DEAN WITTER JAPAN FUND
497, 1996-04-12
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<PAGE>
                        DEAN WITTER
                        JAPAN FUND
   
                        PROSPECTUS--MARCH 6, 1996
    
 
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DEAN  WITTER JAPAN FUND (THE "FUND")  IS AN OPEN-END, NON-DIVERSIFIED MANAGEMENT
INVESTMENT COMPANY  WHOSE  INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE  IS  TO SEEK  LONG-TERM  CAPITAL
APPRECIATION.  THE  FUND SEEKS  TO MEET  ITS  INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE  BY INVESTING
PRIMARILY IN SECURITIES OF ISSUERS LOCATED IN JAPAN.
 
Initial Offering--Shares are  being offered  in an underwriting  by Dean  Witter
Distributors  Inc. at $10.00 per share with  all proceeds going to the Fund. All
expenses in connection with the organization of the Fund and this offering  will
be  paid  by the  Investment Manager  and  Underwriter except  for a  maximum of
$250,000 of organizational expenses  to be reimbursed by  the Fund. The  initial
offering will run from approximately March 25, 1996 through April 23, 1996.
 
Continuous Offering--A continuous offering will commence approximately two weeks
after  the closing date of  the initial offering which  is anticipated for April
26, 1996. Shares of  the Fund will be  priced at the net  asset value per  share
next determined following receipt of an order.
 
Redemptions  and/or  repurchases  of  shares  purchased  in  either  the initial
offering or the continuous  offering are subject in  most cases to a  contingent
deferred sales charge, scaled down from 5% to 1% of the amount redeemed, if made
within  six  years  of  purchase,  which  charge  will  be  paid  to  the Fund's
Distributor,   Dean   Witter   Distributors    Inc.   (See   "Redemptions    and
Repurchases--Contingent  Deferred Sales Charge.") In addition, the Fund pays the
Distributor a Rule 12b-1 distribution fee pursuant to a Plan of Distribution  at
the  annual rate of  1.0% of the lesser  of the (i)  average daily aggregate net
sales or (ii)  average daily  net assets  of the  Fund. (See  "Purchase of  Fund
Shares--Plan of Distribution.")
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
<S>                                                 <C>
Prospectus Summary................................       2
Summary of Fund Expenses..........................       3
The Fund and its Management.......................       4
Investment Objective and Policies.................       4
  Risk Factors and Special Considerations.........       5
Investment Restrictions...........................      11
Underwriting......................................      11
Purchase of Fund Shares...........................      12
Shareholder Services..............................      14
Redemptions and Repurchases.......................      16
Dividends, Distributions and Taxes................      17
Performance Information...........................      18
Additional Information............................      18
</TABLE>
    
 
   
This  Prospectus sets  forth concisely  the information  you should  know before
investing in the  Fund. It  should be read  and retained  for future  reference.
Additional  information  about  the  Fund  is  contained  in  the  Statement  of
Additional Information,  dated March  6, 1996,  which has  been filed  with  the
Securities  and Exchange  Commission, and which  is available at  no charge upon
request of the Fund at the address or telephone numbers listed on this page. The
Statement of Additional Information is incorporated herein by reference.
    
 
SHARES OF THE FUND ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OBLIGATIONS OF, OR GUARANTEED OR ENDORSED
BY, ANY BANK, AND THE  SHARES ARE NOT FEDERALLY  INSURED BY THE FEDERAL  DEPOSIT
INSURANCE CORPORATION, THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD, OR ANY OTHER AGENCY.
 
DEAN WITTER
JAPAN FUND
TWO WORLD TRADE CENTER
NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10048
(212) 392-2550 or
(800) 869-NEWS (toll free)
 
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  THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND
 EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION NOR HAS THE SECURITIES
   AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE
ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A
                               CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
 
                   DEAN WITTER DISTRIBUTORS INC., DISTRIBUTOR
<PAGE>
PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
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<TABLE>
<S>               <C>
THE FUND          The  Fund is organized  as a Trust,  commonly known as  a Massachusetts business  trust, and is an
                  open-end, non- diversified management investment company. The Fund invests primarily in securities
                  of issuers located in Japan.
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SHARES OFFERED    Shares of beneficial interest with $0.01 par value (see page 18).
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INITIAL           Shares are being offered in an underwriting by Dean Witter Distributors Inc. at $10.00 per  share.
OFFERING          The  minimum purchase  is 100 shares  ($1,000). Shares redeemed  within six years  of purchase are
                  subject to a contingent deferred sales charge under most circumstances. The initial offering  will
                  run approximately from March 25, 1996 through April 23, 1996. The closing will take place on April
                  26,  1996 or such other date as  may be agreed upon by Dean  Witter Distributors Inc. and the Fund
                  (the "Closing Date"). Shares  will not be issued  and dividends will not  be declared by the  Fund
                  until  after the  Closing Date.  If any  orders received  during the  initial offering  period are
                  accompanied by  payment,  such  payment  will  be returned  unless  an  accompanying  request  for
                  investment  in a Dean Witter  money market fund is  received at the time  the payment is made. Any
                  purchase order may be cancelled at any time prior to the Closing Date (see page 12).
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CONTINUOUS        A continuous offering will commence within approximately two weeks after the Closing Date.  During
OFFERING          the  continuous offering, the  minimum initial investment will  be $1,000 ($100  if the account is
                  opened through EasyInvest-SM-) and the minimum subsequent investment will be $100 (see page 12).
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INVESTMENT        The investment objective of the Fund is to seek long-term capital appreciation (see page 4).
OBJECTIVE
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INVESTMENT        Dean Witter  InterCapital  Inc.,  the  Investment  Manager  of  the  Fund,  and  its  wholly-owned
MANAGER AND       subsidiary,  Dean Witter Services Company Inc.,  serve in various investment management, advisory,
SUB-ADVISER       management and administrative capacities to ninety-five investment companies and other  portfolios
                  with  net  assets under  management of  approximately $81.7  billion at  January 31,  1996. Morgan
                  Grenfell Investment Services Ltd. has  been retained by the  Investment Manager as Sub-Adviser  to
                  provide  investment advice  and manage the  Fund's portfolio. Morgan  Grenfell Investment Services
                  Ltd. currently  serves as  investment adviser  for primarily  U.S. corporate  and public  employee
                  benefit plans, investment companies, endowments and foundations with assets of approximately $12.9
                  billion at December 31, 1995 (see page 4).
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MANAGEMENT        The  Investment Manager receives a monthly fee at the  annual rate of 1.0% of the Fund's daily net
FEE               assets, of which the Sub-Adviser receives 40% (see page 4).
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DIVIDENDS AND     Dividends from  net investment  income are  paid at  least annually.  Capital gains,  if any,  are
DISTRIBUTIONS     distributed  at least  annually or retained  for reinvestment  by the Fund.  Dividends and capital
                  gains distributions are automatically reinvested in additional shares at net asset value  (without
                  sales charge), unless the shareholder elects to receive cash (see page 17).
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UNDERWRITER AND   Dean  Witter Distributors Inc. (the "Underwriter" or "Distributor"). The Distributor receives from
DISTRIBUTOR       the Fund a distribution fee accrued daily and payable monthly at the rate of 1.0% per annum of the
                  lesser of (i) the Fund's average  daily aggregate net sales or  (ii) the Fund's average daily  net
                  assets.  This fee compensates the Distributor for  the services provided in distributing shares of
                  the Fund  and for  sales related  expenses.  The Distributor  also receives  the proceeds  of  any
                  contingent deferred sales charges (see pages 12 and 16).
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REDEMPTION--      Shares  are redeemable  by the  shareholder at net  asset value.  An account  may be involuntarily
CONTINGENT        redeemed if the total value of the account is less than $100 or, if the account was opened through
DEFERRED          EasyInvest-SM-, if  after twelve  months the  shareholder has  invested less  than $1,000  in  the
SALES             account. Although no commission or sales load is imposed upon the purchase of shares, a contingent
CHARGE            deferred  sales charge (scaled down from 5% to 1%) is imposed on any redemption of shares if after
                  such redemption the aggregate current value of an account with the Fund falls below the  aggregate
                  amount  of the investor's  purchase payments made  during the six  years preceding the redemption.
                  However, there is  no charge imposed  on redemption  of shares purchased  through reinvestment  of
                  dividends or distributions (see pages 16-17).
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RISKS             The  net asset value of the Fund's shares will fluctuate with changes in market value of portfolio
                  securities. The concentration of the  Fund's assets in Japanese issuers  will subject the Fund  to
                  the  risks of  adverse social, political  or economic  events which occur  in or  affect Japan. It
                  should be recognized that the  foreign securities and markets in  which the Fund will invest  pose
                  different  and greater risks than those customarily  associated with domestic securities and their
                  markets. The Fund  may also invest  in options and  futures transactions which  may be  considered
                  speculative  in  nature and  may involve  greater risks  than those  customarily assumed  by other
                  investment companies which  do not  invest in such  instruments (see  pages 5-11). The  Fund is  a
                  non-diversified   investment  company  and,  as  such,  is  not  subject  to  the  diversification
                  requirements of the Investment Company Act of 1940.  As a result, a relatively high percentage  of
                  the  Fund's assets may be  invested in a limited  number of issuers. However,  the Fund intends to
                  qualify as a regulated investment company under the federal income tax laws and, as such, will  be
                  subject to the diversification requirements of the Internal Revenue Code (see pages 9 and 17).
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</TABLE>
    
 
  THE ABOVE IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY THE DETAILED INFORMATION APPEARING
                          ELSEWHERE IN THIS PROSPECTUS
                AND IN THE STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION.
 
2
<PAGE>
SUMMARY OF FUND EXPENSES
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The  following table illustrates all expenses and fees that a shareholder of the
Fund will incur.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES
<S>                                                                                             <C>
Maximum Sales Charge Imposed on Purchases.....................................................  None
Maximum Sales Charge Imposed on Reinvested Dividends..........................................  None
Contingent Deferred Sales Charge
  (as a percentage of the lesser of original purchase price or redemption proceeds)...........  5.0%
</TABLE>
 
 A contingent deferred sales charge is imposed at the following declining rates:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
YEAR SINCE PURCHASE PAYMENT MADE                                                     PERCENTAGE
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------  --------------
<S>                                                                                <C>
First............................................................................          5.0%
Second...........................................................................          4.0%
Third............................................................................          3.0%
Fourth...........................................................................          2.0%
Fifth............................................................................          2.0%
Sixth............................................................................          1.0%
Seventh and thereafter...........................................................       None
</TABLE>
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                               <C>
Redemption Fees.................................................................................       None
Exchange Fee....................................................................................       None
 
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES (AS A PERCENTAGE OF AVERAGE NET ASSETS)
Management Fees.................................................................................       1.0%
12b-1 Fees*.....................................................................................       1.0%
Other Expenses..................................................................................      0.41%
Total Fund Operating Expenses**+................................................................      2.41%
Management and 12b-1 Fees are for  the current fiscal period of the  Fund ending November 30, 1996.  "Other
Expenses"  as shown above, are based  upon estimated amounts of expenses of  the Fund for the fiscal period
ending November 30, 1996.
<FN>
- ------------------------
 * The 12b-1 fee is accrued daily and payable monthly, at an annual rate of 1.0%
   of the lesser of: (a) the average  daily aggregate gross sales of the  Fund's
   shares  since  the  inception of  the  Fund (not  including  reinvestments of
   dividends or distributions), less the average daily aggregate net asset value
   of the  Fund's  shares redeemed  since  the  Fund's inception  upon  which  a
   contingent  deferred  sales charge  has been  imposed or  waived, or  (b) the
   Fund's average daily net assets. A portion of the 12b-1 fee equal to 0.25% of
   the Fund's average daily net assets is characterized as a service fee  within
   the  meaning  of National  Association of  Securities Dealers,  Inc. ("NASD")
   guidelines and is a payment made  to the selling broker for personal  service
   and/or maintenance of shareholder accounts. The remainder of the 12b-1 fee is
   an  asset  based  sales  charge,  and  is  a  distribution  fee  paid  to the
   Distributor to compensate it for the services provided and the expenses borne
   by the Distributor and others in  the distribution of the Fund's shares  (see
   "Purchase of Fund Shares").
**  "Total Fund Operating Expenses,"  as shown above, are  based upon the sum of
   12b-1 Fees, Management Fees and "Other Expenses" which may be incurred by the
   Fund in its initial full year of operations.
 + The  Investment  Manager has  undertaken  to assume  all  operating  expenses
   (except  for any 12b-1 fee, foreign taxes withheld and brokerage fees) and to
   waive the compensation provided  for in its  Management Agreement until  such
   time  as the Fund has $50 million of  net assets or until six months from the
   date of commencement of  the Fund's operations,  whichever occurs first.  The
   fees  and  expenses disclosed  above  do not  reflect  the assumption  of any
   expenses or the waiver of any compensation by the Investment Manager.
</TABLE>
    
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXAMPLE                                                                                   1 YEAR       3 YEARS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                                                                     <C>          <C>
You would pay the following  expenses on a $1,000  investment, assuming (1) 5%  annual
 return and (2) redemption at the end of each time period:............................   $      74    $     105
You   would  pay  the   following  expenses  on  the   same  investment,  assuming  no
 redemption:..........................................................................   $      24    $      75
</TABLE>
 
THE ABOVE EXAMPLE SHOULD  NOT BE CONSIDERED A  REPRESENTATION OF PAST OR  FUTURE
EXPENSES OR PERFORMANCE. ACTUAL EXPENSES OF THE FUND MAY BE GREATER OR LESS THAN
THOSE SHOWN.
 
