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 811-649
Fidelity Puritan Trust
(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)
245 Summer St., Boston, Massachusetts 02210
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)
Scott C. Goebel, Secretary
245 Summer St.
Boston, Massachusetts 02210
(Name and address of agent for service)
Registrant's telephone number, including area code: 617-563-7000
Date of fiscal year end: | August 31 |
| |
Date of reporting period: | August 31, 2013 |
Item 1. Reports to Stockholders
Fidelity®
Balanced
Fund
Annual Report
August 31, 2013
(Fidelity Cover Art)
Contents
Performance | (Click Here) | How the fund has done over time. |
Management's Discussion of Fund Performance | (Click Here) | The Portfolio Manager's review of fund performance and strategy. |
Shareholder Expense Example | (Click Here) | An example of shareholder expenses. |
Investment Changes | (Click Here) | A summary of major shifts in the fund's investments over the past six months. |
Investments | (Click Here) | A complete list of the fund's investments with their market values. |
Financial Statements | (Click Here) | Statements of assets and liabilities, operations, and changes in net assets, as well as financial highlights. |
Notes | (Click Here) | Notes to the financial statements. |
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm | (Click Here) | |
Trustees and Officers | (Click Here) | |
Distributions | (Click Here) | |
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and Management Fees | (Click Here) | |
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. © 2013 FMR LLC. All rights reserved.
Annual Report
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-Q. Forms N-Q are available on the SEC's web site at http://www.sec.gov. A fund's Forms N-Q 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.advisor.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.
Annual Report
Average annual total return reflects the change in the value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of the class' 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 $10,000 table and the fund's 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
Periods ended August 31, 2013 | Past 1 year | Past 5 years | Past 10 years |
Fidelity® Balanced Fund | 11.32% | 6.53% | 7.45% |
$10,000 Over 10 Years
Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity® Balanced Fund, a class of the fund, on August 31, 2003. The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the S&P 500® Index performed over the same period.
Annual Report
Market Recap: Major equity benchmarks set record highs during the 12 months ending August 31, 2013, fueled by an improving global economy and accommodative monetary policies worldwide. The broad-based S&P 500® Index rose 18.70% for the 12 months, setting new highs, while the blue-chip-laden Dow Jones Industrial AverageSM also achieved significant milestones en route to climbing 16.13%. The growth-oriented Nasdaq Composite Index® advanced 18.75%. Stocks slipped early on as investors grew anxious about the U.S. presidential election and the federal debt limit. Markets quickly rebounded and rose through late May, but concern over the U.S. Federal Reserve tapering its bond-buying program prompted a brief, but steep, market sell-off in June. Stocks recovered when the Fed said no moves were imminent, but doubt returned in August as a military strike on Syria loomed. On the bond side of the ledger, U.S. high-income securities rallied alongside equities for most of the period, but cooled off in May and June as interest rates spiked on possible Fed tightening. The sector still advanced solidly, with The BofA Merrill LynchSM US High Yield Constrained Index returning 7.55%. The more rate-sensitive U.S. investment-grade bond category fared far worse, as reflected in the -2.47% return of the Barclays® U.S. Aggregate Bond Index, its largest trailing one-year loss in almost 20 years.
Comments from Co-Portfolio Manager Robert Stansky, Head of FMR's Stock Selector Large Cap Group, which manages Fidelity® Balanced Fund: For the year, the fund's Retail Class shares returned 11.32%, versus 9.87% for the Fidelity Balanced Hybrid Composite IndexSM. Overweighting stocks and underweighting investment-grade bonds notably drove the fund's outperformance. Looking at fixed income, among the biggest contributors were an overweighting in corporate bonds and an underweighting in sovereigns. Security selection also helped. In terms of individual stocks, we successfully avoided computer services provider and index component IBM, which we believe faces an uphill battle, due in part to increased pressure from competitors and slower growth prospects in comparison to smaller software and hardware companies. The fund also received a lift from biopharmaceutical firm Gilead Sciences, which saw its shares rise amid continued success with its treatments for HIV/AIDS. We reduced our position in Gilead to take profits and help manage risk. Conversely, the biggest detractor by far was Apple, the fund's largest holding during the period. The stock reversed course in late September 2012 and continued downward through most of the period, as investors reacted to lackluster quarterly financial results, prompting us to reduce our overweighting.
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.
Annual Report
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 (March 1, 2013 to August 31, 2013).
Actual Expenses
The first line of the accompanying table for each class of the 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 class of the Fund under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. 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 for each class of the Fund provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on a Class' actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Class' 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. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. 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.
Annual Report
| Annualized Expense Ratio B | Beginning Account Value March 1, 2013 | Ending Account Value August 31, 2013 | Expenses Paid During Period* March 1, 2013 to August 31, 2013 |
Balanced | .58% | | | |
Actual | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,052.50 | $ 3.00 |
HypotheticalA | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,022.28 | $ 2.96 |
Class K | .47% | | | |
Actual | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,053.10 | $ 2.43 |
HypotheticalA | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,022.84 | $ 2.40 |
A 5% return per year before expenses
B Annualized expense ratio reflects expenses net of applicable fee waivers.
* Expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 184/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). The fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds in which the Fund invests are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio.
Annual Report
Investment Changes (Unaudited)
The information in the following tables is based on the combined investments of the Fund and its pro-rata share of the investments of Fidelity's fixed-income central funds. |
Top Five Stocks as of August 31, 2013 |
| % of fund's net assets | % of fund's net assets 6 months ago |
Apple, Inc. | 2.4 | 2.9 |
Procter & Gamble Co. | 1.4 | 1.5 |
Capital One Financial Corp. | 1.4 | 1.0 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 1.3 | 1.2 |
Microsoft Corp. | 1.2 | 0.0 |
| 7.7 | |
Top Five Bond Issuers as of August 31, 2013 |
(with maturities greater than one year) | % of fund's net assets | % of fund's net assets 6 months ago |
U.S. Treasury Obligations | 6.0 | 5.8 |
Fannie Mae | 5.1 | 6.5 |
Ginnie Mae | 1.7 | 1.8 |
Freddie Mac | 1.4 | 2.2 |
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust | 0.6 | 0.7 |
| 14.8 | |
Top Five Market Sectors as of August 31, 2013 |
| % of fund's net assets | % of fund's net assets 6 months ago |
Financials | 16.3 | 15.0 |
Information Technology | 12.9 | 12.5 |
Health Care | 9.4 | 9.1 |
Consumer Discretionary | 9.0 | 8.0 |
Energy | 8.6 | 8.7 |
Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets) |
As of August 31, 2013* | As of February 28, 2013** |
| Stocks and Equity Futures 69.1% | | | Stocks and Equity Futures 65.9% | |
| Bonds 29.7% | | | Bonds 32.1% | |
| Convertible Securities 0.1% | | | Convertible Securities 0.1% | |
| Other Investments 0.2% | | | Other Investments 0.2% | |
| Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities) 0.9% | | | Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities) 1.7% | |
* Foreign investments | 10.0% | | ** Foreign investments | 9.6% | |
Percentages are adjusted for the effect of futures contracts and swaps, if applicable. An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of any securities and other investments held indirectly through its investment in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com. |
Percentages in the above tables are adjusted for the effect of TBA Sale Commitments. |
Annual Report
Investments August 31, 2013
Showing Percentage of Net Assets
Common Stocks - 68.3% |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 7.7% |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.1% |
H&R Block, Inc. | 1,222,261 | | $ 34,113 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 1.3% |
Domino's Pizza, Inc. | 588,695 | | 36,169 |
Starbucks Corp. | 1,533,532 | | 108,145 |
Wynn Resorts Ltd. | 513,854 | | 72,474 |
Yum! Brands, Inc. | 1,251,447 | | 87,626 |
| | 304,414 |
Internet & Catalog Retail - 0.9% |
Liberty Media Corp. Interactive Series A (a) | 5,827,654 | | 131,588 |
priceline.com, Inc. (a) | 83,197 | | 78,083 |
| | 209,671 |
Media - 2.8% |
Comcast Corp. Class A | 3,909,192 | | 164,538 |
DIRECTV (a) | 1,569,521 | | 91,315 |
Legend Pictures LLC (n)(o) | 8,571 | | 15,454 |
Liberty Global PLC Class A (a) | 246,200 | | 19,125 |
Time Warner, Inc. | 2,475,228 | | 149,826 |
Twenty-First Century Fox, Inc. Class A | 6,137,277 | | 192,281 |
| | 632,539 |
Multiline Retail - 0.6% |
Dollar General Corp. (a) | 2,387,950 | | 128,878 |
Specialty Retail - 1.0% |
Lowe's Companies, Inc. | 1,933,554 | | 88,595 |
TJX Companies, Inc. | 2,502,857 | | 131,951 |
| | 220,546 |
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 1.0% |
NIKE, Inc. Class B | 1,098,640 | | 69,017 |
Oxford Industries, Inc. | 272,899 | | 16,931 |
PVH Corp. | 658,982 | | 84,844 |
Under Armour, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a) | 618,218 | | 44,907 |
| | 215,699 |
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | 1,745,860 |
CONSUMER STAPLES - 7.2% |
Beverages - 2.1% |
Anheuser-Busch InBev SA NV | 321,944 | | 30,025 |
Coca-Cola Bottling Co. CONSOLIDATED | 111,888 | | 7,031 |
Coca-Cola FEMSA S.A.B. de CV sponsored ADR | 32,025 | | 3,844 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER STAPLES - continued |
Beverages - continued |
Coca-Cola Icecek A/S | 298,728 | | $ 7,004 |
Companhia de Bebidas das Americas (AmBev) (PN) sponsored ADR | 233,025 | | 8,105 |
Constellation Brands, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a) | 562,769 | | 30,530 |
Diageo PLC sponsored ADR | 340,423 | | 41,763 |
Embotelladora Andina SA sponsored ADR | 255,027 | | 7,715 |
Pernod Ricard SA | 371,250 | | 43,100 |
Remy Cointreau SA | 298,496 | | 31,403 |
The Coca-Cola Co. | 6,655,346 | | 254,101 |
| | 464,621 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 1.5% |
CVS Caremark Corp. | 2,820,740 | | 163,744 |
Drogasil SA | 583,500 | | 4,128 |
Kroger Co. | 2,672,996 | | 97,832 |
Sysco Corp. | 330,600 | | 10,586 |
United Natural Foods, Inc. (a) | 69,906 | | 4,238 |
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. | 679,046 | | 49,557 |
| | 330,085 |
Food Products - 0.4% |
Archer Daniels Midland Co. | 237,063 | | 8,347 |
Bunge Ltd. | 367,072 | | 27,817 |
Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc. (a) | 109,276 | | 9,432 |
Mead Johnson Nutrition Co. Class A | 428,732 | | 32,168 |
Nestle SA | 274,438 | | 17,960 |
| | 95,724 |
Household Products - 1.4% |
Procter & Gamble Co. | 4,160,110 | | 324,031 |
Personal Products - 0.1% |
L'Oreal SA | 100,504 | | 16,770 |
Nu Skin Enterprises, Inc. Class A | 98,375 | | 8,235 |
| | 25,005 |
Tobacco - 1.7% |
Altria Group, Inc. | 3,581,509 | | 121,342 |
British American Tobacco PLC sponsored ADR | 2,347,805 | | 238,467 |
Philip Morris International, Inc. | 311,476 | | 25,990 |
Souza Cruz SA | 731,800 | | 7,668 |
| | 393,467 |
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | 1,632,933 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
ENERGY - 7.2% |
Energy Equipment & Services - 1.4% |
Cameron International Corp. (a) | 1,319,091 | | $ 74,911 |
Dril-Quip, Inc. (a) | 232,550 | | 23,722 |
Ensco PLC Class A | 927,739 | | 51,545 |
Frank's International NV | 82,500 | | 2,286 |
Halliburton Co. | 458,544 | | 22,010 |
National Oilwell Varco, Inc. | 1,371,688 | | 101,916 |
Ocean Rig UDW, Inc. (United States) (a) | 645,096 | | 11,250 |
Oceaneering International, Inc. | 229,287 | | 17,788 |
Pacific Drilling SA (a) | 2,000 | | 19 |
Vantage Drilling Co. (a) | 6,033,801 | | 10,378 |
| | 315,825 |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 5.8% |
Anadarko Petroleum Corp. | 1,405,702 | | 128,509 |
Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. | 1,333,800 | | 52,192 |
Chevron Corp. | 1,279,894 | | 154,138 |
Cobalt International Energy, Inc. (a) | 751,547 | | 18,338 |
Concho Resources, Inc. (a) | 388,600 | | 37,504 |
ConocoPhillips | 2,440,259 | | 161,789 |
Continental Resources, Inc. (a) | 328,247 | | 30,284 |
EOG Resources, Inc. | 507,458 | | 79,696 |
Exxon Mobil Corp. | 3,111,457 | | 271,195 |
Kinder Morgan Holding Co. LLC | 1,134,200 | | 43,020 |
Marathon Oil Corp. | 2,228,993 | | 76,744 |
Marathon Petroleum Corp. | 619,543 | | 44,923 |
Noble Energy, Inc. | 805,330 | | 49,471 |
Phillips 66 | 1,022,389 | | 58,378 |
Pioneer Natural Resources Co. | 97,700 | | 17,095 |
Spectra Energy Corp. | 1,363,900 | | 45,159 |
Suncor Energy, Inc. | 1,203,800 | | 40,572 |
| | 1,309,007 |
TOTAL ENERGY | | 1,624,832 |
FINANCIALS - 11.4% |
Capital Markets - 1.5% |
Ameriprise Financial, Inc. | 675,104 | | 58,160 |
BlackRock, Inc. Class A | 185,372 | | 48,256 |
Credit Suisse Group | 316,680 | | 9,128 |
Deutsche Bank AG | 335,228 | | 14,553 |
E*TRADE Financial Corp. (a) | 2,163,465 | | 30,375 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Capital Markets - continued |
Evercore Partners, Inc. Class A | 247,600 | | $ 11,040 |
Invesco Ltd. | 692,060 | | 21,011 |
Morgan Stanley | 2,685,627 | | 69,182 |
Northern Trust Corp. | 382,182 | | 20,970 |
Oaktree Capital Group LLC Class A | 218,700 | | 11,329 |
TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. | 152,886 | | 3,925 |
The Blackstone Group LP | 908,905 | | 19,850 |
UBS AG | 1,140,062 | | 22,028 |
| | 339,807 |
Commercial Banks - 1.8% |
Barclays PLC | 3,051,963 | | 13,369 |
BNP Paribas SA | 257,900 | | 16,162 |
CIT Group, Inc. (a) | 251,687 | | 12,048 |
Comerica, Inc. | 175,300 | | 7,159 |
Erste Group Bank AG | 246,800 | | 7,912 |
Huntington Bancshares, Inc. | 3,474,237 | | 28,628 |
Intesa Sanpaolo SpA | 4,402,700 | | 8,641 |
KBC Groupe SA | 87,960 | | 3,869 |
PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. | 1,096,317 | | 79,231 |
Sberbank (Savings Bank of the Russian Federation) sponsored ADR | 1,621,900 | | 17,095 |
Societe Generale Series A | 470,274 | | 20,582 |
Synovus Financial Corp. | 5,298,345 | | 16,902 |
U.S. Bancorp | 5,115,281 | | 184,815 |
| | 416,413 |
Consumer Finance - 1.8% |
Capital One Financial Corp. | 4,864,105 | | 313,978 |
Discover Financial Services | 319,813 | | 15,111 |
SLM Corp. | 3,648,034 | | 87,516 |
| | 416,605 |
Diversified Financial Services - 3.7% |
Bank of America Corp. | 19,490,008 | | 275,199 |
Citigroup, Inc. | 4,361,055 | | 210,770 |
IntercontinentalExchange, Inc. (a) | 297,391 | | 53,456 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 5,601,852 | | 283,062 |
KBC Ancora (a) | 352,974 | | 8,052 |
| | 830,539 |
Insurance - 1.6% |
ACE Ltd. | 572,593 | | 50,228 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Insurance - continued |
Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Class A (a) | 104 | | $ 17,373 |
Direct Line Insurance Group PLC | 5,525,000 | | 18,563 |
esure Group PLC | 2,148,686 | | 8,058 |
Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. (sub. vtg.) | 57,000 | | 23,420 |
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. | 1,732,791 | | 71,443 |
MetLife, Inc. | 1,945,369 | | 89,857 |
The Travelers Companies, Inc. | 872,849 | | 69,741 |
Validus Holdings Ltd. | 330,112 | | 11,425 |
| | 360,108 |
Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.6% |
American Tower Corp. | 1,243,565 | | 86,415 |
Equity Lifestyle Properties, Inc. | 593,858 | | 20,637 |
Sun Communities, Inc. | 559,015 | | 24,021 |
| | 131,073 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.3% |
Altisource Residential Corp. Class B (a) | 766,718 | | 14,529 |
CBRE Group, Inc. (a) | 2,561,041 | | 56,010 |
| | 70,539 |
Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.1% |
Ocwen Financial Corp. (a) | 302,000 | | 15,233 |
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | 2,580,317 |
HEALTH CARE - 8.8% |
Biotechnology - 2.5% |
Actelion Ltd. | 183,116 | | 12,448 |
Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 715,256 | | 77,076 |
Amgen, Inc. | 1,476,632 | | 160,864 |
Biogen Idec, Inc. (a) | 388,545 | | 82,768 |
CSL Ltd. | 417,969 | | 25,293 |
Gilead Sciences, Inc. (a) | 3,141,825 | | 189,358 |
Onyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 179,682 | | 22,205 |
| | 570,012 |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 1.4% |
Boston Scientific Corp. (a) | 6,986,917 | | 73,922 |
Covidien PLC | 1,459,372 | | 86,687 |
Quidel Corp. (a)(e) | 1,040,834 | | 27,603 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
HEALTH CARE - continued |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - continued |
Stryker Corp. | 1,077,316 | | $ 72,062 |
The Cooper Companies, Inc. | 483,080 | | 63,095 |
| | 323,369 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 1.2% |
Brookdale Senior Living, Inc. (a) | 1,380,952 | | 34,551 |
CIGNA Corp. | 1,457,468 | | 114,688 |
HCA Holdings, Inc. | 161,369 | | 6,163 |
Henry Schein, Inc. (a) | 571,089 | | 57,709 |
McKesson Corp. | 437,524 | | 53,120 |
| | 266,231 |
Life Sciences Tools & Services - 0.5% |
Illumina, Inc. (a) | 398,800 | | 31,043 |
Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. | 831,009 | | 73,819 |
| | 104,862 |
Pharmaceuticals - 3.2% |
AbbVie, Inc. | 2,908,166 | | 123,917 |
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. | 869,054 | | 36,231 |
Merck & Co., Inc. | 1,543,624 | | 72,998 |
Perrigo Co. | 438,510 | | 53,301 |
Pfizer, Inc. | 8,844,535 | | 249,504 |
Roche Holding AG (participation certificate) | 48,073 | | 11,992 |
Sanofi SA sponsored ADR | 500,103 | | 23,895 |
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc. (Canada) (a) | 504,583 | | 49,630 |
Warner Chilcott PLC | 2,809,072 | | 60,255 |
Zoetis, Inc. Class A | 1,833,761 | | 53,454 |
| | 735,177 |
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | 1,999,651 |
INDUSTRIALS - 6.9% |
Aerospace & Defense - 1.8% |
Honeywell International, Inc. | 1,646,067 | | 130,978 |
Precision Castparts Corp. | 361,497 | | 76,363 |
TransDigm Group, Inc. | 276,949 | | 37,942 |
United Technologies Corp. | 1,524,998 | | 152,652 |
| | 397,935 |
Building Products - 0.2% |
Armstrong World Industries, Inc. (a) | 1,027,646 | | 49,902 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.3% |
KAR Auction Services, Inc. | 1,480,059 | | $ 39,429 |
Stericycle, Inc. (a) | 321,149 | | 36,149 |
| | 75,578 |
Electrical Equipment - 1.9% |
AMETEK, Inc. | 2,904,816 | | 124,675 |
Eaton Corp. PLC | 1,389,703 | | 87,996 |
Hubbell, Inc. Class B | 751,595 | | 76,182 |
Roper Industries, Inc. | 1,092,979 | | 135,202 |
| | 424,055 |
Industrial Conglomerates - 1.0% |
Danaher Corp. | 3,464,899 | | 227,020 |
Machinery - 0.7% |
Cummins, Inc. | 691,067 | | 85,139 |
Ingersoll-Rand PLC | 1,319,600 | | 78,041 |
| | 163,180 |
Professional Services - 0.5% |
Nielsen Holdings B.V. | 1,120,616 | | 38,661 |
Verisk Analytics, Inc. (a) | 1,251,497 | | 77,818 |
| | 116,479 |
Road & Rail - 0.2% |
J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc. | 620,330 | | 44,664 |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.3% |
W.W. Grainger, Inc. | 313,260 | | 77,485 |
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | 1,576,298 |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 12.6% |
Communications Equipment - 1.9% |
Cisco Systems, Inc. | 9,222,979 | | 214,988 |
Juniper Networks, Inc. (a) | 3,458,908 | | 65,373 |
Polycom, Inc. (a) | 1,123,433 | | 11,156 |
QUALCOMM, Inc. | 2,045,584 | | 135,581 |
| | 427,098 |
Computers & Peripherals - 3.1% |
Apple, Inc. | 1,134,881 | | 552,735 |
Electronics for Imaging, Inc. (a) | 293,200 | | 8,585 |
EMC Corp. | 1,218,110 | | 31,403 |
NCR Corp. (a) | 3,031,823 | | 107,872 |
| | 700,595 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 0.6% |
Flextronics International Ltd. (a) | 2,691,377 | | $ 24,169 |
Jabil Circuit, Inc. | 1,937,624 | | 44,217 |
TE Connectivity Ltd. | 1,505,693 | | 73,779 |
| | 142,165 |
Internet Software & Services - 2.0% |
Demand Media, Inc. (a) | 871,493 | | 5,647 |
Demandware, Inc. (a) | 28,004 | | 1,178 |
eBay, Inc. (a) | 1,829,535 | | 91,458 |
Google, Inc. Class A (a) | 327,565 | | 277,415 |
Halogen Software, Inc. (h) | 551,000 | | 7,031 |
Marketo, Inc. (e) | 498,088 | | 17,473 |
Responsys, Inc. (a) | 267,677 | | 3,841 |
Yahoo!, Inc. (a) | 1,572,184 | | 42,638 |
| | 446,681 |
IT Services - 0.9% |
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. Class A (a) | 994,191 | | 72,874 |
Fidelity National Information Services, Inc. | 2,742,733 | | 121,942 |
FleetCor Technologies, Inc. (a) | 135,400 | | 13,961 |
Lionbridge Technologies, Inc. (a) | 617,300 | | 2,167 |
Luxoft Holding, Inc. | 265,000 | | 6,294 |
| | 217,238 |
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 0.7% |
Micron Technology, Inc. (a) | 2,013,427 | | 27,322 |
NXP Semiconductors NV (a) | 3,503,508 | | 130,225 |
| | 157,547 |
Software - 3.4% |
Adobe Systems, Inc. (a) | 1,384,306 | | 63,332 |
Aspen Technology, Inc. (a) | 293,159 | | 9,800 |
Compuware Corp. | 1,346,333 | | 14,365 |
Electronic Arts, Inc. (a) | 2,129,870 | | 56,740 |
Guidewire Software, Inc. (a) | 600,031 | | 27,577 |
Jive Software, Inc. (a) | 939,581 | | 11,641 |
Microsoft Corp. | 8,452,221 | | 282,304 |
Oracle Corp. | 6,093,453 | | 194,137 |
QLIK Technologies, Inc. (a) | 199,967 | | 6,557 |
salesforce.com, Inc. (a) | 1,923,125 | | 94,483 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued |
Software - continued |
Ubisoft Entertainment SA (a) | 935,827 | | $ 14,137 |
Xero Ltd. (a) | 175,693 | | 2,281 |
| | 777,354 |
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | 2,868,678 |
MATERIALS - 2.6% |
Chemicals - 2.2% |
Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. | 43,462 | | 4,439 |
Airgas, Inc. | 1,004,115 | | 102,068 |
Ashland, Inc. | 324,224 | | 28,276 |
Eastman Chemical Co. | 676,161 | | 51,388 |
Ecolab, Inc. | 545,196 | | 49,804 |
FMC Corp. | 735,373 | | 48,983 |
LyondellBasell Industries NV Class A | 840,037 | | 58,929 |
Monsanto Co. | 819,895 | | 80,260 |
PPG Industries, Inc. | 319,521 | | 49,912 |
Sigma Aldrich Corp. | 443,558 | | 36,580 |
| | 510,639 |
Construction Materials - 0.2% |
Vulcan Materials Co. | 755,946 | | 36,134 |
Containers & Packaging - 0.2% |
Rock-Tenn Co. Class A | 311,560 | | 34,617 |
Metals & Mining - 0.0% |
Carpenter Technology Corp. | 218,948 | | 11,773 |
TOTAL MATERIALS | | 593,163 |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 1.6% |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.9% |
inContact, Inc. (a) | 1,254,487 | | 10,199 |
Level 3 Communications, Inc. (a) | 598,801 | | 13,389 |
tw telecom, Inc. (a) | 85,600 | | 2,450 |
Verizon Communications, Inc. | 3,594,460 | | 170,306 |
| | 196,344 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.7% |
Crown Castle International Corp. (a) | 186,575 | | 12,952 |
SBA Communications Corp. Class A (a) | 1,207,468 | | 90,560 |
Sprint Corp. (a) | 186,146 | | 1,249 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - continued |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - continued |
T-Mobile U.S., Inc. (a) | 1,367,200 | | $ 31,924 |
Vodafone Group PLC sponsored ADR | 605,600 | | 19,591 |
| | 156,276 |
TOTAL TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES | | 352,620 |
UTILITIES - 2.3% |
Electric Utilities - 1.0% |
American Electric Power Co., Inc. | 829,632 | | 35,508 |
Duke Energy Corp. | 1,424,020 | | 93,416 |
Edison International | 959,427 | | 44,028 |
Entergy Corp. | 90,600 | | 5,729 |
FirstEnergy Corp. | 641,675 | | 24,044 |
PPL Corp. | 654,900 | | 20,105 |
| | 222,830 |
Gas Utilities - 0.0% |
ONEOK, Inc. | 152,667 | | 7,853 |
Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - 0.3% |
NRG Energy, Inc. | 1,734,972 | | 45,543 |
The AES Corp. | 1,863,409 | | 23,684 |
| | 69,227 |
Multi-Utilities - 1.0% |
Ameren Corp. | 210,328 | | 7,111 |
CenterPoint Energy, Inc. | 2,282,452 | | 52,337 |
Dominion Resources, Inc. | 359,100 | | 20,953 |
NiSource, Inc. | 721,416 | | 21,109 |
PG&E Corp. | 1,310,129 | | 54,187 |
Sempra Energy | 698,336 | | 58,954 |
| | 214,651 |
TOTAL UTILITIES | | 514,561 |
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (Cost $12,451,813) | 15,488,913
|
Convertible Preferred Stocks - 0.0% |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.0% |
Media - 0.0% |
Jumptap, Inc. Series G (a)(o) | 893,724 | | $ 7,265 |
TOTAL CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCKS (Cost $6,429) | 7,265
|
Corporate Bonds - 9.0% |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | |
Convertible Bonds - 0.0% |
ENERGY - 0.0% |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 0.0% |
Cobalt International Energy, Inc. 2.625% 12/1/19 | | $ 1,740 | | 1,794 |
Nonconvertible Bonds - 9.0% |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.7% |
Auto Components - 0.1% |
DaimlerChrysler NA Holding Corp. 6.5% 11/15/13 | | 1,340 | | 1,355 |
Delphi Corp. 5% 2/15/23 | | 11,942 | | 12,136 |
| | 13,491 |
Automobiles - 0.1% |
Daimler Finance North America LLC: | | | | |
1.45% 8/1/16 (f) | | 4,045 | | 4,027 |
1.95% 3/28/14 (f) | | 2,240 | | 2,253 |
Ford Motor Co.: | | | | |
4.75% 1/15/43 | | 17,363 | | 15,274 |
7.45% 7/16/31 | | 10,420 | | 12,558 |
Volkswagen International Finance NV 2.375% 3/22/17 (f) | | 1,830 | | 1,858 |
| | 35,970 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.0% |
Ingersoll-Rand Global Holding Co. Ltd.: | | | | |
2.875% 1/15/19 (f) | | 617 | | 608 |
4.25% 6/15/23 (f) | | 4,350 | | 4,265 |
5.75% 6/15/43 (f) | | 3,131 | | 3,213 |
| | 8,086 |
Media - 0.5% |
AOL Time Warner, Inc. 7.625% 4/15/31 | | 4,975 | | 6,230 |
Comcast Corp.: | | | | |
4.95% 6/15/16 | | 955 | | 1,051 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Media - continued |
Comcast Corp.: - continued | | | | |
6.4% 5/15/38 | | $ 3,000 | | $ 3,545 |
6.4% 3/1/40 | | 6,097 | | 7,244 |
6.95% 8/15/37 | | 7,200 | | 9,020 |
COX Communications, Inc. 3.25% 12/15/22 (f) | | 2,422 | | 2,130 |
Discovery Communications LLC: | | | | |
3.7% 6/1/15 | | 5,665 | | 5,931 |
5.05% 6/1/20 | | 204 | | 222 |
NBC Universal, Inc.: | | | | |
3.65% 4/30/15 | | 1,468 | | 1,538 |
5.15% 4/30/20 | | 7,276 | | 8,190 |
6.4% 4/30/40 | | 6,271 | | 7,464 |
News America Holdings, Inc. 7.75% 12/1/45 | | 9,421 | | 11,730 |
Time Warner Cable, Inc.: | | | | |
4% 9/1/21 | | 8,786 | | 8,242 |
4.5% 9/15/42 | | 7,568 | | 5,855 |
5.5% 9/1/41 | | 20,823 | | 17,710 |
5.85% 5/1/17 | | 1,829 | | 1,989 |
5.875% 11/15/40 | | 1,496 | | 1,339 |
6.75% 7/1/18 | | 1,974 | | 2,197 |
Time Warner, Inc.: | | | | |
3.15% 7/15/15 | | 544 | | 566 |
5.875% 11/15/16 | | 4,882 | | 5,520 |
Viacom, Inc.: | | | | |
1.25% 2/27/15 | | 456 | | 457 |
2.5% 9/1/18 | | 809 | | 799 |
3.5% 4/1/17 | | 264 | | 274 |
| | 109,243 |
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | 166,790 |
CONSUMER STAPLES - 0.5% |
Beverages - 0.1% |
Anheuser-Busch InBev Worldwide, Inc. 5.375% 11/15/14 | | 2,481 | | 2,619 |
Beam, Inc. 1.875% 5/15/17 | | 1,408 | | 1,404 |
FBG Finance Ltd. 5.125% 6/15/15 (f) | | 4,938 | | 5,297 |
Fortune Brands, Inc. 5.375% 1/15/16 | | 1,902 | | 2,071 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER STAPLES - continued |
Beverages - continued |
Heineken NV: | | | | |
1.4% 10/1/17 (f) | | $ 3,274 | | $ 3,174 |
2.75% 4/1/23 (f) | | 3,420 | | 3,081 |
SABMiller Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
1.85% 1/15/15 (f) | | 2,353 | | 2,382 |
2.45% 1/15/17 (f) | | 2,353 | | 2,394 |
| | 22,422 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 0.0% |
Walgreen Co. 1% 3/13/15 | | 1,878 | | 1,883 |
Food Products - 0.2% |
Cargill, Inc. 6% 11/27/17 (f) | | 572 | | 655 |
ConAgra Foods, Inc.: | | | | |
1.9% 1/25/18 | | 2,279 | | 2,236 |
3.2% 1/25/23 | | 2,650 | | 2,470 |
4.65% 1/25/43 | | 2,233 | | 2,037 |
Kraft Foods, Inc.: | | | | |
5.375% 2/10/20 | | 26,594 | | 29,672 |
6.5% 8/11/17 | | 3,122 | | 3,613 |
6.75% 2/19/14 | | 436 | | 448 |
| | 41,131 |
Tobacco - 0.2% |
Altria Group, Inc.: | | | | |
2.85% 8/9/22 | | 4,604 | | 4,146 |
4.25% 8/9/42 | | 4,604 | | 3,771 |
9.7% 11/10/18 | | 6,258 | | 8,190 |
Reynolds American, Inc.: | | | | |
3.25% 11/1/22 | | 3,376 | | 3,081 |
4.75% 11/1/42 | | 5,216 | | 4,536 |
6.75% 6/15/17 | | 4,975 | | 5,725 |
7.25% 6/15/37 | | 7,569 | | 8,676 |
| | 38,125 |
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | 103,561 |
ENERGY - 1.1% |
Energy Equipment & Services - 0.2% |
Cameron International Corp. 1.6% 4/30/15 | | 279 | | 281 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Energy Equipment & Services - continued |
DCP Midstream LLC: | | | | |
4.75% 9/30/21 (f) | | $ 6,909 | | $ 6,988 |
5.35% 3/15/20 (f) | | 6,814 | | 7,238 |
El Paso Pipeline Partners Operating Co. LLC: | | | | |
4.1% 11/15/15 | | 7,675 | | 8,140 |
5% 10/1/21 | | 2,791 | | 2,943 |
6.5% 4/1/20 | | 2,608 | | 2,985 |
FMC Technologies, Inc.: | | | | |
2% 10/1/17 | | 846 | | 829 |
3.45% 10/1/22 | | 1,533 | | 1,455 |
Noble Holding International Ltd.: | | | | |
3.05% 3/1/16 | | 914 | | 940 |
3.45% 8/1/15 | | 1,299 | | 1,348 |
Transocean, Inc. 5.05% 12/15/16 | | 4,522 | | 4,943 |
Weatherford International Ltd. 4.95% 10/15/13 | | 2,930 | | 2,942 |
| | 41,032 |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 0.9% |
Anadarko Petroleum Corp.: | | | | |
5.95% 9/15/16 | | 1,716 | | 1,924 |
6.375% 9/15/17 | | 15,653 | | 18,095 |
6.45% 9/15/36 | | 4,710 | | 5,475 |
Apache Corp. 3.25% 4/15/22 | | 233 | | 227 |
Cenovus Energy, Inc. 4.5% 9/15/14 | | 900 | | 935 |
Chevron Corp. 3.191% 6/24/23 | | 7,633 | | 7,390 |
DCP Midstream Operating LP: | | | | |
2.5% 12/1/17 | | 3,027 | | 2,973 |
3.875% 3/15/23 | | 1,823 | | 1,663 |
4.95% 4/1/22 | | 1,267 | | 1,258 |
Duke Energy Field Services: | | | | |
5.375% 10/15/15 (f) | | 2,055 | | 2,209 |
6.45% 11/3/36 (f) | | 6,493 | | 6,824 |
El Paso Natural Gas Co. 5.95% 4/15/17 | | 1,572 | | 1,766 |
Enbridge Energy Partners LP 4.2% 9/15/21 | | 8,103 | | 8,142 |
Encana Holdings Finance Corp. 5.8% 5/1/14 | | 4,858 | | 5,015 |
Enterprise Products Operating LP 5.6% 10/15/14 | | 1,709 | | 1,797 |
Gulfstream Natural Gas System LLC 6.95% 6/1/16 (f) | | 780 | | 885 |
Marathon Petroleum Corp.: | | | | |
3.5% 3/1/16 | | 493 | | 517 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued |
Marathon Petroleum Corp.: - continued | | | | |
5.125% 3/1/21 | | $ 4,415 | | $ 4,725 |
Midcontinent Express Pipeline LLC 5.45% 9/15/14 (f) | | 7,948 | | 8,194 |
Motiva Enterprises LLC: | | | | |
5.75% 1/15/20 (f) | | 1,252 | | 1,422 |
6.85% 1/15/40 (f) | | 4,294 | | 5,241 |
Nakilat, Inc. 6.067% 12/31/33 (f) | | 2,490 | | 2,615 |
Nexen, Inc.: | | | | |
5.2% 3/10/15 | | 1,528 | | 1,612 |
6.2% 7/30/19 | | 2,252 | | 2,604 |
Occidental Petroleum Corp. 2.7% 2/15/23 | | 1,942 | | 1,758 |
Petrobras Global Finance BV: | | | | |
3% 1/15/19 | | 5,005 | | 4,597 |
4.375% 5/20/23 | | 4,137 | | 3,632 |
Petrobras International Finance Co. Ltd.: | | | | |
3.875% 1/27/16 | | 7,288 | | 7,476 |
5.375% 1/27/21 | | 2,625 | | 2,563 |
7.875% 3/15/19 | | 7,382 | | 8,310 |
Petroleos Mexicanos: | | | | |
3.5% 7/18/18 | | 6,965 | | 7,024 |
3.5% 1/30/23 | | 5,005 | | 4,479 |
4.875% 1/24/22 | | 1,430 | | 1,444 |
5.5% 1/21/21 | | 7,423 | | 7,868 |
5.5% 6/27/44 | | 19,723 | | 17,110 |
6% 3/5/20 | | 2,274 | | 2,496 |
6.5% 6/2/41 | | 7,392 | | 7,355 |
Phillips 66: | | | | |
1.95% 3/5/15 | | 1,844 | | 1,871 |
2.95% 5/1/17 | | 1,844 | | 1,898 |
4.3% 4/1/22 | | 6,383 | | 6,438 |
5.875% 5/1/42 | | 5,485 | | 5,822 |
Plains All American Pipeline LP/PAA Finance Corp.: | | | | |
3.95% 9/15/15 | | 356 | | 377 |
6.125% 1/15/17 | | 1,940 | | 2,203 |
Southeast Supply Header LLC 4.85% 8/15/14 (f) | | 1,358 | | 1,405 |
Spectra Energy Capital, LLC 5.65% 3/1/20 | | 1,087 | | 1,184 |
Spectra Energy Partners, LP: | | | | |
2.95% 6/15/16 | | 1,472 | | 1,502 |
4.6% 6/15/21 | | 1,816 | | 1,855 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued |
Suncor Energy, Inc. 6.1% 6/1/18 | | $ 623 | | $ 721 |
Texas Eastern Transmission LP 6% 9/15/17 (f) | | 1,301 | | 1,462 |
TransCapitalInvest Ltd. 5.67% 3/5/14 (f) | | 6,508 | | 6,661 |
Western Gas Partners LP 5.375% 6/1/21 | | 9,827 | | 10,600 |
| | 213,619 |
TOTAL ENERGY | | 254,651 |
FINANCIALS - 4.6% |
Capital Markets - 0.8% |
Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. 5.3% 10/30/15 | | 1,060 | | 1,149 |
BlackRock, Inc.: | | | | |
3.375% 6/1/22 | | 332 | | 327 |
4.25% 5/24/21 | | 501 | | 529 |
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.: | | | | |
2.9% 7/19/18 | | 10,319 | | 10,292 |
3.625% 1/22/23 | | 7,800 | | 7,352 |
5.95% 1/18/18 | | 5,343 | | 5,970 |
6.15% 4/1/18 | | 3,993 | | 4,509 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co.: | | | | |
0.8% 4/23/15 | | 31,000 | | 30,921 |
1.125% 2/26/16 | | 16,826 | | 16,780 |
Lazard Group LLC: | | | | |
6.85% 6/15/17 | | 6,480 | | 7,308 |
7.125% 5/15/15 | | 2,316 | | 2,513 |
Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.: | | | | |
6.11% 1/29/37 | | 13,452 | | 13,639 |
6.4% 8/28/17 | | 5,074 | | 5,779 |
7.75% 5/14/38 | | 8,738 | | 10,478 |
Morgan Stanley: | | | | |
2.125% 4/25/18 | | 18,100 | | 17,451 |
4% 7/24/15 | | 1,373 | | 1,434 |
4.875% 11/1/22 | | 8,068 | | 7,948 |
5.375% 10/15/15 | | 17,634 | | 18,980 |
5.625% 9/23/19 | | 547 | | 601 |
5.95% 12/28/17 | | 301 | | 337 |
6.625% 4/1/18 | | 1,804 | | 2,065 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Capital Markets - continued |
State Street Corp. 3.1% 5/15/23 | | $ 7,500 | | $ 6,934 |
UBS AG Stamford Branch 2.25% 1/28/14 | | 1,211 | | 1,220 |
| | 174,516 |
Commercial Banks - 1.2% |
Associated Banc Corp. 5.125% 3/28/16 | | 2,238 | | 2,391 |
Bank of America NA 5.3% 3/15/17 | | 16,651 | | 18,147 |
BB&T Corp. 3.95% 3/22/22 | | 1,805 | | 1,785 |
Comerica Bank 5.7% 6/1/14 | | 613 | | 634 |
Comerica, Inc. 4.8% 5/1/15 | | 1,223 | | 1,288 |
Credit Suisse 6% 2/15/18 | | 17,158 | | 19,203 |
Credit Suisse New York Branch 5.4% 1/14/20 | | 1,450 | | 1,571 |
Discover Bank: | | | | |
7% 4/15/20 | | 4,144 | | 4,855 |
8.7% 11/18/19 | | 745 | | 940 |
Fifth Third Bancorp: | | | | |
3.5% 3/15/22 | | 638 | | 622 |
4.5% 6/1/18 | | 584 | | 624 |
5.45% 1/15/17 | | 2,232 | | 2,446 |
8.25% 3/1/38 | | 4,070 | | 5,245 |
Fifth Third Capital Trust IV 6.5% 4/15/37 (k) | | 4,966 | | 4,929 |
HBOS PLC 6.75% 5/21/18 (f) | | 560 | | 611 |
Huntington Bancshares, Inc. 7% 12/15/20 | | 3,353 | | 3,930 |
Intesa Sanpaolo SpA: | | | | |
3.125% 1/15/16 | | 20,275 | | 20,209 |
3.875% 1/16/18 | | 20,086 | | 19,564 |
JPMorgan Chase Bank 6% 10/1/17 | | 2,460 | | 2,791 |
KeyBank NA: | | | | |
5.45% 3/3/16 | | 3,278 | | 3,588 |
5.8% 7/1/14 | | 9,872 | | 10,279 |
KeyCorp. 5.1% 3/24/21 | | 628 | | 687 |
Marshall & Ilsley Bank: | | | | |
4.85% 6/16/15 | | 5,313 | | 5,660 |
5% 1/17/17 | | 10,492 | | 11,353 |
Regions Bank: | | | | |
6.45% 6/26/37 | | 12,100 | | 12,562 |
7.5% 5/15/18 | | 10,717 | | 12,517 |
Regions Financial Corp.: | | | | |
2% 5/15/18 | | 7,953 | | 7,598 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Commercial Banks - continued |
Regions Financial Corp.: - continued | | | | |
5.75% 6/15/15 | | $ 1,528 | | $ 1,639 |
7.75% 11/10/14 | | 7,190 | | 7,737 |
Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC: | | | | |
6.1% 6/10/23 | | 8,213 | | 7,887 |
6.125% 12/15/22 | | 39,429 | | 37,880 |
SunTrust Banks, Inc.: | | | | |
0.574% 4/1/15 (k) | | 9,681 | | 9,613 |
3.5% 1/20/17 | | 4,862 | | 5,092 |
UnionBanCal Corp. 3.5% 6/18/22 | | 969 | | 936 |
Wachovia Bank NA: | | | | |
4.8% 11/1/14 | | 557 | | 583 |
6% 11/15/17 | | 8,083 | | 9,238 |
Wachovia Corp. 5.625% 10/15/16 | | 5,718 | | 6,383 |
Wells Fargo & Co.: | | | | |
1.5% 7/1/15 | | 15,284 | | 15,455 |
3.676% 6/15/16 | | 2,611 | | 2,773 |
| | 281,245 |
Consumer Finance - 0.6% |
American Express Credit Corp.: | | | | |
1.3% 7/29/16 | | 6,246 | | 6,256 |
2.75% 9/15/15 | | 1,633 | | 1,692 |
2.8% 9/19/16 | | 626 | | 653 |
American Honda Finance Corp. 1.45% 2/27/15 (f) | | 2,385 | | 2,407 |
Discover Financial Services: | | | | |
3.85% 11/21/22 | | 2,701 | | 2,543 |
5.2% 4/27/22 | | 2,488 | | 2,570 |
6.45% 6/12/17 | | 13,316 | | 15,028 |
Ford Motor Credit Co. LLC: | | | | |
2.5% 1/15/16 | | 16,000 | | 16,144 |
3% 6/12/17 | | 6,246 | | 6,286 |
General Electric Capital Corp.: | | | | |
1% 1/8/16 | | 20,700 | | 20,593 |
1.5% 7/12/16 | | 23,000 | | 23,073 |
2.25% 11/9/15 | | 645 | | 660 |
4.625% 1/7/21 | | 849 | | 897 |
Hyundai Capital America: | | | | |
1.625% 10/2/15 (f) | | 2,131 | | 2,130 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Consumer Finance - continued |
Hyundai Capital America: - continued | | | | |
1.875% 8/9/16 (f) | | $ 1,605 | | $ 1,603 |
2.125% 10/2/17 (f) | | 2,357 | | 2,299 |
2.875% 8/9/18 (f) | | 2,848 | | 2,829 |
Toyota Motor Credit Corp. 0.8% 5/17/16 | | 31,000 | | 30,831 |
| | 138,494 |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.3% |
Bank of America Corp.: | | | | |
3.3% 1/11/23 | | 3,868 | | 3,567 |
3.875% 3/22/17 | | 944 | | 994 |
4.1% 7/24/23 | | 6,161 | | 6,049 |
6.5% 8/1/16 | | 1,220 | | 1,375 |
BP Capital Markets PLC: | | | | |
3.125% 10/1/15 | | 1,345 | | 1,407 |
4.5% 10/1/20 | | 1,336 | | 1,423 |
4.742% 3/11/21 | | 6,000 | | 6,424 |
Citigroup, Inc.: | | | | |
1.7% 7/25/16 | | 9,000 | | 8,994 |
4.05% 7/30/22 | | 2,641 | | 2,536 |
4.45% 1/10/17 | | 15,842 | | 17,040 |
4.75% 5/19/15 | | 16,309 | | 17,272 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co.: | | | | |
3.15% 7/5/16 | | 1,641 | | 1,714 |
3.4% 6/24/15 | | 1,319 | | 1,374 |
RBS Citizens Financial Group, Inc. 4.15% 9/28/22 (f) | | 6,485 | | 6,194 |
TECO Finance, Inc.: | | | | |
4% 3/15/16 | | 1,828 | | 1,936 |
5.15% 3/15/20 | | 164 | | 178 |
| | 78,477 |
Insurance - 0.7% |
American International Group, Inc.: | | | | |
2.375% 8/24/15 | | 16,000 | | 16,193 |
3.8% 3/22/17 | | 6,043 | | 6,389 |
4.875% 9/15/16 | | 2,262 | | 2,466 |
4.875% 6/1/22 | | 4,860 | | 5,175 |
5.6% 10/18/16 | | 5,560 | | 6,176 |
Aon Corp.: | | | | |
3.125% 5/27/16 | | 4,743 | | 4,946 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Insurance - continued |
Aon Corp.: - continued | | | | |
3.5% 9/30/15 | | $ 4,875 | | $ 5,108 |
5% 9/30/20 | | 129 | | 140 |
Aon PLC 4.45% 5/24/43 | | 7,000 | | 6,173 |
Axis Capital Holdings Ltd. 5.75% 12/1/14 | | 452 | | 478 |
Great-West Life & Annuity Insurance Co. 7.153% 5/16/46 (f)(k) | | 2,508 | | 2,571 |
Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.: | | | | |
4% 10/15/17 | | 1,308 | | 1,389 |
5.125% 4/15/22 | | 1,066 | | 1,158 |
5.375% 3/15/17 | | 685 | | 751 |
Liberty Mutual Group, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 6/1/21 (f) | | 8,525 | | 8,955 |
6.5% 3/15/35 (f) | | 1,315 | | 1,438 |
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. 4.8% 7/15/21 | | 5,569 | | 5,961 |
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. 5.375% 12/1/41 (f) | | 3,576 | | 3,712 |
MetLife, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 6/15/15 | | 941 | | 1,009 |
6.75% 6/1/16 | | 5,158 | | 5,904 |
Metropolitan Life Global Funding I 1.875% 6/22/18 (f) | | 7,500 | | 7,303 |
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. 6.063% 3/30/40 (f) | | 4,915 | | 5,632 |
Pacific Life Insurance Co. 9.25% 6/15/39 (f) | | 3,967 | | 5,489 |
Pacific LifeCorp: | | | | |
5.125% 1/30/43 (f) | | 7,709 | | 7,144 |
6% 2/10/20 (f) | | 9,721 | | 10,855 |
Prudential Financial, Inc.: | | | | |
2.3% 8/15/18 | | 888 | | 886 |
3.875% 1/14/15 | | 5,340 | | 5,559 |
4.5% 11/16/21 | | 1,764 | | 1,859 |
7.375% 6/15/19 | | 2,520 | | 3,085 |
Symetra Financial Corp. 6.125% 4/1/16 (f) | | 8,408 | | 9,005 |
Unum Group: | | | | |
5.625% 9/15/20 | | 3,860 | | 4,197 |
5.75% 8/15/42 | | 8,065 | | 8,251 |
7.125% 9/30/16 | | 2,076 | | 2,368 |
| | 157,725 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.5% |
Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc. 4.6% 4/1/22 | | $ 2,035 | | $ 2,031 |
American Campus Communities Operating Partnership LP 3.75% 4/15/23 | | 1,759 | | 1,647 |
Boston Properties, Inc. 3.85% 2/1/23 | | 8,081 | | 7,833 |
BRE Properties, Inc. 5.5% 3/15/17 | | 2,885 | | 3,159 |
Camden Property Trust: | | | | |
2.95% 12/15/22 | | 2,417 | | 2,185 |
5.375% 12/15/13 | | 3,103 | | 3,141 |
DDR Corp. 4.625% 7/15/22 | | 4,470 | | 4,475 |
Developers Diversified Realty Corp.: | | | | |
4.75% 4/15/18 | | 6,131 | | 6,566 |
7.5% 4/1/17 | | 6,446 | | 7,479 |
9.625% 3/15/16 | | 1,851 | | 2,193 |
Duke Realty LP: | | | | |
3.625% 4/15/23 | | 3,152 | | 2,879 |
3.875% 10/15/22 | | 5,452 | | 5,099 |
4.375% 6/15/22 | | 3,753 | | 3,656 |
5.4% 8/15/14 | | 1,356 | | 1,409 |
5.5% 3/1/16 | | 3,075 | | 3,333 |
6.75% 3/15/20 | | 1,339 | | 1,526 |
8.25% 8/15/19 | | 2,643 | | 3,246 |
Equity One, Inc.: | | | | |
3.75% 11/15/22 | | 8,200 | | 7,636 |
5.375% 10/15/15 | | 948 | | 1,023 |
6% 9/15/17 | | 876 | | 969 |
6.25% 1/15/17 | | 663 | | 732 |
Federal Realty Investment Trust: | | | | |
5.9% 4/1/20 | | 1,971 | | 2,232 |
6.2% 1/15/17 | | 501 | | 564 |
HCP, Inc. 3.15% 8/1/22 | | 7,000 | | 6,381 |
Health Care REIT, Inc.: | | | | |
2.25% 3/15/18 | | 2,600 | | 2,546 |
4.125% 4/1/19 | | 13,700 | | 14,234 |
4.7% 9/15/17 | | 843 | | 911 |
HRPT Properties Trust: | | | | |
5.75% 11/1/15 | | 1,731 | | 1,810 |
6.25% 6/15/17 | | 996 | | 1,053 |
6.65% 1/15/18 | | 676 | | 724 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Investment Trusts - continued |
Washington REIT 5.25% 1/15/14 | | $ 1,137 | | $ 1,153 |
Weingarten Realty Investors 3.375% 10/15/22 | | 1,228 | | 1,119 |
| | 104,944 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.5% |
BioMed Realty LP: | | | | |
3.85% 4/15/16 | | 8,775 | | 9,169 |
4.25% 7/15/22 | | 2,970 | | 2,858 |
6.125% 4/15/20 | | 2,611 | | 2,886 |
Brandywine Operating Partnership LP: | | | | |
3.95% 2/15/23 | | 7,304 | | 6,832 |
4.95% 4/15/18 | | 2,996 | | 3,182 |
5.7% 5/1/17 | | 309 | | 338 |
6% 4/1/16 | | 2,770 | | 3,034 |
7.5% 5/15/15 | | 776 | | 853 |
Digital Realty Trust LP: | | | | |
4.5% 7/15/15 | | 3,650 | | 3,830 |
5.25% 3/15/21 | | 4,138 | | 4,260 |
ERP Operating LP 5.75% 6/15/17 | | 2,042 | | 2,287 |
Liberty Property LP: | | | | |
3.375% 6/15/23 | | 3,313 | | 3,014 |
4.125% 6/15/22 | | 3,219 | | 3,150 |
4.75% 10/1/20 | | 8,747 | | 9,120 |
5.125% 3/2/15 | | 1,672 | | 1,760 |
5.5% 12/15/16 | | 2,529 | | 2,785 |
Mack-Cali Realty LP: | | | | |
2.5% 12/15/17 | | 4,556 | | 4,442 |
3.15% 5/15/23 | | 7,438 | | 6,470 |
4.5% 4/18/22 | | 2,016 | | 1,974 |
7.75% 8/15/19 | | 2,476 | | 2,962 |
Post Apartment Homes LP 3.375% 12/1/22 | | 1,364 | | 1,251 |
Prime Property Funding, Inc.: | | | | |
5.125% 6/1/15 (f) | | 2,812 | | 2,967 |
5.5% 1/15/14 (f) | | 1,168 | | 1,190 |
5.7% 4/15/17 (f) | | 2,854 | | 3,105 |
Regency Centers LP: | | | | |
4.95% 4/15/14 | | 494 | | 505 |
5.25% 8/1/15 | | 3,893 | | 4,167 |
5.875% 6/15/17 | | 1,771 | | 1,958 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Management & Development - continued |
Simon Property Group LP: | | | | |
2.8% 1/30/17 | | $ 82 | | $ 84 |
4.2% 2/1/15 | | 2,640 | | 2,743 |
Tanger Properties LP: | | | | |
6.125% 6/1/20 | | 9,597 | | 11,079 |
6.15% 11/15/15 | | 1,286 | | 1,426 |
Ventas Realty LP/Ventas Capital Corp.: | | | | |
2% 2/15/18 | | 4,056 | | 3,928 |
4% 4/30/19 | | 1,999 | | 2,070 |
| | 111,679 |
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | 1,047,080 |
HEALTH CARE - 0.4% |
Biotechnology - 0.1% |
Amgen, Inc.: | | | | |
3.875% 11/15/21 | | 1,808 | | 1,811 |
5.15% 11/15/41 | | 17,224 | | 16,680 |
Celgene Corp. 2.45% 10/15/15 | | 2,168 | | 2,227 |
| | 20,718 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 0.2% |
Aetna, Inc.: | | | | |
2.75% 11/15/22 | | 3,213 | | 2,923 |
4.125% 11/15/42 | | 1,793 | | 1,559 |
Coventry Health Care, Inc.: | | | | |
5.95% 3/15/17 | | 1,413 | | 1,599 |
6.3% 8/15/14 | | 2,925 | | 3,074 |
Express Scripts Holding Co.: | | | | |
3.9% 2/15/22 | | 1,915 | | 1,918 |
4.75% 11/15/21 | | 17,355 | | 18,382 |
Express Scripts, Inc. 3.125% 5/15/16 | | 332 | | 345 |
Medco Health Solutions, Inc.: | | | | |
2.75% 9/15/15 | | 4,158 | | 4,284 |
4.125% 9/15/20 | | 5,031 | | 5,169 |
UnitedHealth Group, Inc.: | | | | |
1.625% 3/15/19 | | 1,873 | | 1,789 |
2.75% 2/15/23 | | 1,069 | | 982 |
2.875% 3/15/23 | | 8,084 | | 7,486 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
HEALTH CARE - continued |
Health Care Providers & Services - continued |
UnitedHealth Group, Inc.: - continued | | | | |
3.95% 10/15/42 | | $ 1,469 | | $ 1,266 |
WellPoint, Inc.: | | | | |
1.25% 9/10/15 | | 108 | | 109 |
1.875% 1/15/18 | | 195 | | 191 |
3.3% 1/15/23 | | 2,598 | | 2,438 |
| | 53,514 |
Pharmaceuticals - 0.1% |
AbbVie, Inc. 1.75% 11/6/17 | | 6,470 | | 6,370 |
Watson Pharmaceuticals, Inc.: | | | | |
1.875% 10/1/17 | | 2,149 | | 2,113 |
5% 8/15/14 | | 2,544 | | 2,637 |
Zoetis, Inc.: | | | | |
1.875% 2/1/18 (f) | | 992 | | 972 |
3.25% 2/1/23 (f) | | 2,418 | | 2,272 |
| | 14,364 |
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | 88,596 |
INDUSTRIALS - 0.3% |
Aerospace & Defense - 0.0% |
BAE Systems Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
4.95% 6/1/14 (f) | | 2,021 | | 2,077 |
6.375% 6/1/19 (f) | | 5,000 | | 5,697 |
| | 7,774 |
Air Freight & Logistics - 0.0% |
United Parcel Service, Inc. 2.45% 10/1/22 | | 1,883 | | 1,740 |
Airlines - 0.1% |
American Airlines pass-thru trust Series 2013-2 Class A, 4.95% 7/15/24 (f) | | 12,500 | | 12,563 |
Continental Airlines, Inc.: | | | | |
6.648% 3/15/19 | | 2,978 | | 3,131 |
6.9% 7/2/19 | | 1,028 | | 1,072 |
U.S. Airways pass-thru trust certificates: | | | | |
6.85% 1/30/18 | | 1,936 | | 2,023 |
8.36% 1/20/19 | | 1,576 | | 1,686 |
| | 20,475 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Industrial Conglomerates - 0.1% |
General Electric Co. 4.125% 10/9/42 | | $ 19,701 | | $ 17,890 |
Road & Rail - 0.1% |
Burlington Northern Santa Fe LLC: | | | | |
4.4% 3/15/42 | | 11,995 | | 10,877 |
4.45% 3/15/43 | | 6,000 | | 5,418 |
5.05% 3/1/41 | | 8,624 | | 8,563 |
| | 24,858 |
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | 72,737 |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 0.1% |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 0.0% |
Tyco Electronics Group SA: | | | | |
1.6% 2/3/15 | | 188 | | 189 |
5.95% 1/15/14 | | 5,513 | | 5,620 |
6.55% 10/1/17 | | 1,119 | | 1,279 |
| | 7,088 |
IT Services - 0.0% |
The Western Union Co. 2.375% 12/10/15 | | 155 | | 158 |
Office Electronics - 0.1% |
Xerox Corp.: | | | | |
1.0832% 5/16/14 (k) | | 10,110 | | 10,110 |
2.95% 3/15/17 | | 1,143 | | 1,166 |
4.25% 2/15/15 | | 1,302 | | 1,358 |
| | 12,634 |
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | 19,880 |
MATERIALS - 0.1% |
Chemicals - 0.0% |
Ecolab, Inc. 1.45% 12/8/17 | | 3,459 | | 3,360 |
Construction Materials - 0.0% |
CRH America, Inc. 6% 9/30/16 | | 3,083 | | 3,463 |
Metals & Mining - 0.1% |
Anglo American Capital PLC 9.375% 4/8/14 (f) | | 3,112 | | 3,259 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
MATERIALS - continued |
Metals & Mining - continued |
Corporacion Nacional del Cobre de Chile (Codelco): | | | | |
3.875% 11/3/21 (f) | | $ 8,722 | | $ 8,354 |
4.5% 8/13/23 (f) | | 8,000 | | 7,813 |
| | 19,426 |
TOTAL MATERIALS | | 26,249 |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 0.3% |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.3% |
AT&T, Inc.: | | | | |
2.4% 8/15/16 | | 355 | | 365 |
2.5% 8/15/15 | | 1,377 | | 1,418 |
4.35% 6/15/45 | | 1,184 | | 1,006 |
5.55% 8/15/41 | | 23,700 | | 24,147 |
BellSouth Capital Funding Corp. 7.875% 2/15/30 | | 61 | | 74 |
CenturyLink, Inc.: | | | | |
5.15% 6/15/17 | | 487 | | 508 |
6% 4/1/17 | | 3,467 | | 3,710 |
6.15% 9/15/19 | | 4,463 | | 4,642 |
Embarq Corp.: | | | | |
7.082% 6/1/16 | | 4,190 | | 4,710 |
7.995% 6/1/36 | | 19,241 | | 19,679 |
Verizon Communications, Inc. 6.25% 4/1/37 | | 4,611 | | 5,066 |
| | 65,325 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.0% |
America Movil S.A.B. de CV: | | | | |
2.375% 9/8/16 | | 371 | | 376 |
3.625% 3/30/15 | | 3,102 | | 3,200 |
Vodafone Group PLC 5% 12/16/13 | | 2,696 | | 2,730 |
| | 6,306 |
TOTAL TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES | | 71,631 |
UTILITIES - 0.9% |
Electric Utilities - 0.6% |
AmerenUE 6.4% 6/15/17 | | 1,518 | | 1,761 |
American Electric Power Co., Inc.: | | | | |
1.65% 12/15/17 | | 2,632 | | 2,557 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
UTILITIES - continued |
Electric Utilities - continued |
American Electric Power Co., Inc.: - continued | | | | |
2.95% 12/15/22 | | $ 2,492 | | $ 2,275 |
Duke Capital LLC 5.668% 8/15/14 | | 3,457 | | 3,600 |
Duquesne Light Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
5.9% 12/1/21 (f) | | 5,539 | | 6,157 |
6.4% 9/15/20 (f) | | 11,856 | | 13,562 |
Edison International 3.75% 9/15/17 | | 4,499 | | 4,721 |
Entergy Louisiana LLC 1.875% 12/15/14 | | 202 | | 205 |
FirstEnergy Corp.: | | | | |
2.75% 3/15/18 | | 5,228 | | 5,011 |
4.25% 3/15/23 | | 9,248 | | 8,381 |
7.375% 11/15/31 | | 10,706 | | 10,797 |
FirstEnergy Solutions Corp. 6.05% 8/15/21 | | 12,120 | | 12,930 |
Indiana Michigan Power Co. 3.2% 3/15/23 | | 5,866 | | 5,507 |
LG&E and KU Energy LLC: | | | | |
2.125% 11/15/15 | | 5,251 | | 5,363 |
3.75% 11/15/20 | | 1,034 | | 1,039 |
Nevada Power Co. 6.5% 8/1/18 | | 2,642 | | 3,146 |
NextEra Energy Capital Holdings, Inc. 1.611% 6/1/14 | | 619 | | 623 |
Northeast Utilities: | | | | |
1.45% 5/1/18 | | 1,676 | | 1,613 |
2.8% 5/1/23 | | 7,613 | | 6,986 |
Pennsylvania Electric Co. 6.05% 9/1/17 | | 618 | | 693 |
Pepco Holdings, Inc. 2.7% 10/1/15 | | 5,263 | | 5,398 |
PPL Capital Funding, Inc. 3.4% 6/1/23 | | 3,630 | | 3,395 |
Progress Energy, Inc. 4.4% 1/15/21 | | 405 | | 427 |
Sierra Pacific Power Co. 5.45% 9/1/13 | | 2,624 | | 2,624 |
Southern Co. 2.375% 9/15/15 | | 393 | | 404 |
West Penn Power Co. 5.95% 12/15/17 (f) | | 6,500 | | 7,402 |
| | 116,577 |
Gas Utilities - 0.0% |
Southern Natural Gas Co. 5.9% 4/1/17 (f) | | 357 | | 403 |
Southern Natural Gas Co./Southern Natural Issuing Corp. 4.4% 6/15/21 | | 2,473 | | 2,565 |
| | 2,968 |
Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - 0.0% |
PSEG Power LLC 2.75% 9/15/16 | | 1,703 | | 1,763 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
UTILITIES - continued |
Multi-Utilities - 0.3% |
Ameren Illinois Co. 6.125% 11/15/17 | | $ 333 | | $ 383 |
Dominion Resources, Inc.: | | | | |
1.95% 8/15/16 | | 246 | | 250 |
2.5756% 9/30/66 (k) | | 16,990 | | 15,825 |
7.5% 6/30/66 (k) | | 5,485 | | 5,924 |
MidAmerican Energy Holdings, Co. 6.5% 9/15/37 | | 3,287 | | 3,885 |
National Grid PLC 6.3% 8/1/16 | | 973 | | 1,100 |
NiSource Finance Corp.: | | | | |
4.45% 12/1/21 | | 2,934 | | 3,002 |
5.25% 9/15/17 | | 682 | | 755 |
5.25% 2/15/43 | | 6,481 | | 6,231 |
5.4% 7/15/14 | | 7,266 | | 7,547 |
5.45% 9/15/20 | | 980 | | 1,077 |
5.8% 2/1/42 | | 3,785 | | 3,914 |
6.4% 3/15/18 | | 2,230 | | 2,571 |
6.8% 1/15/19 | | 4,065 | | 4,757 |
Sempra Energy: | | | | |
2% 3/15/14 | | 2,355 | | 2,372 |
2.875% 10/1/22 | | 6,192 | | 5,707 |
Wisconsin Energy Corp. 6.25% 5/15/67 (k) | | 4,882 | | 5,065 |
| | 70,365 |
TOTAL UTILITIES | | 191,673 |
TOTAL NONCONVERTIBLE BONDS | | 2,042,848 |
TOTAL CORPORATE BONDS (Cost $2,026,495) | 2,044,642
|
U.S. Treasury Obligations - 6.0% |
|
U.S. Treasury Bills, yield at date of purchase 0.02% to 0.04% 10/3/13 (i) | | 8,110 | | 8,110 |
U.S. Treasury Bonds 3.625% 8/15/43 | | 140,714 | | 138,603 |
U.S. Treasury Notes: | | | | |
0.625% 8/15/16 | | 75,125 | | 74,796 |
0.625% 5/31/17 (j) | | 455,509 | | 446,505 |
0.875% 2/28/17 | | 425,833 | | 423,338 |
U.S. Treasury Obligations - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
U.S. Treasury Notes: - continued | | | | |
0.875% 4/30/17 | | $ 246,018 | | $ 243,846 |
4.625% 2/15/17 | | 20,023 | | 22,466 |
TOTAL U.S. TREASURY OBLIGATIONS (Cost $1,362,588) | 1,357,664
|
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities - 4.1% |
|
Fannie Mae - 3.7% |
2.303% 6/1/36 (k) | | 175 | | 186 |
2.5% 11/1/27 to 8/1/43 | | 31,264 | | 29,558 |
2.753% 7/1/37 (k) | | 344 | | 363 |
3% 8/1/42 to 9/1/43 | | 41,096 | | 39,333 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 6,800 | | 6,501 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 6,800 | | 6,501 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 4,500 | | 4,302 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 4,500 | | 4,302 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 18,300 | | 17,495 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 9,000 | | 8,604 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 12,500 | | 11,950 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 5,800 | | 5,545 |
3.5% 5/1/42 to 8/1/43 | | 227,750 | | 225,112 |
4% 2/1/35 to 1/1/42 | | 11,436 | | 11,802 |
4% 9/1/43 (h) | | 27,800 | | 28,667 |
4% 9/1/43 (h) | | 58,400 | | 60,220 |
4% 9/1/43 (h) | | 4,100 | | 4,228 |
4% 9/1/43 (h) | | 4,500 | | 4,640 |
4% 9/1/43 (h) | | 17,900 | | 18,458 |
4% 10/1/43 (h) | | 6,500 | | 6,684 |
4.5% 12/1/23 to 7/1/41 | | 7,755 | | 8,199 |
4.5% 9/1/43 (h) | | 53,400 | | 56,337 |
4.5% 9/1/43 (h) | | 28,500 | | 30,068 |
4.5% 9/1/43 (h) | | 28,500 | | 30,068 |
4.5% 10/1/43 (h) | | 81,900 | | 86,187 |
5% 9/1/43 (h) | | 35,600 | | 38,265 |
5% 10/1/43 (h) | | 35,600 | | 38,179 |
5.5% 9/1/24 | | 4,373 | | 4,705 |
5.5% 9/1/43 (h) | | 28,600 | | 31,049 |
5.5% 9/1/43 (h) | | 8,250 | | 8,956 |
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Fannie Mae - continued |
6% 6/1/35 to 8/1/37 | | $ 8,052 | | $ 8,899 |
6.5% 7/1/32 to 8/1/36 | | 1,469 | | 1,642 |
TOTAL FANNIE MAE | | 837,005 |
Freddie Mac - 0.1% |
2.5% 5/1/28 | | 3,400 | | 3,368 |
3% 1/1/43 | | 6,862 | | 6,547 |
3.126% 10/1/35 (k) | | 230 | | 246 |
3.5% 4/1/32 to 6/1/43 | | 9,177 | | 9,034 |
4% 6/1/24 to 9/1/25 | | 2,036 | | 2,142 |
4.5% 7/1/25 to 12/1/40 | | 829 | | 877 |
5% 3/1/19 | | 2,228 | | 2,366 |
5.5% 1/1/34 to 3/1/40 | | 1,507 | | 1,629 |
6% 7/1/37 to 8/1/37 | | 591 | | 644 |
6.5% 3/1/36 | | 1,039 | | 1,166 |
TOTAL FREDDIE MAC | | 28,019 |
Ginnie Mae - 0.3% |
3.5% 11/15/41 to 3/15/42 | | 587 | | 593 |
4% 1/15/25 to 9/15/41 | | 46,455 | | 48,546 |
4% 9/1/43 (h) | | 10,600 | | 11,028 |
5.5% 12/15/31 to 1/15/39 | | 3,632 | | 3,993 |
6% 2/15/34 to 9/20/38 | | 10,067 | | 11,218 |
TOTAL GINNIE MAE | | 75,378 |
TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY - MORTGAGE SECURITIES (Cost $949,678) | 940,402
|
Asset-Backed Securities - 0.2% |
|
Accredited Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2005-1 Class M1, 0.6541% 4/25/35 (k) | | 729 | | 656 |
ACE Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 2004-HE1 Class M2, 1.8341% 3/25/34 (k) | | 371 | | 346 |
Series 2005-HE2 Class M2, 0.8591% 4/25/35 (k) | | 18 | | 18 |
AmeriCredit Auto Receivables Trust Series 2013-4: | | | | |
Class C, 2.72% 9/9/19 | | 1,410 | | 1,410 |
Class D, 3.31% 10/8/19 | | 880 | | 880 |
Asset-Backed Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Ameriquest Mortgage Securities, Inc. pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
Series 2003-10 Class M1, 1.2341% 12/25/33 (k) | | $ 72 | | $ 65 |
Series 2004-R2 Class M3, 1.0091% 4/25/34 (k) | | 107 | | 64 |
Series 2005-R2 Class M1, 0.6341% 4/25/35 (k) | | 1,662 | | 1,636 |
Argent Securities, Inc. pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
Series 2003-W7 Class A2, 0.9641% 3/25/34 (k) | | 53 | | 49 |
Series 2004-W11 Class M2, 1.2341% 11/25/34 (k) | | 616 | | 560 |
Series 2004-W7 Class M1, 1.0091% 5/25/34 (k) | | 1,600 | | 1,488 |
Series 2006-W4 Class A2C, 0.3441% 5/25/36 (k) | | 1,364 | | 490 |
Asset Backed Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 2004-HE2 Class M1, 1.0091% 4/25/34 (k) | | 2,323 | | 2,194 |
Series 2006-HE2 Class M1, 0.5541% 3/25/36 (k) | | 35 | | 1 |
Capital Trust Ltd. Series 2004-1: | | | | |
Class B, 0.9341% 7/20/39 (f)(k) | | 239 | | 200 |
Class C, 1.2841% 7/20/39 (f)(k) | | 372 | | 16 |
Carrington Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2007-RFC1 Class A3, 0.3241% 12/25/36 (k) | | 1,978 | | 1,140 |
CFC LLC Series 2013-1A Class A, 1.65% 7/17/17 (f) | | 1,553 | | 1,552 |
Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.: | | | | |
Series 2004-3 Class M4, 1.6391% 4/25/34 (k) | | 115 | | 87 |
Series 2004-4 Class M2, 0.9791% 6/25/34 (k) | | 605 | | 557 |
Fannie Mae Series 2004-T5 Class AB3, 0.9892% 5/28/35 (k) | | 43 | | 39 |
Fieldstone Mortgage Investment Corp. Series 2004-3 Class M5, 2.3591% 8/25/34 (k) | | 319 | | 243 |
First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2004-FF2 Class M3, 1.0091% 3/25/34 (k) | | 18 | | 15 |
Ford Credit Floorplan Master Owner Trust Series 2013-3 Class A1, 0.79% 6/15/17 | | 12,280 | | 12,256 |
Fremont Home Loan Trust Series 2005-A: | | | | |
Class M3, 0.9191% 1/25/35 (k) | | 1,041 | | 803 |
Class M4, 1.2041% 1/25/35 (k) | | 399 | | 91 |
GCO Education Loan Funding Master Trust II Series 2007-1A Class C1L, 0.6421% 2/25/47 (f)(k) | | 3,122 | | 2,437 |
GE Business Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 2003-1 Class A, 0.6141% 4/15/31 (f)(k) | | 83 | | 79 |
Series 2006-2A: | | | | |
Class A, 0.3641% 11/15/34 (f)(k) | | 1,216 | | 1,099 |
Class B, 0.4641% 11/15/34 (f)(k) | | 439 | | 370 |
Class C, 0.5641% 11/15/34 (f)(k) | | 729 | | 524 |
Class D, 0.9341% 11/15/34 (f)(k) | | 277 | | 173 |
Asset-Backed Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Guggenheim Structured Real Estate Funding Ltd. Series 2006-3 Class C, 0.7341% 9/25/46 (f)(k) | | $ 1,356 | | $ 1,349 |
Home Equity Asset Trust: | | | | |
Series 2003-2 Class M1, 1.5041% 8/25/33 (k) | | 342 | | 330 |
Series 2003-3 Class M1, 1.4741% 8/25/33 (k) | | 654 | | 597 |
Series 2003-5 Class A2, 0.8841% 12/25/33 (k) | | 36 | | 32 |
HSI Asset Securitization Corp. Trust Series 2007-HE1 Class 2A3, 0.3741% 1/25/37 (k) | | 1,642 | | 772 |
JPMorgan Mortgage Acquisition Trust: | | | | |
Series 2006-NC2 Class M2, 0.4841% 7/25/36 (k) | | 3,185 | | 163 |
Series 2007-CH1 Class AV4, 0.3141% 11/25/36 (k) | | 1,641 | | 1,596 |
Keycorp Student Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 1999-A Class A2, 0.6061% 12/27/29 (k) | | 418 | | 409 |
Series 2006-A Class 2C, 1.4261% 3/27/42 (k) | | 2,909 | | 440 |
MASTR Asset Backed Securities Trust Series 2007-HE1 Class M1, 0.4841% 5/25/37 (k) | | 597 | | 11 |
Meritage Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2004-1 Class M1, 0.9341% 7/25/34 (k) | | 146 | | 117 |
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Investors Trust: | | | | |
Series 2003-OPT1 Class M1, 1.1591% 7/25/34 (k) | | 506 | | 437 |
Series 2006-FM1 Class A2B, 0.2941% 4/25/37 (k) | | 822 | | 792 |
Series 2006-OPT1 Class A1A, 0.7041% 6/25/35 (k) | | 2,591 | | 2,394 |
Morgan Stanley ABS Capital I Trust: | | | | |
Series 2004-HE6 Class A2, 0.8641% 8/25/34 (k) | | 63 | | 62 |
Series 2005-NC1 Class M1, 0.6241% 1/25/35 (k) | | 439 | | 409 |
Series 2005-NC2 Class B1, 1.3541% 3/25/35 (k) | | 457 | | 185 |
New Century Home Equity Loan Trust Series 2005-4 Class M2, 0.6941% 9/25/35 (k) | | 1,566 | | 1,332 |
Ocala Funding LLC: | | | | |
Series 2005-1A Class A, 1.6841% 3/20/10 (d)(f)(k) | | 621 | | 0 |
Series 2006-1A Class A, 1.5841% 3/20/11 (d)(f)(k) | | 1,290 | | 0 |
Park Place Securities, Inc.: | | | | |
Series 2004-WCW1: | | | | |
Class M3, 1.4341% 9/25/34 (k) | | 585 | | 491 |
Class M4, 1.6341% 9/25/34 (k) | | 750 | | 226 |
Series 2005-WCH1 Class M4, 1.0141% 1/25/36 (k) | | 1,620 | | 1,378 |
Salomon Brothers Mortgage Securities VII, Inc. Series 2003-HE1 Class A, 0.9841% 4/25/33 (k) | | 6 | | 5 |
Saxon Asset Securities Trust Series 2004-1 Class M1, 0.9791% 3/25/35 (k) | | 1,202 | | 1,097 |
SLM Private Credit Student Loan Trust Series 2004-A Class C, 1.2233% 6/15/33 (k) | | 1,266 | | 964 |
Structured Asset Investment Loan Trust Series 2004-8 Class M5, 1.9091% 9/25/34 (k) | | 59 | | 41 |
Asset-Backed Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
SVO VOI Mortgage Corp. Series 2006-AA Class A, 5.28% 2/20/24 (f) | | $ 311 | | $ 312 |
Terwin Mortgage Trust Series 2003-4HE Class A1, 1.0441% 9/25/34 (k) | | 32 | | 30 |
Trapeza CDO XII Ltd./Trapeza CDO XII, Inc. Series 2007-12A Class B, 0.8309% 4/6/42 (f)(k) | | 2,197 | | 66 |
Whinstone Capital Management Ltd. Series 1A Class B3, 2.0659% 10/25/44 (f)(k) | | 1,964 | | 1,738 |
TOTAL ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES (Cost $40,677) | 49,313
|
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations - 0.3% |
|
Private Sponsor - 0.3% |
Bear Stearns ALT-A Trust floater Series 2005-1 Class A1, 0.7441% 1/25/35 (k) | | 1,683 | | 1,618 |
First Horizon Mortgage pass-thru Trust Series 2004-AR5 Class 2A1, 2.6056% 10/25/34 (k) | | 950 | | 942 |
Granite Master Issuer PLC: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-1A: | | | | |
Class A1, 0.2541% 12/20/54 (f)(k) | | 6,679 | | 6,556 |
Class A5, 0.3241% 12/20/54 (f)(k) | | 5,379 | | 5,280 |
Series 2006-2 Class A4, 0.2641% 12/20/54 (k) | | 1,993 | | 1,956 |
Series 2006-3: | | | | |
Class A3, 0.2641% 12/20/54 (k) | | 960 | | 942 |
Class A7, 0.3841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 1,043 | | 1,024 |
Class M2, 0.7441% 12/20/54 (k) | | 5,460 | | 4,928 |
Series 2006-4: | | | | |
Class A4, 0.2841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 3,059 | | 3,003 |
Class B1, 0.3641% 12/20/54 (k) | | 4,556 | | 4,207 |
Class M1, 0.5241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 1,198 | | 1,081 |
Series 2007-1: | | | | |
Class 1B1, 0.3241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 5,806 | | 5,362 |
Class 1M1, 0.4841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 1,611 | | 1,454 |
Class 2A1, 0.3241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 2,400 | | 2,356 |
Class 2M1, 0.6841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 2,067 | | 1,865 |
Series 2007-2: | | | | |
Class 1B1, 0.3441% 12/17/54 (k) | | 767 | | 708 |
Class 2C1, 1.0441% 12/17/54 (k) | | 2,864 | | 2,512 |
sequential payer Series 2006-3 Class B2, 0.5241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 5,461 | | 5,043 |
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Private Sponsor - continued |
Granite Master Issuer PLC: - continued | | | | |
Series 2007-2 Class 3A1, 0.3641% 12/17/54 (k) | | $ 428 | | $ 420 |
Granite Mortgages PLC floater Series 2003-3 Class 1C, 2.7162% 1/20/44 (k) | | 472 | | 451 |
JPMorgan Mortgage Trust sequential payer Series 2006-A5 Class 3A5, 2.7827% 8/25/36 (k) | | 1,590 | | 1,263 |
MASTR Adjustable Rate Mortgages Trust Series 2007-3 Class 22A2, 0.3941% 5/25/47 (k) | | 657 | | 490 |
Merrill Lynch Alternative Note Asset Trust floater Series 2007-OAR1 Class A1, 0.3541% 2/25/37 (k) | | 1,210 | | 1,035 |
Opteum Mortgage Acceptance Corp. floater Series 2005-3 Class APT, 0.4741% 7/25/35 (k) | | 1,749 | | 1,679 |
RESI Finance LP/RESI Finance DE Corp. floater Series 2003-B: | | | | |
Class B5, 2.535% 7/10/35 (f)(k) | | 781 | | 720 |
Class B6, 3.035% 7/10/35 (f)(k) | | 166 | | 155 |
Residential Funding Securities Corp. floater Series 2003-RP2 Class A1, 0.6341% 6/25/33 (f)(k) | | 34 | | 34 |
Sequoia Mortgage Trust floater Series 2004-6 Class A3B, 1.2893% 7/20/34 (k) | | 33 | | 31 |
Structured Asset Securities Corp. Series 2003-15A Class 4A, 2.5477% 4/25/33 (k) | | 190 | | 188 |
TBW Mortgage-Backed pass-thru certificates floater Series 2006-4 Class A3, 0.39% 9/25/36 (k) | | 2,694 | | 2,488 |
Thornburg Mortgage Securities Trust floater Series 2003-4 Class A1, 0.8241% 9/25/43 (k) | | 3,477 | | 3,306 |
TOTAL PRIVATE SPONSOR | | 63,097 |
U.S. Government Agency - 0.0% |
Fannie Mae: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2005-38 Class F, 0.4841% 5/25/35 (k) | | 1,072 | | 1,075 |
Series 2007-36 Class F, 0.4141% 4/25/37 (k) | | 1,669 | | 1,672 |
Series 2013-62 Class FA, 0.4841% 6/25/43 (k) | | 6,304 | | 6,295 |
floater sequential payer Series 2012-120 Class FE 0.4841% 2/25/39 (k) | | 2,776 | | 2,756 |
TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY | | 11,798 |
TOTAL COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (Cost $61,144) | 74,895
|
Commercial Mortgage Securities - 2.1% |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Asset Securitization Corp. Series 1997-D5 Class PS1, 1.3471% 2/14/43 (k)(m) | | $ 518 | | $ 16 |
Banc of America Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2004-2 Class A4, 4.153% 11/10/38 | | 285 | | 285 |
Series 2006-2 Class AAB, 5.7116% 5/10/45 (k) | | 737 | | 763 |
Series 2006-3 Class A4, 5.889% 7/10/44 | | 750 | | 822 |
Series 2006-5 Class A2, 5.317% 9/10/47 | | 3,470 | | 3,494 |
Series 2006-6 Class A3, 5.369% 10/10/45 | | 2,628 | | 2,682 |
Series 2007-4 Class A3, 5.8103% 2/10/51 (k) | | 803 | | 828 |
Series 2005-3 Class A3B, 5.09% 7/10/43 (k) | | 4,082 | | 4,251 |
Series 2006-6 Class E, 5.619% 10/10/45 (f) | | 759 | | 84 |
Series 2007-3: | | | | |
Class A3, 5.5595% 6/10/49 (k) | | 2,194 | | 2,200 |
Class A4, 5.5595% 6/10/49 (k) | | 2,739 | | 3,033 |
Banc of America Commercial Mortgage, Inc. sequential payer Series 2001-1 Class A4, 5.451% 1/15/49 | | 2,878 | | 3,121 |
Bayview Commercial Asset Trust: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2003-2 Class M1, 1.0341% 12/25/33 (f)(k) | | 54 | | 39 |
Series 2005-3A: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.5841% 11/25/35 (f)(k) | | 458 | | 386 |
Class M1, 0.6241% 11/25/35 (f)(k) | | 60 | | 42 |
Class M2, 0.6741% 11/25/35 (f)(k) | | 76 | | 53 |
Class M3, 0.6941% 11/25/35 (f)(k) | | 68 | | 46 |
Class M4, 0.7841% 11/25/35 (f)(k) | | 85 | | 53 |
Series 2005-4A: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.5741% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 1,204 | | 989 |
Class B1, 1.5841% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 104 | | 22 |
Class M1, 0.6341% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 388 | | 216 |
Class M2, 0.6541% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 117 | | 61 |
Class M3, 0.6841% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 170 | | 88 |
Class M4, 0.7941% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 94 | | 46 |
Class M5, 0.8341% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 94 | | 33 |
Class M6, 0.8841% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 100 | | 30 |
Series 2006-1: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.5441% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 185 | | 151 |
Class M1, 0.5641% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 66 | | 46 |
Class M2, 0.5841% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 70 | | 48 |
Class M3, 0.6041% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 60 | | 39 |
Class M4, 0.7041% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 34 | | 21 |
Class M5, 0.7441% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 33 | | 18 |
Class M6, 0.8241% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 66 | | 30 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Bayview Commercial Asset Trust: - continued | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-2A: | | | | |
Class M1, 0.4941% 7/25/36 (f)(k) | | $ 174 | | $ 106 |
Class M2, 0.5141% 7/25/36 (f)(k) | | 123 | | 72 |
Class M3, 0.5341% 7/25/36 (f)(k) | | 102 | | 47 |
Class M4, 0.6041% 7/25/36 (f)(k) | | 69 | | 30 |
Class M5, 0.6541% 7/25/36 (f)(k) | | 85 | | 30 |
Series 2006-3A Class M4, 0.6141% 10/25/36 (f)(k) | | 114 | | 17 |
Series 2006-4A: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.4541% 12/25/36 (f)(k) | | 3,582 | | 2,548 |
Class M1, 0.4741% 12/25/36 (f)(k) | | 239 | | 132 |
Class M2, 0.4941% 12/25/36 (f)(k) | | 159 | | 44 |
Class M3, 0.5241% 12/25/36 (f)(k) | | 160 | | 33 |
Series 2007-1 Class A2, 0.4541% 3/25/37 (f)(k) | | 735 | | 480 |
Series 2007-2A: | | | | |
Class A1, 0.4541% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 721 | | 556 |
Class A2, 0.5041% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 676 | | 339 |
Class M1, 0.5541% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 237 | | 65 |
Class M2, 0.5941% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 130 | | 22 |
Class M3, 0.6741% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 131 | | 13 |
Class M4, 0.8341% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 260 | | 10 |
Class M5, 0.9341% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 77 | | 2 |
Series 2007-3: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.4741% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 724 | | 452 |
Class M1, 0.4941% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 144 | | 68 |
Class M2, 0.5241% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 154 | | 45 |
Class M3, 0.5541% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 242 | | 56 |
Class M4, 0.6841% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 380 | | 77 |
Class M5, 0.7841% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 199 | | 29 |
Class M6, 0.9841% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 132 | | 16 |
Series 2007-4A: | | | | |
Class M1, 1.1341% 9/25/37 (f)(k) | | 278 | | 26 |
Class M2, 1.2341% 9/25/37 (f)(k) | | 278 | | 21 |
Class M4, 1.7841% 9/25/37 (f)(k) | | 297 | | 14 |
Series 2004-1, Class IO, 1.25% 4/25/34 (f)(m) | | 1,849 | | 72 |
Series 2006-3A, Class IO, 3.8179% 10/25/36 (f)(k)(m) | | 22,941 | | 530 |
Series 2007-5A, Class IO, 4.186% 10/25/37 (f)(k)(m) | | 4,785 | | 335 |
Bear Stearns Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: | | | | |
floater Series 2007-BBA8: | | | | |
Class D, 0.4341% 3/15/22 (f)(k) | | 653 | | 620 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Bear Stearns Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: - continued | | | | |
floater Series 2007-BBA8: | | | | |
Class E, 0.4841% 3/15/22 (f)(k) | | $ 3,391 | | $ 3,153 |
Class F, 0.5341% 3/15/22 (f)(k) | | 2,081 | | 1,893 |
Class G, 0.5841% 3/15/22 (f)(k) | | 534 | | 475 |
Class H, 0.7341% 3/15/22 (f)(k) | | 653 | | 567 |
Class J, 0.8841% 3/15/22 (f)(k) | | 653 | | 552 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2007-PW15 Class AAB, 5.315% 2/11/44 | | 2,559 | | 2,578 |
Series 2007-PW16: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.7131% 6/11/40 (k) | | 769 | | 864 |
Class AAB, 5.7131% 6/11/40 (k) | | 4,879 | | 5,066 |
Series 2007-PW18 Class A4, 5.7% 6/11/50 | | 5,820 | | 6,511 |
Series 2006-PW13 Class A3, 5.518% 9/11/41 | | 1,568 | | 1,567 |
Series 2006-PW14 Class X2, 0.6687% 12/11/38 (f)(k)(m) | | 12,399 | | 21 |
Series 2006-T22 Class A4, 5.5802% 4/12/38 (k) | | 164 | | 178 |
Series 2006-T24 Class X2, 0.4448% 10/12/41 (f)(k)(m) | | 2,945 | | 1 |
Series 2007-PW18 Class X2, 0.3099% 6/11/50 (f)(k)(m) | | 85,021 | | 565 |
Series 2007-T28 Class X2, 0.1575% 9/11/42 (f)(k)(m) | | 46,342 | | 159 |
C-BASS Trust floater Series 2006-SC1 Class A, 0.4541% 5/25/36 (f)(k) | | 599 | | 560 |
CDC Commercial Mortgage Trust Series 2002-FX1: | | | | |
Class G, 6.625% 5/15/35 (f) | | 1,544 | | 1,574 |
Class XCL, 1.198% 5/15/35 (f)(k)(m) | | 3,685 | | 59 |
Citigroup Commercial Mortgage Trust Series 2007-C6: | | | | |
Class A2, 5.6962% 12/10/49 (k) | | 10 | | 10 |
Class A4, 5.6962% 12/10/49 (k) | | 4,371 | | 4,895 |
Citigroup/Deutsche Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2007-CD4 Class A4, 5.322% 12/11/49 | | 16,063 | | 17,572 |
Series 2007-CD4 Class A3, 5.293% 12/11/49 | | 1,279 | | 1,306 |
Cobalt CMBS Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
Series 2006-C1 Class B, 5.359% 8/15/48 | | 3,942 | | 236 |
Series 2007-C2 Class B, 5.617% 4/15/47 (k) | | 1,468 | | 1,078 |
COMM pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2005-F10A Class J, 1.0341% 4/15/17 (f)(k) | | 139 | | 134 |
Series 2006-FL12 Class AJ, 0.3141% 12/15/20 (f)(k) | | 604 | | 596 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
COMM pass-thru certificates: - continued | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2007-C9 Class A4, 5.8% 12/10/49 (k) | | $ 2,907 | | $ 3,292 |
Series 2006-C8 Class XP, 0.4666% 12/10/46 (k)(m) | | 13,930 | | 19 |
Credit Suisse Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-C4 Class A3, 5.467% 9/15/39 | | 1,524 | | 1,657 |
Series 2007-C2 Class A2, 5.448% 1/15/49 (k) | | 333 | | 332 |
Series 2007-C3 Class A4, 5.6829% 6/15/39 (k) | | 528 | | 577 |
Series 2006-C5 Class ASP, 0.6595% 12/15/39 (k)(m) | | 9,772 | | 17 |
Series 2007-C5 Class A4, 5.695% 9/15/40 (k) | | 1,189 | | 1,324 |
Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Capital Certificates floater Series 2007-TF2A Class B, 0.5341% 4/15/22 (f)(k) | | 4,688 | | 4,239 |
Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp.: | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2004-C1 Class A4, 4.75% 1/15/37 | | 420 | | 421 |
Series 2001-CK6 Class AX, 1.1621% 8/15/36 (k)(m) | | 276 | | 0* |
Series 2001-CKN5 Class AX, 0.6549% 9/15/34 (f)(k)(m) | | 424 | | 0* |
Series 2006-C1 Class A3, 5.392% 2/15/39 (k) | | 3,211 | | 3,257 |
Credit Suisse Mortgage Capital Certificates: | | | | |
floater Series 2007-TFL1: | | | | |
Class B, 0.3341% 2/15/22 (f)(k) | | 497 | | 492 |
Class C: | | | | |
0.3541% 2/15/22 (f)(k) | | 2,047 | | 2,013 |
0.4541% 2/15/22 (f)(k) | | 731 | | 708 |
Class F, 0.5041% 2/15/22 (f)(k) | | 1,462 | | 1,406 |
Series 2007-C1: | | | | |
Class ASP, 0.3793% 2/15/40 (k)(m) | | 16,196 | | 31 |
Class B, 5.487% 2/15/40 (f)(k) | | 2,009 | | 295 |
Extended Stay America Trust floater Series 2013-ESFL: | | | | |
Class A1FL, 0.9859% 12/5/31 (f)(k) | | 1,420 | | 1,419 |
Class A2FL, 0.8859% 12/5/31 (f)(k) | | 1,520 | | 1,509 |
Class BFL, 1.2859% 12/5/31 (f)(k) | | 5,610 | | 5,611 |
Class CFL, 1.6859% 12/5/31 (f)(k) | | 3,980 | | 3,972 |
GE Capital Commercial Mortgage Corp.: | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2007-C1 Class A4, 5.543% 12/10/49 | | 8,890 | | 9,769 |
Series 2001-1 Class X1, 2.0442% 5/15/33 (f)(k)(m) | | 599 | | 8 |
Series 2007-C1 Class XP, 0.1582% 12/10/49 (k)(m) | | 17,696 | | 21 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Greenwich Capital Commercial Funding Corp.: | | | | |
floater Series 2006-FL4 Class B, 0.3759% 11/5/21 (f)(k) | | $ 494 | | $ 486 |
sequential payer Series 2007-GG9 Class A4, 5.444% 3/10/39 | | 33,895 | | 37,206 |
Series 2007-GG11 Class A1, 0.2307% 12/10/49 (f)(k)(m) | | 20,242 | | 68 |
GS Mortgage Securities Corp. II: | | | | |
floater Series 2007-EOP: | | | | |
Class A2, 1.2601% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 881 | | 882 |
Class C, 2.0056% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 7,500 | | 7,519 |
Class D, 2.2018% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 3,090 | | 3,098 |
Class F, 2.6334% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 136 | | 136 |
Class G, 2.7903% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 67 | | 67 |
Class H, 3.3004% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 62 | | 62 |
Class J, 4.0852% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 85 | | 85 |
Series 2006-GG6 Class A2, 5.506% 4/10/38 | | 2,183 | | 2,196 |
GS Mortgage Securities Trust sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-GG8 Class A2, 5.479% 11/10/39 | | 35 | | 35 |
Series 2007-GG10 Class A2, 5.778% 8/10/45 | | 265 | | 267 |
JPMorgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: | | | | |
floater Series 2006-FLA2: | | | | |
Class B, 0.3541% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 563 | | 550 |
Class C, 0.3941% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 400 | | 389 |
Class D, 0.4141% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 178 | | 169 |
Class E, 0.4641% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 255 | | 243 |
Class F, 0.5141% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 383 | | 363 |
Class G, 0.5441% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 332 | | 314 |
Class H, 0.6841% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 255 | | 239 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-CB14 Class A3B, 5.4893% 12/12/44 (k) | | 577 | | 585 |
Series 2006-LDP8 Class A4, 5.399% 5/15/45 | | 837 | | 915 |
Series 2006-LDP9 Class A3, 5.336% 5/15/47 | | 11,253 | | 12,332 |
Series 2007-CB19 Class A4, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 4,648 | | 5,178 |
Series 2007-LD11: | | | | |
Class A2, 5.7987% 6/15/49 (k) | | 1,714 | | 1,755 |
Class A4, 5.8137% 6/15/49 (k) | | 33,014 | | 36,773 |
Series 2007-LDPX Class A3, 5.42% 1/15/49 | | 18,477 | | 20,317 |
Series 2005-LDP3 Class A3, 4.959% 8/15/42 | | 76 | | 76 |
Series 2006-CB17 Class A3, 5.45% 12/12/43 | | 108 | | 108 |
Series 2006-LDP7 Class A4, 5.8629% 4/15/45 (k) | | 1,390 | | 1,524 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
JPMorgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: - continued | | | | |
Series 2007-CB19: | | | | |
Class B, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | $ 112 | | $ 43 |
Class C, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 294 | | 60 |
Class D, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 309 | | 35 |
Series 2007-LDP10: | | | | |
Class CS, 5.466% 1/15/49 (k) | | 108 | | 13 |
Class ES, 5.5357% 1/15/49 (f)(k) | | 679 | | 8 |
LB Commercial Conduit Mortgage Trust sequential payer Series 2007-C3 Class A4, 5.8839% 7/15/44 (k) | | 1,054 | | 1,185 |
LB-UBS Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-C1 Class A2, 5.084% 2/15/31 | | 1 | | 1 |
Series 2006-C6 Class A4, 5.372% 9/15/39 | | 591 | | 651 |
Series 2006-C7 Class A2, 5.3% 11/15/38 | | 678 | | 709 |
Series 2007-C1 Class A4, 5.424% 2/15/40 | | 4,069 | | 4,475 |
Series 2007-C2 Class A3, 5.43% 2/15/40 | | 2,427 | | 2,658 |
Series 2006-C6 Class XCP, 0.673% 9/15/39 (k)(m) | | 5,045 | | 1 |
Series 2007-C1 Class XCP, 0.4262% 2/15/40 (k)(m) | | 1,795 | | 3 |
Series 2007-C6 Class A4, 5.858% 7/15/40 (k) | | 1,642 | | 1,798 |
Series 2007-C7: | | | | |
Class A3, 5.866% 9/15/45 | | 2,744 | | 3,009 |
Class XCP, 0.2714% 9/15/45 (k)(m) | | 79,675 | | 306 |
Lehman Brothers Floating Rate Commercial Mortgage Trust floater Series 2006-LLFA: | | | | |
Class D, 0.4141% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 421 | | 417 |
Class E, 0.4741% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 1,518 | | 1,487 |
Class F, 0.5241% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 1,255 | | 1,217 |
Class G, 0.5441% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 2,478 | | 2,379 |
Class H, 0.5841% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 639 | | 601 |
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
Series 2005-LC1 Class F, 5.4193% 1/12/44 (f)(k) | | 1,143 | | 1,006 |
Series 2006-C1 Class A2, 5.6376% 5/12/39 (k) | | 513 | | 514 |
Series 2007-C1 Class A4, 5.8499% 6/12/50 (k) | | 4,974 | | 5,553 |
Series 2008-C1 Class A4, 5.69% 2/12/51 | | 2,805 | | 3,137 |
Merrill Lynch-CFC Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
floater Series 2006-4 Class A2FL, 0.305% 12/12/49 (k) | | 67 | | 67 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-4 Class ASB, 5.133% 12/12/49 (k) | | 714 | | 738 |
Series 2007-5: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.378% 8/12/48 | | 8,380 | | 9,168 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Merrill Lynch-CFC Commercial Mortgage Trust: - continued | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2007-5: | | | | |
Class B, 5.479% 8/12/48 | | $ 3,942 | | $ 1,244 |
Series 2007-6 Class A4, 5.485% 3/12/51 (k) | | 10,897 | | 11,935 |
Series 2007-7 Class A4, 5.7364% 6/12/50 (k) | | 4,599 | | 5,109 |
Series 2006-4 Class XP, 0.6175% 12/12/49 (k)(m) | | 18,655 | | 154 |
Series 2007-6 Class B, 5.635% 3/12/51 (k) | | 1,314 | | 288 |
Series 2007-7 Class B, 5.7364% 6/12/50 (k) | | 114 | | 8 |
Series 2007-8 Class A3, 5.8968% 8/12/49 (k) | | 1,133 | | 1,271 |
Morgan Stanley Capital I Trust: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-XLF Class C, 1.384% 7/15/19 (f)(k) | | 393 | | 294 |
Series 2007-XLFA: | | | | |
Class C, 0.344% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 754 | | 735 |
Class D, 0.374% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 732 | | 705 |
Class E, 0.434% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 916 | | 863 |
Class F, 0.484% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 550 | | 513 |
Class G, 0.524% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 680 | | 627 |
Class H, 0.614% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 428 | | 373 |
Class J, 0.764% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 247 | | 94 |
sequential payer Series 2007-HQ11 Class A31, 5.439% 2/12/44 (k) | | 618 | | 629 |
Series 2006-IQ11 Class A4, 5.682% 10/15/42 (k) | | 353 | | 382 |
Series 2006-T23 Class A3, 5.8075% 8/12/41 (k) | | 671 | | 671 |
Series 2007-IQ14: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.692% 4/15/49 (k) | | 10,971 | | 12,112 |
Class AAB, 5.654% 4/15/49 | | 2,639 | | 2,654 |
Class B, 5.7275% 4/15/49 (k) | | 323 | | 56 |
Salomon Brothers Mortgage Securities VII, Inc. Series 2006-C2 Class H, 6.308% 7/18/33 (f) | | 185 | | 73 |
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-WL7A: | | | | |
Class F, 0.5241% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 1,672 | | 1,538 |
Class G, 0.5441% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 1,953 | | 1,796 |
Class J, 0.7841% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 434 | | 369 |
Series 2007-WHL8: | | | | |
Class F, 0.6641% 6/15/20 (f)(k) | | 4,581 | | 4,088 |
Class LXR1, 0.8841% 6/15/20 (f)(k) | | 162 | | 141 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2007-C30 Class A5, 5.342% 12/15/43 | | 19,766 | | 21,778 |
Series 2007-C31 Class A4, 5.509% 4/15/47 | | 38,680 | | 42,333 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust: - continued | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2007-C33: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.9241% 2/15/51 (k) | | $ 24,570 | | $ 26,811 |
Class A5, 5.9241% 2/15/51 (k) | | 870 | | 980 |
Series 2005-C19 Class B, 4.892% 5/15/44 | | 1,314 | | 1,364 |
Series 2005-C22: | | | | |
Class B, 5.3802% 12/15/44 (k) | | 2,914 | | 2,370 |
Class F, 5.3802% 12/15/44 (f)(k) | | 2,191 | | 658 |
Series 2006-C23 Class A5, 5.416% 1/15/45 (k) | | 7,210 | | 7,850 |
Series 2007-C30: | | | | |
Class C, 5.483% 12/15/43 (k) | | 3,942 | | 3,173 |
Class D, 5.513% 12/15/43 (k) | | 2,102 | | 1,305 |
Class XP, 0.4764% 12/15/43 (f)(k)(m) | | 10,637 | | 26 |
Series 2007-C31 Class C, 5.6796% 4/15/47 (k) | | 361 | | 251 |
Series 2007-C31A Class A2, 5.421% 4/15/47 | | 5,428 | | 5,436 |
Series 2007-C32: | | | | |
Class D, 5.7482% 6/15/49 (k) | | 987 | | 398 |
Class E, 5.7482% 6/15/49 (k) | | 1,556 | | 481 |
TOTAL COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE SECURITIES (Cost $413,119) | 464,614
|
Municipal Securities - 0.8% |
|
Beaver County Indl. Dev. Auth. Poll. Cont. Rev. Bonds (FirstEnergy Nuclear Generation Corp. Proj.) Series 2005 A, 3.375%, tender 7/1/15 (k) | | 2,300 | | 2,342 |
California Gen. Oblig.: | | | | |
Series 2009, 7.35% 11/1/39 | | 1,255 | | 1,574 |
7.3% 10/1/39 | | 18,960 | | 23,692 |
7.5% 4/1/34 | | 8,780 | | 11,095 |
7.55% 4/1/39 | | 14,130 | | 18,289 |
7.6% 11/1/40 | | 16,260 | | 21,308 |
7.625% 3/1/40 | | 2,920 | | 3,800 |
Chicago Gen. Oblig. (Taxable Proj.) Series 2010 C1, 7.781% 1/1/35 | | 5,595 | | 6,216 |
Illinois Gen. Oblig.: | | | | |
Series 2003, 5.1% 6/1/33 | | 40,890 | | 35,874 |
Series 2010, 4.421% 1/1/15 | | 5,980 | | 6,182 |
Series 2010-1, 6.63% 2/1/35 | | 17,960 | | 17,719 |
Series 2010-3: | | | | |
6.725% 4/1/35 | | 8,580 | | 8,542 |
7.35% 7/1/35 | | 5,140 | | 5,423 |
Municipal Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Illinois Gen. Oblig.: - continued | | | | |
Series 2011: | | | | |
5.665% 3/1/18 | | $ 5,045 | | $ 5,384 |
5.877% 3/1/19 | | 12,490 | | 13,406 |
TOTAL MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (Cost $191,264) | 180,846
|
Foreign Government and Government Agency Obligations - 0.2% |
|
Brazilian Federative Republic 5.625% 1/7/41 | | 5,582 | | 5,387 |
Italian Republic: | | | | |
3.125% 1/26/15 | | 10,287 | | 10,532 |
4.5% 1/21/15 | | 7,717 | | 8,041 |
4.75% 1/25/16 | | 7,716 | | 8,170 |
5.375% 6/12/17 | | 4,630 | | 5,009 |
Russian Federation 3.25% 4/4/17 (f) | | 800 | | 825 |
United Mexican States 4.75% 3/8/44 | | 6,152 | | 5,352 |
TOTAL FOREIGN GOVERNMENT AND GOVERNMENT AGENCY OBLIGATIONS (Cost $44,222) | 43,316
|
Bank Notes - 0.0% |
|
Fifth Third Bank 4.75% 2/1/15 (Cost $971) | | 951 | | 997
|
Preferred Securities - 0.0% |
| | | |
FINANCIALS - 0.0% |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.0% |
MUFG Capital Finance 1 Ltd. 6.346% (g)(k) | 1,204 | | 1,329 |
TOTAL PREFERRED SECURITIES (Cost $1,359) | 1,329
|
Fixed-Income Funds - 9.1% |
| Shares | | |
Fidelity High Income Central Fund 2 (l) | 5,740,220 | | 656,337 |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund (l) | 13,333,790 | | 1,402,181 |
TOTAL FIXED-INCOME FUNDS (Cost $1,957,553) | 2,058,518
|
Money Market Funds - 2.1% |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund, 0.10% (b) | 461,947,286 | | $ 461,947 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund, 0.10% (b)(c) | 5,913,700 | | 5,914 |
TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS (Cost $467,861) | 467,861
|
TOTAL INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO - 102.2% (Cost $19,975,173) | | 23,180,575 |
NET OTHER ASSETS (LIABILITIES) - (2.2)% | | (507,983) |
NET ASSETS - 100% | $ 22,672,592 |
TBA Sale Commitments |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | |
Fannie Mae |
2.5% 9/1/43 | $ (17,500) | | (15,909) |
3% 9/1/43 | (14,700) | | (14,053) |
3% 9/1/43 | (19,400) | | (18,547) |
3% 9/1/43 | (6,800) | | (6,501) |
3% 9/1/43 | (41,000) | | (39,197) |
3% 9/1/43 | (9,000) | | (8,604) |
3% 9/1/43 | (12,500) | | (11,950) |
3% 9/1/43 | (5,800) | | (5,545) |
3.5% 9/1/43 | (63,700) | | (63,526) |
4% 9/1/43 | (17,900) | | (18,458) |
4% 9/1/43 | (21,300) | | (21,964) |
4% 9/1/43 | (17,900) | | (18,458) |
4% 9/1/43 | (6,500) | | (6,703) |
4.5% 9/1/43 | (81,900) | | (86,405) |
4.5% 9/1/43 | (28,500) | | (30,068) |
5% 9/1/43 | (35,600) | | (38,265) |
5.5% 9/1/43 | (8,250) | | (8,956) |
5.5% 9/1/43 | (8,250) | | (8,956) |
TOTAL FANNIE MAE | | (422,065) |
TBA Sale Commitments - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Freddie Mac |
3% 9/1/43 | $ (6,800) | | $ (6,479) |
Ginnie Mae |
3.5% 9/1/43 | (500) | | (504) |
4% 9/1/43 | (10,600) | | (11,005) |
4% 9/1/43 | (4,100) | | (4,257) |
4% 9/1/43 | (4,500) | | (4,672) |
TOTAL GINNIE MAE | | (20,438) |
TOTAL TBA SALE COMMITMENTS (Proceeds $451,132) | $ (448,982) |
Futures Contracts |
| Expiration Date | | Underlying Face Amount at Value (000s) | | Unrealized Appreciation/ (Depreciation) (000s) |
Purchased |
Equity Index Contracts |
2,198 CME E-mini S&P 500 Index Contracts | Sept. 2013 | | $ 179,280 | | $ 1,769 |
The face value of futures purchased as a percentage of net assets is 0.8% |
Swaps |
Credit Default Swaps |
Underlying Reference | Rating (1) | Expiration Date | Clearinghouse/ Counterparty | Fixed Payment Received/ (Paid) | Notional Amount (2) (000s) | Value (1) (000s) | Upfront Premium Received/ (Paid) (000s) | Unrealized Appreciation/ (Depreciation) (000s) |
Sell Protection |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | Credit Suisse | 0.15% | $ 2,403 | $ (2,271) | $ 0 | $ (2,271) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | JPMorgan Chase, Inc. | 0.15% | 1,957 | (1,850) | 0 | (1,850) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | JPMorgan Chase, Inc. | 0.15% | 259 | (245) | 0 | (245) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | Morgan Stanley, Inc. | 0.15% | 1,957 | (1,850) | 0 | (1,850) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | UBS | 0.15% | 1,885 | (1,782) | 0 | (1,782) |
Swaps |
Credit Default Swaps - continued |
Underlying Reference | Rating (1) | Expiration Date | Clearinghouse/ Counterparty | Fixed Payment Received/ (Paid) | Notional Amount (2) (000s) | Value (1) (000s) | Upfront Premium Received/ (Paid) (000s) | Unrealized Appreciation/ (Depreciation) (000s) |
Sell Protection - continued |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | UBS | 0.15% | $ 1,655 | $ (1,564) | $ 0 | $ (1,564) |
Ameriquest Mortgage Securities Inc Series 2004-R11 Class M9 | C | Dec. 2034 | Bank of America | 2.5% | 475 | (444) | 0 | (444) |
TOTAL CREDIT DEFAULT SWAPS | $ (10,006) | $ 0 | $ (10,006) |
(1) Ratings are presented for credit default swaps in which the Fund has sold protection on the underlying referenced debt. Ratings for an underlying index represent a weighted average of the ratings of all securities included in the index. The credit rating or value can be measures of the current payment/performance risk. Ratings are from Moody's Investors Service, Inc. Where Moody's® ratings are not available, S&P® ratings are disclosed and are indicated as such. All ratings are as of the report date and do not reflect subsequent changes. |
|
(2) The notional amount of each credit default swap where the Fund has sold protection approximates the maximum potential amount of future payments that the Fund could be required to make if a credit event were to occur. |
Legend |
(a) Non-income producing |
(b) 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. |
(c) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan. |
(d) Non-income producing - Security is in default. |
(e) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end. |
(f) Security exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers. At the end of the period, the value of these securities amounted to $344,043,000 or 1.5% of net assets. |
(g) Security is perpetual in nature with no stated maturity date. |
(h) Security or a portion of the security purchased on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis. |
(i) Security or a portion of the security was pledged to cover margin requirements for futures contracts. At period end, the value of securities pledged amounted to $8,110,000. |
(j) Security or a portion of the security has been segregated as collateral for open bi-lateral over-the-counter (OTC) swaps. At period end, the value of securities pledged amounted to $12,371,000. |
(k) Coupon rates for floating and adjustable rate securities reflect the rates in effect at period end. |
(l) Affiliated fund that is generally available only to investment companies and other accounts managed by Fidelity Investments. A complete unaudited schedule of portfolio holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is filed with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q and is available upon request or at the SEC's website at www.sec.gov. An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of securities and other investments held indirectly through its investment in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com. 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. |
(m) Security represents right to receive monthly interest payments on an underlying pool of mortgages or assets. Principal shown is the outstanding par amount of the pool as of the end of the period. |
(n) Investment is owned by an entity that is treated as a corporation for U.S. tax purposes and is owned by the Fund. |
(o) Restricted securities - Investment in securities not registered under the Securities Act of 1933 (excluding 144A issues). At the end of the period, the value of restricted securities (excluding 144A issues) amounted to $22,719,000 or 0.1% of net assets. |
Additional information on each restricted holding is as follows: |
Security | Acquisition Date | Acquisition Cost (000s) |
Jumptap, Inc. Series G | 6/29/12 | $ 6,429 |
Legend Pictures LLC | 9/23/10 | $ 6,428 |
* Amount represents less than $1,000. |
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 (Amounts in thousands) |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund | $ 946 |
Fidelity Corporate Bond 1-10 Year Central Fund | 4,753 |
Fidelity High Income Central Fund 2 | 40,119 |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund | 30,238 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund | 1,695 |
Total | $ 77,751 |
Additional information regarding the Fund's fiscal year to date purchases and sales, including the ownership percentage, of the non Money Market Central Funds is as follows: |
Fund (Amounts in thousands) | Value, beginning of period | Purchases | Sales Proceeds | Value, end of period | % ownership, end of period |
Fidelity Corporate Bond 1-10 Year Central Fund | $ 401,162 | $ - | $ 402,521* | $ - | 0.0% |
Fidelity High Income Central Fund 2 | 614,582 | 40,119 | - | 656,337 | 83.0% |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund | 1,971,158 | 322,211 | 830,072 | 1,402,181 | 10.2% |
Total | $ 2,986,902 | $ 362,330 | $ 1,232,593 | $ 2,058,518 | |
* Includes the value of shares redeemed through in-kind transactions. See Note 6 of the Notes to Financial Statements. |
Other Affiliated Issuers |
An affiliated company is a company in which the Fund has ownership of at least 5% of the voting securities. Fiscal year to date transactions with companies which are or were affiliates are as follows: |
Affiliate (Amounts in thousands) | Value, beginning of period | Purchases | Sales Proceeds | Dividend Income | Value, end of period |
Kayak Software Corp. | $ 5,542 | $ 2,376 | $ 11,547 | $ - | $ - |
Total | $ 5,542 | $ 2,376 | $ 11,547 | $ - | $ - |
Other Information |
The following is a summary of the inputs used, as of August 31, 2013, 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 in the table below, please refer to the Investment Valuation section in the accompanying Notes to Financial Statements. |
Valuation Inputs at Reporting Date: |
Description (Amounts in thousands) | Total | Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 |
Investments in Securities: | | | | |
Equities: | | | | |
Consumer Discretionary | $ 1,753,125 | $ 1,737,671 | $ - | $ 15,454 |
Consumer Staples | 1,632,933 | 1,584,948 | 47,985 | - |
Energy | 1,624,832 | 1,624,832 | - | - |
Financials | 2,580,317 | 2,521,239 | 59,078 | - |
Health Care | 1,999,651 | 1,999,651 | - | - |
Industrials | 1,576,298 | 1,576,298 | - | - |
Information Technology | 2,868,678 | 2,868,678 | - | - |
Materials | 593,163 | 593,163 | - | - |
Telecommunication Services | 352,620 | 352,620 | - | - |
Utilities | 514,561 | 514,561 | - | - |
Corporate Bonds | 2,044,642 | - | 2,044,642 | - |
U.S. Government and Government Agency Obligations | 1,357,664 | - | 1,357,664 | - |
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities | 940,402 | - | 940,402 | - |
Asset-Backed Securities | 49,313 | - | 43,468 | 5,845 |
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations | 74,895 | - | 74,020 | 875 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities | 464,614 | - | 464,106 | 508 |
Municipal Securities | 180,846 | - | 180,846 | - |
Foreign Government and Government Agency Obligations | 43,316 | - | 43,316 | - |
Bank Notes | 997 | - | 997 | - |
Preferred Securities | 1,329 | - | 1,329 | - |
Fixed-Income Funds | 2,058,518 | 2,058,518 | - | - |
Money Market Funds | 467,861 | 467,861 | - | - |
Total Investments in Securities: | $ 23,180,575 | $ 17,900,040 | $ 5,257,853 | $ 22,682 |
Valuation Inputs at Reporting Date: |
Description (Amounts in thousands) | Total | Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 |
Derivative Instruments: | | | | |
Assets | | | | |
Futures Contracts | $ 1,769 | $ 1,769 | $ - | $ - |
Liabilities | | | | |
Swaps | $ (10,006) | $ - | $ (10,006) | $ - |
Total Derivative Instruments: | $ (8,237) | $ 1,769 | $ (10,006) | $ - |
Other Financial Instruments: | | | | |
TBA Sale Commitments | $ (448,982) | $ - | $ (448,982) | $ - |
Value of Derivative Instruments |
The following table is a summary of the Fund's value of derivative instruments by primary risk exposure as of August 31, 2013. 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 |
(Amounts in thousands) | Asset | Liability |
Credit Risk | | |
Swaps (b) | $ - | $ (10,006) |
Equity Risk | | |
Futures Contracts (a) | 1,769 | - |
Total Value of Derivatives | $ 1,769 | $ (10,006) |
(a) Reflects gross cumulative appreciation (depreciation) on futures contracts as presented in the Schedule of Investments. Only the period end receivable or payable for daily variation margin and net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) are presented in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. |
(b) For bi-lateral OTC swaps, reflects gross value which is presented in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities in the bi-lateral OTC swaps, at value line-items. |
Other Information |
The composition of credit quality ratings as a percentage of net assets is as follows (Unaudited): |
U.S. Government and U.S. Government Agency Obligations | 14.6% |
AAA,AA,A | 5.5% |
BBB | 6.0% |
BB | 1.2% |
B | 1.8% |
CCC,CC,C | 0.5% |
D | 0.0%* |
Not Rated | 0.3% |
Equities | 68.4% |
Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets | 1.7% |
| 100.0% |
* Amount represents less than 0.1% |
We have used ratings from Moody's Investors Service, Inc. Where Moody's® ratings are not available, we have used S&P® ratings. All ratings are as of the date indicated and do not reflect subsequent changes. |
Distribution of investments by country or territory of incorporation, as a percentage of total net assets, is as follows (Unaudited): |
United States of America | 90.0% |
United Kingdom | 2.4% |
Ireland | 1.5% |
Netherlands | 1.2% |
Others (Individually Less Than 1%) | 4.9% |
| 100.0% |
The information in the above tables is based on the combined investments of the Fund and its pro-rata share of the investments of Fidelity's fixed-income central funds. |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Statement of Assets and Liabilities
Amounts in thousands (except per-share amounts) | August 31, 2013 |
| | |
Assets | | |
Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $5,525) - See accompanying schedule: Unaffiliated issuers (cost $17,549,759) | $ 20,654,196 | |
Fidelity Central Funds (cost $2,425,414) | 2,526,379 | |
Total Investments (cost $19,975,173) | | $ 23,180,575 |
Foreign currency held at value (cost $100) | | 100 |
Receivable for investments sold, regular delivery | | 53,846 |
Receivable for TBA sale commitments | | 451,132 |
Receivable for swaps | | 3 |
Receivable for fund shares sold | | 18,317 |
Dividends receivable | | 25,611 |
Interest receivable | | 35,149 |
Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds | | 51 |
Receivable from investment adviser for expense reductions | | 6 |
Other receivables | | 1,536 |
Total assets | | 23,766,326 |
| | |
Liabilities | | |
Payable to custodian bank | $ 41 | |
Payable for investments purchased Regular delivery | 65,930 | |
Delayed delivery | 521,874 | |
TBA sale commitments, at value | 448,982 | |
Payable for swaps | 945 | |
Payable for fund shares redeemed | 28,041 | |
Bi-lateral OTC swaps, at value | 10,006 | |
Accrued management fee | 7,738 | |
Payable for daily variation margin for derivative instruments | 593 | |
Other affiliated payables | 2,596 | |
Other payables and accrued expenses | 1,074 | |
Collateral on securities loaned, at value | 5,914 | |
Total liabilities | | 1,093,734 |
| | |
Net Assets | | $ 22,672,592 |
Net Assets consist of: | | |
Paid in capital | | $ 18,709,943 |
Undistributed net investment income | | 97,655 |
Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) on investments and foreign currency transactions | | 665,708 |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies | | 3,199,286 |
Net Assets | | $ 22,672,592 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Statement of Assets and Liabilities - continued
Amounts in thousands (except per-share amounts) | August 31, 2013 |
| | |
Balanced: Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($16,342,200 ÷ 747,786 shares) | | $ 21.85 |
| | |
Class K: Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($6,330,392 ÷ 289,670 shares) | | $ 21.85 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Financial Statements - continued
Statement of Operations
Amounts in thousands | Year ended August 31, 2013 |
| | |
Investment Income | | |
Dividends | | $ 265,436 |
Interest | | 153,405 |
Income from Fidelity Central Funds | | 77,751 |
Total income | | 496,592 |
| | |
Expenses | | |
Management fee | $ 87,739 | |
Transfer agent fees | 28,185 | |
Accounting and security lending fees | 2,068 | |
Custodian fees and expenses | 408 | |
Independent trustees' compensation | 132 | |
Appreciation in deferred trustee compensation account | 1 | |
Registration fees | 342 | |
Audit | 158 | |
Legal | 103 | |
Miscellaneous | 201 | |
Total expenses before reductions | 119,337 | |
Expense reductions | (2,513) | 116,824 |
Net investment income (loss) | | 379,768 |
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) Net realized gain (loss) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | 1,519,193 | |
Fidelity Central Funds | 75,359 | |
Other affiliated issuers | 3,376 | |
Foreign currency transactions | (113) | |
Futures contracts | 32,670 | |
Swaps | (12,561) | |
Total net realized gain (loss) | | 1,617,924 |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on: Investment securities | 298,497 | |
Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies | 6 | |
Futures contracts | (5,931) | |
Swaps | 11,962 | |
Delayed delivery commitments | 4,718 | |
Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | | 309,252 |
Net gain (loss) | | 1,927,176 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | | $ 2,306,944 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Statement of Changes in Net Assets
Amounts in thousands | Year ended August 31, 2013 | Year ended August 31, 2012 |
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets | | |
Operations | | |
Net investment income (loss) | $ 379,768 | $ 401,529 |
Net realized gain (loss) | 1,617,924 | (1,032) |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | 309,252 | 1,842,236 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | 2,306,944 | 2,242,733 |
Distributions to shareholders from net investment income | (352,712) | (379,925) |
Share transactions - net increase (decrease) | 99,632 | (947,824) |
Total increase (decrease) in net assets | 2,053,864 | 914,984 |
| | |
Net Assets | | |
Beginning of period | 20,618,728 | 19,703,744 |
End of period (including undistributed net investment income of $97,655 and undistributed net investment income of $84,489, respectively) | $ 22,672,592 | $ 20,618,728 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Financial Highlights - Balanced
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 |
Selected Per-Share Data | | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $ 19.95 | $ 18.17 | $ 16.27 | $ 15.40 | $ 17.71 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | | |
Net investment income (loss) B | .36 | .37 | .35 | .36 | .38 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | 1.88 | 1.76 | 1.91 | .88 | (2.29) |
Total from investment operations | 2.24 | 2.13 | 2.26 | 1.24 | (1.91) |
Distributions from net investment income | (.34) | (.35) | (.35) | (.36) | (.37) |
Distributions from net realized gain | - | - | (.01) | (.01) | (.03) |
Total distributions | (.34) | (.35) | (.36) | (.37) | (.40) |
Net asset value, end of period | $ 21.85 | $ 19.95 | $ 18.17 | $ 16.27 | $ 15.40 |
Total Return A | 11.32% | 11.89% | 13.88% | 8.06% | (10.48)% |
Ratios to Average Net Assets C, E | | | | | |
Expenses before reductions | .58% | .60% | .61% | .62% | .68% |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any | .58% | .60% | .61% | .62% | .68% |
Expenses net of all reductions | .57% | .59% | .60% | .61% | .68% |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.72% | 1.98% | 1.92% | 2.18% | 2.78% |
Supplemental Data | | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (in millions) | $ 16,342 | $ 15,016 | $ 15,602 | $ 16,764 | $ 17,225 |
Portfolio turnover rate D | 244% F | 155% | 193% F | 122% | 198% F |
A Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.
