear-market territory less than a month after hitting an all-time high and extending the longest-running bull market in American history. Following a flattish January to open the year, stocks slid in late February (-8.23%), after a surge in COVID-19 cases outside China pushed investors to safer asset classes. The downtrend continued in March (-12.35%), capping the index’s worst quarterly result since 2008. A historically rapid and expansive U.S. monetary/fiscal-policy response helped mitigate the most acute near-term liquidity issues, and provided a partial offset to the economic disruption. This was evident in April, when the index achieved its highest monthly gain (+12.82%) since 1991, boosted by improving coronavirus trends, plans for reopening the economy and progress on potential treatments. By sector, energy stocks (-38%) fell hard along with the price of crude oil. Financials (-17%) and industrials (-16%) also lagged. In contrast, information technology (+18%) led, followed by health care (+15%), a defensive sector that saw higher demand due to the virus-containment response.
Comments from the Geode Capital Management, LLC, passive equity index team: For the fiscal year, the fund gained 10.77%, compared with an increase of 10.84% for the benchmark Russell 1000
® Growth Index. At the individual-stock level, Apple (+47%), a maker of consumer electronics and personal computers, reported especially strong growth in services and wearable electronics, while software company Microsoft (+38%) benefited from strong earnings growth, a decision to buy back stock and increase its quarterly dividend, and ongoing strength in the company's cloud computing business. Shares of online retail giant Amazon.com (+28%) gained in response to impressive financial results for its holiday quarter, and they also rose sharply in March and April as consumers around the world shopped online for essential goods to limit exposure to the coronavirus. Other notable contributors were electric-vehicle manufacturer Tesla (+225%), which generated strong financial results amid growing demand for its automobiles, and managed-care insurance provider UnitedHealth Group (+27%), whose shares gained as the political prospects for universal health care appeared to dim. On the negative side, shares of aircraft manufacturer Boeing (-62%) were hampered by continued fallout from the company's beleaguered 737 MAX jet. A coronavirus-fueled decline in air travel – and, likely with it, demand for new planes – also weighed on Boeing shares. Shares of real estate investment trust Simon Property Group (-59%) plunged in the first half of March, as the mall owner temporarily closed all its 200 shopping centers, while the retail environment further weakened amid the spread of the coronavirus. Shares of Altria Group (-22%) were hampered by the firm's 35% ownership of Juul Labs, a maker of e-cigarettes and the subject of widespread scrutiny after a vaping illness crisis gripped the US last summer. Also detracting was network-equipment company Cisco Systems (-20%).
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)
Top Ten Stocks as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Microsoft Corp. | 7.9 |
Apple, Inc. | 7.0 |
Amazon.com, Inc. | 5.9 |
Facebook, Inc. Class A | 2.9 |
Alphabet, Inc. Class C | 2.4 |
Alphabet, Inc. Class A | 2.2 |
Visa, Inc. Class A | 2.1 |
UnitedHealth Group, Inc. | 1.9 |
MasterCard, Inc. Class A | 1.6 |
Merck & Co., Inc. | 1.3 |
| 35.2 |
Top Market Sectors as of April 30, 2020
| % of fund's net assets |
Information Technology | 35.1 |
Health Care | 14.2 |
Consumer Discretionary | 13.5 |
Communication Services | 10.0 |
Industrials | 7.5 |
Consumer Staples | 3.8 |
Financials | 2.8 |
Real Estate | 2.3 |
Materials | 1.2 |
Energy | 0.2 |
Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)
As of April 30, 2020* |
| Stocks and Equity Futures | 101.0% |
| Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities)** | (1.0)% |

* Foreign investments - 1.6%
** Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities) are not included in the pie chart
Schedule of Investments April 30, 2020
Showing Percentage of Net Assets
Common Stocks - 90.6% | | | |
| | Shares | Value |
COMMUNICATION SERVICES - 10.0% | | | |
Entertainment - 1.5% | | | |
Electronic Arts, Inc. (a) | | 4,258 | $486,519 |
Live Nation Entertainment, Inc. (a)(b) | | 2,458 | 110,290 |
Madison Square Garden Entertainment Corp. (a) | | 31 | 2,564 |
Netflix, Inc. (a) | | 7,027 | 2,950,286 |
Roku, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,673 | 202,818 |
Spotify Technology SA (a)(b) | | 2,537 | 384,533 |
Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc. (a) | | 777 | 94,056 |
The Madison Square Garden Co. (a) | | 31 | 5,311 |
World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. Class A (b) | | 812 | 36,110 |
Zynga, Inc. (a) | | 4,309 | 32,490 |
| | | 4,304,977 |
Interactive Media & Services - 7.7% | | | |
Alphabet, Inc.: | | | |
Class A (a) | | 4,948 | 6,663,472 |
Class C (a) | | 5,230 | 7,053,492 |
Facebook, Inc. Class A (a) | | 41,679 | 8,532,108 |
IAC/InterActiveCorp (a) | | 829 | 185,265 |
Match Group, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,003 | 77,191 |
TripAdvisor, Inc. | | 1,730 | 34,548 |
Twitter, Inc. (a) | | 14,801 | 424,493 |
| | | 22,970,569 |
Media - 0.8% | | | |
Altice U.S.A., Inc. Class A (a) | | 6,619 | 171,895 |
AMC Networks, Inc. Class A (a) | | 772 | 18,412 |
Cable One, Inc. | | 80 | 153,029 |
Charter Communications, Inc. Class A (a) | | 1,119 | 554,162 |
Comcast Corp. Class A | | 28,023 | 1,054,505 |
Fox Corp. Class B | | 266 | 6,799 |
Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. | | 605 | 10,273 |
Nexstar Broadcasting Group, Inc. Class A | | 626 | 43,845 |
Omnicom Group, Inc. | | 2,088 | 119,079 |
Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc. Class A | | 1,027 | 18,127 |
Sirius XM Holdings, Inc. (b) | | 17,668 | 104,418 |
The New York Times Co. Class A (b) | | 514 | 16,715 |
ViacomCBS, Inc.: | | | |
Class A | | 53 | 1,040 |
Class B | | 5,178 | 89,372 |
| | | 2,361,671 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.0% | | | |
T-Mobile U.S., Inc. (a) | | 436 | 38,281 |
|
TOTAL COMMUNICATION SERVICES | | | 29,675,498 |
|
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 13.5% | | | |
Auto Components - 0.0% | | | |
Aptiv PLC | | 311 | 21,630 |
Automobiles - 0.6% | | | |
Tesla, Inc. (a) | | 2,351 | 1,838,200 |
Distributors - 0.0% | | | |
LKQ Corp. (a) | | 750 | 19,613 |
Pool Corp. | | 720 | 152,395 |
| | | 172,008 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.1% | | | |
Bright Horizons Family Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 1,211 | 141,021 |
Grand Canyon Education, Inc. (a) | | 74 | 6,365 |
H&R Block, Inc. | | 522 | 8,691 |
Service Corp. International | | 1,154 | 42,398 |
ServiceMaster Global Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 364 | 12,394 |
| | | 210,869 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 1.8% | | | |
Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc. (a) | | 509 | 447,182 |
Choice Hotels International, Inc. | | 426 | 31,971 |
Darden Restaurants, Inc. | | 2,709 | 199,897 |
Domino's Pizza, Inc. | | 818 | 296,059 |
Dunkin' Brands Group, Inc. | | 1,506 | 94,637 |
Hilton Grand Vacations, Inc. (a) | | 211 | 4,347 |