The purpose of this table is to assist the investor in understanding the various
costs  and  expenses  that  an  investor  in  the  Fund  will  bear  directly or
indirectly. For a  more complete description  of these costs  and expenses,  see
"The  Fund  and its  Management," "Plan  of  Distribution" and  "Redemptions and
Repurchases."
 
Long-term  shareholders  of  the  Fund  may  pay  more  in  sales  charges   and
distribution  fees than the  economic equivalent of  the maximum front-end sales
charges permitted by the NASD.
 
                                                                               3
<PAGE>
THE FUND AND ITS MANAGEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Dean  Witter Japan Fund (the "Fund") is an open-end, non-diversified, management
investment company.  The  Fund is  a  trust of  the  type commonly  known  as  a
"Massachusetts  business  trust"  and  was  organized  under  the  laws  of  The
Commonwealth of Massachusetts on January 22, 1996.
 
    Dean Witter InterCapital Inc. ("InterCapital" or the "Investment  Manager"),
whose address is Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048, is the Fund's
Investment  Manager.  The Investment  Manager, which  was incorporated  in July,
1992, is a wholly-owned  subsidiary of Dean Witter,  Discover & Co. ("DWDC"),  a
balanced  financial services organization providing  a broad range of nationally
marketed credit and investment products.
 
    InterCapital and its wholly-owned  subsidiary, Dean Witter Services  Company
Inc.,   serve  in  various  investment   management,  advisory,  management  and
administrative capacities to ninety-five  investment companies, thirty of  which
are listed on the New York Stock Exchange, with combined assets of approximately
$79.1  billion  at  January  31,  1996.  The  Investment  Manager  also  manages
portfolios of pension plans, other institutions and individuals which aggregated
approximately $2.6 billion at such date.
 
    The Fund  has  retained the  Investment  Manager to  provide  administrative
services, manage its business affairs and supervise the investment of the Fund's
assets.  InterCapital has retained Dean Witter  Services Company Inc. to perform
the aforementioned administrative services for the Fund.
 
    Under a Sub-Advisory Agreement  between Morgan Grenfell Investment  Services
Limited (the "Sub-Adviser") and the Investment Manager, the Sub-Adviser provides
the  Fund with investment advice and portfolio management relating to the Fund's
investments, subject to the overall  supervision of the Investment Manager.  The
Fund's  Trustees review the various services  provided by the Investment Manager
and the Sub-Adviser to  ensure that the Fund's  general investment policies  and
programs  are being  properly carried out  and that  administrative services are
being provided to the Fund in a satisfactory manner.
 
   
    The Sub-Adviser,  whose  address is  20  Finsbury Circus,  London,  England,
manages,  as of  December 31,  1995, assets  of approximately  $12.9 billion for
primarily  U.S.  corporate  and   public  employee  benefit  plans,   investment
companies, endowments and foundations. The Sub-Adviser is an indirect subsidiary
of Deutsche Bank AG, the largest commercial bank in Germany.
    
 
    As  full compensation for the services  and facilities furnished to the Fund
and for expenses of the  Fund assumed by the  Investment Manager, the Fund  pays
the  Investment Manager  monthly compensation  calculated daily  by applying the
annual rate of 1.0% to the Fund's  net assets. As compensation for its  services
provided pursuant to the Sub-Advisory Agreement, the Investment Manager pays the
Sub-Adviser monthly compensation equal to 40% of its monthly compensation.
 
   
    The  Fund's expenses  include: the  fee of  the Investment  Manager; the fee
pursuant to the  Plan of Distribution  (see "Purchase of  Fund Shares");  taxes;
certain  legal, transfer  agent, custodian and  auditing fees;  and printing and
other expenses relating to the Fund's operations which are not expressly assumed
by the Investment  Manager under  its Investment Management  Agreement with  the
Fund.  The Investment  Manager has undertaken  to assume  all operating expenses
(except for  the  Plan of  Distribution  Fee,  foreign taxes  withheld  and  any
brokerage  fees)  and  waive the  compensation  provided for  in  its Investment
Management Agreement until such time as the  Fund has $50 million of net  assets
or  until six  months from  the date of  commencement of  the Fund's operations,
whichever occurs first.
    
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
The investment objective of the Fund is to seek long-term capital  appreciation.
The objective is a fundamental policy of the Fund and may not be changed without
shareholder approval. There is no assurance that the objective will be achieved.
 
   
    The  Fund  seeks to  achieve its  investment  objective by  investing, under
normal circumstances, at  least 65%  of its  total assets  in equity  securities
issued  by issuers  located in  Japan. Such  issuers will  include companies (i)
which are organized  under the  laws of  Japan and  have a  principal office  in
Japan;  (ii) which  derive 50%  or more of  their total  revenues from operating
business(es) in  Japan; or  (iii)  the equity  securities  of which  are  traded
principally  on a stock exchange  in Japan. Equity securities  in which the Fund
may invest  include  common and  preferred  stocks  and rights  or  warrants  to
purchase common stocks.
    
 
    The  Fund may invest up  to 25% of its total  assets in equity securities of
Japanese companies traded on the Second Sections of the Main Japanese  exchanges
and  in the over-the-counter market. These  would generally be smaller companies
with  above-average   growth  potential.   (See   "Risk  Factors   and   Special
Considerations.")
 
    As  a "single country" mutual fund, the Fund may exhibit certain speculative
characteristics and thus  should not constitute  a complete investment  program.
Investing
 
4
<PAGE>
internationally involves certain risks, such as economic and political risk, and
therefore  poses different and  greater risks than  those customarily associated
with domestic  securities and  their markets.  The concentration  of the  Fund's
assets in Japanese issuers will subject the Fund to the risks of adverse social,
political or economic events which occur in Japan (see "Risk Factors and Special
Considerations").
 
   
    The  remainder of the Fund's portfolio equalling, at times, up to 35% of the
Fund's total assets, may be invested in fixed-income and convertible  securities
of  issuers located in Japan or guaranteed by the Japanese government when it is
deemed  that  such  investments  are  consistent  with  the  Fund's   investment
objective.  This remainder may also include equity, government, fixed-income and
convertible securities issued by issuers located in developed economies in Asia,
Europe and North  America, including the  United States, subject  to the  Fund's
investment  objective. Although the Fund may invest  up to 35% of its net assets
in fixed-income and convertible securities which  are either not rated or  rated
below investment grade, the Fund has no current intention of investing in excess
of 10% of its net assets in unrated or lower rated convertible securities nor in
excess  of 5% of its  net assets in unrated  or lower rated non-convertible debt
securities (see "Lower Rated Convertible and Fixed-Income Securities" below). In
addition, this portion  of the Fund's  portfolio will consist  of various  other
financial  instruments  such  as  forward  foreign  exchange  contracts, futures
contracts and options.
    
 
    The Fund may also invest in securities of Japanese and other foreign issuers
in the form of American Depository Receipts (ADRs), European Depository Receipts
(EDRs) or  other  similar  securities convertible  into  securities  of  foreign
issuers.  These  securities  may  not necessarily  be  denominated  in  the same
currency as the securities into which  they may be converted. ADRs are  receipts
typically  issued by a United States  bank or trust company evidencing ownership
of the underlying securities.  EDRs are European  receipts evidencing a  similar
arrangement.  Generally, ADRs, in  registered form, are designed  for use in the
United States securities markets and EDRs, in bearer form, are designed for  use
in European securities markets.
 
    The  Sub-Adviser will use a "bottom-up" approach, whereby the identification
of earnings  growth  and attractively  priced  stocks drives  the  Sub-Adviser's
investment  process.  However, no  investments  will be  made  without assessing
future country  risk (including  politics, monetary  policy and  currency)  that
might  adversely affect  stock selection.  The Sub-Adviser  believes that strong
growth will be reflected in superior investment returns. A company's ability  to
grow  earnings leads to the accumulation  of assets, increased dividend payments
and, ultimately, drives share prices higher.
 
    Because market inefficiency can lead to  "over" as well as "under"  pricing,
the  Sub-Adviser believes that an assessment of company growth prospects must be
combined with an understanding of how the stock is priced. A series of multiples
is used for this purpose and evaluated against the stock's history. Stocks  that
are  trading  significantly  above  their historic  norm  are  disqualified from
inclusion in the portfolio.  In addition, the Fund  will maintain a  disciplined
sell process for liquidating portfolio holdings.
 
    There  may be periods during which, in the opinion of the Investment Manager
or Sub-Adviser, market conditions warrant reduction of some or all of the Fund's
securities holdings.  During  such  periods,  the Fund  may  adopt  a  temporary
"defensive"  posture in which greater than 35%  and, in some circumstances up to
100%, of its net assets are invested in cash or money market instruments.  Money
market  instruments  in  which the  Fund  may  invest are  securities  issued or
guaranteed by the U.S.  Government (Treasury bills,  notes and bonds,  including
zero  coupon securities); bank obligations (such  as certificates of deposit and
bankers' acceptances); Yankee instruments;  Eurodollar certificates of  deposit;
obligations  of savings institutions; fully insured certificates of deposit; and
commercial paper rated within the  two highest grades by  Moody's or S&P or,  if
not  rated, issued by a company having  an outstanding debt issue rated at least
AA by S&P or Aa by Moody's.
 
    To hedge  against adverse  price movements  in the  securities held  in  its
portfolio  and the currencies in  which they are denominated  (as well as in the
securities it might wish to purchase and their denominated currencies) the  Fund
may  engage in  transactions in forward  foreign currency  contracts, options on
securities  and  currencies,  and  futures  contracts  and  options  on  futures
contracts  on securities,  currencies and  indexes. The  Fund may  also purchase
options  on  securities  to  facilitate  its  participation  in  the   potential
appreciation  of the value  of the underlying securities.  A discussion of these
transactions follows below under "Risk  Factors and Special Considerations"  and
is   supplemented  by  further   disclosure  in  the   Statement  of  Additional
Information.
 
RISK FACTORS AND SPECIAL
CONSIDERATIONS
 
Investing in Japanese equities involves certain risks and special considerations
as follows:
 
THE JAPANESE SECURITIES MARKETS.
 
   
    (a) The  Exchange  Market.    The  Japanese  exchange  market  is  a  highly
systemized,  government  regulated market  currently  consisting of  eight stock
exchanges. The  three Main  Japanese  Exchanges (Tokyo,  Osaka and  Nagoya)  are
comprised  of First and Second Sections.  The First Sections have more stringent
listing standards with  respect to  a company's  number of  years in  existence,
number  of outstanding shares and trading  volume and, accordingly, list larger,
more established companies than the Second Sections. The Fund intends to  invest
primarily  in the  securities of  companies listed on  the First  Section of the
Tokyo Stock  Exchange  ("TSE"). The  TSE  is the  largest  exchange and,  as  of
December  29,  1995,  listed  1,253  companies  with  market  capitalization  of
approximately  U.S.$3.3  trillion   and  average  monthly   trading  volume   of
approximately   U.S.$62.4  billion.   The  Fund   may  invest   up  to   25%  of
    
 
                                                                               5
<PAGE>
its net assets in securities which are traded on the Second Sections of the Main
Japanese Exchanges  (primarily, the  TSE) and  in the  over-the-counter  market,
described  below. These are  generally smaller, less  capitalized companies than
those traded on the First Sections. As of December 29, 1995, the Second  Section
of  the TSE  listed approximately  461 companies  with market  capitalization of
approximately  U.S.$147.3  billion  and   average  monthly  trading  volume   of
approximately  U.S.$3.9 billion. There are also five regional exchanges in which
the Fund does not currently intend to invest.
 
    (B) The OTC Market.   The Japanese  OTC market is  less systemized than  the
stock  exchanges. Trading  of equity  securities in  the Japanese  OTC market is
conducted by securities firms in Japan, primarily through an organization  which
acts  as a "matching agent" by matching buy  and sell orders. As of December 29,
1995, 677  companies  with  market capitalization  of  approximately  U.S.$142.1
billion  and average  monthly trading  volume of  approximately U.S.$4.7 billion
were traded through the Japanese OTC market.
 