B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
C 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.
D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
E Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or reductions from other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class 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 brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.
F The portfolio turnover rate excludes liquidations and/or redemptions executed in-kind from Affiliated Central Funds.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Financial Highlights - Class K
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 |
Selected Per-Share Data | | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $ 19.95 | $ 18.17 | $ 16.27 | $ 15.40 | $ 17.72 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | | |
Net investment income (loss) B | .39 | .40 | .38 | .38 | .40 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | 1.87 | 1.76 | 1.90 | .88 | (2.29) |
Total from investment operations | 2.26 | 2.16 | 2.28 | 1.26 | (1.89) |
Distributions from net investment income | (.36) | (.38) | (.38) | (.38) | (.40) |
Distributions from net realized gain | - | - | (.01) | (.01) | (.03) |
Total distributions | (.36) | (.38) | (.38) F | (.39) | (.43) |
Net asset value, end of period | $ 21.85 | $ 19.95 | $ 18.17 | $ 16.27 | $ 15.40 |
Total Return A | 11.45% | 12.03% | 14.04% | 8.23% | (10.33)% |
Ratios to Average Net Assets C, E | | | | | |
Expenses before reductions | .47% | .48% | .48% | .48% | .50% |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any | .47% | .48% | .48% | .48% | .50% |
Expenses net of all reductions | .46% | .47% | .47% | .47% | .50% |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.83% | 2.10% | 2.05% | 2.32% | 2.96% |
Supplemental Data | | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (in millions) | $ 6,330 | $ 5,603 | $ 4,102 | $ 2,692 | $ 2,014 |
Portfolio turnover rate D | 244% G | 155% | 193% G | 122% | 198% G |
A Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.
B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
C 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.
D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
E Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or reductions from other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class 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 brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.
F Total distributions of $.38 per share is comprised of distributions from net investment income of $.376 and distributions from net realized gain of $.008 per share.
G The portfolio turnover rate excludes liquidations and/or redemptions executed in-kind from Affiliated Central Funds.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements
For the period ended August 31, 2013
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
1. Organization.
Fidelity Balanced Fund (the Fund) is a fund of Fidelity Puritan 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. The Fund offers Balanced and Class K shares, each of which has equal rights as to assets and voting privileges. Each class has exclusive voting rights with respect to matters that affect that class.
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 Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) 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.
Based on its investment objective, each Fidelity Central Fund may invest or participate in various investment vehicles or strategies that are similar to those of the Fund. These strategies are consistent with the investment objectives of the Fund and may involve certain economic risks which may cause a decline in value of each of the Fidelity Central Funds and thus a decline in the value of the Fund. The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), an affiliate of FMR. The following summarizes the Fund's investment in each non-money market Fidelity Central Fund.
Fidelity Central Fund | Investment Manager | Investment Objective | Investment Practices |
Fidelity High Income Central Fund 2 | FMR Co., Inc. (FMRC) | Seeks a high level of income and may also seek capital appreciation by investing primarily in debt securities, preferred stocks, and convertible securities, with an emphasis on lower-quality debt securities. | Loans & Direct Debt Instruments Repurchase Agreements Restricted Securities |
Annual Report
2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds - continued
Fidelity Central Fund | Investment Manager | Investment Objective | Investment Practices |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund | FIMM | Seeks a high level of income by normally investing in investment-grade mortgage-related securities and repurchase agreements for those securities. | Delayed Delivery & When Issued Securities Repurchase Agreements Options Swaps |
An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of any securities and other investments held indirectly through its investment in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com. 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 contain the significant accounting policies (including investment valuation policies) of those 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 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. In accordance with valuation policies and procedures approved by the Board of Trustees (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 FMR Fair Value Committee (the Committee), in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board. Factors used in determining fair value vary by investment type and may include market or investment specific events, changes in interest rates and credit quality. The frequency with which these procedures are used cannot be predicted and they may be utilized to a significant extent. The Committee oversees the Fund's valuation policies and procedures and is responsible for approving and reporting to the Board all fair value determinations.
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Valuation - continued
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. Utilizing these techniques may result in transfers between Level 1 and Level 2. For restricted equity securities and private placements where observable inputs are limited, assumptions about market activity and risk are used and these securities are generally categorized as Level 3 in the hierarchy.
Debt securities, including restricted securities, are valued based on evaluated prices received from third party pricing vendors or from brokers who make markets in such securities. For corporate bonds, bank notes, foreign government and government agency obligations, municipal securities, preferred securities and U.S. government and government agency obligations, pricing vendors utilize matrix pricing which considers yield or price of bonds of comparable quality, coupon, maturity and type as well as broker-supplied prices. For asset backed securities, collateralized mortgage obligations, commercial mortgage securities and U.S. government agency mortgage securities, pricing vendors utilize matrix pricing which considers prepayment speed assumptions, attributes of the collateral, yield or price of bonds of comparable quality, coupon, maturity and type as well as broker-supplied prices. Swaps are marked-to-market daily based on valuations from third party pricing vendors, registered derivates clearing organizations
Annual Report
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Valuation - continued
(clearinghouses) or broker-supplied valuations. These pricing sources may utilize inputs such as interest rate curves, credit spread curves, default possibilities and recovery rates. When independent prices are unavailable or unreliable, debt securities and swaps may be valued utilizing pricing methodologies which consider similar factors that would be used by third party pricing vendors. Debt securities and swaps are generally categorized as Level 2 in the hierarchy but may be Level 3 depending on the circumstances.
Futures contracts are valued at the settlement price established each day by the board of trade or exchange on which they are traded and are categorized as Level 1 in the hierarchy. Investments in open-end mutual funds, including the Fidelity Central Funds, are valued at their closing net asset value (NAV) each business day and are categorized as Level 1 in the hierarchy.
Changes in valuation techniques may result in transfers in or out of an assigned level within the disclosure hierarchy. The aggregate value of investments by input level, as of August 31, 2013 is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
Foreign Currency. The Fund may use foreign currency contracts to facilitate transactions in foreign-denominated securities. Gains and losses from these transactions may arise from changes in the value of the foreign currency or if the counterparties do not perform under the contracts' terms.
Foreign-denominated assets, including investment securities, and liabilities are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rates at period end. Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and dividends received and expenses denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate in effect on the transaction date.
The effects of exchange rate fluctuations on investments are included with the net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investment securities. Other foreign currency transactions resulting in realized and unrealized gain (loss) are disclosed separately.
Investment Transactions and Income. For financial reporting purposes, the Fund's investment holdings and NAV include trades executed through the end of the last business day of the period. The NAV per share for processing shareholder transactions is calculated as of the close of business of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time and includes trades executed through the end of the prior business day. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of identified cost and may include proceeds received from litigation. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date, except for certain dividends from foreign securities where the
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Transactions and Income - continued
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. Distributions received on securities that represent a return of capital or capital gain are recorded as a reduction of cost of investments and/or as a realized gain. Subsequent to ex-dividend date the Fund determines the components of these distributions, based upon receipt of tax filings or other correspondence relating to the underlying investment. Interest income and distributions from the Fidelity Central Funds are accrued as earned. Interest income includes coupon interest and amortization of premium and accretion of discount on debt securities. The principal amount on inflation-indexed securities is periodically adjusted to the rate of inflation and interest is accrued based on the principal amount. The adjustments to principal due to inflation are reflected as increases or decreases to Interest in the accompanying Statement of Operations. Investment income is recorded net of foreign taxes withheld where recovery of such taxes is uncertain. Debt obligations may be placed on non-accrual status and related interest income may be reduced by ceasing current accruals and writing off interest receivables when the collection of all or a portion of interest has become doubtful based on consistently applied procedures. A debt obligation is removed from non-accrual status when the issuer resumes interest payments or when collectability of interest is reasonably assured.
Class Allocations and Expenses. Investment income, realized and unrealized capital gains and losses, common expenses of the Fund, and certain fund-level expense reductions, if any, are allocated on a pro-rata basis to each class based on the relative net assets of each class to the total net assets of the Fund. Each class differs with respect to transfer agent fees incurred. Certain expense reductions may also differ by class. 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.
Deferred Trustee Compensation. Under a Deferred Compensation Plan (the Plan), independent Trustees may elect to defer receipt of a portion of their annual compensation. Deferred amounts are invested in a cross-section of Fidelity funds, are marked-to-market and remain in the Fund until distributed in accordance with the Plan. The investment of deferred amounts and the offsetting payable to the Trustees are included in the accompanying Statement of Assets and Liabilities.
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
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3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders - continued
realized gains. As a result, no provision for U.S. Federal income taxes is required. As of August 31, 2013, the Fund did not have any unrecognized tax benefits in the financial statements; nor is the Fund aware of any tax positions for which it is reasonably possible that the total amounts of unrecognized tax benefits will significantly change in the next twelve months. The Fund files a U.S. federal tax return, in addition to state and local tax returns as required. The Fund's federal income tax returns are subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for a period of three fiscal years after they are filed. State and local tax returns may be subject to examination for an additional fiscal year depending on the jurisdiction. Foreign taxes are provided for based on the Fund's understanding of the tax rules and rates that exist in the foreign markets in which it invests.
Distributions are declared and recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income dividends and capital gain distributions are declared separately for each class. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from GAAP. In addition, the Fund claimed a portion of the payment made to redeeming shareholders as a distribution for income tax purposes.
Capital accounts within the financial statements are adjusted for permanent book-tax differences. These adjustments have no impact on net assets or the results of operations. Temporary book-tax differences will reverse in a subsequent period.
Book-tax differences are primarily due to futures contracts, swap agreements, foreign currency transactions, passive foreign investment companies (PFIC), market discount, partnerships (including allocations from Fidelity Central Funds), deferred trustees compensation, capital loss carryforwards and losses deferred due to wash sales and excise tax regulations.
The federal tax cost of investment securities and unrealized appreciation (depreciation) as of period end were as follows:
Gross unrealized appreciation | $ 3,291,797 |
Gross unrealized depreciation | (272,766) |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities and other investments | $ 3,019,031 |
| |
Tax Cost | $ 20,161,544 |
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders - continued
The tax-based components of distributable earnings as of period end were as follows:
Undistributed ordinary income | $ 77,396 |
Undistributed long-term capital gain | $ 874,797 |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | $ 3,011,146 |
The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:
| August 31, 2013 | August 31, 2012 |
Ordinary Income | $ 352,712 | $ 379,925 |
Delayed Delivery Transactions and When-Issued Securities. During the period, the Fund transacted in securities on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis. Payment and delivery may take place after the customary settlement period for that security. The price of the underlying securities and the date when the securities will be delivered and paid for are fixed at the time the transaction is negotiated. The securities purchased on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis are identified as such in the Fund's Schedule of Investments. The Fund may receive compensation for interest forgone in the purchase of a delayed delivery or when-issued security. With respect to purchase commitments, the Fund identifies securities as segregated in its records with a value at least equal to the amount of the commitment. Losses may arise due to changes in the value of the underlying securities or if the counterparty does not perform under the contract's terms, or if the issuer does not issue the securities due to political, economic, or other factors.
To-Be-Announced (TBA) Securities and Mortgage Dollar Rolls. During the period, the Fund transacted in TBA securities that involved buying or selling mortgage-backed securities (MBS) on a forward commitment basis. A TBA transaction typically does not designate the actual security to be delivered and only includes an approximate principal amount; however delivered securities must meet specified terms defined by industry guidelines, including issuer, rate and current principal amount outstanding on underlying mortgage pools. The Fund may enter into a TBA transaction with the intent to take possession of or deliver the underlying MBS, or the Fund may elect to extend the settlement by entering into either a mortgage or reverse mortgage dollar roll. Mortgage dollar rolls are transactions where a fund sells TBA securities and simultaneously agrees to repurchase MBS on a later date at a lower price and with the same counterparty. Reverse mortgage dollar rolls involve the purchase and simultaneous agreement to sell TBA securities on a later date at a lower price. Transactions in mortgage dollar rolls and reverse mortgage dollar rolls are accounted for as purchases and sales and may result in an increase to the Fund's portfolio turnover rate.
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3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
To-Be-Announced (TBA) Securities and Mortgage Dollar Rolls - continued
Purchases and sales of TBA securities involve risks similar to those discussed above for delayed delivery and when-issued securities. Also, if the counterparty in a mortgage dollar roll or a reverse mortgage dollar roll transaction files for bankruptcy or becomes insolvent, the Fund's right to repurchase or sell securities may be limited. Additionally, when a fund sells TBA securities without already owning or having the right to obtain the deliverable securities (an uncovered forward commitment to sell), it incurs a risk of loss because it could have to purchase the securities at a price that is higher than the price at which it sold them. A fund may be unable to purchase the deliverable securities if the corresponding market is illiquid.
TBA securities subject to a forward commitment to sell at period end are included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments under the caption "TBA Sale Commitments." The proceeds and value of these commitments are reflected in the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities as Receivable for TBA sale commitments and TBA sale commitments, at value, respectively.
Restricted Securities. The Fund may invest in securities that are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale. These securities generally may be resold in transactions exempt from registration or to the public if the securities are registered. Disposal of these securities may involve time-consuming negotiations and expense, and prompt sale at an acceptable price may be difficult. Information regarding restricted securities is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
New Accounting Pronouncement. The Financial Accounting Standards Board issued in December 2011, Accounting Standard Update No. 2011-11, Disclosures about Offsetting Assets and Liabilities, and in January 2013, Accounting Standards Update No. 2013-1 Clarifying the Scope of Disclosures about Offsetting Assets and Liabilities. These updates create new disclosure requirements requiring entities to disclose both gross and net information for derivatives and other financial instruments that are either offset in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities or subject to an enforceable master netting arrangement or similar agreement. The disclosure requirements are effective for annual reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2013, and interim periods within those annual periods. Management expects that the impact of the updates' adoption will be limited to additional financial statement disclosures as applicable.
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 and swaps. Derivatives are investments whose value is primarily
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Risk Exposures and the Use of Derivative Instruments - continued
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, to gain exposure to certain types of assets 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 risks:
Credit Risk | Credit risk relates to the ability of the issuer of a financial instrument to make further principal or interest payments on an obligation or commitment that it has to the Fund. |
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. Derivative counterparty credit risk is managed through formal evaluation of the creditworthiness of all potential counterparties. On certain OTC derivatives such as bi-lateral swaps, the Fund attempts to reduce its exposure to counterparty credit risk by entering into an International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. (ISDA) Master Agreement with each of its counterparties. The ISDA Master Agreement gives the Fund the right to terminate all transactions traded under such agreement upon the deterioration in the credit quality of the counterparty beyond specified levels. The ISDA Master Agreement gives each party the right, upon an event of default by the other party or a termination of the agreement, to close out all transactions traded under such agreement and to net amounts owed under each transaction to one net payable by one party to the other. To mitigate counterparty credit risk on bi-lateral OTC derivatives, the Fund receives collateral in the form of cash or securities once the Fund's net unrealized appreciation on outstanding derivative contracts under an ISDA Master Agreement
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4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Risk Exposures and the Use of Derivative Instruments - continued
exceeds certain applicable thresholds, subject to certain minimum transfer provisions. The collateral received is held in segregated accounts with the Fund's custodian bank in accordance with the collateral agreements entered into between the Fund, the counterparty and the Fund's custodian bank. The Fund could experience delays and costs in gaining access to the collateral even though it is held by the Fund's custodian bank. The Fund's maximum risk of loss from counterparty credit risk related to bi-lateral OTC derivatives is generally the aggregate unrealized appreciation and unpaid counterparty payments in excess of any collateral pledged by the counterparty to the Fund. The Fund may be required to pledge collateral for the benefit of the counterparties on bi-lateral OTC derivatives in an amount not less than each counterparty's unrealized appreciation on outstanding derivative contracts, subject to certain minimum transfer provisions, and any such pledged collateral is identified in the Schedule of Investments. Exchange-traded futures contracts are not covered by the ISDA Master Agreement; however 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.
Net Realized Gain (Loss) and Change in Net Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) on Derivatives. The table below, which reflects the impacts of derivatives on the financial performance of the Fund, summarizes the net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) for derivatives during the period as presented in the Statement of Operations.
Primary Risk Exposure / Derivative Type | Net Realized Gain (Loss) | Change in Net Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) |
Credit Risk | | |
Swaps | $ (12,561) | $ 11,962 |
Equity Risk | | |
Futures Contracts | 32,670 | (5,931) |
Totals (a) | $ 20,109 | $ 6,031 |
(a) 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 and is
representative of activity for the period.
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.
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Futures Contracts - continued
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 for derivative instruments 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 included 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 underlying face amount at value reflects each contract's exposure to the underlying instrument or index at period end. Securities deposited to meet initial margin requirements are identified in the Schedule of Investments.
Swaps. A swap is a contract between two parties to exchange future cash flows at periodic intervals based on a notional principal amount. A bi-lateral OTC swap is a transaction between a fund and a dealer counterparty where cash flows are exchanged between the two parties for the life of the swap.
Bi-lateral OTC swaps are marked-to-market daily and changes in value are reflected in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities in the bi-lateral OTC swaps at value line items. Any upfront premiums paid or received upon entering a bi-lateral OTC swap to compensate for differences between stated terms of the swap and prevailing market conditions (e.g. credit spreads, interest rates or other factors) are recorded in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities and amortized to realized gain or (loss) ratably over the term of the swap. Any unamortized upfront premiums are presented in the Schedule of Investments.
Payments are exchanged at specified intervals, accrued daily commencing with the effective date of the contract and recorded as realized gain or (loss). Realized gain or (loss) is also recorded in the event of an early termination of a swap. The net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on swaps during the period is included in the Statement of Operations.
Any open swaps at period end are included in the Schedule of Investments under the caption "Swaps."
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4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Credit Default Swaps. Credit default swaps enable the Fund to buy or sell protection against specified credit events on a single-name issuer or a traded credit index. Under the terms of a credit default swap the buyer of protection (buyer) receives credit protection in exchange for making periodic payments to the seller of protection (seller) based on a fixed percentage applied to a notional principal amount. In return for these payments, the seller will be required to make a payment upon the occurrence of one or more specified credit events. The Fund enters into credit default swaps as a seller to gain credit exposure to an issuer and/or as a buyer to obtain a measure of protection against defaults of an issuer. Periodic payments are made over the life of the contract by the buyer provided that no credit event occurs.
For credit default swaps on most corporate and sovereign issuers, credit events include bankruptcy, failure to pay or repudiation/moratorium. For credit default swaps on corporate or sovereign issuers, the obligation that may be put to the seller is not limited to the specific reference obligation described in the Schedule of Investments. For credit default swaps on asset-backed securities, a credit event may be triggered by events such as failure to pay principal, maturity extension, rating downgrade or write-down. For credit default swaps on asset-backed securities, the reference obligation described represents the security that may be put to the seller. For credit default swaps on a traded credit index, a specified credit event may affect all or individual underlying securities included in the index.
As a seller, if an underlying credit event occurs, the Fund will pay a net settlement amount of cash equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index. Only in the event of the industry's inability to value the underlying asset will the Fund be required to take delivery of the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index and pay an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap.
As a buyer, if an underlying credit event occurs, the Fund will receive a net settlement amount of cash equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index. Only in the event of the industry's inability to value the underlying asset will the Fund be required to deliver the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index in exchange for payment of an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap.
Typically, the value of each credit default swap and credit rating disclosed for each reference obligation in the Schedule of Investments, where the Fund is the seller, can be used as measures of the current payment/performance risk of the swap. As the value of the swap changes as a positive or negative percentage of the total notional amount, the payment/performance risk may decrease or increase, respectively. In addition to these measures, FMR monitors a variety of factors including cash flow assumptions, market
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Credit Default Swaps - continued
activity and market sentiment as part of its ongoing process of assessing payment/performance risk.
5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.
Purchases and sales of securities (including the Fixed-Income Central Funds), other than short-term securities, U.S. government securities and liquidations executed in-kind from Affiliated Central Funds, aggregated $15,698,281 and $15,491,420, respectively.
6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.
Management Fee. FMR and its affiliates provide the Fund with investment management related services for which the Fund pays a monthly management fee. The management fee is the sum of an individual fund fee rate that is based on an annual rate of .15% of the Fund's average net assets and an annualized group fee rate that averaged .26% during the period. The group fee rate is based upon the average net assets of all the mutual funds advised by FMR, including any mutual funds previously advised by FMR that are currently advised by Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, an affiliate of FMR. The group fee rate decreases as assets under management increase and increases as assets under management decrease. For the period, the total annual management fee rate was .40% of the Fund's average net assets.
Transfer Agent Fees. Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc., (FIIOC), an affiliate of FMR, is the transfer, dividend disbursing and shareholder servicing agent for each class of the Fund. FIIOC receives account fees and asset-based fees that vary according to the account size and type of account of the shareholders of Balanced. FIIOC receives an asset-based fee of Class K's average net assets. FIIOC pays for typesetting, printing and mailing of shareholder reports, except proxy statements.
For the period, transfer agent fees for each class were as follows:
| Amount | % of Average Net Assets |
Balanced | $ 25,180 | .16 |
Class K | 3,005 | .05 |
| $ 28,185 | |
Accounting and Security Lending Fees. Fidelity Service Company, Inc. (FSC), an affiliate of FMR, maintains the Fund's accounting records. The accounting fee is based on
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6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates - continued
Accounting and Security Lending Fees - continued
the level of average net assets for each month. Under a separate contract, FSC administers the security lending program. The security lending fee is based on the number and duration of lending transactions.
Brokerage Commissions. The Fund placed a portion of its portfolio transactions with brokerage firms which are affiliates of the investment adviser. Brokerage commissions are included in net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in the Statement of Operations. The commissions paid to these affiliated firms were $424 for the period.
Other Affiliated Transactions. On January 4, 2013, the Fidelity Corporate Bond 1-10 Year Central Fund ("1-10 Year"), a Fidelity Central Fund in which the Fund was invested, was liquidated pursuant to a Plan of Liquidation and Dissolution approved by the 1-10 Year Board. Under the plan, 1-10 Year distributed in-kind all of its net assets to its shareholders pro rata at its NAV per share as of the close of business on the liquidation date. As a result, the Fund received cash and securities, including accrued interest, of $347,566 in return for 3,056 shares of 1-10 Year. Because 1-10 Year was a partnership for federal income tax purposes, the liquidation generally was tax free to the Fund.
7. Committed Line of Credit.
The Fund participates with other funds managed by FMR 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 Fund has agreed to pay commitment fees on its pro-rata portion of the line of credit, which amounted to $50 and is reflected in Miscellaneous expenses on the Statement of Operations. 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, a lending agent is used and may loan securities to certain qualified borrowers, including Fidelity Capital Markets (FCM), a broker-dealer affiliated with the Fund. 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. If the borrower defaults on its obligation to return the securities loaned because of insolvency or other reasons, the Fund may
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
8. Security Lending - continued
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 maintained at the Fund's custodian and/or invested in cash equivalents and/or 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 FCM. 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. Total security lending income during the period, presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of interest income, amounted to $251. Net income from the Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund during the period, presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of income from Fidelity Central Funds, amounted to $1,695 (including $11 from securities loaned to FCM).
9. Expense Reductions.
Commissions paid to certain brokers with whom FMR, or its affiliates, places trades on behalf of the Fund include an amount in addition to trade execution, which may be rebated back to the Fund to offset certain expenses. This amount totaled $2,474 for the period. In addition, through arrangements with the Fund's custodian, credits realized as a result of uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses. During the period, these credits reduced the Fund's custody expenses by $6.
In addition, FMR reimbursed a portion of the Fund's operating expenses during the period in the amount of $33.
10. Distributions to Shareholders.
Distributions to shareholders of each class were as follows:
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 |
From net investment income | | |
Balanced | $ 249,039 | $ 281,775 |
Class K | 103,673 | 98,150 |
Total | $ 352,712 | $ 379,925 |
Annual Report
11. Share Transactions.
Transactions for each class of shares were as follows:
| Shares | Dollars |
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 | 2013 | 2012 |
Balanced | | | | |
Shares sold | 125,541 | 101,057 | $ 2,652,879 | $ 1,914,819 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 11,563 | 14,566 | 238,686 | 271,000 |
Shares redeemed | (141,860) | (221,553) | (2,965,223) | (4,157,808) |
Net increase (decrease) | (4,756) | (105,930) | $ (73,658) | $ (1,971,989) |
Class K | | | | |
Shares sold | 69,664 | 117,984 | $ 1,451,163 | $ 2,217,745 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 5,019 | 5,255 | 103,673 | 98,150 |
Shares redeemed | (65,784) | (68,166) | (1,381,546) | (1,291,730) |
Net increase (decrease) | 8,899 | 55,073 | $ 173,290 | $ 1,024,165 |
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.
Annual Report
To the Trustees of Fidelity Puritan Trust and the Shareholders of Fidelity Balanced Fund:
In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the schedule of investments, and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Fidelity Balanced Fund (a fund of Fidelity Puritan Trust) at August 31, 2013, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as "financial statements") are the responsibility of the Fidelity Balanced Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at August 31, 2013 by correspondence with the custodian and brokers, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
October 18, 2013
Annual Report
The Trustees, Member of the Advisory Board, and executive 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 Ronald P. O'Hanley, James C. Curvey, Ned C. Lautenbach and William S. Stavropoulos, each of the Trustees oversees 166 funds. Ronald P. O'Hanley, Ned C. Lautenbach and William S. Stavropoulos each oversees 230 funds. James C. Curvey oversees 387 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 of the trust and the fund (as defined in the 1940 Act) (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. The executive officers and Advisory Board Member hold office without limit in time, except that any officer and 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.
Experience, Skills, Attributes, and Qualifications of the Fund's 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.
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Trustees and Officers - continued
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. James C. Curvey is an interested person (as defined in the 1940 Act) 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. Ned C. Lautenbach 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 Board oversees Fidelity's equity and high income funds and another Board oversees Fidelity's investment-grade bond, money market, and asset allocation funds. The asset allocation funds may invest in Fidelity funds overseen by the fund Board. The use of separate Boards, each with its own committee structure, allows the Trustees of each group of Fidelity funds to focus on the unique issues of the funds they oversee, including common research, investment, and operational issues. On occasion, the separate Boards establish joint committees to address issues of overlapping consequences for the Fidelity funds overseen by each Board.
The Trustees operate using a system of committees to facilitate the timely and efficient consideration of all matters of importance to the Trustees, the fund, and fund shareholders and to facilitate compliance with legal and regulatory requirements and oversight of the fund's activities and associated risks. The Board, acting through its committees, has charged FMR and its affiliates with (i) identifying events or circumstances the occurrence of which could have demonstrably adverse effects on the fund's business and/or reputation; (ii) implementing processes and controls to lessen the possibility that such events or circumstances occur or to mitigate the effects of such events or circumstances if they do occur; and (iii) creating and maintaining a system designed to evaluate continuously business and market conditions in order to facilitate the identification and implementation processes described in (i) and (ii) above. Because the day-to-day operations and activities of the fund are carried out by or through FMR, its affiliates and other service providers, the fund's exposure to risks is mitigated but not eliminated by the processes overseen by the Trustees. While each of the Board's committees has responsibility for overseeing different aspects of the fund's activities, oversight is exercised primarily through the Operations, Audit, and Compliance Committees. In addition, the Independent Trustees have 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. For example, a working group comprised of Independent Trustees and FMR has worked and continues to work to review the Fidelity funds' valuation-related activities, reporting and risk management. 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 FMR'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 Fund's Trustees."
Annual Report
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.
Interested Trustees*:
Correspondence intended for each 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+ |
James C. Curvey (1935) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2007 Mr. Curvey is Trustee and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of certain Trusts. Mr. Curvey also serves as Trustee (2007-present) of other investment companies advised by FMR. Mr. Curvey is a Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2009-present), Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Co. (2009-present) and Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2007-present). Mr. Curvey is also Vice Chairman (2007-present) and Director of FMR LLC. In addition, Mr. Curvey serves as an Overseer for the Boston Symphony Orchestra and a member of the Trustees of Villanova University. Previously, Mr. Curvey was the Vice Chairman (2006-2007) and Director (2000-2007) of FMR Corp. |
Ronald P. O'Hanley (1957) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2011 Mr. O'Hanley serves as a Trustee and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of other Fidelity funds (2013-present), and is Director of FMR Co., Inc. (2010-present), Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2010-present), Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2010-present), President of Fidelity Asset Management and Corporate Services and a Member of Fidelity's Executive Committee (2010-present). Previously, Mr. O'Hanley served as President and Chief Executive Officer of BNY Mellon Asset Management (2007-2010). Mr. O'Hanley also served as Vice Chairman of Bank New York Mellon Corp. and a member of that firm's Executive Committee. Prior to the 2007 merger of The Bank of New York and Mellon Financial Corporation, he was Vice Chairman of Mellon Financial Corporation and President and Chief Executive Officer of Mellon Asset Management. He joined Mellon in February 1997. Mr. O'Hanley currently serves as Chairman of the Boston Public Library Foundation Board of Directors and sits on the Board of Directors of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, the Board of Trustees of the Marine Biological Laboratory and the Advisory Board of the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Administration at Syracuse University. Mr. O'Hanley also chairs the Council on Asset Management for the Financial Services Roundtable and is a member of the Board of Directors of Institutional Investor's U.S. Institute. |
* Trustees have been determined to be "Interested Trustees" by virtue of, among other things, their affiliation with the trust or various entities under common control with FMR.
+ The information above includes each Trustee's principal occupation during the last five years and other information relating to the experience, attributes, and skills relevant to each Trustee's qualifications to serve as a Trustee, which led to the conclusion that each Trustee should serve as a Trustee for the fund.
Annual Report
Independent Trustees:
Correspondence intended for each Independent Trustee (that is, the Trustees other than the Interested Trustees) may be sent to Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 55235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-5235.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupations and Other Relevant Experience+ |
Dennis J. Dirks (1948) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2005 Prior to his retirement in May 2003, Mr. Dirks was Chief Operating Officer and a member of the Board of The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC). He also served as President, Chief Operating Officer, and Board member of The Depository Trust Company (DTC) and President and Board member of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC). In addition, Mr. Dirks served as Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Government Securities Clearing Corporation, Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Mortgage-Backed Securities Clearing Corporation, as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of Manhattan College (2005-2008), and as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of AHRC of Nassau County (2006-2008). Mr. Dirks is a member of the Independent Directors Council (IDC) Governing Council (2010-present) and Board of Directors for The Brookville Center for Children's Services, Inc. (2009-present). |
Alan J. Lacy (1953) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Mr. Lacy serves as Senior Adviser (2007-present) of Oak Hill Capital Partners, L.P. (private equity). Mr. Lacy also served as Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) and Vice Chairman (2005-2006) of Sears Holdings Corporation and Sears, Roebuck and Co. (retail). In addition, Mr. Lacy serves as a member of the Board of Directors of Dave & Buster's Entertainment, Inc. (restaurant and entertainment complexes, 2010-present), Earth Fare, Inc. (retail grocery, 2012-present), The Hillman Companies, Inc. (hardware wholesalers, 2010-present), and Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (global pharmaceuticals, 2008-present). Mr. Lacy is a member of the Board of Trustees of The National Parks Conservation Association (2006-present). Previously, Mr. Lacy served as Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the National Parks Conservation Association (2008-2011) and as a member of the Board of Directors for the Western Union Company (global money transfer, 2006-2011). |
Ned C. Lautenbach (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2000 Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Independent Trustees of the Equity and High Income Funds (2006-present) and serves as a Trustee of other Fidelity funds (2013-present). Mr. Lautenbach currently serves as the Lead Director of the Eaton Corporation Board of Directors (diversified industrial, 1997-present). Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Philharmonic Center for the Arts in Naples, Florida (2012-present) and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations (1994-present). Previously, Mr. Lautenbach was a Partner/Advisory Partner at Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, LLC (private equity investment, 1998-2010), as well as a Director of Sony Corporation (2006-2007). |
Joseph Mauriello (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Prior to his retirement in January 2006, Mr. Mauriello served in numerous senior management positions including Deputy Chairman and Chief Operating Officer (2004-2005), and Vice Chairman of Financial Services (2002-2004) of KPMG LLP US (professional services, 1965-2005). Mr. Mauriello currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of XL Group plc. (global insurance and re-insurance, 2006-present). Previously, Mr. Mauriello served as a Director of the Hamilton Funds of the Bank of New York (2006-2007) and of Arcadia Resources Inc. (health care services and products, 2007-2012). |
Robert W. Selander (1950) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2011 Previously, Mr. Selander served as a Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2011), Executive Vice Chairman (2010), Chief Executive Officer (2009-2010), and President and Chief Executive Officer (1997-2009) of Mastercard, Inc. |
Cornelia M. Small (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2005 Ms. Small is a member of the Board of Directors (2009-present) and Chair of the Investment Committee (2010-present) of the Teagle Foundation. Ms. Small also serves on the Investment Committee of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Small served as Chairperson (2002-2008) and a member of the Investment Committee and Chairperson (2008-2012) and a member of the Board of Trustees of Smith College. In addition, Ms. Small served as Chief Investment Officer, Director of Global Equity Investments, and a member of the Board of Directors of Scudder, Stevens & Clark and Scudder Kemper Investments. |
William S. Stavropoulos (1939) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2001 Mr. Stavropoulos is Vice Chairman of the Independent Trustees of the Equity and High Income Funds (2006-present) and serves as a Trustee of other Fidelity funds (2013-present). Mr. Stavropoulos serves as President and Founder of the Michigan Baseball Foundation, the Great Lakes Loons (2007-present). Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman Emeritus of the Board of Directors of The Dow Chemical Company, where he previously served in numerous senior management positions, including President, CEO (1995-2000; 2002-2004), Chairman of the Executive Committee (2000-2006), and as a member of the Board of Directors (1990-2006). Currently, Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman of the Board of Directors of Univar Inc. (global distributor of commodity and specialty chemicals), a Director of Teradata Corporation (data warehousing and technology solutions), and Maersk Inc. (industrial conglomerate), and a member of the Advisory Board for Metalmark Capital LLC (private equity investment, 2005-present). Mr. Stavropoulos is an operating advisor to Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, LLC (private equity investment). In addition, Mr. Stavropoulos is a member of the University of Notre Dame Advisory Council for the College of Science, a Trustee of the Rollin L. Gerstacker Foundation, and a Director of the Naples Philharmonic Center for the Arts. Previously, Mr. Stavropoulos served as a Director of Chemical Financial Corporation (bank holding company, 1993-2012) and Tyco International, Ltd. (multinational manufacturing and services, 2007-2012). |
David M. Thomas (1949) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Previously, Mr. Thomas served as Executive Chairman (2005-2006) and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) of IMS Health, Inc. (pharmaceutical and healthcare information solutions), and a Director of Fortune Brands, Inc. (consumer products, 2000-2011). In addition, Mr. Thomas serves as Non-Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors of Fortune Brands Home and Security (home and security products, 2011-present), and as a member of the Board of Directors of Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (marketing communication, 2004-present). |
+ The information above includes each Trustee's principal occupation during the last five years and other information relating to the experience, attributes, and skills relevant to each Trustee's qualifications to serve as a Trustee, which led to the conclusion that each Trustee should serve as a Trustee for the fund.
Annual Report
Trustees and Officers - continued
Advisory Board Member and Executive Officers:
Correspondence intended for each executive officer and Peter S. Lynch may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 245 Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupation |
Peter S. Lynch (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2003 Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Lynch is Vice Chairman and a Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. In addition, Mr. Lynch serves as a Trustee of Boston College and as the Chairman of the Inner-City Scholarship Fund. Previously, Mr. Lynch served on the Special Olympics International Board of Directors (1997-2006). |
Kenneth B. Robins (1969) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 President and Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Robins also serves as President and Treasurer (2010-present), Deputy Treasurer (2013-present), and Assistant Treasurer (2009-present) of other Fidelity funds and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2004-present). Mr. Robins serves as Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (2013-present). Previously, Mr. Robins served as President and Treasurer (2008-2013) and Deputy Treasurer (2005-2008) of certain Fidelity funds, and Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2006-2008). |
Bruce T. Herring (1965) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2006 Vice President of certain Equity Funds. Mr. Herring also serves as Vice President of other Fidelity funds (2013-present), Chief Investment Officer of Fidelity Global Asset Allocation (GAA) (2013-present), Chief Investment Officer and Director of Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2010-present), Group Chief Investment Officer of FMR, and President of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2010-present). Previously, Mr. Herring served as Vice President (2005-2006) and Senior Vice President (2006-2007) of Fidelity Management & Research Company, Vice President of FMR Co., Inc. (2001-2007) and as a portfolio manager for Fidelity U.S. Equity Funds. |
Brian B. Hogan (1964) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2009 Vice President of Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Hogan also serves as Vice President of other Fidelity funds (2009-present) and President of FMR's Equity Division (2009-present). Previously, Mr. Hogan served as Senior Vice President, Equity Research of FMR (2006-2009) and as a portfolio manager. |
Scott C. Goebel (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Secretary and Chief Legal Officer (CLO) of certain Fidelity funds. Mr. Goebel also serves as Secretary of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (2010-present) and Fidelity Research and Analysis Company (FRAC) (2010-present); Secretary and CLO of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2008-present); General Counsel, Secretary, and Senior Vice President of FMR (2008-present) and FMR Co., Inc. (2008-present); employed by FMR LLC or an affiliate (2001-present); Chief Legal Officer of Fidelity Management & Research (Hong Kong) Limited (2008-present) and Assistant Secretary of Fidelity Management & Research (Japan) Inc. (2008-present), and Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Goebel served as Secretary and CLO of other Fidelity funds (2008-2013), as Assistant Secretary of FIMM (2008-2010), FRAC (2008-2010), and the Funds (2007-2008) and as Vice President and Secretary of Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) (2005-2007). |
William C. Coffey (1969) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2009 Assistant Secretary of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Coffey also serves as Assistant Secretary of other Fidelity funds (2009-present), Senior Vice President and Deputy General Counsel of FMR LLC (2010-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Coffey served as Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR LLC (2005-2009). |
Elizabeth Paige Baumann (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2012 Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Officer of the Fidelity funds. Ms. Baumann also serves as AML Officer of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2012-present), Chief AML Officer of FMR LLC (2012-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Ms. Baumann served as Vice President and Deputy Anti-Money Laundering Officer (2007-2012). |
Christine Reynolds (1958) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Chief Financial Officer of the Fidelity funds. Ms. Reynolds became President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) in August 2008. Ms. Reynolds served as Chief Operating Officer of FPCMS (2007-2008). Previously, Ms. Reynolds served as President, Treasurer, and Anti-Money Laundering officer of the Fidelity funds (2004-2007). |
Joseph A. Hanlon (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2012 Chief Compliance Officer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Hanlon also serves as Chief Compliance Officer of other Fidelity funds (2012-present). Mr. Hanlon serves as Compliance Officer of FMR, FMR Co., Inc., Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), Fidelity Research and Analysis Company (FRAC), and Fidelity Management & Research (Hong Kong) (2009-present), as Senior Vice President of the Fidelity Asset Management Division (2009-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Hanlon served as Compliance Officer of Fidelity Management & Research (Japan) Inc. (2009-2013), Strategic Advisers, Inc. (2009-2013), and Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2009-2013). |
Joseph F. Zambello (1957) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2011 Deputy Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Mr. Zambello is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Zambello served as Vice President of FMR's Program Management Group (2009-2011) and Vice President of the Transfer Agent Oversight Group (2005-2009). |
Adrien E. Deberghes (1967) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Deberghes also serves as President and Treasurer (2013-present), Vice President (2011-present), and Assistant Treasurer (2010-present) of other Fidelity funds, and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Deberghes served as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2008-2013), Senior Vice President of Mutual Fund Administration at State Street Corporation (2007-2008), Senior Director of Mutual Fund Administration at Investors Bank & Trust (2005-2007), and Director of Finance for Dunkin' Brands (2000-2005). |
Stephen Sadoski (1971) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2012 Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Sadoski also serves as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2013-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2012-present). Previously, Mr. Sadoski served as Deputy Treasurer (2012-2013) and Assistant Treasurer (2012-2013) of other Fidelity funds, an assistant chief accountant in the Division of Investment Management of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) (2009-2012) and as a senior manager at Deloitte & Touche LLP (1997-2009). |
Stacie M. Smith (1974) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2013 Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Ms. Smith also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2013-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2009-present). Previously, Ms. Smith served as Deputy Treasurer of certain Fidelity funds (2013) and Senior Audit Manager of Ernst & Young LLP (1996-2009). |
Renee Stagnone (1975) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2013 Deputy Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Ms. Stagnone is an employee of Fidelity Investments. |
Stephanie J. Dorsey (1969) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2010 Assistant Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Ms. Dorsey also serves as President and Treasurer (2013-present) and Assistant Treasurer (2010-present) of other Fidelity funds, Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2013-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Dorsey served as Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Fixed Income and Asset Allocation Funds (2008-2013), Treasurer (2004-2008) of the JPMorgan Mutual Funds and Vice President (2004-2008) of JPMorgan Chase Bank. |
Chris Maher (1972) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2013 Assistant Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Mr. Maher is Vice President of Valuation Oversight and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Maher served as Vice President of Asset Management Compliance (2013), Vice President of FMR's Program Management Group (2010-2013), and Vice President of Valuation Oversight (2008-2010). |
Gary W. Ryan (1958) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2005 Assistant Treasurer of certain Fidelity funds. Mr. Ryan is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Ryan served as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-2013) and Vice President of Fund Reporting in Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) (1999-2005). |
Jonathan Davis (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2010 Assistant Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Mr. Davis is also Assistant Treasurer of Fidelity Rutland Square Trust II and Fidelity Commonwealth Trust II. Mr. Davis is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Davis served as Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR LLC (2003-2010). |
Annual Report
The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Balanced Fund voted to pay to shareholders of record at the opening of business on record date, the following distributions per share derived from capital gains realized from sales of portfolio securities, and dividends derived from net investment income:
| Pay Date | Record Date | Dividend | Capital Gain |
Balanced | 10/14/13 | 10/11/13 | $0.108 | $0.851 |
The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended August 31, 2013, $919,707,777, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.
A total of 2.51% of the dividends distributed during the fiscal year was derived from interest on U.S. Government securities which is generally exempt from state income tax.
Balanced designates $135,777,634 of distributions paid during the period January 1, 2013 to August 31, 2013 as qualifying to be taxed as interest-related dividends for nonresident alien shareholders.
Balanced designates 18%, 61%, 91% and 91% of the dividends distributed in October, December, April and July, respectively during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends-received deduction for corporate shareholders.
Balanced designates 21%, 72%, 100% and 100% of the dividends distributed in October, December, April and July, 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 will notify shareholders in January 2014 of amounts for use in preparing 2013 income tax returns.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and Management Fees
Fidelity Balanced Fund
Each year, the Board of Trustees, including the Independent Trustees (together, the Board), votes on the renewal of the management contract and sub-advisory agreements (together, the Advisory Contracts) for the fund. The Board, assisted by the advice of fund counsel and Independent Trustees' counsel, requests and considers a broad range of information relevant to the renewal of the Advisory Contracts throughout the year.
The Board meets regularly and, at each of its meetings, covers an extensive agenda of topics and materials and considers factors that are relevant to its annual consideration of the renewal of the fund's Advisory Contracts, including the services and support provided to the fund and its shareholders. The Board has established various standing committees, each composed of and chaired by Independent Trustees with varying backgrounds, to which the Board has assigned specific subject matter responsibilities in order to enhance effective decision-making by the Board. The Board, acting directly and through its Committees, requests and receives information concerning the annual consideration of the renewal of the fund's Advisory Contracts. The Board also meets as needed to consider matters specifically related to the Board's annual consideration of the renewal of Advisory Contracts. Members of the Board may also meet with trustees of other Fidelity funds through ad hoc joint committees to discuss certain matters relevant to the Fidelity funds.
At its July 2013 meeting, the Board, including the Independent Trustees, unanimously determined to renew the fund's Advisory Contracts. In reaching its determination, the Board considered all factors it believed relevant, including (i) the nature, extent, and quality of the services to be provided to the fund and its shareholders (including the investment performance of the fund); (ii) the competitiveness of the fund's management fee and total expense ratio relative to peer funds; (iii) the total costs of the services to be provided by and the profits to be realized by Fidelity from its relationship with the fund; (iv) the extent to which economies of scale exist and would be realized as the fund grows; and (v) whether fee levels reflect these economies of scale, if any, for the benefit of fund shareholders.
In considering whether to renew the Advisory Contracts for the fund, the Board reached a determination, with the assistance of fund counsel and Independent Trustees' counsel and through the exercise of its business judgment, that the renewal of the Advisory Contracts was in the best interests of the fund and its shareholders and that the compensation payable under the Advisory Contracts was fair and reasonable. The Board's decision to renew the Advisory Contracts was not based on any single factor, but rather was based on a comprehensive consideration of all the information provided to the Board at its meetings throughout the year. The Board, in reaching its determination to renew the Advisory Contracts, was aware that shareholders in the fund have a broad range of investment choices available to them, including a wide choice among mutual funds offered by Fidelity's competitors, and that the fund's shareholders, who have the opportunity to review and weigh the disclosure provided by the fund in its prospectus and other public disclosures, have chosen to invest in this fund, which is a part of the Fidelity family of funds.
Annual Report
Nature, Extent, and Quality of Services Provided. The Board considered the staffing within the investment adviser, Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR), and the sub-advisers (together, the Investment Advisers) as it relates to the fund, including the backgrounds of the fund's investment personnel, and also considered the fund's investment objective, strategies, and related investment philosophy. The Independent Trustees also had discussions with senior management of Fidelity's investment operations and investment groups. The Board considered the structure of the portfolio manager compensation program and whether this structure provides appropriate incentives to act in the best interests of the fund.
Resources Dedicated to Investment Management and Support Services. The Board and the Fund Oversight and Research Committees reviewed the general qualifications and capabilities of the Investment Advisers' investment staff, including its size, education, experience, and resources, as well as the Investment Advisers' approach to recruiting, training, managing, and compensating investment personnel. The Board noted that FMR has continued to increase the resources devoted to non-U.S. offices, including expansion of Fidelity's global investment organization. The Board also noted that Fidelity's analysts have extensive resources, tools and capabilities that allow them to conduct sophisticated quantitative and fundamental analysis, as well as credit analysis of issuers, counterparties and guarantors. Further, the Board believes that Fidelity's investment professionals have sufficient access to global information and data so as to provide competitive investment results over time, and that those professionals also have access to sophisticated tools that permit them to assess portfolio construction and risk and performance attribution characteristics continuously, as well as to transmit new information and research conclusions rapidly around the world. Additionally, in its deliberations, the Board considered the Investment Advisers' trading and risk management capabilities and resources, which are an integral part of the investment management process.
Shareholder and Administrative Services. The Board considered (i) the nature, extent, quality, and cost of advisory, administrative, and shareholder services performed by the Investment Advisers and their affiliates under the Advisory Contracts and under separate agreements covering transfer agency, pricing and bookkeeping, and securities lending services for the fund; (ii) the nature and extent of the supervision of third party service providers, principally custodians and subcustodians; and (iii) the resources devoted to, and the record of compliance with, the fund's compliance policies and procedures. The Board also reviewed the allocation of fund brokerage, including allocations to brokers affiliated with the Investment Advisers, the use of brokerage commissions to pay fund expenses, and the use of "soft" commission dollars to pay for research services.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
The Board noted that the growth of fund assets over time across the complex allows Fidelity to reinvest in the development of services designed to enhance the value or convenience of the Fidelity funds as investment vehicles. These services include 24-hour access to account information and market information through telephone representatives and over the Internet, investor education materials and asset allocation tools, and the expanded availability of Fidelity Investor Centers.
Investment in a Large Fund Family. The Board considered the benefits to shareholders of investing in a Fidelity fund, including the benefits of investing in a fund that is part of a large family of funds offering a variety of investment disciplines and providing a large variety of mutual fund investor services. The Board noted that Fidelity had taken, or had made recommendations that resulted in the Fidelity funds taking, a number of actions over the previous year that benefited particular funds, including (i) continuing to dedicate additional resources to investment research and to the support of the senior management team that oversees asset management; (ii) persisting in efforts to enhance Fidelity's global research capabilities; (iii) launching new funds and making other enhancements to meet client needs for global and income-oriented solutions; (iv) continuing to launch dedicated lower cost underlying funds to meet portfolio construction needs related to expanding underlying fund options for Fidelity funds of funds, specifically for the Freedom Fund product lines; (v) rationalizing product lines and gaining increased efficiencies through the mergers of several funds into other funds; (vi) strengthening Fidelity's index fund offerings by reducing investment minimums and adopting or lowering existing expense caps for certain funds and classes; (vii) enhancing Global Asset Allocation product offerings by launching new funds and strategies, including "open architecture" target date funds that utilize affiliated and unaffiliated sub-advisers; (viii) modifying the eligibility criteria for Institutional Class shares of Advisor funds to increase their marketability to a portion of the defined contribution plan market; (ix) creating a new low-cost retirement share class for certain Advisor funds to appeal to large retirement plans; (x) transitioning the management of certain Fidelity commodity funds to Geode Capital Management LLC, a registered commodity pool operator, while retaining administrative responsibilities for the funds; (xi) reorganizing a number of funds; and (xii) taking steps toward establishing a new Fidelity adviser to manage sector-based funds and products.
Investment Performance. The Board considered whether the fund has operated in accordance with its investment objective, as well as its record of compliance with its investment restrictions and its performance history. The Board noted that there were portfolio management changes for a sleeve of the fund in March 2011, April 2013, and June 2013.
Annual Report
The Board took into account discussions with the Investment Advisers about fund investment performance that occur at Board meetings throughout the year. In this regard the Board noted that as part of regularly scheduled fund reviews and other reports to the Board on fund performance, the Board periodically considers annualized return information for the fund, for different time periods, measured against a securities market index ("benchmark index") and a peer group of mutual funds with similar objectives ("peer group"). In its evaluation of fund investment performance, the Board gave particular attention to information indicating changes in performance of certain Fidelity funds for specific time periods and the Investment Advisers' explanations for any overperformance or underperformance.
In addition to reviewing absolute and relative fund performance, the Independent Trustees periodically consider the appropriateness of fund performance metrics in evaluating the results achieved. In general, the Independent Trustees believe that fund performance should be evaluated based on net performance (after fees and expenses) of both the highest performing and lowest performing classes, where applicable, compared to appropriate benchmark indices, over appropriate time periods which may include full market cycles, and compared to peer groups, as applicable, over the same periods, taking into account relevant factors including the following: general market conditions; issuer-specific information; tactical opportunities for investment; and fund cash flows and other factors.
The Independent Trustees recognize that shareholders evaluate performance on a net basis over their own holding periods, for which one-, three-, and five-year periods are used as a proxy. For this reason, the performance information reviewed by the Board also included net cumulative calendar year total return information for the fund and an appropriate benchmark index and peer group for the most recent one-, three-, and five-year periods, as shown below. Returns are shown compared to the 25th percentile (top of box) and 75th percentile (bottom of box) of the peer universe.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
Fidelity Balanced Fund
Based on its review, the Board concluded that the nature, extent, and quality of services provided to the fund under the Advisory Contracts should benefit the fund's shareholders.
Competitiveness of Management Fee and Total Expense Ratio. The Board considered the fund's management fee and total expense ratio compared to "mapped groups" of competitive funds and classes. Fidelity creates "mapped groups" by combining similar Lipper investment objective categories that have comparable management fee characteristics. Combining Lipper investment objective categories aids the Board's management fee and total expense ratio comparisons by broadening the competitive group used for comparison and by reducing the number of universes to which various Fidelity funds are compared.
Management Fee. The Board considered two proprietary management fee comparisons for the 12-month periods shown in the chart below. The group of Lipper funds used by the Board for management fee comparisons is referred to below as the "Total Mapped Group." The Total Mapped Group is broader than the Lipper peer group used by the Board for performance comparisons because the Total Mapped Group combines several Lipper investment objective categories while the Lipper peer group does not. The Total Mapped Group comparison focuses on a fund's standing in terms of gross management fees before expense reimbursements or caps relative to the total universe of funds with comparable investment mandates, regardless of whether their management fee structures also are comparable. Funds with comparable investment mandates offer exposure to similar types of securities. Funds with comparable management fee structures have similar management fee contractual arrangements (e.g., flat rate charged for advisory services, all-inclusive fee rate, etc.). "TMG %" represents the percentage of funds in the Total Mapped Group that had management fees that were lower than the fund's. For example, a TMG % of 12% means that 88% of the funds in the Total Mapped Group had higher management fees than the fund. The "Asset-Size Peer Group" (ASPG) comparison focuses on a fund's standing relative to a subset of non-Fidelity funds within the Total Mapped Group that are similar in size and management fee structure. The ASPG represents at least 15% of the funds in the Total Mapped Group with comparable asset size and management fee structures, subject to a minimum of 50 funds (or all funds in the Total Mapped Group if fewer than 50). Additional information, such as the ASPG quartile in which the fund's management fee ranked, is also included in the chart and considered by the Board.
Annual Report
Fidelity Balanced Fund
The Board noted that the fund's management fee ranked below the median of its Total Mapped Group and below the median of its ASPG for 2012.
Based on its review, the Board concluded that the fund's management fee is fair and reasonable in light of the services that the fund receives and the other factors considered.
Total Expense Ratio. In its review of each class's total expense ratio, the Board considered the fund's management fee as well as other fund or class expenses, as applicable, such as transfer agent fees, pricing and bookkeeping fees, and custodial, legal, and audit fees. The Board also noted the effects of any waivers and reimbursements on fees and expenses. As part of its review, the Board also considered the current and historical total expense ratios of each class of the fund compared to competitive fund median expenses. Each class of the fund is compared to those funds and classes in the Total Mapped Group (used by the Board for management fee comparisons) that have a similar sales load structure.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
The Board noted that the total expense ratio of each class ranked below its competitive median for 2012.
Fees Charged to Other Fidelity Clients. The Board also considered Fidelity fee structures and other information with respect to clients of FMR and its affiliates, such as other mutual funds advised or subadvised by FMR or its affiliates, pension plan clients, and other institutional clients. The Board noted the findings of the 2013 ad hoc joint committee (created with the board of other Fidelity funds), which reviewed and compared Fidelity's institutional investment advisory business with its business of providing services to the Fidelity funds, including the differences in services provided, fees charged, and costs incurred, as well as competition in their respective marketplaces.
Based on its review of total expense ratios and fees charged to other Fidelity clients, the Board concluded that the total expense ratio of each class of the fund was reasonable in light of the services that the fund and its shareholders receive and the other factors considered.
Costs of the Services and Profitability. The Board considered the revenues earned and the expenses incurred by Fidelity in conducting the business of developing, marketing, distributing, managing, administering and servicing the fund and servicing the fund's shareholders. The Board also considered the level of Fidelity's profits in respect of all the Fidelity funds.
On an annual basis, FMR presents to the Board Fidelity's profitability for the fund. Fidelity calculates the profitability for each fund, as well as aggregate profitability for groups of Fidelity funds and all Fidelity funds, using a series of detailed revenue and cost allocation methodologies which originate with the books and records of Fidelity on which Fidelity's audited financial statements are based. The Audit Committee of the Board reviews any significant changes from the prior year's methodologies.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC), independent registered public accounting firm and auditor to Fidelity and certain Fidelity funds, has been engaged annually by the Board as part of the Board's assessment of Fidelity's profitability analysis. PwC's engagement includes the review and assessment of the methodologies used by Fidelity in determining the revenues and expenses attributable to Fidelity's mutual fund business, and completion of agreed-upon procedures surrounding the mathematical accuracy of fund profitability and its conformity to allocation methodologies. After considering PwC's reports issued under the engagement and information provided by Fidelity, the Board concluded that while other allocation methods may also be reasonable, Fidelity's profitability methodologies are reasonable in all material respects.
Annual Report
The Board also reviewed Fidelity's non-fund businesses and fall-out benefits related to the mutual fund business as well as cases where Fidelity's affiliates may benefit from or be related to the fund's business.
The Board considered the costs of the services provided by and the profits realized by Fidelity in connection with the operation of the fund and was satisfied that the profitability was not excessive in the circumstances.
Economies of Scale. The Board considered whether there have been economies of scale in respect of the management of the Fidelity funds, whether the Fidelity funds (including the fund) have appropriately benefited from any such economies of scale, and whether there is potential for realization of any further economies of scale. The Board considered the extent to which the fund will benefit from economies of scale through increased services to the fund, through waivers or reimbursements, or through fee or expense reductions. The Board also noted that in 2009, it and the board of other Fidelity funds created an ad hoc committee (the Economies of Scale Committee) to analyze whether FMR attains economies of scale in respect of the management and servicing of the Fidelity funds, whether the Fidelity funds have appropriately benefited from such economies of scale, and whether there is potential for realization of any further economies of scale.
The Board recognized that the fund's management contract incorporates a "group fee" structure, which provides for lower group fee rates as total fund assets under FMR's management increase, and for higher group fee rates as total fund assets under FMR's management decrease. FMR calculates the group fee rates based on a tiered asset "breakpoint" schedule that varies based on asset class. The Board considered that the group fee is designed to deliver the benefits of economies of scale to fund shareholders when total Fidelity fund assets increase, even if assets of any particular fund are unchanged or have declined, because some portion of Fidelity's costs are attributable to services provided to all Fidelity funds, and all funds benefit if those costs can be allocated among more assets. The Board concluded that, given the group fee structure, fund shareholders will benefit from lower management fees as assets under FMR's management increase at the fund complex level, regardless of whether Fidelity achieves any such economies of scale.
The Board concluded, taking into account the analysis of the Economies of Scale Committee, that economies of scale, if any, are being appropriately shared between fund shareholders and Fidelity.
Amendment to Description of Group Fee Rate. At its July 2013 meeting, the Board voted to approve an amendment to the fund's management contract to modify the description of the "group fee rate" effective August 1, 2013. The Board noted that under the prior description in the contract, the group fee rate was based on the average net assets of all registered investment companies with which FMR has management contracts. Under the contract's tiered asset breakpoint schedule, the group fee rate is lower as total fund assets under FMR's management increase, and higher as total fund assets under FMR's management decrease. The Board considered that the prior description would have excluded the assets of 64 Fidelity sector funds from the group fee rate calculation once Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, an affiliate of FMR, assumed management responsibilities for those funds. The Board noted that modifying the description of the group fee rate to continue to include the assets of those 64 funds for purposes of determining group fee rate breakpoints would avoid an immediate adverse impact on the group fee rate for any fund.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
Additional Information Requested by the Board. In order to develop fully the factual basis for consideration of the Fidelity funds' Advisory Contracts, the Board requested and received additional information on certain topics, including: (i) fund performance trends and Fidelity's long-term strategies for certain funds; (ii) the potential to further rationalize the Fidelity fund lineup with the possibility of achieving savings for the funds and Fidelity; (iii) the methodology with respect to competitive fund data and peer group classifications; (iv) the arrangements with, and performance of, certain sub-advisers on behalf of the Fidelity funds, as well as certain proposed participating affiliate arrangements; (v) the realization of fall-out benefits in certain Fidelity business units; (vi) Fidelity's group fee structures, including the rationale for the individual fee rates of certain categories of funds and the definition of group assets; (vii) trends regarding industry use of performance fee structures and the performance adjustment methodologies applicable to the Fidelity funds; (viii) additional competitive analysis regarding the total expenses for certain classes; and (ix) fund profitability methodology, including Fidelity's cost allocation methodology, and the impact of certain factors on fund profitability results.
Based on its evaluation of all of the conclusions noted above, and after considering all factors it believed relevant, the Board ultimately concluded that the advisory fee structures are fair and reasonable, and that the fund's Advisory Contracts should be renewed.
Annual Report
Investment Adviser
Fidelity Management & Research Company
Boston, MA
Investment Sub-Advisers
FMR Co., Inc.
Fidelity Investments
Money Management, Inc.
Fidelity Management & Research
(U.K.) Inc.
Fidelity Management & Research
(Hong Kong) Limited
Fidelity Management & Research
(Japan) Inc.
General Distributor
Fidelity Distributors Corporation
Smithfield, RI
Transfer and Service Agents
Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc.
Boston, MA
Fidelity Service Company, Inc.
Boston, MA
Custodian
Citibank, N.A.
New York, NY
The Fidelity Telephone Connection
Mutual Fund 24-Hour Service
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and Account Assistance 1-800-544-6666
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www.fidelity.com
BAL-UANN-1013
1.789243.110
Fidelity®
Balanced
Fund -
Class K
Annual Report
August 31, 2013
(Fidelity Cover Art)
Contents
Performance | (Click Here) | How the fund has done over time. |
Management's Discussion of Fund Performance | (Click Here) | The Portfolio Manager's review of fund performance and strategy. |
Shareholder Expense Example | (Click Here) | An example of shareholder expenses. |
Investment Changes | (Click Here) | A summary of major shifts in the fund's investments over the past six months. |
Investments | (Click Here) | A complete list of the fund's investments with their market values. |
Financial Statements | (Click Here) | Statements of assets and liabilities, operations, and changes in net assets, as well as financial highlights. |
Notes | (Click Here) | Notes to the financial statements. |
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm | (Click Here) | |
Trustees and Officers | (Click Here) | |
Distributions | (Click Here) | |
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and Management Fees | (Click Here) | |
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 1-800-835-5092 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. © 2013 FMR LLC. All rights reserved.
Annual Report
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-Q. Forms N-Q are available on the SEC's web site at http://www.sec.gov. A fund's Forms N-Q 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.advisor.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.
Annual Report
Average annual total return reflects the change in the value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of the class' 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 $10,000 table and the fund's 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
Periods ended August 31, 2013 | Past 1 year | Past 5 years | Past 10 years |
Class K A | 11.45% | 6.68% | 7.53% |
A The initial offering of Class K shares took place on May 9, 2008. Returns prior to May 9, 2008 are those of Fidelity® Balanced Fund, the original class of the fund.
$10,000 Over 10 Years
Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity® Balanced Fund - Class K on August 31, 2003. The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the S&P 500® Index performed over the same period. The initial offering of Class K took place on May 9, 2008. See above for additional information regarding the performance of Class K.
Annual Report
Market Recap: Major equity benchmarks set record highs during the 12 months ending August 31, 2013, fueled by an improving global economy and accommodative monetary policies worldwide. The broad-based S&P 500® Index rose 18.70% for the 12 months, setting new highs, while the blue-chip-laden Dow Jones Industrial AverageSM also achieved significant milestones en route to climbing 16.13%. The growth-oriented Nasdaq Composite Index® advanced 18.75%. Stocks slipped early on as investors grew anxious about the U.S. presidential election and the federal debt limit. Markets quickly rebounded and rose through late May, but concern over the U.S. Federal Reserve tapering its bond-buying program prompted a brief, but steep, market sell-off in June. Stocks recovered when the Fed said no moves were imminent, but doubt returned in August as a military strike on Syria loomed. On the bond side of the ledger, U.S. high-income securities rallied alongside equities for most of the period, but cooled off in May and June as interest rates spiked on possible Fed tightening. The sector still advanced solidly, with The BofA Merrill LynchSM US High Yield Constrained Index returning 7.55%. The more rate-sensitive U.S. investment-grade bond category fared far worse, as reflected in the -2.47% return of the Barclays® U.S. Aggregate Bond Index, its largest trailing one-year loss in almost 20 years.
Comments from Co-Portfolio Manager Robert Stansky, Head of FMR's Stock Selector Large Cap Group, which manages Fidelity® Balanced Fund: For the year, the fund's Class K shares returned 11.45%, versus 9.87% for the Fidelity Balanced Hybrid Composite IndexSM. Overweighting stocks and underweighting investment-grade bonds notably drove the fund's outperformance. Looking at fixed income, among the biggest contributors were an overweighting in corporate bonds and an underweighting in sovereigns. Security selection also helped. In terms of individual stocks, we successfully avoided computer services provider and index component IBM, which we believe faces an uphill battle, due in part to increased pressure from competitors and slower growth prospects in comparison to smaller software and hardware companies. The fund also received a lift from biopharmaceutical firm Gilead Sciences, which saw its shares rise amid continued success with its treatments for HIV/AIDS. We reduced our position in Gilead to take profits and help manage risk. Conversely, the biggest detractor by far was Apple, the fund's largest holding during the period. The stock reversed course in late September 2012 and continued downward through most of the period, as investors reacted to lackluster quarterly financial results, prompting us to reduce our overweighting.
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.
Annual Report
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 (March 1, 2013 to August 31, 2013).
Actual Expenses
The first line of the accompanying table for each class of the 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 class of the Fund under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. 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 for each class of the Fund provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on a Class' actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Class' 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. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. 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.
Annual Report
| Annualized Expense Ratio B | Beginning Account Value March 1, 2013 | Ending Account Value August 31, 2013 | Expenses Paid During Period* March 1, 2013 to August 31, 2013 |
Balanced | .58% | | | |
Actual | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,052.50 | $ 3.00 |
HypotheticalA | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,022.28 | $ 2.96 |
Class K | .47% | | | |
Actual | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,053.10 | $ 2.43 |
HypotheticalA | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,022.84 | $ 2.40 |
A 5% return per year before expenses
B Annualized expense ratio reflects expenses net of applicable fee waivers.
* Expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 184/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). The fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds in which the Fund invests are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio.