Hilton Worldwide Holdings, Inc. | | 5,385 | 407,698 |
Las Vegas Sands Corp. | | 3,047 | 146,317 |
Marriott International, Inc. Class A | | 4,637 | 421,689 |
McDonald's Corp. | | 2,410 | 452,020 |
MGM Mirage, Inc. (b) | | 755 | 12,707 |
Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd. (a) | | 769 | 12,612 |
Planet Fitness, Inc. (a) | | 1,648 | 99,424 |
Six Flags Entertainment Corp. (b) | | 125 | 2,501 |
Starbucks Corp. | | 20,001 | 1,534,677 |
Vail Resorts, Inc. | | 715 | 122,265 |
Wendy's Co. (b) | | 3,531 | 70,126 |
Wyndham Hotels & Resorts, Inc. | | 512 | 19,308 |
Wynn Resorts Ltd. | | 1,572 | 134,453 |
Yum China Holdings, Inc. | | 5,737 | 278,015 |
Yum! Brands, Inc. | | 5,525 | 477,526 |
| | | 5,265,431 |
Household Durables - 0.1% | | | |
Lennar Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 2,133 | 106,799 |
Class B | | 111 | 4,235 |
NVR, Inc. (a) | | 67 | 207,700 |
Tempur Sealy International, Inc. (a) | | 928 | 49,880 |
| | | 368,614 |
Internet & Direct Marketing Retail - 6.6% | | | |
Amazon.com, Inc. (a) | | 7,095 | 17,553,030 |
eBay, Inc. | | 12,516 | 498,512 |
Etsy, Inc. (a) | | 2,278 | 147,774 |
Expedia, Inc. | | 1,948 | 138,269 |
GrubHub, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,660 | 79,331 |
The Booking Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 703 | 1,040,841 |
Wayfair LLC Class A (a)(b) | | 1,228 | 152,321 |
| | | 19,610,078 |
Leisure Products - 0.1% | | | |
Hasbro, Inc. | | 2,435 | 175,831 |
Mattel, Inc. (a)(b) | | 4,329 | 37,749 |
Polaris, Inc. | | 944 | 66,958 |
| | | 280,538 |
Multiline Retail - 0.4% | | | |
Dollar General Corp. | | 4,718 | 827,065 |
Dollar Tree, Inc. (a) | | 1,685 | 134,244 |
Nordstrom, Inc. | | 1,965 | 36,903 |
Ollie's Bargain Outlet Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 965 | 65,533 |
Target Corp. | | 477 | 52,346 |
| | | 1,116,091 |
Specialty Retail - 2.8% | | | |
Advance Auto Parts, Inc. | | 289 | 34,943 |
AutoZone, Inc. (a) | | 472 | 481,591 |
Best Buy Co., Inc. | | 839 | 64,376 |
Burlington Stores, Inc. (a) | | 1,317 | 240,603 |
CarMax, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,678 | 123,585 |
Carvana Co. Class A (a) | | 900 | 72,099 |
Five Below, Inc. (a) | | 1,030 | 92,865 |
Floor & Decor Holdings, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 1,236 | 52,406 |
L Brands, Inc. | | 603 | 7,170 |
Lowe's Companies, Inc. | | 15,539 | 1,627,710 |
O'Reilly Automotive, Inc. (a) | | 1,264 | 488,334 |
Ross Stores, Inc. | | 6,007 | 548,800 |
The Home Depot, Inc. | | 12,462 | 2,739,521 |
TJX Companies, Inc. | | 24,348 | 1,194,269 |
Tractor Supply Co. | | 2,367 | 240,085 |
Ulta Beauty, Inc. (a) | | 944 | 205,716 |
Williams-Sonoma, Inc. (b) | | 269 | 16,635 |
| | | 8,230,708 |
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 1.0% | | | |
Capri Holdings Ltd. (a) | | 1,058 | 16,135 |
Carter's, Inc. | | 349 | 27,292 |
Columbia Sportswear Co. (b) | | 363 | 26,459 |
Hanesbrands, Inc. (b) | | 5,143 | 51,121 |
lululemon athletica, Inc. (a) | | 2,023 | 452,100 |
NIKE, Inc. Class B | | 23,378 | 2,038,094 |
Skechers U.S.A., Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a) | | 879 | 24,770 |
Under Armour, Inc.: | | | |
Class A (sub. vtg.) (a)(b) | | 2,323 | 24,206 |
Class C (non-vtg.) (a) | | 2,227 | 20,644 |
VF Corp. | | 6,074 | 352,899 |
| | | 3,033,720 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | | 40,147,887 |
|
CONSUMER STAPLES - 3.8% | | | |
Beverages - 1.8% | | | |
Brown-Forman Corp.: | | | |
Class A | | 784 | 44,468 |
Class B (non-vtg.) | | 3,168 | 197,050 |
Monster Beverage Corp. (a) | | 5,861 | 362,268 |
PepsiCo, Inc. | | 18,777 | 2,484,009 |
The Coca-Cola Co. | | 51,673 | 2,371,274 |
| | | 5,459,069 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 0.9% | | | |
Casey's General Stores, Inc. | | 83 | 12,567 |
Costco Wholesale Corp. | | 7,154 | 2,167,662 |
Grocery Outlet Holding Corp. | | 76 | 2,529 |
Sprouts Farmers Market LLC (a) | | 500 | 10,390 |
Sysco Corp. | | 9,161 | 515,489 |
| | | 2,708,637 |
Food Products - 0.3% | | | |
Campbell Soup Co. | | 1,447 | 72,321 |
Kellogg Co. | | 1,471 | 96,351 |
Lamb Weston Holdings, Inc. | | 687 | 42,154 |
McCormick & Co., Inc. (non-vtg.) | | 1,306 | 204,833 |
Pilgrim's Pride Corp. (a) | | 314 | 6,908 |
Post Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 308 | 28,290 |
The Hershey Co. | | 2,191 | 290,154 |
| | | 741,011 |
Household Products - 0.3% | | | |
Church & Dwight Co., Inc. | | 4,471 | 312,925 |
Clorox Co. | | 1,967 | 366,727 |
Procter & Gamble Co. | | 2,366 | 278,880 |
Reynolds Consumer Products, Inc. | | 301 | 9,761 |
| | | 968,293 |
Personal Products - 0.3% | | | |
Estee Lauder Companies, Inc. Class A | | 4,376 | 771,926 |
Herbalife Nutrition Ltd. (a)(b) | | 260 | 9,711 |
| | | 781,637 |
Tobacco - 0.2% | | | |
Altria Group, Inc. | | 17,438 | 684,442 |
|
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | | 11,343,089 |
|
ENERGY - 0.2% | | | |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 0.2% | | | |
Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. | | 4,971 | 107,473 |
Cheniere Energy, Inc. (a) | | 2,926 | 136,615 |
Diamondback Energy, Inc. | | 610 | 26,559 |
Equitrans Midstream Corp. (b) | | 350 | 2,933 |
ONEOK, Inc. | | 2,606 | 77,998 |
Parsley Energy, Inc. Class A | | 3,083 | 29,134 |
Pioneer Natural Resources Co. | | 1,362 | 121,640 |
| | | 502,352 |
FINANCIALS - 2.8% | | | |
Banks - 0.0% | | | |
CIT Group, Inc. | | 149 | 2,828 |
Comerica, Inc. | | 870 | 30,328 |
First Republic Bank | | 545 | 56,838 |
Prosperity Bancshares, Inc. | | 188 | 11,267 |
Signature Bank | | 709 | 75,991 |
SVB Financial Group (a) | | 70 | 13,522 |
Synovus Financial Corp. | | 181 | 3,803 |
Western Alliance Bancorp. | | 173 | 6,207 |
| | | 200,784 |
Capital Markets - 1.7% | | | |
Ameriprise Financial, Inc. | | 322 | 37,011 |
Cboe Global Markets, Inc. | | 544 | 54,063 |
Charles Schwab Corp. | | 13,784 | 519,932 |
E*TRADE Financial Corp. | | 752 | 30,539 |
Evercore, Inc. Class A | | 244 | 12,590 |
FactSet Research Systems, Inc. | | 756 | 207,900 |
Interactive Brokers Group, Inc. | | 333 | 13,653 |
Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. | | 4,212 | 376,763 |
Lazard Ltd. Class A | | 674 | 18,535 |
LPL Financial | | 1,568 | 94,425 |
MarketAxess Holdings, Inc. | | 722 | 328,517 |
Moody's Corp. | | 3,312 | 807,797 |
Morningstar, Inc. | | 371 | 57,861 |
MSCI, Inc. | | 1,643 | 537,261 |
Raymond James Financial, Inc. | | 553 | 36,454 |
S&P Global, Inc. | | 4,969 | 1,455,321 |
SEI Investments Co. | | 1,156 | 58,910 |
T. Rowe Price Group, Inc. | | 1,257 | 145,347 |
TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. | | 4,372 | 171,688 |
Virtu Financial, Inc. Class A | | 341 | 7,969 |
| | | 4,972,536 |
Consumer Finance - 0.3% | | | |
American Express Co. | | 7,541 | 688,116 |
Credit Acceptance Corp. (a)(b) | | 197 | 61,379 |
Discover Financial Services | | 2,535 | 108,929 |
LendingTree, Inc. (a) | | 142 | 35,411 |
Synchrony Financial | | 4,056 | 80,268 |
| | | 974,103 |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.0% | | | |
Voya Financial, Inc. | | 431 | 19,468 |
Insurance - 0.8% | | | |
Alleghany Corp. | | 9 | 4,803 |
Aon PLC | | 4,702 | 811,894 |
Arch Capital Group Ltd. (a) | | 937 | 22,516 |
Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. | | 718 | 56,363 |
Athene Holding Ltd. (a) | | 1,035 | 27,945 |
Axis Capital Holdings Ltd. | | 153 | 5,600 |