   
MARKET RISKS.   Although the market  for Japanese equities  traded on the  First
Section  of the TSE is substantial in terms of trading volume and liquidity, the
TSE has nonetheless exhibited significant market volatility in the past  several
years.  With respect  to the  OTC market,  trades of  certain stocks  may not be
effected on days when the matching of  buy and sell orders for such stocks  does
not  occur. The  liquidity of the  Japanese OTC market,  as well as  that of the
Second Sections  of  the exchanges,  although  increasing in  recent  years,  is
limited  by the small  number of publicly  held shares which  trade on a regular
basis. Overall, Japanese  securities markets have  declined significantly  since
1989  which has contributed to a weakness in the Japanese economy and the impact
of a further decline cannot be  ascertained. The common stocks of many  Japanese
companies  continue, as they have historically,  to trade at high price-earnings
ratios in  comparison with  those in  the  U.S., even  after the  recent  market
decline.  Differences in  accounting methods  make it  difficult to  compare the
earnings of  Japanese companies  with  those of  companies in  other  countries,
especially the United States.
    
 
POLITICAL  RISKS.   Japan has a  parliamentary form of  government. Triggered by
successive revelations  of political  scandals, one-party  rule by  the  Liberal
Democratic  Party which  was established  in 1955,  was terminated  in mid-1993.
Since then,  political  instability  has  resulted  from  frequent  turnover  of
coalition  governments and  prime ministers.  What, if  any, effect  the current
political situation will have on  prospective regulatory reforms of the  economy
in  Japan  cannot be  predicted.  Recent and  future  developments in  Japan and
neighboring Asian countries may lead to  changes in policy that might  adversely
affect the Fund.
 
JAPANESE  GOVERNMENT  REGULATION.    A  foreign  investor  may  not  directly or
indirectly acquire 10%  or more of  the total outstanding  shares of a  Japanese
corporation  without prior notification  to the Ministry  of Finance ("MOF") and
any other  ministry  with  proper  jurisdiction.  Such  ministries  may  make  a
recommendation  to modify or prohibit the  proposed acquisition if they consider
that such acquisition falls  under certain limited  conditions specified in  the
Foreign  Exchange  Controls.  If  the  foreign  investor  does  not  accept  the
recommendation, such ministries may issue an order modifying or prohibiting  the
acquisition. The Fund will be considered a foreign investor for this purpose.
 
   
ECONOMIC  FACTORS.  The  Japanese economy experienced  its worst recession since
World War II  in the 1990s.  While Japan's Economic  Planning Agency claims  the
recession  ended in  October 1993, the  economy has been  largely stagnant since
then. In  addition, asset  deflation, both  financial and  in real  estate,  has
exerted a continuous drag on the economy. The Japanese government has called for
a  transformation of  the economy  away from  its high  dependency on export-led
growth towards greater stimulation of the  domestic economy. The plan calls  for
direct government spending on public works and includes measures to support weak
land  prices and to revitalize Japan's stagnating financial markets. There is no
assurance that this package, however, will succeed in fueling economic growth.
    
 
   
    Strains in the financial system  have also been one  of the major causes  of
Japan's  economic weakness.  The non-performing loans  of financial institutions
have hampered their ability to take on risks, thus obstructing the flow of funds
into capital outlays as well as equities. At the end of 1995, Japan's  financial
institutions  were estimated by the government to  have at least yen 40 trillion
(U.S.$400 billion) in outstanding loans, including uncollectible loans estimated
at yen  10-15 trillion.  While the  banking  system appears  to be  making  some
progress in its attempt to deal with non-performing assets, the overall problems
in the banking system could make economic recovery more difficult to achieve and
may lead to a crisis in the banking system itself.
    
 
INTERNATIONAL  TRADE.  Japan is largely dependent upon foreign economies for raw
materials. International  trade  is important  to  Japan's economy,  as  exports
provide  the means to pay for many of  the raw materials it must import. Because
of the concentration  of Japanese  exports in  highly visible  products such  as
automobiles,  machine tools  and semiconductors,  and the  large trade surpluses
ensuing therefrom, Japan has entered a difficult phase in its relations with its
trading partners, particularly with respect to the United States, with whom  the
trade  imbalance is  the greatest.  It is  possible that  differences over trade
policy may lead the U.S. to take actions which may have an adverse effect on the
Japanese economy.
 
   
CURRENCY FACTORS.  Securities in Japan are denominated and quoted in "yen."  Yen
are fully convertible and transferable based on floating exchange rates into all
currencies,  without administrative or legal restrictions for both non-residents
and residents of  Japan. In determining  the net  asset value of  shares of  the
Fund, assets or liabilities
    
ini-
 
<PAGE>
tially  expressed in terms of Japanese yen  will be translated into U.S. dollars
at the current selling rate of Japanese  yen against U.S. dollars. As a  result,
in the absence of a success-
ful  currency hedge, the value of the  Fund's assets as measured in U.S. dollars
may be  affected  favorably or  unfavorably  by  fluctuations in  the  value  of
Japanese yen relative to the U.S. dollar.
 
NATURAL  DISASTERS.   In the past,  Japan has experienced  earthquakes and tidal
waves varying  in degrees  of severity,  and the  risks of  such phenomena,  and
damage resulting therefrom, continue to exist.
 
GENERAL  RISKS OF INVESTING  IN JAPANESE AND OTHER  FOREIGN SECURITIES.  Foreign
securities investments may be affected by changes in currency rates or  exchange
control  regulations,  changes  in governmental  administration  or  economic or
monetary policy (in the  United States and abroad)  or changed circumstances  in
dealings between nations. Fluctuations in the relative rates of exchange between
the  currencies  of  different  nations  will affect  the  value  of  the Fund's
investments  denominated  in  foreign  currency.  Changes  in  foreign  currency
exchange  rates relative to the U.S. dollar will affect the U.S. dollar value of
the Fund's  assets denominated  in that  currency and  thereby impact  upon  the
Fund's total return on such assets.
 
    Foreign  currency  exchange rates  are determined  by  forces of  supply and
demand on the foreign exchange markets. These forces are themselves affected  by
the   international  balance  of  payments  and  other  economic  and  financial
conditions, government intervention,  speculation and  other factors.  Moreover,
foreign currency exchange rates may be affected by the regulatory control of the
exchanges  on which the  currencies trade. The  foreign currency transactions of
the Fund will be conducted on a  spot basis or through forward foreign  currency
exchange  contracts  (described below).  The Fund  will  incur certain  costs in
connection with these currency transactions.
 
    Investments in  foreign  securities will  also  occasion risks  relating  to
political  and  economic  developments  abroad,  including  the  possibility  of
expropriations or confiscatory taxation, limitations  on the use or transfer  of
Fund   assets  and  any  effects  of   foreign  social,  economic  or  political
instability. Foreign companies are not subject to the regulatory requirements of
U.S. companies and, as  such, there may be  less publicly available  information
about  such companies.  Moreover, foreign companies  are not  subject to uniform
accounting,  auditing  and  financial   reporting  standards  and   requirements
comparable to those applicable to U.S. companies.
 
    Securities  of foreign issuers may be less liquid than comparable securities
of U.S.  issuers  and,  as such,  their  price  changes may  be  more  volatile.
Furthermore,  foreign exchanges and broker-dealers are generally subject to less
government  and   exchange  scrutiny   and   regulation  than   their   American
counterparts.  Brokerage commissions,  dealer concessions  and other transaction
costs may be higher on foreign markets than in the U.S. In addition, differences
in clearance and settlement procedures on foreign markets may occasion delays in
settlements of  the  Fund's  trades  effected in  such  markets.  As  such,  the
inability  to dispose  of portfolio  securities due  to settlement  delays could
result in  losses to  the  Fund due  to subsequent  declines  in value  of  such
securities and the inability of the Fund to make intended security purchases due
to settlement problems could result in a failure of the Fund to make potentially
advantageous investments.
 
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS.  The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements, which may
be  viewed as a type of secured lending by the Fund, and which typically involve
the acquisition  by  the Fund  of  debt  securities, from  a  selling  financial
institution  such as a bank, savings  and loan association or broker-dealer. The
agreement provides that the Fund will sell back to the institution, and that the
institution will repurchase, the underlying security at a specified price and at
a fixed time in the  future, usually not more than  seven days from the date  of
purchase.  While repurchase agreements involve certain risks not associated with
direct investments  in  debt  securities,  including the  risks  of  default  or
bankruptcy  of the selling financial institution, the Fund follows procedures to
minimize such risks. These procedures include effecting repurchase  transactions
only  with large,  well-capitalized and  well-established financial institutions
and maintaining adequate collateralization.
 
   
REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS AND DOLLAR ROLLS.   The Fund may also use  reverse
repurchase  agreements  and dollar  rolls as  part  of its  investment strategy.
Reverse repurchase  agreements involve  sales by  the Fund  of portfolio  assets
concurrently  with an agreement by  the Fund to repurchase  the same assets at a
later date at a fixed price. The Fund  may enter into dollar rolls in which  the
Fund  sells securities and simultaneously  contracts to repurchase substantially
similar (same type and  coupon) securities on a  specified future date.  Reverse
repurchase agreements and dollar rolls involve the risk that the market value of
the  securities  the Fund  is obligated  to repurchase  under the  agreement may
decline below the repurchase price. In the event the buyer of securities under a
reverse repurchase  agreement or  dollar roll  files for  bankruptcy or  becomes
insolvent, the Fund's use of proceeds of the agreement may be restricted pending
a  determination by  the other  party, or  its trustee  or receiver,  whether to
enforce the Fund's obligation to  repurchase the securities. Reverse  repurchase
agreements  and dollar rolls are  speculative techniques involving leverage, and
are considered borrowings by the Fund.
    
 
WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED DELIVERY SECURITIES AND FORWARD COMMITMENTS.  From  time
to time, in the ordinary course of business, the Fund may purchase securities on
a  when-issued or delayed delivery basis or may purchase or sell securities on a
forward commitment basis. When  such transactions are  negotiated, the price  is
fixed  at the time of the commitment, but  delivery and payment can take place a
month   or   more    after   the    date   of   the    commitment.   There    is
 
                                                                               7
<PAGE>
no  overall limit on the percentage of  the Fund's assets which may be committed
to the purchase  of securities  on a  when-issued, delayed  delivery or  forward
commitment  basis. An increase in the  percentage of the Fund's assets committed
to the purchase  of securities  on a  when-issued, delayed  delivery or  forward
commitment basis may increase the volatility of the Fund's net asset value.
 
WHEN, AS AND IF ISSUED SECURITIES.  The Fund may purchase securities on a "when,
as  and if issued" basis  under which the issuance  of the security depends upon
the occurrence of a  subsequent event, such as  approval of a merger,  corporate
reorganization, leveraged buyout or debt restructuring. If the anticipated event
does  not occur and  the securities are not  issued, the Fund  will have lost an
investment opportunity.  There is  no overall  limit on  the percentage  of  the
Fund's  assets which may be committed to  the purchase of securities on a "when,
as and if  issued" basis. An  increase in  the percentage of  the Fund's  assets
committed  to the purchase of securities on a "when, as and if issued" basis may
increase the volatility of its net asset value.
 
ZERO COUPON SECURITIES.  A portion  of the fixed-income securities purchased  by
the  Fund may  be zero  coupon securities.  Such securities  are purchased  at a
discount from their face amount, giving the purchaser the right to receive their
full value at maturity. The interest  earned on such securities is,  implicitly,
automatically  compounded and paid out at  maturity. While such compounding at a
constant rate eliminates the risk of receiving lower yields upon reinvestment of
interest if  prevailing interest  rates  decline, the  owner  of a  zero  coupon
security  will be  unable to participate  in higher yields  upon reinvestment of
interest received  on interest-paying  securities if  prevailing interest  rates
rise.
 
    A  zero coupon  security pays  no interest  to its  holder during  its life.
Therefore, to the extent the Fund invests in zero coupon securities, it will not
receive current cash  available for distribution  to shareholders. In  addition,
zero  coupon securities are subject  to substantially greater price fluctuations
during periods  of  changing  prevailing  interest  rates  than  are  comparable
securities  which  pay interest  on  a current  basis.  Current federal  tax law
requires that a holder  (such as the  Fund) of a zero  coupon security accrue  a
portion  of the discount at which the security was purchased as income each year
even though  the Fund  receives no  interest payments  in cash  on the  security
during the year.
 