Annual Report
Investment Changes (Unaudited)
The information in the following tables is based on the combined investments of the Fund and its pro-rata share of the investments of Fidelity's fixed-income central funds. |
Top Five Stocks as of August 31, 2013 |
| % of fund's net assets | % of fund's net assets 6 months ago |
Apple, Inc. | 2.4 | 2.9 |
Procter & Gamble Co. | 1.4 | 1.5 |
Capital One Financial Corp. | 1.4 | 1.0 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 1.3 | 1.2 |
Microsoft Corp. | 1.2 | 0.0 |
| 7.7 | |
Top Five Bond Issuers as of August 31, 2013 |
(with maturities greater than one year) | % of fund's net assets | % of fund's net assets 6 months ago |
U.S. Treasury Obligations | 6.0 | 5.8 |
Fannie Mae | 5.1 | 6.5 |
Ginnie Mae | 1.7 | 1.8 |
Freddie Mac | 1.4 | 2.2 |
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust | 0.6 | 0.7 |
| 14.8 | |
Top Five Market Sectors as of August 31, 2013 |
| % of fund's net assets | % of fund's net assets 6 months ago |
Financials | 16.3 | 15.0 |
Information Technology | 12.9 | 12.5 |
Health Care | 9.4 | 9.1 |
Consumer Discretionary | 9.0 | 8.0 |
Energy | 8.6 | 8.7 |
Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets) |
As of August 31, 2013* | As of February 28, 2013** |
| Stocks and Equity Futures 69.1% | | | Stocks and Equity Futures 65.9% | |
| Bonds 29.7% | | | Bonds 32.1% | |
| Convertible Securities 0.1% | | | Convertible Securities 0.1% | |
| Other Investments 0.2% | | | Other Investments 0.2% | |
| Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities) 0.9% | | | Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities) 1.7% | |
* Foreign investments | 10.0% | | ** Foreign investments | 9.6% | |
Percentages are adjusted for the effect of futures contracts and swaps, if applicable. An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of any securities and other investments held indirectly through its investment in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com. |
Percentages in the above tables are adjusted for the effect of TBA Sale Commitments. |
Annual Report
Investments August 31, 2013
Showing Percentage of Net Assets
Common Stocks - 68.3% |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 7.7% |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.1% |
H&R Block, Inc. | 1,222,261 | | $ 34,113 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 1.3% |
Domino's Pizza, Inc. | 588,695 | | 36,169 |
Starbucks Corp. | 1,533,532 | | 108,145 |
Wynn Resorts Ltd. | 513,854 | | 72,474 |
Yum! Brands, Inc. | 1,251,447 | | 87,626 |
| | 304,414 |
Internet & Catalog Retail - 0.9% |
Liberty Media Corp. Interactive Series A (a) | 5,827,654 | | 131,588 |
priceline.com, Inc. (a) | 83,197 | | 78,083 |
| | 209,671 |
Media - 2.8% |
Comcast Corp. Class A | 3,909,192 | | 164,538 |
DIRECTV (a) | 1,569,521 | | 91,315 |
Legend Pictures LLC (n)(o) | 8,571 | | 15,454 |
Liberty Global PLC Class A (a) | 246,200 | | 19,125 |
Time Warner, Inc. | 2,475,228 | | 149,826 |
Twenty-First Century Fox, Inc. Class A | 6,137,277 | | 192,281 |
| | 632,539 |
Multiline Retail - 0.6% |
Dollar General Corp. (a) | 2,387,950 | | 128,878 |
Specialty Retail - 1.0% |
Lowe's Companies, Inc. | 1,933,554 | | 88,595 |
TJX Companies, Inc. | 2,502,857 | | 131,951 |
| | 220,546 |
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 1.0% |
NIKE, Inc. Class B | 1,098,640 | | 69,017 |
Oxford Industries, Inc. | 272,899 | | 16,931 |
PVH Corp. | 658,982 | | 84,844 |
Under Armour, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a) | 618,218 | | 44,907 |
| | 215,699 |
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | 1,745,860 |
CONSUMER STAPLES - 7.2% |
Beverages - 2.1% |
Anheuser-Busch InBev SA NV | 321,944 | | 30,025 |
Coca-Cola Bottling Co. CONSOLIDATED | 111,888 | | 7,031 |
Coca-Cola FEMSA S.A.B. de CV sponsored ADR | 32,025 | | 3,844 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER STAPLES - continued |
Beverages - continued |
Coca-Cola Icecek A/S | 298,728 | | $ 7,004 |
Companhia de Bebidas das Americas (AmBev) (PN) sponsored ADR | 233,025 | | 8,105 |
Constellation Brands, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a) | 562,769 | | 30,530 |
Diageo PLC sponsored ADR | 340,423 | | 41,763 |
Embotelladora Andina SA sponsored ADR | 255,027 | | 7,715 |
Pernod Ricard SA | 371,250 | | 43,100 |
Remy Cointreau SA | 298,496 | | 31,403 |
The Coca-Cola Co. | 6,655,346 | | 254,101 |
| | 464,621 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 1.5% |
CVS Caremark Corp. | 2,820,740 | | 163,744 |
Drogasil SA | 583,500 | | 4,128 |
Kroger Co. | 2,672,996 | | 97,832 |
Sysco Corp. | 330,600 | | 10,586 |
United Natural Foods, Inc. (a) | 69,906 | | 4,238 |
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. | 679,046 | | 49,557 |
| | 330,085 |
Food Products - 0.4% |
Archer Daniels Midland Co. | 237,063 | | 8,347 |
Bunge Ltd. | 367,072 | | 27,817 |
Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc. (a) | 109,276 | | 9,432 |
Mead Johnson Nutrition Co. Class A | 428,732 | | 32,168 |
Nestle SA | 274,438 | | 17,960 |
| | 95,724 |
Household Products - 1.4% |
Procter & Gamble Co. | 4,160,110 | | 324,031 |
Personal Products - 0.1% |
L'Oreal SA | 100,504 | | 16,770 |
Nu Skin Enterprises, Inc. Class A | 98,375 | | 8,235 |
| | 25,005 |
Tobacco - 1.7% |
Altria Group, Inc. | 3,581,509 | | 121,342 |
British American Tobacco PLC sponsored ADR | 2,347,805 | | 238,467 |
Philip Morris International, Inc. | 311,476 | | 25,990 |
Souza Cruz SA | 731,800 | | 7,668 |
| | 393,467 |
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | 1,632,933 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
ENERGY - 7.2% |
Energy Equipment & Services - 1.4% |
Cameron International Corp. (a) | 1,319,091 | | $ 74,911 |
Dril-Quip, Inc. (a) | 232,550 | | 23,722 |
Ensco PLC Class A | 927,739 | | 51,545 |
Frank's International NV | 82,500 | | 2,286 |
Halliburton Co. | 458,544 | | 22,010 |
National Oilwell Varco, Inc. | 1,371,688 | | 101,916 |
Ocean Rig UDW, Inc. (United States) (a) | 645,096 | | 11,250 |
Oceaneering International, Inc. | 229,287 | | 17,788 |
Pacific Drilling SA (a) | 2,000 | | 19 |
Vantage Drilling Co. (a) | 6,033,801 | | 10,378 |
| | 315,825 |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 5.8% |
Anadarko Petroleum Corp. | 1,405,702 | | 128,509 |
Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. | 1,333,800 | | 52,192 |
Chevron Corp. | 1,279,894 | | 154,138 |
Cobalt International Energy, Inc. (a) | 751,547 | | 18,338 |
Concho Resources, Inc. (a) | 388,600 | | 37,504 |
ConocoPhillips | 2,440,259 | | 161,789 |
Continental Resources, Inc. (a) | 328,247 | | 30,284 |
EOG Resources, Inc. | 507,458 | | 79,696 |
Exxon Mobil Corp. | 3,111,457 | | 271,195 |
Kinder Morgan Holding Co. LLC | 1,134,200 | | 43,020 |
Marathon Oil Corp. | 2,228,993 | | 76,744 |
Marathon Petroleum Corp. | 619,543 | | 44,923 |
Noble Energy, Inc. | 805,330 | | 49,471 |
Phillips 66 | 1,022,389 | | 58,378 |
Pioneer Natural Resources Co. | 97,700 | | 17,095 |
Spectra Energy Corp. | 1,363,900 | | 45,159 |
Suncor Energy, Inc. | 1,203,800 | | 40,572 |
| | 1,309,007 |
TOTAL ENERGY | | 1,624,832 |
FINANCIALS - 11.4% |
Capital Markets - 1.5% |
Ameriprise Financial, Inc. | 675,104 | | 58,160 |
BlackRock, Inc. Class A | 185,372 | | 48,256 |
Credit Suisse Group | 316,680 | | 9,128 |
Deutsche Bank AG | 335,228 | | 14,553 |
E*TRADE Financial Corp. (a) | 2,163,465 | | 30,375 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Capital Markets - continued |
Evercore Partners, Inc. Class A | 247,600 | | $ 11,040 |
Invesco Ltd. | 692,060 | | 21,011 |
Morgan Stanley | 2,685,627 | | 69,182 |
Northern Trust Corp. | 382,182 | | 20,970 |
Oaktree Capital Group LLC Class A | 218,700 | | 11,329 |
TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. | 152,886 | | 3,925 |
The Blackstone Group LP | 908,905 | | 19,850 |
UBS AG | 1,140,062 | | 22,028 |
| | 339,807 |
Commercial Banks - 1.8% |
Barclays PLC | 3,051,963 | | 13,369 |
BNP Paribas SA | 257,900 | | 16,162 |
CIT Group, Inc. (a) | 251,687 | | 12,048 |
Comerica, Inc. | 175,300 | | 7,159 |
Erste Group Bank AG | 246,800 | | 7,912 |
Huntington Bancshares, Inc. | 3,474,237 | | 28,628 |
Intesa Sanpaolo SpA | 4,402,700 | | 8,641 |
KBC Groupe SA | 87,960 | | 3,869 |
PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. | 1,096,317 | | 79,231 |
Sberbank (Savings Bank of the Russian Federation) sponsored ADR | 1,621,900 | | 17,095 |
Societe Generale Series A | 470,274 | | 20,582 |
Synovus Financial Corp. | 5,298,345 | | 16,902 |
U.S. Bancorp | 5,115,281 | | 184,815 |
| | 416,413 |
Consumer Finance - 1.8% |
Capital One Financial Corp. | 4,864,105 | | 313,978 |
Discover Financial Services | 319,813 | | 15,111 |
SLM Corp. | 3,648,034 | | 87,516 |
| | 416,605 |
Diversified Financial Services - 3.7% |
Bank of America Corp. | 19,490,008 | | 275,199 |
Citigroup, Inc. | 4,361,055 | | 210,770 |
IntercontinentalExchange, Inc. (a) | 297,391 | | 53,456 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 5,601,852 | | 283,062 |
KBC Ancora (a) | 352,974 | | 8,052 |
| | 830,539 |
Insurance - 1.6% |
ACE Ltd. | 572,593 | | 50,228 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Insurance - continued |
Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Class A (a) | 104 | | $ 17,373 |
Direct Line Insurance Group PLC | 5,525,000 | | 18,563 |
esure Group PLC | 2,148,686 | | 8,058 |
Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. (sub. vtg.) | 57,000 | | 23,420 |
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. | 1,732,791 | | 71,443 |
MetLife, Inc. | 1,945,369 | | 89,857 |
The Travelers Companies, Inc. | 872,849 | | 69,741 |
Validus Holdings Ltd. | 330,112 | | 11,425 |
| | 360,108 |
Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.6% |
American Tower Corp. | 1,243,565 | | 86,415 |
Equity Lifestyle Properties, Inc. | 593,858 | | 20,637 |
Sun Communities, Inc. | 559,015 | | 24,021 |
| | 131,073 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.3% |
Altisource Residential Corp. Class B (a) | 766,718 | | 14,529 |
CBRE Group, Inc. (a) | 2,561,041 | | 56,010 |
| | 70,539 |
Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.1% |
Ocwen Financial Corp. (a) | 302,000 | | 15,233 |
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | 2,580,317 |
HEALTH CARE - 8.8% |
Biotechnology - 2.5% |
Actelion Ltd. | 183,116 | | 12,448 |
Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 715,256 | | 77,076 |
Amgen, Inc. | 1,476,632 | | 160,864 |
Biogen Idec, Inc. (a) | 388,545 | | 82,768 |
CSL Ltd. | 417,969 | | 25,293 |
Gilead Sciences, Inc. (a) | 3,141,825 | | 189,358 |
Onyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 179,682 | | 22,205 |
| | 570,012 |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 1.4% |
Boston Scientific Corp. (a) | 6,986,917 | | 73,922 |
Covidien PLC | 1,459,372 | | 86,687 |
Quidel Corp. (a)(e) | 1,040,834 | | 27,603 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
HEALTH CARE - continued |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - continued |
Stryker Corp. | 1,077,316 | | $ 72,062 |
The Cooper Companies, Inc. | 483,080 | | 63,095 |
| | 323,369 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 1.2% |
Brookdale Senior Living, Inc. (a) | 1,380,952 | | 34,551 |
CIGNA Corp. | 1,457,468 | | 114,688 |
HCA Holdings, Inc. | 161,369 | | 6,163 |
Henry Schein, Inc. (a) | 571,089 | | 57,709 |
McKesson Corp. | 437,524 | | 53,120 |
| | 266,231 |
Life Sciences Tools & Services - 0.5% |
Illumina, Inc. (a) | 398,800 | | 31,043 |
Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. | 831,009 | | 73,819 |
| | 104,862 |
Pharmaceuticals - 3.2% |
AbbVie, Inc. | 2,908,166 | | 123,917 |
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. | 869,054 | | 36,231 |
Merck & Co., Inc. | 1,543,624 | | 72,998 |
Perrigo Co. | 438,510 | | 53,301 |
Pfizer, Inc. | 8,844,535 | | 249,504 |
Roche Holding AG (participation certificate) | 48,073 | | 11,992 |
Sanofi SA sponsored ADR | 500,103 | | 23,895 |
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc. (Canada) (a) | 504,583 | | 49,630 |
Warner Chilcott PLC | 2,809,072 | | 60,255 |
Zoetis, Inc. Class A | 1,833,761 | | 53,454 |
| | 735,177 |
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | 1,999,651 |
INDUSTRIALS - 6.9% |
Aerospace & Defense - 1.8% |
Honeywell International, Inc. | 1,646,067 | | 130,978 |
Precision Castparts Corp. | 361,497 | | 76,363 |
TransDigm Group, Inc. | 276,949 | | 37,942 |
United Technologies Corp. | 1,524,998 | | 152,652 |
| | 397,935 |
Building Products - 0.2% |
Armstrong World Industries, Inc. (a) | 1,027,646 | | 49,902 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.3% |
KAR Auction Services, Inc. | 1,480,059 | | $ 39,429 |
Stericycle, Inc. (a) | 321,149 | | 36,149 |
| | 75,578 |
Electrical Equipment - 1.9% |
AMETEK, Inc. | 2,904,816 | | 124,675 |
Eaton Corp. PLC | 1,389,703 | | 87,996 |
Hubbell, Inc. Class B | 751,595 | | 76,182 |
Roper Industries, Inc. | 1,092,979 | | 135,202 |
| | 424,055 |
Industrial Conglomerates - 1.0% |
Danaher Corp. | 3,464,899 | | 227,020 |
Machinery - 0.7% |
Cummins, Inc. | 691,067 | | 85,139 |
Ingersoll-Rand PLC | 1,319,600 | | 78,041 |
| | 163,180 |
Professional Services - 0.5% |
Nielsen Holdings B.V. | 1,120,616 | | 38,661 |
Verisk Analytics, Inc. (a) | 1,251,497 | | 77,818 |
| | 116,479 |
Road & Rail - 0.2% |
J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc. | 620,330 | | 44,664 |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.3% |
W.W. Grainger, Inc. | 313,260 | | 77,485 |
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | 1,576,298 |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 12.6% |
Communications Equipment - 1.9% |
Cisco Systems, Inc. | 9,222,979 | | 214,988 |
Juniper Networks, Inc. (a) | 3,458,908 | | 65,373 |
Polycom, Inc. (a) | 1,123,433 | | 11,156 |
QUALCOMM, Inc. | 2,045,584 | | 135,581 |
| | 427,098 |
Computers & Peripherals - 3.1% |
Apple, Inc. | 1,134,881 | | 552,735 |
Electronics for Imaging, Inc. (a) | 293,200 | | 8,585 |
EMC Corp. | 1,218,110 | | 31,403 |
NCR Corp. (a) | 3,031,823 | | 107,872 |
| | 700,595 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 0.6% |
Flextronics International Ltd. (a) | 2,691,377 | | $ 24,169 |
Jabil Circuit, Inc. | 1,937,624 | | 44,217 |
TE Connectivity Ltd. | 1,505,693 | | 73,779 |
| | 142,165 |
Internet Software & Services - 2.0% |
Demand Media, Inc. (a) | 871,493 | | 5,647 |
Demandware, Inc. (a) | 28,004 | | 1,178 |
eBay, Inc. (a) | 1,829,535 | | 91,458 |
Google, Inc. Class A (a) | 327,565 | | 277,415 |
Halogen Software, Inc. (h) | 551,000 | | 7,031 |
Marketo, Inc. (e) | 498,088 | | 17,473 |
Responsys, Inc. (a) | 267,677 | | 3,841 |
Yahoo!, Inc. (a) | 1,572,184 | | 42,638 |
| | 446,681 |
IT Services - 0.9% |
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. Class A (a) | 994,191 | | 72,874 |
Fidelity National Information Services, Inc. | 2,742,733 | | 121,942 |
FleetCor Technologies, Inc. (a) | 135,400 | | 13,961 |
Lionbridge Technologies, Inc. (a) | 617,300 | | 2,167 |
Luxoft Holding, Inc. | 265,000 | | 6,294 |
| | 217,238 |
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 0.7% |
Micron Technology, Inc. (a) | 2,013,427 | | 27,322 |
NXP Semiconductors NV (a) | 3,503,508 | | 130,225 |
| | 157,547 |
Software - 3.4% |
Adobe Systems, Inc. (a) | 1,384,306 | | 63,332 |
Aspen Technology, Inc. (a) | 293,159 | | 9,800 |
Compuware Corp. | 1,346,333 | | 14,365 |
Electronic Arts, Inc. (a) | 2,129,870 | | 56,740 |
Guidewire Software, Inc. (a) | 600,031 | | 27,577 |
Jive Software, Inc. (a) | 939,581 | | 11,641 |
Microsoft Corp. | 8,452,221 | | 282,304 |
Oracle Corp. | 6,093,453 | | 194,137 |
QLIK Technologies, Inc. (a) | 199,967 | | 6,557 |
salesforce.com, Inc. (a) | 1,923,125 | | 94,483 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued |
Software - continued |
Ubisoft Entertainment SA (a) | 935,827 | | $ 14,137 |
Xero Ltd. (a) | 175,693 | | 2,281 |
| | 777,354 |
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | 2,868,678 |
MATERIALS - 2.6% |
Chemicals - 2.2% |
Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. | 43,462 | | 4,439 |
Airgas, Inc. | 1,004,115 | | 102,068 |
Ashland, Inc. | 324,224 | | 28,276 |
Eastman Chemical Co. | 676,161 | | 51,388 |
Ecolab, Inc. | 545,196 | | 49,804 |
FMC Corp. | 735,373 | | 48,983 |
LyondellBasell Industries NV Class A | 840,037 | | 58,929 |
Monsanto Co. | 819,895 | | 80,260 |
PPG Industries, Inc. | 319,521 | | 49,912 |
Sigma Aldrich Corp. | 443,558 | | 36,580 |
| | 510,639 |
Construction Materials - 0.2% |
Vulcan Materials Co. | 755,946 | | 36,134 |
Containers & Packaging - 0.2% |
Rock-Tenn Co. Class A | 311,560 | | 34,617 |
Metals & Mining - 0.0% |
Carpenter Technology Corp. | 218,948 | | 11,773 |
TOTAL MATERIALS | | 593,163 |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 1.6% |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.9% |
inContact, Inc. (a) | 1,254,487 | | 10,199 |
Level 3 Communications, Inc. (a) | 598,801 | | 13,389 |
tw telecom, Inc. (a) | 85,600 | | 2,450 |
Verizon Communications, Inc. | 3,594,460 | | 170,306 |
| | 196,344 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.7% |
Crown Castle International Corp. (a) | 186,575 | | 12,952 |
SBA Communications Corp. Class A (a) | 1,207,468 | | 90,560 |
Sprint Corp. (a) | 186,146 | | 1,249 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - continued |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - continued |
T-Mobile U.S., Inc. (a) | 1,367,200 | | $ 31,924 |
Vodafone Group PLC sponsored ADR | 605,600 | | 19,591 |
| | 156,276 |
TOTAL TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES | | 352,620 |
UTILITIES - 2.3% |
Electric Utilities - 1.0% |
American Electric Power Co., Inc. | 829,632 | | 35,508 |
Duke Energy Corp. | 1,424,020 | | 93,416 |
Edison International | 959,427 | | 44,028 |
Entergy Corp. | 90,600 | | 5,729 |
FirstEnergy Corp. | 641,675 | | 24,044 |
PPL Corp. | 654,900 | | 20,105 |
| | 222,830 |
Gas Utilities - 0.0% |
ONEOK, Inc. | 152,667 | | 7,853 |
Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - 0.3% |
NRG Energy, Inc. | 1,734,972 | | 45,543 |
The AES Corp. | 1,863,409 | | 23,684 |
| | 69,227 |
Multi-Utilities - 1.0% |
Ameren Corp. | 210,328 | | 7,111 |
CenterPoint Energy, Inc. | 2,282,452 | | 52,337 |
Dominion Resources, Inc. | 359,100 | | 20,953 |
NiSource, Inc. | 721,416 | | 21,109 |
PG&E Corp. | 1,310,129 | | 54,187 |
Sempra Energy | 698,336 | | 58,954 |
| | 214,651 |
TOTAL UTILITIES | | 514,561 |
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (Cost $12,451,813) | 15,488,913
|
Convertible Preferred Stocks - 0.0% |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.0% |
Media - 0.0% |
Jumptap, Inc. Series G (a)(o) | 893,724 | | $ 7,265 |
TOTAL CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCKS (Cost $6,429) | 7,265
|
Corporate Bonds - 9.0% |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | |
Convertible Bonds - 0.0% |
ENERGY - 0.0% |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 0.0% |
Cobalt International Energy, Inc. 2.625% 12/1/19 | | $ 1,740 | | 1,794 |
Nonconvertible Bonds - 9.0% |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.7% |
Auto Components - 0.1% |
DaimlerChrysler NA Holding Corp. 6.5% 11/15/13 | | 1,340 | | 1,355 |
Delphi Corp. 5% 2/15/23 | | 11,942 | | 12,136 |
| | 13,491 |
Automobiles - 0.1% |
Daimler Finance North America LLC: | | | | |
1.45% 8/1/16 (f) | | 4,045 | | 4,027 |
1.95% 3/28/14 (f) | | 2,240 | | 2,253 |
Ford Motor Co.: | | | | |
4.75% 1/15/43 | | 17,363 | | 15,274 |
7.45% 7/16/31 | | 10,420 | | 12,558 |
Volkswagen International Finance NV 2.375% 3/22/17 (f) | | 1,830 | | 1,858 |
| | 35,970 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.0% |
Ingersoll-Rand Global Holding Co. Ltd.: | | | | |
2.875% 1/15/19 (f) | | 617 | | 608 |
4.25% 6/15/23 (f) | | 4,350 | | 4,265 |
5.75% 6/15/43 (f) | | 3,131 | | 3,213 |
| | 8,086 |
Media - 0.5% |
AOL Time Warner, Inc. 7.625% 4/15/31 | | 4,975 | | 6,230 |
Comcast Corp.: | | | | |
4.95% 6/15/16 | | 955 | | 1,051 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Media - continued |
Comcast Corp.: - continued | | | | |
6.4% 5/15/38 | | $ 3,000 | | $ 3,545 |
6.4% 3/1/40 | | 6,097 | | 7,244 |
6.95% 8/15/37 | | 7,200 | | 9,020 |
COX Communications, Inc. 3.25% 12/15/22 (f) | | 2,422 | | 2,130 |
Discovery Communications LLC: | | | | |
3.7% 6/1/15 | | 5,665 | | 5,931 |
5.05% 6/1/20 | | 204 | | 222 |
NBC Universal, Inc.: | | | | |
3.65% 4/30/15 | | 1,468 | | 1,538 |
5.15% 4/30/20 | | 7,276 | | 8,190 |
6.4% 4/30/40 | | 6,271 | | 7,464 |
News America Holdings, Inc. 7.75% 12/1/45 | | 9,421 | | 11,730 |
Time Warner Cable, Inc.: | | | | |
4% 9/1/21 | | 8,786 | | 8,242 |
4.5% 9/15/42 | | 7,568 | | 5,855 |
5.5% 9/1/41 | | 20,823 | | 17,710 |
5.85% 5/1/17 | | 1,829 | | 1,989 |
5.875% 11/15/40 | | 1,496 | | 1,339 |
6.75% 7/1/18 | | 1,974 | | 2,197 |
Time Warner, Inc.: | | | | |
3.15% 7/15/15 | | 544 | | 566 |
5.875% 11/15/16 | | 4,882 | | 5,520 |
Viacom, Inc.: | | | | |
1.25% 2/27/15 | | 456 | | 457 |
2.5% 9/1/18 | | 809 | | 799 |
3.5% 4/1/17 | | 264 | | 274 |
| | 109,243 |
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | 166,790 |
CONSUMER STAPLES - 0.5% |
Beverages - 0.1% |
Anheuser-Busch InBev Worldwide, Inc. 5.375% 11/15/14 | | 2,481 | | 2,619 |
Beam, Inc. 1.875% 5/15/17 | | 1,408 | | 1,404 |
FBG Finance Ltd. 5.125% 6/15/15 (f) | | 4,938 | | 5,297 |
Fortune Brands, Inc. 5.375% 1/15/16 | | 1,902 | | 2,071 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER STAPLES - continued |
Beverages - continued |
Heineken NV: | | | | |
1.4% 10/1/17 (f) | | $ 3,274 | | $ 3,174 |
2.75% 4/1/23 (f) | | 3,420 | | 3,081 |
SABMiller Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
1.85% 1/15/15 (f) | | 2,353 | | 2,382 |
2.45% 1/15/17 (f) | | 2,353 | | 2,394 |
| | 22,422 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 0.0% |
Walgreen Co. 1% 3/13/15 | | 1,878 | | 1,883 |
Food Products - 0.2% |
Cargill, Inc. 6% 11/27/17 (f) | | 572 | | 655 |
ConAgra Foods, Inc.: | | | | |
1.9% 1/25/18 | | 2,279 | | 2,236 |
3.2% 1/25/23 | | 2,650 | | 2,470 |
4.65% 1/25/43 | | 2,233 | | 2,037 |
Kraft Foods, Inc.: | | | | |
5.375% 2/10/20 | | 26,594 | | 29,672 |
6.5% 8/11/17 | | 3,122 | | 3,613 |
6.75% 2/19/14 | | 436 | | 448 |
| | 41,131 |
Tobacco - 0.2% |
Altria Group, Inc.: | | | | |
2.85% 8/9/22 | | 4,604 | | 4,146 |
4.25% 8/9/42 | | 4,604 | | 3,771 |
9.7% 11/10/18 | | 6,258 | | 8,190 |
Reynolds American, Inc.: | | | | |
3.25% 11/1/22 | | 3,376 | | 3,081 |
4.75% 11/1/42 | | 5,216 | | 4,536 |
6.75% 6/15/17 | | 4,975 | | 5,725 |
7.25% 6/15/37 | | 7,569 | | 8,676 |
| | 38,125 |
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | 103,561 |
ENERGY - 1.1% |
Energy Equipment & Services - 0.2% |
Cameron International Corp. 1.6% 4/30/15 | | 279 | | 281 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Energy Equipment & Services - continued |
DCP Midstream LLC: | | | | |
4.75% 9/30/21 (f) | | $ 6,909 | | $ 6,988 |
5.35% 3/15/20 (f) | | 6,814 | | 7,238 |
El Paso Pipeline Partners Operating Co. LLC: | | | | |
4.1% 11/15/15 | | 7,675 | | 8,140 |
5% 10/1/21 | | 2,791 | | 2,943 |
6.5% 4/1/20 | | 2,608 | | 2,985 |
FMC Technologies, Inc.: | | | | |
2% 10/1/17 | | 846 | | 829 |
3.45% 10/1/22 | | 1,533 | | 1,455 |
Noble Holding International Ltd.: | | | | |
3.05% 3/1/16 | | 914 | | 940 |
3.45% 8/1/15 | | 1,299 | | 1,348 |
Transocean, Inc. 5.05% 12/15/16 | | 4,522 | | 4,943 |
Weatherford International Ltd. 4.95% 10/15/13 | | 2,930 | | 2,942 |
| | 41,032 |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 0.9% |
Anadarko Petroleum Corp.: | | | | |
5.95% 9/15/16 | | 1,716 | | 1,924 |
6.375% 9/15/17 | | 15,653 | | 18,095 |
6.45% 9/15/36 | | 4,710 | | 5,475 |
Apache Corp. 3.25% 4/15/22 | | 233 | | 227 |
Cenovus Energy, Inc. 4.5% 9/15/14 | | 900 | | 935 |
Chevron Corp. 3.191% 6/24/23 | | 7,633 | | 7,390 |
DCP Midstream Operating LP: | | | | |
2.5% 12/1/17 | | 3,027 | | 2,973 |
3.875% 3/15/23 | | 1,823 | | 1,663 |
4.95% 4/1/22 | | 1,267 | | 1,258 |
Duke Energy Field Services: | | | | |
5.375% 10/15/15 (f) | | 2,055 | | 2,209 |
6.45% 11/3/36 (f) | | 6,493 | | 6,824 |
El Paso Natural Gas Co. 5.95% 4/15/17 | | 1,572 | | 1,766 |
Enbridge Energy Partners LP 4.2% 9/15/21 | | 8,103 | | 8,142 |
Encana Holdings Finance Corp. 5.8% 5/1/14 | | 4,858 | | 5,015 |
Enterprise Products Operating LP 5.6% 10/15/14 | | 1,709 | | 1,797 |
Gulfstream Natural Gas System LLC 6.95% 6/1/16 (f) | | 780 | | 885 |
Marathon Petroleum Corp.: | | | | |
3.5% 3/1/16 | | 493 | | 517 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued |
Marathon Petroleum Corp.: - continued | | | | |
5.125% 3/1/21 | | $ 4,415 | | $ 4,725 |
Midcontinent Express Pipeline LLC 5.45% 9/15/14 (f) | | 7,948 | | 8,194 |
Motiva Enterprises LLC: | | | | |
5.75% 1/15/20 (f) | | 1,252 | | 1,422 |
6.85% 1/15/40 (f) | | 4,294 | | 5,241 |
Nakilat, Inc. 6.067% 12/31/33 (f) | | 2,490 | | 2,615 |
Nexen, Inc.: | | | | |
5.2% 3/10/15 | | 1,528 | | 1,612 |
6.2% 7/30/19 | | 2,252 | | 2,604 |
Occidental Petroleum Corp. 2.7% 2/15/23 | | 1,942 | | 1,758 |
Petrobras Global Finance BV: | | | | |
3% 1/15/19 | | 5,005 | | 4,597 |
4.375% 5/20/23 | | 4,137 | | 3,632 |
Petrobras International Finance Co. Ltd.: | | | | |
3.875% 1/27/16 | | 7,288 | | 7,476 |
5.375% 1/27/21 | | 2,625 | | 2,563 |
7.875% 3/15/19 | | 7,382 | | 8,310 |
Petroleos Mexicanos: | | | | |
3.5% 7/18/18 | | 6,965 | | 7,024 |
3.5% 1/30/23 | | 5,005 | | 4,479 |
4.875% 1/24/22 | | 1,430 | | 1,444 |
5.5% 1/21/21 | | 7,423 | | 7,868 |
5.5% 6/27/44 | | 19,723 | | 17,110 |
6% 3/5/20 | | 2,274 | | 2,496 |
6.5% 6/2/41 | | 7,392 | | 7,355 |
Phillips 66: | | | | |
1.95% 3/5/15 | | 1,844 | | 1,871 |
2.95% 5/1/17 | | 1,844 | | 1,898 |
4.3% 4/1/22 | | 6,383 | | 6,438 |
5.875% 5/1/42 | | 5,485 | | 5,822 |
Plains All American Pipeline LP/PAA Finance Corp.: | | | | |
3.95% 9/15/15 | | 356 | | 377 |
6.125% 1/15/17 | | 1,940 | | 2,203 |
Southeast Supply Header LLC 4.85% 8/15/14 (f) | | 1,358 | | 1,405 |
Spectra Energy Capital, LLC 5.65% 3/1/20 | | 1,087 | | 1,184 |
Spectra Energy Partners, LP: | | | | |
2.95% 6/15/16 | | 1,472 | | 1,502 |
4.6% 6/15/21 | | 1,816 | | 1,855 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued |
Suncor Energy, Inc. 6.1% 6/1/18 | | $ 623 | | $ 721 |
Texas Eastern Transmission LP 6% 9/15/17 (f) | | 1,301 | | 1,462 |
TransCapitalInvest Ltd. 5.67% 3/5/14 (f) | | 6,508 | | 6,661 |
Western Gas Partners LP 5.375% 6/1/21 | | 9,827 | | 10,600 |
| | 213,619 |
TOTAL ENERGY | | 254,651 |
FINANCIALS - 4.6% |
Capital Markets - 0.8% |
Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. 5.3% 10/30/15 | | 1,060 | | 1,149 |
BlackRock, Inc.: | | | | |
3.375% 6/1/22 | | 332 | | 327 |
4.25% 5/24/21 | | 501 | | 529 |
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.: | | | | |
2.9% 7/19/18 | | 10,319 | | 10,292 |
3.625% 1/22/23 | | 7,800 | | 7,352 |
5.95% 1/18/18 | | 5,343 | | 5,970 |
6.15% 4/1/18 | | 3,993 | | 4,509 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co.: | | | | |
0.8% 4/23/15 | | 31,000 | | 30,921 |
1.125% 2/26/16 | | 16,826 | | 16,780 |
Lazard Group LLC: | | | | |
6.85% 6/15/17 | | 6,480 | | 7,308 |
7.125% 5/15/15 | | 2,316 | | 2,513 |
Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.: | | | | |
6.11% 1/29/37 | | 13,452 | | 13,639 |
6.4% 8/28/17 | | 5,074 | | 5,779 |
7.75% 5/14/38 | | 8,738 | | 10,478 |
Morgan Stanley: | | | | |
2.125% 4/25/18 | | 18,100 | | 17,451 |
4% 7/24/15 | | 1,373 | | 1,434 |
4.875% 11/1/22 | | 8,068 | | 7,948 |
5.375% 10/15/15 | | 17,634 | | 18,980 |
5.625% 9/23/19 | | 547 | | 601 |
5.95% 12/28/17 | | 301 | | 337 |
6.625% 4/1/18 | | 1,804 | | 2,065 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Capital Markets - continued |
State Street Corp. 3.1% 5/15/23 | | $ 7,500 | | $ 6,934 |
UBS AG Stamford Branch 2.25% 1/28/14 | | 1,211 | | 1,220 |
| | 174,516 |
Commercial Banks - 1.2% |
Associated Banc Corp. 5.125% 3/28/16 | | 2,238 | | 2,391 |
Bank of America NA 5.3% 3/15/17 | | 16,651 | | 18,147 |
BB&T Corp. 3.95% 3/22/22 | | 1,805 | | 1,785 |
Comerica Bank 5.7% 6/1/14 | | 613 | | 634 |
Comerica, Inc. 4.8% 5/1/15 | | 1,223 | | 1,288 |
Credit Suisse 6% 2/15/18 | | 17,158 | | 19,203 |
Credit Suisse New York Branch 5.4% 1/14/20 | | 1,450 | | 1,571 |
Discover Bank: | | | | |
7% 4/15/20 | | 4,144 | | 4,855 |
8.7% 11/18/19 | | 745 | | 940 |
Fifth Third Bancorp: | | | | |
3.5% 3/15/22 | | 638 | | 622 |
4.5% 6/1/18 | | 584 | | 624 |
5.45% 1/15/17 | | 2,232 | | 2,446 |
8.25% 3/1/38 | | 4,070 | | 5,245 |
Fifth Third Capital Trust IV 6.5% 4/15/37 (k) | | 4,966 | | 4,929 |
HBOS PLC 6.75% 5/21/18 (f) | | 560 | | 611 |
Huntington Bancshares, Inc. 7% 12/15/20 | | 3,353 | | 3,930 |
Intesa Sanpaolo SpA: | | | | |
3.125% 1/15/16 | | 20,275 | | 20,209 |
3.875% 1/16/18 | | 20,086 | | 19,564 |
JPMorgan Chase Bank 6% 10/1/17 | | 2,460 | | 2,791 |
KeyBank NA: | | | | |
5.45% 3/3/16 | | 3,278 | | 3,588 |
5.8% 7/1/14 | | 9,872 | | 10,279 |
KeyCorp. 5.1% 3/24/21 | | 628 | | 687 |
Marshall & Ilsley Bank: | | | | |
4.85% 6/16/15 | | 5,313 | | 5,660 |
5% 1/17/17 | | 10,492 | | 11,353 |
Regions Bank: | | | | |
6.45% 6/26/37 | | 12,100 | | 12,562 |
7.5% 5/15/18 | | 10,717 | | 12,517 |
Regions Financial Corp.: | | | | |
2% 5/15/18 | | 7,953 | | 7,598 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Commercial Banks - continued |
Regions Financial Corp.: - continued | | | | |
5.75% 6/15/15 | | $ 1,528 | | $ 1,639 |
7.75% 11/10/14 | | 7,190 | | 7,737 |
Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC: | | | | |
6.1% 6/10/23 | | 8,213 | | 7,887 |
6.125% 12/15/22 | | 39,429 | | 37,880 |
SunTrust Banks, Inc.: | | | | |
0.574% 4/1/15 (k) | | 9,681 | | 9,613 |
3.5% 1/20/17 | | 4,862 | | 5,092 |
UnionBanCal Corp. 3.5% 6/18/22 | | 969 | | 936 |
Wachovia Bank NA: | | | | |
4.8% 11/1/14 | | 557 | | 583 |
6% 11/15/17 | | 8,083 | | 9,238 |
Wachovia Corp. 5.625% 10/15/16 | | 5,718 | | 6,383 |
Wells Fargo & Co.: | | | | |
1.5% 7/1/15 | | 15,284 | | 15,455 |
3.676% 6/15/16 | | 2,611 | | 2,773 |
| | 281,245 |
Consumer Finance - 0.6% |
American Express Credit Corp.: | | | | |
1.3% 7/29/16 | | 6,246 | | 6,256 |
2.75% 9/15/15 | | 1,633 | | 1,692 |
2.8% 9/19/16 | | 626 | | 653 |
American Honda Finance Corp. 1.45% 2/27/15 (f) | | 2,385 | | 2,407 |
Discover Financial Services: | | | | |
3.85% 11/21/22 | | 2,701 | | 2,543 |
5.2% 4/27/22 | | 2,488 | | 2,570 |
6.45% 6/12/17 | | 13,316 | | 15,028 |
Ford Motor Credit Co. LLC: | | | | |
2.5% 1/15/16 | | 16,000 | | 16,144 |
3% 6/12/17 | | 6,246 | | 6,286 |
General Electric Capital Corp.: | | | | |
1% 1/8/16 | | 20,700 | | 20,593 |
1.5% 7/12/16 | | 23,000 | | 23,073 |
2.25% 11/9/15 | | 645 | | 660 |
4.625% 1/7/21 | | 849 | | 897 |
Hyundai Capital America: | | | | |
1.625% 10/2/15 (f) | | 2,131 | | 2,130 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Consumer Finance - continued |
Hyundai Capital America: - continued | | | | |
1.875% 8/9/16 (f) | | $ 1,605 | | $ 1,603 |
2.125% 10/2/17 (f) | | 2,357 | | 2,299 |
2.875% 8/9/18 (f) | | 2,848 | | 2,829 |
Toyota Motor Credit Corp. 0.8% 5/17/16 | | 31,000 | | 30,831 |
| | 138,494 |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.3% |
Bank of America Corp.: | | | | |
3.3% 1/11/23 | | 3,868 | | 3,567 |
3.875% 3/22/17 | | 944 | | 994 |
4.1% 7/24/23 | | 6,161 | | 6,049 |
6.5% 8/1/16 | | 1,220 | | 1,375 |
BP Capital Markets PLC: | | | | |
3.125% 10/1/15 | | 1,345 | | 1,407 |
4.5% 10/1/20 | | 1,336 | | 1,423 |
4.742% 3/11/21 | | 6,000 | | 6,424 |
Citigroup, Inc.: | | | | |
1.7% 7/25/16 | | 9,000 | | 8,994 |
4.05% 7/30/22 | | 2,641 | | 2,536 |
4.45% 1/10/17 | | 15,842 | | 17,040 |
4.75% 5/19/15 | | 16,309 | | 17,272 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co.: | | | | |
3.15% 7/5/16 | | 1,641 | | 1,714 |
3.4% 6/24/15 | | 1,319 | | 1,374 |
RBS Citizens Financial Group, Inc. 4.15% 9/28/22 (f) | | 6,485 | | 6,194 |
TECO Finance, Inc.: | | | | |
4% 3/15/16 | | 1,828 | | 1,936 |
5.15% 3/15/20 | | 164 | | 178 |
| | 78,477 |
Insurance - 0.7% |
American International Group, Inc.: | | | | |
2.375% 8/24/15 | | 16,000 | | 16,193 |
3.8% 3/22/17 | | 6,043 | | 6,389 |
4.875% 9/15/16 | | 2,262 | | 2,466 |
4.875% 6/1/22 | | 4,860 | | 5,175 |
5.6% 10/18/16 | | 5,560 | | 6,176 |
Aon Corp.: | | | | |
3.125% 5/27/16 | | 4,743 | | 4,946 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Insurance - continued |
Aon Corp.: - continued | | | | |
3.5% 9/30/15 | | $ 4,875 | | $ 5,108 |
5% 9/30/20 | | 129 | | 140 |
Aon PLC 4.45% 5/24/43 | | 7,000 | | 6,173 |
Axis Capital Holdings Ltd. 5.75% 12/1/14 | | 452 | | 478 |
Great-West Life & Annuity Insurance Co. 7.153% 5/16/46 (f)(k) | | 2,508 | | 2,571 |
Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.: | | | | |
4% 10/15/17 | | 1,308 | | 1,389 |
5.125% 4/15/22 | | 1,066 | | 1,158 |
5.375% 3/15/17 | | 685 | | 751 |
Liberty Mutual Group, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 6/1/21 (f) | | 8,525 | | 8,955 |
6.5% 3/15/35 (f) | | 1,315 | | 1,438 |
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. 4.8% 7/15/21 | | 5,569 | | 5,961 |
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. 5.375% 12/1/41 (f) | | 3,576 | | 3,712 |
MetLife, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 6/15/15 | | 941 | | 1,009 |
6.75% 6/1/16 | | 5,158 | | 5,904 |
Metropolitan Life Global Funding I 1.875% 6/22/18 (f) | | 7,500 | | 7,303 |
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. 6.063% 3/30/40 (f) | | 4,915 | | 5,632 |
Pacific Life Insurance Co. 9.25% 6/15/39 (f) | | 3,967 | | 5,489 |
Pacific LifeCorp: | | | | |
5.125% 1/30/43 (f) | | 7,709 | | 7,144 |
6% 2/10/20 (f) | | 9,721 | | 10,855 |
Prudential Financial, Inc.: | | | | |
2.3% 8/15/18 | | 888 | | 886 |
3.875% 1/14/15 | | 5,340 | | 5,559 |
4.5% 11/16/21 | | 1,764 | | 1,859 |
7.375% 6/15/19 | | 2,520 | | 3,085 |
Symetra Financial Corp. 6.125% 4/1/16 (f) | | 8,408 | | 9,005 |
Unum Group: | | | | |
5.625% 9/15/20 | | 3,860 | | 4,197 |
5.75% 8/15/42 | | 8,065 | | 8,251 |
7.125% 9/30/16 | | 2,076 | | 2,368 |
| | 157,725 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.5% |
Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc. 4.6% 4/1/22 | | $ 2,035 | | $ 2,031 |
American Campus Communities Operating Partnership LP 3.75% 4/15/23 | | 1,759 | | 1,647 |
Boston Properties, Inc. 3.85% 2/1/23 | | 8,081 | | 7,833 |
BRE Properties, Inc. 5.5% 3/15/17 | | 2,885 | | 3,159 |
Camden Property Trust: | | | | |
2.95% 12/15/22 | | 2,417 | | 2,185 |
5.375% 12/15/13 | | 3,103 | | 3,141 |
DDR Corp. 4.625% 7/15/22 | | 4,470 | | 4,475 |
Developers Diversified Realty Corp.: | | | | |
4.75% 4/15/18 | | 6,131 | | 6,566 |
7.5% 4/1/17 | | 6,446 | | 7,479 |
9.625% 3/15/16 | | 1,851 | | 2,193 |
Duke Realty LP: | | | | |
3.625% 4/15/23 | | 3,152 | | 2,879 |
3.875% 10/15/22 | | 5,452 | | 5,099 |
4.375% 6/15/22 | | 3,753 | | 3,656 |
5.4% 8/15/14 | | 1,356 | | 1,409 |
5.5% 3/1/16 | | 3,075 | | 3,333 |
6.75% 3/15/20 | | 1,339 | | 1,526 |
8.25% 8/15/19 | | 2,643 | | 3,246 |
Equity One, Inc.: | | | | |
3.75% 11/15/22 | | 8,200 | | 7,636 |
5.375% 10/15/15 | | 948 | | 1,023 |
6% 9/15/17 | | 876 | | 969 |
6.25% 1/15/17 | | 663 | | 732 |
Federal Realty Investment Trust: | | | | |
5.9% 4/1/20 | | 1,971 | | 2,232 |
6.2% 1/15/17 | | 501 | | 564 |
HCP, Inc. 3.15% 8/1/22 | | 7,000 | | 6,381 |
Health Care REIT, Inc.: | | | | |
2.25% 3/15/18 | | 2,600 | | 2,546 |
4.125% 4/1/19 | | 13,700 | | 14,234 |
4.7% 9/15/17 | | 843 | | 911 |
HRPT Properties Trust: | | | | |
5.75% 11/1/15 | | 1,731 | | 1,810 |
6.25% 6/15/17 | | 996 | | 1,053 |
6.65% 1/15/18 | | 676 | | 724 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Investment Trusts - continued |
Washington REIT 5.25% 1/15/14 | | $ 1,137 | | $ 1,153 |
Weingarten Realty Investors 3.375% 10/15/22 | | 1,228 | | 1,119 |
| | 104,944 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.5% |
BioMed Realty LP: | | | | |
3.85% 4/15/16 | | 8,775 | | 9,169 |
4.25% 7/15/22 | | 2,970 | | 2,858 |
6.125% 4/15/20 | | 2,611 | | 2,886 |
Brandywine Operating Partnership LP: | | | | |
3.95% 2/15/23 | | 7,304 | | 6,832 |
4.95% 4/15/18 | | 2,996 | | 3,182 |
5.7% 5/1/17 | | 309 | | 338 |
6% 4/1/16 | | 2,770 | | 3,034 |
7.5% 5/15/15 | | 776 | | 853 |
Digital Realty Trust LP: | | | | |
4.5% 7/15/15 | | 3,650 | | 3,830 |
5.25% 3/15/21 | | 4,138 | | 4,260 |
ERP Operating LP 5.75% 6/15/17 | | 2,042 | | 2,287 |
Liberty Property LP: | | | | |
3.375% 6/15/23 | | 3,313 | | 3,014 |
4.125% 6/15/22 | | 3,219 | | 3,150 |
4.75% 10/1/20 | | 8,747 | | 9,120 |
5.125% 3/2/15 | | 1,672 | | 1,760 |
5.5% 12/15/16 | | 2,529 | | 2,785 |
Mack-Cali Realty LP: | | | | |
2.5% 12/15/17 | | 4,556 | | 4,442 |
3.15% 5/15/23 | | 7,438 | | 6,470 |
4.5% 4/18/22 | | 2,016 | | 1,974 |
7.75% 8/15/19 | | 2,476 | | 2,962 |
Post Apartment Homes LP 3.375% 12/1/22 | | 1,364 | | 1,251 |
Prime Property Funding, Inc.: | | | | |
5.125% 6/1/15 (f) | | 2,812 | | 2,967 |
5.5% 1/15/14 (f) | | 1,168 | | 1,190 |
5.7% 4/15/17 (f) | | 2,854 | | 3,105 |
Regency Centers LP: | | | | |
4.95% 4/15/14 | | 494 | | 505 |
5.25% 8/1/15 | | 3,893 | | 4,167 |
5.875% 6/15/17 | | 1,771 | | 1,958 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Management & Development - continued |
Simon Property Group LP: | | | | |
2.8% 1/30/17 | | $ 82 | | $ 84 |
4.2% 2/1/15 | | 2,640 | | 2,743 |
Tanger Properties LP: | | | | |
6.125% 6/1/20 | | 9,597 | | 11,079 |
6.15% 11/15/15 | | 1,286 | | 1,426 |
Ventas Realty LP/Ventas Capital Corp.: | | | | |
2% 2/15/18 | | 4,056 | | 3,928 |
4% 4/30/19 | | 1,999 | | 2,070 |
| | 111,679 |
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | 1,047,080 |
HEALTH CARE - 0.4% |
Biotechnology - 0.1% |
Amgen, Inc.: | | | | |
3.875% 11/15/21 | | 1,808 | | 1,811 |
5.15% 11/15/41 | | 17,224 | | 16,680 |
Celgene Corp. 2.45% 10/15/15 | | 2,168 | | 2,227 |
| | 20,718 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 0.2% |
Aetna, Inc.: | | | | |
2.75% 11/15/22 | | 3,213 | | 2,923 |
4.125% 11/15/42 | | 1,793 | | 1,559 |
Coventry Health Care, Inc.: | | | | |
5.95% 3/15/17 | | 1,413 | | 1,599 |
6.3% 8/15/14 | | 2,925 | | 3,074 |
Express Scripts Holding Co.: | | | | |
3.9% 2/15/22 | | 1,915 | | 1,918 |
4.75% 11/15/21 | | 17,355 | | 18,382 |
Express Scripts, Inc. 3.125% 5/15/16 | | 332 | | 345 |
Medco Health Solutions, Inc.: | | | | |
2.75% 9/15/15 | | 4,158 | | 4,284 |
4.125% 9/15/20 | | 5,031 | | 5,169 |
UnitedHealth Group, Inc.: | | | | |
1.625% 3/15/19 | | 1,873 | | 1,789 |
2.75% 2/15/23 | | 1,069 | | 982 |
2.875% 3/15/23 | | 8,084 | | 7,486 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
HEALTH CARE - continued |
Health Care Providers & Services - continued |
UnitedHealth Group, Inc.: - continued | | | | |
3.95% 10/15/42 | | $ 1,469 | | $ 1,266 |
WellPoint, Inc.: | | | | |
1.25% 9/10/15 | | 108 | | 109 |
1.875% 1/15/18 | | 195 | | 191 |
3.3% 1/15/23 | | 2,598 | | 2,438 |
| | 53,514 |
Pharmaceuticals - 0.1% |
AbbVie, Inc. 1.75% 11/6/17 | | 6,470 | | 6,370 |
Watson Pharmaceuticals, Inc.: | | | | |
1.875% 10/1/17 | | 2,149 | | 2,113 |
5% 8/15/14 | | 2,544 | | 2,637 |
Zoetis, Inc.: | | | | |
1.875% 2/1/18 (f) | | 992 | | 972 |
3.25% 2/1/23 (f) | | 2,418 | | 2,272 |
| | 14,364 |
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | 88,596 |
INDUSTRIALS - 0.3% |
Aerospace & Defense - 0.0% |
BAE Systems Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
4.95% 6/1/14 (f) | | 2,021 | | 2,077 |
6.375% 6/1/19 (f) | | 5,000 | | 5,697 |
| | 7,774 |
Air Freight & Logistics - 0.0% |
United Parcel Service, Inc. 2.45% 10/1/22 | | 1,883 | | 1,740 |
Airlines - 0.1% |
American Airlines pass-thru trust Series 2013-2 Class A, 4.95% 7/15/24 (f) | | 12,500 | | 12,563 |
Continental Airlines, Inc.: | | | | |
6.648% 3/15/19 | | 2,978 | | 3,131 |
6.9% 7/2/19 | | 1,028 | | 1,072 |
U.S. Airways pass-thru trust certificates: | | | | |
6.85% 1/30/18 | | 1,936 | | 2,023 |
8.36% 1/20/19 | | 1,576 | | 1,686 |
| | 20,475 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Industrial Conglomerates - 0.1% |
General Electric Co. 4.125% 10/9/42 | | $ 19,701 | | $ 17,890 |
Road & Rail - 0.1% |
Burlington Northern Santa Fe LLC: | | | | |
4.4% 3/15/42 | | 11,995 | | 10,877 |
4.45% 3/15/43 | | 6,000 | | 5,418 |
5.05% 3/1/41 | | 8,624 | | 8,563 |
| | 24,858 |
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | 72,737 |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 0.1% |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 0.0% |
Tyco Electronics Group SA: | | | | |
1.6% 2/3/15 | | 188 | | 189 |
5.95% 1/15/14 | | 5,513 | | 5,620 |
6.55% 10/1/17 | | 1,119 | | 1,279 |
| | 7,088 |
IT Services - 0.0% |
The Western Union Co. 2.375% 12/10/15 | | 155 | | 158 |
Office Electronics - 0.1% |
Xerox Corp.: | | | | |
1.0832% 5/16/14 (k) | | 10,110 | | 10,110 |
2.95% 3/15/17 | | 1,143 | | 1,166 |
4.25% 2/15/15 | | 1,302 | | 1,358 |
| | 12,634 |
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | 19,880 |
MATERIALS - 0.1% |
Chemicals - 0.0% |
Ecolab, Inc. 1.45% 12/8/17 | | 3,459 | | 3,360 |
Construction Materials - 0.0% |
CRH America, Inc. 6% 9/30/16 | | 3,083 | | 3,463 |
Metals & Mining - 0.1% |
Anglo American Capital PLC 9.375% 4/8/14 (f) | | 3,112 | | 3,259 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
MATERIALS - continued |
Metals & Mining - continued |
Corporacion Nacional del Cobre de Chile (Codelco): | | | | |
3.875% 11/3/21 (f) | | $ 8,722 | | $ 8,354 |
4.5% 8/13/23 (f) | | 8,000 | | 7,813 |
| | 19,426 |
TOTAL MATERIALS | | 26,249 |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 0.3% |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.3% |
AT&T, Inc.: | | | | |
2.4% 8/15/16 | | 355 | | 365 |
2.5% 8/15/15 | | 1,377 | | 1,418 |
4.35% 6/15/45 | | 1,184 | | 1,006 |
5.55% 8/15/41 | | 23,700 | | 24,147 |
BellSouth Capital Funding Corp. 7.875% 2/15/30 | | 61 | | 74 |
CenturyLink, Inc.: | | | | |
5.15% 6/15/17 | | 487 | | 508 |
6% 4/1/17 | | 3,467 | | 3,710 |
6.15% 9/15/19 | | 4,463 | | 4,642 |
Embarq Corp.: | | | | |
7.082% 6/1/16 | | 4,190 | | 4,710 |
7.995% 6/1/36 | | 19,241 | | 19,679 |
Verizon Communications, Inc. 6.25% 4/1/37 | | 4,611 | | 5,066 |
| | 65,325 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.0% |
America Movil S.A.B. de CV: | | | | |
2.375% 9/8/16 | | 371 | | 376 |
3.625% 3/30/15 | | 3,102 | | 3,200 |
Vodafone Group PLC 5% 12/16/13 | | 2,696 | | 2,730 |
| | 6,306 |
TOTAL TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES | | 71,631 |
UTILITIES - 0.9% |
Electric Utilities - 0.6% |
AmerenUE 6.4% 6/15/17 | | 1,518 | | 1,761 |
American Electric Power Co., Inc.: | | | | |
1.65% 12/15/17 | | 2,632 | | 2,557 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
UTILITIES - continued |
Electric Utilities - continued |
American Electric Power Co., Inc.: - continued | | | | |
2.95% 12/15/22 | | $ 2,492 | | $ 2,275 |
Duke Capital LLC 5.668% 8/15/14 | | 3,457 | | 3,600 |
Duquesne Light Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
5.9% 12/1/21 (f) | | 5,539 | | 6,157 |
6.4% 9/15/20 (f) | | 11,856 | | 13,562 |
Edison International 3.75% 9/15/17 | | 4,499 | | 4,721 |
Entergy Louisiana LLC 1.875% 12/15/14 | | 202 | | 205 |
FirstEnergy Corp.: | | | | |
2.75% 3/15/18 | | 5,228 | | 5,011 |
4.25% 3/15/23 | | 9,248 | | 8,381 |
7.375% 11/15/31 | | 10,706 | | 10,797 |
FirstEnergy Solutions Corp. 6.05% 8/15/21 | | 12,120 | | 12,930 |
Indiana Michigan Power Co. 3.2% 3/15/23 | | 5,866 | | 5,507 |
LG&E and KU Energy LLC: | | | | |
2.125% 11/15/15 | | 5,251 | | 5,363 |
3.75% 11/15/20 | | 1,034 | | 1,039 |
Nevada Power Co. 6.5% 8/1/18 | | 2,642 | | 3,146 |
NextEra Energy Capital Holdings, Inc. 1.611% 6/1/14 | | 619 | | 623 |
Northeast Utilities: | | | | |
1.45% 5/1/18 | | 1,676 | | 1,613 |
2.8% 5/1/23 | | 7,613 | | 6,986 |
Pennsylvania Electric Co. 6.05% 9/1/17 | | 618 | | 693 |
Pepco Holdings, Inc. 2.7% 10/1/15 | | 5,263 | | 5,398 |
PPL Capital Funding, Inc. 3.4% 6/1/23 | | 3,630 | | 3,395 |
Progress Energy, Inc. 4.4% 1/15/21 | | 405 | | 427 |
Sierra Pacific Power Co. 5.45% 9/1/13 | | 2,624 | | 2,624 |
Southern Co. 2.375% 9/15/15 | | 393 | | 404 |
West Penn Power Co. 5.95% 12/15/17 (f) | | 6,500 | | 7,402 |
| | 116,577 |
Gas Utilities - 0.0% |
Southern Natural Gas Co. 5.9% 4/1/17 (f) | | 357 | | 403 |
Southern Natural Gas Co./Southern Natural Issuing Corp. 4.4% 6/15/21 | | 2,473 | | 2,565 |
| | 2,968 |
Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - 0.0% |
PSEG Power LLC 2.75% 9/15/16 | | 1,703 | | 1,763 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
UTILITIES - continued |
Multi-Utilities - 0.3% |
Ameren Illinois Co. 6.125% 11/15/17 | | $ 333 | | $ 383 |
Dominion Resources, Inc.: | | | | |
1.95% 8/15/16 | | 246 | | 250 |
2.5756% 9/30/66 (k) | | 16,990 | | 15,825 |
7.5% 6/30/66 (k) | | 5,485 | | 5,924 |
MidAmerican Energy Holdings, Co. 6.5% 9/15/37 | | 3,287 | | 3,885 |
National Grid PLC 6.3% 8/1/16 | | 973 | | 1,100 |
NiSource Finance Corp.: | | | | |
4.45% 12/1/21 | | 2,934 | | 3,002 |
5.25% 9/15/17 | | 682 | | 755 |
5.25% 2/15/43 | | 6,481 | | 6,231 |
5.4% 7/15/14 | | 7,266 | | 7,547 |
5.45% 9/15/20 | | 980 | | 1,077 |
5.8% 2/1/42 | | 3,785 | | 3,914 |
6.4% 3/15/18 | | 2,230 | | 2,571 |
6.8% 1/15/19 | | 4,065 | | 4,757 |
Sempra Energy: | | | | |
2% 3/15/14 | | 2,355 | | 2,372 |
2.875% 10/1/22 | | 6,192 | | 5,707 |
Wisconsin Energy Corp. 6.25% 5/15/67 (k) | | 4,882 | | 5,065 |
| | 70,365 |
TOTAL UTILITIES | | 191,673 |
TOTAL NONCONVERTIBLE BONDS | | 2,042,848 |
TOTAL CORPORATE BONDS (Cost $2,026,495) | 2,044,642
|
U.S. Treasury Obligations - 6.0% |
|
U.S. Treasury Bills, yield at date of purchase 0.02% to 0.04% 10/3/13 (i) | | 8,110 | | 8,110 |
U.S. Treasury Bonds 3.625% 8/15/43 | | 140,714 | | 138,603 |
U.S. Treasury Notes: | | | | |
0.625% 8/15/16 | | 75,125 | | 74,796 |
0.625% 5/31/17 (j) | | 455,509 | | 446,505 |
0.875% 2/28/17 | | 425,833 | | 423,338 |
U.S. Treasury Obligations - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
U.S. Treasury Notes: - continued | | | | |
0.875% 4/30/17 | | $ 246,018 | | $ 243,846 |
4.625% 2/15/17 | | 20,023 | | 22,466 |
TOTAL U.S. TREASURY OBLIGATIONS (Cost $1,362,588) | 1,357,664
|
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities - 4.1% |
|
Fannie Mae - 3.7% |
2.303% 6/1/36 (k) | | 175 | | 186 |
2.5% 11/1/27 to 8/1/43 | | 31,264 | | 29,558 |
2.753% 7/1/37 (k) | | 344 | | 363 |
3% 8/1/42 to 9/1/43 | | 41,096 | | 39,333 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 6,800 | | 6,501 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 6,800 | | 6,501 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 4,500 | | 4,302 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 4,500 | | 4,302 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 18,300 | | 17,495 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 9,000 | | 8,604 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 12,500 | | 11,950 |
3% 9/1/43 (h) | | 5,800 | | 5,545 |
3.5% 5/1/42 to 8/1/43 | | 227,750 | | 225,112 |
4% 2/1/35 to 1/1/42 | | 11,436 | | 11,802 |
4% 9/1/43 (h) | | 27,800 | | 28,667 |
4% 9/1/43 (h) | | 58,400 | | 60,220 |
4% 9/1/43 (h) | | 4,100 | | 4,228 |
4% 9/1/43 (h) | | 4,500 | | 4,640 |
4% 9/1/43 (h) | | 17,900 | | 18,458 |
4% 10/1/43 (h) | | 6,500 | | 6,684 |
4.5% 12/1/23 to 7/1/41 | | 7,755 | | 8,199 |
4.5% 9/1/43 (h) | | 53,400 | | 56,337 |
4.5% 9/1/43 (h) | | 28,500 | | 30,068 |
4.5% 9/1/43 (h) | | 28,500 | | 30,068 |
4.5% 10/1/43 (h) | | 81,900 | | 86,187 |
5% 9/1/43 (h) | | 35,600 | | 38,265 |
5% 10/1/43 (h) | | 35,600 | | 38,179 |
5.5% 9/1/24 | | 4,373 | | 4,705 |
5.5% 9/1/43 (h) | | 28,600 | | 31,049 |
5.5% 9/1/43 (h) | | 8,250 | | 8,956 |
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Fannie Mae - continued |
6% 6/1/35 to 8/1/37 | | $ 8,052 | | $ 8,899 |
6.5% 7/1/32 to 8/1/36 | | 1,469 | | 1,642 |
TOTAL FANNIE MAE | | 837,005 |
Freddie Mac - 0.1% |
2.5% 5/1/28 | | 3,400 | | 3,368 |
3% 1/1/43 | | 6,862 | | 6,547 |
3.126% 10/1/35 (k) | | 230 | | 246 |
3.5% 4/1/32 to 6/1/43 | | 9,177 | | 9,034 |
4% 6/1/24 to 9/1/25 | | 2,036 | | 2,142 |
4.5% 7/1/25 to 12/1/40 | | 829 | | 877 |
5% 3/1/19 | | 2,228 | | 2,366 |
5.5% 1/1/34 to 3/1/40 | | 1,507 | | 1,629 |
6% 7/1/37 to 8/1/37 | | 591 | | 644 |
6.5% 3/1/36 | | 1,039 | | 1,166 |
TOTAL FREDDIE MAC | | 28,019 |
Ginnie Mae - 0.3% |
3.5% 11/15/41 to 3/15/42 | | 587 | | 593 |
4% 1/15/25 to 9/15/41 | | 46,455 | | 48,546 |
4% 9/1/43 (h) | | 10,600 | | 11,028 |
5.5% 12/15/31 to 1/15/39 | | 3,632 | | 3,993 |
6% 2/15/34 to 9/20/38 | | 10,067 | | 11,218 |
TOTAL GINNIE MAE | | 75,378 |
TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY - MORTGAGE SECURITIES (Cost $949,678) | 940,402
|
Asset-Backed Securities - 0.2% |
|
Accredited Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2005-1 Class M1, 0.6541% 4/25/35 (k) | | 729 | | 656 |
ACE Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 2004-HE1 Class M2, 1.8341% 3/25/34 (k) | | 371 | | 346 |
Series 2005-HE2 Class M2, 0.8591% 4/25/35 (k) | | 18 | | 18 |
AmeriCredit Auto Receivables Trust Series 2013-4: | | | | |
Class C, 2.72% 9/9/19 | | 1,410 | | 1,410 |
Class D, 3.31% 10/8/19 | | 880 | | 880 |
Asset-Backed Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Ameriquest Mortgage Securities, Inc. pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
Series 2003-10 Class M1, 1.2341% 12/25/33 (k) | | $ 72 | | $ 65 |
Series 2004-R2 Class M3, 1.0091% 4/25/34 (k) | | 107 | | 64 |
Series 2005-R2 Class M1, 0.6341% 4/25/35 (k) | | 1,662 | | 1,636 |
Argent Securities, Inc. pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
Series 2003-W7 Class A2, 0.9641% 3/25/34 (k) | | 53 | | 49 |
Series 2004-W11 Class M2, 1.2341% 11/25/34 (k) | | 616 | | 560 |
Series 2004-W7 Class M1, 1.0091% 5/25/34 (k) | | 1,600 | | 1,488 |
Series 2006-W4 Class A2C, 0.3441% 5/25/36 (k) | | 1,364 | | 490 |
Asset Backed Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 2004-HE2 Class M1, 1.0091% 4/25/34 (k) | | 2,323 | | 2,194 |
Series 2006-HE2 Class M1, 0.5541% 3/25/36 (k) | | 35 | | 1 |
Capital Trust Ltd. Series 2004-1: | | | | |
Class B, 0.9341% 7/20/39 (f)(k) | | 239 | | 200 |
Class C, 1.2841% 7/20/39 (f)(k) | | 372 | | 16 |
Carrington Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2007-RFC1 Class A3, 0.3241% 12/25/36 (k) | | 1,978 | | 1,140 |
CFC LLC Series 2013-1A Class A, 1.65% 7/17/17 (f) | | 1,553 | | 1,552 |
Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.: | | | | |
Series 2004-3 Class M4, 1.6391% 4/25/34 (k) | | 115 | | 87 |
Series 2004-4 Class M2, 0.9791% 6/25/34 (k) | | 605 | | 557 |
Fannie Mae Series 2004-T5 Class AB3, 0.9892% 5/28/35 (k) | | 43 | | 39 |
Fieldstone Mortgage Investment Corp. Series 2004-3 Class M5, 2.3591% 8/25/34 (k) | | 319 | | 243 |
First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2004-FF2 Class M3, 1.0091% 3/25/34 (k) | | 18 | | 15 |
Ford Credit Floorplan Master Owner Trust Series 2013-3 Class A1, 0.79% 6/15/17 | | 12,280 | | 12,256 |
Fremont Home Loan Trust Series 2005-A: | | | | |
Class M3, 0.9191% 1/25/35 (k) | | 1,041 | | 803 |
Class M4, 1.2041% 1/25/35 (k) | | 399 | | 91 |
GCO Education Loan Funding Master Trust II Series 2007-1A Class C1L, 0.6421% 2/25/47 (f)(k) | | 3,122 | | 2,437 |
GE Business Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 2003-1 Class A, 0.6141% 4/15/31 (f)(k) | | 83 | | 79 |
Series 2006-2A: | | | | |
Class A, 0.3641% 11/15/34 (f)(k) | | 1,216 | | 1,099 |
Class B, 0.4641% 11/15/34 (f)(k) | | 439 | | 370 |
Class C, 0.5641% 11/15/34 (f)(k) | | 729 | | 524 |
Class D, 0.9341% 11/15/34 (f)(k) | | 277 | | 173 |
Asset-Backed Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Guggenheim Structured Real Estate Funding Ltd. Series 2006-3 Class C, 0.7341% 9/25/46 (f)(k) | | $ 1,356 | | $ 1,349 |
Home Equity Asset Trust: | | | | |
Series 2003-2 Class M1, 1.5041% 8/25/33 (k) | | 342 | | 330 |
Series 2003-3 Class M1, 1.4741% 8/25/33 (k) | | 654 | | 597 |
Series 2003-5 Class A2, 0.8841% 12/25/33 (k) | | 36 | | 32 |
HSI Asset Securitization Corp. Trust Series 2007-HE1 Class 2A3, 0.3741% 1/25/37 (k) | | 1,642 | | 772 |
JPMorgan Mortgage Acquisition Trust: | | | | |
Series 2006-NC2 Class M2, 0.4841% 7/25/36 (k) | | 3,185 | | 163 |
Series 2007-CH1 Class AV4, 0.3141% 11/25/36 (k) | | 1,641 | | 1,596 |
Keycorp Student Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 1999-A Class A2, 0.6061% 12/27/29 (k) | | 418 | | 409 |
Series 2006-A Class 2C, 1.4261% 3/27/42 (k) | | 2,909 | | 440 |
MASTR Asset Backed Securities Trust Series 2007-HE1 Class M1, 0.4841% 5/25/37 (k) | | 597 | | 11 |
Meritage Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2004-1 Class M1, 0.9341% 7/25/34 (k) | | 146 | | 117 |
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Investors Trust: | | | | |
Series 2003-OPT1 Class M1, 1.1591% 7/25/34 (k) | | 506 | | 437 |
Series 2006-FM1 Class A2B, 0.2941% 4/25/37 (k) | | 822 | | 792 |
Series 2006-OPT1 Class A1A, 0.7041% 6/25/35 (k) | | 2,591 | | 2,394 |
Morgan Stanley ABS Capital I Trust: | | | | |
Series 2004-HE6 Class A2, 0.8641% 8/25/34 (k) | | 63 | | 62 |
Series 2005-NC1 Class M1, 0.6241% 1/25/35 (k) | | 439 | | 409 |
Series 2005-NC2 Class B1, 1.3541% 3/25/35 (k) | | 457 | | 185 |
New Century Home Equity Loan Trust Series 2005-4 Class M2, 0.6941% 9/25/35 (k) | | 1,566 | | 1,332 |
Ocala Funding LLC: | | | | |
Series 2005-1A Class A, 1.6841% 3/20/10 (d)(f)(k) | | 621 | | 0 |
Series 2006-1A Class A, 1.5841% 3/20/11 (d)(f)(k) | | 1,290 | | 0 |
Park Place Securities, Inc.: | | | | |
Series 2004-WCW1: | | | | |
Class M3, 1.4341% 9/25/34 (k) | | 585 | | 491 |
Class M4, 1.6341% 9/25/34 (k) | | 750 | | 226 |
Series 2005-WCH1 Class M4, 1.0141% 1/25/36 (k) | | 1,620 | | 1,378 |
Salomon Brothers Mortgage Securities VII, Inc. Series 2003-HE1 Class A, 0.9841% 4/25/33 (k) | | 6 | | 5 |
Saxon Asset Securities Trust Series 2004-1 Class M1, 0.9791% 3/25/35 (k) | | 1,202 | | 1,097 |
SLM Private Credit Student Loan Trust Series 2004-A Class C, 1.2233% 6/15/33 (k) | | 1,266 | | 964 |
Structured Asset Investment Loan Trust Series 2004-8 Class M5, 1.9091% 9/25/34 (k) | | 59 | | 41 |
Asset-Backed Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
SVO VOI Mortgage Corp. Series 2006-AA Class A, 5.28% 2/20/24 (f) | | $ 311 | | $ 312 |
Terwin Mortgage Trust Series 2003-4HE Class A1, 1.0441% 9/25/34 (k) | | 32 | | 30 |
Trapeza CDO XII Ltd./Trapeza CDO XII, Inc. Series 2007-12A Class B, 0.8309% 4/6/42 (f)(k) | | 2,197 | | 66 |
Whinstone Capital Management Ltd. Series 1A Class B3, 2.0659% 10/25/44 (f)(k) | | 1,964 | | 1,738 |
TOTAL ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES (Cost $40,677) | 49,313
|
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations - 0.3% |
|
Private Sponsor - 0.3% |
Bear Stearns ALT-A Trust floater Series 2005-1 Class A1, 0.7441% 1/25/35 (k) | | 1,683 | | 1,618 |
First Horizon Mortgage pass-thru Trust Series 2004-AR5 Class 2A1, 2.6056% 10/25/34 (k) | | 950 | | 942 |
Granite Master Issuer PLC: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-1A: | | | | |
Class A1, 0.2541% 12/20/54 (f)(k) | | 6,679 | | 6,556 |
Class A5, 0.3241% 12/20/54 (f)(k) | | 5,379 | | 5,280 |
Series 2006-2 Class A4, 0.2641% 12/20/54 (k) | | 1,993 | | 1,956 |
Series 2006-3: | | | | |
Class A3, 0.2641% 12/20/54 (k) | | 960 | | 942 |
Class A7, 0.3841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 1,043 | | 1,024 |
Class M2, 0.7441% 12/20/54 (k) | | 5,460 | | 4,928 |
Series 2006-4: | | | | |
Class A4, 0.2841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 3,059 | | 3,003 |
Class B1, 0.3641% 12/20/54 (k) | | 4,556 | | 4,207 |
Class M1, 0.5241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 1,198 | | 1,081 |
Series 2007-1: | | | | |
Class 1B1, 0.3241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 5,806 | | 5,362 |
Class 1M1, 0.4841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 1,611 | | 1,454 |
Class 2A1, 0.3241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 2,400 | | 2,356 |
Class 2M1, 0.6841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 2,067 | | 1,865 |
Series 2007-2: | | | | |
Class 1B1, 0.3441% 12/17/54 (k) | | 767 | | 708 |
Class 2C1, 1.0441% 12/17/54 (k) | | 2,864 | | 2,512 |
sequential payer Series 2006-3 Class B2, 0.5241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 5,461 | | 5,043 |
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Private Sponsor - continued |
Granite Master Issuer PLC: - continued | | | | |
Series 2007-2 Class 3A1, 0.3641% 12/17/54 (k) | | $ 428 | | $ 420 |
Granite Mortgages PLC floater Series 2003-3 Class 1C, 2.7162% 1/20/44 (k) | | 472 | | 451 |
JPMorgan Mortgage Trust sequential payer Series 2006-A5 Class 3A5, 2.7827% 8/25/36 (k) | | 1,590 | | 1,263 |
MASTR Adjustable Rate Mortgages Trust Series 2007-3 Class 22A2, 0.3941% 5/25/47 (k) | | 657 | | 490 |
Merrill Lynch Alternative Note Asset Trust floater Series 2007-OAR1 Class A1, 0.3541% 2/25/37 (k) | | 1,210 | | 1,035 |
Opteum Mortgage Acceptance Corp. floater Series 2005-3 Class APT, 0.4741% 7/25/35 (k) | | 1,749 | | 1,679 |
RESI Finance LP/RESI Finance DE Corp. floater Series 2003-B: | | | | |
Class B5, 2.535% 7/10/35 (f)(k) | | 781 | | 720 |
Class B6, 3.035% 7/10/35 (f)(k) | | 166 | | 155 |
Residential Funding Securities Corp. floater Series 2003-RP2 Class A1, 0.6341% 6/25/33 (f)(k) | | 34 | | 34 |
Sequoia Mortgage Trust floater Series 2004-6 Class A3B, 1.2893% 7/20/34 (k) | | 33 | | 31 |
Structured Asset Securities Corp. Series 2003-15A Class 4A, 2.5477% 4/25/33 (k) | | 190 | | 188 |
TBW Mortgage-Backed pass-thru certificates floater Series 2006-4 Class A3, 0.39% 9/25/36 (k) | | 2,694 | | 2,488 |
Thornburg Mortgage Securities Trust floater Series 2003-4 Class A1, 0.8241% 9/25/43 (k) | | 3,477 | | 3,306 |
TOTAL PRIVATE SPONSOR | | 63,097 |
U.S. Government Agency - 0.0% |
Fannie Mae: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2005-38 Class F, 0.4841% 5/25/35 (k) | | 1,072 | | 1,075 |
Series 2007-36 Class F, 0.4141% 4/25/37 (k) | | 1,669 | | 1,672 |
Series 2013-62 Class FA, 0.4841% 6/25/43 (k) | | 6,304 | | 6,295 |
floater sequential payer Series 2012-120 Class FE 0.4841% 2/25/39 (k) | | 2,776 | | 2,756 |
TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY | | 11,798 |
TOTAL COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (Cost $61,144) | 74,895
|
Commercial Mortgage Securities - 2.1% |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Asset Securitization Corp. Series 1997-D5 Class PS1, 1.3471% 2/14/43 (k)(m) | | $ 518 | | $ 16 |
Banc of America Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2004-2 Class A4, 4.153% 11/10/38 | | 285 | | 285 |
Series 2006-2 Class AAB, 5.7116% 5/10/45 (k) | | 737 | | 763 |
Series 2006-3 Class A4, 5.889% 7/10/44 | | 750 | | 822 |
Series 2006-5 Class A2, 5.317% 9/10/47 | | 3,470 | | 3,494 |
Series 2006-6 Class A3, 5.369% 10/10/45 | | 2,628 | | 2,682 |
Series 2007-4 Class A3, 5.8103% 2/10/51 (k) | | 803 | | 828 |
Series 2005-3 Class A3B, 5.09% 7/10/43 (k) | | 4,082 | | 4,251 |
Series 2006-6 Class E, 5.619% 10/10/45 (f) | | 759 | | 84 |
Series 2007-3: | | | | |
Class A3, 5.5595% 6/10/49 (k) | | 2,194 | | 2,200 |
Class A4, 5.5595% 6/10/49 (k) | | 2,739 | | 3,033 |
Banc of America Commercial Mortgage, Inc. sequential payer Series 2001-1 Class A4, 5.451% 1/15/49 | | 2,878 | | 3,121 |
Bayview Commercial Asset Trust: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2003-2 Class M1, 1.0341% 12/25/33 (f)(k) | | 54 | | 39 |
Series 2005-3A: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.5841% 11/25/35 (f)(k) | | 458 | | 386 |
Class M1, 0.6241% 11/25/35 (f)(k) | | 60 | | 42 |
Class M2, 0.6741% 11/25/35 (f)(k) | | 76 | | 53 |
Class M3, 0.6941% 11/25/35 (f)(k) | | 68 | | 46 |
Class M4, 0.7841% 11/25/35 (f)(k) | | 85 | | 53 |
Series 2005-4A: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.5741% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 1,204 | | 989 |
Class B1, 1.5841% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 104 | | 22 |
Class M1, 0.6341% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 388 | | 216 |
Class M2, 0.6541% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 117 | | 61 |
Class M3, 0.6841% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 170 | | 88 |
Class M4, 0.7941% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 94 | | 46 |
Class M5, 0.8341% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 94 | | 33 |
Class M6, 0.8841% 1/25/36 (f)(k) | | 100 | | 30 |
Series 2006-1: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.5441% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 185 | | 151 |
Class M1, 0.5641% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 66 | | 46 |
Class M2, 0.5841% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 70 | | 48 |
Class M3, 0.6041% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 60 | | 39 |
Class M4, 0.7041% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 34 | | 21 |
Class M5, 0.7441% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 33 | | 18 |
Class M6, 0.8241% 4/25/36 (f)(k) | | 66 | | 30 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Bayview Commercial Asset Trust: - continued | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-2A: | | | | |
Class M1, 0.4941% 7/25/36 (f)(k) | | $ 174 | | $ 106 |
Class M2, 0.5141% 7/25/36 (f)(k) | | 123 | | 72 |
Class M3, 0.5341% 7/25/36 (f)(k) | | 102 | | 47 |
Class M4, 0.6041% 7/25/36 (f)(k) | | 69 | | 30 |
Class M5, 0.6541% 7/25/36 (f)(k) | | 85 | | 30 |
Series 2006-3A Class M4, 0.6141% 10/25/36 (f)(k) | | 114 | | 17 |
Series 2006-4A: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.4541% 12/25/36 (f)(k) | | 3,582 | | 2,548 |
Class M1, 0.4741% 12/25/36 (f)(k) | | 239 | | 132 |
Class M2, 0.4941% 12/25/36 (f)(k) | | 159 | | 44 |
Class M3, 0.5241% 12/25/36 (f)(k) | | 160 | | 33 |
Series 2007-1 Class A2, 0.4541% 3/25/37 (f)(k) | | 735 | | 480 |
Series 2007-2A: | | | | |
Class A1, 0.4541% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 721 | | 556 |
Class A2, 0.5041% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 676 | | 339 |
Class M1, 0.5541% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 237 | | 65 |
Class M2, 0.5941% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 130 | | 22 |
Class M3, 0.6741% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 131 | | 13 |
Class M4, 0.8341% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 260 | | 10 |
Class M5, 0.9341% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 77 | | 2 |
Series 2007-3: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.4741% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 724 | | 452 |
Class M1, 0.4941% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 144 | | 68 |
Class M2, 0.5241% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 154 | | 45 |
Class M3, 0.5541% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 242 | | 56 |
Class M4, 0.6841% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 380 | | 77 |
Class M5, 0.7841% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 199 | | 29 |
Class M6, 0.9841% 7/25/37 (f)(k) | | 132 | | 16 |
Series 2007-4A: | | | | |
Class M1, 1.1341% 9/25/37 (f)(k) | | 278 | | 26 |
Class M2, 1.2341% 9/25/37 (f)(k) | | 278 | | 21 |
Class M4, 1.7841% 9/25/37 (f)(k) | | 297 | | 14 |
Series 2004-1, Class IO, 1.25% 4/25/34 (f)(m) | | 1,849 | | 72 |
Series 2006-3A, Class IO, 3.8179% 10/25/36 (f)(k)(m) | | 22,941 | | 530 |
Series 2007-5A, Class IO, 4.186% 10/25/37 (f)(k)(m) | | 4,785 | | 335 |
Bear Stearns Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: | | | | |
floater Series 2007-BBA8: | | | | |
Class D, 0.4341% 3/15/22 (f)(k) | | 653 | | 620 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Bear Stearns Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: - continued | | | | |
floater Series 2007-BBA8: | | | | |
Class E, 0.4841% 3/15/22 (f)(k) | | $ 3,391 | | $ 3,153 |
Class F, 0.5341% 3/15/22 (f)(k) | | 2,081 | | 1,893 |
Class G, 0.5841% 3/15/22 (f)(k) | | 534 | | 475 |
Class H, 0.7341% 3/15/22 (f)(k) | | 653 | | 567 |
Class J, 0.8841% 3/15/22 (f)(k) | | 653 | | 552 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2007-PW15 Class AAB, 5.315% 2/11/44 | | 2,559 | | 2,578 |
Series 2007-PW16: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.7131% 6/11/40 (k) | | 769 | | 864 |
Class AAB, 5.7131% 6/11/40 (k) | | 4,879 | | 5,066 |
Series 2007-PW18 Class A4, 5.7% 6/11/50 | | 5,820 | | 6,511 |
Series 2006-PW13 Class A3, 5.518% 9/11/41 | | 1,568 | | 1,567 |
Series 2006-PW14 Class X2, 0.6687% 12/11/38 (f)(k)(m) | | 12,399 | | 21 |
Series 2006-T22 Class A4, 5.5802% 4/12/38 (k) | | 164 | | 178 |
Series 2006-T24 Class X2, 0.4448% 10/12/41 (f)(k)(m) | | 2,945 | | 1 |
Series 2007-PW18 Class X2, 0.3099% 6/11/50 (f)(k)(m) | | 85,021 | | 565 |
Series 2007-T28 Class X2, 0.1575% 9/11/42 (f)(k)(m) | | 46,342 | | 159 |
C-BASS Trust floater Series 2006-SC1 Class A, 0.4541% 5/25/36 (f)(k) | | 599 | | 560 |
CDC Commercial Mortgage Trust Series 2002-FX1: | | | | |
Class G, 6.625% 5/15/35 (f) | | 1,544 | | 1,574 |
Class XCL, 1.198% 5/15/35 (f)(k)(m) | | 3,685 | | 59 |
Citigroup Commercial Mortgage Trust Series 2007-C6: | | | | |
Class A2, 5.6962% 12/10/49 (k) | | 10 | | 10 |
Class A4, 5.6962% 12/10/49 (k) | | 4,371 | | 4,895 |
Citigroup/Deutsche Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2007-CD4 Class A4, 5.322% 12/11/49 | | 16,063 | | 17,572 |
Series 2007-CD4 Class A3, 5.293% 12/11/49 | | 1,279 | | 1,306 |
Cobalt CMBS Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
Series 2006-C1 Class B, 5.359% 8/15/48 | | 3,942 | | 236 |
Series 2007-C2 Class B, 5.617% 4/15/47 (k) | | 1,468 | | 1,078 |
COMM pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2005-F10A Class J, 1.0341% 4/15/17 (f)(k) | | 139 | | 134 |
Series 2006-FL12 Class AJ, 0.3141% 12/15/20 (f)(k) | | 604 | | 596 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
COMM pass-thru certificates: - continued | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2007-C9 Class A4, 5.8% 12/10/49 (k) | | $ 2,907 | | $ 3,292 |
Series 2006-C8 Class XP, 0.4666% 12/10/46 (k)(m) | | 13,930 | | 19 |
Credit Suisse Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-C4 Class A3, 5.467% 9/15/39 | | 1,524 | | 1,657 |
Series 2007-C2 Class A2, 5.448% 1/15/49 (k) | | 333 | | 332 |
Series 2007-C3 Class A4, 5.6829% 6/15/39 (k) | | 528 | | 577 |
Series 2006-C5 Class ASP, 0.6595% 12/15/39 (k)(m) | | 9,772 | | 17 |
Series 2007-C5 Class A4, 5.695% 9/15/40 (k) | | 1,189 | | 1,324 |
Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Capital Certificates floater Series 2007-TF2A Class B, 0.5341% 4/15/22 (f)(k) | | 4,688 | | 4,239 |
Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp.: | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2004-C1 Class A4, 4.75% 1/15/37 | | 420 | | 421 |
Series 2001-CK6 Class AX, 1.1621% 8/15/36 (k)(m) | | 276 | | 0* |
Series 2001-CKN5 Class AX, 0.6549% 9/15/34 (f)(k)(m) | | 424 | | 0* |
Series 2006-C1 Class A3, 5.392% 2/15/39 (k) | | 3,211 | | 3,257 |
Credit Suisse Mortgage Capital Certificates: | | | | |
floater Series 2007-TFL1: | | | | |
Class B, 0.3341% 2/15/22 (f)(k) | | 497 | | 492 |
Class C: | | | | |
0.3541% 2/15/22 (f)(k) | | 2,047 | | 2,013 |
0.4541% 2/15/22 (f)(k) | | 731 | | 708 |
Class F, 0.5041% 2/15/22 (f)(k) | | 1,462 | | 1,406 |
Series 2007-C1: | | | | |
Class ASP, 0.3793% 2/15/40 (k)(m) | | 16,196 | | 31 |
Class B, 5.487% 2/15/40 (f)(k) | | 2,009 | | 295 |
Extended Stay America Trust floater Series 2013-ESFL: | | | | |
Class A1FL, 0.9859% 12/5/31 (f)(k) | | 1,420 | | 1,419 |
Class A2FL, 0.8859% 12/5/31 (f)(k) | | 1,520 | | 1,509 |
Class BFL, 1.2859% 12/5/31 (f)(k) | | 5,610 | | 5,611 |
Class CFL, 1.6859% 12/5/31 (f)(k) | | 3,980 | | 3,972 |
GE Capital Commercial Mortgage Corp.: | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2007-C1 Class A4, 5.543% 12/10/49 | | 8,890 | | 9,769 |
Series 2001-1 Class X1, 2.0442% 5/15/33 (f)(k)(m) | | 599 | | 8 |
Series 2007-C1 Class XP, 0.1582% 12/10/49 (k)(m) | | 17,696 | | 21 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Greenwich Capital Commercial Funding Corp.: | | | | |
floater Series 2006-FL4 Class B, 0.3759% 11/5/21 (f)(k) | | $ 494 | | $ 486 |
sequential payer Series 2007-GG9 Class A4, 5.444% 3/10/39 | | 33,895 | | 37,206 |
Series 2007-GG11 Class A1, 0.2307% 12/10/49 (f)(k)(m) | | 20,242 | | 68 |
GS Mortgage Securities Corp. II: | | | | |
floater Series 2007-EOP: | | | | |
Class A2, 1.2601% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 881 | | 882 |
Class C, 2.0056% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 7,500 | | 7,519 |
Class D, 2.2018% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 3,090 | | 3,098 |
Class F, 2.6334% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 136 | | 136 |
Class G, 2.7903% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 67 | | 67 |
Class H, 3.3004% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 62 | | 62 |
Class J, 4.0852% 3/6/20 (f)(k) | | 85 | | 85 |
Series 2006-GG6 Class A2, 5.506% 4/10/38 | | 2,183 | | 2,196 |
GS Mortgage Securities Trust sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-GG8 Class A2, 5.479% 11/10/39 | | 35 | | 35 |
Series 2007-GG10 Class A2, 5.778% 8/10/45 | | 265 | | 267 |
JPMorgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: | | | | |
floater Series 2006-FLA2: | | | | |
Class B, 0.3541% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 563 | | 550 |
Class C, 0.3941% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 400 | | 389 |
Class D, 0.4141% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 178 | | 169 |
Class E, 0.4641% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 255 | | 243 |
Class F, 0.5141% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 383 | | 363 |
Class G, 0.5441% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 332 | | 314 |
Class H, 0.6841% 11/15/18 (f)(k) | | 255 | | 239 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-CB14 Class A3B, 5.4893% 12/12/44 (k) | | 577 | | 585 |
Series 2006-LDP8 Class A4, 5.399% 5/15/45 | | 837 | | 915 |
Series 2006-LDP9 Class A3, 5.336% 5/15/47 | | 11,253 | | 12,332 |
Series 2007-CB19 Class A4, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 4,648 | | 5,178 |
Series 2007-LD11: | | | | |
Class A2, 5.7987% 6/15/49 (k) | | 1,714 | | 1,755 |
Class A4, 5.8137% 6/15/49 (k) | | 33,014 | | 36,773 |
Series 2007-LDPX Class A3, 5.42% 1/15/49 | | 18,477 | | 20,317 |
Series 2005-LDP3 Class A3, 4.959% 8/15/42 | | 76 | | 76 |
Series 2006-CB17 Class A3, 5.45% 12/12/43 | | 108 | | 108 |
Series 2006-LDP7 Class A4, 5.8629% 4/15/45 (k) | | 1,390 | | 1,524 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
JPMorgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: - continued | | | | |
Series 2007-CB19: | | | | |
Class B, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | $ 112 | | $ 43 |
Class C, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 294 | | 60 |
Class D, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 309 | | 35 |
Series 2007-LDP10: | | | | |
Class CS, 5.466% 1/15/49 (k) | | 108 | | 13 |
Class ES, 5.5357% 1/15/49 (f)(k) | | 679 | | 8 |
LB Commercial Conduit Mortgage Trust sequential payer Series 2007-C3 Class A4, 5.8839% 7/15/44 (k) | | 1,054 | | 1,185 |
LB-UBS Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-C1 Class A2, 5.084% 2/15/31 | | 1 | | 1 |
Series 2006-C6 Class A4, 5.372% 9/15/39 | | 591 | | 651 |
Series 2006-C7 Class A2, 5.3% 11/15/38 | | 678 | | 709 |
Series 2007-C1 Class A4, 5.424% 2/15/40 | | 4,069 | | 4,475 |
Series 2007-C2 Class A3, 5.43% 2/15/40 | | 2,427 | | 2,658 |
Series 2006-C6 Class XCP, 0.673% 9/15/39 (k)(m) | | 5,045 | | 1 |
Series 2007-C1 Class XCP, 0.4262% 2/15/40 (k)(m) | | 1,795 | | 3 |
Series 2007-C6 Class A4, 5.858% 7/15/40 (k) | | 1,642 | | 1,798 |
Series 2007-C7: | | | | |
Class A3, 5.866% 9/15/45 | | 2,744 | | 3,009 |
Class XCP, 0.2714% 9/15/45 (k)(m) | | 79,675 | | 306 |
Lehman Brothers Floating Rate Commercial Mortgage Trust floater Series 2006-LLFA: | | | | |
Class D, 0.4141% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 421 | | 417 |
Class E, 0.4741% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 1,518 | | 1,487 |
Class F, 0.5241% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 1,255 | | 1,217 |
Class G, 0.5441% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 2,478 | | 2,379 |
Class H, 0.5841% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 639 | | 601 |
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
Series 2005-LC1 Class F, 5.4193% 1/12/44 (f)(k) | | 1,143 | | 1,006 |
Series 2006-C1 Class A2, 5.6376% 5/12/39 (k) | | 513 | | 514 |
Series 2007-C1 Class A4, 5.8499% 6/12/50 (k) | | 4,974 | | 5,553 |
Series 2008-C1 Class A4, 5.69% 2/12/51 | | 2,805 | | 3,137 |
Merrill Lynch-CFC Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
floater Series 2006-4 Class A2FL, 0.305% 12/12/49 (k) | | 67 | | 67 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-4 Class ASB, 5.133% 12/12/49 (k) | | 714 | | 738 |
Series 2007-5: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.378% 8/12/48 | | 8,380 | | 9,168 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Merrill Lynch-CFC Commercial Mortgage Trust: - continued | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2007-5: | | | | |
Class B, 5.479% 8/12/48 | | $ 3,942 | | $ 1,244 |
Series 2007-6 Class A4, 5.485% 3/12/51 (k) | | 10,897 | | 11,935 |
Series 2007-7 Class A4, 5.7364% 6/12/50 (k) | | 4,599 | | 5,109 |
Series 2006-4 Class XP, 0.6175% 12/12/49 (k)(m) | | 18,655 | | 154 |
Series 2007-6 Class B, 5.635% 3/12/51 (k) | | 1,314 | | 288 |
Series 2007-7 Class B, 5.7364% 6/12/50 (k) | | 114 | | 8 |
Series 2007-8 Class A3, 5.8968% 8/12/49 (k) | | 1,133 | | 1,271 |
Morgan Stanley Capital I Trust: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-XLF Class C, 1.384% 7/15/19 (f)(k) | | 393 | | 294 |
Series 2007-XLFA: | | | | |
Class C, 0.344% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 754 | | 735 |
Class D, 0.374% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 732 | | 705 |
Class E, 0.434% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 916 | | 863 |
Class F, 0.484% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 550 | | 513 |
Class G, 0.524% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 680 | | 627 |
Class H, 0.614% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 428 | | 373 |
Class J, 0.764% 10/15/20 (f)(k) | | 247 | | 94 |
sequential payer Series 2007-HQ11 Class A31, 5.439% 2/12/44 (k) | | 618 | | 629 |
Series 2006-IQ11 Class A4, 5.682% 10/15/42 (k) | | 353 | | 382 |
Series 2006-T23 Class A3, 5.8075% 8/12/41 (k) | | 671 | | 671 |
Series 2007-IQ14: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.692% 4/15/49 (k) | | 10,971 | | 12,112 |
Class AAB, 5.654% 4/15/49 | | 2,639 | | 2,654 |
Class B, 5.7275% 4/15/49 (k) | | 323 | | 56 |
Salomon Brothers Mortgage Securities VII, Inc. Series 2006-C2 Class H, 6.308% 7/18/33 (f) | | 185 | | 73 |
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-WL7A: | | | | |
Class F, 0.5241% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 1,672 | | 1,538 |
Class G, 0.5441% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 1,953 | | 1,796 |
Class J, 0.7841% 9/15/21 (f)(k) | | 434 | | 369 |
Series 2007-WHL8: | | | | |
Class F, 0.6641% 6/15/20 (f)(k) | | 4,581 | | 4,088 |
Class LXR1, 0.8841% 6/15/20 (f)(k) | | 162 | | 141 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2007-C30 Class A5, 5.342% 12/15/43 | | 19,766 | | 21,778 |
Series 2007-C31 Class A4, 5.509% 4/15/47 | | 38,680 | | 42,333 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust: - continued | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2007-C33: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.9241% 2/15/51 (k) | | $ 24,570 | | $ 26,811 |
Class A5, 5.9241% 2/15/51 (k) | | 870 | | 980 |
Series 2005-C19 Class B, 4.892% 5/15/44 | | 1,314 | | 1,364 |
Series 2005-C22: | | | | |
Class B, 5.3802% 12/15/44 (k) | | 2,914 | | 2,370 |
Class F, 5.3802% 12/15/44 (f)(k) | | 2,191 | | 658 |
Series 2006-C23 Class A5, 5.416% 1/15/45 (k) | | 7,210 | | 7,850 |
Series 2007-C30: | | | | |
Class C, 5.483% 12/15/43 (k) | | 3,942 | | 3,173 |
Class D, 5.513% 12/15/43 (k) | | 2,102 | | 1,305 |
Class XP, 0.4764% 12/15/43 (f)(k)(m) | | 10,637 | | 26 |
Series 2007-C31 Class C, 5.6796% 4/15/47 (k) | | 361 | | 251 |
Series 2007-C31A Class A2, 5.421% 4/15/47 | | 5,428 | | 5,436 |
Series 2007-C32: | | | | |
Class D, 5.7482% 6/15/49 (k) | | 987 | | 398 |
Class E, 5.7482% 6/15/49 (k) | | 1,556 | | 481 |
TOTAL COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE SECURITIES (Cost $413,119) | 464,614
|
Municipal Securities - 0.8% |
|
Beaver County Indl. Dev. Auth. Poll. Cont. Rev. Bonds (FirstEnergy Nuclear Generation Corp. Proj.) Series 2005 A, 3.375%, tender 7/1/15 (k) | | 2,300 | | 2,342 |
California Gen. Oblig.: | | | | |
Series 2009, 7.35% 11/1/39 | | 1,255 | | 1,574 |
7.3% 10/1/39 | | 18,960 | | 23,692 |
7.5% 4/1/34 | | 8,780 | | 11,095 |
7.55% 4/1/39 | | 14,130 | | 18,289 |
7.6% 11/1/40 | | 16,260 | | 21,308 |
7.625% 3/1/40 | | 2,920 | | 3,800 |
Chicago Gen. Oblig. (Taxable Proj.) Series 2010 C1, 7.781% 1/1/35 | | 5,595 | | 6,216 |
Illinois Gen. Oblig.: | | | | |
Series 2003, 5.1% 6/1/33 | | 40,890 | | 35,874 |
Series 2010, 4.421% 1/1/15 | | 5,980 | | 6,182 |
Series 2010-1, 6.63% 2/1/35 | | 17,960 | | 17,719 |
Series 2010-3: | | | | |
6.725% 4/1/35 | | 8,580 | | 8,542 |
7.35% 7/1/35 | | 5,140 | | 5,423 |
Municipal Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Illinois Gen. Oblig.: - continued | | | | |
Series 2011: | | | | |
5.665% 3/1/18 | | $ 5,045 | | $ 5,384 |
5.877% 3/1/19 | | 12,490 | | 13,406 |
TOTAL MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (Cost $191,264) | 180,846
|
Foreign Government and Government Agency Obligations - 0.2% |
|
Brazilian Federative Republic 5.625% 1/7/41 | | 5,582 | | 5,387 |
Italian Republic: | | | | |
3.125% 1/26/15 | | 10,287 | | 10,532 |
4.5% 1/21/15 | | 7,717 | | 8,041 |
4.75% 1/25/16 | | 7,716 | | 8,170 |
5.375% 6/12/17 | | 4,630 | | 5,009 |
Russian Federation 3.25% 4/4/17 (f) | | 800 | | 825 |
United Mexican States 4.75% 3/8/44 | | 6,152 | | 5,352 |
TOTAL FOREIGN GOVERNMENT AND GOVERNMENT AGENCY OBLIGATIONS (Cost $44,222) | 43,316
|
Bank Notes - 0.0% |
|
Fifth Third Bank 4.75% 2/1/15 (Cost $971) | | 951 | | 997
|
Preferred Securities - 0.0% |
| | | |
FINANCIALS - 0.0% |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.0% |
MUFG Capital Finance 1 Ltd. 6.346% (g)(k) | 1,204 | | 1,329 |
TOTAL PREFERRED SECURITIES (Cost $1,359) | 1,329
|
Fixed-Income Funds - 9.1% |
| Shares | | |
Fidelity High Income Central Fund 2 (l) | 5,740,220 | | 656,337 |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund (l) | 13,333,790 | | 1,402,181 |
TOTAL FIXED-INCOME FUNDS (Cost $1,957,553) | 2,058,518
|
Money Market Funds - 2.1% |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund, 0.10% (b) | 461,947,286 | | $ 461,947 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund, 0.10% (b)(c) | 5,913,700 | | 5,914 |
TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS (Cost $467,861) | 467,861
|
TOTAL INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO - 102.2% (Cost $19,975,173) | | 23,180,575 |
NET OTHER ASSETS (LIABILITIES) - (2.2)% | | (507,983) |
NET ASSETS - 100% | $ 22,672,592 |
TBA Sale Commitments |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | |
Fannie Mae |
2.5% 9/1/43 | $ (17,500) | | (15,909) |
3% 9/1/43 | (14,700) | | (14,053) |
3% 9/1/43 | (19,400) | | (18,547) |
3% 9/1/43 | (6,800) | | (6,501) |
3% 9/1/43 | (41,000) | | (39,197) |
3% 9/1/43 | (9,000) | | (8,604) |
3% 9/1/43 | (12,500) | | (11,950) |
3% 9/1/43 | (5,800) | | (5,545) |
3.5% 9/1/43 | (63,700) | | (63,526) |
4% 9/1/43 | (17,900) | | (18,458) |
4% 9/1/43 | (21,300) | | (21,964) |
4% 9/1/43 | (17,900) | | (18,458) |
4% 9/1/43 | (6,500) | | (6,703) |
4.5% 9/1/43 | (81,900) | | (86,405) |
4.5% 9/1/43 | (28,500) | | (30,068) |
5% 9/1/43 | (35,600) | | (38,265) |
5.5% 9/1/43 | (8,250) | | (8,956) |
5.5% 9/1/43 | (8,250) | | (8,956) |
TOTAL FANNIE MAE | | (422,065) |
TBA Sale Commitments - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Freddie Mac |
3% 9/1/43 | $ (6,800) | | $ (6,479) |
Ginnie Mae |
3.5% 9/1/43 | (500) | | (504) |
4% 9/1/43 | (10,600) | | (11,005) |
4% 9/1/43 | (4,100) | | (4,257) |
4% 9/1/43 | (4,500) | | (4,672) |
TOTAL GINNIE MAE | | (20,438) |
TOTAL TBA SALE COMMITMENTS (Proceeds $451,132) | $ (448,982) |
Futures Contracts |
| Expiration Date | | Underlying Face Amount at Value (000s) | | Unrealized Appreciation/ (Depreciation) (000s) |
Purchased |
Equity Index Contracts |
2,198 CME E-mini S&P 500 Index Contracts | Sept. 2013 | | $ 179,280 | | $ 1,769 |
The face value of futures purchased as a percentage of net assets is 0.8% |
Swaps |
Credit Default Swaps |
Underlying Reference | Rating (1) | Expiration Date | Clearinghouse/ Counterparty | Fixed Payment Received/ (Paid) | Notional Amount (2) (000s) | Value (1) (000s) | Upfront Premium Received/ (Paid) (000s) | Unrealized Appreciation/ (Depreciation) (000s) |
Sell Protection |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | Credit Suisse | 0.15% | $ 2,403 | $ (2,271) | $ 0 | $ (2,271) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | JPMorgan Chase, Inc. | 0.15% | 1,957 | (1,850) | 0 | (1,850) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | JPMorgan Chase, Inc. | 0.15% | 259 | (245) | 0 | (245) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | Morgan Stanley, Inc. | 0.15% | 1,957 | (1,850) | 0 | (1,850) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | UBS | 0.15% | 1,885 | (1,782) | 0 | (1,782) |
Swaps |
Credit Default Swaps - continued |
Underlying Reference | Rating (1) | Expiration Date | Clearinghouse/ Counterparty | Fixed Payment Received/ (Paid) | Notional Amount (2) (000s) | Value (1) (000s) | Upfront Premium Received/ (Paid) (000s) | Unrealized Appreciation/ (Depreciation) (000s) |
Sell Protection - continued |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | UBS | 0.15% | $ 1,655 | $ (1,564) | $ 0 | $ (1,564) |
Ameriquest Mortgage Securities Inc Series 2004-R11 Class M9 | C | Dec. 2034 | Bank of America | 2.5% | 475 | (444) | 0 | (444) |
TOTAL CREDIT DEFAULT SWAPS | $ (10,006) | $ 0 | $ (10,006) |
(1) Ratings are presented for credit default swaps in which the Fund has sold protection on the underlying referenced debt. Ratings for an underlying index represent a weighted average of the ratings of all securities included in the index. The credit rating or value can be measures of the current payment/performance risk. Ratings are from Moody's Investors Service, Inc. Where Moody's® ratings are not available, S&P® ratings are disclosed and are indicated as such. All ratings are as of the report date and do not reflect subsequent changes. |
|
(2) The notional amount of each credit default swap where the Fund has sold protection approximates the maximum potential amount of future payments that the Fund could be required to make if a credit event were to occur. |
Legend |
(a) Non-income producing |
(b) 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. |
(c) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan. |
(d) Non-income producing - Security is in default. |
(e) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end. |
(f) Security exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers. At the end of the period, the value of these securities amounted to $344,043,000 or 1.5% of net assets. |
(g) Security is perpetual in nature with no stated maturity date. |
(h) Security or a portion of the security purchased on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis. |
(i) Security or a portion of the security was pledged to cover margin requirements for futures contracts. At period end, the value of securities pledged amounted to $8,110,000. |
(j) Security or a portion of the security has been segregated as collateral for open bi-lateral over-the-counter (OTC) swaps. At period end, the value of securities pledged amounted to $12,371,000. |
(k) Coupon rates for floating and adjustable rate securities reflect the rates in effect at period end. |
(l) Affiliated fund that is generally available only to investment companies and other accounts managed by Fidelity Investments. A complete unaudited schedule of portfolio holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is filed with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q and is available upon request or at the SEC's website at www.sec.gov. An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of securities and other investments held indirectly through its investment in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com. 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. |
(m) Security represents right to receive monthly interest payments on an underlying pool of mortgages or assets. Principal shown is the outstanding par amount of the pool as of the end of the period. |
(n) Investment is owned by an entity that is treated as a corporation for U.S. tax purposes and is owned by the Fund. |
(o) Restricted securities - Investment in securities not registered under the Securities Act of 1933 (excluding 144A issues). At the end of the period, the value of restricted securities (excluding 144A issues) amounted to $22,719,000 or 0.1% of net assets. |
Additional information on each restricted holding is as follows: |
Security | Acquisition Date | Acquisition Cost (000s) |
Jumptap, Inc. Series G | 6/29/12 | $ 6,429 |
Legend Pictures LLC | 9/23/10 | $ 6,428 |
* Amount represents less than $1,000. |
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 (Amounts in thousands) |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund | $ 946 |
Fidelity Corporate Bond 1-10 Year Central Fund | 4,753 |
Fidelity High Income Central Fund 2 | 40,119 |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund | 30,238 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund | 1,695 |
Total | $ 77,751 |
Additional information regarding the Fund's fiscal year to date purchases and sales, including the ownership percentage, of the non Money Market Central Funds is as follows: |
Fund (Amounts in thousands) | Value, beginning of period | Purchases | Sales Proceeds | Value, end of period | % ownership, end of period |
Fidelity Corporate Bond 1-10 Year Central Fund | $ 401,162 | $ - | $ 402,521* | $ - | 0.0% |
Fidelity High Income Central Fund 2 | 614,582 | 40,119 | - | 656,337 | 83.0% |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund | 1,971,158 | 322,211 | 830,072 | 1,402,181 | 10.2% |
Total | $ 2,986,902 | $ 362,330 | $ 1,232,593 | $ 2,058,518 | |
* Includes the value of shares redeemed through in-kind transactions. See Note 6 of the Notes to Financial Statements. |
Other Affiliated Issuers |
An affiliated company is a company in which the Fund has ownership of at least 5% of the voting securities. Fiscal year to date transactions with companies which are or were affiliates are as follows: |
Affiliate (Amounts in thousands) | Value, beginning of period | Purchases | Sales Proceeds | Dividend Income | Value, end of period |
Kayak Software Corp. | $ 5,542 | $ 2,376 | $ 11,547 | $ - | $ - |
Total | $ 5,542 | $ 2,376 | $ 11,547 | $ - | $ - |
Other Information |
The following is a summary of the inputs used, as of August 31, 2013, 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 in the table below, please refer to the Investment Valuation section in the accompanying Notes to Financial Statements. |
Valuation Inputs at Reporting Date: |
Description (Amounts in thousands) | Total | Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 |
Investments in Securities: | | | | |
Equities: | | | | |
Consumer Discretionary | $ 1,753,125 | $ 1,737,671 | $ - | $ 15,454 |
Consumer Staples | 1,632,933 | 1,584,948 | 47,985 | - |
Energy | 1,624,832 | 1,624,832 | - | - |
Financials | 2,580,317 | 2,521,239 | 59,078 | - |
Health Care | 1,999,651 | 1,999,651 | - | - |
Industrials | 1,576,298 | 1,576,298 | - | - |
Information Technology | 2,868,678 | 2,868,678 | - | - |
Materials | 593,163 | 593,163 | - | - |
Telecommunication Services | 352,620 | 352,620 | - | - |
Utilities | 514,561 | 514,561 | - | - |
Corporate Bonds | 2,044,642 | - | 2,044,642 | - |
U.S. Government and Government Agency Obligations | 1,357,664 | - | 1,357,664 | - |
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities | 940,402 | - | 940,402 | - |
Asset-Backed Securities | 49,313 | - | 43,468 | 5,845 |
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations | 74,895 | - | 74,020 | 875 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities | 464,614 | - | 464,106 | 508 |
Municipal Securities | 180,846 | - | 180,846 | - |
Foreign Government and Government Agency Obligations | 43,316 | - | 43,316 | - |
Bank Notes | 997 | - | 997 | - |
Preferred Securities | 1,329 | - | 1,329 | - |
Fixed-Income Funds | 2,058,518 | 2,058,518 | - | - |
Money Market Funds | 467,861 | 467,861 | - | - |
Total Investments in Securities: | $ 23,180,575 | $ 17,900,040 | $ 5,257,853 | $ 22,682 |
Valuation Inputs at Reporting Date: |
Description (Amounts in thousands) | Total | Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 |
Derivative Instruments: | | | | |
Assets | | | | |
Futures Contracts | $ 1,769 | $ 1,769 | $ - | $ - |
Liabilities | | | | |
Swaps | $ (10,006) | $ - | $ (10,006) | $ - |
Total Derivative Instruments: | $ (8,237) | $ 1,769 | $ (10,006) | $ - |
Other Financial Instruments: | | | | |
TBA Sale Commitments | $ (448,982) | $ - | $ (448,982) | $ - |
Value of Derivative Instruments |
The following table is a summary of the Fund's value of derivative instruments by primary risk exposure as of August 31, 2013. 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 |
(Amounts in thousands) | Asset | Liability |
Credit Risk | | |
Swaps (b) | $ - | $ (10,006) |
Equity Risk | | |
Futures Contracts (a) | 1,769 | - |
Total Value of Derivatives | $ 1,769 | $ (10,006) |
(a) Reflects gross cumulative appreciation (depreciation) on futures contracts as presented in the Schedule of Investments. Only the period end receivable or payable for daily variation margin and net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) are presented in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. |
(b) For bi-lateral OTC swaps, reflects gross value which is presented in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities in the bi-lateral OTC swaps, at value line-items. |
Other Information |
The composition of credit quality ratings as a percentage of net assets is as follows (Unaudited): |
U.S. Government and U.S. Government Agency Obligations | 14.6% |
AAA,AA,A | 5.5% |
BBB | 6.0% |
BB | 1.2% |
B | 1.8% |
CCC,CC,C | 0.5% |
D | 0.0%* |
Not Rated | 0.3% |
Equities | 68.4% |
Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets | 1.7% |
| 100.0% |
* Amount represents less than 0.1% |
We have used ratings from Moody's Investors Service, Inc. Where Moody's® ratings are not available, we have used S&P® ratings. All ratings are as of the date indicated and do not reflect subsequent changes. |
Distribution of investments by country or territory of incorporation, as a percentage of total net assets, is as follows (Unaudited): |
United States of America | 90.0% |
United Kingdom | 2.4% |
Ireland | 1.5% |
Netherlands | 1.2% |
Others (Individually Less Than 1%) | 4.9% |
| 100.0% |
The information in the above tables is based on the combined investments of the Fund and its pro-rata share of the investments of Fidelity's fixed-income central funds. |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Statement of Assets and Liabilities
Amounts in thousands (except per-share amounts) | August 31, 2013 |
| | |
Assets | | |
Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $5,525) - See accompanying schedule: Unaffiliated issuers (cost $17,549,759) | $ 20,654,196 | |
Fidelity Central Funds (cost $2,425,414) | 2,526,379 | |
Total Investments (cost $19,975,173) | | $ 23,180,575 |
Foreign currency held at value (cost $100) | | 100 |
Receivable for investments sold, regular delivery | | 53,846 |
Receivable for TBA sale commitments | | 451,132 |
Receivable for swaps | | 3 |
Receivable for fund shares sold | | 18,317 |
Dividends receivable | | 25,611 |
Interest receivable | | 35,149 |
Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds | | 51 |
Receivable from investment adviser for expense reductions | | 6 |
Other receivables | | 1,536 |
Total assets | | 23,766,326 |
| | |
Liabilities | | |
Payable to custodian bank | $ 41 | |
Payable for investments purchased Regular delivery | 65,930 | |
Delayed delivery | 521,874 | |
TBA sale commitments, at value | 448,982 | |
Payable for swaps | 945 | |
Payable for fund shares redeemed | 28,041 | |
Bi-lateral OTC swaps, at value | 10,006 | |
Accrued management fee | 7,738 | |
Payable for daily variation margin for derivative instruments | 593 | |
Other affiliated payables | 2,596 | |
Other payables and accrued expenses | 1,074 | |
Collateral on securities loaned, at value | 5,914 | |
Total liabilities | | 1,093,734 |
| | |
Net Assets | | $ 22,672,592 |
Net Assets consist of: | | |
Paid in capital | | $ 18,709,943 |
Undistributed net investment income | | 97,655 |
Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) on investments and foreign currency transactions | | 665,708 |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies | | 3,199,286 |
Net Assets | | $ 22,672,592 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Statement of Assets and Liabilities - continued
Amounts in thousands (except per-share amounts) | August 31, 2013 |
| | |
Balanced: Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($16,342,200 ÷ 747,786 shares) | | $ 21.85 |
| | |
Class K: Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($6,330,392 ÷ 289,670 shares) | | $ 21.85 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Financial Statements - continued
Statement of Operations
Amounts in thousands | Year ended August 31, 2013 |
| | |
Investment Income | | |
Dividends | | $ 265,436 |
Interest | | 153,405 |
Income from Fidelity Central Funds | | 77,751 |
Total income | | 496,592 |
| | |
Expenses | | |
Management fee | $ 87,739 | |
Transfer agent fees | 28,185 | |
Accounting and security lending fees | 2,068 | |
Custodian fees and expenses | 408 | |
Independent trustees' compensation | 132 | |
Appreciation in deferred trustee compensation account | 1 | |
Registration fees | 342 | |
Audit | 158 | |
Legal | 103 | |
Miscellaneous | 201 | |
Total expenses before reductions | 119,337 | |
Expense reductions | (2,513) | 116,824 |
Net investment income (loss) | | 379,768 |
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) Net realized gain (loss) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | 1,519,193 | |
Fidelity Central Funds | 75,359 | |
Other affiliated issuers | 3,376 | |
Foreign currency transactions | (113) | |
Futures contracts | 32,670 | |
Swaps | (12,561) | |
Total net realized gain (loss) | | 1,617,924 |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on: Investment securities | 298,497 | |
Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies | 6 | |
Futures contracts | (5,931) | |
Swaps | 11,962 | |
Delayed delivery commitments | 4,718 | |
Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | | 309,252 |
Net gain (loss) | | 1,927,176 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | | $ 2,306,944 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Statement of Changes in Net Assets
Amounts in thousands | Year ended August 31, 2013 | Year ended August 31, 2012 |
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets | | |
Operations | | |
Net investment income (loss) | $ 379,768 | $ 401,529 |
Net realized gain (loss) | 1,617,924 | (1,032) |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | 309,252 | 1,842,236 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | 2,306,944 | 2,242,733 |
Distributions to shareholders from net investment income | (352,712) | (379,925) |
Share transactions - net increase (decrease) | 99,632 | (947,824) |
Total increase (decrease) in net assets | 2,053,864 | 914,984 |
| | |
Net Assets | | |
Beginning of period | 20,618,728 | 19,703,744 |
End of period (including undistributed net investment income of $97,655 and undistributed net investment income of $84,489, respectively) | $ 22,672,592 | $ 20,618,728 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Financial Highlights - Balanced
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 |
Selected Per-Share Data | | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $ 19.95 | $ 18.17 | $ 16.27 | $ 15.40 | $ 17.71 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | | |
Net investment income (loss) B | .36 | .37 | .35 | .36 | .38 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | 1.88 | 1.76 | 1.91 | .88 | (2.29) |
Total from investment operations | 2.24 | 2.13 | 2.26 | 1.24 | (1.91) |
Distributions from net investment income | (.34) | (.35) | (.35) | (.36) | (.37) |
Distributions from net realized gain | - | - | (.01) | (.01) | (.03) |
Total distributions | (.34) | (.35) | (.36) | (.37) | (.40) |
Net asset value, end of period | $ 21.85 | $ 19.95 | $ 18.17 | $ 16.27 | $ 15.40 |
Total Return A | 11.32% | 11.89% | 13.88% | 8.06% | (10.48)% |
Ratios to Average Net Assets C, E | | | | | |
Expenses before reductions | .58% | .60% | .61% | .62% | .68% |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any | .58% | .60% | .61% | .62% | .68% |
Expenses net of all reductions | .57% | .59% | .60% | .61% | .68% |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.72% | 1.98% | 1.92% | 2.18% | 2.78% |
Supplemental Data | | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (in millions) | $ 16,342 | $ 15,016 | $ 15,602 | $ 16,764 | $ 17,225 |
Portfolio turnover rate D | 244% F | 155% | 193% F | 122% | 198% F |
A Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.
B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
C 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.
D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
E Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or reductions from other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class 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 brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.
F The portfolio turnover rate excludes liquidations and/or redemptions executed in-kind from Affiliated Central Funds.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Financial Highlights - Class K
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 |
Selected Per-Share Data | | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $ 19.95 | $ 18.17 | $ 16.27 | $ 15.40 | $ 17.72 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | | |
Net investment income (loss) B | .39 | .40 | .38 | .38 | .40 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | 1.87 | 1.76 | 1.90 | .88 | (2.29) |
Total from investment operations | 2.26 | 2.16 | 2.28 | 1.26 | (1.89) |
Distributions from net investment income | (.36) | (.38) | (.38) | (.38) | (.40) |
Distributions from net realized gain | - | - | (.01) | (.01) | (.03) |
Total distributions | (.36) | (.38) | (.38) F | (.39) | (.43) |
Net asset value, end of period | $ 21.85 | $ 19.95 | $ 18.17 | $ 16.27 | $ 15.40 |
Total Return A | 11.45% | 12.03% | 14.04% | 8.23% | (10.33)% |
Ratios to Average Net Assets C, E | | | | | |
Expenses before reductions | .47% | .48% | .48% | .48% | .50% |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any | .47% | .48% | .48% | .48% | .50% |
Expenses net of all reductions | .46% | .47% | .47% | .47% | .50% |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.83% | 2.10% | 2.05% | 2.32% | 2.96% |
Supplemental Data | | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (in millions) | $ 6,330 | $ 5,603 | $ 4,102 | $ 2,692 | $ 2,014 |
Portfolio turnover rate D | 244% G | 155% | 193% G | 122% | 198% G |
A Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.
B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
C 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.
D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
E Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or reductions from other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class 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 brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.
F Total distributions of $.38 per share is comprised of distributions from net investment income of $.376 and distributions from net realized gain of $.008 per share.
G The portfolio turnover rate excludes liquidations and/or redemptions executed in-kind from Affiliated Central Funds.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements
For the period ended August 31, 2013
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
1. Organization.
Fidelity Balanced Fund (the Fund) is a fund of Fidelity Puritan 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. The Fund offers Balanced and Class K shares, each of which has equal rights as to assets and voting privileges. Each class has exclusive voting rights with respect to matters that affect that class.
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 Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) 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.
Based on its investment objective, each Fidelity Central Fund may invest or participate in various investment vehicles or strategies that are similar to those of the Fund. These strategies are consistent with the investment objectives of the Fund and may involve certain economic risks which may cause a decline in value of each of the Fidelity Central Funds and thus a decline in the value of the Fund. The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), an affiliate of FMR. The following summarizes the Fund's investment in each non-money market Fidelity Central Fund.
Fidelity Central Fund | Investment Manager | Investment Objective | Investment Practices |
Fidelity High Income Central Fund 2 | FMR Co., Inc. (FMRC) | Seeks a high level of income and may also seek capital appreciation by investing primarily in debt securities, preferred stocks, and convertible securities, with an emphasis on lower-quality debt securities. | Loans & Direct Debt Instruments Repurchase Agreements Restricted Securities |
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2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds - continued
Fidelity Central Fund | Investment Manager | Investment Objective | Investment Practices |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund | FIMM | Seeks a high level of income by normally investing in investment-grade mortgage-related securities and repurchase agreements for those securities. | Delayed Delivery & When Issued Securities Repurchase Agreements Options Swaps |
An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of any securities and other investments held indirectly through its investment in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com. 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 contain the significant accounting policies (including investment valuation policies) of those 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 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. In accordance with valuation policies and procedures approved by the Board of Trustees (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 FMR Fair Value Committee (the Committee), in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board. Factors used in determining fair value vary by investment type and may include market or investment specific events, changes in interest rates and credit quality. The frequency with which these procedures are used cannot be predicted and they may be utilized to a significant extent. The Committee oversees the Fund's valuation policies and procedures and is responsible for approving and reporting to the Board all fair value determinations.
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Valuation - continued
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. Utilizing these techniques may result in transfers between Level 1 and Level 2. For restricted equity securities and private placements where observable inputs are limited, assumptions about market activity and risk are used and these securities are generally categorized as Level 3 in the hierarchy.
Debt securities, including restricted securities, are valued based on evaluated prices received from third party pricing vendors or from brokers who make markets in such securities. For corporate bonds, bank notes, foreign government and government agency obligations, municipal securities, preferred securities and U.S. government and government agency obligations, pricing vendors utilize matrix pricing which considers yield or price of bonds of comparable quality, coupon, maturity and type as well as broker-supplied prices. For asset backed securities, collateralized mortgage obligations, commercial mortgage securities and U.S. government agency mortgage securities, pricing vendors utilize matrix pricing which considers prepayment speed assumptions, attributes of the collateral, yield or price of bonds of comparable quality, coupon, maturity and type as well as broker-supplied prices. Swaps are marked-to-market daily based on valuations from third party pricing vendors, registered derivates clearing organizations
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3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Valuation - continued
(clearinghouses) or broker-supplied valuations. These pricing sources may utilize inputs such as interest rate curves, credit spread curves, default possibilities and recovery rates. When independent prices are unavailable or unreliable, debt securities and swaps may be valued utilizing pricing methodologies which consider similar factors that would be used by third party pricing vendors. Debt securities and swaps are generally categorized as Level 2 in the hierarchy but may be Level 3 depending on the circumstances.
Futures contracts are valued at the settlement price established each day by the board of trade or exchange on which they are traded and are categorized as Level 1 in the hierarchy. Investments in open-end mutual funds, including the Fidelity Central Funds, are valued at their closing net asset value (NAV) each business day and are categorized as Level 1 in the hierarchy.
Changes in valuation techniques may result in transfers in or out of an assigned level within the disclosure hierarchy. The aggregate value of investments by input level, as of August 31, 2013 is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
Foreign Currency. The Fund may use foreign currency contracts to facilitate transactions in foreign-denominated securities. Gains and losses from these transactions may arise from changes in the value of the foreign currency or if the counterparties do not perform under the contracts' terms.
Foreign-denominated assets, including investment securities, and liabilities are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rates at period end. Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and dividends received and expenses denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate in effect on the transaction date.
The effects of exchange rate fluctuations on investments are included with the net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investment securities. Other foreign currency transactions resulting in realized and unrealized gain (loss) are disclosed separately.
Investment Transactions and Income. For financial reporting purposes, the Fund's investment holdings and NAV include trades executed through the end of the last business day of the period. The NAV per share for processing shareholder transactions is calculated as of the close of business of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time and includes trades executed through the end of the prior business day. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of identified cost and may include proceeds received from litigation. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date, except for certain dividends from foreign securities where the
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Transactions and Income - continued
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. Distributions received on securities that represent a return of capital or capital gain are recorded as a reduction of cost of investments and/or as a realized gain. Subsequent to ex-dividend date the Fund determines the components of these distributions, based upon receipt of tax filings or other correspondence relating to the underlying investment. Interest income and distributions from the Fidelity Central Funds are accrued as earned. Interest income includes coupon interest and amortization of premium and accretion of discount on debt securities. The principal amount on inflation-indexed securities is periodically adjusted to the rate of inflation and interest is accrued based on the principal amount. The adjustments to principal due to inflation are reflected as increases or decreases to Interest in the accompanying Statement of Operations. Investment income is recorded net of foreign taxes withheld where recovery of such taxes is uncertain. Debt obligations may be placed on non-accrual status and related interest income may be reduced by ceasing current accruals and writing off interest receivables when the collection of all or a portion of interest has become doubtful based on consistently applied procedures. A debt obligation is removed from non-accrual status when the issuer resumes interest payments or when collectability of interest is reasonably assured.
Class Allocations and Expenses. Investment income, realized and unrealized capital gains and losses, common expenses of the Fund, and certain fund-level expense reductions, if any, are allocated on a pro-rata basis to each class based on the relative net assets of each class to the total net assets of the Fund. Each class differs with respect to transfer agent fees incurred. Certain expense reductions may also differ by class. 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.
Deferred Trustee Compensation. Under a Deferred Compensation Plan (the Plan), independent Trustees may elect to defer receipt of a portion of their annual compensation. Deferred amounts are invested in a cross-section of Fidelity funds, are marked-to-market and remain in the Fund until distributed in accordance with the Plan. The investment of deferred amounts and the offsetting payable to the Trustees are included in the accompanying Statement of Assets and Liabilities.
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
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3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders - continued
realized gains. As a result, no provision for U.S. Federal income taxes is required. As of August 31, 2013, the Fund did not have any unrecognized tax benefits in the financial statements; nor is the Fund aware of any tax positions for which it is reasonably possible that the total amounts of unrecognized tax benefits will significantly change in the next twelve months. The Fund files a U.S. federal tax return, in addition to state and local tax returns as required. The Fund's federal income tax returns are subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for a period of three fiscal years after they are filed. State and local tax returns may be subject to examination for an additional fiscal year depending on the jurisdiction. Foreign taxes are provided for based on the Fund's understanding of the tax rules and rates that exist in the foreign markets in which it invests.
Distributions are declared and recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income dividends and capital gain distributions are declared separately for each class. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from GAAP. In addition, the Fund claimed a portion of the payment made to redeeming shareholders as a distribution for income tax purposes.
Capital accounts within the financial statements are adjusted for permanent book-tax differences. These adjustments have no impact on net assets or the results of operations. Temporary book-tax differences will reverse in a subsequent period.
Book-tax differences are primarily due to futures contracts, swap agreements, foreign currency transactions, passive foreign investment companies (PFIC), market discount, partnerships (including allocations from Fidelity Central Funds), deferred trustees compensation, capital loss carryforwards and losses deferred due to wash sales and excise tax regulations.
The federal tax cost of investment securities and unrealized appreciation (depreciation) as of period end were as follows:
Gross unrealized appreciation | $ 3,291,797 |
Gross unrealized depreciation | (272,766) |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities and other investments | $ 3,019,031 |
| |
Tax Cost | $ 20,161,544 |
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders - continued
The tax-based components of distributable earnings as of period end were as follows:
Undistributed ordinary income | $ 77,396 |
Undistributed long-term capital gain | $ 874,797 |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | $ 3,011,146 |
The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:
| August 31, 2013 | August 31, 2012 |
Ordinary Income | $ 352,712 | $ 379,925 |
Delayed Delivery Transactions and When-Issued Securities. During the period, the Fund transacted in securities on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis. Payment and delivery may take place after the customary settlement period for that security. The price of the underlying securities and the date when the securities will be delivered and paid for are fixed at the time the transaction is negotiated. The securities purchased on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis are identified as such in the Fund's Schedule of Investments. The Fund may receive compensation for interest forgone in the purchase of a delayed delivery or when-issued security. With respect to purchase commitments, the Fund identifies securities as segregated in its records with a value at least equal to the amount of the commitment. Losses may arise due to changes in the value of the underlying securities or if the counterparty does not perform under the contract's terms, or if the issuer does not issue the securities due to political, economic, or other factors.
To-Be-Announced (TBA) Securities and Mortgage Dollar Rolls. During the period, the Fund transacted in TBA securities that involved buying or selling mortgage-backed securities (MBS) on a forward commitment basis. A TBA transaction typically does not designate the actual security to be delivered and only includes an approximate principal amount; however delivered securities must meet specified terms defined by industry guidelines, including issuer, rate and current principal amount outstanding on underlying mortgage pools. The Fund may enter into a TBA transaction with the intent to take possession of or deliver the underlying MBS, or the Fund may elect to extend the settlement by entering into either a mortgage or reverse mortgage dollar roll. Mortgage dollar rolls are transactions where a fund sells TBA securities and simultaneously agrees to repurchase MBS on a later date at a lower price and with the same counterparty. Reverse mortgage dollar rolls involve the purchase and simultaneous agreement to sell TBA securities on a later date at a lower price. Transactions in mortgage dollar rolls and reverse mortgage dollar rolls are accounted for as purchases and sales and may result in an increase to the Fund's portfolio turnover rate.
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3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
To-Be-Announced (TBA) Securities and Mortgage Dollar Rolls - continued
Purchases and sales of TBA securities involve risks similar to those discussed above for delayed delivery and when-issued securities. Also, if the counterparty in a mortgage dollar roll or a reverse mortgage dollar roll transaction files for bankruptcy or becomes insolvent, the Fund's right to repurchase or sell securities may be limited. Additionally, when a fund sells TBA securities without already owning or having the right to obtain the deliverable securities (an uncovered forward commitment to sell), it incurs a risk of loss because it could have to purchase the securities at a price that is higher than the price at which it sold them. A fund may be unable to purchase the deliverable securities if the corresponding market is illiquid.
TBA securities subject to a forward commitment to sell at period end are included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments under the caption "TBA Sale Commitments." The proceeds and value of these commitments are reflected in the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities as Receivable for TBA sale commitments and TBA sale commitments, at value, respectively.
Restricted Securities. The Fund may invest in securities that are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale. These securities generally may be resold in transactions exempt from registration or to the public if the securities are registered. Disposal of these securities may involve time-consuming negotiations and expense, and prompt sale at an acceptable price may be difficult. Information regarding restricted securities is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
New Accounting Pronouncement. The Financial Accounting Standards Board issued in December 2011, Accounting Standard Update No. 2011-11, Disclosures about Offsetting Assets and Liabilities, and in January 2013, Accounting Standards Update No. 2013-1 Clarifying the Scope of Disclosures about Offsetting Assets and Liabilities. These updates create new disclosure requirements requiring entities to disclose both gross and net information for derivatives and other financial instruments that are either offset in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities or subject to an enforceable master netting arrangement or similar agreement. The disclosure requirements are effective for annual reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2013, and interim periods within those annual periods. Management expects that the impact of the updates' adoption will be limited to additional financial statement disclosures as applicable.