Brown & Brown, Inc. | | 386 | 13,861 |
Erie Indemnity Co. Class A | | 300 | 53,418 |
Everest Re Group Ltd. | | 223 | 38,608 |
Kemper Corp. | | 215 | 14,452 |
Markel Corp. (a) | | 16 | 13,853 |
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. | | 8,656 | 842,488 |
Primerica, Inc. | | 541 | 56,215 |
Progressive Corp. | | 3,728 | 288,174 |
RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd. | | 307 | 44,825 |
The Travelers Companies, Inc. | | 509 | 51,516 |
| | | 2,346,531 |
|
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | | 8,513,422 |
|
HEALTH CARE - 14.2% | | | |
Biotechnology - 2.7% | | | |
AbbVie, Inc. | | 29,653 | 2,437,477 |
Agios Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 85 | 3,497 |
Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 2,614 | 280,927 |
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 1,762 | 232,055 |
Amgen, Inc. | | 8,953 | 2,141,737 |
Biogen, Inc. (a) | | 660 | 195,908 |
BioMarin Pharmaceutical, Inc. (a) | | 3,041 | 279,833 |
Exact Sciences Corp. (a)(b) | | 2,712 | 214,194 |
Exelixis, Inc. (a) | | 2,253 | 55,638 |
Incyte Corp. (a) | | 2,955 | 288,585 |
Ionis Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 2,325 | 129,107 |
Moderna, Inc. (a)(b) | | 3,936 | 181,017 |
Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc. (a) | | 1,783 | 174,984 |
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 8 | 4,207 |
Sage Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 925 | 36,057 |
Sarepta Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | | 1,352 | 159,374 |
Seattle Genetics, Inc. (a) | | 1,854 | 254,424 |
Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | | 4,411 | 1,108,043 |
| | | 8,177,064 |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 3.3% | | | |
Abbott Laboratories | | 14,840 | 1,366,616 |
Abiomed, Inc. (a) | | 861 | 164,666 |
Align Technology, Inc. (a) | | 1,327 | 285,106 |
Baxter International, Inc. | | 4,348 | 386,015 |
Becton, Dickinson & Co. | | 424 | 107,073 |
Boston Scientific Corp. (a) | | 27,639 | 1,035,910 |
Cantel Medical Corp. | | 379 | 14,023 |
Danaher Corp. | | 639 | 104,451 |
DexCom, Inc. (a) | | 1,808 | 606,042 |
Edwards Lifesciences Corp. (a) | | 4,108 | 893,490 |
Envista Holdings Corp. (a) | | 1,667 | 32,456 |
Hill-Rom Holdings, Inc. | | 673 | 75,706 |
Hologic, Inc. (a) | | 4,003 | 200,550 |
ICU Medical, Inc. (a) | | 99 | 21,712 |
IDEXX Laboratories, Inc. (a) | | 1,443 | 400,577 |
Insulet Corp. (a) | | 1,208 | 241,262 |
Intuitive Surgical, Inc. (a) | | 1,940 | 991,107 |
Masimo Corp. (a) | | 946 | 202,359 |
Penumbra, Inc. (a) | | 603 | 106,924 |
ResMed, Inc. | | 2,771 | 430,392 |
STERIS PLC | | 128 | 18,240 |
Stryker Corp. | | 6,827 | 1,272,758 |
Teleflex, Inc. | | 968 | 324,667 |
The Cooper Companies, Inc. | | 117 | 33,544 |
Varian Medical Systems, Inc. (a) | | 1,776 | 203,139 |
West Pharmaceutical Services, Inc. | | 1,136 | 214,999 |
| | | 9,733,784 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 2.9% | | | |
AmerisourceBergen Corp. | | 2,863 | 256,697 |
Anthem, Inc. | | 1,479 | 415,200 |
Centene Corp. (a) | | 9,805 | 652,817 |
Chemed Corp. | | 310 | 129,137 |
Cigna Corp. | | 2,222 | 435,023 |
Encompass Health Corp. | | 1,014 | 67,178 |
Guardant Health, Inc. (a) | | 702 | 54,026 |
HCA Holdings, Inc. | | 3,201 | 351,726 |
Henry Schein, Inc. (a) | | 546 | 29,790 |
Humana, Inc. | | 1,120 | 427,638 |
Laboratory Corp. of America Holdings (a) | | 111 | 18,254 |
McKesson Corp. | | 322 | 45,483 |
Molina Healthcare, Inc. (a) | | 927 | 152,000 |
UnitedHealth Group, Inc. | | 18,924 | 5,534,702 |
| | | 8,569,671 |
Health Care Technology - 0.3% | | | |
Cerner Corp. | | 5,435 | 377,135 |
Change Healthcare, Inc. | | 2,049 | 23,850 |
Veeva Systems, Inc. Class A (a) | | 2,609 | 497,797 |
| | | 898,782 |
Life Sciences Tools & Services - 1.4% | | | |
Adaptive Biotechnologies Corp. | | 856 | 27,401 |
Agilent Technologies, Inc. | | 536 | 41,090 |
Avantor, Inc. | | 4,265 | 71,695 |
Bio-Techne Corp. | | 754 | 169,650 |
Bruker Corp. | | 1,883 | 74,040 |
Charles River Laboratories International, Inc. (a) | | 925 | 133,820 |
Illumina, Inc. (a) | | 2,487 | 793,428 |
IQVIA Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,461 | 208,324 |
Mettler-Toledo International, Inc. (a) | | 466 | 335,492 |
PerkinElmer, Inc. | | 452 | 40,920 |
PPD, Inc. | | 768 | 18,355 |
PRA Health Sciences, Inc. (a) | | 1,186 | 114,449 |
Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. | | 5,429 | 1,816,978 |
Waters Corp. (a) | | 1,346 | 251,702 |
| | | 4,097,344 |
Pharmaceuticals - 3.6% | | | |
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. | | 27,677 | 1,683,038 |
Eli Lilly & Co. | | 16,961 | 2,622,849 |
Horizon Pharma PLC (a) | | 411 | 14,812 |
Jazz Pharmaceuticals PLC (a) | | 1,044 | 115,101 |
Johnson & Johnson | | 7,918 | 1,188,017 |
Merck & Co., Inc. | | 48,206 | 3,824,664 |
Nektar Therapeutics (a)(b) | | 433 | 8,314 |
Zoetis, Inc. Class A | | 9,609 | 1,242,540 |
| | | 10,699,335 |
|
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | | 42,175,980 |
|
INDUSTRIALS - 7.5% | | | |
Aerospace & Defense - 2.1% | | | |
BWX Technologies, Inc. | | 1,608 | 85,320 |
General Dynamics Corp. | | 325 | 42,452 |
Harris Corp. | | 2,194 | 424,978 |
HEICO Corp. | | 887 | 77,701 |
HEICO Corp. Class A | | 1,450 | 104,879 |
Hexcel Corp. | | 1,597 | 55,240 |
Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc. | | 661 | 126,522 |
Lockheed Martin Corp. | | 4,951 | 1,926,236 |
Northrop Grumman Corp. | | 3,122 | 1,032,352 |
Raytheon Technologies Corp. | | 8,239 | 533,970 |
Spirit AeroSystems Holdings, Inc. Class A | | 1,692 | 37,495 |
The Boeing Co. | | 10,656 | 1,502,709 |
TransDigm Group, Inc. | | 848 | 307,892 |
| | | 6,257,746 |
Air Freight & Logistics - 0.6% | | | |
C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc. | | 2,057 | 145,841 |
Expeditors International of Washington, Inc. | | 2,553 | 182,808 |
United Parcel Service, Inc. Class B | | 13,924 | 1,318,046 |
XPO Logistics, Inc. (a) | | 996 | 66,473 |
| | | 1,713,168 |
Airlines - 0.1% | | | |
Alaska Air Group, Inc. | | 1,008 | 32,780 |
American Airlines Group, Inc. | | 78 | 937 |
Delta Air Lines, Inc. | | 2,104 | 54,515 |
JetBlue Airways Corp. (a) | | 445 | 4,334 |
Southwest Airlines Co. | | 5,331 | 166,594 |
United Airlines Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 404 | 11,950 |
| | | 271,110 |
Building Products - 0.3% | | | |
A.O. Smith Corp. | | 383 | 16,232 |
Allegion PLC | | 1,386 | 139,348 |
Armstrong World Industries, Inc. | | 895 | 68,987 |
Fortune Brands Home & Security, Inc. | | 837 | 40,343 |
Lennox International, Inc. | | 717 | 133,850 |
Trane Technologies PLC | | 4,316 | 377,305 |
| | | 776,065 |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.5% | | | |
Cintas Corp. | | 1,401 | 310,784 |
Copart, Inc. (a) | | 3,446 | 276,059 |
IAA Spinco, Inc. (a) | | 2,267 | 87,506 |
KAR Auction Services, Inc. | | 1,993 | 29,855 |
Republic Services, Inc. | | 90 | 7,051 |
Rollins, Inc. | | 2,559 | 102,360 |
Waste Management, Inc. | | 6,510 | 651,130 |
| | | 1,464,745 |
Construction & Engineering - 0.0% | | | |
Quanta Services, Inc. | | 878 | 31,924 |
Electrical Equipment - 0.3% | | | |
Acuity Brands, Inc. | | 177 | 15,326 |
AMETEK, Inc. | | 3,997 | 335,228 |
Emerson Electric Co. | | 963 | 54,920 |
Hubbell, Inc. Class B | | 543 | 67,565 |