PRIVATE  PLACEMENTS.   The  Fund may  invest up  to  5% of  its total  assets in
securities which are  subject to restrictions  on resale because  they have  not
been  registered under the  Securities Act of 1933,  as amended (the "Securities
Act"), or which are otherwise  not readily marketable. (Securities eligible  for
resale  pursuant to  Rule 144A  under the Securities  Act, and  determined to be
liquid pursuant to the procedures discussed in the following paragraph, are  not
subject  to the foregoing restriction.)  These securities are generally referred
to as private placements or restricted securities. Limitations on the resale  of
such  securities  may have  an adverse  effect on  their marketability,  and may
prevent the Fund from disposing of them promptly at reasonable prices. The  Fund
may  have to bear the expense of  registering such securities for resale and the
risk of substantial delays in effecting such registration.
 
   
    The Securities  and Exchange  Commission  has adopted  Rule 144A  under  the
Securities  Act,  which  permits  the  Fund  to  sell  restricted  securities to
qualified institutional  buyers  without  limitation.  The  Investment  Manager,
pursuant  to  procedures  adopted by  the  Trustees  of the  Fund,  will  make a
determination as to the liquidity of  each restricted security purchased by  the
Fund.  If a restricted security  is determined to be  of "liquid," such security
will not  be included  within the  category "illiquid  securities," which  under
current policy may not exceed 15% of the Fund's net assets.
    
 
OPTIONS  AND FUTURES TRANSACTIONS.  The Fund  may purchase and sell (write) call
and put options on (i) portfolio securities which are denominated in either U.S.
dollars or foreign currencies; (ii) stock indexes; and (iii) the U.S. dollar and
foreign currencies. Such options are or may  in the future be listed on  several
U.S.  and  foreign securities  exchanges or  may  be traded  in over-the-counter
transactions ("OTC options"). OTC options  are purchased from or sold  (written)
to  dealers or financial institutions which  have entered into direct agreements
with the Fund.
 
    The Fund is permitted to write covered call options on portfolio  securities
and  the U.S. dollar  and foreign currencies,  without limit, in  order to hedge
against the  decline in  the  value of  a security  or  currency in  which  such
security  is denominated  (although such  hedge is limited  to the  value of the
premium received) and  to close  out long call  option positions.  The Fund  may
write  covered put options, under which the Fund incurs an obligation to buy the
security (or currency) underlying  the option from the  purchaser of the put  at
the  option's  exercise price  at  any time  during  the option  period,  at the
purchaser's election.
 
    The Fund  may  purchase listed  and  OTC call  and  put options  in  amounts
equalling  up to 5% of  its total assets. The Fund  may purchase call options to
close out a covered call position or to protect against an increase in the price
of a security it  anticipates purchasing or,  in the case of  call options on  a
foreign  currency,  to hedge  against  an adverse  exchange  rate change  of the
currency  in  which  the  security  it  anticipates  purchasing  is  denominated
vis-a-vis  the currency in which the exercise price is denominated. The Fund may
purchase put options on  securities which it holds  in its portfolio to  protect
itself  against a decline in the value of  the security and to close out written
put positions in a manner similar to call option closing purchase  transactions.
There are no other limits on the Fund's ability to purchase call and put options
other than compliance with the foregoing policies.
 
    The  Fund may purchase and sell futures contracts that are currently traded,
or may in  the future  be traded,  on U.S.  and foreign  commodity exchanges  on
underlying portfolio
 
8
<PAGE>
securities,   on  any  currency  ("currency"   futures),  on  U.S.  and  foreign
fixed-income securities ("interest rate" futures) and on such indexes of U.S. or
foreign equity  or fixed-income  securities  as may  exist  or come  into  being
("index" futures). The Fund may purchase or sell interest rate futures contracts
for  the purpose of hedging some or all of the value of its portfolio securities
(or anticipated  portfolio securities)  against changes  in prevailing  interest
rates.  The Fund may purchase or sell index futures contracts for the purpose of
hedging some  or all  of  its portfolio  (or anticipated  portfolio)  securities
against  changes in their prices. The Fund may purchase or sell currency futures
contracts to hedge against an  anticipated rise or decline  in the value of  the
currency  in  which  a  portfolio  security  is  denominated  vis-a-vis  another
currency. As a futures contract purchaser, the Fund incurs an obligation to take
delivery of a specified  amount of the obligation  underlying the contract at  a
specified  time in the  future for a specified  price. As a  seller of a futures
contract, the Fund incurs an obligation  to deliver the specified amount of  the
underlying obligation at a specified time in return for an agreed upon price.
 
    The  Fund  also may  purchase  and write  call  and put  options  on futures
contracts which are traded  on an exchange and  enter into closing  transactions
with respect to such options to terminate an existing position.
 
    New  futures  contracts, options  and other  financial products  and various
combinations thereof continue to be developed.  The Fund may invest in any  such
futures,  options or products as may be developed, to the extent consistent with
its investment objective and applicable regulatory requirements.
 
RISKS OF OPTIONS AND FUTURES TRANSACTIONS.  The Fund may close out its  position
as writer of an option, or as a buyer or seller of a futures contract, only if a
liquid  secondary market exists for options or futures contracts of that series.
There is no assurance that such a market will exist, particularly in the case of
OTC options, as such options may generally only be closed out by entering into a
closing purchase transaction  with the  purchasing dealer.  Also, exchanges  may
limit  the amount by which  the price of many futures  contracts may move on any
day. If the price moves  equal the daily limit on  successive days, then it  may
prove  impossible to  liquidate a futures  position until the  daily limit moves
have ceased.
 
    Futures contracts and options transactions may be considered speculative  in
nature  and may  involve greater risks  than those customarily  assumed by other
investment companies which do not invest  in such instruments. One such risk  is
that   the  Investment  Manager  or  Sub-Adviser   could  be  incorrect  in  its
expectations as to  the direction or  extent of various  interest rate or  price
movements  or the time span within which  the movements take place. For example,
if the Fund sold futures contracts for the sale of securities in anticipation of
an increase  in interest  rates,  and then  interest  rates went  down  instead,
causing bond prices to rise, the Fund would lose money on the sale. Another risk
which  will arise  in employing futures  contracts to protect  against the price
volatility of portfolio securities is that the prices of securities,  currencies
and  indexes  subject to  futures contracts  (and  thereby the  futures contract
prices) may correlate  imperfectly with  the behavior  of the  U.S. dollar  cash
prices  of the Fund's portfolio securities and their denominated currencies. See
the Statement of Additional Information for a further discussion of risks.
 
NON-DIVERSIFIED STATUS.  The Fund  is a non-diversified investment company  and,
as  such, is not  subject to the  diversification requirements of  the Act. As a
non-diversified investment company, the Fund may invest a greater portion of its
assets in the  securities of  a single  issuer and  thus is  subject to  greater
exposure  to  risks such  as  a decline  in the  credit  rating of  that issuer.
However, the Fund  anticipates that it  will qualify as  a regulated  investment
company  under the federal income tax laws and, if so qualified, will be subject
to the applicable diversification requirements of the Internal Revenue Code,  as
amended (the "Code"). As a regulated investment company under the Code, the Fund
may  not, as of the end  of any of its fiscal  quarters, have invested more than
25% of its total assets in the securities of any one issuer (including a foreign
government), or as to 50% of its total assets, have invested more than 5% of its
total assets in the securities of a single issuer.
 
FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY EXCHANGE  CONTRACTS.  The Fund  may enter into  forward
foreign currency exchange contracts ("forward contracts") in connection with its
foreign securities investments.
 
    A  forward contract involves an obligation to purchase or sell a currency at
a future date,  which may  be any  fixed number  of days  from the  date of  the
contract agreed upon by the parties, at a price set at the time of the contract.
The  Fund may enter  into forward contracts  as a hedge  against fluctuations in
future foreign exchange rates.
 
    The Fund will enter into forward contracts under various circumstances. When
the Fund  enters  into  a contract  for  the  purchase or  sale  of  a  security
denominated  in a foreign currency, it may, for example, desire to "lock in" the
price of the security in U.S. dollars  or some other foreign currency which  the
Fund  is  temporarily  holding in  its  portfolio.  By entering  into  a forward
contract for  the purchase  or sale,  for a  fixed amount  of dollars  or  other
currency,  of the amount of foreign currency involved in the underlying security
transactions, the Fund will  be able to protect  itself against a possible  loss
resulting  from an adverse change in the relationship between the U.S. dollar or
other currency which is being used for the security purchase (by the Fund or the
counterparty) and  the foreign  currency in  which the  security is  denominated
during  the period between the  date on which the  security is purchased or sold
and the date on which payment is made or received.
 
                                                                               9
<PAGE>
    At other  times,  when,  for  example,  the  Fund's  Investment  Manager  or
Sub-Adviser believe that the currency of a particular foreign country may suffer
a  substantial decline against  the U.S. dollar or  some other foreign currency,
the Fund  may enter  into a  forward contract  to sell,  for a  fixed amount  of
dollars  or other  currency, the  amount of  foreign currency  approximating the
value of some or all of the Fund's securities holdings (or securities which  the
Fund  has purchased  for its  portfolio) denominated  in such  foreign currency.
Under identical circumstances,  the Fund may  enter into a  forward contract  to
sell, for a fixed amount of U.S. dollars or other currency, an amount of foreign
currency  other  than the  currency in  which  the securities  to be  hedged are
denominated approximating the value of some  or all of the portfolio  securities
to  be hedged. This method of  hedging, called "cross-hedging," will be selected
by the Investment Manager or Sub-Adviser when it is determined that the  foreign
currency  in  which the  portfolio securities  are denominated  has insufficient
liquidity or  is trading  at a  discount  as compared  with some  other  foreign
currency with which it tends to move in tandem.
 
    In  addition, when the  Fund's Investment Manager  or Sub-Adviser anticipate
purchasing securities at  some time in  the future,  and wishes to  lock in  the
current  exchange rate of the currency in which those securities are denominated
against the U.S. dollar or some other foreign currency, the Fund may enter  into
a forward contract to purchase an amount of currency equal to some or all of the
value  of the anticipated purchase, for a  fixed amount of U.S. dollars or other
currency. The  Fund  may,  however,  close  out  the  forward  contract  without
purchasing the security which was the subject of the "anticipatory" hedge.
 
    In  all of  the above  circumstances, if  the currency  in which  the Fund's
securities holdings (or anticipated portfolio securities) are denominated  rises
in  value with respect to the currency  which is being purchased (or sold), then
the Fund will have realized fewer gains  than had the Fund not entered into  the
forward  contracts.  Moreover,  the  precise matching  of  the  forward contract
amounts and the value of the securities involved will not generally be possible,
since the future value of such securities in foreign currencies will change as a
consequence of market  movements in the  value of those  securities between  the
date  the forward contract is entered into and  the date it matures. The Fund is
not required  to  enter  into  such transactions  with  regard  to  its  foreign
currency-denominated  securities and will not do so unless deemed appropriate by
the Investment Manager or Sub-Adviser. The Fund generally will not enter into  a
forward  contract with a  term of greater  than one year,  although it may enter
into forward contracts for periods of up to five years. The Fund may be  limited
in its ability to enter into hedging transactions involving forward contracts by
the  Internal Revenue Code requirements relating to qualification as a regulated
investment company (see "Dividends, Distributions and Taxes").
 
RIGHTS AND WARRANTS.   The  Fund may acquire  rights and/or  warrants which  are
attached  to  other  securities in  its  portfolio,  or which  are  issued  as a
distribution by the issuer  of a security held  in its portfolio. Rights  and/or
warrants  are, in  effect, options to  purchase equity securities  at a specific
price, generally valid for a specific period of time, and have no voting rights,
pay no dividends  and have  no rights with  respect to  the corporation  issuing
them.
 
LOWER  RATED CONVERTIBLE  AND FIXED-INCOME  SECURITIES.   The Fund  may acquire,
through purchase or  a distribution  by the  issuer of  a security  held in  its
portfolio, a fixed-income security which is convertible into common stock of the
issuer.  Convertible securities rank senior to  common stocks in a corporation's
capital structure and, therefore, entail less risk than the corporation's common
stock. The value  of a  convertible security is  a function  of its  "investment
value"  (its  value as  if  it did  not have  a  conversion privilege),  and its
"conversion value" (the  security's worth  if it were  to be  exchanged for  the
underlying security, at market value, pursuant to its conversion privilege).
 
    To the extent that a convertible security's investment value is greater than
its  conversion  value,  its  price  will  be  primarily  a  reflection  of such
investment value and its  price will be likely  to increase when interest  rates
fall and decrease when interest rates rise, as with a fixed-income security (the
credit  standing of the issuer and other factors  may also have an effect on the
convertible security's value).  If the conversion  value exceeds the  investment
value,  the price  of the  convertible security  will rise  above its investment
value and, in  addition, will sell  at some premium  over its conversion  value.
(This  premium  represents  the  price  investors are  willing  to  pay  for the
privilege of purchasing a  fixed-income security with  a possibility of  capital
appreciation  due to the conversion  privilege.) At such times  the price of the
convertible security  will tend  to fluctuate  directly with  the price  of  the
underlying equity security.
 