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 and swaps. Derivatives are investments whose value is primarily
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Risk Exposures and the Use of Derivative Instruments - continued
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, to gain exposure to certain types of assets 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 risks:
Credit Risk | Credit risk relates to the ability of the issuer of a financial instrument to make further principal or interest payments on an obligation or commitment that it has to the Fund. |
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. Derivative counterparty credit risk is managed through formal evaluation of the creditworthiness of all potential counterparties. On certain OTC derivatives such as bi-lateral swaps, the Fund attempts to reduce its exposure to counterparty credit risk by entering into an International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. (ISDA) Master Agreement with each of its counterparties. The ISDA Master Agreement gives the Fund the right to terminate all transactions traded under such agreement upon the deterioration in the credit quality of the counterparty beyond specified levels. The ISDA Master Agreement gives each party the right, upon an event of default by the other party or a termination of the agreement, to close out all transactions traded under such agreement and to net amounts owed under each transaction to one net payable by one party to the other. To mitigate counterparty credit risk on bi-lateral OTC derivatives, the Fund receives collateral in the form of cash or securities once the Fund's net unrealized appreciation on outstanding derivative contracts under an ISDA Master Agreement
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4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Risk Exposures and the Use of Derivative Instruments - continued
exceeds certain applicable thresholds, subject to certain minimum transfer provisions. The collateral received is held in segregated accounts with the Fund's custodian bank in accordance with the collateral agreements entered into between the Fund, the counterparty and the Fund's custodian bank. The Fund could experience delays and costs in gaining access to the collateral even though it is held by the Fund's custodian bank. The Fund's maximum risk of loss from counterparty credit risk related to bi-lateral OTC derivatives is generally the aggregate unrealized appreciation and unpaid counterparty payments in excess of any collateral pledged by the counterparty to the Fund. The Fund may be required to pledge collateral for the benefit of the counterparties on bi-lateral OTC derivatives in an amount not less than each counterparty's unrealized appreciation on outstanding derivative contracts, subject to certain minimum transfer provisions, and any such pledged collateral is identified in the Schedule of Investments. Exchange-traded futures contracts are not covered by the ISDA Master Agreement; however 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.
Net Realized Gain (Loss) and Change in Net Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) on Derivatives. The table below, which reflects the impacts of derivatives on the financial performance of the Fund, summarizes the net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) for derivatives during the period as presented in the Statement of Operations.
Primary Risk Exposure / Derivative Type | Net Realized Gain (Loss) | Change in Net Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) |
Credit Risk | | |
Swaps | $ (12,561) | $ 11,962 |
Equity Risk | | |
Futures Contracts | 32,670 | (5,931) |
Totals (a) | $ 20,109 | $ 6,031 |
(a) 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 and is
representative of activity for the period.
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.
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Futures Contracts - continued
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 for derivative instruments 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 included 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 underlying face amount at value reflects each contract's exposure to the underlying instrument or index at period end. Securities deposited to meet initial margin requirements are identified in the Schedule of Investments.
Swaps. A swap is a contract between two parties to exchange future cash flows at periodic intervals based on a notional principal amount. A bi-lateral OTC swap is a transaction between a fund and a dealer counterparty where cash flows are exchanged between the two parties for the life of the swap.
Bi-lateral OTC swaps are marked-to-market daily and changes in value are reflected in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities in the bi-lateral OTC swaps at value line items. Any upfront premiums paid or received upon entering a bi-lateral OTC swap to compensate for differences between stated terms of the swap and prevailing market conditions (e.g. credit spreads, interest rates or other factors) are recorded in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities and amortized to realized gain or (loss) ratably over the term of the swap. Any unamortized upfront premiums are presented in the Schedule of Investments.
Payments are exchanged at specified intervals, accrued daily commencing with the effective date of the contract and recorded as realized gain or (loss). Realized gain or (loss) is also recorded in the event of an early termination of a swap. The net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on swaps during the period is included in the Statement of Operations.
Any open swaps at period end are included in the Schedule of Investments under the caption "Swaps."
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4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Credit Default Swaps. Credit default swaps enable the Fund to buy or sell protection against specified credit events on a single-name issuer or a traded credit index. Under the terms of a credit default swap the buyer of protection (buyer) receives credit protection in exchange for making periodic payments to the seller of protection (seller) based on a fixed percentage applied to a notional principal amount. In return for these payments, the seller will be required to make a payment upon the occurrence of one or more specified credit events. The Fund enters into credit default swaps as a seller to gain credit exposure to an issuer and/or as a buyer to obtain a measure of protection against defaults of an issuer. Periodic payments are made over the life of the contract by the buyer provided that no credit event occurs.
For credit default swaps on most corporate and sovereign issuers, credit events include bankruptcy, failure to pay or repudiation/moratorium. For credit default swaps on corporate or sovereign issuers, the obligation that may be put to the seller is not limited to the specific reference obligation described in the Schedule of Investments. For credit default swaps on asset-backed securities, a credit event may be triggered by events such as failure to pay principal, maturity extension, rating downgrade or write-down. For credit default swaps on asset-backed securities, the reference obligation described represents the security that may be put to the seller. For credit default swaps on a traded credit index, a specified credit event may affect all or individual underlying securities included in the index.
As a seller, if an underlying credit event occurs, the Fund will pay a net settlement amount of cash equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index. Only in the event of the industry's inability to value the underlying asset will the Fund be required to take delivery of the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index and pay an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap.
As a buyer, if an underlying credit event occurs, the Fund will receive a net settlement amount of cash equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index. Only in the event of the industry's inability to value the underlying asset will the Fund be required to deliver the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index in exchange for payment of an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap.
Typically, the value of each credit default swap and credit rating disclosed for each reference obligation in the Schedule of Investments, where the Fund is the seller, can be used as measures of the current payment/performance risk of the swap. As the value of the swap changes as a positive or negative percentage of the total notional amount, the payment/performance risk may decrease or increase, respectively. In addition to these measures, FMR monitors a variety of factors including cash flow assumptions, market
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Credit Default Swaps - continued
activity and market sentiment as part of its ongoing process of assessing payment/performance risk.
5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.
Purchases and sales of securities (including the Fixed-Income Central Funds), other than short-term securities, U.S. government securities and liquidations executed in-kind from Affiliated Central Funds, aggregated $15,698,281 and $15,491,420, respectively.
6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.
Management Fee. FMR and its affiliates provide the Fund with investment management related services for which the Fund pays a monthly management fee. The management fee is the sum of an individual fund fee rate that is based on an annual rate of .15% of the Fund's average net assets and an annualized group fee rate that averaged .26% during the period. The group fee rate is based upon the average net assets of all the mutual funds advised by FMR, including any mutual funds previously advised by FMR that are currently advised by Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, an affiliate of FMR. The group fee rate decreases as assets under management increase and increases as assets under management decrease. For the period, the total annual management fee rate was .40% of the Fund's average net assets.
Transfer Agent Fees. Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc., (FIIOC), an affiliate of FMR, is the transfer, dividend disbursing and shareholder servicing agent for each class of the Fund. FIIOC receives account fees and asset-based fees that vary according to the account size and type of account of the shareholders of Balanced. FIIOC receives an asset-based fee of Class K's average net assets. FIIOC pays for typesetting, printing and mailing of shareholder reports, except proxy statements.
For the period, transfer agent fees for each class were as follows:
| Amount | % of Average Net Assets |
Balanced | $ 25,180 | .16 |
Class K | 3,005 | .05 |
| $ 28,185 | |
Accounting and Security Lending Fees. Fidelity Service Company, Inc. (FSC), an affiliate of FMR, maintains the Fund's accounting records. The accounting fee is based on
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6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates - continued
Accounting and Security Lending Fees - continued
the level of average net assets for each month. Under a separate contract, FSC administers the security lending program. The security lending fee is based on the number and duration of lending transactions.
Brokerage Commissions. The Fund placed a portion of its portfolio transactions with brokerage firms which are affiliates of the investment adviser. Brokerage commissions are included in net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in the Statement of Operations. The commissions paid to these affiliated firms were $424 for the period.
Other Affiliated Transactions. On January 4, 2013, the Fidelity Corporate Bond 1-10 Year Central Fund ("1-10 Year"), a Fidelity Central Fund in which the Fund was invested, was liquidated pursuant to a Plan of Liquidation and Dissolution approved by the 1-10 Year Board. Under the plan, 1-10 Year distributed in-kind all of its net assets to its shareholders pro rata at its NAV per share as of the close of business on the liquidation date. As a result, the Fund received cash and securities, including accrued interest, of $347,566 in return for 3,056 shares of 1-10 Year. Because 1-10 Year was a partnership for federal income tax purposes, the liquidation generally was tax free to the Fund.
7. Committed Line of Credit.
The Fund participates with other funds managed by FMR 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 Fund has agreed to pay commitment fees on its pro-rata portion of the line of credit, which amounted to $50 and is reflected in Miscellaneous expenses on the Statement of Operations. 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, a lending agent is used and may loan securities to certain qualified borrowers, including Fidelity Capital Markets (FCM), a broker-dealer affiliated with the Fund. 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. If the borrower defaults on its obligation to return the securities loaned because of insolvency or other reasons, the Fund may
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
8. Security Lending - continued
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 maintained at the Fund's custodian and/or invested in cash equivalents and/or 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 FCM. 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. Total security lending income during the period, presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of interest income, amounted to $251. Net income from the Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund during the period, presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of income from Fidelity Central Funds, amounted to $1,695 (including $11 from securities loaned to FCM).
9. Expense Reductions.
Commissions paid to certain brokers with whom FMR, or its affiliates, places trades on behalf of the Fund include an amount in addition to trade execution, which may be rebated back to the Fund to offset certain expenses. This amount totaled $2,474 for the period. In addition, through arrangements with the Fund's custodian, credits realized as a result of uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses. During the period, these credits reduced the Fund's custody expenses by $6.
In addition, FMR reimbursed a portion of the Fund's operating expenses during the period in the amount of $33.
10. Distributions to Shareholders.
Distributions to shareholders of each class were as follows:
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 |
From net investment income | | |
Balanced | $ 249,039 | $ 281,775 |
Class K | 103,673 | 98,150 |
Total | $ 352,712 | $ 379,925 |
Annual Report
11. Share Transactions.
Transactions for each class of shares were as follows:
| Shares | Dollars |
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 | 2013 | 2012 |
Balanced | | | | |
Shares sold | 125,541 | 101,057 | $ 2,652,879 | $ 1,914,819 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 11,563 | 14,566 | 238,686 | 271,000 |
Shares redeemed | (141,860) | (221,553) | (2,965,223) | (4,157,808) |
Net increase (decrease) | (4,756) | (105,930) | $ (73,658) | $ (1,971,989) |
Class K | | | | |
Shares sold | 69,664 | 117,984 | $ 1,451,163 | $ 2,217,745 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 5,019 | 5,255 | 103,673 | 98,150 |
Shares redeemed | (65,784) | (68,166) | (1,381,546) | (1,291,730) |
Net increase (decrease) | 8,899 | 55,073 | $ 173,290 | $ 1,024,165 |
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.
Annual Report
To the Trustees of Fidelity Puritan Trust and the Shareholders of Fidelity Balanced Fund:
In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the schedule of investments, and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Fidelity Balanced Fund (a fund of Fidelity Puritan Trust) at August 31, 2013, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as "financial statements") are the responsibility of the Fidelity Balanced Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at August 31, 2013 by correspondence with the custodian and brokers, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
October 18, 2013
Annual Report
The Trustees, Member of the Advisory Board, and executive 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 Ronald P. O'Hanley, James C. Curvey, Ned C. Lautenbach and William S. Stavropoulos, each of the Trustees oversees 166 funds. Ronald P. O'Hanley, Ned C. Lautenbach and William S. Stavropoulos each oversees 230 funds. James C. Curvey oversees 387 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 of the trust and the fund (as defined in the 1940 Act) (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. The executive officers and Advisory Board Member hold office without limit in time, except that any officer and 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.
Experience, Skills, Attributes, and Qualifications of the Fund's 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.
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Trustees and Officers - continued
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. James C. Curvey is an interested person (as defined in the 1940 Act) 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. Ned C. Lautenbach 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 Board oversees Fidelity's equity and high income funds and another Board oversees Fidelity's investment-grade bond, money market, and asset allocation funds. The asset allocation funds may invest in Fidelity funds overseen by the fund Board. The use of separate Boards, each with its own committee structure, allows the Trustees of each group of Fidelity funds to focus on the unique issues of the funds they oversee, including common research, investment, and operational issues. On occasion, the separate Boards establish joint committees to address issues of overlapping consequences for the Fidelity funds overseen by each Board.
The Trustees operate using a system of committees to facilitate the timely and efficient consideration of all matters of importance to the Trustees, the fund, and fund shareholders and to facilitate compliance with legal and regulatory requirements and oversight of the fund's activities and associated risks. The Board, acting through its committees, has charged FMR and its affiliates with (i) identifying events or circumstances the occurrence of which could have demonstrably adverse effects on the fund's business and/or reputation; (ii) implementing processes and controls to lessen the possibility that such events or circumstances occur or to mitigate the effects of such events or circumstances if they do occur; and (iii) creating and maintaining a system designed to evaluate continuously business and market conditions in order to facilitate the identification and implementation processes described in (i) and (ii) above. Because the day-to-day operations and activities of the fund are carried out by or through FMR, its affiliates and other service providers, the fund's exposure to risks is mitigated but not eliminated by the processes overseen by the Trustees. While each of the Board's committees has responsibility for overseeing different aspects of the fund's activities, oversight is exercised primarily through the Operations, Audit, and Compliance Committees. In addition, the Independent Trustees have 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. For example, a working group comprised of Independent Trustees and FMR has worked and continues to work to review the Fidelity funds' valuation-related activities, reporting and risk management. 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 FMR'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 Fund's Trustees."
Annual Report
The fund's Statement of Additional Information (SAI) includes more information about the Trustees. To request a free copy, call Fidelity at 1-800-835-5092.
Interested Trustees*:
Correspondence intended for each 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+ |
James C. Curvey (1935) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2007 Mr. Curvey is Trustee and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of certain Trusts. Mr. Curvey also serves as Trustee (2007-present) of other investment companies advised by FMR. Mr. Curvey is a Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2009-present), Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Co. (2009-present) and Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2007-present). Mr. Curvey is also Vice Chairman (2007-present) and Director of FMR LLC. In addition, Mr. Curvey serves as an Overseer for the Boston Symphony Orchestra and a member of the Trustees of Villanova University. Previously, Mr. Curvey was the Vice Chairman (2006-2007) and Director (2000-2007) of FMR Corp. |
Ronald P. O'Hanley (1957) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2011 Mr. O'Hanley serves as a Trustee and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of other Fidelity funds (2013-present), and is Director of FMR Co., Inc. (2010-present), Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2010-present), Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2010-present), President of Fidelity Asset Management and Corporate Services and a Member of Fidelity's Executive Committee (2010-present). Previously, Mr. O'Hanley served as President and Chief Executive Officer of BNY Mellon Asset Management (2007-2010). Mr. O'Hanley also served as Vice Chairman of Bank New York Mellon Corp. and a member of that firm's Executive Committee. Prior to the 2007 merger of The Bank of New York and Mellon Financial Corporation, he was Vice Chairman of Mellon Financial Corporation and President and Chief Executive Officer of Mellon Asset Management. He joined Mellon in February 1997. Mr. O'Hanley currently serves as Chairman of the Boston Public Library Foundation Board of Directors and sits on the Board of Directors of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, the Board of Trustees of the Marine Biological Laboratory and the Advisory Board of the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Administration at Syracuse University. Mr. O'Hanley also chairs the Council on Asset Management for the Financial Services Roundtable and is a member of the Board of Directors of Institutional Investor's U.S. Institute. |
* Trustees have been determined to be "Interested Trustees" by virtue of, among other things, their affiliation with the trust or various entities under common control with FMR.
+ The information above includes each Trustee's principal occupation during the last five years and other information relating to the experience, attributes, and skills relevant to each Trustee's qualifications to serve as a Trustee, which led to the conclusion that each Trustee should serve as a Trustee for the fund.
Annual Report
Independent Trustees:
Correspondence intended for each Independent Trustee (that is, the Trustees other than the Interested Trustees) may be sent to Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 55235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-5235.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupations and Other Relevant Experience+ |
Dennis J. Dirks (1948) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2005 Prior to his retirement in May 2003, Mr. Dirks was Chief Operating Officer and a member of the Board of The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC). He also served as President, Chief Operating Officer, and Board member of The Depository Trust Company (DTC) and President and Board member of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC). In addition, Mr. Dirks served as Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Government Securities Clearing Corporation, Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Mortgage-Backed Securities Clearing Corporation, as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of Manhattan College (2005-2008), and as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of AHRC of Nassau County (2006-2008). Mr. Dirks is a member of the Independent Directors Council (IDC) Governing Council (2010-present) and Board of Directors for The Brookville Center for Children's Services, Inc. (2009-present). |
Alan J. Lacy (1953) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Mr. Lacy serves as Senior Adviser (2007-present) of Oak Hill Capital Partners, L.P. (private equity). Mr. Lacy also served as Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) and Vice Chairman (2005-2006) of Sears Holdings Corporation and Sears, Roebuck and Co. (retail). In addition, Mr. Lacy serves as a member of the Board of Directors of Dave & Buster's Entertainment, Inc. (restaurant and entertainment complexes, 2010-present), Earth Fare, Inc. (retail grocery, 2012-present), The Hillman Companies, Inc. (hardware wholesalers, 2010-present), and Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (global pharmaceuticals, 2008-present). Mr. Lacy is a member of the Board of Trustees of The National Parks Conservation Association (2006-present). Previously, Mr. Lacy served as Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the National Parks Conservation Association (2008-2011) and as a member of the Board of Directors for the Western Union Company (global money transfer, 2006-2011). |
Ned C. Lautenbach (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2000 Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Independent Trustees of the Equity and High Income Funds (2006-present) and serves as a Trustee of other Fidelity funds (2013-present). Mr. Lautenbach currently serves as the Lead Director of the Eaton Corporation Board of Directors (diversified industrial, 1997-present). Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Philharmonic Center for the Arts in Naples, Florida (2012-present) and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations (1994-present). Previously, Mr. Lautenbach was a Partner/Advisory Partner at Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, LLC (private equity investment, 1998-2010), as well as a Director of Sony Corporation (2006-2007). |
Joseph Mauriello (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Prior to his retirement in January 2006, Mr. Mauriello served in numerous senior management positions including Deputy Chairman and Chief Operating Officer (2004-2005), and Vice Chairman of Financial Services (2002-2004) of KPMG LLP US (professional services, 1965-2005). Mr. Mauriello currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of XL Group plc. (global insurance and re-insurance, 2006-present). Previously, Mr. Mauriello served as a Director of the Hamilton Funds of the Bank of New York (2006-2007) and of Arcadia Resources Inc. (health care services and products, 2007-2012). |
Robert W. Selander (1950) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2011 Previously, Mr. Selander served as a Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2011), Executive Vice Chairman (2010), Chief Executive Officer (2009-2010), and President and Chief Executive Officer (1997-2009) of Mastercard, Inc. |
Cornelia M. Small (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2005 Ms. Small is a member of the Board of Directors (2009-present) and Chair of the Investment Committee (2010-present) of the Teagle Foundation. Ms. Small also serves on the Investment Committee of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Small served as Chairperson (2002-2008) and a member of the Investment Committee and Chairperson (2008-2012) and a member of the Board of Trustees of Smith College. In addition, Ms. Small served as Chief Investment Officer, Director of Global Equity Investments, and a member of the Board of Directors of Scudder, Stevens & Clark and Scudder Kemper Investments. |
William S. Stavropoulos (1939) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2001 Mr. Stavropoulos is Vice Chairman of the Independent Trustees of the Equity and High Income Funds (2006-present) and serves as a Trustee of other Fidelity funds (2013-present). Mr. Stavropoulos serves as President and Founder of the Michigan Baseball Foundation, the Great Lakes Loons (2007-present). Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman Emeritus of the Board of Directors of The Dow Chemical Company, where he previously served in numerous senior management positions, including President, CEO (1995-2000; 2002-2004), Chairman of the Executive Committee (2000-2006), and as a member of the Board of Directors (1990-2006). Currently, Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman of the Board of Directors of Univar Inc. (global distributor of commodity and specialty chemicals), a Director of Teradata Corporation (data warehousing and technology solutions), and Maersk Inc. (industrial conglomerate), and a member of the Advisory Board for Metalmark Capital LLC (private equity investment, 2005-present). Mr. Stavropoulos is an operating advisor to Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, LLC (private equity investment). In addition, Mr. Stavropoulos is a member of the University of Notre Dame Advisory Council for the College of Science, a Trustee of the Rollin L. Gerstacker Foundation, and a Director of the Naples Philharmonic Center for the Arts. Previously, Mr. Stavropoulos served as a Director of Chemical Financial Corporation (bank holding company, 1993-2012) and Tyco International, Ltd. (multinational manufacturing and services, 2007-2012). |
David M. Thomas (1949) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Previously, Mr. Thomas served as Executive Chairman (2005-2006) and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) of IMS Health, Inc. (pharmaceutical and healthcare information solutions), and a Director of Fortune Brands, Inc. (consumer products, 2000-2011). In addition, Mr. Thomas serves as Non-Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors of Fortune Brands Home and Security (home and security products, 2011-present), and as a member of the Board of Directors of Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (marketing communication, 2004-present). |
+ The information above includes each Trustee's principal occupation during the last five years and other information relating to the experience, attributes, and skills relevant to each Trustee's qualifications to serve as a Trustee, which led to the conclusion that each Trustee should serve as a Trustee for the fund.
Annual Report
Trustees and Officers - continued
Advisory Board Member and Executive Officers:
Correspondence intended for each executive officer and Peter S. Lynch may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 245 Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupation |
Peter S. Lynch (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2003 Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Lynch is Vice Chairman and a Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. In addition, Mr. Lynch serves as a Trustee of Boston College and as the Chairman of the Inner-City Scholarship Fund. Previously, Mr. Lynch served on the Special Olympics International Board of Directors (1997-2006). |
Kenneth B. Robins (1969) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 President and Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Robins also serves as President and Treasurer (2010-present), Deputy Treasurer (2013-present), and Assistant Treasurer (2009-present) of other Fidelity funds and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2004-present). Mr. Robins serves as Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (2013-present). Previously, Mr. Robins served as President and Treasurer (2008-2013) and Deputy Treasurer (2005-2008) of certain Fidelity funds, and Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2006-2008). |
Bruce T. Herring (1965) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2006 Vice President of certain Equity Funds. Mr. Herring also serves as Vice President of other Fidelity funds (2013-present), Chief Investment Officer of Fidelity Global Asset Allocation (GAA) (2013-present), Chief Investment Officer and Director of Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2010-present), Group Chief Investment Officer of FMR, and President of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2010-present). Previously, Mr. Herring served as Vice President (2005-2006) and Senior Vice President (2006-2007) of Fidelity Management & Research Company, Vice President of FMR Co., Inc. (2001-2007) and as a portfolio manager for Fidelity U.S. Equity Funds. |
Brian B. Hogan (1964) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2009 Vice President of Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Hogan also serves as Vice President of other Fidelity funds (2009-present) and President of FMR's Equity Division (2009-present). Previously, Mr. Hogan served as Senior Vice President, Equity Research of FMR (2006-2009) and as a portfolio manager. |
Scott C. Goebel (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Secretary and Chief Legal Officer (CLO) of certain Fidelity funds. Mr. Goebel also serves as Secretary of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (2010-present) and Fidelity Research and Analysis Company (FRAC) (2010-present); Secretary and CLO of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2008-present); General Counsel, Secretary, and Senior Vice President of FMR (2008-present) and FMR Co., Inc. (2008-present); employed by FMR LLC or an affiliate (2001-present); Chief Legal Officer of Fidelity Management & Research (Hong Kong) Limited (2008-present) and Assistant Secretary of Fidelity Management & Research (Japan) Inc. (2008-present), and Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Goebel served as Secretary and CLO of other Fidelity funds (2008-2013), as Assistant Secretary of FIMM (2008-2010), FRAC (2008-2010), and the Funds (2007-2008) and as Vice President and Secretary of Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) (2005-2007). |
William C. Coffey (1969) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2009 Assistant Secretary of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Coffey also serves as Assistant Secretary of other Fidelity funds (2009-present), Senior Vice President and Deputy General Counsel of FMR LLC (2010-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Coffey served as Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR LLC (2005-2009). |
Elizabeth Paige Baumann (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2012 Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Officer of the Fidelity funds. Ms. Baumann also serves as AML Officer of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2012-present), Chief AML Officer of FMR LLC (2012-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Ms. Baumann served as Vice President and Deputy Anti-Money Laundering Officer (2007-2012). |
Christine Reynolds (1958) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Chief Financial Officer of the Fidelity funds. Ms. Reynolds became President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) in August 2008. Ms. Reynolds served as Chief Operating Officer of FPCMS (2007-2008). Previously, Ms. Reynolds served as President, Treasurer, and Anti-Money Laundering officer of the Fidelity funds (2004-2007). |
Joseph A. Hanlon (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2012 Chief Compliance Officer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Hanlon also serves as Chief Compliance Officer of other Fidelity funds (2012-present). Mr. Hanlon serves as Compliance Officer of FMR, FMR Co., Inc., Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), Fidelity Research and Analysis Company (FRAC), and Fidelity Management & Research (Hong Kong) (2009-present), as Senior Vice President of the Fidelity Asset Management Division (2009-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Hanlon served as Compliance Officer of Fidelity Management & Research (Japan) Inc. (2009-2013), Strategic Advisers, Inc. (2009-2013), and Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2009-2013). |
Joseph F. Zambello (1957) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2011 Deputy Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Mr. Zambello is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Zambello served as Vice President of FMR's Program Management Group (2009-2011) and Vice President of the Transfer Agent Oversight Group (2005-2009). |
Adrien E. Deberghes (1967) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Deberghes also serves as President and Treasurer (2013-present), Vice President (2011-present), and Assistant Treasurer (2010-present) of other Fidelity funds, and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Deberghes served as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2008-2013), Senior Vice President of Mutual Fund Administration at State Street Corporation (2007-2008), Senior Director of Mutual Fund Administration at Investors Bank & Trust (2005-2007), and Director of Finance for Dunkin' Brands (2000-2005). |
Stephen Sadoski (1971) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2012 Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Sadoski also serves as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2013-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2012-present). Previously, Mr. Sadoski served as Deputy Treasurer (2012-2013) and Assistant Treasurer (2012-2013) of other Fidelity funds, an assistant chief accountant in the Division of Investment Management of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) (2009-2012) and as a senior manager at Deloitte & Touche LLP (1997-2009). |
Stacie M. Smith (1974) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2013 Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Ms. Smith also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2013-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2009-present). Previously, Ms. Smith served as Deputy Treasurer of certain Fidelity funds (2013) and Senior Audit Manager of Ernst & Young LLP (1996-2009). |
Renee Stagnone (1975) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2013 Deputy Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Ms. Stagnone is an employee of Fidelity Investments. |
Stephanie J. Dorsey (1969) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2010 Assistant Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Ms. Dorsey also serves as President and Treasurer (2013-present) and Assistant Treasurer (2010-present) of other Fidelity funds, Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2013-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Dorsey served as Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Fixed Income and Asset Allocation Funds (2008-2013), Treasurer (2004-2008) of the JPMorgan Mutual Funds and Vice President (2004-2008) of JPMorgan Chase Bank. |
Chris Maher (1972) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2013 Assistant Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Mr. Maher is Vice President of Valuation Oversight and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Maher served as Vice President of Asset Management Compliance (2013), Vice President of FMR's Program Management Group (2010-2013), and Vice President of Valuation Oversight (2008-2010). |
Gary W. Ryan (1958) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2005 Assistant Treasurer of certain Fidelity funds. Mr. Ryan is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Ryan served as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-2013) and Vice President of Fund Reporting in Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) (1999-2005). |
Jonathan Davis (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2010 Assistant Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Mr. Davis is also Assistant Treasurer of Fidelity Rutland Square Trust II and Fidelity Commonwealth Trust II. Mr. Davis is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Davis served as Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR LLC (2003-2010). |
Annual Report
The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Balanced Fund voted to pay to shareholders of record at the opening of business on record date, the following distributions per share derived from capital gains realized from sales of portfolio securities and a dividend derived from net investment income:
| Pay Date | Record Date | Dividends | Capital Gains |
Class K | 10/14/13 | 10/11/13 | $0.115 | $0.851 |
The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended August 31, 2013, $919,707,777, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.
A total of 2.51% of the dividends distributed during the fiscal year was derived from interest on U.S. Government securities which is generally exempt from state income tax.
Class K designates $135,777,634 of distributions paid during the period January 1, 2013 to August 31, 2013 as qualifying to be taxed as interest-related dividends for nonresident alien shareholders.
Class K designates 16%, 57%, 84% and 84% of the dividends distributed in October, December, April and July, respectively during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends-received deduction for corporate shareholders.
Class K designates 20%, 68%, 100% and 100% of the dividends distributed in October, December, April and July, 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 will notify shareholders in January 2014 of amounts for use in preparing 2013 income tax returns.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and Management Fees
Fidelity Balanced Fund
Each year, the Board of Trustees, including the Independent Trustees (together, the Board), votes on the renewal of the management contract and sub-advisory agreements (together, the Advisory Contracts) for the fund. The Board, assisted by the advice of fund counsel and Independent Trustees' counsel, requests and considers a broad range of information relevant to the renewal of the Advisory Contracts throughout the year.
The Board meets regularly and, at each of its meetings, covers an extensive agenda of topics and materials and considers factors that are relevant to its annual consideration of the renewal of the fund's Advisory Contracts, including the services and support provided to the fund and its shareholders. The Board has established various standing committees, each composed of and chaired by Independent Trustees with varying backgrounds, to which the Board has assigned specific subject matter responsibilities in order to enhance effective decision-making by the Board. The Board, acting directly and through its Committees, requests and receives information concerning the annual consideration of the renewal of the fund's Advisory Contracts. The Board also meets as needed to consider matters specifically related to the Board's annual consideration of the renewal of Advisory Contracts. Members of the Board may also meet with trustees of other Fidelity funds through ad hoc joint committees to discuss certain matters relevant to the Fidelity funds.
At its July 2013 meeting, the Board, including the Independent Trustees, unanimously determined to renew the fund's Advisory Contracts. In reaching its determination, the Board considered all factors it believed relevant, including (i) the nature, extent, and quality of the services to be provided to the fund and its shareholders (including the investment performance of the fund); (ii) the competitiveness of the fund's management fee and total expense ratio relative to peer funds; (iii) the total costs of the services to be provided by and the profits to be realized by Fidelity from its relationship with the fund; (iv) the extent to which economies of scale exist and would be realized as the fund grows; and (v) whether fee levels reflect these economies of scale, if any, for the benefit of fund shareholders.
In considering whether to renew the Advisory Contracts for the fund, the Board reached a determination, with the assistance of fund counsel and Independent Trustees' counsel and through the exercise of its business judgment, that the renewal of the Advisory Contracts was in the best interests of the fund and its shareholders and that the compensation payable under the Advisory Contracts was fair and reasonable. The Board's decision to renew the Advisory Contracts was not based on any single factor, but rather was based on a comprehensive consideration of all the information provided to the Board at its meetings throughout the year. The Board, in reaching its determination to renew the Advisory Contracts, was aware that shareholders in the fund have a broad range of investment choices available to them, including a wide choice among mutual funds offered by Fidelity's competitors, and that the fund's shareholders, who have the opportunity to review and weigh the disclosure provided by the fund in its prospectus and other public disclosures, have chosen to invest in this fund, which is a part of the Fidelity family of funds.
Annual Report
Nature, Extent, and Quality of Services Provided. The Board considered the staffing within the investment adviser, Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR), and the sub-advisers (together, the Investment Advisers) as it relates to the fund, including the backgrounds of the fund's investment personnel, and also considered the fund's investment objective, strategies, and related investment philosophy. The Independent Trustees also had discussions with senior management of Fidelity's investment operations and investment groups. The Board considered the structure of the portfolio manager compensation program and whether this structure provides appropriate incentives to act in the best interests of the fund.
Resources Dedicated to Investment Management and Support Services. The Board and the Fund Oversight and Research Committees reviewed the general qualifications and capabilities of the Investment Advisers' investment staff, including its size, education, experience, and resources, as well as the Investment Advisers' approach to recruiting, training, managing, and compensating investment personnel. The Board noted that FMR has continued to increase the resources devoted to non-U.S. offices, including expansion of Fidelity's global investment organization. The Board also noted that Fidelity's analysts have extensive resources, tools and capabilities that allow them to conduct sophisticated quantitative and fundamental analysis, as well as credit analysis of issuers, counterparties and guarantors. Further, the Board believes that Fidelity's investment professionals have sufficient access to global information and data so as to provide competitive investment results over time, and that those professionals also have access to sophisticated tools that permit them to assess portfolio construction and risk and performance attribution characteristics continuously, as well as to transmit new information and research conclusions rapidly around the world. Additionally, in its deliberations, the Board considered the Investment Advisers' trading and risk management capabilities and resources, which are an integral part of the investment management process.
Shareholder and Administrative Services. The Board considered (i) the nature, extent, quality, and cost of advisory, administrative, and shareholder services performed by the Investment Advisers and their affiliates under the Advisory Contracts and under separate agreements covering transfer agency, pricing and bookkeeping, and securities lending services for the fund; (ii) the nature and extent of the supervision of third party service providers, principally custodians and subcustodians; and (iii) the resources devoted to, and the record of compliance with, the fund's compliance policies and procedures. The Board also reviewed the allocation of fund brokerage, including allocations to brokers affiliated with the Investment Advisers, the use of brokerage commissions to pay fund expenses, and the use of "soft" commission dollars to pay for research services.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
The Board noted that the growth of fund assets over time across the complex allows Fidelity to reinvest in the development of services designed to enhance the value or convenience of the Fidelity funds as investment vehicles. These services include 24-hour access to account information and market information through telephone representatives and over the Internet, investor education materials and asset allocation tools, and the expanded availability of Fidelity Investor Centers.
Investment in a Large Fund Family. The Board considered the benefits to shareholders of investing in a Fidelity fund, including the benefits of investing in a fund that is part of a large family of funds offering a variety of investment disciplines and providing a large variety of mutual fund investor services. The Board noted that Fidelity had taken, or had made recommendations that resulted in the Fidelity funds taking, a number of actions over the previous year that benefited particular funds, including (i) continuing to dedicate additional resources to investment research and to the support of the senior management team that oversees asset management; (ii) persisting in efforts to enhance Fidelity's global research capabilities; (iii) launching new funds and making other enhancements to meet client needs for global and income-oriented solutions; (iv) continuing to launch dedicated lower cost underlying funds to meet portfolio construction needs related to expanding underlying fund options for Fidelity funds of funds, specifically for the Freedom Fund product lines; (v) rationalizing product lines and gaining increased efficiencies through the mergers of several funds into other funds; (vi) strengthening Fidelity's index fund offerings by reducing investment minimums and adopting or lowering existing expense caps for certain funds and classes; (vii) enhancing Global Asset Allocation product offerings by launching new funds and strategies, including "open architecture" target date funds that utilize affiliated and unaffiliated sub-advisers; (viii) modifying the eligibility criteria for Institutional Class shares of Advisor funds to increase their marketability to a portion of the defined contribution plan market; (ix) creating a new low-cost retirement share class for certain Advisor funds to appeal to large retirement plans; (x) transitioning the management of certain Fidelity commodity funds to Geode Capital Management LLC, a registered commodity pool operator, while retaining administrative responsibilities for the funds; (xi) reorganizing a number of funds; and (xii) taking steps toward establishing a new Fidelity adviser to manage sector-based funds and products.
Investment Performance. The Board considered whether the fund has operated in accordance with its investment objective, as well as its record of compliance with its investment restrictions and its performance history. The Board noted that there were portfolio management changes for a sleeve of the fund in March 2011, April 2013, and June 2013.
Annual Report
The Board took into account discussions with the Investment Advisers about fund investment performance that occur at Board meetings throughout the year. In this regard the Board noted that as part of regularly scheduled fund reviews and other reports to the Board on fund performance, the Board periodically considers annualized return information for the fund, for different time periods, measured against a securities market index ("benchmark index") and a peer group of mutual funds with similar objectives ("peer group"). In its evaluation of fund investment performance, the Board gave particular attention to information indicating changes in performance of certain Fidelity funds for specific time periods and the Investment Advisers' explanations for any overperformance or underperformance.
In addition to reviewing absolute and relative fund performance, the Independent Trustees periodically consider the appropriateness of fund performance metrics in evaluating the results achieved. In general, the Independent Trustees believe that fund performance should be evaluated based on net performance (after fees and expenses) of both the highest performing and lowest performing classes, where applicable, compared to appropriate benchmark indices, over appropriate time periods which may include full market cycles, and compared to peer groups, as applicable, over the same periods, taking into account relevant factors including the following: general market conditions; issuer-specific information; tactical opportunities for investment; and fund cash flows and other factors.
The Independent Trustees recognize that shareholders evaluate performance on a net basis over their own holding periods, for which one-, three-, and five-year periods are used as a proxy. For this reason, the performance information reviewed by the Board also included net cumulative calendar year total return information for the fund and an appropriate benchmark index and peer group for the most recent one-, three-, and five-year periods, as shown below. Returns are shown compared to the 25th percentile (top of box) and 75th percentile (bottom of box) of the peer universe.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
Fidelity Balanced Fund
Based on its review, the Board concluded that the nature, extent, and quality of services provided to the fund under the Advisory Contracts should benefit the fund's shareholders.
Competitiveness of Management Fee and Total Expense Ratio. The Board considered the fund's management fee and total expense ratio compared to "mapped groups" of competitive funds and classes. Fidelity creates "mapped groups" by combining similar Lipper investment objective categories that have comparable management fee characteristics. Combining Lipper investment objective categories aids the Board's management fee and total expense ratio comparisons by broadening the competitive group used for comparison and by reducing the number of universes to which various Fidelity funds are compared.
Management Fee. The Board considered two proprietary management fee comparisons for the 12-month periods shown in the chart below. The group of Lipper funds used by the Board for management fee comparisons is referred to below as the "Total Mapped Group." The Total Mapped Group is broader than the Lipper peer group used by the Board for performance comparisons because the Total Mapped Group combines several Lipper investment objective categories while the Lipper peer group does not. The Total Mapped Group comparison focuses on a fund's standing in terms of gross management fees before expense reimbursements or caps relative to the total universe of funds with comparable investment mandates, regardless of whether their management fee structures also are comparable. Funds with comparable investment mandates offer exposure to similar types of securities. Funds with comparable management fee structures have similar management fee contractual arrangements (e.g., flat rate charged for advisory services, all-inclusive fee rate, etc.). "TMG %" represents the percentage of funds in the Total Mapped Group that had management fees that were lower than the fund's. For example, a TMG % of 12% means that 88% of the funds in the Total Mapped Group had higher management fees than the fund. The "Asset-Size Peer Group" (ASPG) comparison focuses on a fund's standing relative to a subset of non-Fidelity funds within the Total Mapped Group that are similar in size and management fee structure. The ASPG represents at least 15% of the funds in the Total Mapped Group with comparable asset size and management fee structures, subject to a minimum of 50 funds (or all funds in the Total Mapped Group if fewer than 50). Additional information, such as the ASPG quartile in which the fund's management fee ranked, is also included in the chart and considered by the Board.
Annual Report
Fidelity Balanced Fund
The Board noted that the fund's management fee ranked below the median of its Total Mapped Group and below the median of its ASPG for 2012.
Based on its review, the Board concluded that the fund's management fee is fair and reasonable in light of the services that the fund receives and the other factors considered.
Total Expense Ratio. In its review of each class's total expense ratio, the Board considered the fund's management fee as well as other fund or class expenses, as applicable, such as transfer agent fees, pricing and bookkeeping fees, and custodial, legal, and audit fees. The Board also noted the effects of any waivers and reimbursements on fees and expenses. As part of its review, the Board also considered the current and historical total expense ratios of each class of the fund compared to competitive fund median expenses. Each class of the fund is compared to those funds and classes in the Total Mapped Group (used by the Board for management fee comparisons) that have a similar sales load structure.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
The Board noted that the total expense ratio of each class ranked below its competitive median for 2012.
Fees Charged to Other Fidelity Clients. The Board also considered Fidelity fee structures and other information with respect to clients of FMR and its affiliates, such as other mutual funds advised or subadvised by FMR or its affiliates, pension plan clients, and other institutional clients. The Board noted the findings of the 2013 ad hoc joint committee (created with the board of other Fidelity funds), which reviewed and compared Fidelity's institutional investment advisory business with its business of providing services to the Fidelity funds, including the differences in services provided, fees charged, and costs incurred, as well as competition in their respective marketplaces.
Based on its review of total expense ratios and fees charged to other Fidelity clients, the Board concluded that the total expense ratio of each class of the fund was reasonable in light of the services that the fund and its shareholders receive and the other factors considered.
Costs of the Services and Profitability. The Board considered the revenues earned and the expenses incurred by Fidelity in conducting the business of developing, marketing, distributing, managing, administering and servicing the fund and servicing the fund's shareholders. The Board also considered the level of Fidelity's profits in respect of all the Fidelity funds.
On an annual basis, FMR presents to the Board Fidelity's profitability for the fund. Fidelity calculates the profitability for each fund, as well as aggregate profitability for groups of Fidelity funds and all Fidelity funds, using a series of detailed revenue and cost allocation methodologies which originate with the books and records of Fidelity on which Fidelity's audited financial statements are based. The Audit Committee of the Board reviews any significant changes from the prior year's methodologies.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC), independent registered public accounting firm and auditor to Fidelity and certain Fidelity funds, has been engaged annually by the Board as part of the Board's assessment of Fidelity's profitability analysis. PwC's engagement includes the review and assessment of the methodologies used by Fidelity in determining the revenues and expenses attributable to Fidelity's mutual fund business, and completion of agreed-upon procedures surrounding the mathematical accuracy of fund profitability and its conformity to allocation methodologies. After considering PwC's reports issued under the engagement and information provided by Fidelity, the Board concluded that while other allocation methods may also be reasonable, Fidelity's profitability methodologies are reasonable in all material respects.
Annual Report
The Board also reviewed Fidelity's non-fund businesses and fall-out benefits related to the mutual fund business as well as cases where Fidelity's affiliates may benefit from or be related to the fund's business.
The Board considered the costs of the services provided by and the profits realized by Fidelity in connection with the operation of the fund and was satisfied that the profitability was not excessive in the circumstances.
Economies of Scale. The Board considered whether there have been economies of scale in respect of the management of the Fidelity funds, whether the Fidelity funds (including the fund) have appropriately benefited from any such economies of scale, and whether there is potential for realization of any further economies of scale. The Board considered the extent to which the fund will benefit from economies of scale through increased services to the fund, through waivers or reimbursements, or through fee or expense reductions. The Board also noted that in 2009, it and the board of other Fidelity funds created an ad hoc committee (the Economies of Scale Committee) to analyze whether FMR attains economies of scale in respect of the management and servicing of the Fidelity funds, whether the Fidelity funds have appropriately benefited from such economies of scale, and whether there is potential for realization of any further economies of scale.
The Board recognized that the fund's management contract incorporates a "group fee" structure, which provides for lower group fee rates as total fund assets under FMR's management increase, and for higher group fee rates as total fund assets under FMR's management decrease. FMR calculates the group fee rates based on a tiered asset "breakpoint" schedule that varies based on asset class. The Board considered that the group fee is designed to deliver the benefits of economies of scale to fund shareholders when total Fidelity fund assets increase, even if assets of any particular fund are unchanged or have declined, because some portion of Fidelity's costs are attributable to services provided to all Fidelity funds, and all funds benefit if those costs can be allocated among more assets. The Board concluded that, given the group fee structure, fund shareholders will benefit from lower management fees as assets under FMR's management increase at the fund complex level, regardless of whether Fidelity achieves any such economies of scale.
The Board concluded, taking into account the analysis of the Economies of Scale Committee, that economies of scale, if any, are being appropriately shared between fund shareholders and Fidelity.
Amendment to Description of Group Fee Rate. At its July 2013 meeting, the Board voted to approve an amendment to the fund's management contract to modify the description of the "group fee rate" effective August 1, 2013. The Board noted that under the prior description in the contract, the group fee rate was based on the average net assets of all registered investment companies with which FMR has management contracts. Under the contract's tiered asset breakpoint schedule, the group fee rate is lower as total fund assets under FMR's management increase, and higher as total fund assets under FMR's management decrease. The Board considered that the prior description would have excluded the assets of 64 Fidelity sector funds from the group fee rate calculation once Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, an affiliate of FMR, assumed management responsibilities for those funds. The Board noted that modifying the description of the group fee rate to continue to include the assets of those 64 funds for purposes of determining group fee rate breakpoints would avoid an immediate adverse impact on the group fee rate for any fund.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
Additional Information Requested by the Board. In order to develop fully the factual basis for consideration of the Fidelity funds' Advisory Contracts, the Board requested and received additional information on certain topics, including: (i) fund performance trends and Fidelity's long-term strategies for certain funds; (ii) the potential to further rationalize the Fidelity fund lineup with the possibility of achieving savings for the funds and Fidelity; (iii) the methodology with respect to competitive fund data and peer group classifications; (iv) the arrangements with, and performance of, certain sub-advisers on behalf of the Fidelity funds, as well as certain proposed participating affiliate arrangements; (v) the realization of fall-out benefits in certain Fidelity business units; (vi) Fidelity's group fee structures, including the rationale for the individual fee rates of certain categories of funds and the definition of group assets; (vii) trends regarding industry use of performance fee structures and the performance adjustment methodologies applicable to the Fidelity funds; (viii) additional competitive analysis regarding the total expenses for certain classes; and (ix) fund profitability methodology, including Fidelity's cost allocation methodology, and the impact of certain factors on fund profitability results.
Based on its evaluation of all of the conclusions noted above, and after considering all factors it believed relevant, the Board ultimately concluded that the advisory fee structures are fair and reasonable, and that the fund's Advisory Contracts should be renewed.
Annual Report
Investment Adviser
Fidelity Management & Research Company
Boston, MA
Investment Sub-Advisers
FMR Co., Inc.
Fidelity Investments
Money Management, Inc.
Fidelity Management & Research
(U.K.) Inc.
Fidelity Management & Research
(Hong Kong) Limited
Fidelity Management & Research
(Japan) Inc.
General Distributor
Fidelity Distributors Corporation
Smithfield, RI
Transfer and Service Agents
Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc.
Boston, MA
Fidelity Service Company, Inc.
Boston, MA
Custodian
Citibank, N.A.
New York, NY
(Fidelity Investment logo)(registered trademark)
Corporate Headquarters
245 Summer St., Boston, MA 02210
www.fidelity.com
BAL-K-UANN-1013
1.863050.104
Fidelity®
Puritan®
Fund
Annual Report
August 31, 2013
(Fidelity Cover Art)
Contents
Performance | (Click Here) | How the fund has done over time. |
Management's Discussion of Fund Performance | (Click Here) | The Portfolio Manager's review of fund performance and strategy. |
Shareholder Expense Example | (Click Here) | An example of shareholder expenses. |
Investment Changes | (Click Here) | A summary of major shifts in the fund's investments over the past six months. |
Investments | (Click Here) | A complete list of the fund's investments with their market values. |
Financial Statements | (Click Here) | Statements of assets and liabilities, operations, and changes in net assets, as well as financial highlights. |
Notes | (Click Here) | Notes to the financial statements. |
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm | (Click Here) | |
Trustees and Officers | (Click Here) | |
Distributions | (Click Here) | |
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and Management Fees | (Click Here) | |
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. © 2013 FMR LLC. All rights reserved.
Annual Report
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-Q. Forms N-Q are available on the SEC's web site at http://www.sec.gov. A fund's Forms N-Q 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.advisor.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.
Annual Report
Average annual total return reflects the change in the value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of the class' 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 $10,000 table and the fund's 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
Periods ended August 31, 2013 | Past 1 year | Past 5 years | Past 10 years |
Fidelity® Puritan® Fund | 11.29% | 7.03% | 6.97% |
$10,000 Over 10 Years
Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity® Puritan® Fund, a class of the fund, on August 31, 2003. The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the S&P 500® Index performed over the same period.
Annual Report
Market Recap: Major equity benchmarks set record highs during the 12 months ending August 31, 2013, fueled by an improving global economy and accommodative monetary policies worldwide. The broad-based S&P 500® Index rose 18.70% for the 12 months, setting new highs, while the blue-chip-laden Dow Jones Industrial AverageSM also achieved significant milestones en route to climbing 16.13%. The growth-oriented Nasdaq Composite Index® advanced 18.75%. Stocks slipped early on as investors grew anxious about the U.S. presidential election and the federal debt limit. Markets quickly rebounded and rose through late May, but concern over the U.S. Federal Reserve tapering its bond-buying program prompted a brief, but steep, market sell-off in June. Stocks recovered when the Fed said no moves were imminent, but doubt returned in August as a military strike on Syria loomed. On the bond side of the ledger, U.S. high-income securities rallied alongside equities for most of the period, but cooled off in May and June as interest rates spiked on possible Fed tightening. The sector still advanced solidly, with The BofA Merrill LynchSM US High Yield Constrained Index returning 7.55%. The more rate-sensitive U.S. investment-grade bond category fared far worse, as reflected in the -2.47% return of the Barclays® U.S. Aggregate Bond Index, its largest trailing one-year loss in almost 20 years.
Comments from Ramin Arani, Lead Portfolio Manager of Fidelity® Puritan® Fund: For the year, the fund's Retail Class shares returned 11.29%, versus 9.87% for the Fidelity Puritan Composite IndexSM. Versus the Composite index, asset allocation was the dominant contributor, as I overweighted equities and underweighted investment-grade bonds. Our top individual relative contributor was an out-of-index investment in Tesla Motors, as the maker of electronic cars reported good financial results and strong orders - and the stock responded in a huge way. Exxon Mobil, AT&T and IBM are three sizable benchmark stocks I successfully underweighted or avoided, and none was in the fund at period end. Conversely, consumer electronics leader Apple was by far our largest detractor. The fund was modestly overweighted in Apple at period end because I believe it is a strong company and its stock was cheap relative to its valuation. In fixed income, the biggest contributors were an overweighting in corporate bonds, particularly financial institutions, an underweighting in sovereigns and an overweighting in commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS). We were modestly hurt by overweighting corporate bonds issued by telecommunication services companies, as this sector was held back by event risk stemming from investors' anticipation of a major new offering by Verizon Communications.
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.
Annual Report
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 (March 1, 2013 to August 31, 2013).
Actual Expenses
The first line of the accompanying table for each class of the 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 class of the Fund under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. 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 for each class of the Fund provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on a Class' actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Class' 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. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. 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.
Annual Report
Shareholder Expense Example - continued
| Annualized Expense RatioB | Beginning Account Value March 1, 2013 | Ending Account Value August 31, 2013 | Expenses Paid During Period* March 1, 2013 to August 31, 2013 |
Puritan | .58% | | | |
Actual | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,049.50 | $ 3.00 |
HypotheticalA | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,022.28 | $ 2.96 |
Class K | .47% | | | |
Actual | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,050.10 | $ 2.43 |
HypotheticalA | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,022.84 | $ 2.40 |
A 5% return per year before expenses
B Annualized expense ratio reflects expenses net of applicable fee waivers.
* Expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 184/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). The fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds in which the Fund invests are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio.
Annual Report
Investment Changes (Unaudited)
The information in the following tables is based on the combined investments of the Fund and its pro-rata share of the investments of Fidelity's fixed-income central funds.
Top Five Stocks as of August 31, 2013 |
| % of fund's net assets | % of fund's net assets 6 months ago |
Apple, Inc. | 2.4 | 1.9 |
Google, Inc. Class A | 1.7 | 1.5 |
Bank of America Corp. | 1.6 | 0.4 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 1.5 | 1.0 |
Citigroup, Inc. | 1.4 | 1.2 |
| 8.6 | |
Top Five Bond Issuers as of August 31, 2013 |
(with maturities greater than one year) | % of fund's net assets | % of fund's net assets 6 months ago |
U.S. Treasury Obligations | 5.5 | 5.3 |
Fannie Mae | 4.7 | 6.7 |
Ginnie Mae | 1.6 | 1.5 |
Freddie Mac | 1.3 | 1.9 |
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust | 0.7 | 0.9 |
| 13.8 | |
Top Five Market Sectors as of August 31, 2013 |
| % of fund's net assets | % of fund's net assets 6 months ago |
Financials | 18.1 | 16.4 |
Consumer Discretionary | 13.6 | 12.2 |
Information Technology | 13.1 | 12.8 |
Health Care | 12.2 | 10.1 |
Energy | 7.2 | 7.2 |
Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets) |
As of August 31, 2013 * | As of February 28, 2013 ** |
| Stocks 68.9% | | | Stocks 64.9% | |
| Bonds 29.6% | | | Bonds 32.7% | |
| Convertible Securities 0.5% | | | Convertible Securities 0.4% | |
| Other Investments 0.6% | | | Other Investments 0.8% | |
| Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities) 0.4% | | | Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities) 1.2% | |
* Foreign investments | 11.2% | | ** Foreign investments | 10.7% | |
Percentages are adjusted for the effect of futures contracts and swaps, if applicable. |
An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of any securities and other investments held indirectly through its investments in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com. |
Percentages in the above tables are adjusted for the effect of TBA Sale Commitments. |
Annual Report
Investments August 31, 2013
Showing Percentage of Net Assets
Common Stocks - 68.6% |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 11.5% |
Auto Components - 0.0% |
Delphi Automotive PLC | 68,093 | | $ 3,746 |
Automobiles - 1.0% |
Ford Motor Co. | 6,432,200 | | 104,137 |
General Motors Co. (a) | 574,870 | | 19,592 |
Motors Liquidation Co. GUC Trust (a) | 28,150 | | 847 |
Tesla Motors, Inc. (a) | 320,900 | | 54,232 |
Toyota Motor Corp. | 558,700 | | 33,607 |
| | 212,415 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.2% |
H&R Block, Inc. | 1,480,400 | | 41,318 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 1.6% |
Dunkin' Brands Group, Inc. | 1,148,000 | | 49,467 |
PB Investor I LLC | 9,088 | | 14 |
Starbucks Corp. | 1,841,800 | | 129,884 |
Station Holdco LLC (a)(n)(p) | 1,194,419 | | 1,780 |
Station Holdco LLC: | | | |
unit (n)(p) | 2,660 | | 0 * |
warrants 6/15/18 (a)(n)(p) | 75,658 | | 6 |
Vail Resorts, Inc. | 917,027 | | 62,358 |
Wyndham Worldwide Corp. | 623,400 | | 37,005 |
Yum! Brands, Inc. | 833,000 | | 58,327 |
| | 338,841 |
Household Durables - 0.9% |
D.R. Horton, Inc. | 1,116,200 | | 19,924 |
KB Home | 1,061,700 | | 17,019 |
PulteGroup, Inc. | 1,148,000 | | 17,668 |
Sony Corp. sponsored ADR (e) | 1,852,800 | | 36,982 |
Toll Brothers, Inc. (a) | 1,220,700 | | 37,366 |
Whirlpool Corp. | 460,700 | | 59,269 |
| | 188,228 |
Internet & Catalog Retail - 1.2% |
Amazon.com, Inc. (a) | 400,900 | | 112,645 |
Netflix, Inc. (a) | 42,700 | | 12,123 |
priceline.com, Inc. (a) | 89,600 | | 84,092 |
Rakuten, Inc. | 2,811,400 | | 34,446 |
Spotify Technology SA (a)(p) | 15,765 | | 15,597 |
| | 258,903 |
Media - 3.4% |
CBS Corp. Class B | 1,743,100 | | 89,072 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Media - continued |
Comcast Corp. Class A (special) (non-vtg.) | 5,566,200 | | $ 226,767 |
Discovery Communications, Inc. Class A (a) | 29,800 | | 2,310 |
HMH Holdings, Inc. warrants 6/22/19 (a)(p) | 1,945 | | 3 |
Legend Pictures LLC (a)(n)(p) | 49,141 | | 88,601 |
Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. (a)(e) | 1,631,500 | | 57,119 |
Manchester United PLC | 826,630 | | 13,937 |
Publicis Groupe SA | 641,100 | | 47,720 |
The Walt Disney Co. | 284,190 | | 17,287 |
Tribune Co. Class A (a) | 13,773 | | 821 |
Twenty-First Century Fox, Inc. Class A | 3,966,900 | | 124,283 |
Vertis Holdings, Inc. (a) | 1,934 | | 0 |
Viacom, Inc. Class B (non-vtg.) | 712,500 | | 56,687 |
| | 724,607 |
Specialty Retail - 1.6% |
Home Depot, Inc. | 2,362,400 | | 175,975 |
Lowe's Companies, Inc. | 1,528,800 | | 70,050 |
Restoration Hardware Holdings, Inc. | 213,800 | | 14,866 |
TJX Companies, Inc. | 1,513,300 | | 79,781 |
| | 340,672 |
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 1.6% |
Brunello Cucinelli SpA | 1,155,400 | | 34,206 |
C. Wonder LLC (n)(p) | 619,047 | | 19,500 |
Compagnie Financiere Richemont SA Series A | 225,290 | | 21,404 |
Kering SA | 118,100 | | 26,675 |
lululemon athletica, Inc. (a) | 537,200 | | 38,055 |
Michael Kors Holdings Ltd. (a) | 492,461 | | 36,486 |
NIKE, Inc. Class B | 1,026,700 | | 64,497 |
Prada SpA | 1,251,300 | | 12,328 |
PVH Corp. | 41,700 | | 5,369 |
Ralph Lauren Corp. | 327,700 | | 54,205 |
Tory Burch LLC (n)(p) | 324,840 | | 17,505 |
| | 330,230 |
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | 2,438,960 |
CONSUMER STAPLES - 6.3% |
Beverages - 1.2% |
Beam, Inc. | 1,228,200 | | 76,947 |
Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc. | 1,309,700 | | 48,983 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER STAPLES - continued |
Beverages - continued |
Monster Beverage Corp. (a) | 624,800 | | $ 35,857 |
The Coca-Cola Co. | 2,513,900 | | 95,981 |
| | 257,768 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 1.4% |
CVS Caremark Corp. | 3,655,400 | | 212,196 |
Kroger Co. | 1,766,000 | | 64,636 |
Walgreen Co. | 665,700 | | 32,000 |
| | 308,832 |
Food Products - 0.7% |
Bunge Ltd. | 833,000 | | 63,125 |
Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc. (a) | 489,200 | | 42,223 |
Mead Johnson Nutrition Co. Class A | 185,800 | | 13,941 |
The Hershey Co. | 239,100 | | 21,985 |
| | 141,274 |
Household Products - 1.4% |
Energizer Holdings, Inc. | 331,800 | | 32,792 |
Procter & Gamble Co. | 3,283,400 | | 255,744 |
| | 288,536 |
Personal Products - 0.6% |
Estee Lauder Companies, Inc. Class A | 781,400 | | 51,072 |
L'Oreal SA | 206,600 | | 34,473 |
Prestige Brands Holdings, Inc. (a) | 1,443,351 | | 46,866 |
| | 132,411 |
Tobacco - 1.0% |
Japan Tobacco, Inc. | 3,745,100 | | 126,490 |
Lorillard, Inc. | 860,900 | | 36,416 |
Philip Morris International, Inc. | 580,140 | | 48,407 |
| | 211,313 |
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | 1,340,134 |
ENERGY - 5.8% |
Energy Equipment & Services - 1.4% |
Cameron International Corp. (a) | 778,400 | | 44,205 |
Ensco PLC Class A | 1,563,816 | | 86,886 |
Halliburton Co. | 2,203,400 | | 105,763 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
ENERGY - continued |
Energy Equipment & Services - continued |
Noble Corp. | 614,900 | | $ 22,874 |
Schlumberger Ltd. | 521,600 | | 42,218 |
| | 301,946 |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 4.4% |
Anadarko Petroleum Corp. | 1,231,200 | | 112,556 |
Apache Corp. | 20,614 | | 1,766 |
Bonanza Creek Energy, Inc. (a) | 524,000 | | 20,803 |
Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. | 1,376,200 | | 53,851 |
Chevron Corp. | 1,409,100 | | 169,698 |
Cobalt International Energy, Inc. (a) | 742,700 | | 18,122 |
Concho Resources, Inc. (a) | 121,800 | | 11,755 |
ConocoPhillips | 1,261,100 | | 83,611 |
Continental Resources, Inc. (a) | 181,900 | | 16,782 |
Energen Corp. | 387,500 | | 25,695 |
EOG Resources, Inc. | 449,900 | | 70,657 |
EQT Corp. | 552,900 | | 47,395 |
Marathon Oil Corp. | 2,028,000 | | 69,824 |
Noble Energy, Inc. | 181,292 | | 11,137 |
Occidental Petroleum Corp. | 446,258 | | 39,364 |
Phillips 66 | 235,200 | | 13,430 |
Pioneer Natural Resources Co. | 184,100 | | 32,212 |
Suncor Energy, Inc. | 1,279,000 | | 43,107 |
The Williams Companies, Inc. | 2,225,500 | | 80,652 |
| | 922,417 |
TOTAL ENERGY | | 1,224,363 |
FINANCIALS - 12.8% |
Capital Markets - 1.7% |
Apollo Global Management LLC Class A | 1,512,300 | | 38,397 |
BlackRock, Inc. Class A | 160,500 | | 41,781 |
Evercore Partners, Inc. Class A | 772,000 | | 34,423 |
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. | 133,400 | | 20,294 |
Invesco Ltd. | 673,200 | | 20,438 |
State Street Corp. | 1,060,100 | | 70,730 |
The Blackstone Group LP | 1,761,800 | | 38,478 |
UBS AG | 5,070,144 | | 97,963 |
| | 362,504 |
Commercial Banks - 2.5% |
First Republic Bank | 50,000 | | 2,214 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Commercial Banks - continued |
M&T Bank Corp. | 545,300 | | $ 61,804 |
PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. | 1,591,900 | | 115,047 |
Standard Chartered PLC (United Kingdom) | 557,819 | | 12,457 |
TCF Financial Corp. | 1,258,400 | | 17,681 |
Texas Capital Bancshares, Inc. (a) | 868,022 | | 38,262 |
U.S. Bancorp | 1,143,100 | | 41,300 |
Wells Fargo & Co. | 6,041,940 | | 248,203 |
| | 536,968 |
Consumer Finance - 1.3% |
American Express Co. | 1,611,700 | | 115,897 |
Capital One Financial Corp. | 1,232,100 | | 79,532 |
Discover Financial Services | 704,900 | | 33,307 |
SLM Corp. | 2,315,700 | | 55,554 |
| | 284,290 |
Diversified Financial Services - 4.5% |
Bank of America Corp. | 23,557,000 | | 332,625 |
Citigroup, Inc. | 6,119,840 | | 295,772 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 6,316,823 | | 319,189 |
| | 947,586 |
Insurance - 2.0% |
ACE Ltd. | 1,130,600 | | 99,176 |
American International Group, Inc. | 1,916,900 | | 89,059 |
Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Class B (a) | 1,043,700 | | 116,080 |
MetLife, Inc. | 1,346,700 | | 62,204 |
The Travelers Companies, Inc. | 610,700 | | 48,795 |
| | 415,314 |
Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.6% |
American Tower Corp. | 1,330,200 | | 92,436 |
Simon Property Group, Inc. | 161,200 | | 23,476 |
| | 115,912 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.0% |
Realogy Holdings Corp. | 8,900 | | 377 |
Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.2% |
Ocwen Financial Corp. (a) | 793,600 | | 40,029 |
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | 2,702,980 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
HEALTH CARE - 11.4% |
Biotechnology - 4.5% |
ACADIA Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 3,169,404 | | $ 63,262 |
Achillion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 672,600 | | 4,338 |
Acorda Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | 763,300 | | 25,792 |
Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 462,300 | | 49,817 |
AMAG Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 1,013,961 | | 23,990 |
Amgen, Inc. | 1,916,800 | | 208,816 |
Biogen Idec, Inc. (a) | 613,200 | | 130,624 |
BioMarin Pharmaceutical, Inc. (a) | 263,700 | | 17,264 |
Celgene Corp. (a) | 185,700 | | 25,994 |
CSL Ltd. | 1,035,843 | | 62,684 |
Gilead Sciences, Inc. (a) | 2,914,700 | | 175,669 |
Grifols SA ADR | 1,988,480 | | 60,231 |
Medivation, Inc. (a) | 436,900 | | 24,698 |
Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc. (a) | 1,017,600 | | 14,826 |
Onyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 314,700 | | 38,891 |
Theravance, Inc. (a) | 205,028 | | 7,350 |
Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 156,200 | | 11,738 |
| | 945,984 |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 0.8% |
Boston Scientific Corp. (a) | 8,679,000 | | 91,824 |
Stryker Corp. | 361,600 | | 24,187 |
The Cooper Companies, Inc. | 344,259 | | 44,964 |
| | 160,975 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 2.0% |
Brookdale Senior Living, Inc. (a) | 634,850 | | 15,884 |
Catamaran Corp. (a) | 747,900 | | 40,956 |
CIGNA Corp. | 1,146,600 | | 90,226 |
Express Scripts Holding Co. (a) | 489,100 | | 31,244 |
HCA Holdings, Inc. | 900,700 | | 34,398 |
Humana, Inc. | 62,600 | | 5,764 |
McKesson Corp. | 646,700 | | 78,516 |
Qualicorp SA (a) | 5,724,000 | | 44,742 |
UnitedHealth Group, Inc. | 1,113,300 | | 79,868 |
| | 421,598 |
Health Care Technology - 0.3% |
CareView Communications, Inc. (a)(e)(f) | 10,425,300 | | 6,724 |
Cerner Corp. (a) | 1,356,100 | | 62,462 |
| | 69,186 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
HEALTH CARE - continued |
Life Sciences Tools & Services - 0.1% |
Illumina, Inc. (a)(e) | 400,300 | | $ 31,159 |
Pharmaceuticals - 3.7% |
AbbVie, Inc. | 2,082,600 | | 88,740 |
Actavis, Inc. (a) | 946,000 | | 127,880 |
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. | 1,865,100 | | 77,756 |
Eli Lilly & Co. | 347,200 | | 17,846 |
Endo Health Solutions, Inc. (a) | 205,200 | | 8,432 |
Merck & Co., Inc. | 965,500 | | 45,658 |
Optimer Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 635,000 | | 7,944 |
Perrigo Co. | 515,000 | | 62,598 |
Pfizer, Inc. | 5,317,600 | | 150,009 |
Sanofi SA | 171,080 | | 16,396 |
TherapeuticsMD, Inc. (a)(f) | 8,625,414 | | 17,941 |
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc. (Canada) (a) | 794,111 | | 78,107 |
ViroPharma, Inc. (a) | 774,078 | | 23,338 |
Warner Chilcott PLC | 2,866,600 | | 61,489 |
| | 784,134 |
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | 2,413,036 |
INDUSTRIALS - 4.6% |
Aerospace & Defense - 1.6% |
General Dynamics Corp. | 557,100 | | 46,379 |
Honeywell International, Inc. | 1,417,200 | | 112,767 |
The Boeing Co. | 604,800 | | 62,851 |
United Technologies Corp. | 1,208,200 | | 120,941 |
| | 342,938 |
Airlines - 0.2% |
Copa Holdings SA Class A | 323,100 | | 42,255 |
Building Products - 0.1% |
Masco Corp. | 856,100 | | 16,197 |
Masonite International Corp. (a) | 5,358 | | 263 |
Masonite International Corp.: | | | |
warrants 6/9/14 (a) | 25,981 | | 130 |
warrants 6/9/16 (a) | 19,485 | | 234 |
| | 16,824 |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.1% |
Moleskine SpA | 4,482,000 | | 11,379 |
Electrical Equipment - 0.1% |
Generac Holdings, Inc. | 597,800 | | 23,667 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Industrial Conglomerates - 1.1% |
3M Co. | 422,200 | | $ 47,953 |
Danaher Corp. | 1,320,000 | | 86,486 |
General Electric Co. | 3,873,800 | | 89,640 |
Toshiba Corp. | 3,056,000 | | 12,043 |
| | 236,122 |
Machinery - 0.7% |
Cummins, Inc. | 314,400 | | 38,734 |
Global Brass & Copper Holdings, Inc. | 457,774 | | 9,041 |
Ingersoll-Rand PLC | 825,000 | | 48,791 |
Manitowoc Co., Inc. | 1,829,600 | | 36,555 |
Stanley Black & Decker, Inc. | 205,400 | | 17,512 |
| | 150,633 |
Professional Services - 0.1% |
Verisk Analytics, Inc. (a) | 415,500 | | 25,836 |
Road & Rail - 0.5% |
Union Pacific Corp. | 714,756 | | 109,744 |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.1% |
WESCO International, Inc. (a) | 184,200 | | 13,588 |
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | 972,986 |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 12.5% |
Communications Equipment - 1.2% |
Cisco Systems, Inc. | 7,810,600 | | 182,065 |
F5 Networks, Inc. (a) | 250,700 | | 20,903 |
Juniper Networks, Inc. (a) | 695,700 | | 13,149 |
QUALCOMM, Inc. | 640,600 | | 42,459 |
| | 258,576 |
Computers & Peripherals - 3.3% |
Apple, Inc. | 1,043,200 | | 508,085 |
EMC Corp. | 4,183,500 | | 107,851 |
NCR Corp. (a) | 1,993,400 | | 70,925 |
SanDisk Corp. | 56,400 | | 3,112 |
| | 689,973 |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 0.4% |
Amphenol Corp. Class A | 552,400 | | 41,855 |
Arrow Electronics, Inc. (a) | 775,600 | | 36,003 |
E Ink Holdings, Inc. GDR (a)(g) | 140,100 | | 798 |
| | 78,656 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued |
Internet Software & Services - 3.0% |
Demand Media, Inc. (a)(e) | 286,508 | | $ 1,857 |
eBay, Inc. (a) | 1,508,600 | | 75,415 |
Facebook, Inc. Class A (a) | 2,339,160 | | 96,561 |
Google, Inc. Class A (a) | 431,200 | | 365,183 |
Mail.Ru Group Ltd.: | | | |
GDR (g) | 580,000 | | 18,937 |
GDR (Reg. S) | 289,900 | | 9,465 |
Pandora Media, Inc. (a)(e) | 23,894 | | 440 |
Yahoo!, Inc. (a) | 2,387,800 | | 64,757 |
| | 632,615 |
IT Services - 1.1% |
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. Class A (a) | 495,200 | | 36,298 |
MasterCard, Inc. Class A | 58,200 | | 35,274 |
Visa, Inc. Class A | 921,600 | | 160,745 |
| | 232,317 |
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 0.9% |
Altera Corp. | 1,222,200 | | 42,985 |
Broadcom Corp. Class A | 862,800 | | 21,794 |
KLA-Tencor Corp. | 598,000 | | 32,980 |
Micron Technology, Inc. (a) | 1,250,000 | | 16,963 |
NXP Semiconductors NV (a) | 342,800 | | 12,742 |
Spansion, Inc. Class A (a) | 1,868 | | 19 |
Texas Instruments, Inc. | 1,888,400 | | 72,137 |
| | 199,620 |
Software - 2.6% |
Activision Blizzard, Inc. | 640,600 | | 10,455 |
Adobe Systems, Inc. (a) | 1,696,000 | | 77,592 |
Microsoft Corp. | 6,914,000 | | 230,928 |
Oracle Corp. | 4,274,700 | | 136,192 |
salesforce.com, Inc. (a) | 1,408,800 | | 69,214 |
Workday, Inc. Class A | 338,500 | | 24,551 |
| | 548,932 |
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | 2,640,689 |
MATERIALS - 1.4% |
Chemicals - 0.9% |
Ashland, Inc. | 161,600 | | 14,093 |
CF Industries Holdings, Inc. | 98,900 | | 18,825 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
MATERIALS - continued |
Chemicals - continued |
LyondellBasell Industries NV Class A | 714,029 | | $ 50,089 |
Monsanto Co. | 889,200 | | 87,044 |
RPM International, Inc. | 604,600 | | 20,544 |
W.R. Grace & Co. (a) | 168,100 | | 13,507 |
| | 204,102 |
Construction Materials - 0.2% |
Eagle Materials, Inc. | 570,400 | | 36,597 |
Vulcan Materials Co. | 111,400 | | 5,325 |
| | 41,922 |
Containers & Packaging - 0.3% |
Rock-Tenn Co. Class A | 546,400 | | 60,711 |
Metals & Mining - 0.0% |
Ivanplats Ltd. (g) | 819,127 | | 1,524 |
TOTAL MATERIALS | | 308,259 |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 1.2% |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.8% |
Bezeq Israeli Telecommunication Corp. Ltd. | 9,287,800 | | 15,138 |
Broadview Networks Holdings, Inc. | 123,987 | | 1,133 |
Iliad SA | 150,462 | | 36,093 |
Verizon Communications, Inc. | 2,337,700 | | 110,760 |
| | 163,124 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.4% |
SBA Communications Corp. Class A (a) | 479,200 | | 35,940 |
SoftBank Corp. | 245,000 | | 15,285 |
Vodafone Group PLC sponsored ADR | 1,020,100 | | 33,000 |
| | 84,225 |
TOTAL TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES | | 247,349 |
UTILITIES - 1.1% |
Electric Utilities - 0.6% |
Bicent Power LLC: | | | |
warrants 8/21/22 (a) | 531 | | 0 |
warrants 8/21/22 (a) | 327 | | 0 |
Edison International | 1,312,900 | | 60,249 |
NextEra Energy, Inc. | 879,200 | | 70,653 |
| | 130,902 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
UTILITIES - continued |
Gas Utilities - 0.1% |
ONEOK, Inc. | 191,700 | | $ 9,861 |
Multi-Utilities - 0.4% |
Sempra Energy | 1,014,600 | | 85,653 |
TOTAL UTILITIES | | 226,416 |
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (Cost $11,303,306) | 14,515,172
|
Preferred Stocks - 0.7% |
| | | |
Convertible Preferred Stocks - 0.4% |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.3% |
Automobiles - 0.0% |
General Motors Co. 4.75% | 135,200 | | 6,579 |
Household Durables - 0.1% |
Blu Homes, Inc. Series A, 5.00% (p) | 1,082,251 | | 5,000 |
Roku, Inc. 8.00% (p) | 5,520,836 | | 5,000 |
| | 10,000 |
Media - 0.2% |
Vice Holdings, Inc. Series A (p) | 6,701 | | 43,738 |
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | 60,317 |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 0.1% |
Internet Software & Services - 0.0% |
wetpaint.com, Inc. Series C (a)(p) | 497,017 | | 994 |
Software - 0.1% |
Mobileye N.V. Series F (a)(p) | 369,679 | | 12,902 |
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | 13,896 |
MATERIALS - 0.0% |
Metals & Mining - 0.0% |
AngloGold Ashanti Holdings Finance PLC 6.00% | 104,600 | | 1,616 |
Preferred Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
Convertible Preferred Stocks - continued |
UTILITIES - 0.0% |
Electric Utilities - 0.0% |
AES Trust III 6.75% | 76,300 | | $ 3,826 |
TOTAL CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCKS | | 79,655 |
Nonconvertible Preferred Stocks - 0.3% |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.2% |
Automobiles - 0.2% |
Volkswagen AG | 237,100 | | 53,930 |
FINANCIALS - 0.1% |
Capital Markets - 0.0% |
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. Series J, 5.50% | 100,446 | | 2,275 |
Consumer Finance - 0.1% |
Ally Financial, Inc. 7.00% (g) | 10,951 | | 10,267 |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.0% |
GMAC Capital Trust I Series 2, 8.125% | 377,872 | | 10,017 |
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | 22,559 |
TOTAL NONCONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCKS | | 76,489 |
TOTAL PREFERRED STOCKS (Cost $121,499) | 156,144
|
Corporate Bonds - 12.9% |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | |
Convertible Bonds - 0.1% |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.0% |
Media - 0.0% |
Liberty Media Corp.: | | | | |
3.5% 1/15/31 | | $ 375 | | 317 |
3.5% 1/15/31 (g) | | 2,776 | | 2,346 |
Mood Media Corp. 10% 10/31/15 (g) | | 32 | | 28 |
| | 2,691 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Convertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - 0.0% |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 0.0% |
Chesapeake Energy Corp. 2.75% 11/15/35 | | $ 2,810 | | $ 2,889 |
Massey Energy Co. 3.25% 8/1/15 | | 1,880 | | 1,724 |
| | 4,613 |
INDUSTRIALS - 0.1% |
Building Products - 0.1% |
Aspen Aerogels, Inc.: | | | | |
8% 6/1/14 (p) | | 11,328 | | 11,328 |
8% 12/6/14 (p) | | 3,220 | | 3,220 |
| | 14,548 |
TOTAL CONVERTIBLE BONDS | | 21,852 |
Nonconvertible Bonds - 12.8% |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 1.4% |
Auto Components - 0.1% |
Affinia Group, Inc. 7.75% 5/1/21 (g) | | 250 | | 257 |
Chassix, Inc. 9.25% 8/1/18 (g) | | 470 | | 490 |
DaimlerChrysler NA Holding Corp. 6.5% 11/15/13 | | 1,110 | | 1,122 |
Dana Holding Corp.: | | | | |
5.375% 9/15/21 | | 880 | | 865 |
6% 9/15/23 | | 880 | | 858 |
Delphi Corp.: | | | | |
5% 2/15/23 | | 10,718 | | 10,892 |
6.125% 5/15/21 | | 1,690 | | 1,846 |
Schaeffler Holding Finance BV 6.875% 8/15/18 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 1,565 | | 1,628 |
Tenneco, Inc. 6.875% 12/15/20 | | 2,415 | | 2,590 |
| | 20,548 |
Automobiles - 0.2% |
Daimler Finance North America LLC: | | | | |
1.45% 8/1/16 (g) | | 3,577 | | 3,561 |
1.95% 3/28/14 (g) | | 1,854 | | 1,865 |
Ford Motor Co.: | | | | |
4.75% 1/15/43 | | 15,618 | | 13,739 |
6.375% 2/1/29 | | 2,190 | | 2,362 |
7.45% 7/16/31 | | 8,972 | | 10,813 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Automobiles - continued |
General Motors Corp.: | | | | |
6.75% 5/1/28 (d) | | $ 390 | | $ 0 |
7.125% 7/15/49 (d) | | 1,135 | | 0 |
7.2% 1/15/11 (d) | | 2,855 | | 0 |
7.4% 9/1/25 (d) | | 195 | | 0 |
7.7% 4/15/16 (d) | | 705 | | 0 |
8.25% 7/15/23 (d) | | 5,475 | | 0 |
8.375% 7/15/33 (d) | | 16,800 | | 0 |
Volkswagen International Finance NV 2.375% 3/22/17 (g) | | 1,515 | | 1,539 |
| | 33,879 |
Distributors - 0.0% |
American Builders & Contractors Supply Co., Inc. 5.625% 4/15/21 (g) | | 365 | | 354 |
Ferrellgas LP/Ferrellgas Finance Corp. 6.5% 5/1/21 | | 1,745 | | 1,745 |
LKQ Corp. 4.75% 5/15/23 (g) | | 265 | | 244 |
| | 2,343 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.0% |
Ingersoll-Rand Global Holding Co. Ltd.: | | | | |
2.875% 1/15/19 (g) | | 554 | | 546 |
4.25% 6/15/23 (g) | | 3,903 | | 3,827 |
5.75% 6/15/43 (g) | | 2,809 | | 2,883 |
Laureate Education, Inc. 9.25% 9/1/19 (g) | | 4,040 | | 4,363 |
Service Corp. International 5.375% 1/15/22 (g) | | 505 | | 490 |
| | 12,109 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 0.1% |
Boyd Acquisition Sub LLC/Boyd Acquisition Finance Corp. 8.375% 2/15/18 (g) | | 325 | | 349 |
Caesars Entertainment Operating Co., Inc. 8.5% 2/15/20 | | 3,765 | | 3,596 |
Caesars Operating Escrow LLC/Caesars Escrow Corp. 9% 2/15/20 | | 1,765 | | 1,694 |
Chester Downs & Marina LLC 9.25% 2/1/20 (g) | | 435 | | 434 |
Choice Hotels International, Inc. 5.75% 7/1/22 | | 390 | | 402 |
Chukchansi Economic Development Authority 9.75% 5/30/20 (d)(g) | | 2,861 | | 1,659 |
Graton Economic Development Authority 9.625% 9/1/19 (g) | | 1,065 | | 1,177 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - continued |
Landry's Holdings II, Inc. 10.25% 1/1/18 (g) | | $ 900 | | $ 952 |
MCE Finance Ltd. 5% 2/15/21 (g) | | 1,290 | | 1,184 |
MGM Mirage, Inc.: | | | | |
5.875% 2/27/14 | | 2,998 | | 3,068 |
6.625% 12/15/21 | | 1,115 | | 1,132 |
7.5% 6/1/16 | | 2,855 | | 3,141 |
NAI Entertainment Holdings LLC/NAI Entertainment Finance Corp.: | | | | |
5% 8/1/18 (g) | | 865 | | 876 |
8.25% 12/15/17 (g) | | 848 | | 919 |
Pinnacle Entertainment, Inc. 7.75% 4/1/22 | | 450 | | 467 |
Playa Resorts Holding BV 8% 8/15/20 (g) | | 330 | | 337 |
Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. 5.25% 11/15/22 | | 615 | | 599 |
Studio City Finance Ltd. 8.5% 12/1/20 (g) | | 5,600 | | 5,936 |
Waterford Gaming LLC/Waterford Gaming Finance Corp. 8.625% 9/15/14 (g) | | 886 | | 272 |
| | 28,194 |
Household Durables - 0.1% |
Beazer Homes U.S.A., Inc. 7.25% 2/1/23 | | 775 | | 783 |
Brookfield Residential Properties, Inc./Brookfield Residential U.S. Corp. 6.125% 7/1/22 (g) | | 785 | | 775 |
Brookfield Residential Properties, Inc. 6.5% 12/15/20 (g) | | 620 | | 634 |
Reynolds Group Issuer, Inc./Reynolds Group Issuer LLC/Reynolds Group Issuer (Luxembourg) SA: | | | | |
5.75% 10/15/20 | | 6,420 | | 6,364 |
7.875% 8/15/19 | | 8,325 | | 9,158 |
8.25% 2/15/21 | | 1,485 | | 1,466 |
9% 4/15/19 | | 835 | | 862 |
William Lyon Homes, Inc. 8.5% 11/15/20 | | 730 | | 774 |
Woodside Homes Co. LLC/Woodside Homes Finance, Inc. 6.75% 12/15/21 (g) | | 1,350 | | 1,343 |
| | 22,159 |
Leisure Equipment & Products - 0.0% |
Spencer Spirit Holdings, Inc. 9% 5/1/18 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 550 | | 535 |
Media - 0.8% |
AMC Networks, Inc. 7.75% 7/15/21 | | 340 | | 376 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Media - continued |
CCO Holdings LLC/CCO Holdings Capital Corp.: | | | | |
5.125% 2/15/23 | | $ 1,580 | | $ 1,418 |
5.25% 3/15/21 (g) | | 1,375 | | 1,310 |
5.75% 9/1/23 (g) | | 945 | | 881 |
5.75% 1/15/24 | | 4,235 | | 3,928 |
8.125% 4/30/20 | | 3,485 | | 3,781 |
Cequel Communications Escrow I LLC/Cequel Communications Escrow Capital Corp. 6.375% 9/15/20 (g) | | 325 | | 324 |
Cequel Communications Holdings I LLC/Cequel Capital Corp. 5.125% 12/15/21 (g) | | 3,345 | | 3,077 |
Checkout Holding Corp. 0% 11/15/15 (g) | | 1,290 | | 1,042 |
Cinemark U.S.A., Inc.: | | | | |
4.875% 6/1/23 | | 1,275 | | 1,173 |
5.125% 12/15/22 | | 355 | | 332 |
Clear Channel Communications, Inc.: | | | | |
5.5% 9/15/14 | | 2,355 | | 2,284 |
5.5% 12/15/16 | | 1,330 | | 984 |
Clear Channel Worldwide Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
6.5% 11/15/22 | | 755 | | 749 |
6.5% 11/15/22 | | 2,040 | | 2,040 |
7.625% 3/15/20 | | 585 | | 581 |
7.625% 3/15/20 | | 4,105 | | 4,115 |
Comcast Corp.: | | | | |
4.95% 6/15/16 | | 790 | | 870 |
6.4% 5/15/38 | | 6,000 | | 7,090 |
6.4% 3/1/40 | | 4,017 | | 4,772 |
6.95% 8/15/37 | | 7,000 | | 8,769 |
COX Communications, Inc. 3.25% 12/15/22 (g) | | 2,162 | | 1,902 |
Discovery Communications LLC: | | | | |
3.7% 6/1/15 | | 4,012 | | 4,201 |
5.05% 6/1/20 | | 168 | | 182 |
6.35% 6/1/40 | | 3,224 | | 3,543 |
DISH DBS Corp.: | | | | |
5.875% 7/15/22 | | 2,655 | | 2,602 |
6.75% 6/1/21 | | 3,515 | | 3,664 |
EchoStar Communications Corp. 6.625% 10/1/14 | | 3,000 | | 3,131 |
Lamar Media Corp.: | | | | |
5.875% 2/1/22 | | 525 | | 529 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Media - continued |
Lamar Media Corp.: - continued | | | | |
7.875% 4/15/18 | | $ 1,400 | | $ 1,496 |
Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. 5.25% 8/1/18 (g) | | 3,730 | | 3,730 |
McGraw-Hill Global Education Holdings LLC/McGraw-Hill Global Education Finance 9.75% 4/1/21 (g) | | 3,907 | | 4,122 |
National CineMedia LLC: | | | | |
6% 4/15/22 | | 2,600 | | 2,652 |
7.875% 7/15/21 | | 1,380 | | 1,490 |
NBC Universal, Inc.: | | | | |
3.65% 4/30/15 | | 1,216 | | 1,274 |
5.15% 4/30/20 | | 4,917 | | 5,535 |
6.4% 4/30/40 | | 4,249 | | 5,057 |
News America Holdings, Inc. 7.75% 12/1/45 | | 8,012 | | 9,976 |
Nielsen Finance LLC/Nielsen Finance Co.: | | | | |
4.5% 10/1/20 | | 1,770 | | 1,682 |
7.75% 10/15/18 | | 3,165 | | 3,442 |
11.625% 2/1/14 | | 1,171 | | 1,219 |
RCN Telecom Services LLC/RCN Capital Corp. 8.5% 8/15/20 (g) | | 380 | | 376 |
Regal Entertainment Group: | | | | |
5.75% 6/15/23 | | 2,270 | | 2,122 |
5.75% 2/1/25 | | 340 | | 313 |
Satelites Mexicanos SA de CV 9.5% 5/15/17 | | 475 | | 518 |
Sheridan Group, Inc. 12.5% 4/15/14 | | 1,775 | | 1,775 |
Sirius XM Radio, Inc. 5.75% 8/1/21 (g) | | 3,350 | | 3,283 |
Time Warner Cable, Inc.: | | | | |
4% 9/1/21 | | 7,778 | | 7,296 |
4.5% 9/15/42 | | 6,688 | | 5,174 |
5.5% 9/1/41 | | 17,772 | | 15,115 |
5.85% 5/1/17 | | 1,621 | | 1,763 |
5.875% 11/15/40 | | 1,318 | | 1,180 |
6.75% 7/1/18 | | 1,581 | | 1,760 |
Time Warner, Inc.: | | | | |
3.15% 7/15/15 | | 451 | | 469 |
5.375% 10/15/41 | | 1,539 | | 1,521 |
5.875% 11/15/16 | | 3,738 | | 4,227 |
6.2% 3/15/40 | | 2,618 | | 2,846 |
6.5% 11/15/36 | | 2,633 | | 2,932 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Media - continued |
Unitymedia Hessen GmbH & Co. KG/Unitymedia NRW GmbH: | | | | |
5.5% 1/15/23 (g) | | $ 1,340 | | $ 1,263 |
7.5% 3/15/19 (g) | | 480 | | 518 |
UPCB Finance VI Ltd. 6.875% 1/15/22 (g) | | 1,250 | | 1,306 |
Viacom, Inc.: | | | | |
1.25% 2/27/15 | | 377 | | 378 |
2.5% 9/1/18 | | 714 | | 705 |
3.5% 4/1/17 | | 219 | | 228 |
Videotron Ltd. 9.125% 4/15/18 | | 2,604 | | 2,731 |
WMG Acquisition Corp. 6% 1/15/21 (g) | | 423 | | 434 |
| | 171,558 |
Multiline Retail - 0.0% |
The Bon-Ton Department Stores, Inc. 8% 6/15/21 (g) | | 730 | | 706 |
Specialty Retail - 0.1% |
Albea Beauty Holdings SA 8.375% 11/1/19 (g) | | 1,730 | | 1,747 |
Asbury Automotive Group, Inc. 8.375% 11/15/20 | | 565 | | 624 |
Claire's Stores, Inc.: | | | | |
7.75% 6/1/20 (g) | | 485 | | 483 |
9% 3/15/19 (g) | | 3,800 | | 4,232 |
CST Brands, Inc. 5% 5/1/23 (g) | | 320 | | 304 |
Jo-Ann Stores, Inc. 9.75% 10/15/19 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 975 | | 1,004 |
PETCO Animal Supplies, Inc. 9.25% 12/1/18 (g) | | 3,260 | | 3,513 |
Petco Holdings, Inc. 8.5% 10/15/17 pay-in-kind (g) | | 590 | | 602 |
Sonic Automotive, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 5/15/23 | | 195 | | 180 |
7% 7/15/22 | | 885 | | 957 |
| | 13,646 |
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 0.0% |
Burlington Holdings LLC/Burlington Holding Finance, Inc. 9% 2/15/18 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 725 | | 741 |
SIWF Merger Sub, Inc./Springs Industries, Inc. 6.25% 6/1/21 (g) | | 355 | | 351 |
| | 1,092 |
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | 306,769 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER STAPLES - 0.6% |
Beverages - 0.1% |
Anheuser-Busch InBev Worldwide, Inc. 5.375% 11/15/14 | | $ 2,054 | | $ 2,168 |
Beam, Inc. 1.875% 5/15/17 | | 1,176 | | 1,173 |
Constellation Brands, Inc.: | | | | |
3.75% 5/1/21 | | 355 | | 328 |
4.25% 5/1/23 | | 535 | | 491 |
FBG Finance Ltd. 5.125% 6/15/15 (g) | | 3,957 | | 4,245 |
Fortune Brands, Inc. 5.375% 1/15/16 | | 1,919 | | 2,090 |
Heineken NV: | | | | |
1.4% 10/1/17 (g) | | 2,951 | | 2,861 |
2.75% 4/1/23 (g) | | 3,085 | | 2,779 |
SABMiller Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
1.85% 1/15/15 (g) | | 1,947 | | 1,971 |
2.45% 1/15/17 (g) | | 1,947 | | 1,981 |
| | 20,087 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 0.1% |
Bi-Lo LLC/Bi-Lo Finance Corp. 9.25% 2/15/19 (g) | | 1,030 | | 1,123 |
ESAL GmbH 6.25% 2/5/23 (g) | | 925 | | 828 |