Rockwell Automation, Inc. | | 2,365 | 448,120 |
Sensata Technologies, Inc. PLC (a) | | 1,224 | 44,529 |
| | | 965,688 |
Industrial Conglomerates - 0.8% | | | |
3M Co. | | 8,513 | 1,293,295 |
Carlisle Companies, Inc. | | 975 | 117,936 |
Honeywell International, Inc. | | 7,027 | 997,131 |
Roper Technologies, Inc. | | 289 | 98,558 |
| | | 2,506,920 |
Machinery - 1.0% | | | |
Allison Transmission Holdings, Inc. | | 2,778 | 100,953 |
Caterpillar, Inc. | | 793 | 92,289 |
Deere & Co. | | 548 | 79,493 |
Donaldson Co., Inc. | | 2,739 | 120,050 |
Dover Corp. | | 1,155 | 108,166 |
Flowserve Corp. | | 1,158 | 32,621 |
Fortive Corp. | | 1,205 | 77,120 |
Gardner Denver Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 4,106 | 119,402 |
Graco, Inc. | | 2,982 | 133,176 |
IDEX Corp. | | 707 | 108,616 |
Illinois Tool Works, Inc. | | 6,370 | 1,035,125 |
Lincoln Electric Holdings, Inc. | | 999 | 80,429 |
Middleby Corp. (a) | | 1,284 | 71,429 |
Nordson Corp. | | 978 | 157,370 |
Toro Co. | | 2,001 | 127,684 |
WABCO Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 951 | 127,795 |
Westinghouse Air Brake Co. | | 915 | 51,624 |
Woodward, Inc. | | 823 | 49,841 |
Xylem, Inc. | | 3,303 | 237,486 |
| | | 2,910,669 |
Professional Services - 0.6% | | | |
CoreLogic, Inc. | | 76 | 2,920 |
CoStar Group, Inc. (a) | | 613 | 397,383 |
Equifax, Inc. | | 1,972 | 273,911 |
IHS Markit Ltd. | | 4,935 | 332,126 |
Nielsen Holdings PLC | | 750 | 11,048 |
Robert Half International, Inc. | | 2,331 | 110,186 |
TransUnion Holding Co., Inc. | | 3,847 | 303,105 |
Verisk Analytics, Inc. | | 2,719 | 415,545 |
| | | 1,846,224 |
Road & Rail - 1.0% | | | |
CSX Corp. | | 2,967 | 196,504 |
J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc. | | 499 | 50,459 |
Landstar System, Inc. | | 703 | 72,627 |
Lyft, Inc. (a) | | 394 | 12,935 |
Norfolk Southern Corp. | | 634 | 108,477 |
Old Dominion Freight Lines, Inc. | | 784 | 113,907 |
Uber Technologies, Inc. | | 1,911 | 57,846 |
Union Pacific Corp. | | 13,980 | 2,233,864 |
| | | 2,846,619 |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.2% | | | |
Air Lease Corp. Class A | | 123 | 3,216 |
Fastenal Co. | | 8,597 | 311,383 |
United Rentals, Inc. (a) | | 1,050 | 134,925 |
W.W. Grainger, Inc. | | 910 | 250,778 |
| | | 700,302 |
|
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | | 22,291,180 |
|
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 35.1% | | | |
Communications Equipment - 1.3% | | | |
Arista Networks, Inc. (a) | | 1,189 | 260,748 |
Cisco Systems, Inc. | | 71,394 | 3,025,678 |
F5 Networks, Inc. (a) | | 1,025 | 142,742 |
Motorola Solutions, Inc. | | 2,526 | 363,264 |
Ubiquiti, Inc. (b) | | 157 | 25,439 |
| | | 3,817,871 |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 0.6% | | | |
Amphenol Corp. Class A | | 5,599 | 494,168 |
CDW Corp. | | 2,403 | 266,252 |
Cognex Corp. | | 2,982 | 164,726 |
Corning, Inc. | | 3,965 | 87,270 |
Dolby Laboratories, Inc. Class A | | 141 | 8,464 |
FLIR Systems, Inc. | | 191 | 8,289 |
IPG Photonics Corp. (a) | | 42 | 5,432 |
Jabil, Inc. | | 540 | 15,358 |
Keysight Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 3,562 | 344,695 |
National Instruments Corp. | | 120 | 4,610 |
Trimble, Inc. (a) | | 770 | 26,665 |
Zebra Technologies Corp. Class A (a) | | 1,083 | 248,722 |
| | | 1,674,651 |
IT Services - 8.5% | | | |
Accenture PLC Class A | | 12,641 | 2,340,987 |
Akamai Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 2,839 | 277,399 |
Alliance Data Systems Corp. | | 116 | 5,808 |
Automatic Data Processing, Inc. | | 7,242 | 1,062,329 |
Black Knight, Inc. (a) | | 2,921 | 206,135 |
Booz Allen Hamilton Holding Corp. Class A | | 2,778 | 204,016 |
Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. | | 2,222 | 257,752 |
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. Class A | | 59 | 3,423 |
EPAM Systems, Inc. (a) | | 998 | 220,448 |
Euronet Worldwide, Inc. (a) | | 944 | 86,621 |
Fidelity National Information Services, Inc. | | 7,398 | 975,722 |
Fiserv, Inc. (a) | | 9,317 | 960,210 |
FleetCor Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 1,678 | 404,818 |
Gartner, Inc. (a) | | 1,827 | 217,066 |
Genpact Ltd. | | 3,519 | 121,159 |
Global Payments, Inc. | | 5,950 | 987,819 |
GoDaddy, Inc. (a) | | 3,441 | 238,909 |
IBM Corp. | | 10,693 | 1,342,613 |
Jack Henry & Associates, Inc. | | 1,358 | 222,101 |
MasterCard, Inc. Class A | | 17,736 | 4,876,868 |
MongoDB, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 850 | 137,811 |
Okta, Inc. (a) | | 2,061 | 311,829 |
Paychex, Inc. | | 5,298 | 363,019 |
PayPal Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 19,703 | 2,423,469 |
Sabre Corp. | | 812 | 5,903 |
Square, Inc. (a) | | 6,808 | 443,473 |
Switch, Inc. Class A | | 1,101 | 18,904 |
The Western Union Co. | | 1,830 | 34,898 |
Twilio, Inc. Class A (a) | | 2,404 | 269,969 |
VeriSign, Inc. (a) | | 1,083 | 226,878 |
Visa, Inc. Class A | | 34,209 | 6,113,832 |
WEX, Inc. (a) | | 918 | 121,470 |
| | | 25,483,658 |
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 3.5% | | | |
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (a) | | 16,757 | 877,899 |
Applied Materials, Inc. | | 5,018 | 249,294 |
Broadcom, Inc. | | 6,224 | 1,690,563 |
Cree, Inc. (a) | | 138 | 5,952 |
Entegris, Inc. | | 1,742 | 94,469 |
KLA-Tencor Corp. | | 2,352 | 385,940 |
Lam Research Corp. | | 1,879 | 479,671 |
Microchip Technology, Inc. | | 69 | 6,053 |
Monolithic Power Systems, Inc. | | 552 | 110,350 |
NVIDIA Corp. | | 9,511 | 2,779,875 |
Qualcomm, Inc. | | 18,333 | 1,442,257 |
Teradyne, Inc. | | 2,491 | 155,787 |
Texas Instruments, Inc. | | 14,223 | 1,650,864 |
Universal Display Corp. | | 675 | 101,331 |
Xilinx, Inc. | | 3,364 | 294,014 |
| | | 10,324,319 |
Software - 14.1% | | | |
2U, Inc. (a)(b) | | 347 | 8,241 |
Adobe, Inc. (a) | | 8,118 | 2,870,850 |
Alteryx, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 936 | 105,936 |
Anaplan, Inc. (a) | | 1,663 | 67,950 |
ANSYS, Inc. (a) | | 1,415 | 370,489 |
Aspen Technology, Inc. (a) | | 1,419 | 145,093 |
Atlassian Corp. PLC (a) | | 2,362 | 367,267 |
Autodesk, Inc. (a) | | 2,815 | 526,771 |
Avalara, Inc. (a) | | 892 | 79,718 |
Bill.Com Holdings, Inc. (a)(b) | | 158 | 9,305 |
Cadence Design Systems, Inc. (a) | | 4,648 | 377,092 |
CDK Global, Inc. | | 2,756 | 108,256 |
Ceridian HCM Holding, Inc. (a) | | 1,479 | 87,217 |
Citrix Systems, Inc. | | 1,708 | 247,677 |
Coupa Software, Inc. (a) | | 1,290 | 227,156 |
DocuSign, Inc. (a) | | 3,193 | 334,467 |
Dropbox, Inc. Class A (a) | | 4,351 | 91,458 |
Dynatrace, Inc. | | 2,006 | 59,879 |
Elastic NV (a) | | 1,078 | 69,143 |
Fair Isaac Corp. (a) | | 562 | 198,352 |
FireEye, Inc. (a) | | 3,649 | 42,000 |
Fortinet, Inc. (a) | | 2,828 | 304,689 |
Guidewire Software, Inc. (a) | | 1,768 | 160,605 |
HubSpot, Inc. (a)(b) | | 830 | 139,963 |
Intuit, Inc. | | 4,164 | 1,123,489 |
Manhattan Associates, Inc. (a) | | 1,182 | 83,851 |
Medallia, Inc. (b) | | 995 | 21,373 |
Microsoft Corp. | | 131,367 | 23,542,275 |
New Relic, Inc. (a) | | 955 | 51,274 |
Nutanix, Inc. Class A (a) | | 3,543 | 72,596 |
Oracle Corp. | | 39,950 | 2,116,152 |
Pagerduty, Inc. | | 789 | 16,656 |
Palo Alto Networks, Inc. (a) | | 1,904 | 374,155 |
Parametric Technology Corp. (a) | | 2,128 | 147,364 |
Paycom Software, Inc. (a) | | 969 | 252,928 |
Paylocity Holding Corp. (a) | | 727 | 83,263 |
Pegasystems, Inc. | | 698 | 58,367 |