   
    A  portion of the fixed-income and  convertible securities in which the Fund
may invest  are not  rated; when  rated, such  ratings will  generally be  below
investment  grade. Securities below investment grade  are the equivalent of high
yield, high risk  bonds, commonly  known as  "junk bonds."  Investment grade  is
generally  considered to be  debt securities rated  BBB or higher  by Standard &
Poor's Corporation ("S&P") or Baa or  higher by Moody's Investors Service,  Inc.
("Moody's").  However, the Fund will  not invest in debt  securities that are in
default in payment of principal or interest.
    
 
    Because of the special nature of  the Fund's permitted investments in  lower
rated  debt securities, the Investment Manager and Sub-Adviser must take account
of certain special considerations  in assessing the  risks associated with  such
investments.  The prices of  lower rated securities  have been found  to be less
sensitive to changes in prevailing interest rates than higher rated investments,
but are likely to  be more sensitive to  adverse economic changes or  individual
corporate developments. During an economic
 
10
<PAGE>
downturn  or  substantial  period  of rising  interest  rates,  highly leveraged
issuers may  experience  financial stress  which  would adversely  affect  their
ability  to service  their principal and  interest payment  obligations, to meet
their projected business goals or to obtain additional financing. If the  issuer
of  a  fixed-income security  owned by  the  Fund defaults,  the Fund  may incur
additional  expenses  to  seek  recovery.  In  addition,  periods  of   economic
uncertainty  and change can be expected to  result in an increased volatility of
market prices of lower  rated securities and a  corresponding volatility in  the
net asset value of a share of the Fund.
 
PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT
 
   
The  Fund's  portfolio is  actively managed  by its  Investment Manager  and the
Sub-Adviser with  a  view  to  achieving the  Fund's  investment  objective.  In
determining  which securities  to purchase  for the Fund  or hold  in the Fund's
portfolio, the Investment Manager and  the Sub-Adviser will rely on  information
from various sources, including research, ana-
    
lysis  and appraisals of brokers and dealers,  the views of Trustees of the Fund
and others regarding  economic developments  and interest rate  trends, and  the
Investment  Manager's  and  Sub-Adviser's  own  analysis  of  factors  they deem
relevant. The  Fund's  primary portfolio  manager  is William  G.M.  Thomas,  an
Investment  Director of  the Sub-Adviser.  Mr. Thomas  has been  managing equity
portfolios for the Sub-Adviser for over ten years.
 
    Personnel  of  the  Investment  Manager  and  Sub-Adviser  have  substantial
experience  in the  use of the  investment techniques described  above under the
heading "Options  and Futures  Transactions,"  which techniques  require  skills
different  from  those  needed  to select  the  portfolio  securities underlying
various options and futures contracts.
 
    Orders for  transactions  in portfolio  securities  and commodities  may  be
placed  for the Fund with a number of brokers and dealers, including DWR and two
affiliated broker-dealers of the Sub-Adviser (Morgan Grenfell Asia and  Partners
Securities  Pte.  Limited  and  Morgan  Grenfell  Asia  Securities  (Hong  Kong)
Limited). Pursuant to an  order of the Securities  and Exchange Commission,  the
Fund  may effect principal transactions in certain money market instruments with
Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. ("DWR"),  a broker-dealer affiliate of the  Investment
Manager.  In addition, the Fund may  incur brokerage commissions on transactions
conducted through DWR and the  two above-mentioned affiliated broker-dealers  of
the Sub-Adviser.
 
    Although  the Fund does not  intend to engage in  short-term trading, it may
sell portfolio securities without  regard to the length  of time they have  been
held  when such  sale will,  in the  opinion of  the Investment  Manager or Sub-
Adviser, contribute to the  Fund's investment objective.  It is not  anticipated
that the Fund's portfolio turnover rate will exceed 100% in any one year.
 
    The  expenses of the Fund relating to its portfolio management are likely to
be greater than those incurred by other investment companies investing primarily
in  securities  issued  by  domestic  issuers  as  custodial  costs,   brokerage
commissions  and other  transaction charges  related to  investing in  Japan and
other foreign markets are generally higher than in the United States.
 
INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
The investment restrictions listed below  are among the restrictions which  have
been  adopted by the Fund as  fundamental policies. Under the Investment Company
Act of 1940, as  amended (the "Act"),  a fundamental policy  may not be  changed
without the vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund,
as  defined  in the  Act. For  purposes  of the  following limitations:  (i) all
percentage limitations apply immediately after a purchase or initial investment,
and (ii)  any subsequent  change  in any  applicable percentage  resulting  from
market  fluctuations or other  changes in total  or net assets  does not require
elimination of any security from the portfolio.
 
    The Fund may not:
 
        1. Invest 25% or more of the value of its total assets in securities  of
    issuers  in any one industry. This restriction does not apply to obligations
    issued or  guaranteed  by the  United  States Government,  its  agencies  or
    instrumentalities.
 
        2. Invest more than 5% of the value of its total assets in securities of
    issuers  having a  record, together  with predecessors,  of less  than three
    years of  continuous operation.  This  restriction shall  not apply  to  any
    obligation  issued  or  guaranteed  by  the  United  States  Government, its
    agencies or instrumentalities.
 
    In addition, as a non-fundamental policy, the Fund may not, as to 75% of its
total assets, purchase more than 10% of the voting securities of any issuer.
 
UNDERWRITING
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Dean Witter Distributors Inc. (the "Underwriter")  has agreed to purchase up  to
10,000,000  shares from the Fund, which number  may be increased or decreased in
accordance  with  the   Underwriting  Agreement.  The   initial  offering   will
 
                                                                              11
<PAGE>
run  approximately from March 25, 1996  through April 23, 1996. The Underwriting
Agreement provides that the obligation of the Underwriter is subject to  certain
conditions  precedent and that the Underwriter will be obligated to purchase the
shares on April  26, 1996,  or such  other date  as may  be agreed  upon by  the
Underwriter  and the Fund  (the "Closing Date").  Shares will not  be issued and
dividends will not be  declared by the  Fund until after  the Closing Date.  For
this  reason, payment is not  required to be made prior  to the Closing Date. If
any orders  received  during the  initial  offering period  are  accompanied  by
payment,  such  payment  will be  returned  unless an  accompanying  request for
investment in  a Dean  Witter money  market fund  is received  at the  time  the
payment  is made. Prospective investors in money market funds should request and
read the  money  market fund  prospectus  prior  to investing.  All  such  funds
received  and invested in a Dean Witter  money market fund will be automatically
invested in the  Fund on  the Closing  Date without  any further  action by  the
investor.  Any investor may  cancel his or  her purchase of  Fund shares without
penalty at any time prior to the Closing Date.
 
    The Underwriter will purchase shares from the Fund at $10.00 per share  with
all proceeds going to the Fund. The Underwriter may, however, receive contingent
deferred  sales charges from future redemptions of such shares (see "Redemptions
and Repurchases--Contingent Deferred Sales Charge").
 
    The Underwriter shall, regardless  of its expected underwriting  commitment,
be  entitled  and obligated  to purchase  only  the number  of shares  for which
purchase orders have been  received by the Underwriter  prior to 2:00 p.m.,  New
York  time, on the third business day  preceding the Closing Date, or such other
date as may be agreed to between the parties.
 
    The minimum number of Fund shares which may be purchased by any  shareholder
pursuant  to this offering is 100 shares. Certificates for shares purchased will
not be issued unless requested by the shareholder in writing.
 
PURCHASE OF FUND SHARES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Dean Witter Distributors Inc. (the "Distributor") will act as the Distributor of
the Fund's shares  during the  continuous offering. Pursuant  to a  Distribution
Agreement  between  the  Fund  and  the  Distributor,  shares  of  the  Fund are
distributed by the  Distributor and offered  by DWR and  other dealers who  have
entered   into  selected  dealer  agreements  with  the  Distributor  ("Selected
Broker-Dealers"). The principal executive office  of the Distributor is  located
at Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048.
 
    The minimum initial purchase is $1,000. Minimum subsequent purchases of $100
or  more may  be made  by sending a  check, payable  to Dean  Witter Japan Fund,
directly to Dean Witter Trust Company  (the "Transfer Agent") at P.O. Box  1040,
Jersey  City, NJ  07303 or by  contacting an  account executive of  DWR or other
Selected Broker-Dealer. The minimum initial purchase in the case of  investments
through EasyInvest-SM-, an automatic purchase plan (see "Shareholder Services"),
is  $100, provided  that the  schedule of  automatic investments  will result in
investments totalling at  least $1,000 within  the first twelve  months. In  the
case  of investments pursuant  to Systematic Payroll  Deduction Plans (including
Individual  Retirement  Plans),  the  Fund,   in  its  discretion,  may   accept
investments  without  regard to  any minimum  amounts  which would  otherwise be
required if the  Fund has  reason to  believe that  additional investments  will
increase  the investment in  all accounts under  such Plans to  at least $1,000.
Certificates for shares purchased will not be issued unless a request is made by
the shareholder in writing to the Transfer Agent. The offering price will be the
net asset value  per share next  determined following receipt  of an order  (see
"Determination of Net Asset Value").
 
    Shares  of  the Fund  are sold  through  the Distributor  on a  normal three
business day settlement basis; that is, payment is due on the third business day
(settlement date) after the order is placed with the Distributor. Shares of  the
Fund  purchased through the  Distributor are entitled  to any dividends declared
beginning on the  next business  day following  settlement date.  Since DWR  and
other  Selected Broker-Dealers forward investors' funds on settlement date, they
will benefit  from the  temporary use  of the  funds if  payment is  made  prior
thereto.  Shares  purchased  through  the Transfer  Agent  are  entitled  to any
dividends declared beginning on  the next business day  following receipt of  an
order.  As noted above, orders  placed directly with the  Transfer Agent must be
accompanied by  payment. Investors  will be  entitled to  receive dividends  and
capital  gains distributions if their order is received by the close of business
on the day  prior to  the record  date for  such distributions.  While no  sales
charge  is imposed at the time shares are purchased, a contingent deferred sales
charge  may  be  imposed  at  the  time  of  redemption  (see  "Redemptions  and
Repurchases"). Sales personnel are compensated for selling shares of the Fund at
the  time of their sale by the Distributor and/or the Selected Broker-Dealer. In
addition, some  sales  personnel  of the  Selected  Broker-Dealer  will  receive
various  types of non-cash  compensation as special  sales incentives, including
trips, educational and/or business  seminars and merchandise.  The Fund and  the
Distributor reserve the right to reject any purchase orders.
 
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION
 
The Fund has adopted a Plan of Distribution pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Act
(the "Plan"), under which the
 
12
<PAGE>
Fund  pays the Distributor a fee, which is accrued daily and payable monthly, at
an annual rate of 1.0% of the  lesser of: (a) the average daily aggregate  gross
sales  of  the Fund's  shares since  the  inception of  the Fund  (not including
reinvestments of dividends  or capital  gains distributions),  less the  average
daily  aggregate net asset value of the  Fund's shares redeemed since the Fund's
inception upon which  a contingent  deferred sales  charge has  been imposed  or
waived;  or (b) the Fund's average daily net  assets. This fee is treated by the
Fund as an  expense in  the year it  is accrued.  A portion of  the fee  payable
pursuant  to the Plan, equal to 0.25% of the Fund's average daily net assets, is
characterized as  a service  fee  within the  meaning  of NASD  guidelines.  The
service  fee is a  payment made for  personal service and/or  the maintenance of
shareholder accounts.
 
    Amounts paid  under  the Plan  are  paid  to the  Distributor  for  services
provided   and  the  expenses  borne  by  the  Distributor  and  others  in  the
distribution of  the Fund's  shares, including  the payment  of commissions  for
sales  of the Fund's shares and incentive  compensation to and expenses of DWR's
account executives and others who engage in or support distribution of shares or
who service  shareholder accounts,  including overhead  and telephone  expenses;
printing  and distribution of  prospectuses and reports  used in connection with
the offering  of the  Fund's  shares to  other  than current  shareholders;  and
preparation,  printing  and  distribution of  sales  literature  and advertising
materials. In addition, the  Distributor may utilize fees  paid pursuant to  the
Plan  to compensate DWR and other  Selected Broker-Dealers for their opportunity
costs in advancing such amounts,  which compensation would be  in the form of  a
carrying charge on any unreimbursed expenses.
 