Hawk Acquisition Sub, Inc. 4.25% 10/15/20 (g) | | 7,625 | | 7,206 |
Rite Aid Corp.: | | | | |
6.75% 6/15/21 (g) | | 7,375 | | 7,467 |
6.875% 12/15/28 (g) | | 2,995 | | 2,800 |
7.7% 2/15/27 | | 2,550 | | 2,595 |
9.25% 3/15/20 | | 1,330 | | 1,505 |
Tops Markets LLC 8.875% 12/15/17 (g) | | 675 | | 746 |
Walgreen Co. 1% 3/13/15 | | 1,555 | | 1,560 |
| | 25,830 |
Food Products - 0.2% |
Cargill, Inc. 6% 11/27/17 (g) | | 417 | | 478 |
ConAgra Foods, Inc.: | | | | |
1.9% 1/25/18 | | 2,064 | | 2,025 |
3.2% 1/25/23 | | 2,400 | | 2,237 |
4.65% 1/25/43 | | 2,022 | | 1,845 |
Kraft Foods, Inc.: | | | | |
5.375% 2/10/20 | | 23,518 | | 26,240 |
6.5% 8/11/17 | | 2,584 | | 2,990 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER STAPLES - continued |
Food Products - continued |
Kraft Foods, Inc.: - continued | | | | |
6.75% 2/19/14 | | $ 318 | | $ 327 |
Post Holdings, Inc. 7.375% 2/15/22 | | 1,545 | | 1,630 |
| | 37,772 |
Household Products - 0.0% |
Spectrum Brands Escrow Corp.: | | | | |
6.375% 11/15/20 (g) | | 350 | | 362 |
6.625% 11/15/22 (g) | | 415 | | 425 |
| | 787 |
Personal Products - 0.0% |
Alphabet Holding Co., Inc. 7.75% 11/1/17 pay-in-kind | | 1,435 | | 1,482 |
First Quality Finance Co., Inc. 4.625% 5/15/21 (g) | | 300 | | 279 |
Prestige Brands, Inc. 8.125% 2/1/20 | | 220 | | 242 |
Revlon Consumer Products Corp. 5.75% 2/15/21 (g) | | 1,105 | | 1,053 |
| | 3,056 |
Tobacco - 0.2% |
Altria Group, Inc.: | | | | |
2.85% 8/9/22 | | 4,020 | | 3,620 |
4.25% 8/9/42 | | 4,020 | | 3,292 |
9.7% 11/10/18 | | 5,570 | | 7,289 |
Reynolds American, Inc.: | | | | |
3.25% 11/1/22 | | 2,999 | | 2,737 |
4.75% 11/1/42 | | 4,633 | | 4,029 |
6.75% 6/15/17 | | 3,979 | | 4,579 |
7.25% 6/15/37 | | 6,101 | | 6,993 |
| | 32,539 |
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | 120,071 |
ENERGY - 1.4% |
Energy Equipment & Services - 0.3% |
Cameron International Corp. 1.6% 4/30/15 | | 231 | | 232 |
DCP Midstream LLC: | | | | |
4.75% 9/30/21 (g) | | 5,634 | | 5,698 |
5.35% 3/15/20 (g) | | 5,174 | | 5,496 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Energy Equipment & Services - continued |
El Paso Pipeline Partners Operating Co. LLC: | | | | |
4.1% 11/15/15 | | $ 5,488 | | $ 5,821 |
5% 10/1/21 | | 2,280 | | 2,404 |
6.5% 4/1/20 | | 2,264 | | 2,591 |
FMC Technologies, Inc.: | | | | |
2% 10/1/17 | | 735 | | 721 |
3.45% 10/1/22 | | 1,333 | | 1,265 |
Gulfmark Offshore, Inc. 6.375% 3/15/22 | | 365 | | 370 |
Noble Holding International Ltd.: | | | | |
3.05% 3/1/16 | | 756 | | 777 |
3.45% 8/1/15 | | 1,075 | | 1,116 |
Offshore Group Investment Ltd.: | | | | |
7.125% 4/1/23 | | 1,500 | | 1,444 |
7.5% 11/1/19 | | 7,020 | | 7,301 |
Oil States International, Inc. 6.5% 6/1/19 | | 1,420 | | 1,498 |
Pacific Drilling SA 5.375% 6/1/20 (g) | | 1,270 | | 1,226 |
Pacific Drilling V Ltd. 7.25% 12/1/17 (g) | | 2,800 | | 2,975 |
Precision Drilling Corp.: | | | | |
6.5% 12/15/21 | | 315 | | 329 |
6.625% 11/15/20 | | 1,580 | | 1,663 |
Pride International, Inc. 6.875% 8/15/20 | | 1,355 | | 1,601 |
Summit Midstream Holdings LLC 7.5% 7/1/21 (g) | | 500 | | 508 |
Transocean, Inc. 5.05% 12/15/16 | | 3,719 | | 4,065 |
Unit Corp. 6.625% 5/15/21 | | 4,515 | | 4,605 |
Weatherford International Ltd. 4.95% 10/15/13 | | 2,346 | | 2,356 |
| | 56,062 |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 1.1% |
Access Midstream Partners LP/ACMP Finance Corp. 4.875% 5/15/23 | | 1,680 | | 1,562 |
Alpha Natural Resources, Inc.: | | | | |
6% 6/1/19 | | 2,410 | | 2,061 |
6.25% 6/1/21 | | 2,725 | | 2,282 |
9.75% 4/15/18 | | 1,099 | | 1,104 |
Anadarko Petroleum Corp.: | | | | |
5.95% 9/15/16 | | 1,489 | | 1,669 |
6.375% 9/15/17 | | 20,246 | | 23,404 |
6.45% 9/15/36 | | 4,261 | | 4,953 |
Apache Corp. 3.25% 4/15/22 | | 193 | | 188 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued |
Atlas Pipeline Partners LP/Atlas Pipeline Finance Corp. 5.875% 8/1/23 (g) | | $ 1,155 | | $ 1,083 |
Cenovus Energy, Inc. 4.5% 9/15/14 | | 745 | | 774 |
Chesapeake Energy Corp.: | | | | |
5.375% 6/15/21 | | 1,340 | | 1,330 |
5.75% 3/15/23 | | 1,330 | | 1,323 |
Chevron Corp. 3.191% 6/24/23 | | 6,848 | | 6,630 |
Concho Resources, Inc. 5.5% 4/1/23 | | 1,155 | | 1,120 |
Continental Resources, Inc.: | | | | |
4.5% 4/15/23 | | 1,810 | | 1,778 |
5% 9/15/22 | | 2,690 | | 2,717 |
Crestwood Midstream Partners LP/Finance Corp. 7.75% 4/1/19 | | 1,990 | | 2,077 |
DCP Midstream Operating LP: | | | | |
2.5% 12/1/17 | | 2,677 | | 2,630 |
3.875% 3/15/23 | | 1,647 | | 1,502 |
4.95% 4/1/22 | | 1,048 | | 1,041 |
Denbury Resources, Inc.: | | | | |
4.625% 7/15/23 | | 4,625 | | 4,128 |
8.25% 2/15/20 | | 1,973 | | 2,170 |
Duke Energy Field Services: | | | | |
5.375% 10/15/15 (g) | | 1,647 | | 1,771 |
6.45% 11/3/36 (g) | | 3,753 | | 3,944 |
El Paso Natural Gas Co. 5.95% 4/15/17 | | 1,260 | | 1,416 |
Enbridge Energy Partners LP 4.2% 9/15/21 | | 6,629 | | 6,661 |
Encana Holdings Finance Corp. 5.8% 5/1/14 | | 3,892 | | 4,017 |
Enterprise Products Operating LP 5.6% 10/15/14 | | 1,482 | | 1,558 |
EP Energy LLC/Everest Acquisition Finance, Inc. 7.75% 9/1/22 | | 885 | | 947 |
EPE Holdings LLC/EP Energy Bond Co., Inc. 8.875% 12/15/17 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 1,470 | | 1,473 |
EV Energy Partners LP/EV Energy Finance Corp. 8% 4/15/19 | | 650 | | 650 |
Everest Acquisition LLC/Everest Acquisition Finance, Inc.: | | | | |
6.875% 5/1/19 | | 1,540 | | 1,636 |
9.375% 5/1/20 | | 4,780 | | 5,258 |
Forest Oil Corp.: | | | | |
7.25% 6/15/19 | | 1,670 | | 1,657 |
7.5% 9/15/20 | | 1,735 | | 1,666 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued |
Genesis Energy LP/Genesis Energy Finance Corp. 5.75% 2/15/21 | | $ 520 | | $ 512 |
Gulfstream Natural Gas System LLC 6.95% 6/1/16 (g) | | 677 | | 768 |
Halcon Resources Corp. 8.875% 5/15/21 | | 1,030 | | 1,033 |
Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp.: | | | | |
5.5% 1/15/21 (g) | | 485 | | 480 |
8.125% 12/1/19 | | 1,325 | | 1,451 |
LINN Energy LLC/LINN Energy Finance Corp.: | | | | |
6.25% 11/1/19 (g) | | 3,855 | | 3,547 |
6.5% 5/15/19 | | 1,820 | | 1,711 |
Marathon Petroleum Corp.: | | | | |
3.5% 3/1/16 | | 409 | | 429 |
5.125% 3/1/21 | | 3,173 | | 3,396 |
Markwest Energy Partners LP/Markwest Energy Finance Corp. 5.5% 2/15/23 | | 610 | | 599 |
Midcontinent Express Pipeline LLC 5.45% 9/15/14 (g) | | 2,559 | | 2,638 |
Motiva Enterprises LLC: | | | | |
5.75% 1/15/20 (g) | | 3,614 | | 4,105 |
6.85% 1/15/40 (g) | | 2,906 | | 3,547 |
Nakilat, Inc. 6.067% 12/31/33 (g) | | 1,839 | | 1,931 |
Nexen, Inc.: | | | | |
5.2% 3/10/15 | | 1,224 | | 1,291 |
6.2% 7/30/19 | | 1,865 | | 2,156 |
Occidental Petroleum Corp. 2.7% 2/15/23 | | 1,608 | | 1,456 |
Petrobras Global Finance BV: | | | | |
3% 1/15/19 | | 4,414 | | 4,054 |
4.375% 5/20/23 | | 3,648 | | 3,203 |
Petrobras International Finance Co. Ltd.: | | | | |
3.875% 1/27/16 | | 5,238 | | 5,373 |
5.375% 1/27/21 | | 2,313 | | 2,259 |
7.875% 3/15/19 | | 5,564 | | 6,263 |
Petroleos Mexicanos: | | | | |
3.5% 7/18/18 | | 6,172 | | 6,224 |
3.5% 1/30/23 | | 4,530 | | 4,054 |
4.875% 1/24/22 | | 2,315 | | 2,338 |
5.5% 1/21/21 | | 5,342 | | 5,663 |
5.5% 6/27/44 | | 17,702 | | 15,356 |
6% 3/5/20 | | 1,974 | | 2,166 |
6.5% 6/2/41 | | 6,878 | | 6,844 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued |
Phillips 66: | | | | |
1.95% 3/5/15 | | $ 1,526 | | $ 1,549 |
2.95% 5/1/17 | | 1,527 | | 1,572 |
4.3% 4/1/22 | | 5,338 | | 5,384 |
5.875% 5/1/42 | | 4,552 | | 4,832 |
Plains All American Pipeline LP/PAA Finance Corp.: | | | | |
3.95% 9/15/15 | | 308 | | 326 |
6.125% 1/15/17 | | 1,880 | | 2,134 |
QR Energy LP/QRE Finance Corp. 9.25% 8/1/20 | | 1,075 | | 1,088 |
SemGroup Corp. 7.5% 6/15/21 (g) | | 1,000 | | 1,018 |
Southeast Supply Header LLC 4.85% 8/15/14 (g) | | 1,176 | | 1,217 |
Spectra Energy Capital, LLC 5.65% 3/1/20 | | 944 | | 1,028 |
Spectra Energy Partners, LP: | | | | |
2.95% 6/15/16 | | 1,059 | | 1,080 |
4.6% 6/15/21 | | 1,296 | | 1,324 |
Suncor Energy, Inc. 6.1% 6/1/18 | | 7,771 | | 8,992 |
Targa Resources Partners LP/Targa Resources Partners Finance Corp. 6.375% 8/1/22 | | 570 | | 590 |
Teekay Corp. 8.5% 1/15/20 | | 120 | | 130 |
Texas Eastern Transmission LP 6% 9/15/17 (g) | | 948 | | 1,065 |
TransCapitalInvest Ltd. 5.67% 3/5/14 (g) | | 5,281 | | 5,405 |
Western Gas Partners LP 5.375% 6/1/21 | | 7,147 | | 7,709 |
Western Refining, Inc. 6.25% 4/1/21 | | 550 | | 539 |
| | 242,009 |
TOTAL ENERGY | | 298,071 |
FINANCIALS - 5.0% |
Capital Markets - 0.7% |
Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. 5.3% 10/30/15 | | 878 | | 952 |
BlackRock, Inc.: | | | | |
3.375% 6/1/22 | | 274 | | 270 |
4.25% 5/24/21 | | 414 | | 437 |
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.: | | | | |
2.375% 1/22/18 | | 10,000 | | 9,807 |
3.625% 1/22/23 | | 7,000 | | 6,598 |
5.95% 1/18/18 | | 4,242 | | 4,740 |
6.15% 4/1/18 | | 3,466 | | 3,914 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Capital Markets - continued |
JPMorgan Chase & Co.: | | | | |
0.8% 4/23/15 | | $ 28,000 | | $ 27,928 |
1.125% 2/26/16 | | 15,094 | | 15,053 |
Lazard Group LLC: | | | | |
6.85% 6/15/17 | | 5,189 | | 5,852 |
7.125% 5/15/15 | | 1,855 | | 2,013 |
Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.: | | | | |
6.11% 1/29/37 | | 11,555 | | 11,716 |
6.4% 8/28/17 | | 4,204 | | 4,788 |
7.75% 5/14/38 | | 7,615 | | 9,131 |
Morgan Stanley: | | | | |
2.125% 4/25/18 | | 16,388 | | 15,800 |
4% 7/24/15 | | 1,137 | | 1,187 |
4.875% 11/1/22 | | 7,126 | | 7,020 |
5.375% 10/15/15 | | 15,930 | | 17,146 |
5.625% 9/23/19 | | 453 | | 498 |
5.95% 12/28/17 | | 250 | | 280 |
6.625% 4/1/18 | | 1,494 | | 1,710 |
State Street Corp. 3.1% 5/15/23 | | 6,500 | | 6,009 |
UBS AG Stamford Branch 2.25% 1/28/14 | | 1,003 | | 1,011 |
| | 153,860 |
Commercial Banks - 1.2% |
Associated Banc Corp. 5.125% 3/28/16 | | 1,852 | | 1,979 |
Bank of America NA 5.3% 3/15/17 | | 14,681 | | 16,000 |
BB&T Corp. 3.95% 3/22/22 | | 1,495 | | 1,478 |
CIT Group, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 8/15/22 | | 2,195 | | 2,074 |
5% 8/1/23 | | 7,565 | | 7,085 |
5.25% 3/15/18 | | 3,215 | | 3,319 |
5.375% 5/15/20 | | 2,805 | | 2,819 |
5.5% 2/15/19 (g) | | 5,285 | | 5,417 |
Comerica Bank 5.7% 6/1/14 | | 507 | | 525 |
Comerica, Inc. 4.8% 5/1/15 | | 1,013 | | 1,067 |
Credit Suisse 6% 2/15/18 | | 12,547 | | 14,042 |
Credit Suisse New York Branch 5.4% 1/14/20 | | 1,200 | | 1,301 |
Discover Bank: | | | | |
7% 4/15/20 | | 3,075 | | 3,603 |
8.7% 11/18/19 | | 532 | | 671 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Commercial Banks - continued |
Fifth Third Bancorp: | | | | |
3.5% 3/15/22 | | $ 529 | | $ 515 |
4.5% 6/1/18 | | 418 | | 447 |
5.45% 1/15/17 | | 1,848 | | 2,025 |
8.25% 3/1/38 | | 3,116 | | 4,015 |
Fifth Third Capital Trust IV 6.5% 4/15/37 (k) | | 3,790 | | 3,762 |
HBOS PLC 6.75% 5/21/18 (g) | | 408 | | 446 |
Huntington Bancshares, Inc. 7% 12/15/20 | | 2,561 | | 3,001 |
Intesa Sanpaolo SpA: | | | | |
3.125% 1/15/16 | | 18,292 | | 18,232 |
3.875% 1/16/18 | | 18,369 | | 17,891 |
JPMorgan Chase Bank 6% 10/1/17 | | 1,942 | | 2,203 |
KeyBank NA: | | | | |
5.45% 3/3/16 | | 2,302 | | 2,520 |
5.8% 7/1/14 | | 7,641 | | 7,956 |
KeyCorp. 5.1% 3/24/21 | | 519 | | 568 |
Marshall & Ilsley Bank: | | | | |
4.85% 6/16/15 | | 3,881 | | 4,134 |
5% 1/17/17 | | 7,888 | | 8,536 |
Regions Bank: | | | | |
6.45% 6/26/37 | | 9,362 | | 9,719 |
7.5% 5/15/18 | | 8,929 | | 10,428 |
Regions Financial Corp.: | | | | |
2% 5/15/18 | | 7,154 | | 6,834 |
5.75% 6/15/15 | | 1,067 | | 1,144 |
7.75% 11/10/14 | | 4,922 | | 5,296 |
Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC: | | | | |
6.1% 6/10/23 | | 8,822 | | 8,471 |
6.125% 12/15/22 | | 35,362 | | 33,973 |
SunTrust Banks, Inc.: | | | | |
0.574% 4/1/15 (k) | | 8,610 | | 8,550 |
3.5% 1/20/17 | | 4,123 | | 4,318 |
UnionBanCal Corp. 3.5% 6/18/22 | | 5,802 | | 5,602 |
Wachovia Bank NA: | | | | |
4.8% 11/1/14 | | 461 | | 483 |
6% 11/15/17 | | 7,010 | | 8,012 |
Wachovia Corp.: | | | | |
5.625% 10/15/16 | | 4,581 | | 5,114 |
5.75% 6/15/17 | | 1,728 | | 1,966 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Commercial Banks - continued |
Wells Fargo & Co.: | | | | |
1.5% 7/1/15 | | $ 13,693 | | $ 13,847 |
3.676% 6/15/16 | | 2,326 | | 2,470 |
| | 263,858 |
Consumer Finance - 0.8% |
Ally Financial, Inc.: | | | | |
4.625% 6/26/15 | | 2,540 | | 2,630 |
6.25% 12/1/17 | | 1,800 | | 1,930 |
American Express Credit Corp.: | | | | |
1.3% 7/29/16 | | 5,523 | | 5,532 |
2.75% 9/15/15 | | 1,352 | | 1,401 |
2.8% 9/19/16 | | 519 | | 541 |
American Honda Finance Corp. 1.45% 2/27/15 (g) | | 1,975 | | 1,993 |
Discover Financial Services: | | | | |
3.85% 11/21/22 | | 1,983 | | 1,867 |
5.2% 4/27/22 | | 2,146 | | 2,217 |
6.45% 6/12/17 | | 10,512 | | 11,864 |
Ford Motor Credit Co. LLC: | | | | |
2.5% 1/15/16 | | 14,000 | | 14,126 |
3% 6/12/17 | | 5,430 | | 5,465 |
General Electric Capital Corp.: | | | | |
1% 1/8/16 | | 18,569 | | 18,473 |
2.25% 11/9/15 | | 534 | | 547 |
4.625% 1/7/21 | | 703 | | 743 |
5.625% 9/15/17 | | 17,812 | | 20,131 |
General Motors Acceptance Corp. 8% 11/1/31 | | 3,115 | | 3,532 |
GMAC LLC: | | | | |
6.75% 12/1/14 | | 2,355 | | 2,473 |
8% 12/31/18 | | 6,035 | | 6,865 |
8% 11/1/31 | | 19,726 | | 22,685 |
Hyundai Capital America: | | | | |
1.625% 10/2/15 (g) | | 1,867 | | 1,866 |
1.875% 8/9/16 (g) | | 1,416 | | 1,414 |
2.125% 10/2/17 (g) | | 2,063 | | 2,012 |
2.875% 8/9/18 (g) | | 2,511 | | 2,495 |
SLM Corp.: | | | | |
3.875% 9/10/15 | | 240 | | 244 |
5.5% 1/25/23 | | 1,365 | | 1,243 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Consumer Finance - continued |
SLM Corp.: - continued | | | | |
8% 3/25/20 | | $ 5,930 | | $ 6,449 |
8.45% 6/15/18 | | 2,400 | | 2,736 |
Toyota Motor Credit Corp. 0.8% 5/17/16 | | 28,000 | | 27,847 |
| | 171,321 |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.6% |
Bank of America Corp.: | | | | |
3.3% 1/11/23 | | 3,469 | | 3,199 |
3.875% 3/22/17 | | 781 | | 822 |
4.1% 7/24/23 | | 5,450 | | 5,351 |
6.5% 8/1/16 | | 1,010 | | 1,138 |
7.375% 5/15/14 | | 26 | | 27 |
BP Capital Markets PLC: | | | | |
3.125% 10/1/15 | | 1,114 | | 1,166 |
4.5% 10/1/20 | | 1,106 | | 1,178 |
4.742% 3/11/21 | | 4,210 | | 4,507 |
Citigroup, Inc.: | | | | |
1.7% 7/25/16 | | 6,000 | | 5,996 |
3.953% 6/15/16 | | 5,674 | | 6,014 |
4.05% 7/30/22 | | 2,389 | | 2,294 |
4.45% 1/10/17 | | 14,158 | | 15,229 |
4.75% 5/19/15 | | 13,577 | | 14,379 |
5.9% (h)(k) | | 5,610 | | 5,301 |
General Motors Financial Co., Inc.: | | | | |
3.25% 5/15/18 (g) | | 700 | | 672 |
4.25% 5/15/23 (g) | | 615 | | 554 |
4.75% 8/15/17 (g) | | 8,705 | | 8,977 |
6.75% 6/1/18 | | 6,765 | | 7,535 |
Icahn Enterprises LP/Icahn Enterprises Finance Corp.: | | | | |
7.75% 1/15/16 | | 7,625 | | 7,901 |
8% 1/15/18 | | 1,015 | | 1,068 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co.: | | | | |
3.15% 7/5/16 | | 8,974 | | 9,372 |
3.4% 6/24/15 | | 1,092 | | 1,137 |
Landry's Acquisition Co. 9.375% 5/1/20 (g) | | 875 | | 933 |
NSG Holdings II, LLC 7.75% 12/15/25 (g) | | 5,023 | | 5,199 |
RBS Citizens Financial Group, Inc. 4.15% 9/28/22 (g) | | 5,782 | | 5,522 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Diversified Financial Services - continued |
TECO Finance, Inc.: | | | | |
4% 3/15/16 | | $ 1,242 | | $ 1,315 |
5.15% 3/15/20 | | 2,029 | | 2,201 |
TransUnion Holding Co., Inc.: | | | | |
8.125% 6/15/18 pay-in-kind | | 1,155 | | 1,217 |
9.625% 6/15/18 pay-in-kind | | 810 | | 875 |
UPCB Finance III Ltd. 6.625% 7/1/20 (g) | | 2,150 | | 2,247 |
Wind Acquisition Holdings Finance SA 12.25% 7/15/17 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 4,127 | | 4,155 |
| | 127,481 |
Insurance - 0.7% |
American International Group, Inc.: | | | | |
2.375% 8/24/15 | | 14,000 | | 14,169 |
3.8% 3/22/17 | | 5,298 | | 5,601 |
4.875% 9/15/16 | | 1,873 | | 2,042 |
4.875% 6/1/22 | | 5,467 | | 5,821 |
5.6% 10/18/16 | | 4,975 | | 5,526 |
5.85% 1/16/18 | | 12,000 | | 13,521 |
Aon Corp.: | | | | |
3.125% 5/27/16 | | 3,402 | | 3,548 |
3.5% 9/30/15 | | 3,819 | | 4,001 |
5% 9/30/20 | | 107 | | 116 |
Aon PLC 4.45% 5/24/43 | | 7,250 | | 6,393 |
Axis Capital Holdings Ltd. 5.75% 12/1/14 | | 329 | | 348 |
Great-West Life & Annuity Insurance Co. 7.153% 5/16/46 (g)(k) | | 2,008 | | 2,058 |
Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.: | | | | |
4% 10/15/17 | | 1,082 | | 1,149 |
5.125% 4/15/22 | | 956 | | 1,039 |
5.375% 3/15/17 | | 595 | | 652 |
Liberty Mutual Group, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 6/1/21 (g) | | 6,063 | | 6,369 |
6.5% 3/15/35 (g) | | 1,064 | | 1,163 |
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. 4.8% 7/15/21 | | 4,128 | | 4,419 |
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. 5.375% 12/1/41 (g) | | 2,993 | | 3,107 |
MetLife, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 6/15/15 | | 686 | | 736 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Insurance - continued |
MetLife, Inc.: - continued | | | | |
6.75% 6/1/16 | | $ 3,874 | | $ 4,434 |
Metropolitan Life Global Funding I 1.875% 6/22/18 (g) | | 6,760 | | 6,583 |
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. 6.063% 3/30/40 (g) | | 3,585 | | 4,108 |
Pacific Life Insurance Co. 9.25% 6/15/39 (g) | | 3,048 | | 4,217 |
Pacific LifeCorp: | | | | |
5.125% 1/30/43 (g) | | 6,960 | | 6,450 |
6% 2/10/20 (g) | | 8,215 | | 9,174 |
Prudential Financial, Inc.: | | | | |
2.3% 8/15/18 | | 783 | | 781 |
3.875% 1/14/15 | | 2,500 | | 2,603 |
4.5% 11/16/21 | | 1,461 | | 1,540 |
7.375% 6/15/19 | | 1,880 | | 2,301 |
Symetra Financial Corp. 6.125% 4/1/16 (g) | | 6,715 | | 7,192 |
Unum Group: | | | | |
5.625% 9/15/20 | | 2,879 | | 3,130 |
5.75% 8/15/42 | | 7,108 | | 7,272 |
7.125% 9/30/16 | | 1,802 | | 2,056 |
| | 143,619 |
Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.5% |
Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc. 4.6% 4/1/22 | | 1,705 | | 1,702 |
American Campus Communities Operating Partnership LP 3.75% 4/15/23 | | 1,587 | | 1,486 |
Boston Properties, Inc. 3.85% 2/1/23 | | 6,720 | | 6,514 |
BRE Properties, Inc. 5.5% 3/15/17 | | 2,524 | | 2,764 |
Camden Property Trust: | | | | |
2.95% 12/15/22 | | 2,154 | | 1,947 |
5.375% 12/15/13 | | 2,150 | | 2,177 |
DDR Corp. 4.625% 7/15/22 | | 3,877 | | 3,881 |
Developers Diversified Realty Corp.: | | | | |
4.75% 4/15/18 | | 4,595 | | 4,921 |
7.5% 4/1/17 | | 4,966 | | 5,762 |
9.625% 3/15/16 | | 1,675 | | 1,985 |
Duke Realty LP: | | | | |
3.625% 4/15/23 | | 2,844 | | 2,598 |
3.875% 10/15/22 | | 4,799 | | 4,488 |
4.375% 6/15/22 | | 3,202 | | 3,119 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Investment Trusts - continued |
Duke Realty LP: - continued | | | | |
5.4% 8/15/14 | | $ 1,096 | | $ 1,139 |
5.5% 3/1/16 | | 2,930 | | 3,176 |
6.75% 3/15/20 | | 1,161 | | 1,323 |
8.25% 8/15/19 | | 1,838 | | 2,258 |
Equity One, Inc.: | | | | |
3.75% 11/15/22 | | 7,300 | | 6,798 |
5.375% 10/15/15 | | 672 | | 725 |
6% 9/15/17 | | 666 | | 737 |
6.25% 1/15/17 | | 530 | | 585 |
Federal Realty Investment Trust: | | | | |
5.9% 4/1/20 | | 1,379 | | 1,562 |
6.2% 1/15/17 | | 365 | | 411 |
HCP, Inc. 3.15% 8/1/22 | | 8,000 | | 7,293 |
Health Care REIT, Inc.: | | | | |
2.25% 3/15/18 | | 12,327 | | 12,073 |
4.125% 4/1/19 | | 11,300 | | 11,740 |
4.7% 9/15/17 | | 744 | | 804 |
HRPT Properties Trust: | | | | |
5.75% 11/1/15 | | 1,241 | | 1,298 |
6.25% 6/15/17 | | 726 | | 767 |
6.65% 1/15/18 | | 490 | | 525 |
Omega Healthcare Investors, Inc.: | | | | |
5.875% 3/15/24 | | 3,200 | | 3,192 |
6.75% 10/15/22 | | 1,885 | | 2,003 |
Washington REIT 5.25% 1/15/14 | | 988 | | 1,002 |
Weingarten Realty Investors 3.375% 10/15/22 | | 1,098 | | 1,000 |
| | 103,755 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.5% |
BioMed Realty LP: | | | | |
3.85% 4/15/16 | | 6,469 | | 6,759 |
4.25% 7/15/22 | | 2,511 | | 2,416 |
6.125% 4/15/20 | | 1,822 | | 2,014 |
Brandywine Operating Partnership LP: | | | | |
3.95% 2/15/23 | | 6,445 | | 6,029 |
4.95% 4/15/18 | | 2,688 | | 2,855 |
5.7% 5/1/17 | | 268 | | 293 |
6% 4/1/16 | | 2,467 | | 2,702 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Management & Development - continued |
Brandywine Operating Partnership LP: - continued | | | | |
7.5% 5/15/15 | | $ 698 | | $ 767 |
CB Richard Ellis Services, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 3/15/23 | | 1,875 | | 1,739 |
6.625% 10/15/20 | | 900 | | 956 |
Digital Realty Trust LP: | | | | |
4.5% 7/15/15 | | 2,465 | | 2,587 |
5.25% 3/15/21 | | 2,876 | | 2,961 |
ERP Operating LP 5.75% 6/15/17 | | 1,446 | | 1,620 |
Liberty Property LP: | | | | |
3.375% 6/15/23 | | 2,951 | | 2,684 |
4.125% 6/15/22 | | 2,746 | | 2,687 |
4.75% 10/1/20 | | 6,595 | | 6,877 |
5.125% 3/2/15 | | 1,317 | | 1,386 |
5.5% 12/15/16 | | 2,022 | | 2,227 |
Mack-Cali Realty LP: | | | | |
2.5% 12/15/17 | | 4,037 | | 3,936 |
3.15% 5/15/23 | | 6,708 | | 5,835 |
4.5% 4/18/22 | | 1,689 | | 1,654 |
7.75% 8/15/19 | | 2,149 | | 2,571 |
Post Apartment Homes LP 3.375% 12/1/22 | | 1,196 | | 1,097 |
Prime Property Funding, Inc.: | | | | |
5.125% 6/1/15 (g) | | 2,161 | | 2,280 |
5.5% 1/15/14 (g) | | 935 | | 952 |
5.7% 4/15/17 (g) | | 2,286 | | 2,487 |
Realogy Corp. 9% 1/15/20 (g) | | 1,170 | | 1,351 |
Realogy Group LLC/Sunshine Group Florida Ltd. 3.375% 5/1/16 (g) | | 2,125 | | 2,109 |
Regency Centers LP: | | | | |
4.95% 4/15/14 | | 360 | | 368 |
5.25% 8/1/15 | | 3,216 | | 3,442 |
5.875% 6/15/17 | | 1,447 | | 1,599 |
Simon Property Group LP: | | | | |
2.8% 1/30/17 | | 67 | | 69 |
4.2% 2/1/15 | | 1,785 | | 1,855 |
Tanger Properties LP: | | | | |
6.125% 6/1/20 | | 7,035 | | 8,122 |
6.15% 11/15/15 | | 900 | | 998 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Management & Development - continued |
Ventas Realty LP/Ventas Capital Corp.: | | | | |
2% 2/15/18 | | $ 3,611 | | $ 3,497 |
4% 4/30/19 | | 1,771 | | 1,834 |
Weekley Homes LLC/Weekley Finance Corp. 6% 2/1/23 (g) | | 510 | | 495 |
| | 96,110 |
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | 1,060,004 |
HEALTH CARE - 0.8% |
Biotechnology - 0.1% |
Amgen, Inc.: | | | | |
3.875% 11/15/21 | | 1,497 | | 1,500 |
5.15% 11/15/41 | | 14,179 | | 13,731 |
Celgene Corp. 2.45% 10/15/15 | | 1,882 | | 1,933 |
| | 17,164 |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 0.0% |
Aviv Healthcare Properties LP/Aviv Healthcare Capital Corp. 7.75% 2/15/19 | | 2,945 | | 3,151 |
Teleflex, Inc. 6.875% 6/1/19 | | 1,665 | | 1,748 |
| | 4,899 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 0.6% |
Aetna, Inc.: | | | | |
2.75% 11/15/22 | | 2,850 | | 2,593 |
4.125% 11/15/42 | | 1,591 | | 1,383 |
Coventry Health Care, Inc.: | | | | |
5.95% 3/15/17 | | 1,030 | | 1,166 |
6.3% 8/15/14 | | 2,132 | | 2,240 |
DaVita, Inc.: | | | | |
5.75% 8/15/22 | | 1,215 | | 1,203 |
6.625% 11/1/20 | | 1,555 | | 1,648 |
Express Scripts Holding Co.: | | | | |
3.9% 2/15/22 | | 1,585 | | 1,587 |
4.75% 11/15/21 | | 14,348 | | 15,197 |
Express Scripts, Inc. 3.125% 5/15/16 | | 5,121 | | 5,328 |
HCA Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
6.25% 2/15/21 | | 1,415 | | 1,419 |
7.75% 5/15/21 | | 13,495 | | 14,372 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
HEALTH CARE - continued |
Health Care Providers & Services - continued |
HCA, Inc.: | | | | |
4.75% 5/1/23 | | $ 2,715 | | $ 2,535 |
5.875% 3/15/22 | | 5,645 | | 5,828 |
5.875% 5/1/23 | | 2,555 | | 2,491 |
6.5% 2/15/20 | | 10,450 | | 11,221 |
7.5% 2/15/22 | | 3,250 | | 3,534 |
HealthSouth Corp. 5.75% 11/1/24 | | 780 | | 749 |
Legend Acquisition Sub, Inc. 10.75% 8/15/20 (g) | | 2,940 | | 2,381 |
Medco Health Solutions, Inc.: | | | | |
2.75% 9/15/15 | | 3,610 | | 3,719 |
4.125% 9/15/20 | | 3,728 | | 3,830 |
Multiplan, Inc. 9.875% 9/1/18 (g) | | 3,385 | | 3,749 |
Rural/Metro Corp. 10.125% 7/15/19 (d)(g) | | 995 | | 269 |
Sabra Health Care LP/Sabra Capital Corp. 8.125% 11/1/18 | | 1,007 | | 1,085 |
Tenet Healthcare Corp.: | | | | |
4.375% 10/1/21 (g) | | 5,470 | | 4,964 |
4.5% 4/1/21 (g) | | 1,030 | | 948 |
9.875% 7/1/14 | | 4,690 | | 4,995 |
UnitedHealth Group, Inc.: | | | | |
1.625% 3/15/19 | | 1,694 | | 1,618 |
2.75% 2/15/23 | | 957 | | 879 |
2.875% 3/15/23 | | 7,311 | | 6,770 |
3.95% 10/15/42 | | 1,306 | | 1,126 |
WellPoint, Inc.: | | | | |
1.25% 9/10/15 | | 89 | | 89 |
1.875% 1/15/18 | | 161 | | 157 |
3.3% 1/15/23 | | 2,278 | | 2,138 |
| | 113,211 |
Health Care Technology - 0.0% |
IMS Health, Inc. 6% 11/1/20 (g) | | 715 | | 734 |
Pharmaceuticals - 0.1% |
AbbVie, Inc. 1.75% 11/6/17 | | 5,738 | | 5,650 |
VPI Escrow Corp. 6.375% 10/15/20 (g) | | 1,445 | | 1,468 |
VPII Escrow Corp.: | | | | |
6.75% 8/15/18 (g) | | 3,620 | | 3,833 |
7.5% 7/15/21 (g) | | 2,320 | | 2,482 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
HEALTH CARE - continued |
Pharmaceuticals - continued |
Watson Pharmaceuticals, Inc.: | | | | |
1.875% 10/1/17 | | $ 1,940 | | $ 1,908 |
5% 8/15/14 | | 2,209 | | 2,290 |
Zoetis, Inc.: | | | | |
1.15% 2/1/16 (g) | | 5,035 | | 5,036 |
1.875% 2/1/18 (g) | | 898 | | 880 |
3.25% 2/1/23 (g) | | 2,190 | | 2,058 |
| | 25,605 |
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | 161,613 |
INDUSTRIALS - 0.8% |
Aerospace & Defense - 0.1% |
BAE Systems Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
4.95% 6/1/14 (g) | | 1,753 | | 1,802 |
6.375% 6/1/19 (g) | | 3,650 | | 4,159 |
DigitalGlobe, Inc. 5.25% 2/1/21 (g) | | 425 | | 398 |
GenCorp, Inc. 7.125% 3/15/21 (g) | | 320 | | 335 |
TransDigm, Inc. 7.5% 7/15/21 (g) | | 3,440 | | 3,638 |
| | 10,332 |
Air Freight & Logistics - 0.0% |
United Parcel Service, Inc. 2.45% 10/1/22 | | 1,559 | | 1,441 |
Airlines - 0.1% |
American Airlines pass-thru trust Series 2013-2 Class A, 4.95% 7/15/24 (g) | | 11,000 | | 11,055 |
American Airlines, Inc. pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
Series 2013-1A Class A, 4% 1/15/27 (g) | | 920 | | 849 |
Series 2013-1B Class B, 5.625% 1/15/21 (g) | | 395 | | 382 |
Continental Airlines, Inc.: | | | | |
pass-thru trust certificates: | | | | |
8.388% 5/1/22 | | 45 | | 47 |
9.798% 4/1/21 | | 2,727 | | 2,986 |
6.125% 4/29/18 (g) | | 415 | | 421 |
6.648% 3/15/19 | | 2,386 | | 2,509 |
6.9% 7/2/19 | | 824 | | 859 |
7.339% 4/19/14 | | 445 | | 449 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Airlines - continued |
U.S. Airways pass-thru trust certificates: | | | | |
6.85% 1/30/18 | | $ 1,551 | | $ 1,620 |
8.36% 1/20/19 | | 1,263 | | 1,351 |
| | 22,528 |
Building Products - 0.0% |
Associated Materials LLC 9.125% 11/1/17 | | 465 | | 499 |
BC Mountain LLC/BC Mountain Finance, Inc. 7% 2/1/21 (g) | | 330 | | 338 |
Nortek, Inc. 8.5% 4/15/21 | | 925 | | 1,001 |
Ply Gem Industries, Inc. 8.25% 2/15/18 | | 2,953 | | 3,160 |
USG Corp.: | | | | |
6.3% 11/15/16 | | 170 | | 178 |
7.875% 3/30/20 (g) | | 905 | | 989 |
9.75% 1/15/18 | | 975 | | 1,124 |
| | 7,289 |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.2% |
APX Group, Inc.: | | | | |
6.375% 12/1/19 (g) | | 3,360 | | 3,167 |
8.75% 12/1/20 (g) | | 4,345 | | 4,280 |
ARAMARK Corp. 5.75% 3/15/20 (g) | | 1,345 | | 1,372 |
Clean Harbors, Inc. 5.125% 6/1/21 | | 740 | | 720 |
Covanta Holding Corp.: | | | | |
6.375% 10/1/22 | | 875 | | 888 |
7.25% 12/1/20 | | 775 | | 828 |
International Lease Finance Corp.: | | | | |
5.625% 9/20/13 | | 5,290 | | 5,290 |
5.65% 6/1/14 | | 4,439 | | 4,550 |
6.625% 11/15/13 | | 8,252 | | 8,326 |
LBC Tank Terminals Holding Netherlands BV 6.875% 5/15/23 (g) | | 215 | | 216 |
Tervita Corp.: | | | | |
8% 11/15/18 (g) | | 915 | | 913 |
9.75% 11/1/19 (g) | | 450 | | 396 |
WP Rocket Merger Sub, Inc. 10.125% 7/15/19 (d)(g) | | 1,200 | | 360 |
| | 31,306 |
Electrical Equipment - 0.0% |
Anixter International, Inc. 5.625% 5/1/19 | | 705 | | 728 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Industrial Conglomerates - 0.1% |
General Electric Co. 4.125% 10/9/42 | | $ 17,973 | | $ 16,321 |
Machinery - 0.0% |
Briggs & Stratton Corp. 6.875% 12/15/20 | | 920 | | 994 |
Schaeffler Finance BV 4.75% 5/15/21 (g) | | 1,185 | | 1,114 |
TRAC Intermodal LLC/TRAC Intermodal Corp. 11% 8/15/19 | | 910 | | 1,019 |
| | 3,127 |
Marine - 0.0% |
Navios Maritime Acquisition Corp./Navios Acquisition Finance US, Inc. 8.625% 11/1/17 | | 1,035 | | 1,076 |
Navios Maritime Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
8.125% 2/15/19 | | 1,725 | | 1,665 |
8.875% 11/1/17 | | 1,420 | | 1,479 |
Navios South American Logisitcs, Inc./Navios Logistics Finance U.S., Inc. 9.25% 4/15/19 | | 505 | | 545 |
Ultrapetrol (Bahamas) Ltd. 8.875% 6/15/21 (g) | | 785 | | 838 |
| | 5,603 |
Professional Services - 0.0% |
FTI Consulting, Inc. 6% 11/15/22 | | 1,515 | | 1,496 |
Road & Rail - 0.1% |
Burlington Northern Santa Fe LLC: | | | | |
4.4% 3/15/42 | | 9,840 | | 8,923 |
4.45% 3/15/43 | | 5,500 | | 4,967 |
5.05% 3/1/41 | | 7,178 | | 7,127 |
Hertz Corp.: | | | | |
5.875% 10/15/20 | | 1,120 | | 1,149 |
6.25% 10/15/22 | | 800 | | 814 |
NESCO LLC/NESCO Holdings Corp. 11.75% 4/15/17 (g) | | 965 | | 1,076 |
Western Express, Inc. 12.5% 4/15/15 (g) | | 3,725 | | 2,365 |
| | 26,421 |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.2% |
Ahern Rentals, Inc. 9.5% 6/15/18 (g) | | 285 | | 292 |
Interline Brands, Inc. 10% 11/15/18 pay-in-kind | | 330 | | 356 |
International Lease Finance Corp.: | | | | |
3.875% 4/15/18 | | 4,400 | | 4,202 |
4.625% 4/15/21 | | 4,280 | | 3,895 |
5.75% 5/15/16 | | 1,840 | | 1,940 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Trading Companies & Distributors - continued |
International Lease Finance Corp.: - continued | | | | |
6.25% 5/15/19 | | $ 3,035 | | $ 3,126 |
7.125% 9/1/18 (g) | | 5,560 | | 6,172 |
8.25% 12/15/20 | | 4,165 | | 4,634 |
8.625% 9/15/15 | | 4,640 | | 5,092 |
8.625% 1/15/22 | | 3,910 | | 4,409 |
NES Rentals Holdings, Inc. 7.875% 5/1/18 (g) | | 365 | | 374 |
VWR Funding, Inc. 7.25% 9/15/17 | | 2,695 | | 2,803 |
| | 37,295 |
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | 163,887 |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 0.4% |
Communications Equipment - 0.1% |
Avaya, Inc.: | | | | |
7% 4/1/19 (g) | | 2,295 | | 2,100 |
9% 4/1/19 (g) | | 2,135 | | 2,050 |
10.5% 3/1/21 (g) | | 1,708 | | 1,319 |
Commscope Holding Co., Inc. 6.625% 6/1/20 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 555 | | 549 |
Hughes Satellite Systems Corp. 6.5% 6/15/19 | | 7,595 | | 7,994 |
Lucent Technologies, Inc.: | | | | |
6.45% 3/15/29 | | 10,451 | | 8,047 |
6.5% 1/15/28 | | 1,110 | | 844 |
| | 22,903 |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 0.0% |
Infor US, Inc. 9.375% 4/1/19 | | 755 | | 840 |
Tyco Electronics Group SA: | | | | |
1.6% 2/3/15 | | 156 | | 157 |
5.95% 1/15/14 | | 4,453 | | 4,539 |
6.55% 10/1/17 | | 815 | | 932 |
| | 6,468 |
Internet Software & Services - 0.0% |
CyrusOne LP/CyrusOne Finance Corp. 6.375% 11/15/22 | | 885 | | 889 |
IAC/InterActiveCorp 4.75% 12/15/22 | | 1,475 | | 1,361 |
VeriSign, Inc. 4.625% 5/1/23 (g) | | 3,395 | | 3,174 |
| | 5,424 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued |
IT Services - 0.2% |
Audatex North America, Inc. 6% 6/15/21 (g) | | $ 4,565 | | $ 4,622 |
Ceridian Corp.: | | | | |
8.875% 7/15/19 (g) | | 1,110 | | 1,249 |
11% 3/15/21 (g) | | 570 | | 658 |
Compiler Finance Sub, Inc. 7% 5/1/21 (g) | | 180 | | 173 |
First Data Corp.: | | | | |
6.75% 11/1/20 (g) | | 6,215 | | 6,355 |
11.25% 1/15/21 (g) | | 2,955 | | 3,029 |
11.75% 8/15/21 (g) | | 1,490 | | 1,393 |
SunGard Data Systems, Inc.: | | | | |
4.875% 1/15/14 | | 12,355 | | 12,448 |
6.625% 11/1/19 | | 2,205 | | 2,238 |
The Western Union Co. 2.375% 12/10/15 | | 128 | | 130 |
WideOpenWest Finance LLC/WideOpenWest Capital Corp.: | | | | |
10.25% 7/15/19 | | 3,270 | | 3,507 |
13.375% 10/15/19 | | 1,780 | | 2,020 |
| | 37,822 |
Office Electronics - 0.1% |
Xerox Corp.: | | | | |
1.0832% 5/16/14 (k) | | 8,470 | | 8,470 |
2.95% 3/15/17 | | 947 | | 966 |
4.25% 2/15/15 | | 1,130 | | 1,179 |
| | 10,615 |
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 0.0% |
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 10.125% 3/15/18 (g) | | 1,061 | | 1,146 |
NXP BV/NXP Funding LLC: | | | | |
5.75% 2/15/21 (g) | | 1,595 | | 1,595 |
9.75% 8/1/18 (g) | | 380 | | 420 |
Spansion LLC: | | | | |
7.875% 11/15/17 | | 1,150 | | 1,187 |
11.25% 1/15/16 (d)(g) | | 905 | | 0 |
Viasystems, Inc. 7.875% 5/1/19 (g) | | 2,570 | | 2,737 |
| | 7,085 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued |
Software - 0.0% |
BMC Software Finance, Inc. 8.125% 7/15/21 (g) | | $ 2,555 | | $ 2,587 |
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | 92,904 |
MATERIALS - 0.4% |
Chemicals - 0.1% |
Eagle Spinco, Inc. 4.625% 2/15/21 (g) | | 640 | | 602 |
Ecolab, Inc. 1.45% 12/8/17 | | 3,078 | | 2,990 |
Hexion U.S. Finance Corp. 6.625% 4/15/20 (g) | | 2,810 | | 2,775 |
Kinove German Bondco GmbH 9.625% 6/15/18 (g) | | 965 | | 1,066 |
LSB Industries, Inc. 7.75% 8/1/19 (g) | | 425 | | 440 |
MPM Escrow LLC/MPM Finance Escrow Corp. 8.875% 10/15/20 | | 3,135 | | 3,253 |
Orion Engineered Carbons Finance & Co. SCA 9.25% 8/1/19 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 1,000 | | 1,020 |
PolyOne Corp. 5.25% 3/15/23 (g) | | 1,360 | | 1,302 |
Trinseo Materials Operating SCA/Trinseo Materials Finance, Inc. 8.75% 2/1/19 (g) | | 4,715 | | 4,609 |
U.S. Coatings Acquisition, Inc./Flash Dutch 2 BV 7.375% 5/1/21 (g) | | 585 | | 598 |
| | 18,655 |
Construction Materials - 0.0% |
CEMEX Finance LLC 9.375% 10/12/22 (g) | | 1,420 | | 1,523 |
CEMEX SA de CV 5.2756% 9/30/15 (g)(k) | | 2,815 | | 2,899 |
CRH America, Inc. 6% 9/30/16 | | 2,470 | | 2,775 |
| | 7,197 |
Containers & Packaging - 0.1% |
ARD Finance SA 11.125% 6/1/18 pay-in-kind (g) | | 2,044 | | 2,130 |
Ardagh Packaging Finance PLC: | | | | |
7.375% 10/15/17 (g) | | 200 | | 214 |
9.125% 10/15/20 (g) | | 685 | | 731 |
Ardagh Packaging Finance PLC/Ardagh MP Holdings U.S.A., Inc.: | | | | |
4.875% 11/15/22 (g) | | 275 | | 265 |
7% 11/15/20 (g) | | 715 | | 695 |
7.375% 10/15/17 (g) | | 300 | | 320 |
9.125% 10/15/20 (g) | | 690 | | 733 |
BOE Intermediate Holding Corp. 9.75% 11/1/17 pay-in-kind (g) | | 360 | | 357 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
MATERIALS - continued |
Containers & Packaging - continued |
Consolidated Container Co. LLC/Consolidated Container Capital, Inc. 10.125% 7/15/20 (g) | | $ 555 | | $ 599 |
Crown Americas LLC/Crown Americas Capital Corp. III 6.25% 2/1/21 | | 2,040 | | 2,142 |
Owens-Illinois, Inc. 7.8% 5/15/18 | | 350 | | 399 |
Pretium Packaging LLC/Pretium Finance, Inc. 11.5% 4/1/16 | | 1,775 | | 1,899 |
Sealed Air Corp. 6.5% 12/1/20 (g) | | 1,065 | | 1,129 |
Tekni-Plex, Inc. 9.75% 6/1/19 (g) | | 840 | | 941 |
| | 12,554 |
Metals & Mining - 0.2% |
Anglo American Capital PLC 9.375% 4/8/14 (g) | | 2,700 | | 2,827 |
Bluescope Steel Ltd./Bluescope Steel Finance 7.125% 5/1/18 (g) | | 255 | | 258 |
Calcipar SA 6.875% 5/1/18 (g) | | 720 | | 743 |
Corporacion Nacional del Cobre de Chile (Codelco): | | | | |
3.875% 11/3/21 (g) | | 7,189 | | 6,885 |
4.5% 8/13/23 (g) | | 7,000 | | 6,836 |
Edgen Murray Corp. 8.75% 11/1/20 (g) | | 1,135 | | 1,135 |
FMG Resources (August 2006) Pty Ltd.: | | | | |
6% 4/1/17 (g) | | 1,770 | | 1,801 |
6.375% 2/1/16 (g) | | 1,180 | | 1,210 |
7% 11/1/15 (g) | | 1,865 | | 1,921 |
New Gold, Inc.: | | | | |
6.25% 11/15/22 (g) | | 615 | | 589 |
7% 4/15/20 (g) | | 345 | | 351 |
Prince Mineral Holding Corp. 11.5% 12/15/19 (g) | | 405 | | 433 |
Rain CII Carbon LLC/CII Carbon Corp.: | | | | |
8% 12/1/18 (g) | | 1,335 | | 1,348 |
8.25% 1/15/21 (g) | | 750 | | 750 |
Ryerson, Inc./Joseph T Ryerson & Son, Inc.: | | | | |
9% 10/15/17 (g) | | 3,375 | | 3,502 |
11.25% 10/15/18 (g) | | 1,130 | | 1,155 |
Severstal Columbus LLC 10.25% 2/15/18 | | 3,605 | | 3,821 |
Steel Dynamics, Inc.: | | | | |
6.125% 8/15/19 | | 1,115 | | 1,171 |
6.375% 8/15/22 | | 990 | | 1,032 |
| | 37,768 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
MATERIALS - continued |
Paper & Forest Products - 0.0% |
Clearwater Paper Corp. 4.5% 2/1/23 | | $ 1,250 | | $ 1,131 |
Verso Paper Holdings LLC/Verso Paper, Inc.: | | | | |
11.75% 1/15/19 | | 3,025 | | 3,101 |
11.75% 1/15/19 | | 2,615 | | 1,569 |
| | 5,801 |
TOTAL MATERIALS | | 81,975 |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 0.8% |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.4% |
Altice Financing SA 7.875% 12/15/19 (g) | | 550 | | 581 |
Altice Finco SA 9.875% 12/15/20 (g) | | 585 | | 629 |
AT&T, Inc.: | | | | |
2.4% 8/15/16 | | 293 | | 301 |
2.5% 8/15/15 | | 1,139 | | 1,173 |
4.35% 6/15/45 | | 1,320 | | 1,121 |
5.55% 8/15/41 | | 16,289 | | 16,596 |
6.3% 1/15/38 | | 5,000 | | 5,549 |
BellSouth Capital Funding Corp. 7.875% 2/15/30 | | 68 | | 83 |
Broadview Networks Holdings, Inc. 10.5% 11/15/17 | | 1,908 | | 1,869 |
CenturyLink, Inc.: | | | | |
5.15% 6/15/17 | | 440 | | 459 |
6% 4/1/17 | | 3,101 | | 3,318 |
6.15% 9/15/19 | | 3,331 | | 3,464 |
Eileme 1 AB 14.25% 8/15/20 pay-in-kind (g) | | 2,451 | | 2,608 |
Eileme 2 AB 11.625% 1/31/20 (g) | | 1,725 | | 2,001 |
Embarq Corp.: | | | | |
7.082% 6/1/16 | | 3,728 | | 4,190 |
7.995% 6/1/36 | | 17,061 | | 17,450 |
Frontier Communications Corp. 7.125% 1/15/23 | | 2,055 | | 1,998 |
Intelsat Luxembourg SA: | | | | |
7.75% 6/1/21 (g) | | 3,350 | | 3,451 |
8.125% 6/1/23 (g) | | 1,065 | | 1,113 |
Level 3 Communications, Inc. 8.875% 6/1/19 | | 435 | | 464 |
Level 3 Financing, Inc. 7% 6/1/20 | | 1,460 | | 1,471 |
Lynx I Corp. 5.375% 4/15/21 (g) | | 770 | | 751 |
Lynx II Corp. 6.375% 4/15/23 (g) | | 435 | | 432 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - continued |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - continued |
Sprint Capital Corp.: | | | | |
6.875% 11/15/28 | | $ 1,415 | | $ 1,277 |
6.9% 5/1/19 | | 7,925 | | 8,163 |
8.75% 3/15/32 | | 3,565 | | 3,653 |
Verizon Communications, Inc.: | | | | |
6.1% 4/15/18 | | 1,909 | | 2,201 |
6.25% 4/1/37 | | 3,729 | | 4,097 |
Wind Acquisition Finance SA 7.25% 2/15/18 (g) | | 1,860 | | 1,897 |
| | 92,360 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.4% |
America Movil S.A.B. de CV: | | | | |
2.375% 9/8/16 | | 307 | | 311 |
3.625% 3/30/15 | | 2,672 | | 2,757 |
Clearwire Communications LLC/Clearwire Finance, Inc.: | | | | |
12% 12/1/15 (g) | | 1,082 | | 1,142 |
14.75% 12/1/16 (g) | | 3,050 | | 4,163 |
Digicel Group Ltd.: | | | | |
6% 4/15/21 (g) | | 2,805 | | 2,707 |
7% 2/15/20 (g) | | 275 | | 275 |
8.25% 9/30/20 (g) | | 4,060 | | 4,304 |
Intelsat Jackson Holdings SA: | | | | |
5.5% 8/1/23 (g) | | 3,415 | | 3,167 |
6.625% 12/15/22 (g) | | 2,670 | | 2,663 |
6.625% 12/15/22 (g) | | 2,375 | | 2,369 |
7.25% 4/1/19 | | 7,260 | | 7,786 |
7.5% 4/1/21 | | 5,500 | | 5,940 |
MetroPCS Wireless, Inc.: | | | | |
6.25% 4/1/21 (g) | | 2,010 | | 2,005 |
6.625% 4/1/23 (g) | | 3,005 | | 2,982 |
NII Capital Corp. 7.625% 4/1/21 | | 2,609 | | 1,996 |
NII International Telecom S.C.A. 11.375% 8/15/19 (g) | | 1,165 | | 1,252 |
SBA Communications Corp. 5.625% 10/1/19 | | 1,870 | | 1,837 |
SoftBank Corp. 4.5% 4/15/20 (g) | | 445 | | 421 |
Sprint Nextel Corp.: | | | | |
6% 11/15/22 | | 15,345 | | 14,348 |
9% 11/15/18 (g) | | 6,595 | | 7,700 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - continued |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - continued |
T-Mobile U.S.A., Inc. 5.25% 9/1/18 (g) | | $ 940 | | $ 949 |
Vodafone Group PLC 5% 12/16/13 | | 2,129 | | 2,156 |
| | 73,230 |
TOTAL TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES | | 165,590 |
UTILITIES - 1.2% |
Electric Utilities - 0.6% |
AmerenUE 6.4% 6/15/17 | | 4,026 | | 4,669 |
American Electric Power Co., Inc.: | | | | |
1.65% 12/15/17 | | 2,349 | | 2,282 |
2.95% 12/15/22 | | 2,224 | | 2,030 |
Duke Capital LLC 5.668% 8/15/14 | | 2,770 | | 2,885 |
Duquesne Light Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
5.9% 12/1/21 (g) | | 3,934 | | 4,373 |
6.4% 9/15/20 (g) | | 8,922 | | 10,206 |
Edison International 3.75% 9/15/17 | | 3,355 | | 3,520 |
Edison Mission Energy 7% 5/15/17 (d) | | 510 | | 325 |
Entergy Louisiana LLC 1.875% 12/15/14 | | 168 | | 170 |
FirstEnergy Corp.: | | | | |
2.75% 3/15/18 | | 4,723 | | 4,527 |
4.25% 3/15/23 | | 8,330 | | 7,549 |
7.375% 11/15/31 | | 8,041 | | 8,110 |
FirstEnergy Solutions Corp. 6.05% 8/15/21 | | 9,830 | | 10,487 |
Indiana Michigan Power Co. 3.2% 3/15/23 | | 5,294 | | 4,970 |
IPALCO Enterprises, Inc. 7.25% 4/1/16 (g) | | 3,670 | | 4,009 |
LG&E and KU Energy LLC: | | | | |
2.125% 11/15/15 | | 3,785 | | 3,866 |
3.75% 11/15/20 | | 745 | | 749 |
Mirant Americas Generation LLC: | | | | |
8.5% 10/1/21 | | 6,695 | | 7,130 |
9.125% 5/1/31 | | 1,745 | | 1,832 |
Nevada Power Co.: | | | | |
6.5% 5/15/18 | | 5,100 | | 6,046 |
6.5% 8/1/18 | | 1,191 | | 1,418 |
NextEra Energy Capital Holdings, Inc. 1.611% 6/1/14 | | 513 | | 517 |
Northeast Utilities: | | | | |
1.45% 5/1/18 | | 1,511 | | 1,454 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
UTILITIES - continued |
Electric Utilities - continued |
Northeast Utilities: - continued | | | | |
2.8% 5/1/23 | | $ 6,865 | | $ 6,299 |
Pennsylvania Electric Co. 6.05% 9/1/17 | | 450 | | 505 |
Pepco Holdings, Inc. 2.7% 10/1/15 | | 3,805 | | 3,903 |
PPL Capital Funding, Inc. 3.4% 6/1/23 | | 3,274 | | 3,062 |
Progress Energy, Inc.: | | | | |
4.4% 1/15/21 | | 336 | | 354 |
6% 12/1/39 | | 3,060 | | 3,414 |
Sierra Pacific Power Co. 5.45% 9/1/13 | | 1,183 | | 1,183 |
Southern Co. 2.375% 9/15/15 | | 326 | | 335 |
West Penn Power Co. 5.95% 12/15/17 (g) | | 10,500 | | 11,957 |
| | 124,136 |
Gas Utilities - 0.0% |
AmeriGas Finance LLC/AmeriGas Finance Corp.: | | | | |
6.75% 5/20/20 | | 830 | | 880 |
7% 5/20/22 | | 1,785 | | 1,883 |
Southern Natural Gas Co. 5.9% 4/1/17 (g) | | 260 | | 293 |
Southern Natural Gas Co./Southern Natural Issuing Corp. 4.4% 6/15/21 | | 1,753 | | 1,818 |
Star Gas Partners LP/Star Gas Finance Co. 8.875% 12/1/17 | | 950 | | 983 |
| | 5,857 |
Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - 0.3% |
Atlantic Power Corp. 9% 11/15/18 | | 1,655 | | 1,651 |
Calpine Corp. 7.875% 1/15/23 (g) | | 3,183 | | 3,414 |
Energy Future Intermediate Holding Co. LLC/Energy Future Intermediate Holding Finance, Inc.: | | | | |
10% 12/1/20 | | 3,174 | | 3,345 |
10% 12/1/20 (g) | | 8,915 | | 9,372 |
11% 10/1/21 | | 6,978 | | 7,484 |
12.25% 12/1/18 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 2,305 | | 1,739 |
12.25% 3/1/22 (g) | | 19,685 | | 21,900 |
GenOn Energy, Inc.: | | | | |
9.5% 10/15/18 | | 520 | | 588 |
9.875% 10/15/20 | | 1,743 | | 1,939 |
NRG Energy, Inc. 6.625% 3/15/23 | | 3,130 | | 3,107 |
PSEG Power LLC 2.75% 9/15/16 | | 1,379 | | 1,428 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
UTILITIES - continued |
Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - continued |
The AES Corp.: | | | | |
4.875% 5/15/23 | | $ 445 | | $ 408 |
7.375% 7/1/21 | | 1,580 | | 1,722 |
7.75% 10/15/15 | | 2,618 | | 2,913 |
TXU Corp.: | | | | |
5.55% 11/15/14 | | 61 | | 36 |
6.5% 11/15/24 | | 3,550 | | 1,793 |
6.55% 11/15/34 | | 7,200 | | 3,564 |
| | 66,403 |
Multi-Utilities - 0.3% |
Ameren Illinois Co. 6.125% 11/15/17 | | 243 | | 279 |
Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, Inc. 5.7% 6/15/40 | | 1,866 | | 2,143 |
Dominion Resources, Inc.: | | | | |
1.95% 8/15/16 | | 203 | | 206 |
2.5756% 9/30/66 (k) | | 16,524 | | 15,391 |
7.5% 6/30/66 (k) | | 2,474 | | 2,672 |
MidAmerican Energy Holdings, Co. 6.5% 9/15/37 | | 1,418 | | 1,676 |
National Grid PLC 6.3% 8/1/16 | | 845 | | 956 |
NiSource Finance Corp.: | | | | |
4.45% 12/1/21 | | 2,441 | | 2,497 |
5.25% 9/15/17 | | 497 | | 551 |
5.25% 2/15/43 | | 5,559 | | 5,345 |
5.4% 7/15/14 | | 1,816 | | 1,886 |
5.45% 9/15/20 | | 598 | | 657 |
5.8% 2/1/42 | | 3,125 | | 3,231 |
5.95% 6/15/41 | | 5,667 | | 6,009 |
6.4% 3/15/18 | | 1,788 | | 2,062 |
6.8% 1/15/19 | | 2,710 | | 3,171 |
Puget Energy, Inc. 5.625% 7/15/22 | | 3,935 | | 4,196 |
Sempra Energy: | | | | |
2% 3/15/14 | | 1,950 | | 1,964 |
2.3% 4/1/17 | | 5,903 | | 5,968 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
UTILITIES - continued |
Multi-Utilities - continued |
Sempra Energy: - continued | | | | |
2.875% 10/1/22 | | $ 2,361 | | $ 2,176 |
Wisconsin Energy Corp. 6.25% 5/15/67 (k) | | 3,876 | | 4,021 |
| | 67,057 |
TOTAL UTILITIES | | 263,453 |
TOTAL NONCONVERTIBLE BONDS | | 2,714,337 |
TOTAL CORPORATE BONDS (Cost $2,698,662) | 2,736,189
|
U.S. Treasury Obligations - 5.5% |
|
U.S. Treasury Bonds 3.625% 8/15/43 | | 110,690 | | 109,030 |
U.S. Treasury Notes: | | | | |
0.625% 8/15/16 | | 71,764 | | 71,450 |
0.625% 5/31/17 (j) | | 341,436 | | 334,687 |
0.875% 2/28/17 | | 466,852 | | 464,117 |
0.875% 4/30/17 | | 162,725 | | 161,288 |
4.625% 2/15/17 | | 17,658 | | 19,813 |
TOTAL U.S. TREASURY OBLIGATIONS (Cost $1,164,969) | 1,160,385
|
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities - 3.8% |
|
Fannie Mae - 3.4% |
2.303% 6/1/36 (k) | | 141 | | 150 |
2.5% 7/1/28 to 8/1/43 | | 26,700 | | 25,270 |
2.753% 7/1/37 (k) | | 266 | | 280 |
3% 5/1/27 to 8/1/43 | | 42,553 | | 40,732 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 7,100 | | 6,788 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 7,100 | | 6,788 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 4,700 | | 4,493 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 4,700 | | 4,493 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 18,900 | | 18,069 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 9,400 | | 8,987 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 16,000 | | 15,296 |
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Fannie Mae - continued |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | $ 2,900 | | $ 2,772 |
3.5% 3/1/22 to 8/1/43 | | 203,741 | | 201,484 |
4% 2/1/35 to 1/1/42 | | 9,357 | | 9,656 |
4% 9/1/43 (i) | | 24,300 | | 25,057 |
4% 9/1/43 (i) | | 53,500 | | 55,168 |
4% 9/1/43 (i) | | 2,700 | | 2,784 |
4% 9/1/43 (i) | | 2,900 | | 2,990 |
4% 9/1/43 (i) | | 10,700 | | 11,034 |
4% 10/1/43 (i) | | 1,400 | | 1,440 |
4.5% 11/1/19 to 8/1/41 | | 10,612 | | 11,213 |
4.5% 9/1/43 (i) | | 43,900 | | 46,315 |
4.5% 9/1/43 (i) | | 23,700 | | 25,004 |
4.5% 9/1/43 (i) | | 23,700 | | 25,004 |
4.5% 10/1/43 (i) | | 67,600 | | 71,138 |
5% 9/1/43 (i) | | 30,600 | | 32,891 |
5% 10/1/43 (i) | | 30,600 | | 32,817 |
5.5% 9/1/43 (i) | | 24,900 | | 27,032 |
5.5% 9/1/43 (i) | | 4,850 | | 5,265 |
6% 7/1/35 to 8/1/37 | | 4,740 | | 5,240 |
6.5% 7/1/32 to 8/1/36 | | 734 | | 821 |
TOTAL FANNIE MAE | | 726,471 |
Freddie Mac - 0.1% |
2.5% 5/1/28 | | 3,000 | | 2,972 |
3% 1/1/43 | | 6,066 | | 5,788 |
3.126% 10/1/35 (k) | | 185 | | 197 |
3.5% 2/1/32 to 6/1/43 | | 9,297 | | 9,190 |
4% 6/1/24 to 9/1/25 | | 3,563 | | 3,748 |
5% 3/1/19 | | 1,857 | | 1,971 |
5.5% 1/1/38 | | 1,008 | | 1,088 |
6% 7/1/37 to 8/1/37 | | 500 | | 545 |
6.5% 3/1/36 | | 2,597 | | 2,916 |
TOTAL FREDDIE MAC | | 28,415 |
Ginnie Mae - 0.3% |
4% 1/15/25 to 5/15/43 | | 34,478 | | 35,964 |
4% 9/1/43 (i) | | 6,200 | | 6,450 |
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Ginnie Mae - continued |
5.5% 6/15/35 to 9/15/39 | | $ 3,981 | | $ 4,371 |
6% 2/15/34 to 9/20/38 | | 7,098 | | 7,909 |
TOTAL GINNIE MAE | | 54,694 |
TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY - MORTGAGE SECURITIES (Cost $818,035) | 809,580
|
Asset-Backed Securities - 0.2% |
|
Accredited Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2005-1 Class M1, 0.6541% 4/25/35 (k) | | 504 | | 454 |
ACE Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 2004-HE1 Class M2, 1.8341% 3/25/34 (k) | | 257 | | 240 |
Series 2005-HE2 Class M2, 0.8591% 4/25/35 (k) | | 12 | | 12 |
AmeriCredit Auto Receivables Trust Series 2013-4: | | | | |
Class C, 2.72% 9/9/19 | | 1,240 | | 1,240 |
Class D, 3.31% 10/8/19 | | 770 | | 770 |
Ameriquest Mortgage Securities, Inc. pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
Series 2003-10 Class M1, 1.2341% 12/25/33 (k) | | 50 | | 45 |
Series 2004-R2 Class M3, 1.0091% 4/25/34 (k) | | 74 | | 44 |
Series 2005-R2 Class M1, 0.6341% 4/25/35 (k) | | 1,150 | | 1,131 |
Argent Securities, Inc. pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
Series 2003-W7 Class A2, 0.9641% 3/25/34 (k) | | 36 | | 34 |
Series 2004-W11 Class M2, 1.2341% 11/25/34 (k) | | 426 | | 387 |
Series 2004-W7 Class M1, 1.0091% 5/25/34 (k) | | 1,108 | | 1,030 |
Series 2006-W4 Class A2C, 0.3441% 5/25/36 (k) | | 944 | | 339 |
Asset Backed Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 2004-HE2 Class M1, 1.0091% 4/25/34 (k) | | 1,607 | | 1,517 |
Series 2006-HE2 Class M1, 0.5541% 3/25/36 (k) | | 24 | | 0 * |
Capital Trust Ltd. Series 2004-1: | | | | |
Class B, 0.9341% 7/20/39 (g)(k) | | 165 | | 139 |
Class C, 1.2841% 7/20/39 (g)(k) | | 258 | | 11 |
Carrington Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2007-RFC1 Class A3, 0.3241% 12/25/36 (k) | | 1,368 | | 788 |
CFC LLC Series 2013-1A Class A, 1.65% 7/17/17 (g) | | 1,399 | | 1,399 |
Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.: | | | | |
Series 2004-3 Class M4, 1.6391% 4/25/34 (k) | | 80 | | 60 |
Series 2004-4 Class M2, 0.9791% 6/25/34 (k) | | 418 | | 385 |
Fannie Mae Series 2004-T5 Class AB3, 0.9892% 5/28/35 (k) | | 30 | | 27 |
Asset-Backed Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Fieldstone Mortgage Investment Corp. Series 2004-3 Class M5, 2.3591% 8/25/34 (k) | | $ 221 | | $ 168 |
First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2004-FF2 Class M3, 1.0091% 3/25/34 (k) | | 13 | | 10 |
Ford Credit Floorplan Master Owner Trust Series 2013-3 Class A1, 0.79% 6/15/17 | | 11,010 | | 10,989 |
Fremont Home Loan Trust Series 2005-A: | | | | |
Class M3, 0.9191% 1/25/35 (k) | | 720 | | 556 |
Class M4, 1.2041% 1/25/35 (k) | | 276 | | 63 |
GCO Education Loan Funding Master Trust II Series 2007-1A Class C1L, 0.6421% 2/25/47 (g)(k) | | 2,160 | | 1,686 |
GE Business Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 2003-1 Class A, 0.6141% 4/15/31 (g)(k) | | 58 | | 54 |
Series 2006-2A: | | | | |
Class A, 0.3641% 11/15/34 (g)(k) | | 843 | | 762 |
Class B, 0.4641% 11/15/34 (g)(k) | | 305 | | 257 |
Class C, 0.5641% 11/15/34 (g)(k) | | 506 | | 363 |
Class D, 0.9341% 11/15/34 (g)(k) | | 193 | | 120 |
Guggenheim Structured Real Estate Funding Ltd. Series 2006-3 Class C, 0.7341% 9/25/46 (g)(k) | | 938 | | 933 |
Home Equity Asset Trust: | | | | |
Series 2003-2 Class M1, 1.5041% 8/25/33 (k) | | 237 | | 228 |
Series 2003-3 Class M1, 1.4741% 8/25/33 (k) | | 452 | | 413 |
Series 2003-5 Class A2, 0.8841% 12/25/33 (k) | | 25 | | 22 |
HSI Asset Securitization Corp. Trust Series 2007-HE1 Class 2A3, 0.3741% 1/25/37 (k) | | 1,137 | | 534 |
JPMorgan Mortgage Acquisition Trust: | | | | |
Series 2006-NC2 Class M2, 0.4841% 7/25/36 (k) | | 2,497 | | 127 |
Series 2007-CH1 Class AV4, 0.3141% 11/25/36 (k) | | 1,136 | | 1,104 |
Keycorp Student Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 1999-A Class A2, 0.6061% 12/27/29 (k) | | 289 | | 283 |
Series 2006-A Class 2C, 1.4261% 3/27/42 (k) | | 2,016 | | 305 |
MASTR Asset Backed Securities Trust Series 2007-HE1 Class M1, 0.4841% 5/25/37 (k) | | 413 | | 8 |
Meritage Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2004-1 Class M1, 0.9341% 7/25/34 (k) | | 101 | | 81 |
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Investors Trust: | | | | |
Series 2003-OPT1 Class M1, 1.1591% 7/25/34 (k) | | 351 | | 303 |
Series 2006-FM1 Class A2B, 0.2941% 4/25/37 (k) | | 569 | | 548 |
Series 2006-OPT1 Class A1A, 0.7041% 6/25/35 (k) | | 1,794 | | 1,657 |
Morgan Stanley ABS Capital I Trust: | | | | |
Series 2004-HE6 Class A2, 0.8641% 8/25/34 (k) | | 44 | | 43 |
Series 2005-NC1 Class M1, 0.6241% 1/25/35 (k) | | 303 | | 283 |
Asset-Backed Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Morgan Stanley ABS Capital I Trust: - continued | | | | |
Series 2005-NC2 Class B1, 1.3541% 3/25/35 (k) | | $ 316 | | $ 128 |
New Century Home Equity Loan Trust Series 2005-4 Class M2, 0.6941% 9/25/35 (k) | | 1,083 | | 921 |
Ocala Funding LLC: | | | | |
Series 2005-1A Class A, 1.6841% 3/20/10 (d)(g)(k) | | 429 | | 0 |
Series 2006-1A Class A, 1.5841% 3/20/11 (d)(g)(k) | | 892 | | 0 |
Park Place Securities, Inc.: | | | | |
Series 2004-WCW1: | | | | |
Class M3, 1.4341% 9/25/34 (k) | | 405 | | 340 |
Class M4, 1.6341% 9/25/34 (k) | | 519 | | 156 |
Series 2005-WCH1 Class M4, 1.0141% 1/25/36 (k) | | 1,120 | | 953 |
Salomon Brothers Mortgage Securities VII, Inc. Series 2003-HE1 Class A, 0.9841% 4/25/33 (k) | | 4 | | 4 |
Saxon Asset Securities Trust Series 2004-1 Class M1, 0.9791% 3/25/35 (k) | | 831 | | 758 |
SLM Private Credit Student Loan Trust Series 2004-A Class C, 1.2233% 6/15/33 (k) | | 875 | | 666 |
Structured Asset Investment Loan Trust Series 2004-8 Class M5, 1.9091% 9/25/34 (k) | | 41 | | 28 |
SVO VOI Mortgage Corp. Series 2006-AA Class A, 5.28% 2/20/24 (g) | | 216 | | 216 |
Terwin Mortgage Trust Series 2003-4HE Class A1, 1.0441% 9/25/34 (k) | | 22 | | 21 |
Trapeza CDO XII Ltd./Trapeza CDO XII, Inc. Series 2007-12A Class B, 0.8309% 4/6/42 (g)(k) | | 1,523 | | 46 |
Whinstone Capital Management Ltd. Series 1A Class B3, 2.0659% 10/25/44 (g)(k) | | 1,358 | | 1,202 |
TOTAL ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES (Cost $31,646) | 37,391
|
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations - 0.3% |
|
Private Sponsor - 0.2% |
Bear Stearns ALT-A Trust floater Series 2005-1 Class A1, 0.7441% 1/25/35 (k) | | 1,164 | | 1,119 |
First Horizon Mortgage pass-thru Trust Series 2004-AR5 Class 2A1, 2.6056% 10/25/34 (k) | | 779 | | 772 |
Granite Master Issuer PLC: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-1A: | | | | |
Class A1, 0.2541% 12/20/54 (g)(k) | | 5,991 | | 5,880 |
Class A5, 0.3241% 12/20/54 (g)(k) | | 4,460 | | 4,378 |
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Private Sponsor - continued |
Granite Master Issuer PLC: - continued | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-2 Class A4, 0.2641% 12/20/54 (k) | | $ 1,788 | | $ 1,755 |
Series 2006-3: | | | | |
Class A3, 0.2641% 12/20/54 (k) | | 861 | | 845 |
Class A7, 0.3841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 936 | | 918 |
Class M2, 0.7441% 12/20/54 (k) | | 4,540 | | 4,097 |
Series 2006-4: | | | | |
Class A4, 0.2841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 2,744 | | 2,694 |
Class B1, 0.3641% 12/20/54 (k) | | 3,154 | | 2,913 |
Class M1, 0.5241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 829 | | 748 |
Series 2007-1: | | | | |
Class 1B1, 0.3241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 5,012 | | 4,629 |
Class 1M1, 0.4841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 1,114 | | 1,005 |
Class 2A1, 0.3241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 2,153 | | 2,114 |
Class 2M1, 0.6841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 1,431 | | 1,291 |
Series 2007-2: | | | | |
Class 1B1, 0.3441% 12/17/54 (k) | | 767 | | 708 |
Class 2C1, 1.0441% 12/17/54 (k) | | 1,981 | | 1,737 |
sequential payer Series 2006-3 Class B2, 0.5241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 4,550 | | 4,202 |
Series 2007-2 Class 3A1, 0.3641% 12/17/54 (k) | | 384 | | 377 |
Granite Mortgages PLC floater Series 2003-3 Class 1C, 2.7162% 1/20/44 (k) | | 326 | | 311 |
JPMorgan Mortgage Trust sequential payer Series 2006-A5 Class 3A5, 2.7827% 8/25/36 (k) | | 1,294 | | 1,028 |
MASTR Adjustable Rate Mortgages Trust Series 2007-3 Class 22A2, 0.3941% 5/25/47 (k) | | 454 | | 339 |
Merrill Lynch Alternative Note Asset Trust floater Series 2007-OAR1 Class A1, 0.3541% 2/25/37 (k) | | 838 | | 716 |
Opteum Mortgage Acceptance Corp. floater Series 2005-3 Class APT, 0.4741% 7/25/35 (k) | | 1,209 | | 1,161 |
RESI Finance LP/RESI Finance DE Corp. floater Series 2003-B: | | | | |
Class B5, 2.535% 7/10/35 (g)(k) | | 541 | | 499 |
Class B6, 3.035% 7/10/35 (g)(k) | | 115 | | 108 |
Residential Funding Securities Corp. floater Series 2003-RP2 Class A1, 0.6341% 6/25/33 (g)(k) | | 23 | | 23 |
Sequoia Mortgage Trust floater Series 2004-6 Class A3B, 1.2893% 7/20/34 (k) | | 23 | | 21 |
Structured Asset Securities Corp. Series 2003-15A Class 4A, 2.5477% 4/25/33 (k) | | 155 | | 154 |
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Private Sponsor - continued |
TBW Mortgage-Backed pass-thru certificates floater Series 2006-4 Class A3, 0.39% 9/25/36 (k) | | $ 1,863 | | $ 1,721 |
Thornburg Mortgage Securities Trust floater Series 2003-4 Class A1, 0.8241% 9/25/43 (k) | | 3,136 | | 2,981 |
TOTAL PRIVATE SPONSOR | | 51,244 |
U.S. Government Agency - 0.1% |
Fannie Mae: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2005-38 Class F, 0.4841% 5/25/35 (k) | | 967 | | 969 |
Series 2007-36 Class F, 0.4141% 4/25/37 (k) | | 1,506 | | 1,508 |
Series 2013-62 Class FA, 0.4841% 6/25/43 (k) | | 5,687 | | 5,678 |
floater sequential payer Series 2012-120 Class FE 0.4841% 2/25/39 (k) | | 2,504 | | 2,485 |
TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY | | 10,640 |
TOTAL COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (Cost $52,087) | 61,884
|
Commercial Mortgage Securities - 2.0% |
|
Asset Securitization Corp. Series 1997-D5 Class PS1, 1.3471% 2/14/43 (k)(m) | | 360 | | 11 |
Banc of America Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2004-2 Class A4, 4.153% 11/10/38 | | 198 | | 198 |
Series 2006-2 Class AAB, 5.7116% 5/10/45 (k) | | 512 | | 529 |
Series 2006-3 Class A4, 5.889% 7/10/44 | | 680 | | 745 |
Series 2006-5 Class A2, 5.317% 9/10/47 | | 2,409 | | 2,425 |
Series 2006-6 Class A3, 5.369% 10/10/45 | | 1,824 | | 1,861 |
Series 2007-4 Class A3, 5.8103% 2/10/51 (k) | | 558 | | 575 |
Series 2005-3 Class A3B, 5.09% 7/10/43 (k) | | 2,833 | | 2,950 |
Series 2006-6 Class E, 5.619% 10/10/45 (g) | | 527 | | 58 |
Series 2007-3: | | | | |
Class A3, 5.5595% 6/10/49 (k) | | 1,523 | | 1,527 |
Class A4, 5.5595% 6/10/49 (k) | | 1,901 | | 2,105 |
Banc of America Commercial Mortgage, Inc. sequential payer Series 2001-1 Class A4, 5.451% 1/15/49 | | 1,997 | | 2,165 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Bayview Commercial Asset Trust: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2003-2 Class M1, 1.0341% 12/25/33 (g)(k) | | $ 37 | | $ 27 |
Series 2005-3A: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.5841% 11/25/35 (g)(k) | | 317 | | 267 |
Class M1, 0.6241% 11/25/35 (g)(k) | | 42 | | 29 |
Class M2, 0.6741% 11/25/35 (g)(k) | | 53 | | 37 |
Class M3, 0.6941% 11/25/35 (g)(k) | | 47 | | 32 |
Class M4, 0.7841% 11/25/35 (g)(k) | | 59 | | 37 |
Series 2005-4A: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.5741% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 833 | | 684 |
Class B1, 1.5841% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 72 | | 15 |
Class M1, 0.6341% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 269 | | 150 |
Class M2, 0.6541% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 81 | | 42 |
Class M3, 0.6841% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 118 | | 61 |
Class M4, 0.7941% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 65 | | 32 |
Class M5, 0.8341% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 65 | | 23 |
Class M6, 0.8841% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 69 | | 21 |
Series 2006-1: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.5441% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 128 | | 104 |
Class M1, 0.5641% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 46 | | 32 |
Class M2, 0.5841% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 48 | | 33 |
Class M3, 0.6041% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 42 | | 27 |
Class M4, 0.7041% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 24 | | 14 |
Class M5, 0.7441% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 23 | | 12 |
Class M6, 0.8241% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 46 | | 20 |
Series 2006-2A: | | | | |
Class M1, 0.4941% 7/25/36 (g)(k) | | 121 | | 73 |
Class M2, 0.5141% 7/25/36 (g)(k) | | 85 | | 50 |
Class M3, 0.5341% 7/25/36 (g)(k) | | 71 | | 33 |
Class M4, 0.6041% 7/25/36 (g)(k) | | 48 | | 20 |
Class M5, 0.6541% 7/25/36 (g)(k) | | 59 | | 21 |
Series 2006-3A Class M4, 0.6141% 10/25/36 (g)(k) | | 79 | | 12 |
Series 2006-4A: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.4541% 12/25/36 (g)(k) | | 2,479 | | 1,763 |
Class M1, 0.4741% 12/25/36 (g)(k) | | 165 | | 91 |
Class M2, 0.4941% 12/25/36 (g)(k) | | 110 | | 31 |
Class M3, 0.5241% 12/25/36 (g)(k) | | 112 | | 23 |
Series 2007-1 Class A2, 0.4541% 3/25/37 (g)(k) | | 509 | | 333 |
Series 2007-2A: | | | | |
Class A1, 0.4541% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 500 | | 385 |
Class A2, 0.5041% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 468 | | 235 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Bayview Commercial Asset Trust: - continued | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2007-2A: | | | | |
Class M1, 0.5541% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | $ 164 | | $ 45 |
Class M2, 0.5941% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 90 | | 15 |
Class M3, 0.6741% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 91 | | 9 |
Class M4, 0.8341% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 180 | | 7 |
Class M5, 0.9341% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 54 | | 2 |
Series 2007-3: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.4741% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 501 | | 313 |
Class M1, 0.4941% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 100 | | 47 |
Class M2, 0.5241% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 107 | | 31 |
Class M3, 0.5541% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 167 | | 39 |
Class M4, 0.6841% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 263 | | 53 |
Class M5, 0.7841% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 137 | | 20 |
Class M6, 0.9841% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 91 | | 11 |
Series 2007-4A: | | | | |
Class M1, 1.1341% 9/25/37 (g)(k) | | 192 | | 18 |
Class M2, 1.2341% 9/25/37 (g)(k) | | 192 | | 15 |
Class M4, 1.7841% 9/25/37 (g)(k) | | 206 | | 10 |
Series 2004-1, Class IO, 1.25% 4/25/34 (g)(m) | | 1,283 | | 50 |
Series 2006-3A, Class IO, 3.8179% 10/25/36 (g)(k)(m) | | 22,141 | | 512 |
Series 2007-5A, Class IO, 4.186% 10/25/37 (g)(k)(m) | | 3,321 | | 232 |
Bear Stearns Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: | | | | |
floater Series 2007-BBA8: | | | | |
Class D, 0.4341% 3/15/22 (g)(k) | | 452 | | 429 |
Class E, 0.4841% 3/15/22 (g)(k) | | 2,347 | | 2,183 |
Class F, 0.5341% 3/15/22 (g)(k) | | 1,440 | | 1,310 |
Class G, 0.5841% 3/15/22 (g)(k) | | 369 | | 329 |
Class H, 0.7341% 3/15/22 (g)(k) | | 452 | | 392 |
Class J, 0.8841% 3/15/22 (g)(k) | | 452 | | 382 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2007-PW15 Class AAB, 5.315% 2/11/44 | | 1,929 | | 1,943 |
Series 2007-PW16: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.7131% 6/11/40 (k) | | 534 | | 600 |
Class AAB, 5.7131% 6/11/40 (k) | | 3,677 | | 3,817 |
Series 2007-PW18 Class A4, 5.7% 6/11/50 | | 4,380 | | 4,900 |
Series 2006-PW13 Class A3, 5.518% 9/11/41 | | 1,088 | | 1,088 |
Series 2006-PW14 Class X2, 0.6687% 12/11/38 (g)(k)(m) | | 8,606 | | 15 |
Series 2006-T22 Class A4, 5.5802% 4/12/38 (k) | | 114 | | 124 |
Series 2006-T24 Class X2, 0.4448% 10/12/41 (g)(k)(m) | | 2,042 | | 1 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Bear Stearns Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: - continued | | | | |
Series 2007-PW18 Class X2, 0.3099% 6/11/50 (g)(k)(m) | | $ 59,010 | | $ 392 |
Series 2007-T28 Class X2, 0.1575% 9/11/42 (g)(k)(m) | | 32,164 | | 110 |
Berkeley Federal Bank & Trust FSB Series 1994-1 Class B, 0% 8/1/24 (g)(k) | | 407 | | 212 |
C-BASS Trust floater Series 2006-SC1 Class A, 0.4541% 5/25/36 (g)(k) | | 414 | | 388 |
CDC Commercial Mortgage Trust Series 2002-FX1: | | | | |
Class G, 6.625% 5/15/35 (g) | | 1,072 | | 1,092 |
Class XCL, 1.198% 5/15/35 (g)(k)(m) | | 2,557 | | 41 |
Citigroup Commercial Mortgage Trust Series 2007-C6: | | | | |
Class A2, 5.6962% 12/10/49 (k) | | 7 | | 7 |
Class A4, 5.6962% 12/10/49 (k) | | 3,035 | | 3,399 |
Citigroup/Deutsche Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2007-CD4 Class A4, 5.322% 12/11/49 | | 12,448 | | 13,617 |
Series 2007-CD4 Class A3, 5.293% 12/11/49 | | 888 | | 907 |
Cobalt CMBS Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
Series 2006-C1 Class B, 5.359% 8/15/48 | | 2,736 | | 164 |
Series 2007-C2 Class B, 5.617% 4/15/47 (k) | | 1,019 | | 748 |
COMM pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2005-F10A Class J, 1.0341% 4/15/17 (g)(k) | | 96 | | 92 |
Series 2006-FL12 Class AJ, 0.3141% 12/15/20 (g)(k) | | 420 | | 414 |
sequential payer Series 2007-C9 Class A4, 5.8% 12/10/49 (k) | | 2,018 | | 2,285 |
Series 2006-C8 Class XP, 0.4666% 12/10/46 (k)(m) | | 9,656 | | 13 |
Credit Suisse Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-C4 Class A3, 5.467% 9/15/39 | | 1,057 | | 1,149 |
Series 2007-C2 Class A2, 5.448% 1/15/49 (k) | | 232 | | 231 |
Series 2007-C3 Class A4, 5.6829% 6/15/39 (k) | | 368 | | 402 |
Series 2006-C5 Class ASP, 0.6595% 12/15/39 (k)(m) | | 6,774 | | 12 |
Series 2007-C5 Class A4, 5.695% 9/15/40 (k) | | 825 | | 918 |
Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Capital Certificates floater Series 2007-TF2A Class B, 0.5341% 4/15/22 (g)(k) | | 3,254 | | 2,942 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp.: | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2004-C1 Class A4, 4.75% 1/15/37 | | $ 292 | | $ 293 |
Series 2001-CK6 Class AX, 1.1621% 8/15/36 (k)(m) | | 191 | | 0 * |
Series 2001-CKN5 Class AX, 0.6549% 9/15/34 (g)(k)(m) | | 295 | | 0 * |
Series 2006-C1 Class A3, 5.392% 2/15/39 (k) | | 2,228 | | 2,260 |
Credit Suisse Mortgage Capital Certificates: | | | | |
floater Series 2007-TFL1: | | | | |
Class B, 0.3341% 2/15/22 (g)(k) | | 345 | | 341 |
Class C: | | | | |
0.3541% 2/15/22 (g)(k) | | 1,416 | | 1,392 |
0.4541% 2/15/22 (g)(k) | | 506 | | 490 |
Class F, 0.5041% 2/15/22 (g)(k) | | 1,011 | | 973 |
Series 2007-C1: | | | | |
Class ASP, 0.3793% 2/15/40 (k)(m) | | 11,241 | | 21 |
Class B, 5.487% 2/15/40 (g)(k) | | 1,394 | | 204 |
Extended Stay America Trust floater Series 2013-ESFL: | | | | |
Class A1FL, 0.9859% 12/5/31 (g)(k) | | 1,380 | | 1,379 |
Class A2FL, 0.8859% 12/5/31 (g)(k) | | 1,380 | | 1,370 |
Class BFL, 1.2859% 12/5/31 (g)(k) | | 5,070 | | 5,071 |
Class CFL, 1.6859% 12/5/31 (g)(k) | | 3,690 | | 3,683 |
GE Capital Commercial Mortgage Corp.: | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2007-C1 Class A4, 5.543% 12/10/49 | | 9,244 | | 10,158 |
Series 2001-1 Class X1, 2.0442% 5/15/33 (g)(k)(m) | | 416 | | 5 |
Series 2007-C1 Class XP, 0.1582% 12/10/49 (k)(m) | | 12,273 | | 15 |
Greenwich Capital Commercial Funding Corp.: | | | | |
floater Series 2006-FL4 Class B, 0.3759% 11/5/21 (g)(k) | | 343 | | 338 |
sequential payer Series 2007-GG9 Class A4, 5.444% 3/10/39 | | 28,618 | | 31,414 |
Series 2007-GG11 Class A1, 0.2307% 12/10/49 (g)(k)(m) | | 14,049 | | 47 |
GS Mortgage Securities Corp. II: | | | | |
floater Series 2007-EOP: | | | | |
Class A2, 1.2601% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 767 | | 767 |
Class C, 2.0056% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 6,364 | | 6,380 |
Class D, 2.2018% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 2,144 | | 2,150 |
Class F, 2.6334% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 94 | | 94 |
Class G, 2.7903% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 47 | | 47 |
Class H, 3.3004% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 42 | | 42 |
Class J, 4.0852% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 60 | | 60 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
GS Mortgage Securities Corp. II: - continued | | | | |
Series 2006-GG6 Class A2, 5.506% 4/10/38 | | $ 1,515 | | $ 1,525 |
GS Mortgage Securities Corp. Trust Series 2013-KYO Class XB1, 3.2489% 11/8/29 (g)(k)(m) | | 196,352 | | 13,073 |
GS Mortgage Securities Trust sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-GG8 Class A2, 5.479% 11/10/39 | | 24 | | 24 |
Series 2007-GG10 Class A2, 5.778% 8/10/45 | | 184 | | 186 |
JPMorgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: | | | | |
floater Series 2006-FLA2: | | | | |
Class B, 0.3541% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 391 | | 382 |
Class C, 0.3941% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 277 | | 270 |
Class D, 0.4141% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 122 | | 117 |
Class E, 0.4641% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 176 | | 168 |
Class F, 0.5141% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 265 | | 251 |
Class G, 0.5441% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 230 | | 218 |
Class H, 0.6841% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 176 | | 165 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-CB14 Class A3B, 5.4893% 12/12/44 (k) | | 400 | | 406 |
Series 2006-LDP8 Class A4, 5.399% 5/15/45 | | 581 | | 635 |
Series 2006-LDP9 Class A3, 5.336% 5/15/47 | | 15,032 | | 16,473 |
Series 2007-CB19 Class A4, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 3,228 | | 3,596 |
Series 2007-LD11: | | | | |
Class A2, 5.7987% 6/15/49 (k) | | 1,189 | | 1,218 |
Class A4, 5.8137% 6/15/49 (k) | | 31,964 | | 35,604 |
Series 2007-LDPX Class A3, 5.42% 1/15/49 | | 14,834 | | 16,311 |
Series 2005-LDP3 Class A3, 4.959% 8/15/42 | | 53 | | 53 |
Series 2006-CB17 Class A3, 5.45% 12/12/43 | | 75 | | 75 |
Series 2006-LDP7 Class A4, 5.8629% 4/15/45 (k) | | 1,230 | | 1,348 |
Series 2007-CB19: | | | | |
Class B, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 78 | | 30 |
Class C, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 204 | | 42 |
Class D, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 214 | | 24 |
Series 2007-LDP10: | | | | |
Class CS, 5.466% 1/15/49 (k) | | 75 | | 9 |
Class ES, 5.5357% 1/15/49 (g)(k) | | 472 | | 6 |
LB Commercial Conduit Mortgage Trust sequential payer Series 2007-C3 Class A4, 5.8839% 7/15/44 (k) | | 743 | | 835 |
LB Multi-family Mortgage Trust Series 1991-4 Class A1, 7.125% 4/25/21 (k) | | 17 | | 12 |
LB-UBS Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-C1 Class A2, 5.084% 2/15/31 | | 1 | | 1 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
LB-UBS Commercial Mortgage Trust: - continued | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-C6 Class A4, 5.372% 9/15/39 | | $ 410 | | $ 451 |
Series 2006-C7 Class A2, 5.3% 11/15/38 | | 471 | | 492 |
Series 2007-C1 Class A4, 5.424% 2/15/40 | | 2,738 | | 3,012 |
Series 2007-C2 Class A3, 5.43% 2/15/40 | | 1,644 | | 1,800 |
Series 2006-C6 Class XCP, 0.673% 9/15/39 (k)(m) | | 3,502 | | 1 |
Series 2007-C1 Class XCP, 0.4262% 2/15/40 (k)(m) | | 1,246 | | 2 |
Series 2007-C6 Class A4, 5.858% 7/15/40 (k) | | 1,140 | | 1,248 |
Series 2007-C7: | | | | |
Class A3, 5.866% 9/15/45 | | 1,770 | | 1,940 |
Class XCP, 0.2714% 9/15/45 (k)(m) | | 55,299 | | 212 |
Lehman Brothers Floating Rate Commercial Mortgage Trust floater Series 2006-LLFA: | | | | |
Class D, 0.4141% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 292 | | 289 |
Class E, 0.4741% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 1,054 | | 1,033 |
Class F, 0.5241% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 868 | | 841 |
Class G, 0.5441% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 1,714 | | 1,645 |
Class H, 0.5841% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 442 | | 416 |
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
Series 2005-LC1 Class F, 5.4193% 1/12/44 (g)(k) | | 793 | | 698 |
Series 2006-C1 Class A2, 5.6376% 5/12/39 (k) | | 356 | | 357 |
Series 2007-C1 Class A4, 5.8499% 6/12/50 (k) | | 3,452 | | 3,854 |
Series 2008-C1 Class A4, 5.69% 2/12/51 | | 1,947 | | 2,178 |
Merrill Lynch-CFC Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
floater Series 2006-4 Class A2FL, 0.305% 12/12/49 (k) | | 47 | | 47 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-4 Class ASB, 5.133% 12/12/49 (k) | | 496 | | 512 |
Series 2007-5: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.378% 8/12/48 | | 7,455 | | 8,156 |
Class B, 5.479% 8/12/48 | | 2,736 | | 864 |
Series 2007-6 Class A4, 5.485% 3/12/51 (k) | | 7,400 | | 8,105 |
Series 2007-7 Class A4, 5.7364% 6/12/50 (k) | | 3,192 | | 3,546 |
Series 2006-4 Class XP, 0.6175% 12/12/49 (k)(m) | | 12,944 | | 107 |
Series 2007-6 Class B, 5.635% 3/12/51 (k) | | 912 | | 200 |
Series 2007-7 Class B, 5.7364% 6/12/50 (k) | | 79 | | 5 |
Series 2007-8 Class A3, 5.8968% 8/12/49 (k) | | 787 | | 883 |
Morgan Stanley Capital I Trust: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-XLF Class C, 1.384% 7/15/19 (g)(k) | | 272 | | 204 |
Series 2007-XLFA: | | | | |
Class C, 0.344% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | 523 | | 510 |
Class D, 0.374% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | 507 | | 488 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Morgan Stanley Capital I Trust: - continued | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2007-XLFA: | | | | |
Class E, 0.434% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | $ 634 | | $ 597 |
Class F, 0.484% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | 380 | | 355 |
Class G, 0.524% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | 470 | | 434 |
Class H, 0.614% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | 296 | | 258 |
Class J, 0.764% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | 171 | | 65 |
sequential payer Series 2007-HQ11 Class A31, 5.439% 2/12/44 (k) | | 429 | | 436 |
Series 2006-IQ11 Class A4, 5.682% 10/15/42 (k) | | 245 | | 266 |
Series 2006-T23 Class A3, 5.8075% 8/12/41 (k) | | 466 | | 466 |
Series 2007-IQ14: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.692% 4/15/49 (k) | | 1,368 | | 1,510 |
Class AAB, 5.654% 4/15/49 | | 1,987 | | 1,998 |
Class B, 5.7275% 4/15/49 (k) | | 224 | | 39 |
Salomon Brothers Mortgage Securities VII, Inc. Series 2006-C2 Class H, 6.308% 7/18/33 (g) | | 129 | | 51 |
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-WL7A: | | | | |
Class F, 0.5241% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 1,156 | | 1,064 |
Class G, 0.5441% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 1,351 | | 1,242 |
Class J, 0.7841% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 300 | | 255 |
Series 2007-WHL8: | | | | |
Class F, 0.6641% 6/15/20 (g)(k) | | 3,171 | | 2,829 |
Class LXR1, 0.8841% 6/15/20 (g)(k) | | 112 | | 97 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2007-C30 Class A5, 5.342% 12/15/43 | | 15,721 | | 17,321 |
Series 2007-C31: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.509% 4/15/47 | | 42,116 | | 46,094 |
Class A5, 5.5% 4/15/47 | | 16,000 | | 17,723 |
Series 2007-C33: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.9241% 2/15/51 (k) | | 23,060 | | 25,164 |
Class A5, 5.9241% 2/15/51 (k) | | 10,259 | | 11,562 |
Series 2005-C19 Class B, 4.892% 5/15/44 | | 912 | | 947 |
Series 2005-C22: | | | | |
Class B, 5.3802% 12/15/44 (k) | | 2,022 | | 1,644 |
Class F, 5.3802% 12/15/44 (g)(k) | | 1,521 | | 457 |
Series 2006-C23 Class A5, 5.416% 1/15/45 (k) | | 5,005 | | 5,449 |
Series 2007-C30: | | | | |
Class C, 5.483% 12/15/43 (k) | | 2,736 | | 2,202 |
Class D, 5.513% 12/15/43 (k) | | 1,459 | | 906 |
Class XP, 0.4764% 12/15/43 (g)(k)(m) | | 7,383 | | 18 |
Series 2007-C31 Class C, 5.6796% 4/15/47 (k) | | 251 | | 175 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust: - continued | | | | |
Series 2007-C31A Class A2, 5.421% 4/15/47 | | $ 4,033 | | $ 4,038 |
Series 2007-C32: | | | | |
Class D, 5.7482% 6/15/49 (k) | | 685 | | 276 |
Class E, 5.7482% 6/15/49 (k) | | 1,080 | | 334 |
TOTAL COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE SECURITIES (Cost $383,951) | 420,814
|
Municipal Securities - 0.7% |
|
Beaver County Indl. Dev. Auth. Poll. Cont. Rev. Bonds (FirstEnergy Nuclear Generation Corp. Proj.) Series 2005 A, 3.375%, tender 7/1/15 (k) | | 1,700 | | 1,731 |
California Gen. Oblig.: | | | | |
Series 2009, 7.35% 11/1/39 | | 1,095 | | 1,373 |
7.3% 10/1/39 | | 16,765 | | 20,949 |
7.5% 4/1/34 | | 7,195 | | 9,092 |
7.55% 4/1/39 | | 14,205 | | 18,386 |
7.6% 11/1/40 | | 14,125 | | 18,510 |
7.625% 3/1/40 | | 2,445 | | 3,182 |
Chicago Gen. Oblig. (Taxable Proj.) Series 2010 C1, 7.781% 1/1/35 | | 5,050 | | 5,610 |
Illinois Gen. Oblig.: | | | | |
Series 2003, 5.1% 6/1/33 | | 34,625 | | 30,378 |
Series 2010, 4.421% 1/1/15 | | 4,050 | | 4,187 |
Series 2010-1, 6.63% 2/1/35 | | 15,425 | | 15,218 |
Series 2010-3: | | | | |
6.725% 4/1/35 | | 7,505 | | 7,472 |
7.35% 7/1/35 | | 4,495 | | 4,743 |
Series 2011: | | | | |
5.665% 3/1/18 | | 5,030 | | 5,368 |
5.877% 3/1/19 | | 10,800 | | 11,592 |
TOTAL MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (Cost $167,821) | 157,791
|
Foreign Government and Government Agency Obligations - 0.2% |
|
Brazilian Federative Republic 5.625% 1/7/41 | | 4,922 | | 4,750 |
Italian Republic: | | | | |
3.125% 1/26/15 | | 9,149 | | 9,367 |
4.5% 1/21/15 | | 6,859 | | 7,147 |
Foreign Government and Government Agency Obligations - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Italian Republic: - continued | | | | |
4.75% 1/25/16 | | $ 6,870 | | $ 7,274 |
5.375% 6/12/17 | | 4,115 | | 4,452 |
Russian Federation 3.25% 4/4/17 (g) | | 800 | | 825 |
United Mexican States 4.75% 3/8/44 | | 5,572 | | 4,848 |
TOTAL FOREIGN GOVERNMENT AND GOVERNMENT AGENCY OBLIGATIONS (Cost $39,494) | 38,663
|
Floating Rate Loans - 0.5% |
|
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.2% |
Auto Components - 0.0% |
Tower Automotive Holdings U.S.A. LLC Tranche B, term loan 4.75% 4/23/20 (k) | | 324 | | 325 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.0% |
Bright Horizons Family Solutions, Inc. Tranche B, term loan 4.0001% 1/30/20 (k) | | 224 | | 224 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 0.1% |
Centaur Acquisition LLC Tranche 2LN, term loan 8.75% 2/20/20 (k) | | 375 | | 376 |
Fantasy Springs Resort Casino term loan 12% 8/6/12 (d)(k) | | 8,755 | | 6,829 |
Graton Economic Development Authority Tranche B, term loan 9% 8/22/18 (k) | | 600 | | 626 |
Harrah's Entertainment, Inc. Tranche B 6LN, term loan 5.44% 1/28/18 (k) | | 1,665 | | 1,482 |
Landry's Restaurants, Inc. Tranche B, term loan 4.75% 4/24/18 (k) | | 8,352 | | 8,395 |
MGM Mirage, Inc. Tranche B, term loan 3.5% 12/20/19 (k) | | 637 | | 634 |
Playa Resorts Holding BV Tranche B, term loan 4.75% 8/9/19 (k) | | 145 | | 145 |
Station Casinos LLC Tranche B, term loan 5% 2/19/20 (k) | | 3,257 | | 3,281 |
| | 21,768 |
Household Durables - 0.0% |
Serta Simmons Holdings, LLC Tranche B, term loan 5% 10/1/19 (k) | | 1,746 | | 1,751 |
Floating Rate Loans - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Media - 0.1% |
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Co. term loan 5.25% 5/22/18 (k) | | $ 173 | | $ 173 |
Media Holdco, LP Tranche B, term loan 7.25% 7/23/18 (k) | | 607 | | 608 |
Springer Science+Business Media Deutschland GmbH Tranche B 2LN, term loan 5% 8/8/20 (k) | | 4,280 | | 4,237 |
Univision Communications, Inc. term loan 4.5% 3/1/20 (k) | | 2,327 | | 2,318 |
| | 7,336 |
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | 31,404 |
CONSUMER STAPLES - 0.0% |
Food & Staples Retailing - 0.0% |
Rite Aid Corp.: | | | | |
Tranche 1LN, term loan 4% 2/21/20 (k) | | 803 | | 804 |
Tranche 2 LN2, term loan 4.875% 6/21/21 (k) | | 3,850 | | 3,869 |
Tranche 2LN, term loan 5.75% 8/21/20 (k) | | 125 | | 128 |
Sprouts Farmers Market LLC Tranche B, term loan 4% 4/12/20 (k) | | 226 | | 227 |
| | 5,028 |
Personal Products - 0.0% |
Revlon Consumer Products Corp. term loan 8/19/19 | | 1,960 | | 1,958 |
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | 6,986 |
ENERGY - 0.0% |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 0.0% |
Chesapeake Energy Corp. Tranche B, term loan 5.75% 12/2/17 (k) | | 3,135 | | 3,202 |
Samson Investment Co. Tranche 2LN, term loan 6% 9/25/18 (k) | | 325 | | 327 |
| | 3,529 |
FINANCIALS - 0.1% |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.0% |
TPF II LC LLC Tranche B, term loan 6.5% 8/16/19 (k) | | 1,735 | | 1,720 |
Insurance - 0.1% |
Asurion LLC Tranche B 1LN, term loan 4.5% 5/24/19 (k) | | 7,022 | | 6,943 |
Floating Rate Loans - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.0% |
Realogy Corp. Credit-Linked Deposit 4.4463% 10/10/16 (k) | | $ 1,228 | | $ 1,225 |
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | 9,888 |
HEALTH CARE - 0.0% |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 0.0% |
American Renal Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
Tranche 2LN, term loan 8.5% 2/8/20 (k) | | 2,260 | | 2,181 |
Tranche B 1LN, term loan 4.5% 8/8/19 (k) | | 2,050 | | 2,032 |
| | 4,213 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 0.0% |
Genoa Healthcare Group LLC Tranche 2LN, term loan 14% 2/10/15 (k) | | 2,305 | | 1,844 |
Pharmaceuticals - 0.0% |
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Tranche E, term loan 4.5% 8/5/20 (k) | | 1,303 | | 1,318 |
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | 7,375 |
INDUSTRIALS - 0.1% |
Airlines - 0.1% |
U.S. Airways, Inc. Tranche B 1LN, term loan 4.25% 5/21/19 (k) | | 6,390 | | 6,318 |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.0% |
ARAMARK Corp. Tranche B, term loan 4% 8/22/19 (k) | | 3,535 | | 3,557 |
Arysta Lifescience SPC LLC: | | | | |
Tranche B 1LN, term loan 4.5% 5/29/20 (k) | | 420 | | 419 |
Tranche B 2LN, term loan 8.25% 11/30/20 (k) | | 355 | | 353 |
SourceHOV LLC Tranche 2LN, term loan 8.75% 4/30/19 (k) | | 150 | | 152 |
| | 4,481 |
Professional Services - 0.0% |
AlixPartners LLP: | | | | |
Tranche 2LN, term loan 9% 7/10/21 (k) | | 2,210 | | 2,221 |
Tranche B2 1LN, term loan 5% 7/10/20 (k) | | 1,630 | | 1,650 |
| | 3,871 |
Floating Rate Loans - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.0% |
Fly Funding II Sarl Tranche B, term loan 4.5% 8/9/18 (k) | | $ 190 | | $ 191 |
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | 14,861 |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 0.1% |
Communications Equipment - 0.0% |
SafeNet, Inc. Tranche 2LN, term loan 6.1826% 4/12/15 (k) | | 4,500 | | 4,489 |
IT Services - 0.1% |
First Data Corp. term loan 4.1841% 3/24/18 (k) | | 9,900 | | 9,801 |
Software - 0.0% |
BMC Software Finance, Inc. Tranche B, term loan 5% 8/9/20 (k) | | 1,865 | | 1,865 |
ION Trading Technologies Ltd. Tranche 2LN, term loan 8.25% 5/22/21 (k) | | 70 | | 70 |
Kronos, Inc.: | | | | |
Tranche 2LN, term loan 9.75% 4/24/20 (k) | | 2,035 | | 2,106 |
Tranche B 1LN, term loan 4.5% 10/30/19 (k) | | 1,124 | | 1,127 |
| | 5,168 |
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | 19,458 |
MATERIALS - 0.0% |
Chemicals - 0.0% |
Royal Adhesives & Sealants LLC: | | | | |
Tranche 2LN, term loan 9.75% 1/31/19 (k) | | 1,190 | | 1,196 |
Tranche B 1LN, term loan 5.5% 7/31/18 (k) | | 125 | | 126 |
| | 1,322 |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 0.0% |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.0% |
Altice Financing SA Tranche B, term loan 5.3986% 6/24/19 (k)(o) | | 5,780 | | 5,664 |
FairPoint Communications, Inc. Tranche B, term loan 7.5% 2/14/19 (k) | | 474 | | 473 |
Floating Rate Loans - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - continued |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - continued |
Integra Telecom Holdings, Inc. Tranche 2LN, term loan 9.75% 2/14/20 (k) | | $ 125 | | $ 128 |
LTS Buyer LLC Tranche 2LN, term loan 8% 4/11/21 (k) | | 65 | | 65 |
| | 6,330 |
UTILITIES - 0.0% |
Electric Utilities - 0.0% |
TXU Energy LLC Tranche B, term loan 4.7118% 10/10/17 (k) | | 5,026 | | 3,399 |
Gas Utilities - 0.0% |
Everest Acquisition LLC Tranche B 3LN, term loan 3.5% 5/24/18 (k) | | 487 | | 486 |
Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - 0.0% |
LSP Madison Funding LLC Tranche 1LN, term loan 5.5% 6/28/19 (k) | | 756 | | 758 |
TOTAL UTILITIES | | 4,643 |
TOTAL FLOATING RATE LOANS (Cost $106,658) | 105,796
|
Bank Notes - 0.0% |
|
Fifth Third Bank 4.75% 2/1/15 (Cost $694) | | 680 | | 713
|
Preferred Securities - 0.1% |
| | | |
FINANCIALS - 0.1% |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.1% |
Bank of America Corp. 5.2% (h)(k) | 3,710 | | 3,314 |
Citigroup, Inc.: | | | |
5.35% (h)(k) | 11,740 | | 10,630 |
5.95% (h)(k) | 2,950 | | 2,818 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. 5.15% (h)(k) | 3,895 | | 3,499 |
MUFG Capital Finance 1 Ltd. 6.346% (h)(k) | 996 | | 1,099 |
TOTAL PREFERRED SECURITIES (Cost $23,385) | 21,360
|
Fixed-Income Funds - 5.9% |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund (l) (Cost $1,215,114) | 11,811,153 | | $ 1,242,061 |
Other - 0.0% |
| | | |
Other - 0.0% |
Tribune Co. Claim (Cost $11) | 11,084 | | 11
|
Money Market Funds - 0.8% |
| | | |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund, 0.10% (b) | 138,152,089 | | 138,152 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund, 0.10% (b)(c) | 25,098,461 | | 25,098 |
TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS (Cost $163,250) | 163,250
|
Cash Equivalents - 0.1% |
| Maturity Amount (000s) | | |
Investments in repurchase agreements in a joint trading account at 0.04%, dated 8/30/13 due 9/3/13 (Collateralized by U.S. Treasury Obligations) # (Cost $12,901) | $ 12,901 | | 12,901
|
TOTAL INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO - 102.3% (Cost $18,303,483) | 21,640,105 |
NET OTHER ASSETS (LIABILITIES) - (2.3)% | (476,424) |
NET ASSETS - 100% | $ 21,163,681 |
TBA Sale Commitments |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | |
Fannie Mae |
2.5% 9/1/43 | $ (14,600) | | (13,272) |
3% 9/1/43 | (13,000) | | (12,428) |
3% 9/1/43 | (17,100) | | (16,348) |
TBA Sale Commitments - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Fannie Mae - continued |
3% 9/1/43 | $ (12,400) | | $ (11,855) |
3% 9/1/43 | (42,400) | | (40,535) |
3% 9/1/43 | (9,400) | | (8,987) |
3% 9/1/43 | (16,000) | | (15,296) |
3% 9/1/43 | (2,900) | | (2,772) |
3.5% 9/1/43 | (54,900) | | (54,750) |
4% 9/1/43 | (10,700) | | (11,034) |
4% 9/1/43 | (22,900) | | (23,614) |
4% 9/1/43 | (10,700) | | (11,034) |
4% 9/1/43 | (1,400) | | (1,444) |
4.5% 9/1/43 | (67,600) | | (71,318) |
4.5% 9/1/43 | (23,700) | | (25,004) |
5% 9/1/43 | (30,600) | | (32,891) |
5.5% 9/1/43 | (4,850) | | (5,265) |
5.5% 9/1/43 | (4,850) | | (5,265) |
TOTAL FANNIE MAE | | (363,112) |
Freddie Mac |
3% 9/1/43 | (6,000) | | (5,718) |
Ginnie Mae |
4% 9/1/43 | (6,200) | | (6,437) |
4% 9/1/43 | (2,700) | | (2,803) |
4% 9/1/43 | (2,900) | | (3,010) |
TOTAL GINNIE MAE | | (12,250) |
TOTAL TBA SALE COMMITMENTS (Proceeds $383,108) | $ (381,080) |
Swaps |
Credit Default Swaps |
Underlying Reference | Rating (1) | Expiration Date | Clearinghouse/Counterparty | Fixed Payment Received/ (Paid) | Notional Amount (2) (000s) | Value (000s) (1) | Upfront Premium Received/(Paid) (000s) | Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation)(000s) |
Sell Protection |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | Credit Suisse | 0.15% | $ 1,913 | $ (1,809) | $ 0 | $ (1,809) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | JPMorgan Chase, Inc. | 0.15% | 1,568 | (1,483) | 0 | (1,483) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | JPMorgan Chase, Inc. | 0.15% | 360 | (340) | 0 | (340) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | Morgan Stanley, Inc. | 0.15% | 1,568 | (1,483) | 0 | (1,483) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | UBS | 0.15% | 1,525 | (1,442) | 0 | (1,442) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | UBS | 0.15% | 1,309 | (1,237) | 0 | (1,237) |
TOTAL CREDIT DEFAULT SWAPS | $ (7,794) | $ 0 | $ (7,794) |
|
(1) Ratings are presented for credit default swaps in which the Fund has sold protection on the underlying referenced debt. Ratings for an underlying index represent a weighted average of the ratings of all securities included in the index. The credit rating or value can be measures of the current payment/performance risk. Ratings are from Moody's Investors Service, Inc. Where Moody's® ratings are not available, S&P® ratings are disclosed and are indicated as such. All ratings are as of the report date and do not reflect subsequent changes. |
|
(2) The notional amount of each credit default swap where the Fund has sold protection approximates the maximum potential amount of future payments that the Fund could be required to make if a credit event were to occur. |
Legend |
(a) Non-income producing |
(b) 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. |
(c) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan. |
(d) Non-income producing - Security is in default. |
(e) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end. |
(f) Affiliated company |
(g) Security exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers. At the end of the period, the value of these securities amounted to $675,062,000 or 3.2% of net assets. |
(h) Security is perpetual in nature with no stated maturity date. |
(i) Security or a portion of the security purchased on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis. |
(j) Security or a portion of the security has been segregated as collateral for open bi-lateral over-the-counter (OTC) swaps. At period end, the value of securities pledged amounted to $10,670,000. |
(k) Coupon rates for floating and adjustable rate securities reflect the rates in effect at period end. |
(l) Affiliated fund that is generally available only to investment companies and other accounts managed by Fidelity Investments. A complete unaudited schedule of portfolio holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is filed with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q and is available upon request or at the SEC's website at www.sec.gov. An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of securities and other investments held indirectly through its investment in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com. 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. |
(m) Security represents right to receive monthly interest payments on an underlying pool of mortgages or assets. Principal shown is the outstanding par amount of the pool as of the end of the period. |
(n) Investment is owned by an entity that is treated as a corporation for U.S. tax purposes and is owned by the Fund. |
(o) Position or a portion of the position represents an unfunded loan commitment. At period end, the total principal amount and market value of unfunded commitments totaled $154,000 and $150,000, respectively. The coupon rate will be determined at time of settlement. |
(p) Restricted securities - Investment in securities not registered under the Securities Act of 1933 (excluding 144A issues). At the end of the period, the value of restricted securities (excluding 144A issues) amounted to $225,174,000 or 1.1% of net assets. |
Additional information on each restricted holding is as follows: |
Security | Acquisition Date | Acquisition Cost (000s) |
Aspen Aerogels, Inc. 8% 6/1/14 | 6/1/11 - 12/31/12 | $ 11,328 |
Aspen Aerogels, Inc. 8% 12/6/14 | 12/6/11 - 12/31/12 | $ 3,220 |
Blu Homes, Inc. Series A, 5.00% | 6/10/13 | $ 5,000 |
C. Wonder LLC | 12/27/12 - 6/25/13 | $ 19,500 |
HMH Holdings, Inc. warrants 6/22/19 | 6/22/12 | $ 4 |
Legend Pictures LLC | 9/23/10 - 3/30/12 | $ 37,645 |
Mobileye N.V. Series F | 8/15/13 | $ 12,902 |
Roku, Inc. 8.00% | 5/7/13 | $ 5,000 |
Spotify Technology SA | 11/14/12 | $ 15,028 |
Station Holdco LLC | 6/17/11 | $ 1,131 |
Station Holdco LLC unit | 4/1/13 | $ 0* |
Station Holdco LLC warrants 6/15/18 | 8/11/08 - 8/15/08 | $ 6,416 |
Tory Burch LLC | 12/31/12 | $ 17,505 |
Vice Holdings, Inc. Series A | 8/3/12 | $ 34,999 |
wetpaint.com, Inc. Series C | 5/14/08 | $ 5,000 |
* Amount represents less than $1,000. |
# Additional information on each counterparty to the repurchase agreement is as follows: |
Repurchase Agreement / Counterparty | Value (000s) |
$12,901,000 due 9/03/13 at 0.04% |
BNP Paribas Securities Corp. | $ 6,708 |
Barclays Capital, Inc. | 3,568 |
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. | 2,625 |
| $ 12,901 |
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 (Amounts in thousands) |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund | $ 797 |
Fidelity Corporate Bond 1-10 Year Central Fund | 3,681 |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund | 26,750 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund | 937 |
Total | $ 32,165 |
Additional information regarding the Fund's fiscal year to date purchases and sales, including the ownership percentage, of the non Money Market Central Funds is as follows: |
Fund (Amounts in thousands) | Value, beginning of period | Purchases | Sales Proceeds | Value, end of period | % ownership, end of period |
Fidelity Corporate Bond 1-10 Year Central Fund | $ 286,809 | $ - | $ 287,718* | $ - | 0.0% |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund | 1,638,428 | 280,727 | 621,810 | 1,242,061 | 9.0% |
Total | $ 1,925,237 | $ 280,727 | $ 909,528 | $ 1,242,061 | |
* Includes the value of shares redeemed through in-kind transactions. See Note 6 of the Notes to Financial Statements. |
Other Affiliated Issuers |
An affiliated company is a company in which the Fund has ownership of at least 5% of the voting securities. Fiscal year to date transactions with companies which are or were affiliates are as follows: |
Affiliate (Amounts in thousands) | Value, beginning of period | Purchases | Sales Proceeds | Dividend Income | Value, end of period |
AMAG Pharmaceuticals, Inc. | $ 21,602 | $ - | $ 9,542 | $ - | $ - |
American Woodmark Corp. | - | 19,666 | 26,240 | - | - |
CareView Communications, Inc. | 10,530 | - | - | - | 6,724 |
Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc. | 27,540 | - | 33,236 | - | - |
Southcross Energy Partners LP | - | 17,043 | 14,462 | 127 | - |
TherapeuticsMD, Inc. | 18,645 | 6,593 | - | - | 17,941 |
Total | $ 78,317 | $ 43,302 | $ 83,480 | $ 127 | $ 24,665 |
Other Information |
The following is a summary of the inputs used, as of August 31, 2013, 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 in the tables below, please refer to the Investment Valuation section in the accompanying Notes to Financial Statements. |
Valuation Inputs at Reporting Date: |
Description (Amounts in thousands) | Total | Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 |
Investments in Securities: | | | | |
Equities: | | | | |
Consumer Discretionary | $ 2,553,207 | $ 2,288,410 | $ 68,053 | $ 196,744 |
Consumer Staples | 1,340,134 | 1,213,644 | 126,490 | - |
Energy | 1,224,363 | 1,224,363 | - | - |
Financials | 2,725,539 | 2,617,309 | 108,230 | - |
Health Care | 2,413,036 | 2,396,640 | 16,396 | - |
Industrials | 972,986 | 960,709 | 12,043 | 234 |
Information Technology | 2,654,585 | 2,640,689 | - | 13,896 |
Materials | 309,875 | 309,875 | - | - |
Telecommunication Services | 247,349 | 230,931 | 15,285 | 1,133 |
Utilities | 230,242 | 230,242 | - | - |
Corporate Bonds | 2,736,189 | - | 2,717,639 | 18,550 |
U.S. Government and Government Agency Obligations | 1,160,385 | - | 1,160,385 | - |
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities | 809,580 | - | 809,580 | - |
Asset-Backed Securities | 37,391 | - | 33,347 | 4,044 |
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations | 61,884 | - | 61,277 | 607 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities | 420,814 | - | 420,238 | 576 |
Municipal Securities | 157,791 | - | 157,791 | - |
Foreign Government and Government Agency Obligations | 38,663 | - | 38,663 | - |
Floating Rate Loans | 105,796 | - | 96,515 | 9,281 |
Bank Notes | 713 | - | 713 | - |
Preferred Securities | 21,360 | - | 21,360 | - |
Fixed-Income Funds | 1,242,061 | 1,242,061 | - | - |
Other | 11 | - | - | 11 |
Money Market Funds | 163,250 | 163,250 | - | - |
Cash Equivalents | 12,901 | - | 12,901 | - |
Total Investments in Securities: | $ 21,640,105 | $ 15,518,123 | $ 5,876,906 | $ 245,076 |
Derivative Instruments: | | | | |
Liabilities | | | | |
Swaps | $ (7,794) | $ - | $ (7,794) | $ - |
Other Financial Instruments: | | | | |
TBA Sale Commitments | $ (381,080) | $ - | $ (381,080) | $ - |
Valuation Inputs at Reporting Date: |
The following is a reconciliation of Investments in Securities for which Level 3 inputs were used in determining value: |
(Amounts in thousands) | |
Investments in Securities: | |
Beginning Balance | $ 162,679 |
Net Realized Gain (Loss) on Investment Securities | 2,464 |
Net Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investment Securities | 45,630 |
Cost of Purchases | 83,041 |
Proceeds of Sales | (32,411) |
Amortization/Accretion | 876 |
Transfers into Level 3 | 1,618 |
Transfers out of Level 3 | (18,821) |
Ending Balance | $ 245,076 |
The change in unrealized gain (loss) for the period attributable to Level 3 securities held at August 31, 2013 | $ 45,439 |
The information used in the above reconciliation represents fiscal year to date activity for any Investments in Securities identified as using Level 3 inputs at either the beginning or the end of the current fiscal period. Transfers in or out of Level 3 represent the beginning value of any Security or Instrument where a change in the pricing level occurred from the beginning to the end of the period. The cost of purchases and the proceeds of sales may include securities received or delivered through corporate actions or exchanges. Realized and unrealized gains (losses) disclosed in the reconciliation are included in Net Gain (Loss) on the Fund's Statement of Operations. |
Value of Derivative Instruments |
The following table is a summary of the Fund's value of derivative instruments by primary risk exposure as of August 31, 2013. 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 |
(Amounts in thousands) | Asset | Liability |
Credit Risk | | |
Swaps (a) | $ - | $ (7,794) |
Total Value of Derivatives | $ - | $ (7,794) |
(a) For bi-lateral OTC swaps, reflects gross value which is presented in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities in the bi-lateral OTC swaps, at value line-items. |
Other Information |
The composition of credit quality ratings as a percentage of net assets is as follows (Unaudited): |
U.S. Government and U.S. Government Agency Obligations | 13.5% |
AAA,AA,A | 5.4% |
BBB | 6.4% |
BB | 2.1% |
B | 1.9% |
CCC,CC,C | 0.4% |
D | 0.0%* |
Not Rated | 0.6% |
Equities | 69.3% |
Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets | 0.4% |
| 100% |
* Amount represents less than 0.1% |
We have used ratings from Moody's Investors Service, Inc. Where Moody's ratings are not available, we have used S&P ratings. All ratings are as of the date indicated and do not reflect subsequent changes. |
Distribution of investments by country or territory of incorporation, as a percentage of total net assets, is as follows (Unaudited): |
United States of America | 88.8% |
Canada | 1.4% |
Japan | 1.3% |
Switzerland | 1.2% |
United Kingdom | 1.0% |
Others (Individually Less Than 1%) | 6.3% |
| 100.0% |
The information in the above tables is based on the combined investments of the Fund and its pro-rata share of the investments of Fidelity's fixed-income central funds. |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Statement of Assets and Liabilities
Amounts in thousands (except per-share amounts) | August 31, 2013 |
| | |
Assets | | |
Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $24,134 and repurchase agreements of $12,901) - See accompanying schedule: Unaffiliated issuers (cost $16,891,508) | $ 20,210,129 | |
Fidelity Central Funds (cost $1,378,364) | 1,405,311 | |
Other affiliated issuers (cost $33,611) | 24,665 | |
Total Investments (cost $18,303,483) | | $ 21,640,105 |
Cash | | 4,290 |
Receivable for investments sold, regular delivery | | 5,829 |
Receivable for TBA sale commitments | | 383,108 |
Receivable for swaps | | 1 |
Receivable for fund shares sold | | 26,505 |
Dividends receivable | | 18,740 |
Interest receivable | | 51,101 |
Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds | | 22 |
Receivable from investment adviser for expense reductions | | 5 |
Other receivables | | 1,092 |
Total assets | | 22,130,798 |
| | |
Liabilities | | |
Payable for investments purchased Regular delivery | $ 63,793 | |
Delayed delivery | 439,402 | |
TBA sale commitments, at value | 381,080 | |
Payable for swaps | 744 | |
Payable for fund shares redeemed | 38,341 | |
Bi-lateral OTC swaps, at value | 7,794 | |
Accrued management fee | 7,220 | |
Other affiliated payables | 2,468 | |
Other payables and accrued expenses | 1,177 | |
Collateral on securities loaned, at value | 25,098 | |
Total liabilities | | 967,117 |
| | |
Net Assets | | $ 21,163,681 |
Net Assets consist of: | | |
Paid in capital | | $ 16,566,159 |
Undistributed net investment income | | 80,612 |
Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) on investments and foreign currency transactions | | 1,186,056 |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies | | 3,330,854 |
Net Assets | | $ 21,163,681 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Financial Statements - continued
Statement of Assets and Liabilities - continued
Amounts in thousands (except per-share amounts) | August 31, 2013 |
| | |
Puritan: Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($15,933,880 ÷ 759,450 shares) | | $ 20.98 |
| | |
Class K: Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($5,229,801 ÷ 249,322 shares) | | $ 20.98 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Statement of Operations
Amounts in thousands | Year ended August 31, 2013 |
| | |
Investment Income | | |
Dividends (including $127 earned from other affiliated issuers) | | $ 237,691 |
Interest | | 214,329 |
Income from Fidelity Central Funds | | 32,165 |
Total income | | 484,185 |
| | |
Expenses | | |
Management fee | $ 83,031 | |
Transfer agent fees | 27,231 | |
Accounting and security lending fees | 2,021 | |
Custodian fees and expenses | 334 | |
Independent trustees' compensation | 126 | |
Appreciation in deferred trustee compensation account | 2 | |
Registration fees | 207 | |
Audit | 280 | |
Legal | 125 | |
Interest | 3 | |
Miscellaneous | 194 | |
Total expenses before reductions | 113,554 | |
Expense reductions | (1,690) | 111,864 |
Net investment income (loss) | | 372,321 |
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) Net realized gain (loss) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | 1,457,101 | |
Fidelity Central Funds | 41,779 | |
Other affiliated issuers | 23,157 | |
Foreign currency transactions | (484) | |
Futures contracts | (292) | |
Swaps | (10,177) | |
Total net realized gain (loss) | | 1,511,084 |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on: Investment securities | 290,824 | |
Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies | 17 | |
Swaps | 9,669 | |
Delayed delivery commitments | 4,587 | |
Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | | 305,097 |
Net gain (loss) | | 1,816,181 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | | $ 2,188,502 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Financial Statements - continued
Statement of Changes in Net Assets
Amounts in thousands | Year ended August 31, 2013 | Year ended August 31, 2012 |
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets | | |
Operations | | |
Net investment income (loss) | $ 372,321 | $ 389,728 |
Net realized gain (loss) | 1,511,084 | 255,024 |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | 305,097 | 1,565,691 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | 2,188,502 | 2,210,443 |
Distributions to shareholders from net investment income | (353,018) | (364,135) |
Distributions to shareholders from net realized gain | (355,229) | - |
Total distributions | (708,247) | (364,135) |
Share transactions - net increase (decrease) | (49,273) | (743,799) |
Total increase (decrease) in net assets | 1,430,982 | 1,102,509 |
| | |
Net Assets | | |
Beginning of period | 19,732,699 | 18,630,190 |
End of period (including undistributed net investment income of $80,612 and undistributed net investment income of $84,879, respectively) | $ 21,163,681 | $ 19,732,699 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Financial Highlights - Puritan
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 |
Selected Per-Share Data | | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $ 19.53 | $ 17.72 | $ 15.81 | $ 15.06 | $ 17.07 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | | |
Net investment income (loss) B | .36 | .38 | .35 | .40 | .45 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | 1.79 | 1.78 | 1.93 | .75 | (2.00) |
Total from investment operations | 2.15 | 2.16 | 2.28 | 1.15 | (1.55) |
Distributions from net investment income | (.35) | (.35) | (.36) | (.39) | (.44) |
Distributions from net realized gain | (.35) | - | - F | (.01) | (.02) |
Total distributions | (.70) | (.35) | (.37) H | (.40) | (.46) G |
Net asset value, end of period | $ 20.98 | $ 19.53 | $ 17.72 | $ 15.81 | $ 15.06 |
Total Return A | 11.29% | 12.35% | 14.38% | 7.61% | (8.76)% |
Ratios to Average Net Assets C,E | | | | | |
Expenses before reductions | .58% | .59% | .60% | .61% | .67% |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any | .58% | .59% | .60% | .61% | .67% |
Expenses net of all reductions | .57% | .59% | .59% | .61% | .67% |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.79% | 2.03% | 1.96% | 2.48% | 3.30% |
Supplemental Data | | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (in millions) | $ 15,934 | $ 15,472 | $ 15,420 | $ 15,054 | $ 16,111 |
Portfolio turnover rate D | 229% I | 141% | 154% I | 104% | 116% I |
A Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.