Pluralsight, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,049 | 17,246 |
Proofpoint, Inc. (a) | | 1,115 | 135,729 |
RealPage, Inc. (a) | | 1,591 | 102,604 |
RingCentral, Inc. (a) | | 1,479 | 337,996 |
Salesforce.com, Inc. (a) | | 16,785 | 2,718,331 |
ServiceNow, Inc. (a) | | 3,709 | 1,303,862 |
Smartsheet, Inc. (a) | | 1,620 | 85,406 |
SolarWinds, Inc. (a)(b) | | 217 | 3,685 |
Splunk, Inc. (a) | | 2,661 | 373,498 |
SS&C Technologies Holdings, Inc. | | 4,009 | 221,136 |
Synopsys, Inc. (a) | | 2,513 | 394,843 |
Teradata Corp. (a) | | 2,017 | 49,598 |
The Trade Desk, Inc. (a)(b) | | 804 | 235,234 |
Tyler Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 782 | 250,780 |
VMware, Inc. Class A (a)(b) | | 1,488 | 195,702 |
Workday, Inc. Class A (a) | | 2,783 | 428,304 |
Zendesk, Inc. (a) | | 2,255 | 173,364 |
Zscaler, Inc. (a)(b) | | 1,388 | 93,107 |
| | | 42,063,742 |
Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals - 7.1% | | | |
Apple, Inc. | | 71,160 | 20,906,808 |
Dell Technologies, Inc. (a) | | 2,238 | 95,540 |
HP, Inc. | | 1,355 | 21,016 |
NCR Corp. (a) | | 2,311 | 47,422 |
NetApp, Inc. | | 4,017 | 175,824 |
Pure Storage, Inc. Class A (a) | | 4,620 | 66,528 |
| | | 21,313,138 |
|
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | | 104,677,379 |
|
MATERIALS - 1.2% | | | |
Chemicals - 0.8% | | | |
Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. | | 568 | 128,129 |
Axalta Coating Systems Ltd. (a) | | 1,170 | 23,096 |
CF Industries Holdings, Inc. | | 368 | 10,120 |
Ecolab, Inc. | | 4,997 | 966,920 |
Element Solutions, Inc. (a) | | 760 | 7,790 |
NewMarket Corp. | | 109 | 44,847 |
PPG Industries, Inc. | | 1,510 | 137,153 |
RPM International, Inc. | | 388 | 25,767 |
Sherwin-Williams Co. | | 1,657 | 888,765 |
The Scotts Miracle-Gro Co. Class A | | 722 | 89,550 |
W.R. Grace & Co. | | 1,376 | 64,988 |
| | | 2,387,125 |
Construction Materials - 0.1% | | | |
Eagle Materials, Inc. | | 633 | 38,619 |
Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. | | 348 | 66,200 |
Vulcan Materials Co. | | 2,300 | 259,831 |
| | | 364,650 |
Containers & Packaging - 0.3% | | | |
Aptargroup, Inc. | | 469 | 50,221 |
Avery Dennison Corp. | | 1,490 | 164,481 |
Ball Corp. | | 6,393 | 419,317 |
Berry Global Group, Inc. (a) | | 903 | 35,930 |
Crown Holdings, Inc. (a) | | 1,375 | 88,564 |
Sealed Air Corp. | | 191 | 5,461 |
| | | 763,974 |
Metals & Mining - 0.0% | | | |
Royal Gold, Inc. | | 368 | 45,091 |
Southern Copper Corp. | | 980 | 31,791 |
| | | 76,882 |
|
TOTAL MATERIALS | | | 3,592,631 |
|
REAL ESTATE - 2.3% | | | |
Equity Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) - 2.3% | | | |
American Homes 4 Rent Class A | | 2,436 | 58,805 |
American Tower Corp. | | 8,732 | 2,078,216 |
Americold Realty Trust | | 3,679 | 112,541 |
Brookfield Property REIT, Inc. Class A | | 1,763 | 17,269 |
Colony Capital, Inc. | | 472 | 1,090 |
CoreSite Realty Corp. | | 582 | 70,533 |
Crown Castle International Corp. | | 8,230 | 1,312,109 |
Equinix, Inc. | | 1,675 | 1,130,960 |
Equity Lifestyle Properties, Inc. | | 3,238 | 195,284 |
Extra Space Storage, Inc. | | 1,879 | 165,803 |
Iron Mountain, Inc. | | 637 | 15,403 |
Lamar Advertising Co. Class A | | 1,846 | 106,422 |
Outfront Media, Inc. | | 368 | 5,774 |
Public Storage | | 2,150 | 398,718 |
SBA Communications Corp. Class A | | 2,234 | 647,681 |
Simon Property Group, Inc. | | 5,629 | 375,848 |
Sun Communities, Inc. | | 394 | 52,954 |
UDR, Inc. | | 285 | 10,679 |
| | | 6,756,089 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.0% | | | |
CBRE Group, Inc. (a) | | 2,941 | 126,257 |
Howard Hughes Corp. (a) | | 358 | 19,389 |
Jones Lang LaSalle, Inc. | | 217 | 22,911 |
| | | 168,557 |
|
TOTAL REAL ESTATE | | | 6,924,646 |
|
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS | | | |
(Cost $238,044,348) | | | 269,844,064 |
|
Money Market Funds - 10.0% | | | |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund 0.16% (c) | | 27,177,400 | 27,185,553 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund 0.11% (c)(d) | | 2,656,628 | 2,656,893 |
TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS | | | |
(Cost $29,841,901) | | | 29,842,446 |
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES - 100.6% | | | |
(Cost $267,886,249) | | | 299,686,510 |
NET OTHER ASSETS (LIABILITIES) - (0.6)% | | | (1,858,983) |
NET ASSETS - 100% | | | $297,827,527 |
Futures Contracts | | | | | |
| Number of contracts | Expiration Date | Notional Amount | Value | Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation) |
Purchased | | | | | |
Equity Index Contracts | | | | | |
CME E-mini NASDAQ 100 Index Contracts (United States) | 172 | June 2020 | $30,920,440 | $4,347,721 | $4,347,721 |
The notional amount of futures purchased as a percentage of Net Assets is 10.4%
For the period, the average monthly notional amount at value for futures contracts in the aggregate was $6,182,486.
Legend
(a) Non-income producing
(b) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.
(c) 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.
(d) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.
Affiliated Central Funds
Information regarding fiscal year to date income earned by the Fund from investments in Fidelity Central Funds is as follows:
Fund | Income earned |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund | $49,932 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund | 4,913 |
Total | $54,845 |
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 April 30, 2020, 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 |
Investments in Securities: | | | | |
Equities: | | | | |
Communication Services | $29,675,498 | $29,675,498 | $-- | $-- |
Consumer Discretionary | 40,147,887 | 40,147,887 | -- | -- |
Consumer Staples | 11,343,089 | 11,343,089 | -- | -- |
Energy | 502,352 | 502,352 | -- | -- |
Financials | 8,513,422 | 8,513,422 | -- | -- |
Health Care | 42,175,980 | 42,175,980 | -- | -- |
Industrials | 22,291,180 | 22,291,180 | -- | -- |
Information Technology | 104,677,379 | 104,677,379 | -- | -- |
Materials | 3,592,631 | 3,592,631 | -- | -- |
Real Estate | 6,924,646 | 6,924,646 | -- | -- |
Money Market Funds | 29,842,446 | 29,842,446 | -- | -- |
Total Investments in Securities: | $299,686,510 | $299,686,510 | $-- | $-- |
Derivative Instruments: | | | | |
Assets | | | | |
Futures Contracts | $4,347,721 | $4,347,721 | $-- | $-- |
Total Assets | $4,347,721 | $4,347,721 | $-- | $-- |
Total Derivative Instruments: | $4,347,721 | $4,347,721 | $-- | $-- |
Value of Derivative Instruments
The following table is a summary of the Fund's value of derivative instruments by primary risk exposure as of April 30, 2020. 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 |
Equity Risk | | |
Futures Contracts(a) | $4,347,721 | $0 |
Total Equity Risk | 4,347,721 | 0 |
Total Value of Derivatives | $4,347,721 | $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).
The following table is a summary of the Fund's derivatives inclusive of potential netting arrangements.
Counterparty | Value of Derivative Assets | Value of Derivative Liabilities | Collateral Received(a) | Collateral Pledged(a) | Net(b) |
Exchange Traded Futures | $4,347,721 | $-- | $-- | $-- | $4,347,721 |
(a) Reflects collateral received from or pledged to an individual counterparty, excluding any excess or initial collateral amounts.