    At any given time, the expenses in distributing shares of the Fund may be in
excess  of the total of (i) the payments  made by the Fund pursuant to the Plan,
and (ii) the  proceeds of contingent  deferred sales charges  paid by  investors
upon  the  redemption of  shares  (see "Redemptions  and Repurchases--Contingent
Deferred Sales Charge"). For example, if $1 million in expenses in  distributing
shares of the Fund had been incurred and $750,000 had been received as described
in (i) and (ii) above, the excess expense would amount to $250,000.
 
    Because  there  is no  requirement under  the Plan  that the  Distributor be
reimbursed for all  distribution expenses or  any requirement that  the Plan  be
continued  from year to year, such excess  amount, if any, does not constitute a
liability of the Fund. Although there is no legal obligation for the Fund to pay
expenses incurred in excess of payments made to the Distributor under the  Plan,
and  the proceeds  of contingent deferred  sales charges paid  by investors upon
redemption of shares, if for any reason the Plan is terminated the Trustees will
consider at that time the manner in which to treat such expenses. Any cumulative
expenses incurred, but not yet recovered through distribution fees or contingent
deferred sales charges, may or may not be recovered through future  distribution
fees or contingent deferred sales charges.
 
DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE
 
The net asset value per share of the Fund is determined once daily at 4:00 p.m.,
New York time, on each day that the New York Stock Exchange is open (or, on days
when  the New  York Stock Exchange  closes prior  to 4:00 p.m.,  at such earlier
time) by  taking the  value  of all  assets of  the  Fund, subtracting  all  its
liabilities,  dividing by the number of  shares outstanding and adjusting to the
nearest cent. The  net asset  value per  share will  not be  determined on  Good
Friday and on such other federal and non-federal holidays as are observed by the
New York Stock Exchange.
 
    In  the calculation of the  Fund's net asset value:  (1) an equity portfolio
security listed or traded on  the New York or  American Stock Exchange or  other
domestic  or foreign stock exchange or quoted  by NASDAQ is valued at its latest
sale price on that exchange or quotation  service, prior to the time assets  are
valued;  if there were no  sales that day, the security  is valued at the latest
bid price (in cases where  a security is traded on  more than one exchange,  the
security  is valued on the exchange designated as the primary market pursuant to
procedures adopted by the Trustees); and (2) all other portfolio securities  for
which over-the-counter market quotations are readily available are valued at the
latest  bid price. When  market quotations are  not readily available, including
circumstances under which it is determined  by the Investment Manager that  sale
and  bid  prices are  not  reflective of  a  security's market  value, portfolio
securities are valued  at their  fair value as  determined in  good faith  under
procedures  established by  and under  the general  supervision of  the Board of
Trustees. For valuation  purposes, quotations of  foreign portfolio  securities,
other  assets and liabilities  and forward contracts  stated in foreign currency
are translated into U.S. dollar equivalents at the prevailing market rates prior
to the close of the New York Stock Exchange. Dividends receivable are accrued as
of the ex-dividend date or as of the time that the relevant ex-dividend date and
amounts become known.
 
    Short-term debt securities with remaining  maturities of sixty days or  less
at  the  time of  purchase are  valued  at amortized  cost, unless  the Trustees
determine such does  not reflect  the securities'  market value,  in which  case
these  securities  will be  valued  at their  fair  value as  determined  by the
Trustees.
 
    Certain of  the Fund's  portfolio securities  may be  valued by  an  outside
pricing  service approved by the Fund's Trustees. The pricing service utilizes a
matrix system  incorporating  security  quality,  maturity  and  coupon  as  the
evaluation model parameters, and/or research evaluations by its staff, including
review of broker-dealer market price quotations, in determining what it believes
is  the  fair  valuation of  the  portfolio  securities valued  by  such pricing
service.
 
                                                                              13
<PAGE>
SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
AUTOMATIC  INVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS.   All income dividends and
capital gains distributions are automatically paid in full and fractional shares
of the Fund (or, if specified by the shareholder, any other open-end  investment
company  for which InterCapital serves as investment manager (collectively, with
the Fund, the "Dean Witter Funds")),  unless the shareholder requests that  they
be  paid in  cash. Shares  as acquired are  not subject  to the  imposition of a
contingent deferred sales  charge upon  their redemption  (see "Redemptions  and
Repurchases").
 
INVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED IN CASH.  Any shareholder who
receives  a cash payment  representing a dividend  or capital gains distribution
may invest such dividend or distribution at  the net asset value per share  next
determined  after receipt by the  Transfer Agent, by returning  the check or the
proceeds to the Transfer Agent within thirty days after the payment date. Shares
so acquired are  not subject to  the imposition of  a contingent deferred  sales
charge upon their redemption (see "Redemptions and Repurchases").
 
EASYINVEST-SM-.  Shareholders may subscribe to EasyInvest, an automatic purchase
plan  which  provides for  any  amount from  $100  to $5,000  to  be transferred
automatically from a checking or savings account, on a semi-monthly, monthly  or
quarterly  basis, to the  Transfer Agent for  investment in shares  of the Fund.
(See also "Purchase of Fund Shares" and "Redemptions and
Repurchases--Involuntary Redemption").
 
SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL  PLAN.   A  systematic  withdrawal plan  (the  "Withdrawal
Plan")  is available  for shareholders  who own or  purchase shares  of the Fund
having a minimum value of $10,000 based  upon the then current net asset  value.
The  Withdrawal Plan provides  for monthly or  quarterly (March, June, September
and December) checks in any  dollar amount, not less than  $25, or in any  whole
percentage  of  the  account balance,  on  an annualized  basis.  Any applicable
contingent deferred sales charge  will be imposed on  shares redeemed under  the
Withdrawal  Plan  (see "Redemptions  and Repurchases--Contingent  Deferred Sales
Charge"). Therefore, any shareholder participating  in the Withdrawal Plan  will
have  sufficient shares redeemed  from his or  her account so  that the proceeds
(net of any applicable contingent deferred sales charge) to the shareholder will
be the designated monthly or quarterly amount.
 
    Withdrawal Plan payments should  not be considered  as dividends, yields  or
income.  If periodic withdrawal plan payments continuously exceed net investment
income and  net capital  gains, the  shareholder's original  investment will  be
correspondingly reduced and ultimately exhausted.
 
    Shareholders  should  contact  their  DWR  or  other  Selected Broker-Dealer
account executive or the Transfer Agent for further information about any of the
above services.
 
TAX-SHELTERED RETIREMENT  PLANS.   Retirement  plans are  available for  use  by
corporations,  the self-employed,  Individual Retirement  Accounts and Custodial
Accounts under Section 403(b)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code. Adoption of  such
plans should be on advice of legal counsel or tax adviser.
 
    For  further information  regarding plan administration,  custodial fees and
other details,  investors should  contact  their DWR  or other  Selected  Dealer
account executive or the Transfer Agent.
 
EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE
 
The  Fund makes available  to its shareholders  an "Exchange Privilege" allowing
the exchange of shares of  the Fund for shares of  other Dean Witter Funds  sold
with  a contingent deferred sales charge ("CDSC  funds"), and for shares of Dean
Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury  Trust, Dean Witter  Short-Term Bond Fund,  Dean
Witter  Limited Term  Municipal Trust,  Dean Witter  Balanced Growth  Fund, Dean
Witter Balanced Income Fund, Dean  Witter Intermediate Term U.S. Treasury  Trust
and  five Dean Witter Funds  which are money market  funds (the foregoing eleven
non-CDSC funds  are  hereinafter  collectively  referred  to  as  the  "Exchange
Funds"). Exchanges may be made after the shares of the Fund acquired by purchase
(not by exchange or dividend reinvestment) have been held for thirty days. There
is  no waiting period for  exchanges of shares acquired  by exchange or dividend
reinvestment.
 
    An exchange to another CDSC fund or to any Exchange Fund that is not a money
market fund is on the basis of the next calculated net asset value per share  of
each  fund after the  exchange order is  received. When exchanging  into a money
market fund from the Fund,  shares of the Fund are  redeemed out of the Fund  at
their  next calculated net  asset value and  the proceeds of  the redemption are
used to  purchase  shares of  the  money market  fund  at the  net  asset  value
determined  the following business day. Subsequent  exchanges between any of the
money market funds and any of the CDSC funds can be effected on the same  basis.
No  contingent deferred  sales charge  ("CDSC") is  imposed at  the time  of any
exchange, although any applicable CDSC will be imposed upon ultimate redemption.
Shares of the Fund acquired in exchange for shares of another CDSC fund having a
different CDSC schedule  than that  of this  Fund will  be subject  to the  CDSC
schedule  of this  Fund, even if  such shares are  subsequently re-exchanged for
shares of the  CDSC fund  originally purchased. During  the period  of time  the
shareholder  remains in the Exchange  Fund (calculated from the  last day of the
 
14
<PAGE>
month in which the Exchange Fund shares were acquired), the holding period  (for
the  purpose of determining the rate of the CDSC) is frozen. If those shares are
subsequently  reexchanged  for  shares  of  a  CDSC  fund,  the  holding  period
previously  frozen when the first  exchange was made resumes  on the last day of
the month in which shares of a CDSC fund are reacquired. Thus, the CDSC is based
upon the time (calculated as described above) the shareholder was invested in  a
CDSC fund (see "Redemptions and Repurchases--Contingent Deferred Sales Charge").
However,  in  the  case  of  shares exchanged  into  an  Exchange  Fund,  upon a
redemption of shares which  results in a  CDSC being imposed,  a credit (not  to
exceed  the amount of the CDSC) will be given in an amount equal to the Exchange
Fund  12b-1  distribution  fees  incurred  on  or  after  that  date  which  are
attributable  to  those  shares.  (Exchange  Fund  12b-1  distribution  fees are
described in the prospectuses for those funds.)
 
    In addition, shares of the  Fund may be acquired  in exchange for shares  of
Dean  Witter Funds sold  with a front-end sales  charge ("front-end sales charge
funds"), but shares  of the  Fund, however acquired,  may not  be exchanged  for
shares  of  front-end sales  charge funds.  Shares  of a  CDSC fund  acquired in
exchange for shares of a front-end sales charge fund (or in exchange for  shares
of  other Dean Witter  Funds for which  shares of a  front-end sales charge fund
have been exchanged) are not subject to any CDSC upon their redemption.
 
    Purchases and  exchanges should  be  made for  investment purposes  only.  A
pattern  of frequent  exchanges may  be deemed by  the Investment  Manager to be
abusive and contrary to the best interests of the Fund's other shareholders and,
at the Investment Manager's discretion, may be limited by the Fund's refusal  to
accept  additional purchases  and/or exchanges  from the  investor. Although the
Fund does not  have any  specific definition of  what constitutes  a pattern  of
frequent  exchanges,  and  will  consider all  relevant  factors  in determining
whether a particular situation is abusive and contrary to the best interests  of
the Fund and its other shareholders, investors should be aware that the Fund and
each  of the other Dean Witter Funds  may in their discretion limit or otherwise
restrict the number  of times this  Exchange Privilege may  be exercised by  any
investor.  Any such restriction will be made  by the Fund on a prospective basis
only, upon notice  of the  shareholder not later  than ten  days following  such
shareholder's  most  recent  exchange.  Also,  the  Exchange  Privilege  may  be
terminated or revised at  any time by  the Fund and/or any  of such Dean  Witter
Funds  for which shares of the Fund have been exchanged, upon such notice as may
be required by applicable  regulatory agencies. Shareholders maintaining  margin
accounts  with  DWR  or another  Selected  Broker-Dealer are  referred  to their
account executive  regarding restrictions  on  exchange of  shares of  the  Fund
pledged in the margin account.
 
    The  current prospectus for each  fund describes its investment objective(s)
and policies, and  shareholders should obtain  a copy and  examine it  carefully
before  investing. Exchanges are  subject to the  minimum investment requirement
and any other conditions imposed  by each fund. In  the case of any  shareholder
holding  a share certificate or certificates, no exchanges may be made until all
applicable share  certificates have  been  received by  the Transfer  Agent  and
deposited  in the Shareholder's account. An exchange will be treated for federal
income tax purposes the same as a  repurchase or redemption of shares, on  which
the  shareholder may  realize a  capital gain or  loss. However,  the ability to
deduct capital losses on an exchange may be limited in situations where there is
an exchange of  shares within ninety  days after the  shares are purchased.  The
Exchange  Privilege is only available in states where an exchange may legally be
made.
 