B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
C 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.
D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
E Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or reductions from other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class 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 brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.
F Amount represents less than $.01 per share.
G Total distributions of $.46 per share is comprised of distributions from net investment income of $.442 and distributions from net realized gain of $.015 per share.
H Total distributions of $.37 per share is comprised of distributions from net investment income of $.364 and distributions from net realized gain of $.003 per share.
I The portfolio turnover rate excludes liquidations and/or redemptions executed in-kind from Affiliated Central Funds.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Financial Highlights - Class K
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 |
Selected Per-Share Data | | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $ 19.52 | $ 17.72 | $ 15.80 | $ 15.06 | $ 17.07 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | | |
Net investment income (loss) B | .39 | .40 | .38 | .42 | .46 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | 1.79 | 1.77 | 1.93 | .74 | (1.99) |
Total from investment operations | 2.18 | 2.17 | 2.31 | 1.16 | (1.53) |
Distributions from net investment income | (.37) | (.37) | (.39) | (.41) | (.47) |
Distributions from net realized gain | (.35) | - | - F | (.01) | (.02) |
Total distributions | (.72) | (.37) | (.39) | (.42) | (.48) G |
Net asset value, end of period | $ 20.98 | $ 19.52 | $ 17.72 | $ 15.80 | $ 15.06 |
Total Return A | 11.48% | 12.43% | 14.59% | 7.69% | (8.59)% |
Ratios to Average Net Assets C,E | | | | | |
Expenses before reductions | .47% | .48% | .48% | .48% | .50% |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any | .47% | .48% | .48% | .48% | .50% |
Expenses net of all reductions | .46% | .47% | .47% | .47% | .50% |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.90% | 2.15% | 2.09% | 2.61% | 3.47% |
Supplemental Data | | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (in millions) | $ 5,230 | $ 4,261 | $ 3,211 | $ 2,280 | $ 1,469 |
Portfolio turnover rate D | 229% H | 141% | 154% H | 104% | 116% H |
A Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.
B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
C 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.
D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
E Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or reductions from other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class 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 brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.
F Amount represents less than $.01 per share.
G Total distributions of $.48 per share is comprised of distributions from net investment income of $.468 and distributions from net realized gain of $.015 per share.
H The portfolio turnover rate excludes liquidations and/or redemptions executed in-kind from Affiliated Central Funds.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements
For the period ended August 31, 2013
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
1. Organization.
Fidelity Puritan Fund (the Fund) is a fund of Fidelity Puritan 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. The Fund offers Puritan and Class K shares, each of which has equal rights as to assets and voting privileges. Each class has exclusive voting rights with respect to matters that affect that class.
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 Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) 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.
Based on its investment objective, each Fidelity Central Fund may invest or participate in various investment vehicles or strategies that are similar to those of the Fund. These strategies are consistent with the investment objectives of the Fund and may involve certain economic risks which may cause a decline in value of each of the Fidelity Central Funds and thus a decline in the value of the Fund. The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), an affiliate of FMR. The following summarizes the Fund's investment in each non-money market Fidelity Central Fund.
Fidelity Central Fund | Investment Manager | Investment Objective | Investment Practices |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund | FIMM | Seeks a high level of income by normally investing in investment-grade mortgage-related securities and repurchase agreements for those securities. | Delayed Delivery & When Issued Securities Repurchase Agreements Options Swaps |
An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of any securities and other investments held indirectly through its investment in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com. 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 contain the
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds - continued
significant accounting policies (including investment valuation policies) of those 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 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. In accordance with valuation policies and procedures approved by the Board of Trustees (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 FMR Fair Value Committee (the Committee), in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board. Factors used in determining fair value vary by investment type and may include market or investment specific events, changes in interest rates and credit quality. The frequency with which these procedures are used cannot be predicted and they may be utilized to a significant extent. The Committee oversees the Fund's valuation policies and procedures and is responsible for approving and reporting to the Board all fair value determinations.
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)
Annual Report
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Valuation - continued
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. Utilizing these techniques may result in transfers between Level 1 and Level 2. Restricted equity securities and private placements for which observable inputs are not available are valued using alternate valuation approaches, including the market approach and the income approach and are categorized as Level 3 in the hierarchy. The market approach generally consists of using comparable market transactions while the income approach generally consists of using the net present value of estimated future cash flows, adjusted as appropriate for liquidity, credit, market and/or other risk factors.
Debt securities, including restricted securities, are valued based on evaluated prices received from third party pricing vendors or from brokers who make markets in such securities. For corporate bonds, bank notes, floating rate loans, foreign government and government agency obligations, municipal securities, preferred securities and U.S. government and government agency obligations, pricing vendors utilize matrix pricing which considers yield or price of bonds of comparable quality, coupon, maturity and type as well as broker-supplied prices. For asset backed securities, collateralized mortgage obligations, commercial mortgage securities and U.S. government agency mortgage securities, pricing vendors utilize matrix pricing which considers prepayment speed assumptions, attributes of the collateral, yield or price of bonds of comparable quality, coupon, maturity and type as well as broker-supplied prices. Swaps are marked-to-market daily based on valuations from third party pricing vendors, registered derivatives clearing organizations (clearinghouses) or broker-supplied valuations. These pricing sources may utilize inputs such as interest rate curves, credit spread curves, default possibilities and recovery rates. When independent prices are unavailable or unreliable, debt securities and swaps may be valued utilizing pricing methodologies which consider similar factors that would be used by third party pricing vendors. Debt securities and
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Valuation - continued
swaps are generally categorized as Level 2 in the hierarchy but may be Level 3 depending on the circumstances.
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. Short-term securities with remaining maturities of sixty days or less may be valued at amortized cost, which approximates fair value, and are categorized as Level 2 in the hierarchy.
The following provides information on Level 3 securities held by the Fund that were valued at period end based on unobservable inputs. These amounts exclude valuations provided by a broker.
Asset Type | Fair Value at 08/31/13 (000s) | Valuation Technique (s) | Unobservable Input | Amount or Range / Weighted Average | Impact to Valuation from an Increase in Input* |
Asset-Backed Securities | $ 73 | Discounted cash flow | Yield | 4.5% | Decrease |
| | Expected distribution | Recovery rate | 0% - 3% / 3.0% | Increase |
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations | $ 607 | Discounted cash flow | Yield | 7.5% | Decrease |
Commercial Mortgage Securities | $ 372 | Discounted cash flow | Discount rate | 20.1% | Decrease |
| | Expected distribution | Recovery rate | 70.0% | Increase |
| | Market comparable | Spread | 106.4% | Decrease |
| | | Quoted price | $ 87.00 | Increase |
Common Stocks | $ 144,147 | Discounted cash flow | Discount rate | 20% - 50% / 47.5% | Decrease |
| | Expected distribution | Recovery rate | 0% - 1% / 1.0% | Increase |
| | Market comparable | Transaction price | $ 53.89 | Increase |
| | | EV/EBITDA multiple | 5.0 - 22.0 / 16.7 | Increase |
Corporate Bonds | $ 18,550 | Discounted cash flow | Discount rate | 25.0% | Decrease |
| | Expected distribution | Recovery rate | 0.0% | Increase |
| | Market comparable | Transaction price | $ 100.00 | Increase |
Annual Report
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Valuation - continued
Asset Type | Fair Value at 08/31/13 (000s) | Valuation Technique (s) | Unobservable Input | Amount or Range / Weighted Average | Impact to Valuation from an Increase in Input* |
Floating Rate Loans | $ 6,829 | Discounted cash flow | Discount rate | 15.0% | Decrease |
| | Market comparable | EV/EBITDA multiple | 7.0 | Increase |
Preferred Stocks | $ 67,634 | Market comparable | Transaction price | $0.91 - $6,527.04 / $4,291.08 | Increase |
| | | EV/EBITDA multiple | 5.0 | Increase |
* Represents the expected directional change in the fair value of the Level 3 investments that would result from an increase in the corresponding
input. A decrease to the unobservable input would have the opposite effect. Significant changes in these inputs could result in significantly higher or
lower fair value measurements.
Changes in valuation techniques may result in transfers in or out of an assigned level within the disclosure hierarchy. The aggregate value of investments by input level, as of August 31, 2013, as well as a roll forward of Level 3 investments, is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
Foreign Currency. The Fund may use foreign currency contracts to facilitate transactions in foreign-denominated securities. Gains and losses from these transactions may arise from changes in the value of the foreign currency or if the counterparties do not perform under the contracts' terms.
Foreign-denominated assets, including investment securities, and liabilities are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rates at period end. Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and dividends received and expenses denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate in effect on the transaction date.
The effects of exchange rate fluctuations on investments are included with the net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investment securities. Other foreign currency transactions resulting in realized and unrealized gain (loss) are disclosed separately.
Investment Transactions and Income. For financial reporting purposes, the Fund's investment holdings and NAV include trades executed through the end of the last business day of the period. The NAV per share for processing shareholder transactions is calculated as of the close of business of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time and includes trades executed through the end of the prior business day. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of identified
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Transactions and Income - continued
cost and may 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. Distributions received on securities that represent a return of capital or capital gain are recorded as a reduction of cost of investments and/or as a realized gain. Subsequent to ex-dividend date the Fund determines the components of these distributions, based upon receipt of tax filings or other correspondence relating to the underlying investment. Interest income and distributions from the Fidelity Central Funds are accrued as earned. Interest income includes coupon interest and amortization of premium and accretion of discount on debt securities. The principal amount on inflation-indexed securities is periodically adjusted to the rate of inflation and interest is accrued based on the principal amount. The adjustments to principal due to inflation are reflected as increases or decreases to Interest in the accompanying Statement of Operations. Investment income is recorded net of foreign taxes withheld where recovery of such taxes is uncertain. Debt obligations may be placed on non-accrual status and related interest income may be reduced by ceasing current accruals and writing off interest receivables when the collection of all or a portion of interest has become doubtful based on consistently applied procedures. A debt obligation is removed from non-accrual status when the issuer resumes interest payments or when collectability of interest is reasonably assured.
Class Allocations and Expenses. Investment income, realized and unrealized capital gains and losses, common expenses of the Fund, and certain fund-level expense reductions, if any, are allocated on a pro-rata basis to each class based on the relative net assets of each class to the total net assets of the Fund. Each class differs with respect to transfer agent fees incurred. Certain expense reductions may also differ by class. 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.
Deferred Trustee Compensation. Under a Deferred Compensation Plan (the Plan), independent Trustees may elect to defer receipt of a portion of their annual compensation. Deferred amounts are invested in a cross-section of Fidelity funds, are marked-to-market and remain in the Fund until distributed in accordance with the Plan. The investment of deferred amounts and the offsetting payable to the Trustees are included in the accompanying Statement of Assets and Liabilities.
Annual Report
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders. Each year, the Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code, including distributing substantially all of its taxable income and realized gains. As a result, no provision for U.S. Federal income taxes is required. As of August 31, 2013, the Fund did not have any unrecognized tax benefits in the financial statements; nor is the Fund aware of any tax positions for which it is reasonably possible that the total amounts of unrecognized tax benefits will significantly change in the next twelve months. The Fund files a U.S. federal tax return, in addition to state and local tax returns as required. The Fund's federal income tax returns are subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for a period of three fiscal years after they are filed. State and local tax returns may be subject to examination for an additional fiscal year depending on the jurisdiction. Foreign taxes are provided for based on the Fund's understanding of the tax rules and rates that exist in the foreign markets in which it invests.
Distributions are declared and recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income dividends and capital gain distributions are declared separately for each class. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from GAAP. In addition, the Fund claimed a portion of the payment made to redeeming shareholders as a distribution for income tax purposes.
Capital accounts within the financial statements are adjusted for permanent book-tax differences. These adjustments have no impact on net assets or the results of operations. Temporary book-tax differences will reverse in a subsequent period.
Book-tax differences are primarily due to futures contracts, swaps, foreign currency transactions, market discount, equity-debt classifications, partnerships (including allocations from Fidelity Central Funds), deferred trustees compensation and losses deferred due to wash sales.
The federal tax cost of investment securities and unrealized appreciation (depreciation) as of period end were as follows:
Gross unrealized appreciation | $ 3,562,705 |
Gross unrealized depreciation | (316,406) |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities and other investments | $ 3,246,299 |
| |
Tax Cost | $ 18,393,806 |
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders - continued
The tax-based components of distributable earnings as of period end were as follows:
Undistributed ordinary income | $ 85,512 |
Undistributed long-term capital gain | $ 1,272,417 |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | $ 3,240,531 |
The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:
| August 31, 2013 | August 31, 2012 |
Ordinary Income | $ 381,222 | $ 364,135 |
Long-term Capital Gains | 327,025 | - |
Total | $ 708,247 | $ 364,135 |
Repurchase Agreements. FMR has received an Exemptive Order from the SEC which permits the Fund and other affiliated entities of FMR to transfer uninvested cash balances into joint trading accounts which are then invested in repurchase agreements. The Fund may also invest directly with institutions in repurchase agreements. Repurchase agreements may be collateralized by government or non-government securities. Upon settlement date, collateral is held in segregated accounts with custodian banks and may be obtained in the event of a default of the counterparty. The Fund monitors, on a daily basis, the value of the collateral to ensure it is at least equal to the principal amount of the repurchase agreement (including accrued interest). In the event of a default by the counterparty, realization of the collateral proceeds could be delayed, during which time the value of the collateral may decline.
Delayed Delivery Transactions and When-Issued Securities. During the period, the Fund transacted in securities on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis. Payment and delivery may take place after the customary settlement period for that security. The price of the underlying securities and the date when the securities will be delivered and paid for are fixed at the time the transaction is negotiated. The securities purchased on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis are identified as such in the Fund's Schedule of Investments. The Fund may receive compensation for interest forgone in the purchase of a delayed delivery or when-issued security. With respect to purchase commitments, the Fund identifies securities as segregated in its records with a value at least equal to the amount of the commitment. Losses may arise due to changes in the value of the underlying securities or if the counterparty does not perform under the contract's terms, or if the issuer does not issue the securities due to political, economic, or other factors.
To-Be-Announced (TBA) Securities and Mortgage Dollar Rolls. During the period, the Fund transacted in TBA securities that involved buying or selling mortgage-backed
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3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
To-Be-Announced (TBA) Securities and Mortgage Dollar Rolls - continued
securities (MBS) on a forward commitment basis. A TBA transaction typically does not designate the actual security to be delivered and only includes an approximate principal amount; however delivered securities must meet specified terms defined by industry guidelines, including issuer, rate and current principal amount outstanding on underlying mortgage pools. The Fund may enter into a TBA transaction with the intent to take possession of or deliver the underlying MBS, or the Fund may elect to extend the settlement by entering into either a mortgage or reverse mortgage dollar roll. Mortgage dollar rolls are transactions where a fund sells TBA securities and simultaneously agrees to repurchase MBS on a later date at a lower price and with the same counterparty. Reverse mortgage dollar rolls involve the purchase and simultaneous agreement to sell TBA securities on a later date at a lower price. Transactions in mortgage dollar rolls and reverse mortgage dollar rolls are accounted for as purchases and sales and may result in an increase to the Fund's portfolio turnover rate.
Purchases and sales of TBA securities involve risks similar to those discussed above for delayed delivery and when-issued securities. Also, if the counterparty in a mortgage dollar roll or a reverse mortgage dollar roll transaction files for bankruptcy or becomes insolvent, the Fund's right to repurchase or sell securities may be limited. Additionally, when a fund sells TBA securities without already owning or having the right to obtain the deliverable securities (an uncovered forward commitment to sell), it incurs a risk of loss because it could have to purchase the securities at a price that is higher than the price at which it sold them. A fund may be unable to purchase the deliverable securities if the corresponding market is illiquid.
TBA securities subject to a forward commitment to sell at period end are included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments under the caption "TBA Sale Commitments." The proceeds and value of these commitments are reflected in the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities as Receivable for TBA sale commitments and TBA sale commitments, at value, respectively.
Restricted Securities. The Fund may invest in securities that are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale. These securities generally may be resold in transactions exempt from registration or to the public if the securities are registered. Disposal of these securities may involve time-consuming negotiations and expense, and prompt sale at an acceptable price may be difficult. Information regarding restricted securities is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
Loans and Other Direct Debt Instruments. The Fund invests in direct debt instruments which are interests in amounts owed to lenders by corporate or other borrowers.
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Loans and Other Direct Debt Instruments - continued
These instruments may be in the form of loans, trade claims or other receivables and may include standby financing commitments such as revolving credit facilities that obligate the Fund to supply additional cash to the borrower on demand. Loans may be acquired through assignment or participation, or may be made directly to a borrower. The Fund may be contractually obligated to receive approval from the agent bank and/or borrower prior to the sale of these loans. The Fund also invests in unfunded loan commitments, which are contractual obligations for future funding. Information regarding unfunded commitments is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
New Accounting Pronouncement. The Financial Accounting Standards Board issued in December 2011, Accounting Standard Update No. 2011-11, Disclosures about Offsetting Assets and Liabilities, and in January 2013, Accounting Standards Update No. 2013-1 Clarifying the Scope of Disclosures about Offsetting Assets and Liabilities. These updates create new disclosure requirements requiring entities to disclose both gross and net information for derivatives and other financial instruments that are either offset in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities or subject to an enforceable master netting arrangement or similar agreement. The disclosure requirements are effective for annual reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2013, and interim periods within those annual periods. Management expects that the impact of the updates' adoption will be limited to additional financial statement disclosures as applicable.
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 and swaps. 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, to gain exposure to certain types of assets 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.
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4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Risk Exposures and the Use of Derivative Instruments - continued
The Fund's use of derivatives increased or decreased its exposure to the following risks:
Credit Risk | Credit risk relates to the ability of the issuer of a financial instrument to make further principal or interest payments on an obligation or commitment that it has to the Fund. |
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. Derivative counterparty credit risk is managed through formal evaluation of the creditworthiness of all potential counterparties. On certain OTC derivatives such as bi-lateral swaps, the Fund attempts to reduce its exposure to counterparty credit risk by entering into an International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. (ISDA) Master Agreement with each of its counterparties. The ISDA Master Agreement gives the Fund the right to terminate all transactions traded under such agreement upon the deterioration in the credit quality of the counterparty beyond specified levels. The ISDA Master Agreement gives each party the right, upon an event of default by the other party or a termination of the agreement, to close out all transactions traded under such agreement and to net amounts owed under each transaction to one net payable by one party to the other. To mitigate counterparty credit risk on bi-lateral OTC derivatives, the Fund receives collateral in the form of cash or securities once the Fund's net unrealized appreciation on outstanding derivative contracts under an ISDA Master Agreement exceeds certain applicable thresholds, subject to certain minimum transfer provisions. The collateral received is held in segregated accounts with the Fund's custodian bank in accordance with the collateral agreements entered into between the Fund, the counterparty and the Fund's custodian bank. The Fund could experience delays and costs in gaining access to the collateral even though it is held by the Fund's custodian bank. The Fund's maximum risk of loss from counterparty credit risk related to bi-lateral OTC derivatives is generally the aggregate unrealized appreciation and unpaid counterparty payments in excess of any collateral pledged by the counterparty to the Fund. The Fund may be required to pledge collateral for the benefit of the counterparties on bi-lateral OTC derivatives in an amount not less than each counterparty's unrealized appreciation on outstanding derivative contracts, subject to certain minimum transfer provisions, and
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Risk Exposures and the Use of Derivative Instruments - continued
any such pledged collateral is identified in the Schedule of Investments. Exchange-traded futures contracts are not covered by the ISDA Master Agreement; however 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.
Net Realized Gain (Loss) and Change in Net Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) on Derivatives. The table below, which reflects the impacts of derivatives on the financial performance of the Fund, summarizes the net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) for derivatives during the period as presented in the Statement of Operations.
Primary Risk Exposure / Derivative Type | Net Realized Gain (Loss) | Change in Net Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) |
Credit Risk | | |
Swaps | $ (10,177) | $ 9,669 |
Equity Risk | | |
Futures Contracts | (292) | - |
Totals (a) | $ (10,469) | $ 9,669 |
(a) A summary of the value of derivatives by primary risk exposure as of period end, if any, is included at the end of the Schedule of Investments and
is representative of activity for the period.
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 for derivative instruments 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 included in the Statement of Operations.
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4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Futures Contracts - continued
Any open futures contracts at period end are presented in the Schedule of Investments under the caption "Futures Contracts." The underlying face amount at value reflects each contract's exposure to the underlying instrument or index at period end.
Swaps. A swap is a contract between two parties to exchange future cash flows at periodic intervals based on a notional principal amount. A bi-lateral OTC swap is a transaction between a fund and a dealer counterparty where cash flows are exchanged between the two parties for the life of the swap.
Bi-lateral OTC swaps are marked-to-market daily and changes in value are reflected in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities in the bi-lateral OTC swaps at value line items. Any upfront premiums paid or received upon entering a bi-lateral OTC swap to compensate for differences between stated terms of the swap and prevailing market conditions (e.g. credit spreads, interest rates or other factors) are recorded in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities and amortized to realized gain or (loss) ratably over the term of the swap. Any unamortized upfront premiums are presented in the Schedule of Investments.
Payments are exchanged at specified intervals, accrued daily commencing with the effective date of the contract and recorded as realized gain or (loss). Realized gain or (loss) is also recorded in the event of an early termination of a swap. The net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on swaps during the period is included in the Statement of Operations.
Any open swaps at period end are included in the Schedule of Investments under the caption "Swaps."
Credit Default Swaps. Credit default swaps enable the Fund to buy or sell protection against specified credit events on a single-name issuer or a traded credit index. Under the terms of a credit default swap the buyer of protection (buyer) receives credit protection in exchange for making periodic payments to the seller of protection (seller) based on a fixed percentage applied to a notional principal amount. In return for these payments, the seller will be required to make a payment upon the occurrence of one or more specified credit events. The Fund enters into credit default swaps as a seller to gain credit exposure to an issuer and/or as a buyer to obtain a measure of protection against defaults of an issuer. Periodic payments are made over the life of the contract by the buyer provided that no credit event occurs.
For credit default swaps on most corporate and sovereign issuers, credit events include bankruptcy, failure to pay or repudiation/moratorium. For credit default swaps on corporate or sovereign issuers, the obligation that may be put to the seller is not limited
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Credit Default Swaps - continued
to the specific reference obligation described in the Schedule of Investments. For credit default swaps on asset-backed securities, a credit event may be triggered by events such as failure to pay principal, maturity extension, rating downgrade or write-down. For credit default swaps on asset-backed securities, the reference obligation described represents the security that may be put to the seller. For credit default swaps on a traded credit index, a specified credit event may affect all or individual underlying securities included in the index.
As a seller, if an underlying credit event occurs, the Fund will pay a net settlement amount of cash equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index. Only in the event of the industry's inability to value the underlying asset will the Fund be required to take delivery of the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index and pay an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap.
As a buyer, if an underlying credit event occurs, the Fund will receive a net settlement amount of cash equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index. Only in the event of the industry's inability to value the underlying asset will the Fund be required to deliver the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index in exchange for payment of an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap.
Typically, the value of each credit default swap and credit rating disclosed for each reference obligation in the Schedule of Investments, where the Fund is the seller, can be used as measures of the current payment/performance risk of the swap. As the value of the swap changes as a positive or negative percentage of the total notional amount, the payment/performance risk may decrease or increase, respectively. In addition to these measures, FMR monitors a variety of factors including cash flow assumptions, market activity and market sentiment as part of its ongoing process of assessing payment/performance risk.
5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.
Purchases and sales of securities (including the Fixed-Income Central Funds), other than short-term securities, U.S. government securities and liquidations executed in-kind from Affiliated Central Funds, aggregated $14,263,927 and $13,654,122, respectively.
Annual Report
6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.
Management Fee. FMR and its affiliates provide the Fund with investment management related services for which the Fund pays a monthly management fee. The management fee is the sum of an individual fund fee rate that is based on an annual rate of .15% of the Fund's average net assets and an annualized group fee rate that averaged .26% during the period. The group fee rate is based upon the average net assets of all the mutual funds advised by FMR, including any mutual funds previously advised by FMR that are currently advised by Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, an affiliate of FMR. The group fee rate decreases as assets under management increase and increases as assets under management decrease. For the period, the total annual management fee rate was .40% of the Fund's average net assets.
Transfer Agent Fees. Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc., (FIIOC), an affiliate of FMR, is the transfer, dividend disbursing and shareholder servicing agent for each class of the Fund. FIIOC receives account fees and asset-based fees that vary according to the account size and type of account of the shareholders of Puritan. FIIOC receives an asset-based fee of Class K's average net assets. FIIOC pays for typesetting, printing and mailing of shareholder reports, except proxy statements.
For the period, transfer agent fees for each class were as follows:
| Amount | % of Average Net Assets |
Puritan | $ 24,890 | .16 |
Class K | 2,341 | .05 |
| $ 27,231 | |
Accounting and Security Lending Fees. Fidelity Service Company, Inc. (FSC), an affiliate of FMR, maintains the Fund's accounting records. The accounting fee is based on the level of average net assets for each month. Under a separate contract, FSC administers the security lending program. The security lending fee is based on the number and duration of lending transactions.
Brokerage Commissions. The Fund placed a portion of its portfolio transactions with brokerage firms which are affiliates of the investment adviser. Brokerage commissions are included in net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in the Statement of Operations. The commissions paid to these affiliated firms were $281 for the period.
Interfund Lending Program. Pursuant to an Exemptive Order issued by the SEC, the Fund, along with other registered investment companies having management contracts with FMR, may participate in an interfund lending program. This program provides an alternative credit facility allowing the funds to borrow from, or lend money to, other participating affiliated funds. At period end, there were no interfund loans outstanding.
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates - continued
Interfund Lending Program - continued
The Fund's 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 |
Borrower | $ 24,357 | .31% | $ 1 |
Other Affiliated Transactions. On January 4, 2013, the Fidelity Corporate Bond 1-10 Year Central Fund ("1-10 Year"), a fund in which the Fund was invested, was liquidated pursuant to a Plan of Liquidation and Dissolution approved by the 1-10 Year Board. Under the plan, 1-10 Year distributed in-kind all of its net assets to its shareholders pro rata at its NAV per share as of the close of business on the liquidation date. As a result, the Fund received cash and securities, including accrued interest, of $287,718 in return for 2,530 of shares of 1-10 Year. Because 1-10 Year was a partnership for federal income tax purposes, the liquidation generally was tax free to the Fund.
7. Committed Line of Credit.
The Fund participates with other funds managed by FMR 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 Fund has agreed to pay commitment fees on its pro-rata portion of the line of credit, which amounted to $47 and is reflected in Miscellaneous expenses on the Statement of Operations. 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, a lending agent is used and may loan securities to certain qualified borrowers, including Fidelity Capital Markets (FCM), a broker-dealer affiliated with the Fund. 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. 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 maintained at the Fund's custodian and/or invested in cash equivalents and/or 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
Annual Report
8. Security Lending - continued
Liabilities. At period end, there were no security loans outstanding with FCM. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less rebates paid to borrowers, plus any premium payments received for lending certain types of securities. Total security lending income during the period, presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of interest income, amounted to $222. Net income from the Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund during the period, presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of income from Fidelity Central Funds, amounted to $937 (including $39 from securities loaned to FCM).
9. Bank Borrowings.
The Fund is permitted to have bank borrowings for temporary or emergency purposes to fund shareholder redemptions or for other short-term liquidity requirements. The Fund has established borrowing arrangements with certain banks. The interest rate on the borrowings is the bank's base rate, as revised from time to time. The average loan balance during the period for which loans were outstanding amounted to $31,358. The weighted average interest rate was .66%. The interest expense amounted to $2 under the bank borrowing program. At period end, there were no bank borrowings outstanding.
10. Expense Reductions.
Commissions paid to certain brokers with whom FMR, or its affiliates, places trades on behalf of the Fund include an amount in addition to trade execution, which may be rebated back to the Fund to offset certain expenses. This amount totaled $1,655 for the period. Through arrangements with the Fund's custodian, credits realized as a result of uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses. During the period, these credits reduced the Fund's custody expenses by $8.
In addition, FMR reimbursed a portion of the Fund's operating expenses during the period in the amount of $27.
11. Distributions to Shareholders.
Distributions to shareholders of each class were as follows:
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 |
From net investment income | | |
Puritan | $ 267,070 | $ 290,441 |
Class K | 85,948 | 73,694 |
Total | $ 353,018 | $ 364,135 |
From net realized gain | | |
Puritan | $ 276,687 | $ - |
Class K | 78,542 | - |
Total | $ 355,229 | $ - |
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
12. Share Transactions.
Transactions for each class of shares were as follows:
| Shares | Dollars |
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 | 2013 | 2012 |
Puritan | | | | |
Shares sold | 78,846 | 79,946 | $ 1,597,567 | $ 1,477,678 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 26,262 | 15,053 | 515,763 | 274,339 |
Shares redeemed | (138,032) | (172,734) | (2,782,293) | (3,181,243) |
Net increase (decrease) | (32,924) | (77,735) | $ (668,963) | $ (1,429,226) |
Class K | | | | |
Shares sold | 68,604 | 80,899 | $ 1,385,671 | $ 1,501,190 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 8,366 | 4,030 | 164,490 | 73,694 |
Shares redeemed | (45,907) | (47,844) | (930,471) | (889,457) |
Net increase (decrease) | 31,063 | 37,085 | $ 619,690 | $ 685,427 |
13. 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.
Annual Report
To the Trustees of Fidelity Puritan Trust and the Shareholders of Fidelity Puritan Fund:
In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the schedule of investments, and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Fidelity Puritan Fund (a fund of Fidelity Puritan Trust) at August 31, 2013, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as "financial statements") are the responsibility of the Fidelity Puritan Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at August 31, 2013 by correspondence with the custodian, agent banks and brokers, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
October 21, 2013
Annual Report
The Trustees, Member of the Advisory Board, and executive 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 James C. Curvey, Ned C. Lautenbach, Ronald P. O'Hanley, and William S. Stavropoulos, each of the Trustees oversees 166 funds. Mr. Curvey oversees 387 funds. Mr. Lautenbach, Mr. O'Hanley, and Mr. Stavropoulos each oversees 230 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 of the trust and the fund (as defined in the 1940 Act) (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. The executive officers and Advisory Board Member hold office without limit in time, except that any officer and 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.
Experience, Skills, Attributes, and Qualifications of the Fund's 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.
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Trustees and Officers - continued
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. James C. Curvey is an interested person (as defined in the 1940 Act) 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. Ned C. Lautenbach 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 equity and high income funds and another Board oversees Fidelity's investment-grade bond, money market, and asset allocation funds. The asset allocation funds may invest in Fidelity funds overseen by the fund's Board. The use of separate Boards, each with its own committee structure, allows the Trustees of each group of Fidelity funds to focus on the unique issues of the funds they oversee, including common research, investment, and operational issues. On occasion, the separate Boards establish joint committees to address issues of overlapping consequences for the Fidelity funds overseen by each Board.
The Trustees operate using a system of committees to facilitate the timely and efficient consideration of all matters of importance to the Trustees, the fund, and fund shareholders and to facilitate compliance with legal and regulatory requirements and oversight of the fund's activities and associated risks. The Board, acting through its committees, has charged FMR and its affiliates with (i) identifying events or circumstances the occurrence of which could have demonstrably adverse effects on the fund's business and/or reputation; (ii) implementing processes and controls to lessen the possibility that such events or circumstances occur or to mitigate the effects of such events or circumstances if they do occur; and (iii) creating and maintaining a system designed to evaluate continuously business and market conditions in order to facilitate the identification and implementation processes described in (i) and (ii) above. Because the day-to-day operations and activities of the funds are carried out by or through FMR, its affiliates and other service providers, the fund's exposure to risks is mitigated but not eliminated by the processes overseen by the Trustees. While each of the Board's committees has responsibility for overseeing different aspects of the fund's activities, oversight is exercised primarily through the Operations, Audit, and Compliance Committees. In addition, the Independent Trustees have 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. For example, a working group comprised of Independent Trustees and FMR has worked and continues to work to review the Fidelity fund's valuation-related activities, reporting and risk management. 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 FMR'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 Fund's Trustees."
Annual Report
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.
Interested Trustees*:
Correspondence intended for each 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+ |
James C. Curvey (1935) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2007 Mr. Curvey is Trustee and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of certain Trusts. Mr. Curvey also serves as Trustee (2007-present) of other investment companies advised by FMR. Mr. Curvey is a Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2009-present), Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Co. (2009-present) and Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2007-present). Mr. Curvey is also Vice Chairman (2007-present) and Director of FMR LLC. In addition, Mr. Curvey serves as an Overseer for the Boston Symphony Orchestra and a member of the Trustees of Villanova University. Previously, Mr. Curvey was the Vice Chairman (2006-2007) and Director (2000-2007) of FMR Corp. |
Ronald P. O'Hanley (1957) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2011 Mr. O'Hanley serves as a Trustee and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of other Fidelity funds (2013-present), and is Director of FMR Co., Inc. (2010-present), Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2010-present), Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2010-present), President of Fidelity Asset Management and Corporate Services and a Member of Fidelity's Executive Committee (2010-present). Previously, Mr. O'Hanley served as President and Chief Executive Officer of BNY Mellon Asset Management (2007-2010). Mr. O'Hanley also served as Vice Chairman of Bank New York Mellon Corp. and a member of that firm's Executive Committee. Prior to the 2007 merger of The Bank of New York and Mellon Financial Corporation, he was Vice Chairman of Mellon Financial Corporation and President and Chief Executive Officer of Mellon Asset Management. He joined Mellon in February 1997. Mr. O'Hanley currently serves as Chairman of the Boston Public Library Foundation Board of Directors and sits on the Board of Directors of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, the Board of Trustees of the Marine Biological Laboratory and the Advisory Board of the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Administration at Syracuse University. Mr. O'Hanley also chairs the Council on Asset Management for the Financial Services Roundtable and is a member of the Board of Directors of Institutional Investor's U.S. Institute. |
* Trustees have been determined to be "Interested Trustees" by virtue of, among other things, their affiliation with the trust or various entities under common control with FMR.
+ The information above includes each Trustee's principal occupation during the last five years and other information relating to the experience, attributes, and skills relevant to each Trustee's qualifications to serve as a Trustee, which led to the conclusion that each Trustee should serve as a Trustee for the fund.
Annual Report
Independent Trustees:
Correspondence intended for each Independent Trustee (that is, the Trustees other than the Interested Trustees) may be sent to Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 55235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-5235.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupations and Other Relevant Experience+ |
Dennis J. Dirks (1948) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2005 Prior to his retirement in May 2003, Mr. Dirks was Chief Operating Officer and a member of the Board of The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC). He also served as President, Chief Operating Officer, and Board member of The Depository Trust Company (DTC) and President and Board member of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC). In addition, Mr. Dirks served as Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Government Securities Clearing Corporation, Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Mortgage-Backed Securities Clearing Corporation, as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of Manhattan College (2005-2008), and as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of AHRC of Nassau County (2006-2008). Mr. Dirks is a member of the Independent Directors Council (IDC) Governing Council (2010-present) and Board of Directors for The Brookville Center for Children's Services, Inc. (2009-present). |
Alan J. Lacy (1953) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Mr. Lacy serves as Senior Adviser (2007-present) of Oak Hill Capital Partners, L.P. (private equity). Mr. Lacy also served as Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) and Vice Chairman (2005-2006) of Sears Holdings Corporation and Sears, Roebuck and Co. (retail). In addition, Mr. Lacy serves as a member of the Board of Directors of Dave & Buster's Entertainment, Inc. (restaurant and entertainment complexes, 2010-present), Earth Fare, Inc. (retail grocery, 2012-present), The Hillman Companies, Inc. (hardware wholesalers, 2010-present), and Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (global pharmaceuticals, 2008-present). Mr. Lacy is a member of the Board of Trustees of The National Parks Conservation Association (2006-present). Previously, Mr. Lacy served as Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the National Parks Conservation Association (2008-2011) and as a member of the Board of Directors for the Western Union Company (global money transfer, 2006-2011). |
Ned C. Lautenbach (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2000 Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Independent Trustees of the Equity and High Income Funds (2006-present) and serves as a Trustee of other Fidelity funds (2013-present). Mr. Lautenbach currently serves as the Lead Director of the Eaton Corporation Board of Directors (diversified industrial, 1997-present). Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Philharmonic Center for the Arts in Naples, Florida (2012-present) and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations (1994-present). Previously, Mr. Lautenbach was a Partner/Advisory Partner at Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, LLC (private equity investment, 1998-2010), as well as a Director of Sony Corporation (2006-2007). |
Joseph Mauriello (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Prior to his retirement in January 2006, Mr. Mauriello served in numerous senior management positions including Deputy Chairman and Chief Operating Officer (2004-2005), and Vice Chairman of Financial Services (2002-2004) of KPMG LLP US (professional services, 1965-2005). Mr. Mauriello currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of XL Group plc. (global insurance and re-insurance, 2006-present). Previously, Mr. Mauriello served as a Director of the Hamilton Funds of the Bank of New York (2006-2007) and of Arcadia Resources Inc. (health care services and products, 2007-2012). |
Robert W. Selander (1950) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2011 Previously, Mr. Selander served as a Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2011), Executive Vice Chairman (2010), Chief Executive Officer (2009-2010), and President and Chief Executive Officer (1997-2009) of Mastercard, Inc. |
Cornelia M. Small (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2005 Ms. Small is a member of the Board of Directors (2009-present) and Chair of the Investment Committee (2010-present) of the Teagle Foundation. Ms. Small also serves on the Investment Committee of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Small served as Chairperson (2002-2008) and a member of the Investment Committee and Chairperson (2008-2012) and a member of the Board of Trustees of Smith College. In addition, Ms. Small served as Chief Investment Officer, Director of Global Equity Investments, and a member of the Board of Directors of Scudder, Stevens & Clark and Scudder Kemper Investments. |
William S. Stavropoulos (1939) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2001 Mr. Stavropoulos is Vice Chairman of the Independent Trustees of the Equity and High Income Funds (2006-present) and serves as a Trustee of other Fidelity funds (2013-present). Mr. Stavropoulos serves as President and Founder of the Michigan Baseball Foundation, the Great Lakes Loons (2007-present). Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman Emeritus of the Board of Directors of The Dow Chemical Company, where he previously served in numerous senior management positions, including President, CEO (1995-2000; 2002-2004), Chairman of the Executive Committee (2000-2006), and as a member of the Board of Directors (1990-2006). Currently, Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman of the Board of Directors of Univar Inc. (global distributor of commodity and specialty chemicals), a Director of Teradata Corporation (data warehousing and technology solutions), and Maersk Inc. (industrial conglomerate), and a member of the Advisory Board for Metalmark Capital LLC (private equity investment, 2005-present). Mr. Stavropoulos is an operating advisor to Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, LLC (private equity investment). In addition, Mr. Stavropoulos is a member of the University of Notre Dame Advisory Council for the College of Science, a Trustee of the Rollin L. Gerstacker Foundation, and a Director of the Naples Philharmonic Center for the Arts. Previously, Mr. Stavropoulos served as a Director of Chemical Financial Corporation (bank holding company, 1993-2012) and Tyco International, Ltd. (multinational manufacturing and services, 2007-2012). |
David M. Thomas (1949) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Previously, Mr. Thomas served as Executive Chairman (2005-2006) and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) of IMS Health, Inc. (pharmaceutical and healthcare information solutions), and a Director of Fortune Brands, Inc. (consumer products, 2000-2011). In addition, Mr. Thomas serves as Non-Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors of Fortune Brands Home and Security (home and security products, 2011-present), and as a member of the Board of Directors of Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (marketing communication, 2004-present). |
+ The information above includes each Trustee's principal occupation during the last five years and other information relating to the experience, attributes, and skills relevant to each Trustee's qualifications to serve as a Trustee, which led to the conclusion that each Trustee should serve as a Trustee for the fund.
Annual Report
Trustees and Officers - continued
Advisory Board Member and Executive Officers:
Correspondence intended for each executive officer and Peter S. Lynch may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 245 Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupation |
Peter S. Lynch (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2003 Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Lynch is Vice Chairman and a Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. In addition, Mr. Lynch serves as a Trustee of Boston College and as the Chairman of the Inner-City Scholarship Fund. Previously, Mr. Lynch served on the Special Olympics International Board of Directors (1997-2006). |
Kenneth B. Robins (1969) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 President and Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Robins also serves as President and Treasurer (2010-present), Deputy Treasurer (2013-present), and Assistant Treasurer (2009-present) of other Fidelity funds and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2004-present). Mr. Robins serves as Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (2013-present). Previously, Mr. Robins served as President and Treasurer (2008-2013) and Deputy Treasurer (2005-2008) of certain Fidelity funds, and Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2006-2008). |
Bruce T. Herring (1965) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2006 Vice President of certain Equity Funds. Mr. Herring also serves as Vice President of other Fidelity funds (2013-present), Chief Investment Officer of Fidelity Global Asset Allocation (GAA) (2013-present), Chief Investment Officer and Director of Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2010-present), Group Chief Investment Officer of FMR, and President of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2010-present). Previously, Mr. Herring served as Vice President (2005-2006) and Senior Vice President (2006-2007) of Fidelity Management & Research Company, Vice President of FMR Co., Inc. (2001-2007) and as a portfolio manager for Fidelity U.S. Equity Funds. |
Brian B. Hogan (1964) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2009 Vice President of Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Hogan also serves as Vice President of other Fidelity funds (2009-present) and President of FMR's Equity Division (2009-present). Previously, Mr. Hogan served as Senior Vice President, Equity Research of FMR (2006-2009) and as a portfolio manager. |
Scott C. Goebel (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Secretary and Chief Legal Officer (CLO) of certain Fidelity funds. Mr. Goebel also serves as Secretary of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (2010-present) and Fidelity Research and Analysis Company (FRAC) (2010-present); Secretary and CLO of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2008-present); General Counsel, Secretary, and Senior Vice President of FMR (2008-present) and FMR Co., Inc. (2008-present); employed by FMR LLC or an affiliate (2001-present); Chief Legal Officer of Fidelity Management & Research (Hong Kong) Limited (2008-present) and Assistant Secretary of Fidelity Management & Research (Japan) Inc. (2008-present), and Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Goebel served as Secretary and CLO of other Fidelity funds (2008-2013), as Assistant Secretary of FIMM (2008-2010), FRAC (2008-2010), and the Funds (2007-2008) and as Vice President and Secretary of Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) (2005-2007). |
William C. Coffey (1969) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2009 Assistant Secretary of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Coffey also serves as Assistant Secretary of other Fidelity funds (2009-present), Senior Vice President and Deputy General Counsel of FMR LLC (2010-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Coffey served as Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR LLC (2005-2009). |
Elizabeth Paige Baumann (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2012 Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Officer of the Fidelity funds. Ms. Baumann also serves as AML Officer of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2012-present), Chief AML Officer of FMR LLC (2012-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Ms. Baumann served as Vice President and Deputy Anti-Money Laundering Officer (2007-2012). |
Christine Reynolds (1958) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Chief Financial Officer of the Fidelity funds. Ms. Reynolds became President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) in August 2008. Ms. Reynolds served as Chief Operating Officer of FPCMS (2007-2008). Previously, Ms. Reynolds served as President, Treasurer, and Anti-Money Laundering officer of the Fidelity funds (2004-2007). |
Joseph A. Hanlon (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2012 Chief Compliance Officer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Hanlon also serves as Chief Compliance Officer of other Fidelity funds (2012-present). Mr. Hanlon serves as Compliance Officer of FMR, FMR Co., Inc., Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), Fidelity Research and Analysis Company (FRAC), and Fidelity Management & Research (Hong Kong) (2009-present), as Senior Vice President of the Fidelity Asset Management Division (2009-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Hanlon served as Compliance Officer of Fidelity Management & Research (Japan) Inc. (2009-2013), Strategic Advisers, Inc. (2009-2013), and Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2009-2013). |
Joseph F. Zambello (1957) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2011 Deputy Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Mr. Zambello is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Zambello served as Vice President of FMR's Program Management Group (2009-2011) and Vice President of the Transfer Agent Oversight Group (2005-2009). |
Adrien E. Deberghes (1967) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Deberghes also serves as President and Treasurer (2013-present), Vice President (2011-present), and Assistant Treasurer (2010-present) of other Fidelity funds, and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Deberghes served as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2008-2013), Senior Vice President of Mutual Fund Administration at State Street Corporation (2007-2008), Senior Director of Mutual Fund Administration at Investors Bank & Trust (2005-2007), and Director of Finance for Dunkin' Brands (2000-2005). |
Stephen Sadoski (1971) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2012 Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Sadoski also serves as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2013-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2012-present). Previously, Mr. Sadoski served as Deputy Treasurer (2012-2013) and Assistant Treasurer (2012-2013) of other Fidelity funds, an assistant chief accountant in the Division of Investment Management of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) (2009-2012) and as a senior manager at Deloitte & Touche LLP (1997-2009). |
Stacie M. Smith (1974) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2013 Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Ms. Smith also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2013-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2009-present). Previously, Ms. Smith served as Deputy Treasurer of certain Fidelity funds (2013) and Senior Audit Manager of Ernst & Young LLP (1996-2009). |
Renee Stagnone (1975) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2013 Deputy Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Ms. Stagnone is an employee of Fidelity Investments. |
Stephanie J. Dorsey (1969) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2010 Assistant Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Ms. Dorsey also serves as President and Treasurer (2013-present) and Assistant Treasurer (2010-present) of other Fidelity funds, Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2013-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Dorsey served as Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Fixed Income and Asset Allocation Funds (2008-2013), Treasurer (2004-2008) of the JPMorgan Mutual Funds and Vice President (2004-2008) of JPMorgan Chase Bank. |
Chris Maher (1972) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2013 Assistant Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Mr. Maher is Vice President of Valuation Oversight and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Maher served as Vice President of Asset Management Compliance (2013), Vice President of FMR's Program Management Group (2010-2013), and Vice President of Valuation Oversight (2008-2010). |
Gary W. Ryan (1958) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2005 Assistant Treasurer of certain Fidelity funds. Mr. Ryan is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Ryan served as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-2013) and Vice President of Fund Reporting in Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) (1999-2005). |
Jonathan Davis (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2010 Assistant Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Mr. Davis is also Assistant Treasurer of Fidelity Rutland Square Trust II and Fidelity Commonwealth Trust II. Mr. Davis is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Davis served as Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR LLC (2003-2010). |
Annual Report
The Board of Trustees of Puritan 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 | Dividend | Capital Gain |
Puritan | 10/14/13 | 10/11/13 | $0.093 | $1.298 |
The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended August 31, 2013 $1,364,831,555, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.
A total of 2.29% of the dividends distributed during the fiscal year was derived from interest on U.S. Government securities which is generally exempt from state income tax.
The fund designates $126,559,866 of distributions paid during the period January 1, 2013 to August 31, 2013 as qualifying to be taxed as interest-related dividends for nonresident alien shareholders.
Puritan designates 15%, 46%, 74%, 74% of the dividends distributed in October, December, April and July, respectively during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends-received deduction for corporate shareholders.
Puritan designates 17%, 52%, 80%, 80% of the dividends distributed in October, December, April and July, 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 will notify shareholders in January 2014 of amounts for use in preparing 2013 income tax returns.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and Management Fees
Fidelity Puritan Fund
Each year, the Board of Trustees, including the Independent Trustees (together, the Board), votes on the renewal of the management contract and sub-advisory agreements (together, the Advisory Contracts) for the fund. The Board, assisted by the advice of fund counsel and Independent Trustees' counsel, requests and considers a broad range of information relevant to the renewal of the Advisory Contracts throughout the year.
The Board meets regularly and, at each of its meetings, covers an extensive agenda of topics and materials and considers factors that are relevant to its annual consideration of the renewal of the fund's Advisory Contracts, including the services and support provided to the fund and its shareholders. The Board has established various standing committees, each composed of and chaired by Independent Trustees with varying backgrounds, to which the Board has assigned specific subject matter responsibilities in order to enhance effective decision-making by the Board. The Board, acting directly and through its Committees, requests and receives information concerning the annual consideration of the renewal of the fund's Advisory Contracts. The Board also meets as needed to consider matters specifically related to the Board's annual consideration of the renewal of Advisory Contracts. Members of the Board may also meet with trustees of other Fidelity funds through ad hoc joint committees to discuss certain matters relevant to the Fidelity funds.
At its July 2013 meeting, the Board, including the Independent Trustees, unanimously determined to renew the fund's Advisory Contracts. In reaching its determination, the Board considered all factors it believed relevant, including (i) the nature, extent, and quality of the services to be provided to the fund and its shareholders (including the investment performance of the fund); (ii) the competitiveness of the fund's management fee and total expense ratio relative to peer funds; (iii) the total costs of the services to be provided by and the profits to be realized by Fidelity from its relationship with the fund; (iv) the extent to which economies of scale exist and would be realized as the fund grows; and (v) whether fee levels reflect these economies of scale, if any, for the benefit of fund shareholders.
In considering whether to renew the Advisory Contracts for the fund, the Board reached a determination, with the assistance of fund counsel and Independent Trustees' counsel and through the exercise of its business judgment, that the renewal of the Advisory Contracts was in the best interests of the fund and its shareholders and that the compensation payable under the Advisory Contracts was fair and reasonable. The Board's decision to renew the Advisory Contracts was not based on any single factor, but rather was based on a comprehensive consideration of all the information provided to the Board at its meetings throughout the year. The Board, in reaching its determination to renew the Advisory Contracts, was aware that shareholders in the fund have a broad range of investment choices available to them, including a wide choice among mutual funds offered by Fidelity's competitors, and that the fund's shareholders, who have the opportunity to review and weigh the disclosure provided by the fund in its prospectus and other public disclosures, have chosen to invest in this fund, which is a part of the Fidelity family of funds.
Annual Report
Nature, Extent, and Quality of Services Provided. The Board considered the staffing within the investment adviser, Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR), and the sub-advisers (together, the Investment Advisers) as it relates to the fund, including the backgrounds of the fund's investment personnel, and also considered the fund's investment objective, strategies, and related investment philosophy. The Independent Trustees also had discussions with senior management of Fidelity's investment operations and investment groups. The Board considered the structure of the portfolio manager compensation program and whether this structure provides appropriate incentives to act in the best interests of the fund.
Resources Dedicated to Investment Management and Support Services. The Board and the Fund Oversight and Research Committees reviewed the general qualifications and capabilities of the Investment Advisers' investment staff, including its size, education, experience, and resources, as well as the Investment Advisers' approach to recruiting, training, managing, and compensating investment personnel. The Board noted that FMR has continued to increase the resources devoted to non-U.S. offices, including expansion of Fidelity's global investment organization. The Board also noted that Fidelity's analysts have extensive resources, tools and capabilities that allow them to conduct sophisticated quantitative and fundamental analysis, as well as credit analysis of issuers, counterparties and guarantors. Further, the Board believes that Fidelity's investment professionals have sufficient access to global information and data so as to provide competitive investment results over time, and that those professionals also have access to sophisticated tools that permit them to assess portfolio construction and risk and performance attribution characteristics continuously, as well as to transmit new information and research conclusions rapidly around the world. Additionally, in its deliberations, the Board considered the Investment Advisers' trading and risk management capabilities and resources, which are an integral part of the investment management process.
Shareholder and Administrative Services. The Board considered (i) the nature, extent, quality, and cost of advisory, administrative, and shareholder services performed by the Investment Advisers and their affiliates under the Advisory Contracts and under separate agreements covering transfer agency, pricing and bookkeeping, and securities lending services for the fund; (ii) the nature and extent of the supervision of third party service providers, principally custodians and subcustodians; and (iii) the resources devoted to, and the record of compliance with, the fund's compliance policies and procedures. The Board also reviewed the allocation of fund brokerage, including allocations to brokers affiliated with the Investment Advisers, the use of brokerage commissions to pay fund expenses, and the use of "soft" commission dollars to pay for research services.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
The Board noted that the growth of fund assets over time across the complex allows Fidelity to reinvest in the development of services designed to enhance the value or convenience of the Fidelity funds as investment vehicles. These services include 24-hour access to account information and market information through telephone representatives and over the Internet, investor education materials and asset allocation tools, and the expanded availability of Fidelity Investor Centers.
Investment in a Large Fund Family. The Board considered the benefits to shareholders of investing in a Fidelity fund, including the benefits of investing in a fund that is part of a large family of funds offering a variety of investment disciplines and providing a large variety of mutual fund investor services. The Board noted that Fidelity had taken, or had made recommendations that resulted in the Fidelity funds taking, a number of actions over the previous year that benefited particular funds, including (i) continuing to dedicate additional resources to investment research and to the support of the senior management team that oversees asset management; (ii) persisting in efforts to enhance Fidelity's global research capabilities; (iii) launching new funds and making other enhancements to meet client needs for global and income-oriented solutions; (iv) continuing to launch dedicated lower cost underlying funds to meet portfolio construction needs related to expanding underlying fund options for Fidelity funds of funds, specifically for the Freedom Fund product lines; (v) rationalizing product lines and gaining increased efficiencies through the mergers of several funds into other funds; (vi) strengthening Fidelity's index fund offerings by reducing investment minimums and adopting or lowering existing expense caps for certain funds and classes; (vii) enhancing Global Asset Allocation product offerings by launching new funds and strategies, including "open architecture" target date funds that utilize affiliated and unaffiliated sub-advisers; (viii) modifying the eligibility criteria for Institutional Class shares of Advisor funds to increase their marketability to a portion of the defined contribution plan market; (ix) creating a new low-cost retirement share class for certain Advisor funds to appeal to large retirement plans; (x) transitioning the management of certain Fidelity commodity funds to Geode Capital Management LLC, a registered commodity pool operator, while retaining administrative responsibilities for the funds; (xi) reorganizing a number of funds; and (xii) taking steps toward establishing a new Fidelity adviser to manage sector-based funds and products.
Investment Performance. The Board considered whether the fund has operated in accordance with its investment objective, as well as its record of compliance with its investment restrictions and its performance history.
The Board took into account discussions with the Investment Advisers about fund investment performance that occur at Board meetings throughout the year. In this regard the Board noted that as part of regularly scheduled fund reviews and other reports to the Board on fund performance, the Board periodically considers annualized return information for the fund, for different time periods, measured against a securities market index ("benchmark index") and a peer group of mutual funds with similar objectives ("peer group"). In its evaluation of fund investment performance, the Board gave particular attention to information indicating changes in performance of certain Fidelity funds for specific time periods and the Investment Advisers' explanations for any overperformance or underperformance.
Annual Report
In addition to reviewing absolute and relative fund performance, the Independent Trustees periodically consider the appropriateness of fund performance metrics in evaluating the results achieved. In general, the Independent Trustees believe that fund performance should be evaluated based on net performance (after fees and expenses) of both the highest performing and lowest performing classes, where applicable, compared to appropriate benchmark indices, over appropriate time periods which may include full market cycles, and compared to peer groups, as applicable, over the same periods, taking into account relevant factors including the following: general market conditions; issuer-specific information; tactical opportunities for investment; and fund cash flows and other factors.
The Independent Trustees recognize that shareholders evaluate performance on a net basis over their own holding periods, for which one-, three-, and five-year periods are used as a proxy. For this reason, the performance information reviewed by the Board also included net cumulative calendar year total return information for the fund and an appropriate benchmark index and peer group for the most recent one-, three-, and five-year periods, as shown below. Returns are shown compared to the 25th percentile (top of box) and 75th percentile (bottom of box) of the peer universe.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
Fidelity Puritan Fund
Based on its review, the Board concluded that the nature, extent, and quality of services provided to the fund under the Advisory Contracts should benefit the fund's shareholders.
Competitiveness of Management Fee and Total Expense Ratio. The Board considered the fund's management fee and total expense ratio compared to "mapped groups" of competitive funds and classes. Fidelity creates "mapped groups" by combining similar Lipper investment objective categories that have comparable management fee characteristics. Combining Lipper investment objective categories aids the Board's management fee and total expense ratio comparisons by broadening the competitive group used for comparison and by reducing the number of universes to which various Fidelity funds are compared.
Management Fee. The Board considered two proprietary management fee comparisons for the 12-month periods shown in the chart below. The group of Lipper funds used by the Board for management fee comparisons is referred to below as the "Total Mapped Group." The Total Mapped Group is broader than the Lipper peer group used by the Board for performance comparisons because the Total Mapped Group combines several Lipper investment objective categories while the Lipper peer group does not. The Total Mapped Group comparison focuses on a fund's standing in terms of gross management fees before expense reimbursements or caps relative to the total universe of funds with comparable investment mandates, regardless of whether their management fee structures also are comparable. Funds with comparable investment mandates offer exposure to similar types of securities. Funds with comparable management fee structures have similar management fee contractual arrangements (e.g., flat rate charged for advisory services, all-inclusive fee rate, etc.). "TMG %" represents the percentage of funds in the Total Mapped Group that had management fees that were lower than the fund's. For example, a TMG % of 12% means that 88% of the funds in the Total Mapped Group had higher management fees than the fund. The "Asset-Size Peer Group" (ASPG) comparison focuses on a fund's standing relative to a subset of non-Fidelity funds within the Total Mapped Group that are similar in size and management fee structure. The ASPG represents at least 15% of the funds in the Total Mapped Group with comparable asset size and management fee structures, subject to a minimum of 50 funds (or all funds in the Total Mapped Group if fewer than 50). Additional information, such as the ASPG quartile in which the fund's management fee ranked, is also included in the chart and considered by the Board.
Annual Report
Fidelity Puritan Fund
The Board noted that the fund's management fee ranked below the median of its Total Mapped Group and below the median of its ASPG for 2012.
Based on its review, the Board concluded that the fund's management fee is fair and reasonable in light of the services that the fund receives and the other factors considered.
Total Expense Ratio. In its review of each class's total expense ratio, the Board considered the fund's management fee as well as other fund or class expenses, as applicable, such as transfer agent fees, pricing and bookkeeping fees, and custodial, legal, and audit fees. The Board also noted the effects of any waivers and reimbursements on fees and expenses. As part of its review, the Board also considered the current and historical total expense ratios of each class of the fund compared to competitive fund median expenses. Each class of the fund is compared to those funds and classes in the Total Mapped Group (used by the Board for management fee comparisons) that have a similar sales load structure.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
The Board noted that the total expense ratio of each class ranked below its competitive median for 2012.
Fees Charged to Other Fidelity Clients. The Board also considered Fidelity fee structures and other information with respect to clients of FMR and its affiliates, such as other mutual funds advised or subadvised by FMR or its affiliates, pension plan clients, and other institutional clients. The Board noted the findings of the 2013 ad hoc joint committee (created with the board of other Fidelity funds), which reviewed and compared Fidelity's institutional investment advisory business with its business of providing services to the Fidelity funds, including the differences in services provided, fees charged, and costs incurred, as well as competition in their respective marketplaces.
Based on its review of total expense ratios and fees charged to other Fidelity clients, the Board concluded that the total expense ratio of each class of the fund was reasonable in light of the services that the fund and its shareholders receive and the other factors considered.
Costs of the Services and Profitability. The Board considered the revenues earned and the expenses incurred by Fidelity in conducting the business of developing, marketing, distributing, managing, administering and servicing the fund and servicing the fund's shareholders. The Board also considered the level of Fidelity's profits in respect of all the Fidelity funds.
On an annual basis, FMR presents to the Board Fidelity's profitability for the fund. Fidelity calculates the profitability for each fund, as well as aggregate profitability for groups of Fidelity funds and all Fidelity funds, using a series of detailed revenue and cost allocation methodologies which originate with the books and records of Fidelity on which Fidelity's audited financial statements are based. The Audit Committee of the Board reviews any significant changes from the prior year's methodologies.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC), independent registered public accounting firm and auditor to Fidelity and certain Fidelity funds, has been engaged annually by the Board as part of the Board's assessment of Fidelity's profitability analysis. PwC's engagement includes the review and assessment of the methodologies used by Fidelity in determining the revenues and expenses attributable to Fidelity's mutual fund business, and completion of agreed-upon procedures surrounding the mathematical accuracy of fund profitability and its conformity to allocation methodologies. After considering PwC's reports issued under the engagement and information provided by Fidelity, the Board concluded that while other allocation methods may also be reasonable, Fidelity's profitability methodologies are reasonable in all material respects.
Annual Report
The Board also reviewed Fidelity's non-fund businesses and fall-out benefits related to the mutual fund business as well as cases where Fidelity's affiliates may benefit from or be related to the fund's business.
The Board considered the costs of the services provided by and the profits realized by Fidelity in connection with the operation of the fund and was satisfied that the profitability was not excessive in the circumstances.
Economies of Scale. The Board considered whether there have been economies of scale in respect of the management of the Fidelity funds, whether the Fidelity funds (including the fund) have appropriately benefited from any such economies of scale, and whether there is potential for realization of any further economies of scale. The Board considered the extent to which the fund will benefit from economies of scale through increased services to the fund, through waivers or reimbursements, or through fee or expense reductions. The Board also noted that in 2009, it and the board of other Fidelity funds created an ad hoc committee (the Economies of Scale Committee) to analyze whether FMR attains economies of scale in respect of the management and servicing of the Fidelity funds, whether the Fidelity funds have appropriately benefited from such economies of scale, and whether there is potential for realization of any further economies of scale.
The Board recognized that the fund's management contract incorporates a "group fee" structure, which provides for lower group fee rates as total fund assets under FMR's management increase, and for higher group fee rates as total fund assets under FMR's management decrease. FMR calculates the group fee rates based on a tiered asset "breakpoint" schedule that varies based on asset class. The Board considered that the group fee is designed to deliver the benefits of economies of scale to fund shareholders when total Fidelity fund assets increase, even if assets of any particular fund are unchanged or have declined, because some portion of Fidelity's costs are attributable to services provided to all Fidelity funds, and all funds benefit if those costs can be allocated among more assets. The Board concluded that, given the group fee structure, fund shareholders will benefit from lower management fees as assets under FMR's management increase at the fund complex level, regardless of whether Fidelity achieves any such economies of scale.
The Board concluded, taking into account the analysis of the Economies of Scale Committee, that economies of scale, if any, are being appropriately shared between fund shareholders and Fidelity.
Amendment to Description of Group Fee Rate. At its July 2013 meeting, the Board voted to approve an amendment to the fund's management contract to modify the description of the "group fee rate" effective August 1, 2013. The Board noted that under the prior description in the contract, the group fee rate was based on the average net assets of all registered investment companies with which FMR has management contracts. Under the contract's tiered asset breakpoint schedule, the group fee rate is lower as total fund assets under FMR's management increase, and higher as total fund assets under FMR's management decrease. The Board considered that the prior description would have excluded the assets of 64 Fidelity sector funds from the group fee rate calculation once Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, an affiliate of FMR, assumed management responsibilities for those funds. The Board noted that modifying the description of the group fee rate to continue to include the assets of those 64 funds for purposes of determining group fee rate breakpoints would avoid an immediate adverse impact on the group fee rate for any fund.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
Additional Information Requested by the Board. In order to develop fully the factual basis for consideration of the Fidelity funds' Advisory Contracts, the Board requested and received additional information on certain topics, including: (i) fund performance trends and Fidelity's long-term strategies for certain funds; (ii) the potential to further rationalize the Fidelity fund lineup with the possibility of achieving savings for the funds and Fidelity; (iii) the methodology with respect to competitive fund data and peer group classifications; (iv) the arrangements with, and performance of, certain sub-advisers on behalf of the Fidelity funds, as well as certain proposed participating affiliate arrangements; (v) the realization of fall-out benefits in certain Fidelity business units; (vi) Fidelity's group fee structures, including the rationale for the individual fee rates of certain categories of funds and the definition of group assets; (vii) trends regarding industry use of performance fee structures and the performance adjustment methodologies applicable to the Fidelity funds; (viii) additional competitive analysis regarding the total expenses for certain classes; and (ix) fund profitability methodology, including Fidelity's cost allocation methodology, and the impact of certain factors on fund profitability results.
Based on its evaluation of all of the conclusions noted above, and after considering all factors it believed relevant, the Board ultimately concluded that the advisory fee structures are fair and reasonable, and that the fund's Advisory Contracts should be renewed.
Annual Report
Investment Adviser
Fidelity Management & Research Company
Boston, MA
Investment Sub-Advisers
FMR Co., Inc.
Fidelity Management & Research
(U.K.) Inc.
Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc.
Fidelity Management & Research
(Hong Kong) Limited
Fidelity Management & Research
(Japan) Inc.
General Distributor
Fidelity Distributors Corporation
Smithfield, RI
Transfer and Service Agents
Fidelity Investments Institutional
Operations Company, Inc.
Boston, MA
Fidelity Service Company, Inc.
Boston, MA
Custodian
JP Morgan Chase Bank
New York, NY
The Fidelity Telephone Connection
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and Account Assistance 1-800-544-6666
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www.fidelity.com
PUR-UANN-1013
1.789251.110
Fidelity®
Puritan®
Fund -
Class K
Annual Report
August 31, 2013
(Fidelity Cover Art)
Contents
Performance | (Click Here) | How the fund has done over time. |
Management's Discussion of Fund Performance | (Click Here) | The Portfolio Manager's review of fund performance and strategy. |
Shareholder Expense Example | (Click Here) | An example of shareholder expenses. |
Investment Changes | (Click Here) | A summary of major shifts in the fund's investments over the past six months. |
Investments | (Click Here) | A complete list of the fund's investments with their market values. |
Financial Statements | (Click Here) | Statements of assets and liabilities, operations, and changes in net assets, as well as financial highlights. |
Notes | (Click Here) | Notes to the financial statements. |
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm | (Click Here) | |
Trustees and Officers | (Click Here) | |
Distributions | (Click Here) | |
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and Management Fees | (Click Here) | |
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 1-800-835-5092 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. © 2013 FMR LLC. All rights reserved.
Annual Report
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-Q. Forms N-Q are available on the SEC's web site at http://www.sec.gov. A fund's Forms N-Q 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.advisor.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.
Annual Report
Average annual total return reflects the change in the value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of the class' 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 $10,000 table and the fund's 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
Periods ended August 31, 2013 | Past 1 year | Past 5 years | Past 10 years |
Class K A | 11.48% | 7.17% | 7.04% |
A The initial offering of Class K shares took place on May 9, 2008. Returns prior to May 9, 2008 are those of Fidelity® Puritan® Fund, the original class of the fund.
$10,000 Over 10 Years
Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity® Puritan® Fund - Class K, on August 31, 2003. The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the S&P 500® Index performed over the same period. The initial offering of Class K took place on May 9, 2008. See footnote above for additional information regarding the performance of Class K.
Annual Report
Market Recap: Major equity benchmarks set record highs during the 12 months ending August 31, 2013, fueled by an improving global economy and accommodative monetary policies worldwide. The broad-based S&P 500® Index rose 18.70% for the 12 months, setting new highs, while the blue-chip-laden Dow Jones Industrial AverageSM also achieved significant milestones en route to climbing 16.13%. The growth-oriented Nasdaq Composite Index® advanced 18.75%. Stocks slipped early on as investors grew anxious about the U.S. presidential election and the federal debt limit. Markets quickly rebounded and rose through late May, but concern over the U.S. Federal Reserve tapering its bond-buying program prompted a brief, but steep, market sell-off in June. Stocks recovered when the Fed said no moves were imminent, but doubt returned in August as a military strike on Syria loomed. On the bond side of the ledger, U.S. high-income securities rallied alongside equities for most of the period, but cooled off in May and June as interest rates spiked on possible Fed tightening. The sector still advanced solidly, with The BofA Merrill LynchSM US High Yield Constrained Index returning 7.55%. The more rate-sensitive U.S. investment-grade bond category fared far worse, as reflected in the -2.47% return of the Barclays® U.S. Aggregate Bond Index, its largest trailing one-year loss in almost 20 years.
Comments from Ramin Arani, Lead Portfolio Manager of Fidelity® Puritan® Fund: For the year, the fund's Class K shares returned 11.48%, versus 9.87% for the Fidelity Puritan Composite IndexSM. Versus the Composite index, asset allocation was the dominant contributor, as I overweighted equities and underweighted investment-grade bonds. Our top individual relative contributor was an out-of-index investment in Tesla Motors, as the maker of electronic cars reported good financial results and strong orders - and the stock responded in a huge way. Exxon Mobil, AT&T and IBM are three sizable benchmark stocks I successfully underweighted or avoided, and none was in the fund at period end. Conversely, consumer electronics leader Apple was by far our largest detractor. The fund was modestly overweighted in Apple at period end because I believe it is a strong company and its stock was cheap relative to its valuation. In fixed income, the biggest contributors were an overweighting in corporate bonds, particularly financial institutions, an underweighting in sovereigns and an overweighting in commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS). We were modestly hurt by overweighting corporate bonds issued by telecommunication services companies, as this sector was held back by event risk stemming from investors' anticipation of a major new offering by Verizon Communications.
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.
Annual Report
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 (March 1, 2013 to August 31, 2013).
Actual Expenses
The first line of the accompanying table for each class of the 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 class of the Fund under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. 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 for each class of the Fund provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on a Class' actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Class' 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. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. 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.
Annual Report
| Annualized Expense RatioB | Beginning Account Value March 1, 2013 | Ending Account Value August 31, 2013 | Expenses Paid During Period* March 1, 2013 to August 31, 2013 |
Puritan | .58% | | | |
Actual | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,049.50 | $ 3.00 |
HypotheticalA | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,022.28 | $ 2.96 |
Class K | .47% | | | |
Actual | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,050.10 | $ 2.43 |
HypotheticalA | | $ 1,000.00 | $ 1,022.84 | $ 2.40 |
A 5% return per year before expenses
B Annualized expense ratio reflects expenses net of applicable fee waivers.
* Expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 184/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). The fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds in which the Fund invests are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio.
Annual Report
Investment Changes (Unaudited)
The information in the following tables is based on the combined investments of the Fund and its pro-rata share of the investments of Fidelity's fixed-income central funds.