(b) Net represents the receivable / (payable) that would be due from / (to) the counterparty in an event of default. Netting may be allowed across transactions traded under the same legal agreement with the same legal entity. Please refer to Derivative Instruments - Risk Exposures and the Use of Derivative Instruments section in the accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Financial Statements
Statement of Assets and Liabilities
| | April 30, 2020 |
Assets | | |
Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $2,541,187) — See accompanying schedule: Unaffiliated issuers (cost $238,044,348) | $269,844,064 | |
Fidelity Central Funds (cost $29,841,901) | 29,842,446 | |
Total Investment in Securities (cost $267,886,249) | | $299,686,510 |
Segregated cash with brokers for derivative instruments | | 2,415,000 |
Receivable for fund shares sold | | 299,978 |
Dividends receivable | | 109,222 |
Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds | | 4,282 |
Total assets | | 302,514,992 |
Liabilities | | |
Payable for investments purchased | $1,040,856 | |
Payable for fund shares redeemed | 829,062 | |
Payable for daily variation margin on futures contracts | 152,236 | |
Other payables and accrued expenses | 8,425 | |
Collateral on securities loaned | 2,656,886 | |
Total liabilities | | 4,687,465 |
Net Assets | | $297,827,527 |
Net Assets consist of: | | |
Paid in capital | | $261,427,794 |
Total accumulated earnings (loss) | | 36,399,733 |
Net Assets | | $297,827,527 |
Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($297,827,527 ÷ 25,854,594 shares) | | $11.52 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Operations
| | Year ended April 30, 2020 |
Investment Income | | |
Dividends | | $3,458,444 |
Interest | | 2,309 |
Income from Fidelity Central Funds (including $4,913 from security lending) | | 54,845 |
Total income | | 3,515,598 |
Expenses | | |
Custodian fees and expenses | $20,741 | |
Independent trustees' fees and expenses | 995 | |
Interest | 628 | |
Commitment fees | 689 | |
Total expenses | | 23,053 |
Net investment income (loss) | | 3,492,545 |
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) | | |
Net realized gain (loss) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | 1,823,577 | |
Fidelity Central Funds | 284 | |
Futures contracts | (1,124,157) | |
Total net realized gain (loss) | | 699,704 |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | 21,868,288 | |
Fidelity Central Funds | 545 | |
Futures contracts | 4,313,929 | |
Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | | 26,182,762 |
Net gain (loss) | | 26,882,466 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | | $30,375,011 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Statement of Changes in Net Assets
| Year ended April 30, 2020 | For the period August 17, 2018 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2019 |
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets | | |
Operations | | |
Net investment income (loss) | $3,492,545 | $229,252 |
Net realized gain (loss) | 699,704 | (180,570) |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | 26,182,762 | 9,965,220 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | 30,375,011 | 10,013,902 |
Distributions to shareholders | (3,959,843) | (29,337) |
Share transactions | | |
Proceeds from sales of shares | 130,862,339 | 261,517,644 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 3,959,843 | 29,337 |
Cost of shares redeemed | (127,233,857) | (7,707,512) |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from share transactions | 7,588,325 | 253,839,469 |
Total increase (decrease) in net assets | 34,003,493 | 263,824,034 |
Net Assets | | |
Beginning of period | 263,824,034 | – |
End of period | $297,827,527 | $263,824,034 |
Other Information | | |
Shares | | |
Sold | 11,928,329 | 25,774,808 |
Issued in reinvestment of distributions | 350,171 | 3,248 |
Redeemed | (11,460,435) | (741,527) |
Net increase (decrease) | 818,065 | 25,036,529 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Financial Highlights
Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund
| | |
Years ended April 30, | 2020 | 2019 A |
Selected Per–Share Data | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $10.54 | $10.00 |
Income from Investment Operations | | |
Net investment income (loss)B | .14 | .06 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | .99 | .53 |
Total from investment operations | 1.13 | .59 |
Distributions from net investment income | (.10) | (.05) |
Distributions from net realized gain | (.05) | – |
Total distributions | (.15) | (.05) |
Net asset value, end of period | $11.52 | $10.54 |
Total ReturnC,D | 10.77% | 5.97% |
Ratios to Average Net AssetsE,F | | |
Expenses before reductions | .01% | .05%G |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any | .01% | .01%G |
Expenses net of all reductions | .01% | .01%G |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.24% | .85%G |
Supplemental Data | | |
Net assets, end of period (000 omitted) | $297,828 | $263,824 |
Portfolio turnover rateH | 45% | 21%G |
A For the period August 17, 2018 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2019.
B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
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 Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
F Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the Fund. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the Fund during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the Fund.
G Annualized
H Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Notes to Financial Statements
For the period ended April 30, 2020
1. Organization.
Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund (the Fund) is a fund of Fidelity Salem Street Trust (the Trust) and is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares. Shares are offered only to certain other Fidelity funds and Fidelity managed 529 plans. 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.
Effective January 1, 2020:
Investment advisers Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc., FMR Co., Inc., and Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, merged with and into Fidelity Management & Research Company. In connection with the merger transactions, the resulting, merged investment adviser was then redomiciled from Massachusetts to Delaware, changed its corporate structure from a corporation to a limited liability company, and changed its name to "Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC".
2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds.
The Fund invests 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 Fund's Schedule of Investments lists each of the Fidelity Central Funds held as of period end, if any, as an investment of the Fund, but does not include the underlying holdings of each Fidelity Central Fund. As an Investing Fund, the Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by the investment adviser. Annualized expenses of the Money Market Central Funds as of their most recent shareholder report date ranged from less than .005% to .01%.
A complete unaudited list of holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is available upon request or at the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) website at www.sec.gov. In addition, the financial statements of the Fidelity Central Funds, which are not covered by the Fund's Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC 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 – Investments 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 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. 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.
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 April 30, 2020 is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
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. 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.
Expenses. 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. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.
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 April 30, 2020, 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.
Distributions are declared and recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from GAAP.
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 futures contracts, partnerships and losses deferred due to wash sales.
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 | $43,993,420 |
Gross unrealized depreciation | (13,693,525) |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | $30,299,895 |
Tax Cost | $269,386,615 |
The tax-based components of distributable earnings as of period end were as follows:
Undistributed ordinary income | $2,996,813 |
Undistributed long-term capital gain | $3,103,027 |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities and other investments | $30,299,895 |
The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:
| April 30, 2020 | April 30, 2019(a) |
Ordinary Income | $3,831,107 | $ 29,337 |
Long-term Capital Gains | 128,736 | -- |
Total | $3,959,843 | $29,337 |
(a) For the period August 17, 2018 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2019.
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. A summary of the Fund's derivatives inclusive of potential netting arrangements is presented at the end of the Schedule of Investments.
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. Cash deposited to meet initial margin requirements is presented as segregated cash with brokers for derivative instruments in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.
5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.
Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities, are noted in the table below.
| Purchases ($) | Sales ($) |
Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund | 123,112,261 | 138,450,827 |
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 does not pay a management fee. Under the management contract, the investment adviser or an affiliate pays all ordinary operating expenses of the Fund, except custody fees, fees and expenses of the independent Trustees, and certain miscellaneous expenses such as proxy and shareholder meeting expenses.
Sub-Adviser. Geode Capital Management, LLC (Geode), serves as sub-adviser for the Fund. Geode provides discretionary investment advisory services to the Fund and is paid by the investment adviser for providing these services.
Interfund Lending Program. Pursuant to an Exemptive Order issued by the SEC, the fund, along with other registered investment companies having management contracts with Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (FMR), or other affiliated entities of FMR, may participate in an interfund lending program. This program provides an alternative credit facility allowing the fund to borrow from, or lend money to, other participating affiliated funds. At period end, there were no interfund loans outstanding. Activity in this program during the period for which loans were outstanding was as follows:
| Borrower or Lender | Average Loan Balance | Weighted Average Interest Rate | Interest Expense |
Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund | Borrower | $6,274,500 | 1.80% | $628 |
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. Interfund trades are included within the respective purchases and sales amounts shown in the Purchases and Sales of Investments note.
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. The participating funds have agreed to pay commitment fees on their pro-rata portion of the line of credit, which are reflected in Commitment fees on the Statement of Operations, and are as follows:
| Amount |
Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund | $689 |
During the period, there were no borrowings on this line of credit.
8. Security Lending.
The Fund lends portfolio securities from time to time in order to earn additional income. For equity securities, lending agents are used, including National Financial Services (NFS), an affiliate of the Fund. Pursuant to a securities lending agreement, NFS will receive a fee, which is capped at 9.9% of daily lending revenue, for its services as lending agent. The Fund may lend securities to certain qualified borrowers, including NFS. On the settlement date of the loan, the 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 the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. The 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, the Fund may apply collateral received from the borrower against the obligation. The 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. The value of loaned securities and cash collateral at period end are disclosed on the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities. At period end, there were no security loans outstanding with NFS, as affiliated borrower. Total fees paid by the Fund to NFS, as lending agent, amounted to $459. 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, and includes $32 from securities loaned to NFS, as affiliated borrower.
9. Other.
The 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.
At the end of the period, mutual funds and accounts managed by the investment adviser or its affiliates were the owners of record of all of the outstanding shares of the Fund.
10. 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 Salem Street Trust and Shareholders of Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund
Opinion on the Financial Statements and Financial Highlights
We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund (the "Fund"), a fund of Fidelity Salem Street Trust, including the schedule of investments, as of April 30, 2020, the related statement of operations for the year then ended, the statement of changes in net assets and the financial highlights for the year then ended and for the period from August 17, 2018 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2019, 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 April 30, 2020, the results of its operations for the year then ended, and the changes in its net assets and the financial highlights for the year then ended and for the period from August 17, 2018 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 2019, 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 April 30, 2020, by correspondence with the custodian and brokers; when replies were not received from brokers, we performed other auditing procedures. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
/s/ Deloitte & Touche LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
June 15, 2020
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. Except for Jonathan Chiel, each of the Trustees oversees 282 funds. Mr. Chiel oversees 175 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 1-800-544-8544.