    If DWR or another Selected Broker-Dealer is the current dealer of record and
its account  numbers  are part  of  the account  information,  shareholders  may
initiate  an exchange of shares of the Fund for shares of any of the Dean Witter
Funds (for which the Exchange Privilege is available) pursuant to this  Exchange
Privilege   by  contacting  their  account   executive  (no  Exchange  Privilege
Authorization Form is required). Other shareholders (and those shareholders  who
are  clients  of DWR  or another  Selected  Broker-Dealer but  who wish  to make
exchanges directly by writing or  telephoning the Transfer Agent) must  complete
and  forward to  the Transfer  Agent an  Exchange Privilege  Authorization Form,
copies of  which  may  be obtained  from  the  Transfer Agent,  to  initiate  an
exchange. If the Authorization Form is used, exchanges may be made in writing or
by contacting the Transfer Agent at (800) 869-NEWS (toll free).
 
    The  Fund  will  employ  reasonable  procedures  to  confirm  that  exchange
instructions communicated over  the telephone are  genuine. Such procedures  may
include requiring various forms of personal identification such as name, mailing
address,  social security  or other tax  identification number and  DWR or other
Selected Broker-Dealer account number (if any). Telephone instructions may  also
be recorded. If such procedures are not employed, the Fund may be liable for any
losses due to unauthorized or fraudulent instructions.
 
    Telephone exchange instructions will be accepted if received by the Transfer
Agent  between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00  p.m., New York time, on  any day the New York
Stock Exchange is  open. Any  shareholder wishing to  make an  exchange who  has
previously  filed an Exchange Privilege Authorization  Form and who is unable to
reach the Fund  by telephone should  contact his  or her DWR  or other  Selected
Broker-Dealer  account  executive, if  appropriate, or  make a  written exchange
request. Shareholders are  advised that  during periods of  drastic economic  or
market  changes, it  is possible that  the telephone exchange  procedures may be
 
                                                                              15
<PAGE>
difficult to implement, although this has not been the experience with the  Dean
Witter Funds in the past.
 
    Shareholders  should  contact  their  DWR  or  other  Selected Broker-Dealer
account executive  or  the Transfer  Agent  for further  information  about  the
Exchange Privilege.
 
REDEMPTIONS AND REPURCHASES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
REDEMPTION.   Shares of the Fund can be redeemed for cash at any time at the net
asset value per share next determined; however, such redemption proceeds may  be
reduced  by the amount of any  applicable contingent deferred sales charges (see
below).  If  shares  are  held  in  a  shareholder's  account  without  a  share
certificate,  a written request for redemption sent to the Fund's Transfer Agent
at P.O. Box 983, Jersey City, NJ 07303 is required. If certificates are held  by
the  shareholder(s), the shares may be redeemed by surrendering the certificates
with a written  request for  redemption, along with  any additional  information
required by the Transfer Agent.
 
CONTINGENT  DEFERRED SALES CHARGE.   Shares of  the Fund which  are held for six
years or more after purchase (calculated from the last day of the month in which
the shares were purchased)  will not be subject  to any charge upon  redemption.
Shares redeemed sooner than six years after purchase may, however, be subject to
a  charge upon  redemption. This charge  is called a  "contingent deferred sales
charge" ("CDSC"), which  will be  a percentage of  the dollar  amount of  shares
redeemed  and will be assessed  on an amount equal to  the lesser of the current
market value  or  the cost  of  the shares  being  redeemed. The  size  of  this
percentage  will depend upon how long the shares have been held, as set forth in
the table below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             CONTINGENT DEFERRED
               YEAR SINCE                       SALES CHARGE
                PURCHASE                     AS A PERCENTAGE OF
              PAYMENT MADE                     AMOUNT REDEEMED
- -----------------------------------------  -----------------------
<S>                                        <C>
First....................................               5.0%
Second...................................               4.0%
Third....................................               3.0%
Fourth...................................               2.0%
Fifth....................................               2.0%
Sixth....................................               1.0%
Seventh and thereafter...................           None
</TABLE>
 
    A CDSC will not be imposed on:  (i) any amount which represents an  increase
in value of shares purchased within the six years preceding the redemption; (ii)
the current net asset value of shares purchased more than six years prior to the
redemption;  and (iii) the  current net asset value  of shares purchased through
reinvestment of dividends  or distributions and/or  shares acquired in  exchange
for  shares of Dean Witter Funds sold with  a front-end sales charge or of other
Dean Witter Funds acquired in exchange for such shares. Moreover, in determining
whether a CDSC is applicable it will  be assumed that amounts described in  (i),
(ii) and (iii) above (in that order) are redeemed first.
 
    In  addition, the CDSC, if otherwise applicable,  will be waived in the case
of:
 
    (1) redemptions of  shares held at  the time a  shareholder dies or  becomes
disabled,  only  if the  shares are:  (A) registered  either in  the name  of an
individual shareholder (not a  trust), or in the  names of such shareholder  and
his  or her spouse as joint tenants with right of survivorship; or   (B) held in
a qualified corporate  or self-employed retirement  plan, Individual  Retirement
Account  ("IRA") or  Custodial Account under  Section 403(b)(7)  of the Internal
Revenue Code  ("403(b) Custodial  Account"), provided  in either  case that  the
redemption is requested within one year of the death or initial determination of
disability;
 
    (2)   redemptions  in   connection  with   the  following   retirement  plan
distributions:  (A) lump-sum or  other distributions from a qualified  corporate
or self-employed retirement plan following retirement (or, in the case of a "key
employee"    of   a   "top   heavy"    plan,   following   attainment   of   age
59 1/2);  (B)  distributions from an IRA  or 403(b) Custodial Account  following
attainment  of age 59 1/2; or    (C) a tax-free return of an excess contribution
to an IRA; and
 
    (3) all redemptions of  shares held for  the benefit of  a participant in  a
corporate or self-employed retirement plan qualified under Section 401(k) of the
Internal   Revenue  Code  which  offers  investment  companies  managed  by  the
Investment Manager  or its  subsidiary, Dean  Witter Services  Company Inc.,  as
self-directed  investment alternatives and for  which Dean Witter Trust Company,
an affiliate  of  the Investment  Manager,  serves as  recordkeeper  or  Trustee
("Eligible  401(k) Plan"), provided that either: (A) the plan continues to be an
Eligible 401(k)  Plan after  the  redemption; or     (B)  the redemption  is  in
connection  with the complete termination of the plan involving the distribution
of all plan assets to participants.
 
    With reference to (1) above, for the purpose of determining disability,  the
Distributor  utilizes the definition of disability contained in Section 72(m)(7)
of the  Internal Revenue  Code, which  relates  to the  inability to  engage  in
gainful  employment. With reference  to (2) above,  the term "distribution" does
not encompass a direct transfer of  IRA, 403(b) Custodial Account or  retirement
plan  assets to a  successor custodian or  trustee. All waivers  will be granted
only following receipt by the  Distributor of confirmation of the  shareholder's
entitlement.
 
16
<PAGE>
REPURCHASE.   DWR and other Selected Broker-Dealers are authorized to repurchase
shares represented by  a share certificate  which is delivered  to any of  their
offices.  Shares held in a shareholder's account without a share certificate may
also be repurchased by DWR and other Selected Broker-Dealers upon the telephonic
or telegraphic request of the shareholder. The repurchase price is the net asset
value next computed (see "Purchase of Fund Shares") after such repurchase  order
is  received by DWR  or other Selected Broker-Dealer,  reduced by any applicable
CDSC.
 
    The CDSC, if  any, will  be the  only fee imposed  by either  the Fund,  the
Distributor  or DWR or other Selected Broker-Dealer.  The offer by DWR and other
Selected Broker-Dealers to repurchase shares may be suspended without notice  by
the Distributor at any time. In that event, shareholders may redeem their shares
through the Fund's Transfer Agent as set forth above under "Redemption."
 
PAYMENT  FOR SHARES REDEEMED  OR REPURCHASED.  Payment  for shares presented for
repurchase or redemption will be made  by check within seven days after  receipt
by  the Transfer Agent of the certificate  and/or written request in good order.
Such payment may be postponed or the right of redemption suspended under unusual
circumstances; e.g., when  normal trading is  not taking place  on the New  York
Stock  Exchange. If the  shares to be  redeemed have recently  been purchased by
check, payment of the  redemption proceeds may be  delayed for the minimum  time
needed  to verify that the check used  for investment has been honored (not more
than fifteen days from the time of receipt of the check by the Transfer  Agent).
Shareholders   maintaining  margin   accounts  with  DWR   or  another  Selected
Broker-Dealer are referred to their account executive regarding restrictions  on
redemption of shares of the Fund pledged in the margin account.
 
REINSTATEMENT  PRIVILEGE.  A shareholder who has  had his or her shares redeemed
or repurchased and  has not  previously exercised  this reinstatement  privilege
may,  within  thirty  days  after  the date  of  the  redemption  or repurchase,
reinstate any portion or all of the proceeds of such redemption or repurchase in
shares  of  the  Fund  at  their  net  asset  value  next  determined  after   a
reinstatement  request, together with the proceeds,  is received by the Transfer
Agent and receive a pro-rata  credit for any CDSC  paid in connection with  such
redemption or repurchase.
 
INVOLUNTARY  REDEMPTION.  The Fund reserves the  right to redeem, on sixty days'
notice and at net asset value, the shares of any shareholder (other than  shares
held  in an  Individual Retirement  Account or  Custodial Account  under Section
403(b)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code)  whose shares due to redemptions by  the
shareholder have a value of less than $100 or such lesser amount as may be fixed
by  the Trustees or, in the case of an account opened through EasyInvest-SM-, if
after twelve  months  the shareholder  has  invested  less than  $1,000  in  the
account.  However, before the Fund redeems such shares and sends the proceeds to
the shareholder, it will notify the shareholder that the value of the shares  is
less  than the  applicable amount  and allow him  or her  sixty days  to make an
additional investment in an amount which will  increase the value of his or  her
account to at least the applicable amount before the redemption is processed. No
CDSC will be imposed on any involuntary redemption.
 
DIVIDENDS, DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
DIVIDENDS  AND  DISTRIBUTIONS.    The  Fund  intends  to  pay  dividends  and to
distribute substantially all of its net investment income and distribute capital
gains, if  any, once  each year.  The  Fund may,  however, determine  either  to
distribute  or to retain all or part of  any long-term capital gains in any year
for reinvestment.
 
    All dividends and any capital gains distributions will be paid in additional
Fund shares  and automatically  credited to  the shareholder's  account  without
issuance  of a share certificate unless the shareholder requests in writing that
all  dividends  and/or   distributions  be  paid   in  cash  (see   "Shareholder
Services--Automatic Investment of Dividends and Distributions").
 
TAXES.   Because the Fund intends to distribute all of its net investment income
and net short-term  capital gains  to shareholders  and otherwise  qualify as  a
regulated investment company under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code, it
is  not expected that the Fund will be required to pay any Federal income tax on
any such  income and  capital  gains. Shareholders  will  normally have  to  pay
Federal income taxes, and any state and local income taxes, on the dividends and
distributions they receive from the Fund.
 
    Distributions  of net investment income and net short-term capital gains are
taxable to the shareholder as ordinary dividend income regardless of whether the
shareholder receives such distributions  in additional shares  or in cash.  Some
part  of  such  dividends and  distributions  may  be eligible  for  the Federal
dividends received deduction available to the Fund's corporate shareholders.
 
    Distributions of  net  long-term  capital  gains, if  any,  are  taxable  to
shareholders as long-term capital gains regardless of how long a shareholder has
held the Fund's shares and regardless of whether the distribution is received in
additional  shares or in cash. Capital  gains distributions are not eligible for
the dividends received deduction.
 
    After the  end  of  the  calendar  year,  shareholders  will  be  sent  full
information on their dividends and capital gains distributions for tax purposes.
To avoid being subject to a
 
                                                                              17
<PAGE>
31%   Federal  backup  withholding  tax  on  taxable  dividends,  capital  gains
distributions and  the proceeds  of redemptions  and repurchases,  shareholders'
taxpayer  identification numbers  must be  furnished and  certified as  to their
accuracy.
 
    Dividends, interest  and  gains  received  by the  Fund  may  give  rise  to
withholding  and other taxes  imposed by foreign countries.  If it qualifies for
and makes the appropriate election with  the Internal Revenue Service, the  Fund
will  report annually to its shareholders the  amount per share of such taxes to
enable shareholders to  claim United  States foreign tax  credits or  deductions
with  respect to such taxes. In the absence  of such an election, the Fund would
deduct foreign tax in computing the amount of its distributable income.
 
    Shareholders should consult their  tax advisers as  to the applicability  of
the foregoing to their current situation.
 
PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
From  time to time the  Fund may quote its  "total return" in advertisements and
sales literature. The total return of  the Fund is based on historical  earnings
and is not intended to indicate future performance.
 