Top Five Stocks as of August 31, 2013 |
| % of fund's net assets | % of fund's net assets 6 months ago |
Apple, Inc. | 2.4 | 1.9 |
Google, Inc. Class A | 1.7 | 1.5 |
Bank of America Corp. | 1.6 | 0.4 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 1.5 | 1.0 |
Citigroup, Inc. | 1.4 | 1.2 |
| 8.6 | |
Top Five Bond Issuers as of August 31, 2013 |
(with maturities greater than one year) | % of fund's net assets | % of fund's net assets 6 months ago |
U.S. Treasury Obligations | 5.5 | 5.3 |
Fannie Mae | 4.7 | 6.7 |
Ginnie Mae | 1.6 | 1.5 |
Freddie Mac | 1.3 | 1.9 |
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust | 0.7 | 0.9 |
| 13.8 | |
Top Five Market Sectors as of August 31, 2013 |
| % of fund's net assets | % of fund's net assets 6 months ago |
Financials | 18.1 | 16.4 |
Consumer Discretionary | 13.6 | 12.2 |
Information Technology | 13.1 | 12.8 |
Health Care | 12.2 | 10.1 |
Energy | 7.2 | 7.2 |
Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets) |
As of August 31, 2013 * | As of February 28, 2013 ** |
| Stocks 68.9% | | | Stocks 64.9% | |
| Bonds 29.6% | | | Bonds 32.7% | |
| Convertible Securities 0.5% | | | Convertible Securities 0.4% | |
| Other Investments 0.6% | | | Other Investments 0.8% | |
| Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities) 0.4% | | | Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets (Liabilities) 1.2% | |
* Foreign investments | 11.2% | | ** Foreign investments | 10.7% | |
Percentages are adjusted for the effect of futures contracts and swaps, if applicable. |
An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of any securities and other investments held indirectly through its investments in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com. |
Percentages in the above tables are adjusted for the effect of TBA Sale Commitments. |
Annual Report
Investments August 31, 2013
Showing Percentage of Net Assets
Common Stocks - 68.6% |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 11.5% |
Auto Components - 0.0% |
Delphi Automotive PLC | 68,093 | | $ 3,746 |
Automobiles - 1.0% |
Ford Motor Co. | 6,432,200 | | 104,137 |
General Motors Co. (a) | 574,870 | | 19,592 |
Motors Liquidation Co. GUC Trust (a) | 28,150 | | 847 |
Tesla Motors, Inc. (a) | 320,900 | | 54,232 |
Toyota Motor Corp. | 558,700 | | 33,607 |
| | 212,415 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.2% |
H&R Block, Inc. | 1,480,400 | | 41,318 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 1.6% |
Dunkin' Brands Group, Inc. | 1,148,000 | | 49,467 |
PB Investor I LLC | 9,088 | | 14 |
Starbucks Corp. | 1,841,800 | | 129,884 |
Station Holdco LLC (a)(n)(p) | 1,194,419 | | 1,780 |
Station Holdco LLC: | | | |
unit (n)(p) | 2,660 | | 0 * |
warrants 6/15/18 (a)(n)(p) | 75,658 | | 6 |
Vail Resorts, Inc. | 917,027 | | 62,358 |
Wyndham Worldwide Corp. | 623,400 | | 37,005 |
Yum! Brands, Inc. | 833,000 | | 58,327 |
| | 338,841 |
Household Durables - 0.9% |
D.R. Horton, Inc. | 1,116,200 | | 19,924 |
KB Home | 1,061,700 | | 17,019 |
PulteGroup, Inc. | 1,148,000 | | 17,668 |
Sony Corp. sponsored ADR (e) | 1,852,800 | | 36,982 |
Toll Brothers, Inc. (a) | 1,220,700 | | 37,366 |
Whirlpool Corp. | 460,700 | | 59,269 |
| | 188,228 |
Internet & Catalog Retail - 1.2% |
Amazon.com, Inc. (a) | 400,900 | | 112,645 |
Netflix, Inc. (a) | 42,700 | | 12,123 |
priceline.com, Inc. (a) | 89,600 | | 84,092 |
Rakuten, Inc. | 2,811,400 | | 34,446 |
Spotify Technology SA (a)(p) | 15,765 | | 15,597 |
| | 258,903 |
Media - 3.4% |
CBS Corp. Class B | 1,743,100 | | 89,072 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Media - continued |
Comcast Corp. Class A (special) (non-vtg.) | 5,566,200 | | $ 226,767 |
Discovery Communications, Inc. Class A (a) | 29,800 | | 2,310 |
HMH Holdings, Inc. warrants 6/22/19 (a)(p) | 1,945 | | 3 |
Legend Pictures LLC (a)(n)(p) | 49,141 | | 88,601 |
Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. (a)(e) | 1,631,500 | | 57,119 |
Manchester United PLC | 826,630 | | 13,937 |
Publicis Groupe SA | 641,100 | | 47,720 |
The Walt Disney Co. | 284,190 | | 17,287 |
Tribune Co. Class A (a) | 13,773 | | 821 |
Twenty-First Century Fox, Inc. Class A | 3,966,900 | | 124,283 |
Vertis Holdings, Inc. (a) | 1,934 | | 0 |
Viacom, Inc. Class B (non-vtg.) | 712,500 | | 56,687 |
| | 724,607 |
Specialty Retail - 1.6% |
Home Depot, Inc. | 2,362,400 | | 175,975 |
Lowe's Companies, Inc. | 1,528,800 | | 70,050 |
Restoration Hardware Holdings, Inc. | 213,800 | | 14,866 |
TJX Companies, Inc. | 1,513,300 | | 79,781 |
| | 340,672 |
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 1.6% |
Brunello Cucinelli SpA | 1,155,400 | | 34,206 |
C. Wonder LLC (n)(p) | 619,047 | | 19,500 |
Compagnie Financiere Richemont SA Series A | 225,290 | | 21,404 |
Kering SA | 118,100 | | 26,675 |
lululemon athletica, Inc. (a) | 537,200 | | 38,055 |
Michael Kors Holdings Ltd. (a) | 492,461 | | 36,486 |
NIKE, Inc. Class B | 1,026,700 | | 64,497 |
Prada SpA | 1,251,300 | | 12,328 |
PVH Corp. | 41,700 | | 5,369 |
Ralph Lauren Corp. | 327,700 | | 54,205 |
Tory Burch LLC (n)(p) | 324,840 | | 17,505 |
| | 330,230 |
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | 2,438,960 |
CONSUMER STAPLES - 6.3% |
Beverages - 1.2% |
Beam, Inc. | 1,228,200 | | 76,947 |
Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc. | 1,309,700 | | 48,983 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER STAPLES - continued |
Beverages - continued |
Monster Beverage Corp. (a) | 624,800 | | $ 35,857 |
The Coca-Cola Co. | 2,513,900 | | 95,981 |
| | 257,768 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 1.4% |
CVS Caremark Corp. | 3,655,400 | | 212,196 |
Kroger Co. | 1,766,000 | | 64,636 |
Walgreen Co. | 665,700 | | 32,000 |
| | 308,832 |
Food Products - 0.7% |
Bunge Ltd. | 833,000 | | 63,125 |
Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc. (a) | 489,200 | | 42,223 |
Mead Johnson Nutrition Co. Class A | 185,800 | | 13,941 |
The Hershey Co. | 239,100 | | 21,985 |
| | 141,274 |
Household Products - 1.4% |
Energizer Holdings, Inc. | 331,800 | | 32,792 |
Procter & Gamble Co. | 3,283,400 | | 255,744 |
| | 288,536 |
Personal Products - 0.6% |
Estee Lauder Companies, Inc. Class A | 781,400 | | 51,072 |
L'Oreal SA | 206,600 | | 34,473 |
Prestige Brands Holdings, Inc. (a) | 1,443,351 | | 46,866 |
| | 132,411 |
Tobacco - 1.0% |
Japan Tobacco, Inc. | 3,745,100 | | 126,490 |
Lorillard, Inc. | 860,900 | | 36,416 |
Philip Morris International, Inc. | 580,140 | | 48,407 |
| | 211,313 |
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | 1,340,134 |
ENERGY - 5.8% |
Energy Equipment & Services - 1.4% |
Cameron International Corp. (a) | 778,400 | | 44,205 |
Ensco PLC Class A | 1,563,816 | | 86,886 |
Halliburton Co. | 2,203,400 | | 105,763 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
ENERGY - continued |
Energy Equipment & Services - continued |
Noble Corp. | 614,900 | | $ 22,874 |
Schlumberger Ltd. | 521,600 | | 42,218 |
| | 301,946 |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 4.4% |
Anadarko Petroleum Corp. | 1,231,200 | | 112,556 |
Apache Corp. | 20,614 | | 1,766 |
Bonanza Creek Energy, Inc. (a) | 524,000 | | 20,803 |
Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. | 1,376,200 | | 53,851 |
Chevron Corp. | 1,409,100 | | 169,698 |
Cobalt International Energy, Inc. (a) | 742,700 | | 18,122 |
Concho Resources, Inc. (a) | 121,800 | | 11,755 |
ConocoPhillips | 1,261,100 | | 83,611 |
Continental Resources, Inc. (a) | 181,900 | | 16,782 |
Energen Corp. | 387,500 | | 25,695 |
EOG Resources, Inc. | 449,900 | | 70,657 |
EQT Corp. | 552,900 | | 47,395 |
Marathon Oil Corp. | 2,028,000 | | 69,824 |
Noble Energy, Inc. | 181,292 | | 11,137 |
Occidental Petroleum Corp. | 446,258 | | 39,364 |
Phillips 66 | 235,200 | | 13,430 |
Pioneer Natural Resources Co. | 184,100 | | 32,212 |
Suncor Energy, Inc. | 1,279,000 | | 43,107 |
The Williams Companies, Inc. | 2,225,500 | | 80,652 |
| | 922,417 |
TOTAL ENERGY | | 1,224,363 |
FINANCIALS - 12.8% |
Capital Markets - 1.7% |
Apollo Global Management LLC Class A | 1,512,300 | | 38,397 |
BlackRock, Inc. Class A | 160,500 | | 41,781 |
Evercore Partners, Inc. Class A | 772,000 | | 34,423 |
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. | 133,400 | | 20,294 |
Invesco Ltd. | 673,200 | | 20,438 |
State Street Corp. | 1,060,100 | | 70,730 |
The Blackstone Group LP | 1,761,800 | | 38,478 |
UBS AG | 5,070,144 | | 97,963 |
| | 362,504 |
Commercial Banks - 2.5% |
First Republic Bank | 50,000 | | 2,214 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Commercial Banks - continued |
M&T Bank Corp. | 545,300 | | $ 61,804 |
PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. | 1,591,900 | | 115,047 |
Standard Chartered PLC (United Kingdom) | 557,819 | | 12,457 |
TCF Financial Corp. | 1,258,400 | | 17,681 |
Texas Capital Bancshares, Inc. (a) | 868,022 | | 38,262 |
U.S. Bancorp | 1,143,100 | | 41,300 |
Wells Fargo & Co. | 6,041,940 | | 248,203 |
| | 536,968 |
Consumer Finance - 1.3% |
American Express Co. | 1,611,700 | | 115,897 |
Capital One Financial Corp. | 1,232,100 | | 79,532 |
Discover Financial Services | 704,900 | | 33,307 |
SLM Corp. | 2,315,700 | | 55,554 |
| | 284,290 |
Diversified Financial Services - 4.5% |
Bank of America Corp. | 23,557,000 | | 332,625 |
Citigroup, Inc. | 6,119,840 | | 295,772 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. | 6,316,823 | | 319,189 |
| | 947,586 |
Insurance - 2.0% |
ACE Ltd. | 1,130,600 | | 99,176 |
American International Group, Inc. | 1,916,900 | | 89,059 |
Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Class B (a) | 1,043,700 | | 116,080 |
MetLife, Inc. | 1,346,700 | | 62,204 |
The Travelers Companies, Inc. | 610,700 | | 48,795 |
| | 415,314 |
Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.6% |
American Tower Corp. | 1,330,200 | | 92,436 |
Simon Property Group, Inc. | 161,200 | | 23,476 |
| | 115,912 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.0% |
Realogy Holdings Corp. | 8,900 | | 377 |
Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.2% |
Ocwen Financial Corp. (a) | 793,600 | | 40,029 |
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | 2,702,980 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
HEALTH CARE - 11.4% |
Biotechnology - 4.5% |
ACADIA Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 3,169,404 | | $ 63,262 |
Achillion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 672,600 | | 4,338 |
Acorda Therapeutics, Inc. (a) | 763,300 | | 25,792 |
Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 462,300 | | 49,817 |
AMAG Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 1,013,961 | | 23,990 |
Amgen, Inc. | 1,916,800 | | 208,816 |
Biogen Idec, Inc. (a) | 613,200 | | 130,624 |
BioMarin Pharmaceutical, Inc. (a) | 263,700 | | 17,264 |
Celgene Corp. (a) | 185,700 | | 25,994 |
CSL Ltd. | 1,035,843 | | 62,684 |
Gilead Sciences, Inc. (a) | 2,914,700 | | 175,669 |
Grifols SA ADR | 1,988,480 | | 60,231 |
Medivation, Inc. (a) | 436,900 | | 24,698 |
Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc. (a) | 1,017,600 | | 14,826 |
Onyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 314,700 | | 38,891 |
Theravance, Inc. (a) | 205,028 | | 7,350 |
Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 156,200 | | 11,738 |
| | 945,984 |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 0.8% |
Boston Scientific Corp. (a) | 8,679,000 | | 91,824 |
Stryker Corp. | 361,600 | | 24,187 |
The Cooper Companies, Inc. | 344,259 | | 44,964 |
| | 160,975 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 2.0% |
Brookdale Senior Living, Inc. (a) | 634,850 | | 15,884 |
Catamaran Corp. (a) | 747,900 | | 40,956 |
CIGNA Corp. | 1,146,600 | | 90,226 |
Express Scripts Holding Co. (a) | 489,100 | | 31,244 |
HCA Holdings, Inc. | 900,700 | | 34,398 |
Humana, Inc. | 62,600 | | 5,764 |
McKesson Corp. | 646,700 | | 78,516 |
Qualicorp SA (a) | 5,724,000 | | 44,742 |
UnitedHealth Group, Inc. | 1,113,300 | | 79,868 |
| | 421,598 |
Health Care Technology - 0.3% |
CareView Communications, Inc. (a)(e)(f) | 10,425,300 | | 6,724 |
Cerner Corp. (a) | 1,356,100 | | 62,462 |
| | 69,186 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
HEALTH CARE - continued |
Life Sciences Tools & Services - 0.1% |
Illumina, Inc. (a)(e) | 400,300 | | $ 31,159 |
Pharmaceuticals - 3.7% |
AbbVie, Inc. | 2,082,600 | | 88,740 |
Actavis, Inc. (a) | 946,000 | | 127,880 |
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. | 1,865,100 | | 77,756 |
Eli Lilly & Co. | 347,200 | | 17,846 |
Endo Health Solutions, Inc. (a) | 205,200 | | 8,432 |
Merck & Co., Inc. | 965,500 | | 45,658 |
Optimer Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a) | 635,000 | | 7,944 |
Perrigo Co. | 515,000 | | 62,598 |
Pfizer, Inc. | 5,317,600 | | 150,009 |
Sanofi SA | 171,080 | | 16,396 |
TherapeuticsMD, Inc. (a)(f) | 8,625,414 | | 17,941 |
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc. (Canada) (a) | 794,111 | | 78,107 |
ViroPharma, Inc. (a) | 774,078 | | 23,338 |
Warner Chilcott PLC | 2,866,600 | | 61,489 |
| | 784,134 |
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | 2,413,036 |
INDUSTRIALS - 4.6% |
Aerospace & Defense - 1.6% |
General Dynamics Corp. | 557,100 | | 46,379 |
Honeywell International, Inc. | 1,417,200 | | 112,767 |
The Boeing Co. | 604,800 | | 62,851 |
United Technologies Corp. | 1,208,200 | | 120,941 |
| | 342,938 |
Airlines - 0.2% |
Copa Holdings SA Class A | 323,100 | | 42,255 |
Building Products - 0.1% |
Masco Corp. | 856,100 | | 16,197 |
Masonite International Corp. (a) | 5,358 | | 263 |
Masonite International Corp.: | | | |
warrants 6/9/14 (a) | 25,981 | | 130 |
warrants 6/9/16 (a) | 19,485 | | 234 |
| | 16,824 |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.1% |
Moleskine SpA | 4,482,000 | | 11,379 |
Electrical Equipment - 0.1% |
Generac Holdings, Inc. | 597,800 | | 23,667 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Industrial Conglomerates - 1.1% |
3M Co. | 422,200 | | $ 47,953 |
Danaher Corp. | 1,320,000 | | 86,486 |
General Electric Co. | 3,873,800 | | 89,640 |
Toshiba Corp. | 3,056,000 | | 12,043 |
| | 236,122 |
Machinery - 0.7% |
Cummins, Inc. | 314,400 | | 38,734 |
Global Brass & Copper Holdings, Inc. | 457,774 | | 9,041 |
Ingersoll-Rand PLC | 825,000 | | 48,791 |
Manitowoc Co., Inc. | 1,829,600 | | 36,555 |
Stanley Black & Decker, Inc. | 205,400 | | 17,512 |
| | 150,633 |
Professional Services - 0.1% |
Verisk Analytics, Inc. (a) | 415,500 | | 25,836 |
Road & Rail - 0.5% |
Union Pacific Corp. | 714,756 | | 109,744 |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.1% |
WESCO International, Inc. (a) | 184,200 | | 13,588 |
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | 972,986 |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 12.5% |
Communications Equipment - 1.2% |
Cisco Systems, Inc. | 7,810,600 | | 182,065 |
F5 Networks, Inc. (a) | 250,700 | | 20,903 |
Juniper Networks, Inc. (a) | 695,700 | | 13,149 |
QUALCOMM, Inc. | 640,600 | | 42,459 |
| | 258,576 |
Computers & Peripherals - 3.3% |
Apple, Inc. | 1,043,200 | | 508,085 |
EMC Corp. | 4,183,500 | | 107,851 |
NCR Corp. (a) | 1,993,400 | | 70,925 |
SanDisk Corp. | 56,400 | | 3,112 |
| | 689,973 |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 0.4% |
Amphenol Corp. Class A | 552,400 | | 41,855 |
Arrow Electronics, Inc. (a) | 775,600 | | 36,003 |
E Ink Holdings, Inc. GDR (a)(g) | 140,100 | | 798 |
| | 78,656 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued |
Internet Software & Services - 3.0% |
Demand Media, Inc. (a)(e) | 286,508 | | $ 1,857 |
eBay, Inc. (a) | 1,508,600 | | 75,415 |
Facebook, Inc. Class A (a) | 2,339,160 | | 96,561 |
Google, Inc. Class A (a) | 431,200 | | 365,183 |
Mail.Ru Group Ltd.: | | | |
GDR (g) | 580,000 | | 18,937 |
GDR (Reg. S) | 289,900 | | 9,465 |
Pandora Media, Inc. (a)(e) | 23,894 | | 440 |
Yahoo!, Inc. (a) | 2,387,800 | | 64,757 |
| | 632,615 |
IT Services - 1.1% |
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. Class A (a) | 495,200 | | 36,298 |
MasterCard, Inc. Class A | 58,200 | | 35,274 |
Visa, Inc. Class A | 921,600 | | 160,745 |
| | 232,317 |
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 0.9% |
Altera Corp. | 1,222,200 | | 42,985 |
Broadcom Corp. Class A | 862,800 | | 21,794 |
KLA-Tencor Corp. | 598,000 | | 32,980 |
Micron Technology, Inc. (a) | 1,250,000 | | 16,963 |
NXP Semiconductors NV (a) | 342,800 | | 12,742 |
Spansion, Inc. Class A (a) | 1,868 | | 19 |
Texas Instruments, Inc. | 1,888,400 | | 72,137 |
| | 199,620 |
Software - 2.6% |
Activision Blizzard, Inc. | 640,600 | | 10,455 |
Adobe Systems, Inc. (a) | 1,696,000 | | 77,592 |
Microsoft Corp. | 6,914,000 | | 230,928 |
Oracle Corp. | 4,274,700 | | 136,192 |
salesforce.com, Inc. (a) | 1,408,800 | | 69,214 |
Workday, Inc. Class A | 338,500 | | 24,551 |
| | 548,932 |
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | 2,640,689 |
MATERIALS - 1.4% |
Chemicals - 0.9% |
Ashland, Inc. | 161,600 | | 14,093 |
CF Industries Holdings, Inc. | 98,900 | | 18,825 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
MATERIALS - continued |
Chemicals - continued |
LyondellBasell Industries NV Class A | 714,029 | | $ 50,089 |
Monsanto Co. | 889,200 | | 87,044 |
RPM International, Inc. | 604,600 | | 20,544 |
W.R. Grace & Co. (a) | 168,100 | | 13,507 |
| | 204,102 |
Construction Materials - 0.2% |
Eagle Materials, Inc. | 570,400 | | 36,597 |
Vulcan Materials Co. | 111,400 | | 5,325 |
| | 41,922 |
Containers & Packaging - 0.3% |
Rock-Tenn Co. Class A | 546,400 | | 60,711 |
Metals & Mining - 0.0% |
Ivanplats Ltd. (g) | 819,127 | | 1,524 |
TOTAL MATERIALS | | 308,259 |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 1.2% |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.8% |
Bezeq Israeli Telecommunication Corp. Ltd. | 9,287,800 | | 15,138 |
Broadview Networks Holdings, Inc. | 123,987 | | 1,133 |
Iliad SA | 150,462 | | 36,093 |
Verizon Communications, Inc. | 2,337,700 | | 110,760 |
| | 163,124 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.4% |
SBA Communications Corp. Class A (a) | 479,200 | | 35,940 |
SoftBank Corp. | 245,000 | | 15,285 |
Vodafone Group PLC sponsored ADR | 1,020,100 | | 33,000 |
| | 84,225 |
TOTAL TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES | | 247,349 |
UTILITIES - 1.1% |
Electric Utilities - 0.6% |
Bicent Power LLC: | | | |
warrants 8/21/22 (a) | 531 | | 0 |
warrants 8/21/22 (a) | 327 | | 0 |
Edison International | 1,312,900 | | 60,249 |
NextEra Energy, Inc. | 879,200 | | 70,653 |
| | 130,902 |
Common Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
UTILITIES - continued |
Gas Utilities - 0.1% |
ONEOK, Inc. | 191,700 | | $ 9,861 |
Multi-Utilities - 0.4% |
Sempra Energy | 1,014,600 | | 85,653 |
TOTAL UTILITIES | | 226,416 |
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS (Cost $11,303,306) | 14,515,172
|
Preferred Stocks - 0.7% |
| | | |
Convertible Preferred Stocks - 0.4% |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.3% |
Automobiles - 0.0% |
General Motors Co. 4.75% | 135,200 | | 6,579 |
Household Durables - 0.1% |
Blu Homes, Inc. Series A, 5.00% (p) | 1,082,251 | | 5,000 |
Roku, Inc. 8.00% (p) | 5,520,836 | | 5,000 |
| | 10,000 |
Media - 0.2% |
Vice Holdings, Inc. Series A (p) | 6,701 | | 43,738 |
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | 60,317 |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 0.1% |
Internet Software & Services - 0.0% |
wetpaint.com, Inc. Series C (a)(p) | 497,017 | | 994 |
Software - 0.1% |
Mobileye N.V. Series F (a)(p) | 369,679 | | 12,902 |
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | 13,896 |
MATERIALS - 0.0% |
Metals & Mining - 0.0% |
AngloGold Ashanti Holdings Finance PLC 6.00% | 104,600 | | 1,616 |
Preferred Stocks - continued |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
Convertible Preferred Stocks - continued |
UTILITIES - 0.0% |
Electric Utilities - 0.0% |
AES Trust III 6.75% | 76,300 | | $ 3,826 |
TOTAL CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCKS | | 79,655 |
Nonconvertible Preferred Stocks - 0.3% |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.2% |
Automobiles - 0.2% |
Volkswagen AG | 237,100 | | 53,930 |
FINANCIALS - 0.1% |
Capital Markets - 0.0% |
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. Series J, 5.50% | 100,446 | | 2,275 |
Consumer Finance - 0.1% |
Ally Financial, Inc. 7.00% (g) | 10,951 | | 10,267 |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.0% |
GMAC Capital Trust I Series 2, 8.125% | 377,872 | | 10,017 |
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | 22,559 |
TOTAL NONCONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCKS | | 76,489 |
TOTAL PREFERRED STOCKS (Cost $121,499) | 156,144
|
Corporate Bonds - 12.9% |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | |
Convertible Bonds - 0.1% |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.0% |
Media - 0.0% |
Liberty Media Corp.: | | | | |
3.5% 1/15/31 | | $ 375 | | 317 |
3.5% 1/15/31 (g) | | 2,776 | | 2,346 |
Mood Media Corp. 10% 10/31/15 (g) | | 32 | | 28 |
| | 2,691 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Convertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - 0.0% |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 0.0% |
Chesapeake Energy Corp. 2.75% 11/15/35 | | $ 2,810 | | $ 2,889 |
Massey Energy Co. 3.25% 8/1/15 | | 1,880 | | 1,724 |
| | 4,613 |
INDUSTRIALS - 0.1% |
Building Products - 0.1% |
Aspen Aerogels, Inc.: | | | | |
8% 6/1/14 (p) | | 11,328 | | 11,328 |
8% 12/6/14 (p) | | 3,220 | | 3,220 |
| | 14,548 |
TOTAL CONVERTIBLE BONDS | | 21,852 |
Nonconvertible Bonds - 12.8% |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 1.4% |
Auto Components - 0.1% |
Affinia Group, Inc. 7.75% 5/1/21 (g) | | 250 | | 257 |
Chassix, Inc. 9.25% 8/1/18 (g) | | 470 | | 490 |
DaimlerChrysler NA Holding Corp. 6.5% 11/15/13 | | 1,110 | | 1,122 |
Dana Holding Corp.: | | | | |
5.375% 9/15/21 | | 880 | | 865 |
6% 9/15/23 | | 880 | | 858 |
Delphi Corp.: | | | | |
5% 2/15/23 | | 10,718 | | 10,892 |
6.125% 5/15/21 | | 1,690 | | 1,846 |
Schaeffler Holding Finance BV 6.875% 8/15/18 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 1,565 | | 1,628 |
Tenneco, Inc. 6.875% 12/15/20 | | 2,415 | | 2,590 |
| | 20,548 |
Automobiles - 0.2% |
Daimler Finance North America LLC: | | | | |
1.45% 8/1/16 (g) | | 3,577 | | 3,561 |
1.95% 3/28/14 (g) | | 1,854 | | 1,865 |
Ford Motor Co.: | | | | |
4.75% 1/15/43 | | 15,618 | | 13,739 |
6.375% 2/1/29 | | 2,190 | | 2,362 |
7.45% 7/16/31 | | 8,972 | | 10,813 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Automobiles - continued |
General Motors Corp.: | | | | |
6.75% 5/1/28 (d) | | $ 390 | | $ 0 |
7.125% 7/15/49 (d) | | 1,135 | | 0 |
7.2% 1/15/11 (d) | | 2,855 | | 0 |
7.4% 9/1/25 (d) | | 195 | | 0 |
7.7% 4/15/16 (d) | | 705 | | 0 |
8.25% 7/15/23 (d) | | 5,475 | | 0 |
8.375% 7/15/33 (d) | | 16,800 | | 0 |
Volkswagen International Finance NV 2.375% 3/22/17 (g) | | 1,515 | | 1,539 |
| | 33,879 |
Distributors - 0.0% |
American Builders & Contractors Supply Co., Inc. 5.625% 4/15/21 (g) | | 365 | | 354 |
Ferrellgas LP/Ferrellgas Finance Corp. 6.5% 5/1/21 | | 1,745 | | 1,745 |
LKQ Corp. 4.75% 5/15/23 (g) | | 265 | | 244 |
| | 2,343 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.0% |
Ingersoll-Rand Global Holding Co. Ltd.: | | | | |
2.875% 1/15/19 (g) | | 554 | | 546 |
4.25% 6/15/23 (g) | | 3,903 | | 3,827 |
5.75% 6/15/43 (g) | | 2,809 | | 2,883 |
Laureate Education, Inc. 9.25% 9/1/19 (g) | | 4,040 | | 4,363 |
Service Corp. International 5.375% 1/15/22 (g) | | 505 | | 490 |
| | 12,109 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 0.1% |
Boyd Acquisition Sub LLC/Boyd Acquisition Finance Corp. 8.375% 2/15/18 (g) | | 325 | | 349 |
Caesars Entertainment Operating Co., Inc. 8.5% 2/15/20 | | 3,765 | | 3,596 |
Caesars Operating Escrow LLC/Caesars Escrow Corp. 9% 2/15/20 | | 1,765 | | 1,694 |
Chester Downs & Marina LLC 9.25% 2/1/20 (g) | | 435 | | 434 |
Choice Hotels International, Inc. 5.75% 7/1/22 | | 390 | | 402 |
Chukchansi Economic Development Authority 9.75% 5/30/20 (d)(g) | | 2,861 | | 1,659 |
Graton Economic Development Authority 9.625% 9/1/19 (g) | | 1,065 | | 1,177 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - continued |
Landry's Holdings II, Inc. 10.25% 1/1/18 (g) | | $ 900 | | $ 952 |
MCE Finance Ltd. 5% 2/15/21 (g) | | 1,290 | | 1,184 |
MGM Mirage, Inc.: | | | | |
5.875% 2/27/14 | | 2,998 | | 3,068 |
6.625% 12/15/21 | | 1,115 | | 1,132 |
7.5% 6/1/16 | | 2,855 | | 3,141 |
NAI Entertainment Holdings LLC/NAI Entertainment Finance Corp.: | | | | |
5% 8/1/18 (g) | | 865 | | 876 |
8.25% 12/15/17 (g) | | 848 | | 919 |
Pinnacle Entertainment, Inc. 7.75% 4/1/22 | | 450 | | 467 |
Playa Resorts Holding BV 8% 8/15/20 (g) | | 330 | | 337 |
Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. 5.25% 11/15/22 | | 615 | | 599 |
Studio City Finance Ltd. 8.5% 12/1/20 (g) | | 5,600 | | 5,936 |
Waterford Gaming LLC/Waterford Gaming Finance Corp. 8.625% 9/15/14 (g) | | 886 | | 272 |
| | 28,194 |
Household Durables - 0.1% |
Beazer Homes U.S.A., Inc. 7.25% 2/1/23 | | 775 | | 783 |
Brookfield Residential Properties, Inc./Brookfield Residential U.S. Corp. 6.125% 7/1/22 (g) | | 785 | | 775 |
Brookfield Residential Properties, Inc. 6.5% 12/15/20 (g) | | 620 | | 634 |
Reynolds Group Issuer, Inc./Reynolds Group Issuer LLC/Reynolds Group Issuer (Luxembourg) SA: | | | | |
5.75% 10/15/20 | | 6,420 | | 6,364 |
7.875% 8/15/19 | | 8,325 | | 9,158 |
8.25% 2/15/21 | | 1,485 | | 1,466 |
9% 4/15/19 | | 835 | | 862 |
William Lyon Homes, Inc. 8.5% 11/15/20 | | 730 | | 774 |
Woodside Homes Co. LLC/Woodside Homes Finance, Inc. 6.75% 12/15/21 (g) | | 1,350 | | 1,343 |
| | 22,159 |
Leisure Equipment & Products - 0.0% |
Spencer Spirit Holdings, Inc. 9% 5/1/18 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 550 | | 535 |
Media - 0.8% |
AMC Networks, Inc. 7.75% 7/15/21 | | 340 | | 376 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Media - continued |
CCO Holdings LLC/CCO Holdings Capital Corp.: | | | | |
5.125% 2/15/23 | | $ 1,580 | | $ 1,418 |
5.25% 3/15/21 (g) | | 1,375 | | 1,310 |
5.75% 9/1/23 (g) | | 945 | | 881 |
5.75% 1/15/24 | | 4,235 | | 3,928 |
8.125% 4/30/20 | | 3,485 | | 3,781 |
Cequel Communications Escrow I LLC/Cequel Communications Escrow Capital Corp. 6.375% 9/15/20 (g) | | 325 | | 324 |
Cequel Communications Holdings I LLC/Cequel Capital Corp. 5.125% 12/15/21 (g) | | 3,345 | | 3,077 |
Checkout Holding Corp. 0% 11/15/15 (g) | | 1,290 | | 1,042 |
Cinemark U.S.A., Inc.: | | | | |
4.875% 6/1/23 | | 1,275 | | 1,173 |
5.125% 12/15/22 | | 355 | | 332 |
Clear Channel Communications, Inc.: | | | | |
5.5% 9/15/14 | | 2,355 | | 2,284 |
5.5% 12/15/16 | | 1,330 | | 984 |
Clear Channel Worldwide Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
6.5% 11/15/22 | | 755 | | 749 |
6.5% 11/15/22 | | 2,040 | | 2,040 |
7.625% 3/15/20 | | 585 | | 581 |
7.625% 3/15/20 | | 4,105 | | 4,115 |
Comcast Corp.: | | | | |
4.95% 6/15/16 | | 790 | | 870 |
6.4% 5/15/38 | | 6,000 | | 7,090 |
6.4% 3/1/40 | | 4,017 | | 4,772 |
6.95% 8/15/37 | | 7,000 | | 8,769 |
COX Communications, Inc. 3.25% 12/15/22 (g) | | 2,162 | | 1,902 |
Discovery Communications LLC: | | | | |
3.7% 6/1/15 | | 4,012 | | 4,201 |
5.05% 6/1/20 | | 168 | | 182 |
6.35% 6/1/40 | | 3,224 | | 3,543 |
DISH DBS Corp.: | | | | |
5.875% 7/15/22 | | 2,655 | | 2,602 |
6.75% 6/1/21 | | 3,515 | | 3,664 |
EchoStar Communications Corp. 6.625% 10/1/14 | | 3,000 | | 3,131 |
Lamar Media Corp.: | | | | |
5.875% 2/1/22 | | 525 | | 529 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Media - continued |
Lamar Media Corp.: - continued | | | | |
7.875% 4/15/18 | | $ 1,400 | | $ 1,496 |
Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. 5.25% 8/1/18 (g) | | 3,730 | | 3,730 |
McGraw-Hill Global Education Holdings LLC/McGraw-Hill Global Education Finance 9.75% 4/1/21 (g) | | 3,907 | | 4,122 |
National CineMedia LLC: | | | | |
6% 4/15/22 | | 2,600 | | 2,652 |
7.875% 7/15/21 | | 1,380 | | 1,490 |
NBC Universal, Inc.: | | | | |
3.65% 4/30/15 | | 1,216 | | 1,274 |
5.15% 4/30/20 | | 4,917 | | 5,535 |
6.4% 4/30/40 | | 4,249 | | 5,057 |
News America Holdings, Inc. 7.75% 12/1/45 | | 8,012 | | 9,976 |
Nielsen Finance LLC/Nielsen Finance Co.: | | | | |
4.5% 10/1/20 | | 1,770 | | 1,682 |
7.75% 10/15/18 | | 3,165 | | 3,442 |
11.625% 2/1/14 | | 1,171 | | 1,219 |
RCN Telecom Services LLC/RCN Capital Corp. 8.5% 8/15/20 (g) | | 380 | | 376 |
Regal Entertainment Group: | | | | |
5.75% 6/15/23 | | 2,270 | | 2,122 |
5.75% 2/1/25 | | 340 | | 313 |
Satelites Mexicanos SA de CV 9.5% 5/15/17 | | 475 | | 518 |
Sheridan Group, Inc. 12.5% 4/15/14 | | 1,775 | | 1,775 |
Sirius XM Radio, Inc. 5.75% 8/1/21 (g) | | 3,350 | | 3,283 |
Time Warner Cable, Inc.: | | | | |
4% 9/1/21 | | 7,778 | | 7,296 |
4.5% 9/15/42 | | 6,688 | | 5,174 |
5.5% 9/1/41 | | 17,772 | | 15,115 |
5.85% 5/1/17 | | 1,621 | | 1,763 |
5.875% 11/15/40 | | 1,318 | | 1,180 |
6.75% 7/1/18 | | 1,581 | | 1,760 |
Time Warner, Inc.: | | | | |
3.15% 7/15/15 | | 451 | | 469 |
5.375% 10/15/41 | | 1,539 | | 1,521 |
5.875% 11/15/16 | | 3,738 | | 4,227 |
6.2% 3/15/40 | | 2,618 | | 2,846 |
6.5% 11/15/36 | | 2,633 | | 2,932 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Media - continued |
Unitymedia Hessen GmbH & Co. KG/Unitymedia NRW GmbH: | | | | |
5.5% 1/15/23 (g) | | $ 1,340 | | $ 1,263 |
7.5% 3/15/19 (g) | | 480 | | 518 |
UPCB Finance VI Ltd. 6.875% 1/15/22 (g) | | 1,250 | | 1,306 |
Viacom, Inc.: | | | | |
1.25% 2/27/15 | | 377 | | 378 |
2.5% 9/1/18 | | 714 | | 705 |
3.5% 4/1/17 | | 219 | | 228 |
Videotron Ltd. 9.125% 4/15/18 | | 2,604 | | 2,731 |
WMG Acquisition Corp. 6% 1/15/21 (g) | | 423 | | 434 |
| | 171,558 |
Multiline Retail - 0.0% |
The Bon-Ton Department Stores, Inc. 8% 6/15/21 (g) | | 730 | | 706 |
Specialty Retail - 0.1% |
Albea Beauty Holdings SA 8.375% 11/1/19 (g) | | 1,730 | | 1,747 |
Asbury Automotive Group, Inc. 8.375% 11/15/20 | | 565 | | 624 |
Claire's Stores, Inc.: | | | | |
7.75% 6/1/20 (g) | | 485 | | 483 |
9% 3/15/19 (g) | | 3,800 | | 4,232 |
CST Brands, Inc. 5% 5/1/23 (g) | | 320 | | 304 |
Jo-Ann Stores, Inc. 9.75% 10/15/19 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 975 | | 1,004 |
PETCO Animal Supplies, Inc. 9.25% 12/1/18 (g) | | 3,260 | | 3,513 |
Petco Holdings, Inc. 8.5% 10/15/17 pay-in-kind (g) | | 590 | | 602 |
Sonic Automotive, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 5/15/23 | | 195 | | 180 |
7% 7/15/22 | | 885 | | 957 |
| | 13,646 |
Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 0.0% |
Burlington Holdings LLC/Burlington Holding Finance, Inc. 9% 2/15/18 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 725 | | 741 |
SIWF Merger Sub, Inc./Springs Industries, Inc. 6.25% 6/1/21 (g) | | 355 | | 351 |
| | 1,092 |
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | 306,769 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER STAPLES - 0.6% |
Beverages - 0.1% |
Anheuser-Busch InBev Worldwide, Inc. 5.375% 11/15/14 | | $ 2,054 | | $ 2,168 |
Beam, Inc. 1.875% 5/15/17 | | 1,176 | | 1,173 |
Constellation Brands, Inc.: | | | | |
3.75% 5/1/21 | | 355 | | 328 |
4.25% 5/1/23 | | 535 | | 491 |
FBG Finance Ltd. 5.125% 6/15/15 (g) | | 3,957 | | 4,245 |
Fortune Brands, Inc. 5.375% 1/15/16 | | 1,919 | | 2,090 |
Heineken NV: | | | | |
1.4% 10/1/17 (g) | | 2,951 | | 2,861 |
2.75% 4/1/23 (g) | | 3,085 | | 2,779 |
SABMiller Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
1.85% 1/15/15 (g) | | 1,947 | | 1,971 |
2.45% 1/15/17 (g) | | 1,947 | | 1,981 |
| | 20,087 |
Food & Staples Retailing - 0.1% |
Bi-Lo LLC/Bi-Lo Finance Corp. 9.25% 2/15/19 (g) | | 1,030 | | 1,123 |
ESAL GmbH 6.25% 2/5/23 (g) | | 925 | | 828 |
Hawk Acquisition Sub, Inc. 4.25% 10/15/20 (g) | | 7,625 | | 7,206 |
Rite Aid Corp.: | | | | |
6.75% 6/15/21 (g) | | 7,375 | | 7,467 |
6.875% 12/15/28 (g) | | 2,995 | | 2,800 |
7.7% 2/15/27 | | 2,550 | | 2,595 |
9.25% 3/15/20 | | 1,330 | | 1,505 |
Tops Markets LLC 8.875% 12/15/17 (g) | | 675 | | 746 |
Walgreen Co. 1% 3/13/15 | | 1,555 | | 1,560 |
| | 25,830 |
Food Products - 0.2% |
Cargill, Inc. 6% 11/27/17 (g) | | 417 | | 478 |
ConAgra Foods, Inc.: | | | | |
1.9% 1/25/18 | | 2,064 | | 2,025 |
3.2% 1/25/23 | | 2,400 | | 2,237 |
4.65% 1/25/43 | | 2,022 | | 1,845 |
Kraft Foods, Inc.: | | | | |
5.375% 2/10/20 | | 23,518 | | 26,240 |
6.5% 8/11/17 | | 2,584 | | 2,990 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
CONSUMER STAPLES - continued |
Food Products - continued |
Kraft Foods, Inc.: - continued | | | | |
6.75% 2/19/14 | | $ 318 | | $ 327 |
Post Holdings, Inc. 7.375% 2/15/22 | | 1,545 | | 1,630 |
| | 37,772 |
Household Products - 0.0% |
Spectrum Brands Escrow Corp.: | | | | |
6.375% 11/15/20 (g) | | 350 | | 362 |
6.625% 11/15/22 (g) | | 415 | | 425 |
| | 787 |
Personal Products - 0.0% |
Alphabet Holding Co., Inc. 7.75% 11/1/17 pay-in-kind | | 1,435 | | 1,482 |
First Quality Finance Co., Inc. 4.625% 5/15/21 (g) | | 300 | | 279 |
Prestige Brands, Inc. 8.125% 2/1/20 | | 220 | | 242 |
Revlon Consumer Products Corp. 5.75% 2/15/21 (g) | | 1,105 | | 1,053 |
| | 3,056 |
Tobacco - 0.2% |
Altria Group, Inc.: | | | | |
2.85% 8/9/22 | | 4,020 | | 3,620 |
4.25% 8/9/42 | | 4,020 | | 3,292 |
9.7% 11/10/18 | | 5,570 | | 7,289 |
Reynolds American, Inc.: | | | | |
3.25% 11/1/22 | | 2,999 | | 2,737 |
4.75% 11/1/42 | | 4,633 | | 4,029 |
6.75% 6/15/17 | | 3,979 | | 4,579 |
7.25% 6/15/37 | | 6,101 | | 6,993 |
| | 32,539 |
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | 120,071 |
ENERGY - 1.4% |
Energy Equipment & Services - 0.3% |
Cameron International Corp. 1.6% 4/30/15 | | 231 | | 232 |
DCP Midstream LLC: | | | | |
4.75% 9/30/21 (g) | | 5,634 | | 5,698 |
5.35% 3/15/20 (g) | | 5,174 | | 5,496 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Energy Equipment & Services - continued |
El Paso Pipeline Partners Operating Co. LLC: | | | | |
4.1% 11/15/15 | | $ 5,488 | | $ 5,821 |
5% 10/1/21 | | 2,280 | | 2,404 |
6.5% 4/1/20 | | 2,264 | | 2,591 |
FMC Technologies, Inc.: | | | | |
2% 10/1/17 | | 735 | | 721 |
3.45% 10/1/22 | | 1,333 | | 1,265 |
Gulfmark Offshore, Inc. 6.375% 3/15/22 | | 365 | | 370 |
Noble Holding International Ltd.: | | | | |
3.05% 3/1/16 | | 756 | | 777 |
3.45% 8/1/15 | | 1,075 | | 1,116 |
Offshore Group Investment Ltd.: | | | | |
7.125% 4/1/23 | | 1,500 | | 1,444 |
7.5% 11/1/19 | | 7,020 | | 7,301 |
Oil States International, Inc. 6.5% 6/1/19 | | 1,420 | | 1,498 |
Pacific Drilling SA 5.375% 6/1/20 (g) | | 1,270 | | 1,226 |
Pacific Drilling V Ltd. 7.25% 12/1/17 (g) | | 2,800 | | 2,975 |
Precision Drilling Corp.: | | | | |
6.5% 12/15/21 | | 315 | | 329 |
6.625% 11/15/20 | | 1,580 | | 1,663 |
Pride International, Inc. 6.875% 8/15/20 | | 1,355 | | 1,601 |
Summit Midstream Holdings LLC 7.5% 7/1/21 (g) | | 500 | | 508 |
Transocean, Inc. 5.05% 12/15/16 | | 3,719 | | 4,065 |
Unit Corp. 6.625% 5/15/21 | | 4,515 | | 4,605 |
Weatherford International Ltd. 4.95% 10/15/13 | | 2,346 | | 2,356 |
| | 56,062 |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 1.1% |
Access Midstream Partners LP/ACMP Finance Corp. 4.875% 5/15/23 | | 1,680 | | 1,562 |
Alpha Natural Resources, Inc.: | | | | |
6% 6/1/19 | | 2,410 | | 2,061 |
6.25% 6/1/21 | | 2,725 | | 2,282 |
9.75% 4/15/18 | | 1,099 | | 1,104 |
Anadarko Petroleum Corp.: | | | | |
5.95% 9/15/16 | | 1,489 | | 1,669 |
6.375% 9/15/17 | | 20,246 | | 23,404 |
6.45% 9/15/36 | | 4,261 | | 4,953 |
Apache Corp. 3.25% 4/15/22 | | 193 | | 188 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued |
Atlas Pipeline Partners LP/Atlas Pipeline Finance Corp. 5.875% 8/1/23 (g) | | $ 1,155 | | $ 1,083 |
Cenovus Energy, Inc. 4.5% 9/15/14 | | 745 | | 774 |
Chesapeake Energy Corp.: | | | | |
5.375% 6/15/21 | | 1,340 | | 1,330 |
5.75% 3/15/23 | | 1,330 | | 1,323 |
Chevron Corp. 3.191% 6/24/23 | | 6,848 | | 6,630 |
Concho Resources, Inc. 5.5% 4/1/23 | | 1,155 | | 1,120 |
Continental Resources, Inc.: | | | | |
4.5% 4/15/23 | | 1,810 | | 1,778 |
5% 9/15/22 | | 2,690 | | 2,717 |
Crestwood Midstream Partners LP/Finance Corp. 7.75% 4/1/19 | | 1,990 | | 2,077 |
DCP Midstream Operating LP: | | | | |
2.5% 12/1/17 | | 2,677 | | 2,630 |
3.875% 3/15/23 | | 1,647 | | 1,502 |
4.95% 4/1/22 | | 1,048 | | 1,041 |
Denbury Resources, Inc.: | | | | |
4.625% 7/15/23 | | 4,625 | | 4,128 |
8.25% 2/15/20 | | 1,973 | | 2,170 |
Duke Energy Field Services: | | | | |
5.375% 10/15/15 (g) | | 1,647 | | 1,771 |
6.45% 11/3/36 (g) | | 3,753 | | 3,944 |
El Paso Natural Gas Co. 5.95% 4/15/17 | | 1,260 | | 1,416 |
Enbridge Energy Partners LP 4.2% 9/15/21 | | 6,629 | | 6,661 |
Encana Holdings Finance Corp. 5.8% 5/1/14 | | 3,892 | | 4,017 |
Enterprise Products Operating LP 5.6% 10/15/14 | | 1,482 | | 1,558 |
EP Energy LLC/Everest Acquisition Finance, Inc. 7.75% 9/1/22 | | 885 | | 947 |
EPE Holdings LLC/EP Energy Bond Co., Inc. 8.875% 12/15/17 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 1,470 | | 1,473 |
EV Energy Partners LP/EV Energy Finance Corp. 8% 4/15/19 | | 650 | | 650 |
Everest Acquisition LLC/Everest Acquisition Finance, Inc.: | | | | |
6.875% 5/1/19 | | 1,540 | | 1,636 |
9.375% 5/1/20 | | 4,780 | | 5,258 |
Forest Oil Corp.: | | | | |
7.25% 6/15/19 | | 1,670 | | 1,657 |
7.5% 9/15/20 | | 1,735 | | 1,666 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued |
Genesis Energy LP/Genesis Energy Finance Corp. 5.75% 2/15/21 | | $ 520 | | $ 512 |
Gulfstream Natural Gas System LLC 6.95% 6/1/16 (g) | | 677 | | 768 |
Halcon Resources Corp. 8.875% 5/15/21 | | 1,030 | | 1,033 |
Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp.: | | | | |
5.5% 1/15/21 (g) | | 485 | | 480 |
8.125% 12/1/19 | | 1,325 | | 1,451 |
LINN Energy LLC/LINN Energy Finance Corp.: | | | | |
6.25% 11/1/19 (g) | | 3,855 | | 3,547 |
6.5% 5/15/19 | | 1,820 | | 1,711 |
Marathon Petroleum Corp.: | | | | |
3.5% 3/1/16 | | 409 | | 429 |
5.125% 3/1/21 | | 3,173 | | 3,396 |
Markwest Energy Partners LP/Markwest Energy Finance Corp. 5.5% 2/15/23 | | 610 | | 599 |
Midcontinent Express Pipeline LLC 5.45% 9/15/14 (g) | | 2,559 | | 2,638 |
Motiva Enterprises LLC: | | | | |
5.75% 1/15/20 (g) | | 3,614 | | 4,105 |
6.85% 1/15/40 (g) | | 2,906 | | 3,547 |
Nakilat, Inc. 6.067% 12/31/33 (g) | | 1,839 | | 1,931 |
Nexen, Inc.: | | | | |
5.2% 3/10/15 | | 1,224 | | 1,291 |
6.2% 7/30/19 | | 1,865 | | 2,156 |
Occidental Petroleum Corp. 2.7% 2/15/23 | | 1,608 | | 1,456 |
Petrobras Global Finance BV: | | | | |
3% 1/15/19 | | 4,414 | | 4,054 |
4.375% 5/20/23 | | 3,648 | | 3,203 |
Petrobras International Finance Co. Ltd.: | | | | |
3.875% 1/27/16 | | 5,238 | | 5,373 |
5.375% 1/27/21 | | 2,313 | | 2,259 |
7.875% 3/15/19 | | 5,564 | | 6,263 |
Petroleos Mexicanos: | | | | |
3.5% 7/18/18 | | 6,172 | | 6,224 |
3.5% 1/30/23 | | 4,530 | | 4,054 |
4.875% 1/24/22 | | 2,315 | | 2,338 |
5.5% 1/21/21 | | 5,342 | | 5,663 |
5.5% 6/27/44 | | 17,702 | | 15,356 |
6% 3/5/20 | | 1,974 | | 2,166 |
6.5% 6/2/41 | | 6,878 | | 6,844 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
ENERGY - continued |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued |
Phillips 66: | | | | |
1.95% 3/5/15 | | $ 1,526 | | $ 1,549 |
2.95% 5/1/17 | | 1,527 | | 1,572 |
4.3% 4/1/22 | | 5,338 | | 5,384 |
5.875% 5/1/42 | | 4,552 | | 4,832 |
Plains All American Pipeline LP/PAA Finance Corp.: | | | | |
3.95% 9/15/15 | | 308 | | 326 |
6.125% 1/15/17 | | 1,880 | | 2,134 |
QR Energy LP/QRE Finance Corp. 9.25% 8/1/20 | | 1,075 | | 1,088 |
SemGroup Corp. 7.5% 6/15/21 (g) | | 1,000 | | 1,018 |
Southeast Supply Header LLC 4.85% 8/15/14 (g) | | 1,176 | | 1,217 |
Spectra Energy Capital, LLC 5.65% 3/1/20 | | 944 | | 1,028 |
Spectra Energy Partners, LP: | | | | |
2.95% 6/15/16 | | 1,059 | | 1,080 |
4.6% 6/15/21 | | 1,296 | | 1,324 |
Suncor Energy, Inc. 6.1% 6/1/18 | | 7,771 | | 8,992 |
Targa Resources Partners LP/Targa Resources Partners Finance Corp. 6.375% 8/1/22 | | 570 | | 590 |
Teekay Corp. 8.5% 1/15/20 | | 120 | | 130 |
Texas Eastern Transmission LP 6% 9/15/17 (g) | | 948 | | 1,065 |
TransCapitalInvest Ltd. 5.67% 3/5/14 (g) | | 5,281 | | 5,405 |
Western Gas Partners LP 5.375% 6/1/21 | | 7,147 | | 7,709 |
Western Refining, Inc. 6.25% 4/1/21 | | 550 | | 539 |
| | 242,009 |
TOTAL ENERGY | | 298,071 |
FINANCIALS - 5.0% |
Capital Markets - 0.7% |
Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. 5.3% 10/30/15 | | 878 | | 952 |
BlackRock, Inc.: | | | | |
3.375% 6/1/22 | | 274 | | 270 |
4.25% 5/24/21 | | 414 | | 437 |
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.: | | | | |
2.375% 1/22/18 | | 10,000 | | 9,807 |
3.625% 1/22/23 | | 7,000 | | 6,598 |
5.95% 1/18/18 | | 4,242 | | 4,740 |
6.15% 4/1/18 | | 3,466 | | 3,914 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Capital Markets - continued |
JPMorgan Chase & Co.: | | | | |
0.8% 4/23/15 | | $ 28,000 | | $ 27,928 |
1.125% 2/26/16 | | 15,094 | | 15,053 |
Lazard Group LLC: | | | | |
6.85% 6/15/17 | | 5,189 | | 5,852 |
7.125% 5/15/15 | | 1,855 | | 2,013 |
Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.: | | | | |
6.11% 1/29/37 | | 11,555 | | 11,716 |
6.4% 8/28/17 | | 4,204 | | 4,788 |
7.75% 5/14/38 | | 7,615 | | 9,131 |
Morgan Stanley: | | | | |
2.125% 4/25/18 | | 16,388 | | 15,800 |
4% 7/24/15 | | 1,137 | | 1,187 |
4.875% 11/1/22 | | 7,126 | | 7,020 |
5.375% 10/15/15 | | 15,930 | | 17,146 |
5.625% 9/23/19 | | 453 | | 498 |
5.95% 12/28/17 | | 250 | | 280 |
6.625% 4/1/18 | | 1,494 | | 1,710 |
State Street Corp. 3.1% 5/15/23 | | 6,500 | | 6,009 |
UBS AG Stamford Branch 2.25% 1/28/14 | | 1,003 | | 1,011 |
| | 153,860 |
Commercial Banks - 1.2% |
Associated Banc Corp. 5.125% 3/28/16 | | 1,852 | | 1,979 |
Bank of America NA 5.3% 3/15/17 | | 14,681 | | 16,000 |
BB&T Corp. 3.95% 3/22/22 | | 1,495 | | 1,478 |
CIT Group, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 8/15/22 | | 2,195 | | 2,074 |
5% 8/1/23 | | 7,565 | | 7,085 |
5.25% 3/15/18 | | 3,215 | | 3,319 |
5.375% 5/15/20 | | 2,805 | | 2,819 |
5.5% 2/15/19 (g) | | 5,285 | | 5,417 |
Comerica Bank 5.7% 6/1/14 | | 507 | | 525 |
Comerica, Inc. 4.8% 5/1/15 | | 1,013 | | 1,067 |
Credit Suisse 6% 2/15/18 | | 12,547 | | 14,042 |
Credit Suisse New York Branch 5.4% 1/14/20 | | 1,200 | | 1,301 |
Discover Bank: | | | | |
7% 4/15/20 | | 3,075 | | 3,603 |
8.7% 11/18/19 | | 532 | | 671 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Commercial Banks - continued |
Fifth Third Bancorp: | | | | |
3.5% 3/15/22 | | $ 529 | | $ 515 |
4.5% 6/1/18 | | 418 | | 447 |
5.45% 1/15/17 | | 1,848 | | 2,025 |
8.25% 3/1/38 | | 3,116 | | 4,015 |
Fifth Third Capital Trust IV 6.5% 4/15/37 (k) | | 3,790 | | 3,762 |
HBOS PLC 6.75% 5/21/18 (g) | | 408 | | 446 |
Huntington Bancshares, Inc. 7% 12/15/20 | | 2,561 | | 3,001 |
Intesa Sanpaolo SpA: | | | | |
3.125% 1/15/16 | | 18,292 | | 18,232 |
3.875% 1/16/18 | | 18,369 | | 17,891 |
JPMorgan Chase Bank 6% 10/1/17 | | 1,942 | | 2,203 |
KeyBank NA: | | | | |
5.45% 3/3/16 | | 2,302 | | 2,520 |
5.8% 7/1/14 | | 7,641 | | 7,956 |
KeyCorp. 5.1% 3/24/21 | | 519 | | 568 |
Marshall & Ilsley Bank: | | | | |
4.85% 6/16/15 | | 3,881 | | 4,134 |
5% 1/17/17 | | 7,888 | | 8,536 |
Regions Bank: | | | | |
6.45% 6/26/37 | | 9,362 | | 9,719 |
7.5% 5/15/18 | | 8,929 | | 10,428 |
Regions Financial Corp.: | | | | |
2% 5/15/18 | | 7,154 | | 6,834 |
5.75% 6/15/15 | | 1,067 | | 1,144 |
7.75% 11/10/14 | | 4,922 | | 5,296 |
Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC: | | | | |
6.1% 6/10/23 | | 8,822 | | 8,471 |
6.125% 12/15/22 | | 35,362 | | 33,973 |
SunTrust Banks, Inc.: | | | | |
0.574% 4/1/15 (k) | | 8,610 | | 8,550 |
3.5% 1/20/17 | | 4,123 | | 4,318 |
UnionBanCal Corp. 3.5% 6/18/22 | | 5,802 | | 5,602 |
Wachovia Bank NA: | | | | |
4.8% 11/1/14 | | 461 | | 483 |
6% 11/15/17 | | 7,010 | | 8,012 |
Wachovia Corp.: | | | | |
5.625% 10/15/16 | | 4,581 | | 5,114 |
5.75% 6/15/17 | | 1,728 | | 1,966 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Commercial Banks - continued |
Wells Fargo & Co.: | | | | |
1.5% 7/1/15 | | $ 13,693 | | $ 13,847 |
3.676% 6/15/16 | | 2,326 | | 2,470 |
| | 263,858 |
Consumer Finance - 0.8% |
Ally Financial, Inc.: | | | | |
4.625% 6/26/15 | | 2,540 | | 2,630 |
6.25% 12/1/17 | | 1,800 | | 1,930 |
American Express Credit Corp.: | | | | |
1.3% 7/29/16 | | 5,523 | | 5,532 |
2.75% 9/15/15 | | 1,352 | | 1,401 |
2.8% 9/19/16 | | 519 | | 541 |
American Honda Finance Corp. 1.45% 2/27/15 (g) | | 1,975 | | 1,993 |
Discover Financial Services: | | | | |
3.85% 11/21/22 | | 1,983 | | 1,867 |
5.2% 4/27/22 | | 2,146 | | 2,217 |
6.45% 6/12/17 | | 10,512 | | 11,864 |
Ford Motor Credit Co. LLC: | | | | |
2.5% 1/15/16 | | 14,000 | | 14,126 |
3% 6/12/17 | | 5,430 | | 5,465 |
General Electric Capital Corp.: | | | | |
1% 1/8/16 | | 18,569 | | 18,473 |
2.25% 11/9/15 | | 534 | | 547 |
4.625% 1/7/21 | | 703 | | 743 |
5.625% 9/15/17 | | 17,812 | | 20,131 |
General Motors Acceptance Corp. 8% 11/1/31 | | 3,115 | | 3,532 |
GMAC LLC: | | | | |
6.75% 12/1/14 | | 2,355 | | 2,473 |
8% 12/31/18 | | 6,035 | | 6,865 |
8% 11/1/31 | | 19,726 | | 22,685 |
Hyundai Capital America: | | | | |
1.625% 10/2/15 (g) | | 1,867 | | 1,866 |
1.875% 8/9/16 (g) | | 1,416 | | 1,414 |
2.125% 10/2/17 (g) | | 2,063 | | 2,012 |
2.875% 8/9/18 (g) | | 2,511 | | 2,495 |
SLM Corp.: | | | | |
3.875% 9/10/15 | | 240 | | 244 |
5.5% 1/25/23 | | 1,365 | | 1,243 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Consumer Finance - continued |
SLM Corp.: - continued | | | | |
8% 3/25/20 | | $ 5,930 | | $ 6,449 |
8.45% 6/15/18 | | 2,400 | | 2,736 |
Toyota Motor Credit Corp. 0.8% 5/17/16 | | 28,000 | | 27,847 |
| | 171,321 |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.6% |
Bank of America Corp.: | | | | |
3.3% 1/11/23 | | 3,469 | | 3,199 |
3.875% 3/22/17 | | 781 | | 822 |
4.1% 7/24/23 | | 5,450 | | 5,351 |
6.5% 8/1/16 | | 1,010 | | 1,138 |
7.375% 5/15/14 | | 26 | | 27 |
BP Capital Markets PLC: | | | | |
3.125% 10/1/15 | | 1,114 | | 1,166 |
4.5% 10/1/20 | | 1,106 | | 1,178 |
4.742% 3/11/21 | | 4,210 | | 4,507 |
Citigroup, Inc.: | | | | |
1.7% 7/25/16 | | 6,000 | | 5,996 |
3.953% 6/15/16 | | 5,674 | | 6,014 |
4.05% 7/30/22 | | 2,389 | | 2,294 |
4.45% 1/10/17 | | 14,158 | | 15,229 |
4.75% 5/19/15 | | 13,577 | | 14,379 |
5.9% (h)(k) | | 5,610 | | 5,301 |
General Motors Financial Co., Inc.: | | | | |
3.25% 5/15/18 (g) | | 700 | | 672 |
4.25% 5/15/23 (g) | | 615 | | 554 |
4.75% 8/15/17 (g) | | 8,705 | | 8,977 |
6.75% 6/1/18 | | 6,765 | | 7,535 |
Icahn Enterprises LP/Icahn Enterprises Finance Corp.: | | | | |
7.75% 1/15/16 | | 7,625 | | 7,901 |
8% 1/15/18 | | 1,015 | | 1,068 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co.: | | | | |
3.15% 7/5/16 | | 8,974 | | 9,372 |
3.4% 6/24/15 | | 1,092 | | 1,137 |
Landry's Acquisition Co. 9.375% 5/1/20 (g) | | 875 | | 933 |
NSG Holdings II, LLC 7.75% 12/15/25 (g) | | 5,023 | | 5,199 |
RBS Citizens Financial Group, Inc. 4.15% 9/28/22 (g) | | 5,782 | | 5,522 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Diversified Financial Services - continued |
TECO Finance, Inc.: | | | | |
4% 3/15/16 | | $ 1,242 | | $ 1,315 |
5.15% 3/15/20 | | 2,029 | | 2,201 |
TransUnion Holding Co., Inc.: | | | | |
8.125% 6/15/18 pay-in-kind | | 1,155 | | 1,217 |
9.625% 6/15/18 pay-in-kind | | 810 | | 875 |
UPCB Finance III Ltd. 6.625% 7/1/20 (g) | | 2,150 | | 2,247 |
Wind Acquisition Holdings Finance SA 12.25% 7/15/17 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 4,127 | | 4,155 |
| | 127,481 |
Insurance - 0.7% |
American International Group, Inc.: | | | | |
2.375% 8/24/15 | | 14,000 | | 14,169 |
3.8% 3/22/17 | | 5,298 | | 5,601 |
4.875% 9/15/16 | | 1,873 | | 2,042 |
4.875% 6/1/22 | | 5,467 | | 5,821 |
5.6% 10/18/16 | | 4,975 | | 5,526 |
5.85% 1/16/18 | | 12,000 | | 13,521 |
Aon Corp.: | | | | |
3.125% 5/27/16 | | 3,402 | | 3,548 |
3.5% 9/30/15 | | 3,819 | | 4,001 |
5% 9/30/20 | | 107 | | 116 |
Aon PLC 4.45% 5/24/43 | | 7,250 | | 6,393 |
Axis Capital Holdings Ltd. 5.75% 12/1/14 | | 329 | | 348 |
Great-West Life & Annuity Insurance Co. 7.153% 5/16/46 (g)(k) | | 2,008 | | 2,058 |
Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.: | | | | |
4% 10/15/17 | | 1,082 | | 1,149 |
5.125% 4/15/22 | | 956 | | 1,039 |
5.375% 3/15/17 | | 595 | | 652 |
Liberty Mutual Group, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 6/1/21 (g) | | 6,063 | | 6,369 |
6.5% 3/15/35 (g) | | 1,064 | | 1,163 |
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. 4.8% 7/15/21 | | 4,128 | | 4,419 |
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. 5.375% 12/1/41 (g) | | 2,993 | | 3,107 |
MetLife, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 6/15/15 | | 686 | | 736 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Insurance - continued |
MetLife, Inc.: - continued | | | | |
6.75% 6/1/16 | | $ 3,874 | | $ 4,434 |
Metropolitan Life Global Funding I 1.875% 6/22/18 (g) | | 6,760 | | 6,583 |
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. 6.063% 3/30/40 (g) | | 3,585 | | 4,108 |
Pacific Life Insurance Co. 9.25% 6/15/39 (g) | | 3,048 | | 4,217 |
Pacific LifeCorp: | | | | |
5.125% 1/30/43 (g) | | 6,960 | | 6,450 |
6% 2/10/20 (g) | | 8,215 | | 9,174 |
Prudential Financial, Inc.: | | | | |
2.3% 8/15/18 | | 783 | | 781 |
3.875% 1/14/15 | | 2,500 | | 2,603 |
4.5% 11/16/21 | | 1,461 | | 1,540 |
7.375% 6/15/19 | | 1,880 | | 2,301 |
Symetra Financial Corp. 6.125% 4/1/16 (g) | | 6,715 | | 7,192 |
Unum Group: | | | | |
5.625% 9/15/20 | | 2,879 | | 3,130 |
5.75% 8/15/42 | | 7,108 | | 7,272 |
7.125% 9/30/16 | | 1,802 | | 2,056 |
| | 143,619 |
Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.5% |
Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc. 4.6% 4/1/22 | | 1,705 | | 1,702 |
American Campus Communities Operating Partnership LP 3.75% 4/15/23 | | 1,587 | | 1,486 |
Boston Properties, Inc. 3.85% 2/1/23 | | 6,720 | | 6,514 |
BRE Properties, Inc. 5.5% 3/15/17 | | 2,524 | | 2,764 |
Camden Property Trust: | | | | |
2.95% 12/15/22 | | 2,154 | | 1,947 |
5.375% 12/15/13 | | 2,150 | | 2,177 |
DDR Corp. 4.625% 7/15/22 | | 3,877 | | 3,881 |
Developers Diversified Realty Corp.: | | | | |
4.75% 4/15/18 | | 4,595 | | 4,921 |
7.5% 4/1/17 | | 4,966 | | 5,762 |
9.625% 3/15/16 | | 1,675 | | 1,985 |
Duke Realty LP: | | | | |
3.625% 4/15/23 | | 2,844 | | 2,598 |
3.875% 10/15/22 | | 4,799 | | 4,488 |
4.375% 6/15/22 | | 3,202 | | 3,119 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Investment Trusts - continued |
Duke Realty LP: - continued | | | | |
5.4% 8/15/14 | | $ 1,096 | | $ 1,139 |
5.5% 3/1/16 | | 2,930 | | 3,176 |
6.75% 3/15/20 | | 1,161 | | 1,323 |
8.25% 8/15/19 | | 1,838 | | 2,258 |
Equity One, Inc.: | | | | |
3.75% 11/15/22 | | 7,300 | | 6,798 |
5.375% 10/15/15 | | 672 | | 725 |
6% 9/15/17 | | 666 | | 737 |
6.25% 1/15/17 | | 530 | | 585 |
Federal Realty Investment Trust: | | | | |
5.9% 4/1/20 | | 1,379 | | 1,562 |
6.2% 1/15/17 | | 365 | | 411 |
HCP, Inc. 3.15% 8/1/22 | | 8,000 | | 7,293 |
Health Care REIT, Inc.: | | | | |
2.25% 3/15/18 | | 12,327 | | 12,073 |
4.125% 4/1/19 | | 11,300 | | 11,740 |
4.7% 9/15/17 | | 744 | | 804 |
HRPT Properties Trust: | | | | |
5.75% 11/1/15 | | 1,241 | | 1,298 |
6.25% 6/15/17 | | 726 | | 767 |
6.65% 1/15/18 | | 490 | | 525 |
Omega Healthcare Investors, Inc.: | | | | |
5.875% 3/15/24 | | 3,200 | | 3,192 |
6.75% 10/15/22 | | 1,885 | | 2,003 |
Washington REIT 5.25% 1/15/14 | | 988 | | 1,002 |
Weingarten Realty Investors 3.375% 10/15/22 | | 1,098 | | 1,000 |
| | 103,755 |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.5% |
BioMed Realty LP: | | | | |
3.85% 4/15/16 | | 6,469 | | 6,759 |
4.25% 7/15/22 | | 2,511 | | 2,416 |
6.125% 4/15/20 | | 1,822 | | 2,014 |
Brandywine Operating Partnership LP: | | | | |
3.95% 2/15/23 | | 6,445 | | 6,029 |
4.95% 4/15/18 | | 2,688 | | 2,855 |
5.7% 5/1/17 | | 268 | | 293 |
6% 4/1/16 | | 2,467 | | 2,702 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Management & Development - continued |
Brandywine Operating Partnership LP: - continued | | | | |
7.5% 5/15/15 | | $ 698 | | $ 767 |
CB Richard Ellis Services, Inc.: | | | | |
5% 3/15/23 | | 1,875 | | 1,739 |
6.625% 10/15/20 | | 900 | | 956 |
Digital Realty Trust LP: | | | | |
4.5% 7/15/15 | | 2,465 | | 2,587 |
5.25% 3/15/21 | | 2,876 | | 2,961 |
ERP Operating LP 5.75% 6/15/17 | | 1,446 | | 1,620 |
Liberty Property LP: | | | | |
3.375% 6/15/23 | | 2,951 | | 2,684 |
4.125% 6/15/22 | | 2,746 | | 2,687 |
4.75% 10/1/20 | | 6,595 | | 6,877 |
5.125% 3/2/15 | | 1,317 | | 1,386 |
5.5% 12/15/16 | | 2,022 | | 2,227 |
Mack-Cali Realty LP: | | | | |
2.5% 12/15/17 | | 4,037 | | 3,936 |
3.15% 5/15/23 | | 6,708 | | 5,835 |
4.5% 4/18/22 | | 1,689 | | 1,654 |
7.75% 8/15/19 | | 2,149 | | 2,571 |
Post Apartment Homes LP 3.375% 12/1/22 | | 1,196 | | 1,097 |
Prime Property Funding, Inc.: | | | | |
5.125% 6/1/15 (g) | | 2,161 | | 2,280 |
5.5% 1/15/14 (g) | | 935 | | 952 |
5.7% 4/15/17 (g) | | 2,286 | | 2,487 |
Realogy Corp. 9% 1/15/20 (g) | | 1,170 | | 1,351 |
Realogy Group LLC/Sunshine Group Florida Ltd. 3.375% 5/1/16 (g) | | 2,125 | | 2,109 |
Regency Centers LP: | | | | |
4.95% 4/15/14 | | 360 | | 368 |
5.25% 8/1/15 | | 3,216 | | 3,442 |
5.875% 6/15/17 | | 1,447 | | 1,599 |
Simon Property Group LP: | | | | |
2.8% 1/30/17 | | 67 | | 69 |
4.2% 2/1/15 | | 1,785 | | 1,855 |
Tanger Properties LP: | | | | |
6.125% 6/1/20 | | 7,035 | | 8,122 |
6.15% 11/15/15 | | 900 | | 998 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Management & Development - continued |
Ventas Realty LP/Ventas Capital Corp.: | | | | |
2% 2/15/18 | | $ 3,611 | | $ 3,497 |
4% 4/30/19 | | 1,771 | | 1,834 |
Weekley Homes LLC/Weekley Finance Corp. 6% 2/1/23 (g) | | 510 | | 495 |
| | 96,110 |
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | 1,060,004 |
HEALTH CARE - 0.8% |
Biotechnology - 0.1% |
Amgen, Inc.: | | | | |
3.875% 11/15/21 | | 1,497 | | 1,500 |
5.15% 11/15/41 | | 14,179 | | 13,731 |
Celgene Corp. 2.45% 10/15/15 | | 1,882 | | 1,933 |
| | 17,164 |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 0.0% |
Aviv Healthcare Properties LP/Aviv Healthcare Capital Corp. 7.75% 2/15/19 | | 2,945 | | 3,151 |
Teleflex, Inc. 6.875% 6/1/19 | | 1,665 | | 1,748 |
| | 4,899 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 0.6% |
Aetna, Inc.: | | | | |
2.75% 11/15/22 | | 2,850 | | 2,593 |
4.125% 11/15/42 | | 1,591 | | 1,383 |
Coventry Health Care, Inc.: | | | | |
5.95% 3/15/17 | | 1,030 | | 1,166 |
6.3% 8/15/14 | | 2,132 | | 2,240 |
DaVita, Inc.: | | | | |
5.75% 8/15/22 | | 1,215 | | 1,203 |
6.625% 11/1/20 | | 1,555 | | 1,648 |
Express Scripts Holding Co.: | | | | |
3.9% 2/15/22 | | 1,585 | | 1,587 |
4.75% 11/15/21 | | 14,348 | | 15,197 |
Express Scripts, Inc. 3.125% 5/15/16 | | 5,121 | | 5,328 |
HCA Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
6.25% 2/15/21 | | 1,415 | | 1,419 |
7.75% 5/15/21 | | 13,495 | | 14,372 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
HEALTH CARE - continued |
Health Care Providers & Services - continued |
HCA, Inc.: | | | | |
4.75% 5/1/23 | | $ 2,715 | | $ 2,535 |
5.875% 3/15/22 | | 5,645 | | 5,828 |
5.875% 5/1/23 | | 2,555 | | 2,491 |
6.5% 2/15/20 | | 10,450 | | 11,221 |
7.5% 2/15/22 | | 3,250 | | 3,534 |
HealthSouth Corp. 5.75% 11/1/24 | | 780 | | 749 |
Legend Acquisition Sub, Inc. 10.75% 8/15/20 (g) | | 2,940 | | 2,381 |
Medco Health Solutions, Inc.: | | | | |
2.75% 9/15/15 | | 3,610 | | 3,719 |
4.125% 9/15/20 | | 3,728 | | 3,830 |
Multiplan, Inc. 9.875% 9/1/18 (g) | | 3,385 | | 3,749 |
Rural/Metro Corp. 10.125% 7/15/19 (d)(g) | | 995 | | 269 |
Sabra Health Care LP/Sabra Capital Corp. 8.125% 11/1/18 | | 1,007 | | 1,085 |
Tenet Healthcare Corp.: | | | | |
4.375% 10/1/21 (g) | | 5,470 | | 4,964 |
4.5% 4/1/21 (g) | | 1,030 | | 948 |
9.875% 7/1/14 | | 4,690 | | 4,995 |
UnitedHealth Group, Inc.: | | | | |
1.625% 3/15/19 | | 1,694 | | 1,618 |
2.75% 2/15/23 | | 957 | | 879 |
2.875% 3/15/23 | | 7,311 | | 6,770 |
3.95% 10/15/42 | | 1,306 | | 1,126 |
WellPoint, Inc.: | | | | |
1.25% 9/10/15 | | 89 | | 89 |
1.875% 1/15/18 | | 161 | | 157 |
3.3% 1/15/23 | | 2,278 | | 2,138 |
| | 113,211 |
Health Care Technology - 0.0% |
IMS Health, Inc. 6% 11/1/20 (g) | | 715 | | 734 |
Pharmaceuticals - 0.1% |
AbbVie, Inc. 1.75% 11/6/17 | | 5,738 | | 5,650 |
VPI Escrow Corp. 6.375% 10/15/20 (g) | | 1,445 | | 1,468 |
VPII Escrow Corp.: | | | | |
6.75% 8/15/18 (g) | | 3,620 | | 3,833 |
7.5% 7/15/21 (g) | | 2,320 | | 2,482 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
HEALTH CARE - continued |
Pharmaceuticals - continued |
Watson Pharmaceuticals, Inc.: | | | | |
1.875% 10/1/17 | | $ 1,940 | | $ 1,908 |
5% 8/15/14 | | 2,209 | | 2,290 |
Zoetis, Inc.: | | | | |
1.15% 2/1/16 (g) | | 5,035 | | 5,036 |
1.875% 2/1/18 (g) | | 898 | | 880 |
3.25% 2/1/23 (g) | | 2,190 | | 2,058 |
| | 25,605 |
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | 161,613 |
INDUSTRIALS - 0.8% |
Aerospace & Defense - 0.1% |
BAE Systems Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
4.95% 6/1/14 (g) | | 1,753 | | 1,802 |
6.375% 6/1/19 (g) | | 3,650 | | 4,159 |
DigitalGlobe, Inc. 5.25% 2/1/21 (g) | | 425 | | 398 |
GenCorp, Inc. 7.125% 3/15/21 (g) | | 320 | | 335 |
TransDigm, Inc. 7.5% 7/15/21 (g) | | 3,440 | | 3,638 |
| | 10,332 |
Air Freight & Logistics - 0.0% |
United Parcel Service, Inc. 2.45% 10/1/22 | | 1,559 | | 1,441 |
Airlines - 0.1% |
American Airlines pass-thru trust Series 2013-2 Class A, 4.95% 7/15/24 (g) | | 11,000 | | 11,055 |
American Airlines, Inc. pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
Series 2013-1A Class A, 4% 1/15/27 (g) | | 920 | | 849 |
Series 2013-1B Class B, 5.625% 1/15/21 (g) | | 395 | | 382 |
Continental Airlines, Inc.: | | | | |
pass-thru trust certificates: | | | | |
8.388% 5/1/22 | | 45 | | 47 |
9.798% 4/1/21 | | 2,727 | | 2,986 |
6.125% 4/29/18 (g) | | 415 | | 421 |
6.648% 3/15/19 | | 2,386 | | 2,509 |
6.9% 7/2/19 | | 824 | | 859 |
7.339% 4/19/14 | | 445 | | 449 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Airlines - continued |
U.S. Airways pass-thru trust certificates: | | | | |
6.85% 1/30/18 | | $ 1,551 | | $ 1,620 |
8.36% 1/20/19 | | 1,263 | | 1,351 |
| | 22,528 |
Building Products - 0.0% |
Associated Materials LLC 9.125% 11/1/17 | | 465 | | 499 |
BC Mountain LLC/BC Mountain Finance, Inc. 7% 2/1/21 (g) | | 330 | | 338 |
Nortek, Inc. 8.5% 4/15/21 | | 925 | | 1,001 |
Ply Gem Industries, Inc. 8.25% 2/15/18 | | 2,953 | | 3,160 |
USG Corp.: | | | | |
6.3% 11/15/16 | | 170 | | 178 |
7.875% 3/30/20 (g) | | 905 | | 989 |
9.75% 1/15/18 | | 975 | | 1,124 |
| | 7,289 |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.2% |
APX Group, Inc.: | | | | |
6.375% 12/1/19 (g) | | 3,360 | | 3,167 |
8.75% 12/1/20 (g) | | 4,345 | | 4,280 |
ARAMARK Corp. 5.75% 3/15/20 (g) | | 1,345 | | 1,372 |
Clean Harbors, Inc. 5.125% 6/1/21 | | 740 | | 720 |
Covanta Holding Corp.: | | | | |
6.375% 10/1/22 | | 875 | | 888 |
7.25% 12/1/20 | | 775 | | 828 |
International Lease Finance Corp.: | | | | |
5.625% 9/20/13 | | 5,290 | | 5,290 |
5.65% 6/1/14 | | 4,439 | | 4,550 |
6.625% 11/15/13 | | 8,252 | | 8,326 |
LBC Tank Terminals Holding Netherlands BV 6.875% 5/15/23 (g) | | 215 | | 216 |
Tervita Corp.: | | | | |
8% 11/15/18 (g) | | 915 | | 913 |
9.75% 11/1/19 (g) | | 450 | | 396 |
WP Rocket Merger Sub, Inc. 10.125% 7/15/19 (d)(g) | | 1,200 | | 360 |
| | 31,306 |
Electrical Equipment - 0.0% |
Anixter International, Inc. 5.625% 5/1/19 | | 705 | | 728 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Industrial Conglomerates - 0.1% |
General Electric Co. 4.125% 10/9/42 | | $ 17,973 | | $ 16,321 |
Machinery - 0.0% |
Briggs & Stratton Corp. 6.875% 12/15/20 | | 920 | | 994 |
Schaeffler Finance BV 4.75% 5/15/21 (g) | | 1,185 | | 1,114 |
TRAC Intermodal LLC/TRAC Intermodal Corp. 11% 8/15/19 | | 910 | | 1,019 |
| | 3,127 |
Marine - 0.0% |
Navios Maritime Acquisition Corp./Navios Acquisition Finance US, Inc. 8.625% 11/1/17 | | 1,035 | | 1,076 |
Navios Maritime Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
8.125% 2/15/19 | | 1,725 | | 1,665 |
8.875% 11/1/17 | | 1,420 | | 1,479 |
Navios South American Logisitcs, Inc./Navios Logistics Finance U.S., Inc. 9.25% 4/15/19 | | 505 | | 545 |
Ultrapetrol (Bahamas) Ltd. 8.875% 6/15/21 (g) | | 785 | | 838 |
| | 5,603 |
Professional Services - 0.0% |
FTI Consulting, Inc. 6% 11/15/22 | | 1,515 | | 1,496 |
Road & Rail - 0.1% |
Burlington Northern Santa Fe LLC: | | | | |
4.4% 3/15/42 | | 9,840 | | 8,923 |
4.45% 3/15/43 | | 5,500 | | 4,967 |
5.05% 3/1/41 | | 7,178 | | 7,127 |
Hertz Corp.: | | | | |
5.875% 10/15/20 | | 1,120 | | 1,149 |
6.25% 10/15/22 | | 800 | | 814 |
NESCO LLC/NESCO Holdings Corp. 11.75% 4/15/17 (g) | | 965 | | 1,076 |
Western Express, Inc. 12.5% 4/15/15 (g) | | 3,725 | | 2,365 |
| | 26,421 |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.2% |
Ahern Rentals, Inc. 9.5% 6/15/18 (g) | | 285 | | 292 |
Interline Brands, Inc. 10% 11/15/18 pay-in-kind | | 330 | | 356 |
International Lease Finance Corp.: | | | | |
3.875% 4/15/18 | | 4,400 | | 4,202 |
4.625% 4/15/21 | | 4,280 | | 3,895 |
5.75% 5/15/16 | | 1,840 | | 1,940 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Trading Companies & Distributors - continued |
International Lease Finance Corp.: - continued | | | | |
6.25% 5/15/19 | | $ 3,035 | | $ 3,126 |
7.125% 9/1/18 (g) | | 5,560 | | 6,172 |
8.25% 12/15/20 | | 4,165 | | 4,634 |
8.625% 9/15/15 | | 4,640 | | 5,092 |
8.625% 1/15/22 | | 3,910 | | 4,409 |
NES Rentals Holdings, Inc. 7.875% 5/1/18 (g) | | 365 | | 374 |
VWR Funding, Inc. 7.25% 9/15/17 | | 2,695 | | 2,803 |
| | 37,295 |
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | 163,887 |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 0.4% |
Communications Equipment - 0.1% |
Avaya, Inc.: | | | | |
7% 4/1/19 (g) | | 2,295 | | 2,100 |
9% 4/1/19 (g) | | 2,135 | | 2,050 |
10.5% 3/1/21 (g) | | 1,708 | | 1,319 |
Commscope Holding Co., Inc. 6.625% 6/1/20 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 555 | | 549 |
Hughes Satellite Systems Corp. 6.5% 6/15/19 | | 7,595 | | 7,994 |
Lucent Technologies, Inc.: | | | | |
6.45% 3/15/29 | | 10,451 | | 8,047 |
6.5% 1/15/28 | | 1,110 | | 844 |
| | 22,903 |
Electronic Equipment & Components - 0.0% |
Infor US, Inc. 9.375% 4/1/19 | | 755 | | 840 |
Tyco Electronics Group SA: | | | | |
1.6% 2/3/15 | | 156 | | 157 |
5.95% 1/15/14 | | 4,453 | | 4,539 |
6.55% 10/1/17 | | 815 | | 932 |
| | 6,468 |
Internet Software & Services - 0.0% |
CyrusOne LP/CyrusOne Finance Corp. 6.375% 11/15/22 | | 885 | | 889 |
IAC/InterActiveCorp 4.75% 12/15/22 | | 1,475 | | 1,361 |
VeriSign, Inc. 4.625% 5/1/23 (g) | | 3,395 | | 3,174 |
| | 5,424 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued |
IT Services - 0.2% |
Audatex North America, Inc. 6% 6/15/21 (g) | | $ 4,565 | | $ 4,622 |
Ceridian Corp.: | | | | |
8.875% 7/15/19 (g) | | 1,110 | | 1,249 |
11% 3/15/21 (g) | | 570 | | 658 |
Compiler Finance Sub, Inc. 7% 5/1/21 (g) | | 180 | | 173 |
First Data Corp.: | | | | |
6.75% 11/1/20 (g) | | 6,215 | | 6,355 |
11.25% 1/15/21 (g) | | 2,955 | | 3,029 |
11.75% 8/15/21 (g) | | 1,490 | | 1,393 |
SunGard Data Systems, Inc.: | | | | |
4.875% 1/15/14 | | 12,355 | | 12,448 |
6.625% 11/1/19 | | 2,205 | | 2,238 |
The Western Union Co. 2.375% 12/10/15 | | 128 | | 130 |
WideOpenWest Finance LLC/WideOpenWest Capital Corp.: | | | | |
10.25% 7/15/19 | | 3,270 | | 3,507 |
13.375% 10/15/19 | | 1,780 | | 2,020 |
| | 37,822 |
Office Electronics - 0.1% |
Xerox Corp.: | | | | |
1.0832% 5/16/14 (k) | | 8,470 | | 8,470 |
2.95% 3/15/17 | | 947 | | 966 |
4.25% 2/15/15 | | 1,130 | | 1,179 |
| | 10,615 |
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 0.0% |
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 10.125% 3/15/18 (g) | | 1,061 | | 1,146 |
NXP BV/NXP Funding LLC: | | | | |
5.75% 2/15/21 (g) | | 1,595 | | 1,595 |
9.75% 8/1/18 (g) | | 380 | | 420 |
Spansion LLC: | | | | |
7.875% 11/15/17 | | 1,150 | | 1,187 |
11.25% 1/15/16 (d)(g) | | 905 | | 0 |
Viasystems, Inc. 7.875% 5/1/19 (g) | | 2,570 | | 2,737 |
| | 7,085 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued |
Software - 0.0% |
BMC Software Finance, Inc. 8.125% 7/15/21 (g) | | $ 2,555 | | $ 2,587 |
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | 92,904 |
MATERIALS - 0.4% |
Chemicals - 0.1% |
Eagle Spinco, Inc. 4.625% 2/15/21 (g) | | 640 | | 602 |
Ecolab, Inc. 1.45% 12/8/17 | | 3,078 | | 2,990 |
Hexion U.S. Finance Corp. 6.625% 4/15/20 (g) | | 2,810 | | 2,775 |
Kinove German Bondco GmbH 9.625% 6/15/18 (g) | | 965 | | 1,066 |
LSB Industries, Inc. 7.75% 8/1/19 (g) | | 425 | | 440 |
MPM Escrow LLC/MPM Finance Escrow Corp. 8.875% 10/15/20 | | 3,135 | | 3,253 |
Orion Engineered Carbons Finance & Co. SCA 9.25% 8/1/19 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 1,000 | | 1,020 |
PolyOne Corp. 5.25% 3/15/23 (g) | | 1,360 | | 1,302 |
Trinseo Materials Operating SCA/Trinseo Materials Finance, Inc. 8.75% 2/1/19 (g) | | 4,715 | | 4,609 |
U.S. Coatings Acquisition, Inc./Flash Dutch 2 BV 7.375% 5/1/21 (g) | | 585 | | 598 |
| | 18,655 |
Construction Materials - 0.0% |
CEMEX Finance LLC 9.375% 10/12/22 (g) | | 1,420 | | 1,523 |
CEMEX SA de CV 5.2756% 9/30/15 (g)(k) | | 2,815 | | 2,899 |
CRH America, Inc. 6% 9/30/16 | | 2,470 | | 2,775 |
| | 7,197 |
Containers & Packaging - 0.1% |
ARD Finance SA 11.125% 6/1/18 pay-in-kind (g) | | 2,044 | | 2,130 |
Ardagh Packaging Finance PLC: | | | | |
7.375% 10/15/17 (g) | | 200 | | 214 |
9.125% 10/15/20 (g) | | 685 | | 731 |
Ardagh Packaging Finance PLC/Ardagh MP Holdings U.S.A., Inc.: | | | | |
4.875% 11/15/22 (g) | | 275 | | 265 |
7% 11/15/20 (g) | | 715 | | 695 |
7.375% 10/15/17 (g) | | 300 | | 320 |
9.125% 10/15/20 (g) | | 690 | | 733 |
BOE Intermediate Holding Corp. 9.75% 11/1/17 pay-in-kind (g) | | 360 | | 357 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
MATERIALS - continued |
Containers & Packaging - continued |
Consolidated Container Co. LLC/Consolidated Container Capital, Inc. 10.125% 7/15/20 (g) | | $ 555 | | $ 599 |
Crown Americas LLC/Crown Americas Capital Corp. III 6.25% 2/1/21 | | 2,040 | | 2,142 |
Owens-Illinois, Inc. 7.8% 5/15/18 | | 350 | | 399 |
Pretium Packaging LLC/Pretium Finance, Inc. 11.5% 4/1/16 | | 1,775 | | 1,899 |
Sealed Air Corp. 6.5% 12/1/20 (g) | | 1,065 | | 1,129 |
Tekni-Plex, Inc. 9.75% 6/1/19 (g) | | 840 | | 941 |
| | 12,554 |
Metals & Mining - 0.2% |
Anglo American Capital PLC 9.375% 4/8/14 (g) | | 2,700 | | 2,827 |
Bluescope Steel Ltd./Bluescope Steel Finance 7.125% 5/1/18 (g) | | 255 | | 258 |
Calcipar SA 6.875% 5/1/18 (g) | | 720 | | 743 |
Corporacion Nacional del Cobre de Chile (Codelco): | | | | |
3.875% 11/3/21 (g) | | 7,189 | | 6,885 |
4.5% 8/13/23 (g) | | 7,000 | | 6,836 |
Edgen Murray Corp. 8.75% 11/1/20 (g) | | 1,135 | | 1,135 |
FMG Resources (August 2006) Pty Ltd.: | | | | |
6% 4/1/17 (g) | | 1,770 | | 1,801 |
6.375% 2/1/16 (g) | | 1,180 | | 1,210 |
7% 11/1/15 (g) | | 1,865 | | 1,921 |
New Gold, Inc.: | | | | |
6.25% 11/15/22 (g) | | 615 | | 589 |
7% 4/15/20 (g) | | 345 | | 351 |
Prince Mineral Holding Corp. 11.5% 12/15/19 (g) | | 405 | | 433 |
Rain CII Carbon LLC/CII Carbon Corp.: | | | | |
8% 12/1/18 (g) | | 1,335 | | 1,348 |
8.25% 1/15/21 (g) | | 750 | | 750 |
Ryerson, Inc./Joseph T Ryerson & Son, Inc.: | | | | |
9% 10/15/17 (g) | | 3,375 | | 3,502 |
11.25% 10/15/18 (g) | | 1,130 | | 1,155 |
Severstal Columbus LLC 10.25% 2/15/18 | | 3,605 | | 3,821 |
Steel Dynamics, Inc.: | | | | |
6.125% 8/15/19 | | 1,115 | | 1,171 |
6.375% 8/15/22 | | 990 | | 1,032 |
| | 37,768 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
MATERIALS - continued |
Paper & Forest Products - 0.0% |
Clearwater Paper Corp. 4.5% 2/1/23 | | $ 1,250 | | $ 1,131 |
Verso Paper Holdings LLC/Verso Paper, Inc.: | | | | |
11.75% 1/15/19 | | 3,025 | | 3,101 |
11.75% 1/15/19 | | 2,615 | | 1,569 |
| | 5,801 |
TOTAL MATERIALS | | 81,975 |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 0.8% |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.4% |
Altice Financing SA 7.875% 12/15/19 (g) | | 550 | | 581 |
Altice Finco SA 9.875% 12/15/20 (g) | | 585 | | 629 |
AT&T, Inc.: | | | | |
2.4% 8/15/16 | | 293 | | 301 |
2.5% 8/15/15 | | 1,139 | | 1,173 |
4.35% 6/15/45 | | 1,320 | | 1,121 |
5.55% 8/15/41 | | 16,289 | | 16,596 |
6.3% 1/15/38 | | 5,000 | | 5,549 |
BellSouth Capital Funding Corp. 7.875% 2/15/30 | | 68 | | 83 |
Broadview Networks Holdings, Inc. 10.5% 11/15/17 | | 1,908 | | 1,869 |
CenturyLink, Inc.: | | | | |
5.15% 6/15/17 | | 440 | | 459 |
6% 4/1/17 | | 3,101 | | 3,318 |
6.15% 9/15/19 | | 3,331 | | 3,464 |
Eileme 1 AB 14.25% 8/15/20 pay-in-kind (g) | | 2,451 | | 2,608 |
Eileme 2 AB 11.625% 1/31/20 (g) | | 1,725 | | 2,001 |
Embarq Corp.: | | | | |
7.082% 6/1/16 | | 3,728 | | 4,190 |
7.995% 6/1/36 | | 17,061 | | 17,450 |
Frontier Communications Corp. 7.125% 1/15/23 | | 2,055 | | 1,998 |
Intelsat Luxembourg SA: | | | | |
7.75% 6/1/21 (g) | | 3,350 | | 3,451 |
8.125% 6/1/23 (g) | | 1,065 | | 1,113 |
Level 3 Communications, Inc. 8.875% 6/1/19 | | 435 | | 464 |
Level 3 Financing, Inc. 7% 6/1/20 | | 1,460 | | 1,471 |
Lynx I Corp. 5.375% 4/15/21 (g) | | 770 | | 751 |
Lynx II Corp. 6.375% 4/15/23 (g) | | 435 | | 432 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - continued |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - continued |
Sprint Capital Corp.: | | | | |
6.875% 11/15/28 | | $ 1,415 | | $ 1,277 |
6.9% 5/1/19 | | 7,925 | | 8,163 |
8.75% 3/15/32 | | 3,565 | | 3,653 |
Verizon Communications, Inc.: | | | | |
6.1% 4/15/18 | | 1,909 | | 2,201 |
6.25% 4/1/37 | | 3,729 | | 4,097 |
Wind Acquisition Finance SA 7.25% 2/15/18 (g) | | 1,860 | | 1,897 |
| | 92,360 |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - 0.4% |
America Movil S.A.B. de CV: | | | | |
2.375% 9/8/16 | | 307 | | 311 |
3.625% 3/30/15 | | 2,672 | | 2,757 |
Clearwire Communications LLC/Clearwire Finance, Inc.: | | | | |
12% 12/1/15 (g) | | 1,082 | | 1,142 |
14.75% 12/1/16 (g) | | 3,050 | | 4,163 |
Digicel Group Ltd.: | | | | |
6% 4/15/21 (g) | | 2,805 | | 2,707 |
7% 2/15/20 (g) | | 275 | | 275 |
8.25% 9/30/20 (g) | | 4,060 | | 4,304 |
Intelsat Jackson Holdings SA: | | | | |
5.5% 8/1/23 (g) | | 3,415 | | 3,167 |
6.625% 12/15/22 (g) | | 2,670 | | 2,663 |
6.625% 12/15/22 (g) | | 2,375 | | 2,369 |
7.25% 4/1/19 | | 7,260 | | 7,786 |
7.5% 4/1/21 | | 5,500 | | 5,940 |
MetroPCS Wireless, Inc.: | | | | |
6.25% 4/1/21 (g) | | 2,010 | | 2,005 |
6.625% 4/1/23 (g) | | 3,005 | | 2,982 |
NII Capital Corp. 7.625% 4/1/21 | | 2,609 | | 1,996 |
NII International Telecom S.C.A. 11.375% 8/15/19 (g) | | 1,165 | | 1,252 |
SBA Communications Corp. 5.625% 10/1/19 | | 1,870 | | 1,837 |
SoftBank Corp. 4.5% 4/15/20 (g) | | 445 | | 421 |
Sprint Nextel Corp.: | | | | |
6% 11/15/22 | | 15,345 | | 14,348 |
9% 11/15/18 (g) | | 6,595 | | 7,700 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - continued |
Wireless Telecommunication Services - continued |
T-Mobile U.S.A., Inc. 5.25% 9/1/18 (g) | | $ 940 | | $ 949 |
Vodafone Group PLC 5% 12/16/13 | | 2,129 | | 2,156 |
| | 73,230 |
TOTAL TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES | | 165,590 |
UTILITIES - 1.2% |
Electric Utilities - 0.6% |
AmerenUE 6.4% 6/15/17 | | 4,026 | | 4,669 |
American Electric Power Co., Inc.: | | | | |
1.65% 12/15/17 | | 2,349 | | 2,282 |
2.95% 12/15/22 | | 2,224 | | 2,030 |
Duke Capital LLC 5.668% 8/15/14 | | 2,770 | | 2,885 |
Duquesne Light Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
5.9% 12/1/21 (g) | | 3,934 | | 4,373 |
6.4% 9/15/20 (g) | | 8,922 | | 10,206 |
Edison International 3.75% 9/15/17 | | 3,355 | | 3,520 |
Edison Mission Energy 7% 5/15/17 (d) | | 510 | | 325 |
Entergy Louisiana LLC 1.875% 12/15/14 | | 168 | | 170 |
FirstEnergy Corp.: | | | | |
2.75% 3/15/18 | | 4,723 | | 4,527 |
4.25% 3/15/23 | | 8,330 | | 7,549 |
7.375% 11/15/31 | | 8,041 | | 8,110 |
FirstEnergy Solutions Corp. 6.05% 8/15/21 | | 9,830 | | 10,487 |
Indiana Michigan Power Co. 3.2% 3/15/23 | | 5,294 | | 4,970 |
IPALCO Enterprises, Inc. 7.25% 4/1/16 (g) | | 3,670 | | 4,009 |
LG&E and KU Energy LLC: | | | | |
2.125% 11/15/15 | | 3,785 | | 3,866 |
3.75% 11/15/20 | | 745 | | 749 |
Mirant Americas Generation LLC: | | | | |
8.5% 10/1/21 | | 6,695 | | 7,130 |
9.125% 5/1/31 | | 1,745 | | 1,832 |
Nevada Power Co.: | | | | |
6.5% 5/15/18 | | 5,100 | | 6,046 |
6.5% 8/1/18 | | 1,191 | | 1,418 |
NextEra Energy Capital Holdings, Inc. 1.611% 6/1/14 | | 513 | | 517 |
Northeast Utilities: | | | | |
1.45% 5/1/18 | | 1,511 | | 1,454 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
UTILITIES - continued |
Electric Utilities - continued |
Northeast Utilities: - continued | | | | |
2.8% 5/1/23 | | $ 6,865 | | $ 6,299 |
Pennsylvania Electric Co. 6.05% 9/1/17 | | 450 | | 505 |
Pepco Holdings, Inc. 2.7% 10/1/15 | | 3,805 | | 3,903 |
PPL Capital Funding, Inc. 3.4% 6/1/23 | | 3,274 | | 3,062 |
Progress Energy, Inc.: | | | | |
4.4% 1/15/21 | | 336 | | 354 |
6% 12/1/39 | | 3,060 | | 3,414 |
Sierra Pacific Power Co. 5.45% 9/1/13 | | 1,183 | | 1,183 |
Southern Co. 2.375% 9/15/15 | | 326 | | 335 |
West Penn Power Co. 5.95% 12/15/17 (g) | | 10,500 | | 11,957 |
| | 124,136 |
Gas Utilities - 0.0% |
AmeriGas Finance LLC/AmeriGas Finance Corp.: | | | | |
6.75% 5/20/20 | | 830 | | 880 |
7% 5/20/22 | | 1,785 | | 1,883 |
Southern Natural Gas Co. 5.9% 4/1/17 (g) | | 260 | | 293 |
Southern Natural Gas Co./Southern Natural Issuing Corp. 4.4% 6/15/21 | | 1,753 | | 1,818 |
Star Gas Partners LP/Star Gas Finance Co. 8.875% 12/1/17 | | 950 | | 983 |
| | 5,857 |
Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - 0.3% |
Atlantic Power Corp. 9% 11/15/18 | | 1,655 | | 1,651 |
Calpine Corp. 7.875% 1/15/23 (g) | | 3,183 | | 3,414 |
Energy Future Intermediate Holding Co. LLC/Energy Future Intermediate Holding Finance, Inc.: | | | | |
10% 12/1/20 | | 3,174 | | 3,345 |
10% 12/1/20 (g) | | 8,915 | | 9,372 |
11% 10/1/21 | | 6,978 | | 7,484 |
12.25% 12/1/18 pay-in-kind (g)(k) | | 2,305 | | 1,739 |
12.25% 3/1/22 (g) | | 19,685 | | 21,900 |
GenOn Energy, Inc.: | | | | |
9.5% 10/15/18 | | 520 | | 588 |
9.875% 10/15/20 | | 1,743 | | 1,939 |
NRG Energy, Inc. 6.625% 3/15/23 | | 3,130 | | 3,107 |
PSEG Power LLC 2.75% 9/15/16 | | 1,379 | | 1,428 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
UTILITIES - continued |
Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - continued |
The AES Corp.: | | | | |
4.875% 5/15/23 | | $ 445 | | $ 408 |
7.375% 7/1/21 | | 1,580 | | 1,722 |
7.75% 10/15/15 | | 2,618 | | 2,913 |
TXU Corp.: | | | | |
5.55% 11/15/14 | | 61 | | 36 |
6.5% 11/15/24 | | 3,550 | | 1,793 |
6.55% 11/15/34 | | 7,200 | | 3,564 |
| | 66,403 |
Multi-Utilities - 0.3% |
Ameren Illinois Co. 6.125% 11/15/17 | | 243 | | 279 |
Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, Inc. 5.7% 6/15/40 | | 1,866 | | 2,143 |
Dominion Resources, Inc.: | | | | |
1.95% 8/15/16 | | 203 | | 206 |
2.5756% 9/30/66 (k) | | 16,524 | | 15,391 |
7.5% 6/30/66 (k) | | 2,474 | | 2,672 |
MidAmerican Energy Holdings, Co. 6.5% 9/15/37 | | 1,418 | | 1,676 |
National Grid PLC 6.3% 8/1/16 | | 845 | | 956 |
NiSource Finance Corp.: | | | | |
4.45% 12/1/21 | | 2,441 | | 2,497 |
5.25% 9/15/17 | | 497 | | 551 |
5.25% 2/15/43 | | 5,559 | | 5,345 |
5.4% 7/15/14 | | 1,816 | | 1,886 |
5.45% 9/15/20 | | 598 | | 657 |
5.8% 2/1/42 | | 3,125 | | 3,231 |
5.95% 6/15/41 | | 5,667 | | 6,009 |
6.4% 3/15/18 | | 1,788 | | 2,062 |
6.8% 1/15/19 | | 2,710 | | 3,171 |
Puget Energy, Inc. 5.625% 7/15/22 | | 3,935 | | 4,196 |
Sempra Energy: | | | | |
2% 3/15/14 | | 1,950 | | 1,964 |
2.3% 4/1/17 | | 5,903 | | 5,968 |
Corporate Bonds - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Nonconvertible Bonds - continued |
UTILITIES - continued |
Multi-Utilities - continued |
Sempra Energy: - continued | | | | |
2.875% 10/1/22 | | $ 2,361 | | $ 2,176 |
Wisconsin Energy Corp. 6.25% 5/15/67 (k) | | 3,876 | | 4,021 |
| | 67,057 |
TOTAL UTILITIES | | 263,453 |
TOTAL NONCONVERTIBLE BONDS | | 2,714,337 |
TOTAL CORPORATE BONDS (Cost $2,698,662) | 2,736,189
|
U.S. Treasury Obligations - 5.5% |
|
U.S. Treasury Bonds 3.625% 8/15/43 | | 110,690 | | 109,030 |
U.S. Treasury Notes: | | | | |
0.625% 8/15/16 | | 71,764 | | 71,450 |
0.625% 5/31/17 (j) | | 341,436 | | 334,687 |
0.875% 2/28/17 | | 466,852 | | 464,117 |
0.875% 4/30/17 | | 162,725 | | 161,288 |
4.625% 2/15/17 | | 17,658 | | 19,813 |
TOTAL U.S. TREASURY OBLIGATIONS (Cost $1,164,969) | 1,160,385
|
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities - 3.8% |
|
Fannie Mae - 3.4% |
2.303% 6/1/36 (k) | | 141 | | 150 |
2.5% 7/1/28 to 8/1/43 | | 26,700 | | 25,270 |
2.753% 7/1/37 (k) | | 266 | | 280 |
3% 5/1/27 to 8/1/43 | | 42,553 | | 40,732 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 7,100 | | 6,788 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 7,100 | | 6,788 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 4,700 | | 4,493 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 4,700 | | 4,493 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 18,900 | | 18,069 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 9,400 | | 8,987 |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | 16,000 | | 15,296 |
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Fannie Mae - continued |
3% 9/1/43 (i) | | $ 2,900 | | $ 2,772 |
3.5% 3/1/22 to 8/1/43 | | 203,741 | | 201,484 |
4% 2/1/35 to 1/1/42 | | 9,357 | | 9,656 |
4% 9/1/43 (i) | | 24,300 | | 25,057 |
4% 9/1/43 (i) | | 53,500 | | 55,168 |
4% 9/1/43 (i) | | 2,700 | | 2,784 |
4% 9/1/43 (i) | | 2,900 | | 2,990 |
4% 9/1/43 (i) | | 10,700 | | 11,034 |
4% 10/1/43 (i) | | 1,400 | | 1,440 |
4.5% 11/1/19 to 8/1/41 | | 10,612 | | 11,213 |
4.5% 9/1/43 (i) | | 43,900 | | 46,315 |
4.5% 9/1/43 (i) | | 23,700 | | 25,004 |
4.5% 9/1/43 (i) | | 23,700 | | 25,004 |
4.5% 10/1/43 (i) | | 67,600 | | 71,138 |
5% 9/1/43 (i) | | 30,600 | | 32,891 |
5% 10/1/43 (i) | | 30,600 | | 32,817 |
5.5% 9/1/43 (i) | | 24,900 | | 27,032 |
5.5% 9/1/43 (i) | | 4,850 | | 5,265 |
6% 7/1/35 to 8/1/37 | | 4,740 | | 5,240 |
6.5% 7/1/32 to 8/1/36 | | 734 | | 821 |
TOTAL FANNIE MAE | | 726,471 |
Freddie Mac - 0.1% |
2.5% 5/1/28 | | 3,000 | | 2,972 |
3% 1/1/43 | | 6,066 | | 5,788 |
3.126% 10/1/35 (k) | | 185 | | 197 |
3.5% 2/1/32 to 6/1/43 | | 9,297 | | 9,190 |
4% 6/1/24 to 9/1/25 | | 3,563 | | 3,748 |
5% 3/1/19 | | 1,857 | | 1,971 |
5.5% 1/1/38 | | 1,008 | | 1,088 |
6% 7/1/37 to 8/1/37 | | 500 | | 545 |
6.5% 3/1/36 | | 2,597 | | 2,916 |
TOTAL FREDDIE MAC | | 28,415 |
Ginnie Mae - 0.3% |
4% 1/15/25 to 5/15/43 | | 34,478 | | 35,964 |
4% 9/1/43 (i) | | 6,200 | | 6,450 |
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Ginnie Mae - continued |
5.5% 6/15/35 to 9/15/39 | | $ 3,981 | | $ 4,371 |
6% 2/15/34 to 9/20/38 | | 7,098 | | 7,909 |
TOTAL GINNIE MAE | | 54,694 |
TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY - MORTGAGE SECURITIES (Cost $818,035) | 809,580
|
Asset-Backed Securities - 0.2% |
|
Accredited Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2005-1 Class M1, 0.6541% 4/25/35 (k) | | 504 | | 454 |
ACE Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 2004-HE1 Class M2, 1.8341% 3/25/34 (k) | | 257 | | 240 |
Series 2005-HE2 Class M2, 0.8591% 4/25/35 (k) | | 12 | | 12 |
AmeriCredit Auto Receivables Trust Series 2013-4: | | | | |
Class C, 2.72% 9/9/19 | | 1,240 | | 1,240 |
Class D, 3.31% 10/8/19 | | 770 | | 770 |
Ameriquest Mortgage Securities, Inc. pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
Series 2003-10 Class M1, 1.2341% 12/25/33 (k) | | 50 | | 45 |
Series 2004-R2 Class M3, 1.0091% 4/25/34 (k) | | 74 | | 44 |
Series 2005-R2 Class M1, 0.6341% 4/25/35 (k) | | 1,150 | | 1,131 |
Argent Securities, Inc. pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
Series 2003-W7 Class A2, 0.9641% 3/25/34 (k) | | 36 | | 34 |
Series 2004-W11 Class M2, 1.2341% 11/25/34 (k) | | 426 | | 387 |
Series 2004-W7 Class M1, 1.0091% 5/25/34 (k) | | 1,108 | | 1,030 |
Series 2006-W4 Class A2C, 0.3441% 5/25/36 (k) | | 944 | | 339 |
Asset Backed Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 2004-HE2 Class M1, 1.0091% 4/25/34 (k) | | 1,607 | | 1,517 |
Series 2006-HE2 Class M1, 0.5541% 3/25/36 (k) | | 24 | | 0 * |
Capital Trust Ltd. Series 2004-1: | | | | |
Class B, 0.9341% 7/20/39 (g)(k) | | 165 | | 139 |
Class C, 1.2841% 7/20/39 (g)(k) | | 258 | | 11 |
Carrington Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2007-RFC1 Class A3, 0.3241% 12/25/36 (k) | | 1,368 | | 788 |
CFC LLC Series 2013-1A Class A, 1.65% 7/17/17 (g) | | 1,399 | | 1,399 |
Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.: | | | | |
Series 2004-3 Class M4, 1.6391% 4/25/34 (k) | | 80 | | 60 |
Series 2004-4 Class M2, 0.9791% 6/25/34 (k) | | 418 | | 385 |
Fannie Mae Series 2004-T5 Class AB3, 0.9892% 5/28/35 (k) | | 30 | | 27 |
Asset-Backed Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Fieldstone Mortgage Investment Corp. Series 2004-3 Class M5, 2.3591% 8/25/34 (k) | | $ 221 | | $ 168 |
First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2004-FF2 Class M3, 1.0091% 3/25/34 (k) | | 13 | | 10 |
Ford Credit Floorplan Master Owner Trust Series 2013-3 Class A1, 0.79% 6/15/17 | | 11,010 | | 10,989 |
Fremont Home Loan Trust Series 2005-A: | | | | |
Class M3, 0.9191% 1/25/35 (k) | | 720 | | 556 |
Class M4, 1.2041% 1/25/35 (k) | | 276 | | 63 |
GCO Education Loan Funding Master Trust II Series 2007-1A Class C1L, 0.6421% 2/25/47 (g)(k) | | 2,160 | | 1,686 |
GE Business Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 2003-1 Class A, 0.6141% 4/15/31 (g)(k) | | 58 | | 54 |
Series 2006-2A: | | | | |
Class A, 0.3641% 11/15/34 (g)(k) | | 843 | | 762 |
Class B, 0.4641% 11/15/34 (g)(k) | | 305 | | 257 |
Class C, 0.5641% 11/15/34 (g)(k) | | 506 | | 363 |
Class D, 0.9341% 11/15/34 (g)(k) | | 193 | | 120 |
Guggenheim Structured Real Estate Funding Ltd. Series 2006-3 Class C, 0.7341% 9/25/46 (g)(k) | | 938 | | 933 |
Home Equity Asset Trust: | | | | |
Series 2003-2 Class M1, 1.5041% 8/25/33 (k) | | 237 | | 228 |
Series 2003-3 Class M1, 1.4741% 8/25/33 (k) | | 452 | | 413 |
Series 2003-5 Class A2, 0.8841% 12/25/33 (k) | | 25 | | 22 |
HSI Asset Securitization Corp. Trust Series 2007-HE1 Class 2A3, 0.3741% 1/25/37 (k) | | 1,137 | | 534 |
JPMorgan Mortgage Acquisition Trust: | | | | |
Series 2006-NC2 Class M2, 0.4841% 7/25/36 (k) | | 2,497 | | 127 |
Series 2007-CH1 Class AV4, 0.3141% 11/25/36 (k) | | 1,136 | | 1,104 |
Keycorp Student Loan Trust: | | | | |
Series 1999-A Class A2, 0.6061% 12/27/29 (k) | | 289 | | 283 |
Series 2006-A Class 2C, 1.4261% 3/27/42 (k) | | 2,016 | | 305 |
MASTR Asset Backed Securities Trust Series 2007-HE1 Class M1, 0.4841% 5/25/37 (k) | | 413 | | 8 |
Meritage Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2004-1 Class M1, 0.9341% 7/25/34 (k) | | 101 | | 81 |
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Investors Trust: | | | | |
Series 2003-OPT1 Class M1, 1.1591% 7/25/34 (k) | | 351 | | 303 |
Series 2006-FM1 Class A2B, 0.2941% 4/25/37 (k) | | 569 | | 548 |
Series 2006-OPT1 Class A1A, 0.7041% 6/25/35 (k) | | 1,794 | | 1,657 |
Morgan Stanley ABS Capital I Trust: | | | | |
Series 2004-HE6 Class A2, 0.8641% 8/25/34 (k) | | 44 | | 43 |
Series 2005-NC1 Class M1, 0.6241% 1/25/35 (k) | | 303 | | 283 |
Asset-Backed Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Morgan Stanley ABS Capital I Trust: - continued | | | | |
Series 2005-NC2 Class B1, 1.3541% 3/25/35 (k) | | $ 316 | | $ 128 |
New Century Home Equity Loan Trust Series 2005-4 Class M2, 0.6941% 9/25/35 (k) | | 1,083 | | 921 |
Ocala Funding LLC: | | | | |
Series 2005-1A Class A, 1.6841% 3/20/10 (d)(g)(k) | | 429 | | 0 |
Series 2006-1A Class A, 1.5841% 3/20/11 (d)(g)(k) | | 892 | | 0 |
Park Place Securities, Inc.: | | | | |
Series 2004-WCW1: | | | | |
Class M3, 1.4341% 9/25/34 (k) | | 405 | | 340 |
Class M4, 1.6341% 9/25/34 (k) | | 519 | | 156 |
Series 2005-WCH1 Class M4, 1.0141% 1/25/36 (k) | | 1,120 | | 953 |
Salomon Brothers Mortgage Securities VII, Inc. Series 2003-HE1 Class A, 0.9841% 4/25/33 (k) | | 4 | | 4 |
Saxon Asset Securities Trust Series 2004-1 Class M1, 0.9791% 3/25/35 (k) | | 831 | | 758 |
SLM Private Credit Student Loan Trust Series 2004-A Class C, 1.2233% 6/15/33 (k) | | 875 | | 666 |
Structured Asset Investment Loan Trust Series 2004-8 Class M5, 1.9091% 9/25/34 (k) | | 41 | | 28 |
SVO VOI Mortgage Corp. Series 2006-AA Class A, 5.28% 2/20/24 (g) | | 216 | | 216 |
Terwin Mortgage Trust Series 2003-4HE Class A1, 1.0441% 9/25/34 (k) | | 22 | | 21 |
Trapeza CDO XII Ltd./Trapeza CDO XII, Inc. Series 2007-12A Class B, 0.8309% 4/6/42 (g)(k) | | 1,523 | | 46 |
Whinstone Capital Management Ltd. Series 1A Class B3, 2.0659% 10/25/44 (g)(k) | | 1,358 | | 1,202 |
TOTAL ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES (Cost $31,646) | 37,391
|
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations - 0.3% |
|
Private Sponsor - 0.2% |
Bear Stearns ALT-A Trust floater Series 2005-1 Class A1, 0.7441% 1/25/35 (k) | | 1,164 | | 1,119 |
First Horizon Mortgage pass-thru Trust Series 2004-AR5 Class 2A1, 2.6056% 10/25/34 (k) | | 779 | | 772 |
Granite Master Issuer PLC: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-1A: | | | | |
Class A1, 0.2541% 12/20/54 (g)(k) | | 5,991 | | 5,880 |
Class A5, 0.3241% 12/20/54 (g)(k) | | 4,460 | | 4,378 |
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Private Sponsor - continued |
Granite Master Issuer PLC: - continued | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-2 Class A4, 0.2641% 12/20/54 (k) | | $ 1,788 | | $ 1,755 |
Series 2006-3: | | | | |
Class A3, 0.2641% 12/20/54 (k) | | 861 | | 845 |
Class A7, 0.3841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 936 | | 918 |
Class M2, 0.7441% 12/20/54 (k) | | 4,540 | | 4,097 |
Series 2006-4: | | | | |
Class A4, 0.2841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 2,744 | | 2,694 |
Class B1, 0.3641% 12/20/54 (k) | | 3,154 | | 2,913 |
Class M1, 0.5241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 829 | | 748 |
Series 2007-1: | | | | |
Class 1B1, 0.3241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 5,012 | | 4,629 |
Class 1M1, 0.4841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 1,114 | | 1,005 |
Class 2A1, 0.3241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 2,153 | | 2,114 |
Class 2M1, 0.6841% 12/20/54 (k) | | 1,431 | | 1,291 |
Series 2007-2: | | | | |
Class 1B1, 0.3441% 12/17/54 (k) | | 767 | | 708 |
Class 2C1, 1.0441% 12/17/54 (k) | | 1,981 | | 1,737 |
sequential payer Series 2006-3 Class B2, 0.5241% 12/20/54 (k) | | 4,550 | | 4,202 |
Series 2007-2 Class 3A1, 0.3641% 12/17/54 (k) | | 384 | | 377 |
Granite Mortgages PLC floater Series 2003-3 Class 1C, 2.7162% 1/20/44 (k) | | 326 | | 311 |
JPMorgan Mortgage Trust sequential payer Series 2006-A5 Class 3A5, 2.7827% 8/25/36 (k) | | 1,294 | | 1,028 |
MASTR Adjustable Rate Mortgages Trust Series 2007-3 Class 22A2, 0.3941% 5/25/47 (k) | | 454 | | 339 |
Merrill Lynch Alternative Note Asset Trust floater Series 2007-OAR1 Class A1, 0.3541% 2/25/37 (k) | | 838 | | 716 |
Opteum Mortgage Acceptance Corp. floater Series 2005-3 Class APT, 0.4741% 7/25/35 (k) | | 1,209 | | 1,161 |
RESI Finance LP/RESI Finance DE Corp. floater Series 2003-B: | | | | |
Class B5, 2.535% 7/10/35 (g)(k) | | 541 | | 499 |
Class B6, 3.035% 7/10/35 (g)(k) | | 115 | | 108 |
Residential Funding Securities Corp. floater Series 2003-RP2 Class A1, 0.6341% 6/25/33 (g)(k) | | 23 | | 23 |
Sequoia Mortgage Trust floater Series 2004-6 Class A3B, 1.2893% 7/20/34 (k) | | 23 | | 21 |
Structured Asset Securities Corp. Series 2003-15A Class 4A, 2.5477% 4/25/33 (k) | | 155 | | 154 |
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Private Sponsor - continued |
TBW Mortgage-Backed pass-thru certificates floater Series 2006-4 Class A3, 0.39% 9/25/36 (k) | | $ 1,863 | | $ 1,721 |
Thornburg Mortgage Securities Trust floater Series 2003-4 Class A1, 0.8241% 9/25/43 (k) | | 3,136 | | 2,981 |
TOTAL PRIVATE SPONSOR | | 51,244 |
U.S. Government Agency - 0.1% |
Fannie Mae: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2005-38 Class F, 0.4841% 5/25/35 (k) | | 967 | | 969 |
Series 2007-36 Class F, 0.4141% 4/25/37 (k) | | 1,506 | | 1,508 |
Series 2013-62 Class FA, 0.4841% 6/25/43 (k) | | 5,687 | | 5,678 |
floater sequential payer Series 2012-120 Class FE 0.4841% 2/25/39 (k) | | 2,504 | | 2,485 |
TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY | | 10,640 |
TOTAL COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (Cost $52,087) | 61,884
|
Commercial Mortgage Securities - 2.0% |
|
Asset Securitization Corp. Series 1997-D5 Class PS1, 1.3471% 2/14/43 (k)(m) | | 360 | | 11 |
Banc of America Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2004-2 Class A4, 4.153% 11/10/38 | | 198 | | 198 |
Series 2006-2 Class AAB, 5.7116% 5/10/45 (k) | | 512 | | 529 |
Series 2006-3 Class A4, 5.889% 7/10/44 | | 680 | | 745 |
Series 2006-5 Class A2, 5.317% 9/10/47 | | 2,409 | | 2,425 |
Series 2006-6 Class A3, 5.369% 10/10/45 | | 1,824 | | 1,861 |
Series 2007-4 Class A3, 5.8103% 2/10/51 (k) | | 558 | | 575 |
Series 2005-3 Class A3B, 5.09% 7/10/43 (k) | | 2,833 | | 2,950 |
Series 2006-6 Class E, 5.619% 10/10/45 (g) | | 527 | | 58 |
Series 2007-3: | | | | |
Class A3, 5.5595% 6/10/49 (k) | | 1,523 | | 1,527 |
Class A4, 5.5595% 6/10/49 (k) | | 1,901 | | 2,105 |
Banc of America Commercial Mortgage, Inc. sequential payer Series 2001-1 Class A4, 5.451% 1/15/49 | | 1,997 | | 2,165 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Bayview Commercial Asset Trust: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2003-2 Class M1, 1.0341% 12/25/33 (g)(k) | | $ 37 | | $ 27 |
Series 2005-3A: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.5841% 11/25/35 (g)(k) | | 317 | | 267 |
Class M1, 0.6241% 11/25/35 (g)(k) | | 42 | | 29 |
Class M2, 0.6741% 11/25/35 (g)(k) | | 53 | | 37 |
Class M3, 0.6941% 11/25/35 (g)(k) | | 47 | | 32 |
Class M4, 0.7841% 11/25/35 (g)(k) | | 59 | | 37 |
Series 2005-4A: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.5741% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 833 | | 684 |
Class B1, 1.5841% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 72 | | 15 |
Class M1, 0.6341% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 269 | | 150 |
Class M2, 0.6541% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 81 | | 42 |
Class M3, 0.6841% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 118 | | 61 |
Class M4, 0.7941% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 65 | | 32 |
Class M5, 0.8341% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 65 | | 23 |
Class M6, 0.8841% 1/25/36 (g)(k) | | 69 | | 21 |
Series 2006-1: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.5441% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 128 | | 104 |
Class M1, 0.5641% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 46 | | 32 |
Class M2, 0.5841% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 48 | | 33 |
Class M3, 0.6041% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 42 | | 27 |
Class M4, 0.7041% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 24 | | 14 |
Class M5, 0.7441% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 23 | | 12 |
Class M6, 0.8241% 4/25/36 (g)(k) | | 46 | | 20 |
Series 2006-2A: | | | | |
Class M1, 0.4941% 7/25/36 (g)(k) | | 121 | | 73 |
Class M2, 0.5141% 7/25/36 (g)(k) | | 85 | | 50 |
Class M3, 0.5341% 7/25/36 (g)(k) | | 71 | | 33 |
Class M4, 0.6041% 7/25/36 (g)(k) | | 48 | | 20 |
Class M5, 0.6541% 7/25/36 (g)(k) | | 59 | | 21 |
Series 2006-3A Class M4, 0.6141% 10/25/36 (g)(k) | | 79 | | 12 |
Series 2006-4A: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.4541% 12/25/36 (g)(k) | | 2,479 | | 1,763 |
Class M1, 0.4741% 12/25/36 (g)(k) | | 165 | | 91 |
Class M2, 0.4941% 12/25/36 (g)(k) | | 110 | | 31 |
Class M3, 0.5241% 12/25/36 (g)(k) | | 112 | | 23 |
Series 2007-1 Class A2, 0.4541% 3/25/37 (g)(k) | | 509 | | 333 |
Series 2007-2A: | | | | |
Class A1, 0.4541% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 500 | | 385 |
Class A2, 0.5041% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 468 | | 235 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Bayview Commercial Asset Trust: - continued | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2007-2A: | | | | |
Class M1, 0.5541% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | $ 164 | | $ 45 |
Class M2, 0.5941% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 90 | | 15 |
Class M3, 0.6741% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 91 | | 9 |
Class M4, 0.8341% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 180 | | 7 |
Class M5, 0.9341% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 54 | | 2 |
Series 2007-3: | | | | |
Class A2, 0.4741% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 501 | | 313 |
Class M1, 0.4941% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 100 | | 47 |
Class M2, 0.5241% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 107 | | 31 |
Class M3, 0.5541% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 167 | | 39 |
Class M4, 0.6841% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 263 | | 53 |
Class M5, 0.7841% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 137 | | 20 |
Class M6, 0.9841% 7/25/37 (g)(k) | | 91 | | 11 |
Series 2007-4A: | | | | |
Class M1, 1.1341% 9/25/37 (g)(k) | | 192 | | 18 |
Class M2, 1.2341% 9/25/37 (g)(k) | | 192 | | 15 |
Class M4, 1.7841% 9/25/37 (g)(k) | | 206 | | 10 |
Series 2004-1, Class IO, 1.25% 4/25/34 (g)(m) | | 1,283 | | 50 |
Series 2006-3A, Class IO, 3.8179% 10/25/36 (g)(k)(m) | | 22,141 | | 512 |
Series 2007-5A, Class IO, 4.186% 10/25/37 (g)(k)(m) | | 3,321 | | 232 |
Bear Stearns Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: | | | | |
floater Series 2007-BBA8: | | | | |
Class D, 0.4341% 3/15/22 (g)(k) | | 452 | | 429 |
Class E, 0.4841% 3/15/22 (g)(k) | | 2,347 | | 2,183 |
Class F, 0.5341% 3/15/22 (g)(k) | | 1,440 | | 1,310 |
Class G, 0.5841% 3/15/22 (g)(k) | | 369 | | 329 |
Class H, 0.7341% 3/15/22 (g)(k) | | 452 | | 392 |
Class J, 0.8841% 3/15/22 (g)(k) | | 452 | | 382 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2007-PW15 Class AAB, 5.315% 2/11/44 | | 1,929 | | 1,943 |
Series 2007-PW16: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.7131% 6/11/40 (k) | | 534 | | 600 |
Class AAB, 5.7131% 6/11/40 (k) | | 3,677 | | 3,817 |
Series 2007-PW18 Class A4, 5.7% 6/11/50 | | 4,380 | | 4,900 |
Series 2006-PW13 Class A3, 5.518% 9/11/41 | | 1,088 | | 1,088 |
Series 2006-PW14 Class X2, 0.6687% 12/11/38 (g)(k)(m) | | 8,606 | | 15 |
Series 2006-T22 Class A4, 5.5802% 4/12/38 (k) | | 114 | | 124 |
Series 2006-T24 Class X2, 0.4448% 10/12/41 (g)(k)(m) | | 2,042 | | 1 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Bear Stearns Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: - continued | | | | |
Series 2007-PW18 Class X2, 0.3099% 6/11/50 (g)(k)(m) | | $ 59,010 | | $ 392 |
Series 2007-T28 Class X2, 0.1575% 9/11/42 (g)(k)(m) | | 32,164 | | 110 |
Berkeley Federal Bank & Trust FSB Series 1994-1 Class B, 0% 8/1/24 (g)(k) | | 407 | | 212 |
C-BASS Trust floater Series 2006-SC1 Class A, 0.4541% 5/25/36 (g)(k) | | 414 | | 388 |
CDC Commercial Mortgage Trust Series 2002-FX1: | | | | |
Class G, 6.625% 5/15/35 (g) | | 1,072 | | 1,092 |
Class XCL, 1.198% 5/15/35 (g)(k)(m) | | 2,557 | | 41 |
Citigroup Commercial Mortgage Trust Series 2007-C6: | | | | |
Class A2, 5.6962% 12/10/49 (k) | | 7 | | 7 |
Class A4, 5.6962% 12/10/49 (k) | | 3,035 | | 3,399 |
Citigroup/Deutsche Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2007-CD4 Class A4, 5.322% 12/11/49 | | 12,448 | | 13,617 |
Series 2007-CD4 Class A3, 5.293% 12/11/49 | | 888 | | 907 |
Cobalt CMBS Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
Series 2006-C1 Class B, 5.359% 8/15/48 | | 2,736 | | 164 |
Series 2007-C2 Class B, 5.617% 4/15/47 (k) | | 1,019 | | 748 |
COMM pass-thru certificates: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2005-F10A Class J, 1.0341% 4/15/17 (g)(k) | | 96 | | 92 |
Series 2006-FL12 Class AJ, 0.3141% 12/15/20 (g)(k) | | 420 | | 414 |
sequential payer Series 2007-C9 Class A4, 5.8% 12/10/49 (k) | | 2,018 | | 2,285 |
Series 2006-C8 Class XP, 0.4666% 12/10/46 (k)(m) | | 9,656 | | 13 |
Credit Suisse Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-C4 Class A3, 5.467% 9/15/39 | | 1,057 | | 1,149 |
Series 2007-C2 Class A2, 5.448% 1/15/49 (k) | | 232 | | 231 |
Series 2007-C3 Class A4, 5.6829% 6/15/39 (k) | | 368 | | 402 |
Series 2006-C5 Class ASP, 0.6595% 12/15/39 (k)(m) | | 6,774 | | 12 |
Series 2007-C5 Class A4, 5.695% 9/15/40 (k) | | 825 | | 918 |
Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Capital Certificates floater Series 2007-TF2A Class B, 0.5341% 4/15/22 (g)(k) | | 3,254 | | 2,942 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp.: | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2004-C1 Class A4, 4.75% 1/15/37 | | $ 292 | | $ 293 |
Series 2001-CK6 Class AX, 1.1621% 8/15/36 (k)(m) | | 191 | | 0 * |
Series 2001-CKN5 Class AX, 0.6549% 9/15/34 (g)(k)(m) | | 295 | | 0 * |
Series 2006-C1 Class A3, 5.392% 2/15/39 (k) | | 2,228 | | 2,260 |
Credit Suisse Mortgage Capital Certificates: | | | | |
floater Series 2007-TFL1: | | | | |
Class B, 0.3341% 2/15/22 (g)(k) | | 345 | | 341 |
Class C: | | | | |
0.3541% 2/15/22 (g)(k) | | 1,416 | | 1,392 |
0.4541% 2/15/22 (g)(k) | | 506 | | 490 |
Class F, 0.5041% 2/15/22 (g)(k) | | 1,011 | | 973 |
Series 2007-C1: | | | | |
Class ASP, 0.3793% 2/15/40 (k)(m) | | 11,241 | | 21 |
Class B, 5.487% 2/15/40 (g)(k) | | 1,394 | | 204 |
Extended Stay America Trust floater Series 2013-ESFL: | | | | |
Class A1FL, 0.9859% 12/5/31 (g)(k) | | 1,380 | | 1,379 |
Class A2FL, 0.8859% 12/5/31 (g)(k) | | 1,380 | | 1,370 |
Class BFL, 1.2859% 12/5/31 (g)(k) | | 5,070 | | 5,071 |
Class CFL, 1.6859% 12/5/31 (g)(k) | | 3,690 | | 3,683 |
GE Capital Commercial Mortgage Corp.: | | | | |
sequential payer Series 2007-C1 Class A4, 5.543% 12/10/49 | | 9,244 | | 10,158 |
Series 2001-1 Class X1, 2.0442% 5/15/33 (g)(k)(m) | | 416 | | 5 |
Series 2007-C1 Class XP, 0.1582% 12/10/49 (k)(m) | | 12,273 | | 15 |
Greenwich Capital Commercial Funding Corp.: | | | | |
floater Series 2006-FL4 Class B, 0.3759% 11/5/21 (g)(k) | | 343 | | 338 |
sequential payer Series 2007-GG9 Class A4, 5.444% 3/10/39 | | 28,618 | | 31,414 |
Series 2007-GG11 Class A1, 0.2307% 12/10/49 (g)(k)(m) | | 14,049 | | 47 |
GS Mortgage Securities Corp. II: | | | | |
floater Series 2007-EOP: | | | | |
Class A2, 1.2601% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 767 | | 767 |
Class C, 2.0056% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 6,364 | | 6,380 |
Class D, 2.2018% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 2,144 | | 2,150 |
Class F, 2.6334% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 94 | | 94 |
Class G, 2.7903% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 47 | | 47 |
Class H, 3.3004% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 42 | | 42 |
Class J, 4.0852% 3/6/20 (g)(k) | | 60 | | 60 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
GS Mortgage Securities Corp. II: - continued | | | | |
Series 2006-GG6 Class A2, 5.506% 4/10/38 | | $ 1,515 | | $ 1,525 |
GS Mortgage Securities Corp. Trust Series 2013-KYO Class XB1, 3.2489% 11/8/29 (g)(k)(m) | | 196,352 | | 13,073 |
GS Mortgage Securities Trust sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-GG8 Class A2, 5.479% 11/10/39 | | 24 | | 24 |
Series 2007-GG10 Class A2, 5.778% 8/10/45 | | 184 | | 186 |
JPMorgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust: | | | | |
floater Series 2006-FLA2: | | | | |
Class B, 0.3541% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 391 | | 382 |
Class C, 0.3941% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 277 | | 270 |
Class D, 0.4141% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 122 | | 117 |
Class E, 0.4641% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 176 | | 168 |
Class F, 0.5141% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 265 | | 251 |
Class G, 0.5441% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 230 | | 218 |
Class H, 0.6841% 11/15/18 (g)(k) | | 176 | | 165 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-CB14 Class A3B, 5.4893% 12/12/44 (k) | | 400 | | 406 |
Series 2006-LDP8 Class A4, 5.399% 5/15/45 | | 581 | | 635 |
Series 2006-LDP9 Class A3, 5.336% 5/15/47 | | 15,032 | | 16,473 |
Series 2007-CB19 Class A4, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 3,228 | | 3,596 |
Series 2007-LD11: | | | | |
Class A2, 5.7987% 6/15/49 (k) | | 1,189 | | 1,218 |
Class A4, 5.8137% 6/15/49 (k) | | 31,964 | | 35,604 |
Series 2007-LDPX Class A3, 5.42% 1/15/49 | | 14,834 | | 16,311 |
Series 2005-LDP3 Class A3, 4.959% 8/15/42 | | 53 | | 53 |
Series 2006-CB17 Class A3, 5.45% 12/12/43 | | 75 | | 75 |
Series 2006-LDP7 Class A4, 5.8629% 4/15/45 (k) | | 1,230 | | 1,348 |
Series 2007-CB19: | | | | |
Class B, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 78 | | 30 |
Class C, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 204 | | 42 |
Class D, 5.711% 2/12/49 (k) | | 214 | | 24 |
Series 2007-LDP10: | | | | |
Class CS, 5.466% 1/15/49 (k) | | 75 | | 9 |
Class ES, 5.5357% 1/15/49 (g)(k) | | 472 | | 6 |
LB Commercial Conduit Mortgage Trust sequential payer Series 2007-C3 Class A4, 5.8839% 7/15/44 (k) | | 743 | | 835 |
LB Multi-family Mortgage Trust Series 1991-4 Class A1, 7.125% 4/25/21 (k) | | 17 | | 12 |
LB-UBS Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-C1 Class A2, 5.084% 2/15/31 | | 1 | | 1 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
LB-UBS Commercial Mortgage Trust: - continued | | | | |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-C6 Class A4, 5.372% 9/15/39 | | $ 410 | | $ 451 |
Series 2006-C7 Class A2, 5.3% 11/15/38 | | 471 | | 492 |
Series 2007-C1 Class A4, 5.424% 2/15/40 | | 2,738 | | 3,012 |
Series 2007-C2 Class A3, 5.43% 2/15/40 | | 1,644 | | 1,800 |
Series 2006-C6 Class XCP, 0.673% 9/15/39 (k)(m) | | 3,502 | | 1 |
Series 2007-C1 Class XCP, 0.4262% 2/15/40 (k)(m) | | 1,246 | | 2 |
Series 2007-C6 Class A4, 5.858% 7/15/40 (k) | | 1,140 | | 1,248 |
Series 2007-C7: | | | | |
Class A3, 5.866% 9/15/45 | | 1,770 | | 1,940 |
Class XCP, 0.2714% 9/15/45 (k)(m) | | 55,299 | | 212 |
Lehman Brothers Floating Rate Commercial Mortgage Trust floater Series 2006-LLFA: | | | | |
Class D, 0.4141% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 292 | | 289 |
Class E, 0.4741% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 1,054 | | 1,033 |
Class F, 0.5241% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 868 | | 841 |
Class G, 0.5441% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 1,714 | | 1,645 |
Class H, 0.5841% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 442 | | 416 |
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
Series 2005-LC1 Class F, 5.4193% 1/12/44 (g)(k) | | 793 | | 698 |
Series 2006-C1 Class A2, 5.6376% 5/12/39 (k) | | 356 | | 357 |
Series 2007-C1 Class A4, 5.8499% 6/12/50 (k) | | 3,452 | | 3,854 |
Series 2008-C1 Class A4, 5.69% 2/12/51 | | 1,947 | | 2,178 |
Merrill Lynch-CFC Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
floater Series 2006-4 Class A2FL, 0.305% 12/12/49 (k) | | 47 | | 47 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2006-4 Class ASB, 5.133% 12/12/49 (k) | | 496 | | 512 |
Series 2007-5: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.378% 8/12/48 | | 7,455 | | 8,156 |
Class B, 5.479% 8/12/48 | | 2,736 | | 864 |
Series 2007-6 Class A4, 5.485% 3/12/51 (k) | | 7,400 | | 8,105 |
Series 2007-7 Class A4, 5.7364% 6/12/50 (k) | | 3,192 | | 3,546 |
Series 2006-4 Class XP, 0.6175% 12/12/49 (k)(m) | | 12,944 | | 107 |
Series 2007-6 Class B, 5.635% 3/12/51 (k) | | 912 | | 200 |
Series 2007-7 Class B, 5.7364% 6/12/50 (k) | | 79 | | 5 |
Series 2007-8 Class A3, 5.8968% 8/12/49 (k) | | 787 | | 883 |
Morgan Stanley Capital I Trust: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-XLF Class C, 1.384% 7/15/19 (g)(k) | | 272 | | 204 |
Series 2007-XLFA: | | | | |
Class C, 0.344% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | 523 | | 510 |
Class D, 0.374% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | 507 | | 488 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Morgan Stanley Capital I Trust: - continued | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2007-XLFA: | | | | |
Class E, 0.434% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | $ 634 | | $ 597 |
Class F, 0.484% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | 380 | | 355 |
Class G, 0.524% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | 470 | | 434 |
Class H, 0.614% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | 296 | | 258 |
Class J, 0.764% 10/15/20 (g)(k) | | 171 | | 65 |
sequential payer Series 2007-HQ11 Class A31, 5.439% 2/12/44 (k) | | 429 | | 436 |
Series 2006-IQ11 Class A4, 5.682% 10/15/42 (k) | | 245 | | 266 |
Series 2006-T23 Class A3, 5.8075% 8/12/41 (k) | | 466 | | 466 |
Series 2007-IQ14: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.692% 4/15/49 (k) | | 1,368 | | 1,510 |
Class AAB, 5.654% 4/15/49 | | 1,987 | | 1,998 |
Class B, 5.7275% 4/15/49 (k) | | 224 | | 39 |
Salomon Brothers Mortgage Securities VII, Inc. Series 2006-C2 Class H, 6.308% 7/18/33 (g) | | 129 | | 51 |
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust: | | | | |
floater: | | | | |
Series 2006-WL7A: | | | | |
Class F, 0.5241% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 1,156 | | 1,064 |
Class G, 0.5441% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 1,351 | | 1,242 |
Class J, 0.7841% 9/15/21 (g)(k) | | 300 | | 255 |
Series 2007-WHL8: | | | | |
Class F, 0.6641% 6/15/20 (g)(k) | | 3,171 | | 2,829 |
Class LXR1, 0.8841% 6/15/20 (g)(k) | | 112 | | 97 |
sequential payer: | | | | |
Series 2007-C30 Class A5, 5.342% 12/15/43 | | 15,721 | | 17,321 |
Series 2007-C31: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.509% 4/15/47 | | 42,116 | | 46,094 |
Class A5, 5.5% 4/15/47 | | 16,000 | | 17,723 |
Series 2007-C33: | | | | |
Class A4, 5.9241% 2/15/51 (k) | | 23,060 | | 25,164 |
Class A5, 5.9241% 2/15/51 (k) | | 10,259 | | 11,562 |
Series 2005-C19 Class B, 4.892% 5/15/44 | | 912 | | 947 |
Series 2005-C22: | | | | |
Class B, 5.3802% 12/15/44 (k) | | 2,022 | | 1,644 |
Class F, 5.3802% 12/15/44 (g)(k) | | 1,521 | | 457 |
Series 2006-C23 Class A5, 5.416% 1/15/45 (k) | | 5,005 | | 5,449 |
Series 2007-C30: | | | | |
Class C, 5.483% 12/15/43 (k) | | 2,736 | | 2,202 |
Class D, 5.513% 12/15/43 (k) | | 1,459 | | 906 |
Class XP, 0.4764% 12/15/43 (g)(k)(m) | | 7,383 | | 18 |
Series 2007-C31 Class C, 5.6796% 4/15/47 (k) | | 251 | | 175 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust: - continued | | | | |
Series 2007-C31A Class A2, 5.421% 4/15/47 | | $ 4,033 | | $ 4,038 |
Series 2007-C32: | | | | |
Class D, 5.7482% 6/15/49 (k) | | 685 | | 276 |
Class E, 5.7482% 6/15/49 (k) | | 1,080 | | 334 |
TOTAL COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE SECURITIES (Cost $383,951) | 420,814
|
Municipal Securities - 0.7% |
|
Beaver County Indl. Dev. Auth. Poll. Cont. Rev. Bonds (FirstEnergy Nuclear Generation Corp. Proj.) Series 2005 A, 3.375%, tender 7/1/15 (k) | | 1,700 | | 1,731 |
California Gen. Oblig.: | | | | |
Series 2009, 7.35% 11/1/39 | | 1,095 | | 1,373 |
7.3% 10/1/39 | | 16,765 | | 20,949 |
7.5% 4/1/34 | | 7,195 | | 9,092 |
7.55% 4/1/39 | | 14,205 | | 18,386 |
7.6% 11/1/40 | | 14,125 | | 18,510 |
7.625% 3/1/40 | | 2,445 | | 3,182 |
Chicago Gen. Oblig. (Taxable Proj.) Series 2010 C1, 7.781% 1/1/35 | | 5,050 | | 5,610 |
Illinois Gen. Oblig.: | | | | |
Series 2003, 5.1% 6/1/33 | | 34,625 | | 30,378 |
Series 2010, 4.421% 1/1/15 | | 4,050 | | 4,187 |
Series 2010-1, 6.63% 2/1/35 | | 15,425 | | 15,218 |
Series 2010-3: | | | | |
6.725% 4/1/35 | | 7,505 | | 7,472 |
7.35% 7/1/35 | | 4,495 | | 4,743 |
Series 2011: | | | | |
5.665% 3/1/18 | | 5,030 | | 5,368 |
5.877% 3/1/19 | | 10,800 | | 11,592 |
TOTAL MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (Cost $167,821) | 157,791
|
Foreign Government and Government Agency Obligations - 0.2% |
|
Brazilian Federative Republic 5.625% 1/7/41 | | 4,922 | | 4,750 |
Italian Republic: | | | | |
3.125% 1/26/15 | | 9,149 | | 9,367 |
4.5% 1/21/15 | | 6,859 | | 7,147 |
Foreign Government and Government Agency Obligations - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Italian Republic: - continued | | | | |
4.75% 1/25/16 | | $ 6,870 | | $ 7,274 |
5.375% 6/12/17 | | 4,115 | | 4,452 |
Russian Federation 3.25% 4/4/17 (g) | | 800 | | 825 |
United Mexican States 4.75% 3/8/44 | | 5,572 | | 4,848 |
TOTAL FOREIGN GOVERNMENT AND GOVERNMENT AGENCY OBLIGATIONS (Cost $39,494) | 38,663
|
Floating Rate Loans - 0.5% |
|
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 0.2% |
Auto Components - 0.0% |
Tower Automotive Holdings U.S.A. LLC Tranche B, term loan 4.75% 4/23/20 (k) | | 324 | | 325 |
Diversified Consumer Services - 0.0% |
Bright Horizons Family Solutions, Inc. Tranche B, term loan 4.0001% 1/30/20 (k) | | 224 | | 224 |
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 0.1% |
Centaur Acquisition LLC Tranche 2LN, term loan 8.75% 2/20/20 (k) | | 375 | | 376 |
Fantasy Springs Resort Casino term loan 12% 8/6/12 (d)(k) | | 8,755 | | 6,829 |
Graton Economic Development Authority Tranche B, term loan 9% 8/22/18 (k) | | 600 | | 626 |
Harrah's Entertainment, Inc. Tranche B 6LN, term loan 5.44% 1/28/18 (k) | | 1,665 | | 1,482 |
Landry's Restaurants, Inc. Tranche B, term loan 4.75% 4/24/18 (k) | | 8,352 | | 8,395 |
MGM Mirage, Inc. Tranche B, term loan 3.5% 12/20/19 (k) | | 637 | | 634 |
Playa Resorts Holding BV Tranche B, term loan 4.75% 8/9/19 (k) | | 145 | | 145 |
Station Casinos LLC Tranche B, term loan 5% 2/19/20 (k) | | 3,257 | | 3,281 |
| | 21,768 |
Household Durables - 0.0% |
Serta Simmons Holdings, LLC Tranche B, term loan 5% 10/1/19 (k) | | 1,746 | | 1,751 |
Floating Rate Loans - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - continued |
Media - 0.1% |
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Co. term loan 5.25% 5/22/18 (k) | | $ 173 | | $ 173 |
Media Holdco, LP Tranche B, term loan 7.25% 7/23/18 (k) | | 607 | | 608 |
Springer Science+Business Media Deutschland GmbH Tranche B 2LN, term loan 5% 8/8/20 (k) | | 4,280 | | 4,237 |
Univision Communications, Inc. term loan 4.5% 3/1/20 (k) | | 2,327 | | 2,318 |
| | 7,336 |
TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY | | 31,404 |
CONSUMER STAPLES - 0.0% |
Food & Staples Retailing - 0.0% |
Rite Aid Corp.: | | | | |
Tranche 1LN, term loan 4% 2/21/20 (k) | | 803 | | 804 |
Tranche 2 LN2, term loan 4.875% 6/21/21 (k) | | 3,850 | | 3,869 |
Tranche 2LN, term loan 5.75% 8/21/20 (k) | | 125 | | 128 |
Sprouts Farmers Market LLC Tranche B, term loan 4% 4/12/20 (k) | | 226 | | 227 |
| | 5,028 |
Personal Products - 0.0% |
Revlon Consumer Products Corp. term loan 8/19/19 | | 1,960 | | 1,958 |
TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES | | 6,986 |
ENERGY - 0.0% |
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 0.0% |
Chesapeake Energy Corp. Tranche B, term loan 5.75% 12/2/17 (k) | | 3,135 | | 3,202 |
Samson Investment Co. Tranche 2LN, term loan 6% 9/25/18 (k) | | 325 | | 327 |
| | 3,529 |
FINANCIALS - 0.1% |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.0% |
TPF II LC LLC Tranche B, term loan 6.5% 8/16/19 (k) | | 1,735 | | 1,720 |
Insurance - 0.1% |
Asurion LLC Tranche B 1LN, term loan 4.5% 5/24/19 (k) | | 7,022 | | 6,943 |
Floating Rate Loans - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
FINANCIALS - continued |
Real Estate Management & Development - 0.0% |
Realogy Corp. Credit-Linked Deposit 4.4463% 10/10/16 (k) | | $ 1,228 | | $ 1,225 |
TOTAL FINANCIALS | | 9,888 |
HEALTH CARE - 0.0% |
Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 0.0% |
American Renal Holdings, Inc.: | | | | |
Tranche 2LN, term loan 8.5% 2/8/20 (k) | | 2,260 | | 2,181 |
Tranche B 1LN, term loan 4.5% 8/8/19 (k) | | 2,050 | | 2,032 |
| | 4,213 |
Health Care Providers & Services - 0.0% |
Genoa Healthcare Group LLC Tranche 2LN, term loan 14% 2/10/15 (k) | | 2,305 | | 1,844 |
Pharmaceuticals - 0.0% |
Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Tranche E, term loan 4.5% 8/5/20 (k) | | 1,303 | | 1,318 |
TOTAL HEALTH CARE | | 7,375 |
INDUSTRIALS - 0.1% |
Airlines - 0.1% |
U.S. Airways, Inc. Tranche B 1LN, term loan 4.25% 5/21/19 (k) | | 6,390 | | 6,318 |
Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.0% |
ARAMARK Corp. Tranche B, term loan 4% 8/22/19 (k) | | 3,535 | | 3,557 |
Arysta Lifescience SPC LLC: | | | | |
Tranche B 1LN, term loan 4.5% 5/29/20 (k) | | 420 | | 419 |
Tranche B 2LN, term loan 8.25% 11/30/20 (k) | | 355 | | 353 |
SourceHOV LLC Tranche 2LN, term loan 8.75% 4/30/19 (k) | | 150 | | 152 |
| | 4,481 |
Professional Services - 0.0% |
AlixPartners LLP: | | | | |
Tranche 2LN, term loan 9% 7/10/21 (k) | | 2,210 | | 2,221 |
Tranche B2 1LN, term loan 5% 7/10/20 (k) | | 1,630 | | 1,650 |
| | 3,871 |
Floating Rate Loans - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
INDUSTRIALS - continued |
Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.0% |
Fly Funding II Sarl Tranche B, term loan 4.5% 8/9/18 (k) | | $ 190 | | $ 191 |
TOTAL INDUSTRIALS | | 14,861 |
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 0.1% |
Communications Equipment - 0.0% |
SafeNet, Inc. Tranche 2LN, term loan 6.1826% 4/12/15 (k) | | 4,500 | | 4,489 |
IT Services - 0.1% |
First Data Corp. term loan 4.1841% 3/24/18 (k) | | 9,900 | | 9,801 |
Software - 0.0% |
BMC Software Finance, Inc. Tranche B, term loan 5% 8/9/20 (k) | | 1,865 | | 1,865 |
ION Trading Technologies Ltd. Tranche 2LN, term loan 8.25% 5/22/21 (k) | | 70 | | 70 |
Kronos, Inc.: | | | | |
Tranche 2LN, term loan 9.75% 4/24/20 (k) | | 2,035 | | 2,106 |
Tranche B 1LN, term loan 4.5% 10/30/19 (k) | | 1,124 | | 1,127 |
| | 5,168 |
TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY | | 19,458 |
MATERIALS - 0.0% |
Chemicals - 0.0% |
Royal Adhesives & Sealants LLC: | | | | |
Tranche 2LN, term loan 9.75% 1/31/19 (k) | | 1,190 | | 1,196 |
Tranche B 1LN, term loan 5.5% 7/31/18 (k) | | 125 | | 126 |
| | 1,322 |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 0.0% |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - 0.0% |
Altice Financing SA Tranche B, term loan 5.3986% 6/24/19 (k)(o) | | 5,780 | | 5,664 |
FairPoint Communications, Inc. Tranche B, term loan 7.5% 2/14/19 (k) | | 474 | | 473 |
Floating Rate Loans - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - continued |
Diversified Telecommunication Services - continued |
Integra Telecom Holdings, Inc. Tranche 2LN, term loan 9.75% 2/14/20 (k) | | $ 125 | | $ 128 |
LTS Buyer LLC Tranche 2LN, term loan 8% 4/11/21 (k) | | 65 | | 65 |
| | 6,330 |
UTILITIES - 0.0% |
Electric Utilities - 0.0% |
TXU Energy LLC Tranche B, term loan 4.7118% 10/10/17 (k) | | 5,026 | | 3,399 |
Gas Utilities - 0.0% |
Everest Acquisition LLC Tranche B 3LN, term loan 3.5% 5/24/18 (k) | | 487 | | 486 |
Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - 0.0% |
LSP Madison Funding LLC Tranche 1LN, term loan 5.5% 6/28/19 (k) | | 756 | | 758 |
TOTAL UTILITIES | | 4,643 |
TOTAL FLOATING RATE LOANS (Cost $106,658) | 105,796
|
Bank Notes - 0.0% |
|
Fifth Third Bank 4.75% 2/1/15 (Cost $694) | | 680 | | 713
|
Preferred Securities - 0.1% |
| | | |
FINANCIALS - 0.1% |
Diversified Financial Services - 0.1% |
Bank of America Corp. 5.2% (h)(k) | 3,710 | | 3,314 |
Citigroup, Inc.: | | | |
5.35% (h)(k) | 11,740 | | 10,630 |
5.95% (h)(k) | 2,950 | | 2,818 |
JPMorgan Chase & Co. 5.15% (h)(k) | 3,895 | | 3,499 |
MUFG Capital Finance 1 Ltd. 6.346% (h)(k) | 996 | | 1,099 |
TOTAL PREFERRED SECURITIES (Cost $23,385) | 21,360
|
Fixed-Income Funds - 5.9% |
| Shares | | Value (000s) |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund (l) (Cost $1,215,114) | 11,811,153 | | $ 1,242,061 |
Other - 0.0% |
| | | |
Other - 0.0% |
Tribune Co. Claim (Cost $11) | 11,084 | | 11
|
Money Market Funds - 0.8% |
| | | |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund, 0.10% (b) | 138,152,089 | | 138,152 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund, 0.10% (b)(c) | 25,098,461 | | 25,098 |
TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS (Cost $163,250) | 163,250
|
Cash Equivalents - 0.1% |
| Maturity Amount (000s) | | |
Investments in repurchase agreements in a joint trading account at 0.04%, dated 8/30/13 due 9/3/13 (Collateralized by U.S. Treasury Obligations) # (Cost $12,901) | $ 12,901 | | 12,901
|
TOTAL INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO - 102.3% (Cost $18,303,483) | 21,640,105 |
NET OTHER ASSETS (LIABILITIES) - (2.3)% | (476,424) |
NET ASSETS - 100% | $ 21,163,681 |
TBA Sale Commitments |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | |
Fannie Mae |
2.5% 9/1/43 | $ (14,600) | | (13,272) |
3% 9/1/43 | (13,000) | | (12,428) |
3% 9/1/43 | (17,100) | | (16,348) |
TBA Sale Commitments - continued |
| Principal Amount (000s) | | Value (000s) |
Fannie Mae - continued |
3% 9/1/43 | $ (12,400) | | $ (11,855) |
3% 9/1/43 | (42,400) | | (40,535) |
3% 9/1/43 | (9,400) | | (8,987) |
3% 9/1/43 | (16,000) | | (15,296) |
3% 9/1/43 | (2,900) | | (2,772) |
3.5% 9/1/43 | (54,900) | | (54,750) |
4% 9/1/43 | (10,700) | | (11,034) |
4% 9/1/43 | (22,900) | | (23,614) |
4% 9/1/43 | (10,700) | | (11,034) |
4% 9/1/43 | (1,400) | | (1,444) |
4.5% 9/1/43 | (67,600) | | (71,318) |
4.5% 9/1/43 | (23,700) | | (25,004) |
5% 9/1/43 | (30,600) | | (32,891) |
5.5% 9/1/43 | (4,850) | | (5,265) |
5.5% 9/1/43 | (4,850) | | (5,265) |
TOTAL FANNIE MAE | | (363,112) |
Freddie Mac |
3% 9/1/43 | (6,000) | | (5,718) |