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. Abigail P. Johnson is an interested person and currently serves as 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. Arthur E. Johnson serves as Chairman of the Independent Trustees 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 investment-grade bond, money market, asset allocation and certain equity funds, and other Boards oversee Fidelity's high income and other equity funds. The asset allocation funds may invest in Fidelity® funds that are overseen by such other Boards. 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 and Audit Committees. In addition, an ad hoc Board committee of Independent Trustees has worked with FMR to enhance the Board's oversight of investment and financial risks, legal and regulatory risks, technology risks, and operational risks, including the development of additional risk reporting to the Board. 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+
Jonathan Chiel (1957)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Mr. Chiel also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Mr. Chiel is Executive Vice President and General Counsel for FMR LLC (diversified financial services company, 2012-present). Previously, Mr. Chiel served as general counsel (2004-2012) and senior vice president and deputy general counsel (2000-2004) for John Hancock Financial Services; a partner with Choate, Hall & Stewart (1996-2000) (law firm); and an Assistant United States Attorney for the United States Attorney’s Office of the District of Massachusetts (1986-95), including Chief of the Criminal Division (1993-1995). Mr. Chiel is a director on the boards of the Boston Bar Foundation and the Maimonides School.
Abigail P. Johnson (1961)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2009
Trustee
Chairman of the Board of Trustees
Ms. Johnson also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Ms. Johnson serves as Chairman (2016-present), Chief Executive Officer (2014-present), and Director (2007-present) of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company), President of Fidelity Financial Services (2012-present) and President of Personal, Workplace and Institutional Services (2005-present). Ms. Johnson is Chairman and Director of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm, 2011-present). Previously, Ms. Johnson served as Chairman and Director of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2011-2019), Vice Chairman (2007-2016) and President (2013-2016) of FMR LLC, President and a Director of Fidelity Management & Research Company (2001-2005), a Trustee of other investment companies advised by Fidelity Management & Research Company, Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firm), and FMR Co., Inc. (2001-2005), Senior Vice President of the Fidelity® funds (2001-2005), and managed a number of Fidelity® funds. Ms. Abigail P. Johnson and Mr. Arthur E. Johnson are not related.
Jennifer Toolin McAuliffe (1959)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Ms. McAuliffe also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Ms. McAuliffe served as Co-Head of Fixed Income of Fidelity Investments Limited (now known as FIL Limited (FIL)) (diversified financial services company), Director of Research for FIL’s credit and quantitative teams in London, Hong Kong and Tokyo and Director of Research for taxable and municipal bonds at Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. Ms. McAuliffe previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2016). Ms. McAuliffe was previously a lawyer at Ropes & Gray LLP and currently serves as director or trustee of several not-for-profit entities.
* 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+
Elizabeth S. Acton (1951)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2013
Trustee
Ms. Acton also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Acton served as Executive Vice President, Finance (2011-2012), Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer (2002-2011) and Treasurer (2004-2005) of Comerica Incorporated (financial services). Prior to joining Comerica, Ms. Acton held a variety of positions at Ford Motor Company (1983-2002), including Vice President and Treasurer (2000-2002) and Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Ford Motor Credit Company (1998-2000). Ms. Acton currently serves as a member of the Board and Audit and Finance Committees of Beazer Homes USA, Inc. (homebuilding, 2012-present). Ms. Acton previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2013-2016).
Ann E. Dunwoody (1953)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2018
Trustee
General Dunwoody also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. General Dunwoody (United States Army, Retired) was the first woman in U.S. military history to achieve the rank of four-star general and prior to her retirement in 2012 held a variety of positions within the U.S. Army, including Commanding General, U.S. Army Material Command (2008-2012). General Dunwoody currently serves as President of First to Four LLC (leadership and mentoring services, 2012-present), a member of the Board and Nomination and Corporate Governance Committees of Kforce Inc. (professional staffing services, 2016-present) and a member of the Board of Automattic Inc. (software engineering, 2018-present). Previously, General Dunwoody served as a member of the Advisory Board and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of L3 Technologies, Inc. (communication, electronic, sensor and aerospace systems, 2013-2019) and a member of the Board and Audit and Sustainability and Corporate Responsibility Committees of Republic Services, Inc. (waste collection, disposal and recycling, 2013-2016). Ms. Dunwoody also serves on several boards for non-profit organizations, including as a member of the Board, Chair of the Nomination and Governance Committee and a member of the Audit Committee of Logistics Management Institute (consulting non-profit, 2012-present), a member of the Council of Trustees for the Association of the United States Army (advocacy non-profit, 2013-present), a member of the Board of Florida Institute of Technology (2015-present) and a member of the Board of ThanksUSA (military family education non-profit, 2014-present). General Dunwoody previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2018).
John Engler (1948)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2014
Trustee
Mr. Engler also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Engler served as Governor of Michigan (1991-2003), President of the Business Roundtable (2011-2017) and interim President of Michigan State University (2018-2019). Mr. Engler currently serves as a member of the Board of K12 Inc. (technology-based education company, 2012-present). Previously, Mr. Engler served as a member of the Board of Universal Forest Products (manufacturer and distributor of wood and wood-alternative products, 2003-2019) and Trustee of The Munder Funds (2003-2014). Mr. Engler previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2014-2016).
Robert F. Gartland (1951)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2010
Trustee
Mr. Gartland also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Gartland held a variety of positions at Morgan Stanley (financial services, 1979-2007), including Managing Director (1987-2007) and Chase Manhattan Bank (1975-1978). Mr. Gartland previously served as Chairman and an investor in Gartland & Mellina Group Corp. (consulting, 2009-2019), as a member of the Board of National Securities Clearing Corporation (1993-1996) and as Chairman of TradeWeb (2003-2004).
Arthur E. Johnson (1947)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2008
Trustee
Chairman of the Independent Trustees
Mr. Johnson also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Johnson served as Senior Vice President of Corporate Strategic Development of Lockheed Martin Corporation (defense contractor, 1999-2009). Mr. Johnson currently serves as a member of the Board of Booz Allen Hamilton (management consulting, 2011-present). Mr. Johnson previously served as a member of the Board of Eaton Corporation plc (diversified power management, 2009-2019) and a member of the Board of AGL Resources, Inc. (holding company, 2002-2016). Mr. Johnson previously served as Vice Chairman (2015-2018) of the Independent Trustees of certain Fidelity® funds. Mr. Arthur E. Johnson is not related to Ms. Abigail P. Johnson.
Michael E. Kenneally (1954)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2009
Trustee
Vice Chairman of the Independent Trustees
Mr. Kenneally also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Kenneally served as Chairman and Global Chief Executive Officer of Credit Suisse Asset Management and Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer of Bank of America Corporation. Earlier roles at Bank of America included Director of Research, Senior Portfolio Manager for various institutional equity accounts and mutual funds and Portfolio Manager for a number of institutional fixed-income clients. Mr. Kenneally began his career as a Research Analyst in 1983 and was awarded the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation in 1991.
Marie L. Knowles (1946)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2001
Trustee
Ms. Knowles also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Prior to her retirement, Ms. Knowles held several positions at Atlantic Richfield Company (diversified energy), including Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (1996-2000), Senior Vice President (1993-1996) and President of ARCO Transportation Company (pipeline and tanker operations, 1993-1996). Ms. Knowles currently serves as a member of the Board of McKesson Corporation (healthcare service, since 2002), a member of the Board of the Santa Catalina Island Company (real estate, 2009-present), a member of the Investment Company Institute Board of Governors and a member of the Governing Council of the Independent Directors Council (2014-present). Ms. Knowles also serves as a member of the Advisory Board for the School of Engineering of the University of Southern California. Ms. Knowles previously served as Chairman (2015-2018) and Vice Chairman (2012-2015) of the Independent Trustees of certain Fidelity® funds.
Mark A. Murray (1954)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2016
Trustee
Mr. Murray also serves as Trustee of other Fidelity® funds. Previously, Mr. Murray served as Co-Chief Executive Officer (2013-2016), President (2006-2013) and Vice Chairman (2013-2020) of Meijer, Inc. Mr. Murray serves as a member of the Board and Nuclear Review and Public Policy and Responsibility Committees of DTE Energy Company (diversified energy company, 2009-present) and a member of the Board and Audit Committee and Chairman of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee of Universal Forest Products, Inc. (manufacturer and distributor of wood and wood-alternative products, 2004-2016). Mr. Murray previously served as a member of the Board of Spectrum Health (not-for-profit health system, 2015-2019). Mr. Murray also serves as a member of the Board of many community and professional organizations. Mr. Murray previously served as a member of the Advisory Board of certain Fidelity® funds (2016).
+ 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 an officer may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 245 Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210. Officers appear below in alphabetical order.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupation
Elizabeth Paige Baumann (1968)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2017
Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Officer
Ms. Baumann also serves as AML Officer of other funds. She is Chief AML Officer (2012-present) and Senior Vice President (2014-present) of FMR LLC (diversified financial services company) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Ms. Baumann served as AML Officer of certain funds (2017-2019), as AML Officer of the funds (2012-2016), and Vice President (2007-2014) and Deputy Anti-Money Laundering Officer (2007-2012) of FMR LLC.
Craig S. Brown (1977)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2019
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Brown also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Brown 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).
David J. Carter (1973)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2020
Assistant Secretary
Mr. Carter also serves as Assistant Secretary of other funds. Mr. Carter serves as Vice President, Associate General Counsel (2010-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2005-present).
Jonathan Davis (1968)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2010
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Davis also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Davis serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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
President and Treasurer
Ms. Del Prato also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Del Prato is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2017-present). 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: 2016
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Hogan also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Hogan serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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).
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: 2013
Assistant Treasurer
Mr. Maher also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Maher serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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).
Nancy D. Prior (1967)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2014
Vice President
Ms. Prior also serves as Vice President of other funds. Ms. Prior serves as President of Fixed Income (2014-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2002-present). Previously, Ms. Prior served as President (2016-2019) and Director (2014-2019) of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (investment adviser firm), Vice President of Global Asset Allocation Funds (2017-2019); Vice Chairman of FIAM LLC (investment adviser firm, 2014-2018), a Director of FMR Investment Management (UK) Limited (investment adviser firm, 2015-2018), President Multi-Asset Class Strategies of FMR's Global Asset Allocation Division (2017-2018), Vice President of Fidelity's Money Market Funds (2012-2014), and President, Money Market and Short Duration Bond Group of Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) (investment adviser firm, 2013-2014).
Kenneth B. Robins (1969)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2020
Chief Compliance Officer
Mr. Robins also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Robins serves as Compliance Officer of Fidelity Management & Research Company LLC (investment adviser firm, 2016-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2004-present). Previously, Mr. Robins served as Compliance Officer of FMR Co., Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2016-2019), as Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (investment adviser firm, 2013-2016) and served in other fund officer roles.
Stacie M. Smith (1974)
Year of Election or Appointment: 2013
Assistant Treasurer
Ms. Smith also serves as an officer of other funds. Ms. Smith serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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
Deputy Treasurer
Mr. Spector also serves as an officer of other funds. Mr. Spector serves as Assistant Treasurer of 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 Assistant Treasurer of other funds. Mr. Wegmann is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2011-present).
Shareholder Expense Example
As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs and (2) ongoing costs, including other Fund expenses. This Example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the 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 (November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020).
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 under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro-rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's 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 Fund's actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Fund's 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. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro-rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's 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.
| Annualized Expense Ratio-A | Beginning Account Value November 1, 2019 | Ending Account Value April 30, 2020 | Expenses Paid During Period-B November 1, 2019 to April 30, 2020 |
Actual | .01% | $1,000.00 | $1,061.00 | $.05 |
Hypothetical-C | | $1,000.00 | $1,024.81 | $.05 |
A Annualized expense ratio reflects expenses net of applicable fee waivers.
B Expenses are equal to the Fund's annualized expense ratio, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period).
C 5% return per year before expenses
Distributions (Unaudited)
The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund voted to pay on June 08, 2020, to shareholders of record at the opening of business on June 05, 2020, a distribution of $.195 per share derived from capital gains realized from sales of portfolio securities and a dividend of $.040 per share from net investment income.
The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended April 30, 2020, $3,207,806, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.
The fund designates 55% and 63% of the dividends distributed in June and December, respectively during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends–received deduction for corporate shareholders.
The fund designates 63% and 65% of the dividends distributed in June and December, respectively during the fiscal year as amounts which may be taken into account as a dividend for the purposes of the maximum rate under section 1(h)(11) of the Internal Revenue Code.
The fund designates 5% and 4% of the dividends distributed in June and December, respectively during the fiscal year as a section 199A dividend.
The fund will notify shareholders in January 2021 of amounts for use in preparing 2020 income tax returns.
Liquidity Risk Management Program
The Securities and Exchange Commission adopted Rule 22e-4 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the Liquidity Rule) to promote effective liquidity risk management throughout the open-end investment company industry, thereby reducing the risk that funds will be unable to meet their redemption obligations and mitigating dilution of the interests of fund shareholders.
The Fund has adopted and implemented a liquidity risk management program pursuant to the Liquidity Rule (the Program) effective December 1, 2018. The Program is reasonably designed to assess and manage the Fund’s liquidity risk and to comply with the requirements of the Liquidity Rule. The Fund’s Board of Trustees (the Board) has designated the Fund’s investment adviser as administrator of the Program. The Fidelity advisers have established a Liquidity Risk Management Committee (the LRM Committee) to manage the Program for each of the Fidelity Funds. The LRM Committee monitors the adequacy and effectiveness of implementation of the Program and on a periodic basis assesses each Fund’s liquidity risk based on a variety of factors including (1) the Fund’s investment strategy, (2) portfolio liquidity and cash flow projections during normal and reasonably foreseeable stressed conditions, (3) shareholder redemptions, (4) borrowings and other funding sources and (5) in the case of exchange-traded funds, certain additional factors including the effect of the Fund’s prices and spreads, market participants, and basket compositions on the overall liquidity of the Fund’s portfolio, as applicable.
In accordance with the Program, each of the Fund’s portfolio investments is classified into one of four liquidity categories described below based on a determination of a reasonable expectation for how long it would take to convert the investment to cash (or sell or dispose of the investment) without significantly changing its market value.
- Highly liquid investments – cash or convertible to cash within three business days or less
- Moderately liquid investments – convertible to cash in three to seven calendar days
- Less liquid investments – can be sold or disposed of, but not settled, within seven calendar days
- Illiquid investments – cannot be sold or disposed of within seven calendar days
Liquidity classification determinations take into account a variety of factors including various market, trading and investment-specific considerations, as well as market depth, and generally utilize analysis from a third-party liquidity metrics service.
The Liquidity Rule places a 15% limit on a fund’s illiquid investments and requires funds that do not primarily hold assets that are highly liquid investments to determine and maintain a minimum percentage of the fund’s net assets to be invested in highly liquid investments (highly liquid investment minimum or HLIM). The Program includes provisions reasonably designed to comply with the 15% limit on illiquid investments and for determining, periodically reviewing and complying with the HLIM requirement as applicable.
At a recent meeting of the Fund’s Board of Trustees, the LRM Committee provided a written report to the Board pertaining to the operation, adequacy, and effectiveness of implementation of the Program for the annual period from December 1, 2018 through November 30, 2019. The report concluded that the Program has been implemented and is operating effectively and is reasonably designed to assess and manage the Fund’s liquidity risk.

CGI-ANN-0620
1.9891255.101
Item 2.
Code of Ethics
As of the end of the period, April 30, 2020, Fidelity Salem Street Trust (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 Elizabeth S. Acton is an audit committee financial expert, as defined in Item 3 of Form N-CSR. Ms. Acton 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 Flex Mid Cap Index Fund, Fidelity Flex Small Cap Index Fund, Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund, Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund, Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund, Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund and Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund (the “Funds”):
Services Billed by Deloitte Entities
April 30, 2020 FeesA
| | | | |
| Audit Fees | Audit-Related Fees | Tax Fees | All Other Fees |
Fidelity Flex Mid Cap Index Fund | $40,100 | $- | $6,900 | $900 |
Fidelity Flex Small Cap Index Fund | $49,800 | $100 | $6,700 | $1,100 |
Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund | $39,100 | $- | $6,900 | $900 |
Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund | $39,100 | $- | $6,900 | $900 |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | $40,200 | $- | $6,900 | $900 |
Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund | $39,200 | $- | $6,900 | $800 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | $49,800 | $100 | $6,700 | $1,100 |
| | | | |
| Audit Fees | Audit-Related Fees | Tax Fees | All Other Fees |
Fidelity Flex Mid Cap Index Fund | $53,000 | $100 | $5,000 | $1,200 |
Fidelity Flex Small Cap Index Fund | $62,000 | $100 | $5,000 | $1,500 |
Fidelity Large Cap Growth Index Fund | $41,000 | $100 | $4,800 | $1,300 |
Fidelity Large Cap Value Index Fund | $41,000 | $100 | $4,800 | $1,300 |
Fidelity Mid Cap Index Fund | $46,000 | $100 | $5,100 | $1,300 |
Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund | $36,000 | $- | $4,800 | $700 |
Fidelity Small Cap Index Fund | $56,000 | $100 | $5,100 | $1,600 |
A Amounts may reflect rounding.
B Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund commenced operations on August 17, 2018.
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
| | |
| April 30, 2020A | April 30, 2019A,B
|
Audit-Related Fees | $- | $290,000 |
Tax Fees | $3,000 | $5,000 |
All Other Fees | $- | $- |
A Amounts may reflect rounding.
B May include amounts billed prior to the Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund’s commencement of operations.
“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 | April 30, 2020A | April 30, 2019A,B |
Deloitte Entities | $559,300 | $750,000 |
A Amounts may reflect rounding.
B May include amounts billed prior to the Fidelity Series Large Cap Growth Index Fund’s commencement of operations.
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
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 Salem Street Trust
| |
By: | /s/Laura M. Del Prato |
| Laura M. Del Prato |
| President and Treasurer |
|
|
Date: | June 19, 2020 |
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/Laura M. Del Prato |
| Laura M. Del Prato |
| President and Treasurer |
|
|
Date: | June 19, 2020 |
| |
By: | /s/John J. Burke III |
| John J. Burke III |
| Chief Financial Officer |
|
|
Date: | June 19, 2020 |