Ginnie Mae |
4% 9/1/43 | (6,200) | | (6,437) |
4% 9/1/43 | (2,700) | | (2,803) |
4% 9/1/43 | (2,900) | | (3,010) |
TOTAL GINNIE MAE | | (12,250) |
TOTAL TBA SALE COMMITMENTS (Proceeds $383,108) | $ (381,080) |
Swaps |
Credit Default Swaps |
Underlying Reference | Rating (1) | Expiration Date | Clearinghouse/Counterparty | Fixed Payment Received/ (Paid) | Notional Amount (2) (000s) | Value (000s) (1) | Upfront Premium Received/(Paid) (000s) | Unrealized Appreciation/(Depreciation)(000s) |
Sell Protection |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | Credit Suisse | 0.15% | $ 1,913 | $ (1,809) | $ 0 | $ (1,809) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | JPMorgan Chase, Inc. | 0.15% | 1,568 | (1,483) | 0 | (1,483) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | JPMorgan Chase, Inc. | 0.15% | 360 | (340) | 0 | (340) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | Morgan Stanley, Inc. | 0.15% | 1,568 | (1,483) | 0 | (1,483) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | UBS | 0.15% | 1,525 | (1,442) | 0 | (1,442) |
ABX AA 07-1 Index | C | Sep. 2037 | UBS | 0.15% | 1,309 | (1,237) | 0 | (1,237) |
TOTAL CREDIT DEFAULT SWAPS | $ (7,794) | $ 0 | $ (7,794) |
|
(1) Ratings are presented for credit default swaps in which the Fund has sold protection on the underlying referenced debt. Ratings for an underlying index represent a weighted average of the ratings of all securities included in the index. The credit rating or value can be measures of the current payment/performance risk. Ratings are from Moody's Investors Service, Inc. Where Moody's® ratings are not available, S&P® ratings are disclosed and are indicated as such. All ratings are as of the report date and do not reflect subsequent changes. |
|
(2) The notional amount of each credit default swap where the Fund has sold protection approximates the maximum potential amount of future payments that the Fund could be required to make if a credit event were to occur. |
Legend |
(a) Non-income producing |
(b) 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. |
(c) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan. |
(d) Non-income producing - Security is in default. |
(e) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end. |
(f) Affiliated company |
(g) Security exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers. At the end of the period, the value of these securities amounted to $675,062,000 or 3.2% of net assets. |
(h) Security is perpetual in nature with no stated maturity date. |
(i) Security or a portion of the security purchased on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis. |
(j) Security or a portion of the security has been segregated as collateral for open bi-lateral over-the-counter (OTC) swaps. At period end, the value of securities pledged amounted to $10,670,000. |
(k) Coupon rates for floating and adjustable rate securities reflect the rates in effect at period end. |
(l) Affiliated fund that is generally available only to investment companies and other accounts managed by Fidelity Investments. A complete unaudited schedule of portfolio holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is filed with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q and is available upon request or at the SEC's website at www.sec.gov. An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of securities and other investments held indirectly through its investment in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com. 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. |
(m) Security represents right to receive monthly interest payments on an underlying pool of mortgages or assets. Principal shown is the outstanding par amount of the pool as of the end of the period. |
(n) Investment is owned by an entity that is treated as a corporation for U.S. tax purposes and is owned by the Fund. |
(o) Position or a portion of the position represents an unfunded loan commitment. At period end, the total principal amount and market value of unfunded commitments totaled $154,000 and $150,000, respectively. The coupon rate will be determined at time of settlement. |
(p) Restricted securities - Investment in securities not registered under the Securities Act of 1933 (excluding 144A issues). At the end of the period, the value of restricted securities (excluding 144A issues) amounted to $225,174,000 or 1.1% of net assets. |
Additional information on each restricted holding is as follows: |
Security | Acquisition Date | Acquisition Cost (000s) |
Aspen Aerogels, Inc. 8% 6/1/14 | 6/1/11 - 12/31/12 | $ 11,328 |
Aspen Aerogels, Inc. 8% 12/6/14 | 12/6/11 - 12/31/12 | $ 3,220 |
Blu Homes, Inc. Series A, 5.00% | 6/10/13 | $ 5,000 |
C. Wonder LLC | 12/27/12 - 6/25/13 | $ 19,500 |
HMH Holdings, Inc. warrants 6/22/19 | 6/22/12 | $ 4 |
Legend Pictures LLC | 9/23/10 - 3/30/12 | $ 37,645 |
Mobileye N.V. Series F | 8/15/13 | $ 12,902 |
Roku, Inc. 8.00% | 5/7/13 | $ 5,000 |
Spotify Technology SA | 11/14/12 | $ 15,028 |
Station Holdco LLC | 6/17/11 | $ 1,131 |
Station Holdco LLC unit | 4/1/13 | $ 0* |
Station Holdco LLC warrants 6/15/18 | 8/11/08 - 8/15/08 | $ 6,416 |
Tory Burch LLC | 12/31/12 | $ 17,505 |
Vice Holdings, Inc. Series A | 8/3/12 | $ 34,999 |
wetpaint.com, Inc. Series C | 5/14/08 | $ 5,000 |
* Amount represents less than $1,000. |
# Additional information on each counterparty to the repurchase agreement is as follows: |
Repurchase Agreement / Counterparty | Value (000s) |
$12,901,000 due 9/03/13 at 0.04% |
BNP Paribas Securities Corp. | $ 6,708 |
Barclays Capital, Inc. | 3,568 |
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. | 2,625 |
| $ 12,901 |
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 (Amounts in thousands) |
Fidelity Cash Central Fund | $ 797 |
Fidelity Corporate Bond 1-10 Year Central Fund | 3,681 |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund | 26,750 |
Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund | 937 |
Total | $ 32,165 |
Additional information regarding the Fund's fiscal year to date purchases and sales, including the ownership percentage, of the non Money Market Central Funds is as follows: |
Fund (Amounts in thousands) | Value, beginning of period | Purchases | Sales Proceeds | Value, end of period | % ownership, end of period |
Fidelity Corporate Bond 1-10 Year Central Fund | $ 286,809 | $ - | $ 287,718* | $ - | 0.0% |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund | 1,638,428 | 280,727 | 621,810 | 1,242,061 | 9.0% |
Total | $ 1,925,237 | $ 280,727 | $ 909,528 | $ 1,242,061 | |
* Includes the value of shares redeemed through in-kind transactions. See Note 6 of the Notes to Financial Statements. |
Other Affiliated Issuers |
An affiliated company is a company in which the Fund has ownership of at least 5% of the voting securities. Fiscal year to date transactions with companies which are or were affiliates are as follows: |
Affiliate (Amounts in thousands) | Value, beginning of period | Purchases | Sales Proceeds | Dividend Income | Value, end of period |
AMAG Pharmaceuticals, Inc. | $ 21,602 | $ - | $ 9,542 | $ - | $ - |
American Woodmark Corp. | - | 19,666 | 26,240 | - | - |
CareView Communications, Inc. | 10,530 | - | - | - | 6,724 |
Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc. | 27,540 | - | 33,236 | - | - |
Southcross Energy Partners LP | - | 17,043 | 14,462 | 127 | - |
TherapeuticsMD, Inc. | 18,645 | 6,593 | - | - | 17,941 |
Total | $ 78,317 | $ 43,302 | $ 83,480 | $ 127 | $ 24,665 |
Other Information |
The following is a summary of the inputs used, as of August 31, 2013, 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 in the tables below, please refer to the Investment Valuation section in the accompanying Notes to Financial Statements. |
Valuation Inputs at Reporting Date: |
Description (Amounts in thousands) | Total | Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 |
Investments in Securities: | | | | |
Equities: | | | | |
Consumer Discretionary | $ 2,553,207 | $ 2,288,410 | $ 68,053 | $ 196,744 |
Consumer Staples | 1,340,134 | 1,213,644 | 126,490 | - |
Energy | 1,224,363 | 1,224,363 | - | - |
Financials | 2,725,539 | 2,617,309 | 108,230 | - |
Health Care | 2,413,036 | 2,396,640 | 16,396 | - |
Industrials | 972,986 | 960,709 | 12,043 | 234 |
Information Technology | 2,654,585 | 2,640,689 | - | 13,896 |
Materials | 309,875 | 309,875 | - | - |
Telecommunication Services | 247,349 | 230,931 | 15,285 | 1,133 |
Utilities | 230,242 | 230,242 | - | - |
Corporate Bonds | 2,736,189 | - | 2,717,639 | 18,550 |
U.S. Government and Government Agency Obligations | 1,160,385 | - | 1,160,385 | - |
U.S. Government Agency - Mortgage Securities | 809,580 | - | 809,580 | - |
Asset-Backed Securities | 37,391 | - | 33,347 | 4,044 |
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations | 61,884 | - | 61,277 | 607 |
Commercial Mortgage Securities | 420,814 | - | 420,238 | 576 |
Municipal Securities | 157,791 | - | 157,791 | - |
Foreign Government and Government Agency Obligations | 38,663 | - | 38,663 | - |
Floating Rate Loans | 105,796 | - | 96,515 | 9,281 |
Bank Notes | 713 | - | 713 | - |
Preferred Securities | 21,360 | - | 21,360 | - |
Fixed-Income Funds | 1,242,061 | 1,242,061 | - | - |
Other | 11 | - | - | 11 |
Money Market Funds | 163,250 | 163,250 | - | - |
Cash Equivalents | 12,901 | - | 12,901 | - |
Total Investments in Securities: | $ 21,640,105 | $ 15,518,123 | $ 5,876,906 | $ 245,076 |
Derivative Instruments: | | | | |
Liabilities | | | | |
Swaps | $ (7,794) | $ - | $ (7,794) | $ - |
Other Financial Instruments: | | | | |
TBA Sale Commitments | $ (381,080) | $ - | $ (381,080) | $ - |
Valuation Inputs at Reporting Date: |
The following is a reconciliation of Investments in Securities for which Level 3 inputs were used in determining value: |
(Amounts in thousands) | |
Investments in Securities: | |
Beginning Balance | $ 162,679 |
Net Realized Gain (Loss) on Investment Securities | 2,464 |
Net Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investment Securities | 45,630 |
Cost of Purchases | 83,041 |
Proceeds of Sales | (32,411) |
Amortization/Accretion | 876 |
Transfers into Level 3 | 1,618 |
Transfers out of Level 3 | (18,821) |
Ending Balance | $ 245,076 |
The change in unrealized gain (loss) for the period attributable to Level 3 securities held at August 31, 2013 | $ 45,439 |
The information used in the above reconciliation represents fiscal year to date activity for any Investments in Securities identified as using Level 3 inputs at either the beginning or the end of the current fiscal period. Transfers in or out of Level 3 represent the beginning value of any Security or Instrument where a change in the pricing level occurred from the beginning to the end of the period. The cost of purchases and the proceeds of sales may include securities received or delivered through corporate actions or exchanges. Realized and unrealized gains (losses) disclosed in the reconciliation are included in Net Gain (Loss) on the Fund's Statement of Operations. |
Value of Derivative Instruments |
The following table is a summary of the Fund's value of derivative instruments by primary risk exposure as of August 31, 2013. 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 |
(Amounts in thousands) | Asset | Liability |
Credit Risk | | |
Swaps (a) | $ - | $ (7,794) |
Total Value of Derivatives | $ - | $ (7,794) |
(a) For bi-lateral OTC swaps, reflects gross value which is presented in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities in the bi-lateral OTC swaps, at value line-items. |
Other Information |
The composition of credit quality ratings as a percentage of net assets is as follows (Unaudited): |
U.S. Government and U.S. Government Agency Obligations | 13.5% |
AAA,AA,A | 5.4% |
BBB | 6.4% |
BB | 2.1% |
B | 1.9% |
CCC,CC,C | 0.4% |
D | 0.0%* |
Not Rated | 0.6% |
Equities | 69.3% |
Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets | 0.4% |
| 100% |
* Amount represents less than 0.1% |
We have used ratings from Moody's Investors Service, Inc. Where Moody's ratings are not available, we have used S&P ratings. All ratings are as of the date indicated and do not reflect subsequent changes. |
Distribution of investments by country or territory of incorporation, as a percentage of total net assets, is as follows (Unaudited): |
United States of America | 88.8% |
Canada | 1.4% |
Japan | 1.3% |
Switzerland | 1.2% |
United Kingdom | 1.0% |
Others (Individually Less Than 1%) | 6.3% |
| 100.0% |
The information in the above tables is based on the combined investments of the Fund and its pro-rata share of the investments of Fidelity's fixed-income central funds. |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Statement of Assets and Liabilities
Amounts in thousands (except per-share amounts) | August 31, 2013 |
| | |
Assets | | |
Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $24,134 and repurchase agreements of $12,901) - See accompanying schedule: Unaffiliated issuers (cost $16,891,508) | $ 20,210,129 | |
Fidelity Central Funds (cost $1,378,364) | 1,405,311 | |
Other affiliated issuers (cost $33,611) | 24,665 | |
Total Investments (cost $18,303,483) | | $ 21,640,105 |
Cash | | 4,290 |
Receivable for investments sold, regular delivery | | 5,829 |
Receivable for TBA sale commitments | | 383,108 |
Receivable for swaps | | 1 |
Receivable for fund shares sold | | 26,505 |
Dividends receivable | | 18,740 |
Interest receivable | | 51,101 |
Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds | | 22 |
Receivable from investment adviser for expense reductions | | 5 |
Other receivables | | 1,092 |
Total assets | | 22,130,798 |
| | |
Liabilities | | |
Payable for investments purchased Regular delivery | $ 63,793 | |
Delayed delivery | 439,402 | |
TBA sale commitments, at value | 381,080 | |
Payable for swaps | 744 | |
Payable for fund shares redeemed | 38,341 | |
Bi-lateral OTC swaps, at value | 7,794 | |
Accrued management fee | 7,220 | |
Other affiliated payables | 2,468 | |
Other payables and accrued expenses | 1,177 | |
Collateral on securities loaned, at value | 25,098 | |
Total liabilities | | 967,117 |
| | |
Net Assets | | $ 21,163,681 |
Net Assets consist of: | | |
Paid in capital | | $ 16,566,159 |
Undistributed net investment income | | 80,612 |
Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) on investments and foreign currency transactions | | 1,186,056 |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies | | 3,330,854 |
Net Assets | | $ 21,163,681 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Statement of Assets and Liabilities - continued
Amounts in thousands (except per-share amounts) | August 31, 2013 |
| | |
Puritan: Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($15,933,880 ÷ 759,450 shares) | | $ 20.98 |
| | |
Class K: Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($5,229,801 ÷ 249,322 shares) | | $ 20.98 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Financial Statements - continued
Statement of Operations
Amounts in thousands | Year ended August 31, 2013 |
| | |
Investment Income | | |
Dividends (including $127 earned from other affiliated issuers) | | $ 237,691 |
Interest | | 214,329 |
Income from Fidelity Central Funds | | 32,165 |
Total income | | 484,185 |
| | |
Expenses | | |
Management fee | $ 83,031 | |
Transfer agent fees | 27,231 | |
Accounting and security lending fees | 2,021 | |
Custodian fees and expenses | 334 | |
Independent trustees' compensation | 126 | |
Appreciation in deferred trustee compensation account | 2 | |
Registration fees | 207 | |
Audit | 280 | |
Legal | 125 | |
Interest | 3 | |
Miscellaneous | 194 | |
Total expenses before reductions | 113,554 | |
Expense reductions | (1,690) | 111,864 |
Net investment income (loss) | | 372,321 |
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) Net realized gain (loss) on: | | |
Investment securities: | | |
Unaffiliated issuers | 1,457,101 | |
Fidelity Central Funds | 41,779 | |
Other affiliated issuers | 23,157 | |
Foreign currency transactions | (484) | |
Futures contracts | (292) | |
Swaps | (10,177) | |
Total net realized gain (loss) | | 1,511,084 |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on: Investment securities | 290,824 | |
Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies | 17 | |
Swaps | 9,669 | |
Delayed delivery commitments | 4,587 | |
Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | | 305,097 |
Net gain (loss) | | 1,816,181 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | | $ 2,188,502 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Statement of Changes in Net Assets
Amounts in thousands | Year ended August 31, 2013 | Year ended August 31, 2012 |
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets | | |
Operations | | |
Net investment income (loss) | $ 372,321 | $ 389,728 |
Net realized gain (loss) | 1,511,084 | 255,024 |
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | 305,097 | 1,565,691 |
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations | 2,188,502 | 2,210,443 |
Distributions to shareholders from net investment income | (353,018) | (364,135) |
Distributions to shareholders from net realized gain | (355,229) | - |
Total distributions | (708,247) | (364,135) |
Share transactions - net increase (decrease) | (49,273) | (743,799) |
Total increase (decrease) in net assets | 1,430,982 | 1,102,509 |
| | |
Net Assets | | |
Beginning of period | 19,732,699 | 18,630,190 |
End of period (including undistributed net investment income of $80,612 and undistributed net investment income of $84,879, respectively) | $ 21,163,681 | $ 19,732,699 |
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Financial Highlights - Puritan
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 |
Selected Per-Share Data | | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $ 19.53 | $ 17.72 | $ 15.81 | $ 15.06 | $ 17.07 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | | |
Net investment income (loss) B | .36 | .38 | .35 | .40 | .45 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | 1.79 | 1.78 | 1.93 | .75 | (2.00) |
Total from investment operations | 2.15 | 2.16 | 2.28 | 1.15 | (1.55) |
Distributions from net investment income | (.35) | (.35) | (.36) | (.39) | (.44) |
Distributions from net realized gain | (.35) | - | - F | (.01) | (.02) |
Total distributions | (.70) | (.35) | (.37) H | (.40) | (.46) G |
Net asset value, end of period | $ 20.98 | $ 19.53 | $ 17.72 | $ 15.81 | $ 15.06 |
Total Return A | 11.29% | 12.35% | 14.38% | 7.61% | (8.76)% |
Ratios to Average Net Assets C,E | | | | | |
Expenses before reductions | .58% | .59% | .60% | .61% | .67% |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any | .58% | .59% | .60% | .61% | .67% |
Expenses net of all reductions | .57% | .59% | .59% | .61% | .67% |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.79% | 2.03% | 1.96% | 2.48% | 3.30% |
Supplemental Data | | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (in millions) | $ 15,934 | $ 15,472 | $ 15,420 | $ 15,054 | $ 16,111 |
Portfolio turnover rate D | 229% I | 141% | 154% I | 104% | 116% I |
A Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.
B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
C 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.
D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
E Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or reductions from other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class 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 brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.
F Amount represents less than $.01 per share.
G Total distributions of $.46 per share is comprised of distributions from net investment income of $.442 and distributions from net realized gain of $.015 per share.
H Total distributions of $.37 per share is comprised of distributions from net investment income of $.364 and distributions from net realized gain of $.003 per share.
I The portfolio turnover rate excludes liquidations and/or redemptions executed in-kind from Affiliated Central Funds.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Financial Highlights - Class K
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 |
Selected Per-Share Data | | | | | |
Net asset value, beginning of period | $ 19.52 | $ 17.72 | $ 15.80 | $ 15.06 | $ 17.07 |
Income from Investment Operations | | | | | |
Net investment income (loss) B | .39 | .40 | .38 | .42 | .46 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) | 1.79 | 1.77 | 1.93 | .74 | (1.99) |
Total from investment operations | 2.18 | 2.17 | 2.31 | 1.16 | (1.53) |
Distributions from net investment income | (.37) | (.37) | (.39) | (.41) | (.47) |
Distributions from net realized gain | (.35) | - | - F | (.01) | (.02) |
Total distributions | (.72) | (.37) | (.39) | (.42) | (.48) G |
Net asset value, end of period | $ 20.98 | $ 19.52 | $ 17.72 | $ 15.80 | $ 15.06 |
Total Return A | 11.48% | 12.43% | 14.59% | 7.69% | (8.59)% |
Ratios to Average Net Assets C,E | | | | | |
Expenses before reductions | .47% | .48% | .48% | .48% | .50% |
Expenses net of fee waivers, if any | .47% | .48% | .48% | .48% | .50% |
Expenses net of all reductions | .46% | .47% | .47% | .47% | .50% |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.90% | 2.15% | 2.09% | 2.61% | 3.47% |
Supplemental Data | | | | | |
Net assets, end of period (in millions) | $ 5,230 | $ 4,261 | $ 3,211 | $ 2,280 | $ 1,469 |
Portfolio turnover rate D | 229% H | 141% | 154% H | 104% | 116% H |
A Total returns would have been lower if certain expenses had not been reduced during the applicable periods shown.
B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
C 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.
D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.
E Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or reductions from other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class 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 brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.
F Amount represents less than $.01 per share.
G Total distributions of $.48 per share is comprised of distributions from net investment income of $.468 and distributions from net realized gain of $.015 per share.
H The portfolio turnover rate excludes liquidations and/or redemptions executed in-kind from Affiliated Central Funds.
See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements
For the period ended August 31, 2013
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
1. Organization.
Fidelity Puritan Fund (the Fund) is a fund of Fidelity Puritan 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. The Fund offers Puritan and Class K shares, each of which has equal rights as to assets and voting privileges. Each class has exclusive voting rights with respect to matters that affect that class.
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 Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) 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.
Based on its investment objective, each Fidelity Central Fund may invest or participate in various investment vehicles or strategies that are similar to those of the Fund. These strategies are consistent with the investment objectives of the Fund and may involve certain economic risks which may cause a decline in value of each of the Fidelity Central Funds and thus a decline in the value of the Fund. The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), an affiliate of FMR. The following summarizes the Fund's investment in each non-money market Fidelity Central Fund.
Fidelity Central Fund | Investment Manager | Investment Objective | Investment Practices |
Fidelity Mortgage Backed Securities Central Fund | FIMM | Seeks a high level of income by normally investing in investment-grade mortgage-related securities and repurchase agreements for those securities. | Delayed Delivery & When Issued Securities Repurchase Agreements Options Swaps |
An unaudited holdings listing for the Fund, which presents direct holdings as well as the pro-rata share of any securities and other investments held indirectly through its investment in underlying non-money market Fidelity Central Funds, is available at fidelity.com. 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 contain the
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2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds - continued
significant accounting policies (including investment valuation policies) of those 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 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. In accordance with valuation policies and procedures approved by the Board of Trustees (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 FMR Fair Value Committee (the Committee), in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board. Factors used in determining fair value vary by investment type and may include market or investment specific events, changes in interest rates and credit quality. The frequency with which these procedures are used cannot be predicted and they may be utilized to a significant extent. The Committee oversees the Fund's valuation policies and procedures and is responsible for approving and reporting to the Board all fair value determinations.
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)
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Valuation - continued
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. Utilizing these techniques may result in transfers between Level 1 and Level 2. Restricted equity securities and private placements for which observable inputs are not available are valued using alternate valuation approaches, including the market approach and the income approach and are categorized as Level 3 in the hierarchy. The market approach generally consists of using comparable market transactions while the income approach generally consists of using the net present value of estimated future cash flows, adjusted as appropriate for liquidity, credit, market and/or other risk factors.
Debt securities, including restricted securities, are valued based on evaluated prices received from third party pricing vendors or from brokers who make markets in such securities. For corporate bonds, bank notes, floating rate loans, foreign government and government agency obligations, municipal securities, preferred securities and U.S. government and government agency obligations, pricing vendors utilize matrix pricing which considers yield or price of bonds of comparable quality, coupon, maturity and type as well as broker-supplied prices. For asset backed securities, collateralized mortgage obligations, commercial mortgage securities and U.S. government agency mortgage securities, pricing vendors utilize matrix pricing which considers prepayment speed assumptions, attributes of the collateral, yield or price of bonds of comparable quality, coupon, maturity and type as well as broker-supplied prices. Swaps are marked-to-market daily based on valuations from third party pricing vendors, registered derivatives clearing organizations (clearinghouses) or broker-supplied valuations. These pricing sources may utilize inputs such as interest rate curves, credit spread curves, default possibilities and recovery rates. When independent prices are unavailable or unreliable, debt securities and swaps may be valued utilizing pricing methodologies which consider similar factors that would be used by third party pricing vendors. Debt securities and
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3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Valuation - continued
swaps are generally categorized as Level 2 in the hierarchy but may be Level 3 depending on the circumstances.
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. Short-term securities with remaining maturities of sixty days or less may be valued at amortized cost, which approximates fair value, and are categorized as Level 2 in the hierarchy.
The following provides information on Level 3 securities held by the Fund that were valued at period end based on unobservable inputs. These amounts exclude valuations provided by a broker.
Asset Type | Fair Value at 08/31/13 (000s) | Valuation Technique (s) | Unobservable Input | Amount or Range / Weighted Average | Impact to Valuation from an Increase in Input* |
Asset-Backed Securities | $ 73 | Discounted cash flow | Yield | 4.5% | Decrease |
| | Expected distribution | Recovery rate | 0% - 3% / 3.0% | Increase |
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations | $ 607 | Discounted cash flow | Yield | 7.5% | Decrease |
Commercial Mortgage Securities | $ 372 | Discounted cash flow | Discount rate | 20.1% | Decrease |
| | Expected distribution | Recovery rate | 70.0% | Increase |
| | Market comparable | Spread | 106.4% | Decrease |
| | | Quoted price | $ 87.00 | Increase |
Common Stocks | $ 144,147 | Discounted cash flow | Discount rate | 20% - 50% / 47.5% | Decrease |
| | Expected distribution | Recovery rate | 0% - 1% / 1.0% | Increase |
| | Market comparable | Transaction price | $ 53.89 | Increase |
| | | EV/EBITDA multiple | 5.0 - 22.0 / 16.7 | Increase |
Corporate Bonds | $ 18,550 | Discounted cash flow | Discount rate | 25.0% | Decrease |
| | Expected distribution | Recovery rate | 0.0% | Increase |
| | Market comparable | Transaction price | $ 100.00 | Increase |
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Valuation - continued
Asset Type | Fair Value at 08/31/13 (000s) | Valuation Technique (s) | Unobservable Input | Amount or Range / Weighted Average | Impact to Valuation from an Increase in Input* |
Floating Rate Loans | $ 6,829 | Discounted cash flow | Discount rate | 15.0% | Decrease |
| | Market comparable | EV/EBITDA multiple | 7.0 | Increase |
Preferred Stocks | $ 67,634 | Market comparable | Transaction price | $0.91 - $6,527.04 / $4,291.08 | Increase |
| | | EV/EBITDA multiple | 5.0 | Increase |
* Represents the expected directional change in the fair value of the Level 3 investments that would result from an increase in the corresponding
input. A decrease to the unobservable input would have the opposite effect. Significant changes in these inputs could result in significantly higher or
lower fair value measurements.
Changes in valuation techniques may result in transfers in or out of an assigned level within the disclosure hierarchy. The aggregate value of investments by input level, as of August 31, 2013, as well as a roll forward of Level 3 investments, is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
Foreign Currency. The Fund may use foreign currency contracts to facilitate transactions in foreign-denominated securities. Gains and losses from these transactions may arise from changes in the value of the foreign currency or if the counterparties do not perform under the contracts' terms.
Foreign-denominated assets, including investment securities, and liabilities are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rates at period end. Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and dividends received and expenses denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate in effect on the transaction date.
The effects of exchange rate fluctuations on investments are included with the net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investment securities. Other foreign currency transactions resulting in realized and unrealized gain (loss) are disclosed separately.
Investment Transactions and Income. For financial reporting purposes, the Fund's investment holdings and NAV include trades executed through the end of the last business day of the period. The NAV per share for processing shareholder transactions is calculated as of the close of business of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time and includes trades executed through the end of the prior business day. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of identified
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3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Investment Transactions and Income - continued
cost and may 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. Distributions received on securities that represent a return of capital or capital gain are recorded as a reduction of cost of investments and/or as a realized gain. Subsequent to ex-dividend date the Fund determines the components of these distributions, based upon receipt of tax filings or other correspondence relating to the underlying investment. Interest income and distributions from the Fidelity Central Funds are accrued as earned. Interest income includes coupon interest and amortization of premium and accretion of discount on debt securities. The principal amount on inflation-indexed securities is periodically adjusted to the rate of inflation and interest is accrued based on the principal amount. The adjustments to principal due to inflation are reflected as increases or decreases to Interest in the accompanying Statement of Operations. Investment income is recorded net of foreign taxes withheld where recovery of such taxes is uncertain. Debt obligations may be placed on non-accrual status and related interest income may be reduced by ceasing current accruals and writing off interest receivables when the collection of all or a portion of interest has become doubtful based on consistently applied procedures. A debt obligation is removed from non-accrual status when the issuer resumes interest payments or when collectability of interest is reasonably assured.
Class Allocations and Expenses. Investment income, realized and unrealized capital gains and losses, common expenses of the Fund, and certain fund-level expense reductions, if any, are allocated on a pro-rata basis to each class based on the relative net assets of each class to the total net assets of the Fund. Each class differs with respect to transfer agent fees incurred. Certain expense reductions may also differ by class. 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.
Deferred Trustee Compensation. Under a Deferred Compensation Plan (the Plan), independent Trustees may elect to defer receipt of a portion of their annual compensation. Deferred amounts are invested in a cross-section of Fidelity funds, are marked-to-market and remain in the Fund until distributed in accordance with the Plan. The investment of deferred amounts and the offsetting payable to the Trustees are included in the accompanying Statement of Assets and Liabilities.
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders. Each year, the Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code, including distributing substantially all of its taxable income and realized gains. As a result, no provision for U.S. Federal income taxes is required. As of August 31, 2013, the Fund did not have any unrecognized tax benefits in the financial statements; nor is the Fund aware of any tax positions for which it is reasonably possible that the total amounts of unrecognized tax benefits will significantly change in the next twelve months. The Fund files a U.S. federal tax return, in addition to state and local tax returns as required. The Fund's federal income tax returns are subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for a period of three fiscal years after they are filed. State and local tax returns may be subject to examination for an additional fiscal year depending on the jurisdiction. Foreign taxes are provided for based on the Fund's understanding of the tax rules and rates that exist in the foreign markets in which it invests.
Distributions are declared and recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income dividends and capital gain distributions are declared separately for each class. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from GAAP. In addition, the Fund claimed a portion of the payment made to redeeming shareholders as a distribution for income tax purposes.
Capital accounts within the financial statements are adjusted for permanent book-tax differences. These adjustments have no impact on net assets or the results of operations. Temporary book-tax differences will reverse in a subsequent period.
Book-tax differences are primarily due to futures contracts, swaps, foreign currency transactions, market discount, equity-debt classifications, partnerships (including allocations from Fidelity Central Funds), deferred trustees compensation and losses deferred due to wash sales.
The federal tax cost of investment securities and unrealized appreciation (depreciation) as of period end were as follows:
Gross unrealized appreciation | $ 3,562,705 |
Gross unrealized depreciation | (316,406) |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities and other investments | $ 3,246,299 |
| |
Tax Cost | $ 18,393,806 |
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3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders - continued
The tax-based components of distributable earnings as of period end were as follows:
Undistributed ordinary income | $ 85,512 |
Undistributed long-term capital gain | $ 1,272,417 |
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) | $ 3,240,531 |
The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:
| August 31, 2013 | August 31, 2012 |
Ordinary Income | $ 381,222 | $ 364,135 |
Long-term Capital Gains | 327,025 | - |
Total | $ 708,247 | $ 364,135 |
Repurchase Agreements. FMR has received an Exemptive Order from the SEC which permits the Fund and other affiliated entities of FMR to transfer uninvested cash balances into joint trading accounts which are then invested in repurchase agreements. The Fund may also invest directly with institutions in repurchase agreements. Repurchase agreements may be collateralized by government or non-government securities. Upon settlement date, collateral is held in segregated accounts with custodian banks and may be obtained in the event of a default of the counterparty. The Fund monitors, on a daily basis, the value of the collateral to ensure it is at least equal to the principal amount of the repurchase agreement (including accrued interest). In the event of a default by the counterparty, realization of the collateral proceeds could be delayed, during which time the value of the collateral may decline.
Delayed Delivery Transactions and When-Issued Securities. During the period, the Fund transacted in securities on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis. Payment and delivery may take place after the customary settlement period for that security. The price of the underlying securities and the date when the securities will be delivered and paid for are fixed at the time the transaction is negotiated. The securities purchased on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis are identified as such in the Fund's Schedule of Investments. The Fund may receive compensation for interest forgone in the purchase of a delayed delivery or when-issued security. With respect to purchase commitments, the Fund identifies securities as segregated in its records with a value at least equal to the amount of the commitment. Losses may arise due to changes in the value of the underlying securities or if the counterparty does not perform under the contract's terms, or if the issuer does not issue the securities due to political, economic, or other factors.
To-Be-Announced (TBA) Securities and Mortgage Dollar Rolls. During the period, the Fund transacted in TBA securities that involved buying or selling mortgage-backed
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
To-Be-Announced (TBA) Securities and Mortgage Dollar Rolls - continued
securities (MBS) on a forward commitment basis. A TBA transaction typically does not designate the actual security to be delivered and only includes an approximate principal amount; however delivered securities must meet specified terms defined by industry guidelines, including issuer, rate and current principal amount outstanding on underlying mortgage pools. The Fund may enter into a TBA transaction with the intent to take possession of or deliver the underlying MBS, or the Fund may elect to extend the settlement by entering into either a mortgage or reverse mortgage dollar roll. Mortgage dollar rolls are transactions where a fund sells TBA securities and simultaneously agrees to repurchase MBS on a later date at a lower price and with the same counterparty. Reverse mortgage dollar rolls involve the purchase and simultaneous agreement to sell TBA securities on a later date at a lower price. Transactions in mortgage dollar rolls and reverse mortgage dollar rolls are accounted for as purchases and sales and may result in an increase to the Fund's portfolio turnover rate.
Purchases and sales of TBA securities involve risks similar to those discussed above for delayed delivery and when-issued securities. Also, if the counterparty in a mortgage dollar roll or a reverse mortgage dollar roll transaction files for bankruptcy or becomes insolvent, the Fund's right to repurchase or sell securities may be limited. Additionally, when a fund sells TBA securities without already owning or having the right to obtain the deliverable securities (an uncovered forward commitment to sell), it incurs a risk of loss because it could have to purchase the securities at a price that is higher than the price at which it sold them. A fund may be unable to purchase the deliverable securities if the corresponding market is illiquid.
TBA securities subject to a forward commitment to sell at period end are included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments under the caption "TBA Sale Commitments." The proceeds and value of these commitments are reflected in the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities as Receivable for TBA sale commitments and TBA sale commitments, at value, respectively.
Restricted Securities. The Fund may invest in securities that are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale. These securities generally may be resold in transactions exempt from registration or to the public if the securities are registered. Disposal of these securities may involve time-consuming negotiations and expense, and prompt sale at an acceptable price may be difficult. Information regarding restricted securities is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
Loans and Other Direct Debt Instruments. The Fund invests in direct debt instruments which are interests in amounts owed to lenders by corporate or other borrowers.
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3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued
Loans and Other Direct Debt Instruments - continued
These instruments may be in the form of loans, trade claims or other receivables and may include standby financing commitments such as revolving credit facilities that obligate the Fund to supply additional cash to the borrower on demand. Loans may be acquired through assignment or participation, or may be made directly to a borrower. The Fund may be contractually obligated to receive approval from the agent bank and/or borrower prior to the sale of these loans. The Fund also invests in unfunded loan commitments, which are contractual obligations for future funding. Information regarding unfunded commitments is included at the end of the Fund's Schedule of Investments.
New Accounting Pronouncement. The Financial Accounting Standards Board issued in December 2011, Accounting Standard Update No. 2011-11, Disclosures about Offsetting Assets and Liabilities, and in January 2013, Accounting Standards Update No. 2013-1 Clarifying the Scope of Disclosures about Offsetting Assets and Liabilities. These updates create new disclosure requirements requiring entities to disclose both gross and net information for derivatives and other financial instruments that are either offset in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities or subject to an enforceable master netting arrangement or similar agreement. The disclosure requirements are effective for annual reporting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2013, and interim periods within those annual periods. Management expects that the impact of the updates' adoption will be limited to additional financial statement disclosures as applicable.
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 and swaps. 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, to gain exposure to certain types of assets 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.
Annual Report
Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Risk Exposures and the Use of Derivative Instruments - continued
The Fund's use of derivatives increased or decreased its exposure to the following risks:
Credit Risk | Credit risk relates to the ability of the issuer of a financial instrument to make further principal or interest payments on an obligation or commitment that it has to the Fund. |
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. Derivative counterparty credit risk is managed through formal evaluation of the creditworthiness of all potential counterparties. On certain OTC derivatives such as bi-lateral swaps, the Fund attempts to reduce its exposure to counterparty credit risk by entering into an International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. (ISDA) Master Agreement with each of its counterparties. The ISDA Master Agreement gives the Fund the right to terminate all transactions traded under such agreement upon the deterioration in the credit quality of the counterparty beyond specified levels. The ISDA Master Agreement gives each party the right, upon an event of default by the other party or a termination of the agreement, to close out all transactions traded under such agreement and to net amounts owed under each transaction to one net payable by one party to the other. To mitigate counterparty credit risk on bi-lateral OTC derivatives, the Fund receives collateral in the form of cash or securities once the Fund's net unrealized appreciation on outstanding derivative contracts under an ISDA Master Agreement exceeds certain applicable thresholds, subject to certain minimum transfer provisions. The collateral received is held in segregated accounts with the Fund's custodian bank in accordance with the collateral agreements entered into between the Fund, the counterparty and the Fund's custodian bank. The Fund could experience delays and costs in gaining access to the collateral even though it is held by the Fund's custodian bank. The Fund's maximum risk of loss from counterparty credit risk related to bi-lateral OTC derivatives is generally the aggregate unrealized appreciation and unpaid counterparty payments in excess of any collateral pledged by the counterparty to the Fund. The Fund may be required to pledge collateral for the benefit of the counterparties on bi-lateral OTC derivatives in an amount not less than each counterparty's unrealized appreciation on outstanding derivative contracts, subject to certain minimum transfer provisions, and
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4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Risk Exposures and the Use of Derivative Instruments - continued
any such pledged collateral is identified in the Schedule of Investments. Exchange-traded futures contracts are not covered by the ISDA Master Agreement; however 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.
Net Realized Gain (Loss) and Change in Net Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) on Derivatives. The table below, which reflects the impacts of derivatives on the financial performance of the Fund, summarizes the net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) for derivatives during the period as presented in the Statement of Operations.
Primary Risk Exposure / Derivative Type | Net Realized Gain (Loss) | Change in Net Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) |
Credit Risk | | |
Swaps | $ (10,177) | $ 9,669 |
Equity Risk | | |
Futures Contracts | (292) | - |
Totals (a) | $ (10,469) | $ 9,669 |
(a) A summary of the value of derivatives by primary risk exposure as of period end, if any, is included at the end of the Schedule of Investments and
is representative of activity for the period.
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 for derivative instruments 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 included in the Statement of Operations.
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Futures Contracts - continued
Any open futures contracts at period end are presented in the Schedule of Investments under the caption "Futures Contracts." The underlying face amount at value reflects each contract's exposure to the underlying instrument or index at period end.
Swaps. A swap is a contract between two parties to exchange future cash flows at periodic intervals based on a notional principal amount. A bi-lateral OTC swap is a transaction between a fund and a dealer counterparty where cash flows are exchanged between the two parties for the life of the swap.
Bi-lateral OTC swaps are marked-to-market daily and changes in value are reflected in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities in the bi-lateral OTC swaps at value line items. Any upfront premiums paid or received upon entering a bi-lateral OTC swap to compensate for differences between stated terms of the swap and prevailing market conditions (e.g. credit spreads, interest rates or other factors) are recorded in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities and amortized to realized gain or (loss) ratably over the term of the swap. Any unamortized upfront premiums are presented in the Schedule of Investments.
Payments are exchanged at specified intervals, accrued daily commencing with the effective date of the contract and recorded as realized gain or (loss). Realized gain or (loss) is also recorded in the event of an early termination of a swap. The net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on swaps during the period is included in the Statement of Operations.
Any open swaps at period end are included in the Schedule of Investments under the caption "Swaps."
Credit Default Swaps. Credit default swaps enable the Fund to buy or sell protection against specified credit events on a single-name issuer or a traded credit index. Under the terms of a credit default swap the buyer of protection (buyer) receives credit protection in exchange for making periodic payments to the seller of protection (seller) based on a fixed percentage applied to a notional principal amount. In return for these payments, the seller will be required to make a payment upon the occurrence of one or more specified credit events. The Fund enters into credit default swaps as a seller to gain credit exposure to an issuer and/or as a buyer to obtain a measure of protection against defaults of an issuer. Periodic payments are made over the life of the contract by the buyer provided that no credit event occurs.
For credit default swaps on most corporate and sovereign issuers, credit events include bankruptcy, failure to pay or repudiation/moratorium. For credit default swaps on corporate or sovereign issuers, the obligation that may be put to the seller is not limited
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4. Derivative Instruments - continued
Credit Default Swaps - continued
to the specific reference obligation described in the Schedule of Investments. For credit default swaps on asset-backed securities, a credit event may be triggered by events such as failure to pay principal, maturity extension, rating downgrade or write-down. For credit default swaps on asset-backed securities, the reference obligation described represents the security that may be put to the seller. For credit default swaps on a traded credit index, a specified credit event may affect all or individual underlying securities included in the index.
As a seller, if an underlying credit event occurs, the Fund will pay a net settlement amount of cash equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index. Only in the event of the industry's inability to value the underlying asset will the Fund be required to take delivery of the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index and pay an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap.
As a buyer, if an underlying credit event occurs, the Fund will receive a net settlement amount of cash equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index. Only in the event of the industry's inability to value the underlying asset will the Fund be required to deliver the reference obligation or underlying securities comprising an index in exchange for payment of an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap.
Typically, the value of each credit default swap and credit rating disclosed for each reference obligation in the Schedule of Investments, where the Fund is the seller, can be used as measures of the current payment/performance risk of the swap. As the value of the swap changes as a positive or negative percentage of the total notional amount, the payment/performance risk may decrease or increase, respectively. In addition to these measures, FMR monitors a variety of factors including cash flow assumptions, market activity and market sentiment as part of its ongoing process of assessing payment/performance risk.
5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.
Purchases and sales of securities (including the Fixed-Income Central Funds), other than short-term securities, U.S. government securities and liquidations executed in-kind from Affiliated Central Funds, aggregated $14,263,927 and $13,654,122, respectively.
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.
Management Fee. FMR and its affiliates provide the Fund with investment management related services for which the Fund pays a monthly management fee. The management fee is the sum of an individual fund fee rate that is based on an annual rate of .15% of the Fund's average net assets and an annualized group fee rate that averaged .26% during the period. The group fee rate is based upon the average net assets of all the mutual funds advised by FMR, including any mutual funds previously advised by FMR that are currently advised by Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, an affiliate of FMR. The group fee rate decreases as assets under management increase and increases as assets under management decrease. For the period, the total annual management fee rate was .40% of the Fund's average net assets.
Transfer Agent Fees. Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc., (FIIOC), an affiliate of FMR, is the transfer, dividend disbursing and shareholder servicing agent for each class of the Fund. FIIOC receives account fees and asset-based fees that vary according to the account size and type of account of the shareholders of Puritan. FIIOC receives an asset-based fee of Class K's average net assets. FIIOC pays for typesetting, printing and mailing of shareholder reports, except proxy statements.
For the period, transfer agent fees for each class were as follows:
| Amount | % of Average Net Assets |
Puritan | $ 24,890 | .16 |
Class K | 2,341 | .05 |
| $ 27,231 | |
Accounting and Security Lending Fees. Fidelity Service Company, Inc. (FSC), an affiliate of FMR, maintains the Fund's accounting records. The accounting fee is based on the level of average net assets for each month. Under a separate contract, FSC administers the security lending program. The security lending fee is based on the number and duration of lending transactions.
Brokerage Commissions. The Fund placed a portion of its portfolio transactions with brokerage firms which are affiliates of the investment adviser. Brokerage commissions are included in net realized gain (loss) and change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) in the Statement of Operations. The commissions paid to these affiliated firms were $281 for the period.
Interfund Lending Program. Pursuant to an Exemptive Order issued by the SEC, the Fund, along with other registered investment companies having management contracts with FMR, may participate in an interfund lending program. This program provides an alternative credit facility allowing the funds to borrow from, or lend money to, other participating affiliated funds. At period end, there were no interfund loans outstanding.
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6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates - continued
Interfund Lending Program - continued
The Fund's 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 |
Borrower | $ 24,357 | .31% | $ 1 |
Other Affiliated Transactions. On January 4, 2013, the Fidelity Corporate Bond 1-10 Year Central Fund ("1-10 Year"), a fund in which the Fund was invested, was liquidated pursuant to a Plan of Liquidation and Dissolution approved by the 1-10 Year Board. Under the plan, 1-10 Year distributed in-kind all of its net assets to its shareholders pro rata at its NAV per share as of the close of business on the liquidation date. As a result, the Fund received cash and securities, including accrued interest, of $287,718 in return for 2,530 of shares of 1-10 Year. Because 1-10 Year was a partnership for federal income tax purposes, the liquidation generally was tax free to the Fund.
7. Committed Line of Credit.
The Fund participates with other funds managed by FMR 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 Fund has agreed to pay commitment fees on its pro-rata portion of the line of credit, which amounted to $47 and is reflected in Miscellaneous expenses on the Statement of Operations. 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, a lending agent is used and may loan securities to certain qualified borrowers, including Fidelity Capital Markets (FCM), a broker-dealer affiliated with the Fund. 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. 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 maintained at the Fund's custodian and/or invested in cash equivalents and/or 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
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Notes to Financial Statements - continued
(Amounts in thousands except percentages)
8. Security Lending - continued
Liabilities. At period end, there were no security loans outstanding with FCM. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less rebates paid to borrowers, plus any premium payments received for lending certain types of securities. Total security lending income during the period, presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of interest income, amounted to $222. Net income from the Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund during the period, presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of income from Fidelity Central Funds, amounted to $937 (including $39 from securities loaned to FCM).
9. Bank Borrowings.
The Fund is permitted to have bank borrowings for temporary or emergency purposes to fund shareholder redemptions or for other short-term liquidity requirements. The Fund has established borrowing arrangements with certain banks. The interest rate on the borrowings is the bank's base rate, as revised from time to time. The average loan balance during the period for which loans were outstanding amounted to $31,358. The weighted average interest rate was .66%. The interest expense amounted to $2 under the bank borrowing program. At period end, there were no bank borrowings outstanding.
10. Expense Reductions.
Commissions paid to certain brokers with whom FMR, or its affiliates, places trades on behalf of the Fund include an amount in addition to trade execution, which may be rebated back to the Fund to offset certain expenses. This amount totaled $1,655 for the period. Through arrangements with the Fund's custodian, credits realized as a result of uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses. During the period, these credits reduced the Fund's custody expenses by $8.
In addition, FMR reimbursed a portion of the Fund's operating expenses during the period in the amount of $27.
11. Distributions to Shareholders.
Distributions to shareholders of each class were as follows:
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 |
From net investment income | | |
Puritan | $ 267,070 | $ 290,441 |
Class K | 85,948 | 73,694 |
Total | $ 353,018 | $ 364,135 |
From net realized gain | | |
Puritan | $ 276,687 | $ - |
Class K | 78,542 | - |
Total | $ 355,229 | $ - |
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12. Share Transactions.
Transactions for each class of shares were as follows:
| Shares | Dollars |
Years ended August 31, | 2013 | 2012 | 2013 | 2012 |
Puritan | | | | |
Shares sold | 78,846 | 79,946 | $ 1,597,567 | $ 1,477,678 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 26,262 | 15,053 | 515,763 | 274,339 |
Shares redeemed | (138,032) | (172,734) | (2,782,293) | (3,181,243) |
Net increase (decrease) | (32,924) | (77,735) | $ (668,963) | $ (1,429,226) |
Class K | | | | |
Shares sold | 68,604 | 80,899 | $ 1,385,671 | $ 1,501,190 |
Reinvestment of distributions | 8,366 | 4,030 | 164,490 | 73,694 |
Shares redeemed | (45,907) | (47,844) | (930,471) | (889,457) |
Net increase (decrease) | 31,063 | 37,085 | $ 619,690 | $ 685,427 |
13. 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.
Annual Report
To the Trustees of Fidelity Puritan Trust and the Shareholders of Fidelity Puritan Fund:
In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the schedule of investments, and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Fidelity Puritan Fund (a fund of Fidelity Puritan Trust) at August 31, 2013, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as "financial statements") are the responsibility of the Fidelity Puritan Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at August 31, 2013 by correspondence with the custodian, agent banks and brokers, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
October 21, 2013
Annual Report
The Trustees, Member of the Advisory Board, and executive 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 James C. Curvey, Ned C. Lautenbach, Ronald P. O'Hanley, and William S. Stavropoulos, each of the Trustees oversees 166 funds. Mr. Curvey oversees 387 funds. Mr. Lautenbach, Mr. O'Hanley, and Mr. Stavropoulos each oversees 230 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 of the trust and the fund (as defined in the 1940 Act) (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. The executive officers and Advisory Board Member hold office without limit in time, except that any officer and 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.
Experience, Skills, Attributes, and Qualifications of the Fund's 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.
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Trustees and Officers - continued
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. James C. Curvey is an interested person (as defined in the 1940 Act) 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. Ned C. Lautenbach 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 equity and high income funds and another Board oversees Fidelity's investment-grade bond, money market, and asset allocation funds. The asset allocation funds may invest in Fidelity funds overseen by the fund's Board. The use of separate Boards, each with its own committee structure, allows the Trustees of each group of Fidelity funds to focus on the unique issues of the funds they oversee, including common research, investment, and operational issues. On occasion, the separate Boards establish joint committees to address issues of overlapping consequences for the Fidelity funds overseen by each Board.
The Trustees operate using a system of committees to facilitate the timely and efficient consideration of all matters of importance to the Trustees, the fund, and fund shareholders and to facilitate compliance with legal and regulatory requirements and oversight of the fund's activities and associated risks. The Board, acting through its committees, has charged FMR and its affiliates with (i) identifying events or circumstances the occurrence of which could have demonstrably adverse effects on the fund's business and/or reputation; (ii) implementing processes and controls to lessen the possibility that such events or circumstances occur or to mitigate the effects of such events or circumstances if they do occur; and (iii) creating and maintaining a system designed to evaluate continuously business and market conditions in order to facilitate the identification and implementation processes described in (i) and (ii) above. Because the day-to-day operations and activities of the funds are carried out by or through FMR, its affiliates and other service providers, the fund's exposure to risks is mitigated but not eliminated by the processes overseen by the Trustees. While each of the Board's committees has responsibility for overseeing different aspects of the fund's activities, oversight is exercised primarily through the Operations, Audit, and Compliance Committees. In addition, the Independent Trustees have 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. For example, a working group comprised of Independent Trustees and FMR has worked and continues to work to review the Fidelity fund's valuation-related activities, reporting and risk management. 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 FMR'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 Fund's Trustees."
Annual Report
The fund's Statement of Additional Information (SAI) includes more information about the Trustees. To request a free copy, call Fidelity at 1-800-835-5092.
Interested Trustees*:
Correspondence intended for each 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+ |
James C. Curvey (1935) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2007 Mr. Curvey is Trustee and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of certain Trusts. Mr. Curvey also serves as Trustee (2007-present) of other investment companies advised by FMR. Mr. Curvey is a Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2009-present), Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Co. (2009-present) and Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2007-present). Mr. Curvey is also Vice Chairman (2007-present) and Director of FMR LLC. In addition, Mr. Curvey serves as an Overseer for the Boston Symphony Orchestra and a member of the Trustees of Villanova University. Previously, Mr. Curvey was the Vice Chairman (2006-2007) and Director (2000-2007) of FMR Corp. |
Ronald P. O'Hanley (1957) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2011 Mr. O'Hanley serves as a Trustee and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of other Fidelity funds (2013-present), and is Director of FMR Co., Inc. (2010-present), Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2010-present), Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2010-present), President of Fidelity Asset Management and Corporate Services and a Member of Fidelity's Executive Committee (2010-present). Previously, Mr. O'Hanley served as President and Chief Executive Officer of BNY Mellon Asset Management (2007-2010). Mr. O'Hanley also served as Vice Chairman of Bank New York Mellon Corp. and a member of that firm's Executive Committee. Prior to the 2007 merger of The Bank of New York and Mellon Financial Corporation, he was Vice Chairman of Mellon Financial Corporation and President and Chief Executive Officer of Mellon Asset Management. He joined Mellon in February 1997. Mr. O'Hanley currently serves as Chairman of the Boston Public Library Foundation Board of Directors and sits on the Board of Directors of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, the Board of Trustees of the Marine Biological Laboratory and the Advisory Board of the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Administration at Syracuse University. Mr. O'Hanley also chairs the Council on Asset Management for the Financial Services Roundtable and is a member of the Board of Directors of Institutional Investor's U.S. Institute. |
* Trustees have been determined to be "Interested Trustees" by virtue of, among other things, their affiliation with the trust or various entities under common control with FMR.
+ The information above includes each Trustee's principal occupation during the last five years and other information relating to the experience, attributes, and skills relevant to each Trustee's qualifications to serve as a Trustee, which led to the conclusion that each Trustee should serve as a Trustee for the fund.
Annual Report
Independent Trustees:
Correspondence intended for each Independent Trustee (that is, the Trustees other than the Interested Trustees) may be sent to Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 55235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-5235.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupations and Other Relevant Experience+ |
Dennis J. Dirks (1948) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2005 Prior to his retirement in May 2003, Mr. Dirks was Chief Operating Officer and a member of the Board of The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC). He also served as President, Chief Operating Officer, and Board member of The Depository Trust Company (DTC) and President and Board member of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC). In addition, Mr. Dirks served as Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Government Securities Clearing Corporation, Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Mortgage-Backed Securities Clearing Corporation, as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of Manhattan College (2005-2008), and as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of AHRC of Nassau County (2006-2008). Mr. Dirks is a member of the Independent Directors Council (IDC) Governing Council (2010-present) and Board of Directors for The Brookville Center for Children's Services, Inc. (2009-present). |
Alan J. Lacy (1953) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Mr. Lacy serves as Senior Adviser (2007-present) of Oak Hill Capital Partners, L.P. (private equity). Mr. Lacy also served as Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) and Vice Chairman (2005-2006) of Sears Holdings Corporation and Sears, Roebuck and Co. (retail). In addition, Mr. Lacy serves as a member of the Board of Directors of Dave & Buster's Entertainment, Inc. (restaurant and entertainment complexes, 2010-present), Earth Fare, Inc. (retail grocery, 2012-present), The Hillman Companies, Inc. (hardware wholesalers, 2010-present), and Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (global pharmaceuticals, 2008-present). Mr. Lacy is a member of the Board of Trustees of The National Parks Conservation Association (2006-present). Previously, Mr. Lacy served as Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the National Parks Conservation Association (2008-2011) and as a member of the Board of Directors for the Western Union Company (global money transfer, 2006-2011). |
Ned C. Lautenbach (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2000 Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Independent Trustees of the Equity and High Income Funds (2006-present) and serves as a Trustee of other Fidelity funds (2013-present). Mr. Lautenbach currently serves as the Lead Director of the Eaton Corporation Board of Directors (diversified industrial, 1997-present). Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Philharmonic Center for the Arts in Naples, Florida (2012-present) and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations (1994-present). Previously, Mr. Lautenbach was a Partner/Advisory Partner at Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, LLC (private equity investment, 1998-2010), as well as a Director of Sony Corporation (2006-2007). |
Joseph Mauriello (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Prior to his retirement in January 2006, Mr. Mauriello served in numerous senior management positions including Deputy Chairman and Chief Operating Officer (2004-2005), and Vice Chairman of Financial Services (2002-2004) of KPMG LLP US (professional services, 1965-2005). Mr. Mauriello currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of XL Group plc. (global insurance and re-insurance, 2006-present). Previously, Mr. Mauriello served as a Director of the Hamilton Funds of the Bank of New York (2006-2007) and of Arcadia Resources Inc. (health care services and products, 2007-2012). |
Robert W. Selander (1950) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2011 Previously, Mr. Selander served as a Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2011), Executive Vice Chairman (2010), Chief Executive Officer (2009-2010), and President and Chief Executive Officer (1997-2009) of Mastercard, Inc. |
Cornelia M. Small (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2005 Ms. Small is a member of the Board of Directors (2009-present) and Chair of the Investment Committee (2010-present) of the Teagle Foundation. Ms. Small also serves on the Investment Committee of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Small served as Chairperson (2002-2008) and a member of the Investment Committee and Chairperson (2008-2012) and a member of the Board of Trustees of Smith College. In addition, Ms. Small served as Chief Investment Officer, Director of Global Equity Investments, and a member of the Board of Directors of Scudder, Stevens & Clark and Scudder Kemper Investments. |
William S. Stavropoulos (1939) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2001 Mr. Stavropoulos is Vice Chairman of the Independent Trustees of the Equity and High Income Funds (2006-present) and serves as a Trustee of other Fidelity funds (2013-present). Mr. Stavropoulos serves as President and Founder of the Michigan Baseball Foundation, the Great Lakes Loons (2007-present). Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman Emeritus of the Board of Directors of The Dow Chemical Company, where he previously served in numerous senior management positions, including President, CEO (1995-2000; 2002-2004), Chairman of the Executive Committee (2000-2006), and as a member of the Board of Directors (1990-2006). Currently, Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman of the Board of Directors of Univar Inc. (global distributor of commodity and specialty chemicals), a Director of Teradata Corporation (data warehousing and technology solutions), and Maersk Inc. (industrial conglomerate), and a member of the Advisory Board for Metalmark Capital LLC (private equity investment, 2005-present). Mr. Stavropoulos is an operating advisor to Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, LLC (private equity investment). In addition, Mr. Stavropoulos is a member of the University of Notre Dame Advisory Council for the College of Science, a Trustee of the Rollin L. Gerstacker Foundation, and a Director of the Naples Philharmonic Center for the Arts. Previously, Mr. Stavropoulos served as a Director of Chemical Financial Corporation (bank holding company, 1993-2012) and Tyco International, Ltd. (multinational manufacturing and services, 2007-2012). |
David M. Thomas (1949) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Previously, Mr. Thomas served as Executive Chairman (2005-2006) and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) of IMS Health, Inc. (pharmaceutical and healthcare information solutions), and a Director of Fortune Brands, Inc. (consumer products, 2000-2011). In addition, Mr. Thomas serves as Non-Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors of Fortune Brands Home and Security (home and security products, 2011-present), and as a member of the Board of Directors of Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (marketing communication, 2004-present). |
+ The information above includes each Trustee's principal occupation during the last five years and other information relating to the experience, attributes, and skills relevant to each Trustee's qualifications to serve as a Trustee, which led to the conclusion that each Trustee should serve as a Trustee for the fund.
Annual Report
Trustees and Officers - continued
Advisory Board Member and Executive Officers:
Correspondence intended for each executive officer and Peter S. Lynch may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 245 Summer Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210.
Name, Year of Birth; Principal Occupation |
Peter S. Lynch (1944) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2003 Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Lynch is Vice Chairman and a Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. In addition, Mr. Lynch serves as a Trustee of Boston College and as the Chairman of the Inner-City Scholarship Fund. Previously, Mr. Lynch served on the Special Olympics International Board of Directors (1997-2006). |
Kenneth B. Robins (1969) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 President and Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Robins also serves as President and Treasurer (2010-present), Deputy Treasurer (2013-present), and Assistant Treasurer (2009-present) of other Fidelity funds and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2004-present). Mr. Robins serves as Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (2013-present). Previously, Mr. Robins served as President and Treasurer (2008-2013) and Deputy Treasurer (2005-2008) of certain Fidelity funds, and Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2006-2008). |
Bruce T. Herring (1965) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2006 Vice President of certain Equity Funds. Mr. Herring also serves as Vice President of other Fidelity funds (2013-present), Chief Investment Officer of Fidelity Global Asset Allocation (GAA) (2013-present), Chief Investment Officer and Director of Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2010-present), Group Chief Investment Officer of FMR, and President of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2010-present). Previously, Mr. Herring served as Vice President (2005-2006) and Senior Vice President (2006-2007) of Fidelity Management & Research Company, Vice President of FMR Co., Inc. (2001-2007) and as a portfolio manager for Fidelity U.S. Equity Funds. |
Brian B. Hogan (1964) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2009 Vice President of Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Hogan also serves as Vice President of other Fidelity funds (2009-present) and President of FMR's Equity Division (2009-present). Previously, Mr. Hogan served as Senior Vice President, Equity Research of FMR (2006-2009) and as a portfolio manager. |
Scott C. Goebel (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Secretary and Chief Legal Officer (CLO) of certain Fidelity funds. Mr. Goebel also serves as Secretary of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM) (2010-present) and Fidelity Research and Analysis Company (FRAC) (2010-present); Secretary and CLO of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2008-present); General Counsel, Secretary, and Senior Vice President of FMR (2008-present) and FMR Co., Inc. (2008-present); employed by FMR LLC or an affiliate (2001-present); Chief Legal Officer of Fidelity Management & Research (Hong Kong) Limited (2008-present) and Assistant Secretary of Fidelity Management & Research (Japan) Inc. (2008-present), and Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Goebel served as Secretary and CLO of other Fidelity funds (2008-2013), as Assistant Secretary of FIMM (2008-2010), FRAC (2008-2010), and the Funds (2007-2008) and as Vice President and Secretary of Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) (2005-2007). |
William C. Coffey (1969) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2009 Assistant Secretary of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Coffey also serves as Assistant Secretary of other Fidelity funds (2009-present), Senior Vice President and Deputy General Counsel of FMR LLC (2010-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Coffey served as Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR LLC (2005-2009). |
Elizabeth Paige Baumann (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2012 Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Officer of the Fidelity funds. Ms. Baumann also serves as AML Officer of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2012-present), Chief AML Officer of FMR LLC (2012-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Ms. Baumann served as Vice President and Deputy Anti-Money Laundering Officer (2007-2012). |
Christine Reynolds (1958) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Chief Financial Officer of the Fidelity funds. Ms. Reynolds became President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) in August 2008. Ms. Reynolds served as Chief Operating Officer of FPCMS (2007-2008). Previously, Ms. Reynolds served as President, Treasurer, and Anti-Money Laundering officer of the Fidelity funds (2004-2007). |
Joseph A. Hanlon (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2012 Chief Compliance Officer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Hanlon also serves as Chief Compliance Officer of other Fidelity funds (2012-present). Mr. Hanlon serves as Compliance Officer of FMR, FMR Co., Inc., Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), Fidelity Research and Analysis Company (FRAC), and Fidelity Management & Research (Hong Kong) (2009-present), as Senior Vice President of the Fidelity Asset Management Division (2009-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Hanlon served as Compliance Officer of Fidelity Management & Research (Japan) Inc. (2009-2013), Strategic Advisers, Inc. (2009-2013), and Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2009-2013). |
Joseph F. Zambello (1957) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2011 Deputy Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Mr. Zambello is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Zambello served as Vice President of FMR's Program Management Group (2009-2011) and Vice President of the Transfer Agent Oversight Group (2005-2009). |
Adrien E. Deberghes (1967) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2008 Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Deberghes also serves as President and Treasurer (2013-present), Vice President (2011-present), and Assistant Treasurer (2010-present) of other Fidelity funds, and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Deberghes served as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2008-2013), Senior Vice President of Mutual Fund Administration at State Street Corporation (2007-2008), Senior Director of Mutual Fund Administration at Investors Bank & Trust (2005-2007), and Director of Finance for Dunkin' Brands (2000-2005). |
Stephen Sadoski (1971) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2012 Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Mr. Sadoski also serves as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2013-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2012-present). Previously, Mr. Sadoski served as Deputy Treasurer (2012-2013) and Assistant Treasurer (2012-2013) of other Fidelity funds, an assistant chief accountant in the Division of Investment Management of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) (2009-2012) and as a senior manager at Deloitte & Touche LLP (1997-2009). |
Stacie M. Smith (1974) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2013 Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Ms. Smith also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2013-present) and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2009-present). Previously, Ms. Smith served as Deputy Treasurer of certain Fidelity funds (2013) and Senior Audit Manager of Ernst & Young LLP (1996-2009). |
Renee Stagnone (1975) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2013 Deputy Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Ms. Stagnone is an employee of Fidelity Investments. |
Stephanie J. Dorsey (1969) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2010 Assistant Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds. Ms. Dorsey also serves as President and Treasurer (2013-present) and Assistant Treasurer (2010-present) of other Fidelity funds, Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of The North Carolina Capital Management Trust: Cash and Term Portfolios (2013-present), and is an employee of Fidelity Investments (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Dorsey served as Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Fixed Income and Asset Allocation Funds (2008-2013), Treasurer (2004-2008) of the JPMorgan Mutual Funds and Vice President (2004-2008) of JPMorgan Chase Bank. |
Chris Maher (1972) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2013 Assistant Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Mr. Maher is Vice President of Valuation Oversight and is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Maher served as Vice President of Asset Management Compliance (2013), Vice President of FMR's Program Management Group (2010-2013), and Vice President of Valuation Oversight (2008-2010). |
Gary W. Ryan (1958) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2005 Assistant Treasurer of certain Fidelity funds. Mr. Ryan is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Ryan served as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-2013) and Vice President of Fund Reporting in Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) (1999-2005). |
Jonathan Davis (1968) |
| Year of Election or Appointment: 2010 Assistant Treasurer of the Fidelity funds. Mr. Davis is also Assistant Treasurer of Fidelity Rutland Square Trust II and Fidelity Commonwealth Trust II. Mr. Davis is an employee of Fidelity Investments. Previously, Mr. Davis served as Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR LLC (2003-2010). |
Annual Report
The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Puritan 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 a dividend derived from net investment income:
| Pay Date | Record Date | Dividends | Capital Gains |
Class K | 10/14/13 | 10/11/13 | $0.100 | $1.298 |
The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended August 31, 2013 $1,364,831,555, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.
A total of 2.29% of the dividends distributed during the fiscal year was derived from interest on U.S. Government securities which is generally exempt from state income tax.
The fund designates $126,559,866 of distributions paid during the period January 1, 2013 to August 31, 2013 as qualifying to be taxed as interest-related dividends for nonresident alien shareholders.
Class K designates 14%, 44%, 69%, 69% of the dividends distributed in October, December, April and July, respectively during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends-received deduction for corporate shareholders.
Class K designates 16%, 50%, 75%, 75% of the dividends distributed in October, December, April and July, 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 will notify shareholders in January 2014 of amounts for use in preparing 2013 income tax returns.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and Management Fees
Fidelity Puritan Fund
Each year, the Board of Trustees, including the Independent Trustees (together, the Board), votes on the renewal of the management contract and sub-advisory agreements (together, the Advisory Contracts) for the fund. The Board, assisted by the advice of fund counsel and Independent Trustees' counsel, requests and considers a broad range of information relevant to the renewal of the Advisory Contracts throughout the year.
The Board meets regularly and, at each of its meetings, covers an extensive agenda of topics and materials and considers factors that are relevant to its annual consideration of the renewal of the fund's Advisory Contracts, including the services and support provided to the fund and its shareholders. The Board has established various standing committees, each composed of and chaired by Independent Trustees with varying backgrounds, to which the Board has assigned specific subject matter responsibilities in order to enhance effective decision-making by the Board. The Board, acting directly and through its Committees, requests and receives information concerning the annual consideration of the renewal of the fund's Advisory Contracts. The Board also meets as needed to consider matters specifically related to the Board's annual consideration of the renewal of Advisory Contracts. Members of the Board may also meet with trustees of other Fidelity funds through ad hoc joint committees to discuss certain matters relevant to the Fidelity funds.
At its July 2013 meeting, the Board, including the Independent Trustees, unanimously determined to renew the fund's Advisory Contracts. In reaching its determination, the Board considered all factors it believed relevant, including (i) the nature, extent, and quality of the services to be provided to the fund and its shareholders (including the investment performance of the fund); (ii) the competitiveness of the fund's management fee and total expense ratio relative to peer funds; (iii) the total costs of the services to be provided by and the profits to be realized by Fidelity from its relationship with the fund; (iv) the extent to which economies of scale exist and would be realized as the fund grows; and (v) whether fee levels reflect these economies of scale, if any, for the benefit of fund shareholders.
In considering whether to renew the Advisory Contracts for the fund, the Board reached a determination, with the assistance of fund counsel and Independent Trustees' counsel and through the exercise of its business judgment, that the renewal of the Advisory Contracts was in the best interests of the fund and its shareholders and that the compensation payable under the Advisory Contracts was fair and reasonable. The Board's decision to renew the Advisory Contracts was not based on any single factor, but rather was based on a comprehensive consideration of all the information provided to the Board at its meetings throughout the year. The Board, in reaching its determination to renew the Advisory Contracts, was aware that shareholders in the fund have a broad range of investment choices available to them, including a wide choice among mutual funds offered by Fidelity's competitors, and that the fund's shareholders, who have the opportunity to review and weigh the disclosure provided by the fund in its prospectus and other public disclosures, have chosen to invest in this fund, which is a part of the Fidelity family of funds.
Annual Report
Nature, Extent, and Quality of Services Provided. The Board considered the staffing within the investment adviser, Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR), and the sub-advisers (together, the Investment Advisers) as it relates to the fund, including the backgrounds of the fund's investment personnel, and also considered the fund's investment objective, strategies, and related investment philosophy. The Independent Trustees also had discussions with senior management of Fidelity's investment operations and investment groups. The Board considered the structure of the portfolio manager compensation program and whether this structure provides appropriate incentives to act in the best interests of the fund.
Resources Dedicated to Investment Management and Support Services. The Board and the Fund Oversight and Research Committees reviewed the general qualifications and capabilities of the Investment Advisers' investment staff, including its size, education, experience, and resources, as well as the Investment Advisers' approach to recruiting, training, managing, and compensating investment personnel. The Board noted that FMR has continued to increase the resources devoted to non-U.S. offices, including expansion of Fidelity's global investment organization. The Board also noted that Fidelity's analysts have extensive resources, tools and capabilities that allow them to conduct sophisticated quantitative and fundamental analysis, as well as credit analysis of issuers, counterparties and guarantors. Further, the Board believes that Fidelity's investment professionals have sufficient access to global information and data so as to provide competitive investment results over time, and that those professionals also have access to sophisticated tools that permit them to assess portfolio construction and risk and performance attribution characteristics continuously, as well as to transmit new information and research conclusions rapidly around the world. Additionally, in its deliberations, the Board considered the Investment Advisers' trading and risk management capabilities and resources, which are an integral part of the investment management process.
Shareholder and Administrative Services. The Board considered (i) the nature, extent, quality, and cost of advisory, administrative, and shareholder services performed by the Investment Advisers and their affiliates under the Advisory Contracts and under separate agreements covering transfer agency, pricing and bookkeeping, and securities lending services for the fund; (ii) the nature and extent of the supervision of third party service providers, principally custodians and subcustodians; and (iii) the resources devoted to, and the record of compliance with, the fund's compliance policies and procedures. The Board also reviewed the allocation of fund brokerage, including allocations to brokers affiliated with the Investment Advisers, the use of brokerage commissions to pay fund expenses, and the use of "soft" commission dollars to pay for research services.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
The Board noted that the growth of fund assets over time across the complex allows Fidelity to reinvest in the development of services designed to enhance the value or convenience of the Fidelity funds as investment vehicles. These services include 24-hour access to account information and market information through telephone representatives and over the Internet, investor education materials and asset allocation tools, and the expanded availability of Fidelity Investor Centers.
Investment in a Large Fund Family. The Board considered the benefits to shareholders of investing in a Fidelity fund, including the benefits of investing in a fund that is part of a large family of funds offering a variety of investment disciplines and providing a large variety of mutual fund investor services. The Board noted that Fidelity had taken, or had made recommendations that resulted in the Fidelity funds taking, a number of actions over the previous year that benefited particular funds, including (i) continuing to dedicate additional resources to investment research and to the support of the senior management team that oversees asset management; (ii) persisting in efforts to enhance Fidelity's global research capabilities; (iii) launching new funds and making other enhancements to meet client needs for global and income-oriented solutions; (iv) continuing to launch dedicated lower cost underlying funds to meet portfolio construction needs related to expanding underlying fund options for Fidelity funds of funds, specifically for the Freedom Fund product lines; (v) rationalizing product lines and gaining increased efficiencies through the mergers of several funds into other funds; (vi) strengthening Fidelity's index fund offerings by reducing investment minimums and adopting or lowering existing expense caps for certain funds and classes; (vii) enhancing Global Asset Allocation product offerings by launching new funds and strategies, including "open architecture" target date funds that utilize affiliated and unaffiliated sub-advisers; (viii) modifying the eligibility criteria for Institutional Class shares of Advisor funds to increase their marketability to a portion of the defined contribution plan market; (ix) creating a new low-cost retirement share class for certain Advisor funds to appeal to large retirement plans; (x) transitioning the management of certain Fidelity commodity funds to Geode Capital Management LLC, a registered commodity pool operator, while retaining administrative responsibilities for the funds; (xi) reorganizing a number of funds; and (xii) taking steps toward establishing a new Fidelity adviser to manage sector-based funds and products.
Investment Performance. The Board considered whether the fund has operated in accordance with its investment objective, as well as its record of compliance with its investment restrictions and its performance history.
The Board took into account discussions with the Investment Advisers about fund investment performance that occur at Board meetings throughout the year. In this regard the Board noted that as part of regularly scheduled fund reviews and other reports to the Board on fund performance, the Board periodically considers annualized return information for the fund, for different time periods, measured against a securities market index ("benchmark index") and a peer group of mutual funds with similar objectives ("peer group"). In its evaluation of fund investment performance, the Board gave particular attention to information indicating changes in performance of certain Fidelity funds for specific time periods and the Investment Advisers' explanations for any overperformance or underperformance.
Annual Report
In addition to reviewing absolute and relative fund performance, the Independent Trustees periodically consider the appropriateness of fund performance metrics in evaluating the results achieved. In general, the Independent Trustees believe that fund performance should be evaluated based on net performance (after fees and expenses) of both the highest performing and lowest performing classes, where applicable, compared to appropriate benchmark indices, over appropriate time periods which may include full market cycles, and compared to peer groups, as applicable, over the same periods, taking into account relevant factors including the following: general market conditions; issuer-specific information; tactical opportunities for investment; and fund cash flows and other factors.
The Independent Trustees recognize that shareholders evaluate performance on a net basis over their own holding periods, for which one-, three-, and five-year periods are used as a proxy. For this reason, the performance information reviewed by the Board also included net cumulative calendar year total return information for the fund and an appropriate benchmark index and peer group for the most recent one-, three-, and five-year periods, as shown below. Returns are shown compared to the 25th percentile (top of box) and 75th percentile (bottom of box) of the peer universe.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
Fidelity Puritan Fund
Based on its review, the Board concluded that the nature, extent, and quality of services provided to the fund under the Advisory Contracts should benefit the fund's shareholders.
Competitiveness of Management Fee and Total Expense Ratio. The Board considered the fund's management fee and total expense ratio compared to "mapped groups" of competitive funds and classes. Fidelity creates "mapped groups" by combining similar Lipper investment objective categories that have comparable management fee characteristics. Combining Lipper investment objective categories aids the Board's management fee and total expense ratio comparisons by broadening the competitive group used for comparison and by reducing the number of universes to which various Fidelity funds are compared.
Management Fee. The Board considered two proprietary management fee comparisons for the 12-month periods shown in the chart below. The group of Lipper funds used by the Board for management fee comparisons is referred to below as the "Total Mapped Group." The Total Mapped Group is broader than the Lipper peer group used by the Board for performance comparisons because the Total Mapped Group combines several Lipper investment objective categories while the Lipper peer group does not. The Total Mapped Group comparison focuses on a fund's standing in terms of gross management fees before expense reimbursements or caps relative to the total universe of funds with comparable investment mandates, regardless of whether their management fee structures also are comparable. Funds with comparable investment mandates offer exposure to similar types of securities. Funds with comparable management fee structures have similar management fee contractual arrangements (e.g., flat rate charged for advisory services, all-inclusive fee rate, etc.). "TMG %" represents the percentage of funds in the Total Mapped Group that had management fees that were lower than the fund's. For example, a TMG % of 12% means that 88% of the funds in the Total Mapped Group had higher management fees than the fund. The "Asset-Size Peer Group" (ASPG) comparison focuses on a fund's standing relative to a subset of non-Fidelity funds within the Total Mapped Group that are similar in size and management fee structure. The ASPG represents at least 15% of the funds in the Total Mapped Group with comparable asset size and management fee structures, subject to a minimum of 50 funds (or all funds in the Total Mapped Group if fewer than 50). Additional information, such as the ASPG quartile in which the fund's management fee ranked, is also included in the chart and considered by the Board.
Annual Report
Fidelity Puritan Fund
The Board noted that the fund's management fee ranked below the median of its Total Mapped Group and below the median of its ASPG for 2012.
Based on its review, the Board concluded that the fund's management fee is fair and reasonable in light of the services that the fund receives and the other factors considered.
Total Expense Ratio. In its review of each class's total expense ratio, the Board considered the fund's management fee as well as other fund or class expenses, as applicable, such as transfer agent fees, pricing and bookkeeping fees, and custodial, legal, and audit fees. The Board also noted the effects of any waivers and reimbursements on fees and expenses. As part of its review, the Board also considered the current and historical total expense ratios of each class of the fund compared to competitive fund median expenses. Each class of the fund is compared to those funds and classes in the Total Mapped Group (used by the Board for management fee comparisons) that have a similar sales load structure.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
The Board noted that the total expense ratio of each class ranked below its competitive median for 2012.
Fees Charged to Other Fidelity Clients. The Board also considered Fidelity fee structures and other information with respect to clients of FMR and its affiliates, such as other mutual funds advised or subadvised by FMR or its affiliates, pension plan clients, and other institutional clients. The Board noted the findings of the 2013 ad hoc joint committee (created with the board of other Fidelity funds), which reviewed and compared Fidelity's institutional investment advisory business with its business of providing services to the Fidelity funds, including the differences in services provided, fees charged, and costs incurred, as well as competition in their respective marketplaces.
Based on its review of total expense ratios and fees charged to other Fidelity clients, the Board concluded that the total expense ratio of each class of the fund was reasonable in light of the services that the fund and its shareholders receive and the other factors considered.
Costs of the Services and Profitability. The Board considered the revenues earned and the expenses incurred by Fidelity in conducting the business of developing, marketing, distributing, managing, administering and servicing the fund and servicing the fund's shareholders. The Board also considered the level of Fidelity's profits in respect of all the Fidelity funds.
On an annual basis, FMR presents to the Board Fidelity's profitability for the fund. Fidelity calculates the profitability for each fund, as well as aggregate profitability for groups of Fidelity funds and all Fidelity funds, using a series of detailed revenue and cost allocation methodologies which originate with the books and records of Fidelity on which Fidelity's audited financial statements are based. The Audit Committee of the Board reviews any significant changes from the prior year's methodologies.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC), independent registered public accounting firm and auditor to Fidelity and certain Fidelity funds, has been engaged annually by the Board as part of the Board's assessment of Fidelity's profitability analysis. PwC's engagement includes the review and assessment of the methodologies used by Fidelity in determining the revenues and expenses attributable to Fidelity's mutual fund business, and completion of agreed-upon procedures surrounding the mathematical accuracy of fund profitability and its conformity to allocation methodologies. After considering PwC's reports issued under the engagement and information provided by Fidelity, the Board concluded that while other allocation methods may also be reasonable, Fidelity's profitability methodologies are reasonable in all material respects.
Annual Report
The Board also reviewed Fidelity's non-fund businesses and fall-out benefits related to the mutual fund business as well as cases where Fidelity's affiliates may benefit from or be related to the fund's business.
The Board considered the costs of the services provided by and the profits realized by Fidelity in connection with the operation of the fund and was satisfied that the profitability was not excessive in the circumstances.
Economies of Scale. The Board considered whether there have been economies of scale in respect of the management of the Fidelity funds, whether the Fidelity funds (including the fund) have appropriately benefited from any such economies of scale, and whether there is potential for realization of any further economies of scale. The Board considered the extent to which the fund will benefit from economies of scale through increased services to the fund, through waivers or reimbursements, or through fee or expense reductions. The Board also noted that in 2009, it and the board of other Fidelity funds created an ad hoc committee (the Economies of Scale Committee) to analyze whether FMR attains economies of scale in respect of the management and servicing of the Fidelity funds, whether the Fidelity funds have appropriately benefited from such economies of scale, and whether there is potential for realization of any further economies of scale.
The Board recognized that the fund's management contract incorporates a "group fee" structure, which provides for lower group fee rates as total fund assets under FMR's management increase, and for higher group fee rates as total fund assets under FMR's management decrease. FMR calculates the group fee rates based on a tiered asset "breakpoint" schedule that varies based on asset class. The Board considered that the group fee is designed to deliver the benefits of economies of scale to fund shareholders when total Fidelity fund assets increase, even if assets of any particular fund are unchanged or have declined, because some portion of Fidelity's costs are attributable to services provided to all Fidelity funds, and all funds benefit if those costs can be allocated among more assets. The Board concluded that, given the group fee structure, fund shareholders will benefit from lower management fees as assets under FMR's management increase at the fund complex level, regardless of whether Fidelity achieves any such economies of scale.
The Board concluded, taking into account the analysis of the Economies of Scale Committee, that economies of scale, if any, are being appropriately shared between fund shareholders and Fidelity.
Amendment to Description of Group Fee Rate. At its July 2013 meeting, the Board voted to approve an amendment to the fund's management contract to modify the description of the "group fee rate" effective August 1, 2013. The Board noted that under the prior description in the contract, the group fee rate was based on the average net assets of all registered investment companies with which FMR has management contracts. Under the contract's tiered asset breakpoint schedule, the group fee rate is lower as total fund assets under FMR's management increase, and higher as total fund assets under FMR's management decrease. The Board considered that the prior description would have excluded the assets of 64 Fidelity sector funds from the group fee rate calculation once Fidelity SelectCo, LLC, an affiliate of FMR, assumed management responsibilities for those funds. The Board noted that modifying the description of the group fee rate to continue to include the assets of those 64 funds for purposes of determining group fee rate breakpoints would avoid an immediate adverse impact on the group fee rate for any fund.
Annual Report
Board Approval of Investment Advisory Contracts and
Management Fees - continued
Additional Information Requested by the Board. In order to develop fully the factual basis for consideration of the Fidelity funds' Advisory Contracts, the Board requested and received additional information on certain topics, including: (i) fund performance trends and Fidelity's long-term strategies for certain funds; (ii) the potential to further rationalize the Fidelity fund lineup with the possibility of achieving savings for the funds and Fidelity; (iii) the methodology with respect to competitive fund data and peer group classifications; (iv) the arrangements with, and performance of, certain sub-advisers on behalf of the Fidelity funds, as well as certain proposed participating affiliate arrangements; (v) the realization of fall-out benefits in certain Fidelity business units; (vi) Fidelity's group fee structures, including the rationale for the individual fee rates of certain categories of funds and the definition of group assets; (vii) trends regarding industry use of performance fee structures and the performance adjustment methodologies applicable to the Fidelity funds; (viii) additional competitive analysis regarding the total expenses for certain classes; and (ix) fund profitability methodology, including Fidelity's cost allocation methodology, and the impact of certain factors on fund profitability results.
Based on its evaluation of all of the conclusions noted above, and after considering all factors it believed relevant, the Board ultimately concluded that the advisory fee structures are fair and reasonable, and that the fund's Advisory Contracts should be renewed.
Annual Report
Investment Adviser
Fidelity Management & Research Company
Boston, MA
Investment Sub-Advisers
FMR Co., Inc.
Fidelity Management & Research
(U.K.) Inc.
Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc.
Fidelity Management & Research
(Hong Kong) Limited
Fidelity Management & Research
(Japan) Inc.
General Distributor
Fidelity Distributors Corporation
Smithfield, RI
Transfer and Service Agents
Fidelity Investments Institutional
Operations Company, Inc.
Boston, MA
Fidelity Service Company, Inc.
Boston, MA
Custodian
JP Morgan Chase Bank
New York, NY
(Fidelity Investment logo)(registered trademark)
Corporate Headquarters
245 Summer St., Boston, MA 02210
www.fidelity.com
PUR-K-UANN-1013
1.863164.104
Item 2. Code of Ethics
As of the end of the period, August 31, 2013, Fidelity Puritan 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 Joseph Mauriello is an audit committee financial expert, as defined in Item 3 of Form N-CSR. Mr. Mauriello 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 PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP ("PwC") in each of the last two fiscal years for services rendered to Fidelity Balanced Fund and Fidelity Puritan Fund (the "Funds"):
Services Billed by PwC
August 31, 2013 FeesA
| Audit Fees | Audit-Related Fees | Tax Fees | All Other Fees |
Fidelity Balanced Fund | $121,000 | $- | $10,000 | $9,700 |
Fidelity Puritan Fund | $250,000 | $- | $10,000 | $9,300 |
August 31, 2012 FeesA
| Audit Fees | Audit-Related Fees | Tax Fees | All Other Fees |
Fidelity Balanced Fund | $122,000 | $- | $10,800 | $9,900 |
Fidelity Puritan Fund | $240,000 | $- | $13,200 | $9,500 |
A Amounts may reflect rounding.
The following table presents fees billed by PwC that were required to be approved by the Audit Committee for services that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of the Funds and that are rendered on behalf of Fidelity Management & Research Company ("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 Funds ("Fund Service Providers"):
Services Billed by PwC
| August 31, 2013A | August 31, 2012A |
Audit-Related Fees | $5,335,000 | $4,450,000 |
Tax Fees | $- | $- |
All Other Fees | $30,000 | $- |
A Amounts may reflect rounding.
"Audit-Related Fees" represent fees billed for assurance and related services that are reasonably related to the performance of the fund audit or the review of the fund's financial statements and that are not reported under Audit Fees.
"Tax Fees" represent fees billed for tax compliance, tax advice or tax planning that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of the fund.
"All Other Fees" represent fees billed for services provided to the fund or Fund Service Provider, a significant portion of which are assurance related, that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of the fund, excluding those services that are reported under Audit Fees, Audit-Related Fees or Tax Fees.
Assurance services must be performed by an independent public accountant.
* * *
The aggregate non-audit fees billed by PwC for services rendered to the Funds, 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 Funds are as follows:
Billed By | August 31, 2013 A | August 31, 2012 A |
PwC | $6,220,000 | $5,695,000 |
A Amounts may reflect rounding.
The trust's Audit Committee has considered non-audit services that were not pre-approved that were provided by PwC to Fund Service Providers to be compatible with maintaining the independence of PwC in its audit of the Funds, taking into account representations from PwC, in accordance with Public Company Accounting Oversight Board rules, regarding its independence from the Funds and 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 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 on a periodic basis.
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 Funds' last two fiscal years relating to services provided to (i) the Funds or (ii) any Fund Service Provider that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of the Funds.
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 second fiscal quarter of 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. Exhibits
(a) | (1) | Code of Ethics pursuant to Item 2 of Form N-CSR is filed and attached hereto as EX-99.CODE ETH. |
(a) | (2) | Certification pursuant to Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (17 CFR 270.30a-2(a)) is filed and attached hereto as Exhibit 99.CERT. |
(a) | (3) | Not applicable. |
(b) | | Certification pursuant to Rule 30a-2(b) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (17 CFR 270.30a-2(b)) is furnished and attached hereto as Exhibit 99.906CERT. |
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
Fidelity Puritan Trust
By: | /s/Kenneth B. Robins |
| Kenneth B. Robins |
| President and Treasurer |
| |
Date: | October 28, 2013 |
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/Kenneth B. Robins |
| Kenneth B. Robins |
| President and Treasurer |
| |
Date: | October 28, 2013 |
By: | /s/Christine Reynolds |
| Christine Reynolds |
| Chief Financial Officer |
| |
Date: | October 28, 2013 |