    The  "average annual total return" of the Fund refers to a figure reflecting
the average annualized  percentage increase  (or decrease)  in the  value of  an
initial  investment in the Fund of  $1,000 over a period of  one year as well as
over the  life of  the Fund.  Average annual  total return  reflects all  income
earned  by the Fund, any appreciation or  depreciation of the Fund's assets, all
expenses incurred by the  Fund and all sales  charges incurred by  shareholders,
for  the  stated periods.  It  also assumes  reinvestment  of all  dividends and
distributions paid by the Fund.
 
    In addition to the foregoing, the  Fund may advertise its total return  over
different  periods of time  by means of aggregate,  average, and year-by-year or
other types of total return figures. The  Fund may also advertise the growth  of
hypothetical investments of $10,000, $50,000 and $100,000 in shares of the Fund.
Such  calculations  may  or may  not  reflect  the deduction  of  the contingent
deferred sales charge which, if reflected, would reduce the performance  quoted.
The  Fund  from time  to time  may  also advertise  its performance  relative to
certain performance rankings and indexes compiled by independent  organizations,
such as mutual fund performance rankings of Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.
 
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
VOTING  RIGHTS.  All shares of beneficial interest  of the Fund are of $0.01 par
value and are equal as to earnings,  assets and voting privileges. There are  no
conversion,  pre-emptive  or  other  subscription  rights.  In  the  event  of a
liquidation, each share of  beneficial interest of the  Fund is entitled to  its
portion  of all the Fund's  assets after all debts  and expenses have been paid.
The shares do not have cumulative voting rights.
 
    The Fund is  not required to  hold Annual Meetings  of Shareholders and,  in
ordinary  circumstances, the  Fund does  not intend  to hold  such meetings. The
Trustees may call  Special Meetings  of Shareholders for  action by  shareholder
vote  as may be required  by the Act or the  Declaration of Trust. Under certain
circumstances the Trustees may be  removed by action of  the Trustees or by  the
shareholders.
 
    Under Massachusetts law, shareholders of a business trust may, under certain
circumstances,  be held  personally liable  as partners  for obligations  of the
Fund. However,  the  Declaration of  Trust  contains an  express  disclaimer  of
shareholder  liability for acts  or obligations of the  Fund, requires that Fund
obligations include  such  disclaimer,  and  provides  for  indemnification  and
reimbursement  of expenses out  of the Fund's property  for any shareholder held
personally liable  for  the  obligations  of  the Fund.  Thus,  the  risk  of  a
shareholder  incurring  financial loss  on account  of shareholder  liability is
limited to circumstances in which  the Fund itself would  be unable to meet  its
obligations.  Given the above limitations on shareholder personal liability, and
the nature of the Fund's assets and operations, in the opinion of  Massachusetts
counsel to the Fund, the risk to shareholders of personal liability is remote.
 
   
CODE  OF ETHICS.   Directors, officers and employees  of the Investment Manager,
Dean Witter Services Company  Inc. and the Distributor  are subject to a  strict
Code  of Ethics adopted  by those companies.  The Code of  Ethics is intended to
ensure that the interests of shareholders and other clients are placed ahead  of
any  personal  interest,  that no  undue  personal  benefit is  obtained  from a
person's employment  activities  and  that actual  and  potential  conflicts  of
interest  are  avoided.  To  achieve  these  goals  and  comply  with regulatory
requirements, the Code  of Ethics  requires, among other  things, that  personal
securities  transactions by employees of the  companies be subject to an advance
clearance process to monitor  that no Dean  Witter Fund is  engaged at the  same
time  in a purchase  or sale of the  same security. The Code  of Ethics bans the
purchase of  securities  in  an  initial public  offering,  and  also  prohibits
engaging in futures and options transactions and profiting on short-term trading
(that  is, a purchase within sixty days of a sale or a sale within sixty days of
a purchase) of a security.
    
 
18
<PAGE>
In addition, investment personnel may not purchase or sell a security for  their
personal  account within thirty days before or after any transaction in any Dean
Witter Fund managed by them. Any violations of the Code of Ethics are subject to
sanctions,  including  reprimand,  demotion  or  suspension  or  termination  of
employment.  The Code  of Ethics comports  with regulatory  requirements and the
recommendations in the 1994 report by the Investment Company Institute  Advisory
Group on Personal Investing.
 
    The  Fund's  Sub-Adviser  also has  a  Code  of Ethics  which  complies with
regulatory requirements and, insofar  as it relates  to persons associated  with
the  Fund, the 1994 report by the Investment Company Institute Advisory Group on
Personal Investing.
 
SHAREHOLDER INQUIRIES.  All inquiries regarding  the Fund should be directed  to
the  Fund at the  telephone numbers or address  set forth on  the front cover of
this Prospectus.
 
                                                                              19
<PAGE>
 
DEAN WITTER
JAPAN FUND
TWO WORLD TRADE CENTER
NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10048
(212) 392-2550
 
TRUSTEES
Michael Bozic
Charles A. Fiumefreddo
Edwin J. Garn
John R. Haire
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson
Paul Kolton
Michael E. Nugent
Philip J. Purcell
John L. Schroeder
 
OFFICERS
Charles A. Fiumefreddo
Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer
Sheldon Curtis
Vice President, Secretary and
General Counsel
Thomas F. Caloia
Treasurer
 
CUSTODIAN
The Chase Manhattan Bank N.A.
One Chase Plaza
New York, NY 10005
 
TRANSFER AGENT AND DIVIDEND
DISBURSING AGENT
Dean Witter Trust Company
Harborside Financial Center,
Plaza Two
Jersey City, New Jersey 07311
 
INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
Price Waterhouse LLP
1177 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10036
 
INVESTMENT MANAGER
Dean Witter InterCapital Inc.
 
SUB-ADVISER
Morgan Grenfell Investment Services
Limited
<PAGE>
   
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
                                                                     DEAN WITTER
MARCH 6, 1996
    
                                                                      JAPAN FUND
- --------------------------------------------------
 
    Dean  Witter  Japan  Fund  (the  "Fund")  is  an  open-end,  non-diversified
management investment company  whose investment objective  is to seek  long-term
capital  appreciation.  The Fund  seeks to  achieve  its objective  by investing
primarily in securities of issuers  located in Japan (see "Investment  Objective
and Policies").
 
   
    A  Prospectus for  the Fund  dated March 6,  1996, which  provides the basic
information you  should know  before  investing in  the  Fund, may  be  obtained
without  charge from  the Fund  at its address  or the  telephone numbers listed
below or from  the Fund's Distributor,  Dean Witter Distributors  Inc., or  from
Dean  Witter  Reynolds Inc.  at any  of  its branch  offices. This  Statement of
Additional Information is not a Prospectus. It contains information in  addition
to  and more detailed than  that set forth in the  Prospectus. It is intended to
provide additional information  regarding the activities  and operations of  the
Fund, and should be read in conjunction with the Prospectus.
    
 
Dean Witter Japan Fund
Two World Trade Center
New York, New York 10048
(212) 392-2550
(800) 869-NEWS (toll-free)
<PAGE>
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                      <C>
The Fund and its Management............................................................          3
 
Trustees and Officers..................................................................          7
 
Investment Practices and Policies......................................................         12
 
Investment Restrictions................................................................         28
 
Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage...................................................         29
 
Underwriting...........................................................................         31
 
Purchase of Fund Shares................................................................         32
 
Determination of Net Asset Value.......................................................         34
 
Shareholder Services...................................................................         35
 
Redemptions and Repurchases............................................................         39
 
Dividends, Distributions and Taxes.....................................................         41
 
Performance Information................................................................         43
 
Description of Shares..................................................................         44
 
Custodian and Transfer Agent...........................................................         44
 
Independent Accountants................................................................         45
 
Reports to Shareholders................................................................         45
 
Legal Counsel..........................................................................         45
 
Experts................................................................................         45
 
Registration Statement.................................................................         45
 
Report of Independent Accountants......................................................         46
 
Statement of Assets and Liabilities....................................................         47
</TABLE>
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
THE FUND AND ITS MANAGEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
THE FUND
 
    The  Fund is a trust of the type commonly known as a "Massachusetts business
trust" and was organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts  on
January 22, 1996.
 
THE INVESTMENT MANAGER
 
    Dean  Witter InterCapital Inc. (the "Investment Manager" or "InterCapital"),
a Delaware corporation, whose address is  Two World Trade Center, New York,  New
York  10048, is  the Fund's Investment  Manager. InterCapital  is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Dean Witter, Discover &  Co. ("DWDC"), a Delaware corporation.  In
an  internal  reorganization which  took  place in  January,  1993, InterCapital
assumed  the  advisory,  administrative  and  management  activities  previously
performed  by the InterCapital Division of  Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. ("DWR"), a
broker-dealer affiliate of InterCapital. (As hereinafter used in this  Statement
of  Additional Information,  the terms  "InterCapital" and  "Investment Manager"
refer to DWR's InterCapital Division prior to the internal reorganization and to
Dean Witter InterCapital Inc. thereafter.) The daily management of the Fund  and
research  relating  to  the  Fund's  portfolio are  conducted  by  or  under the
direction of officers  of the  Fund and of  the Investment  Manager, subject  to
review  of investments by the Fund's Trustees. In addition, Trustees of the Fund
provide guidance on economic factors and interest rate trends. Information as to
these Trustees  and  officers  is  contained under  the  caption  "Trustees  and
Officers".
 
    InterCapital  is  the  investment  manager  or  investment  adviser  of  the
following management  investment companies:  Active Assets  Money Trust,  Active
Assets  Tax-Free Trust, Active  Assets California Tax-Free  Trust, Active Assets
Government Securities Trust, InterCapital  Income Securities Inc.,  InterCapital
Insured Municipal Bond Trust, InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust, InterCapital
Insured  Municipal  Income  Trust,  InterCapital  Insured  Municipal Securities,
InterCapital California  Insured Municipal  Income Trust,  InterCapital  Insured
California  Municipal  Securities,  InterCapital  Quality  Municipal  Investment
Trust,  InterCapital  Quality  Municipal  Income  Trust,  InterCapital   Quality
Municipal  Securities,  InterCapital  California  Quality  Municipal Securities,
InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities, High Income Advantage Trust,
High Income Advantage  Trust II, High  Income Advantage Trust  III, Dean  Witter
Government  Income Trust,  Dean Witter High  Yield Securities  Inc., Dean Witter
Tax-Free Daily  Income  Trust, Dean  Witter  Tax-Exempt Securities  Trust,  Dean
Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc., Dean Witter Natural Resource Development
Securities  Inc., Dean Witter American Value Fund, Dean Witter Developing Growth
Securities Trust, Dean Witter  U.S. Government Money  Market Trust, Dean  Witter
Variable Investment Series, Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust, Dean Witter
Select  Municipal  Reinvestment  Fund, Dean  Witter  U.S.  Government Securities
Trust, Dean  Witter World  Wide Income  Trust, Dean  Witter California  Tax-Free
Income  Fund, Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund, Dean Witter Convertible
Securities Trust, Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust, Dean Witter  Value-Added
Market Series, Dean Witter Utilities Fund, Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily
Income  Trust,  Dean Witter  Strategist  Fund, Dean  Witter  Intermediate Income
Securities, Dean Witter Capital Growth  Securities, Dean Witter Precious  Metals
and  Minerals Trust,  Dean Witter  New York  Municipal Money  Market Trust, Dean
Witter European  Growth Fund  Inc., Dean  Witter Global  Short-Term Income  Fund
Inc.,  Dean Witter Pacific  Growth Fund Inc.,  Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal
Series Trust, Dean Witter  Short-Term U.S. Treasury  Trust, Dean Witter  Premier
Income  Trust, Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust, Dean Witter Health Sciences
Trust, Dean  Witter  Retirement  Series,  Dean  Witter  Global  Dividend  Growth
Securities,  Dean Witter  Limited Term  Municipal Trust,  Dean Witter Short-Term
Bond  Fund,  Dean  Witter  Global  Utilities  Fund,  Dean  Witter  High   Income
Securities,  Dean  Witter National  Municipal  Trust, Dean  Witter International
SmallCap Fund, Dean Witter  Mid-Cap Growth Fund,  Dean Witter Select  Dimensions
Investment  Series,  Dean  Witter  Global  Asset  Allocation  Fund,  Dean Witter
Balanced Growth  Fund, Dean  Witter  Balanced Income  Fund, Dean  Witter  Hawaii
Municipal  Trust, Dean Witter Capital Appreciation Fund, Dean Witter Information
Fund, Dean Witter Intermediate Term U.S. Treasury Trust, Municipal Income Trust,
Municipal  Income  Trust  II,  Municipal  Income  Trust  III,  Municipal  Income
Opportunities  Trust, Municipal Income Opportunities  Trust II, Municipal Income
Opportunities Trust III, Municipal Premium
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
Income Trust  and  Prime  Income  Trust.  The  foregoing  investment  companies,
together with the Fund, are collectively referred to as the Dean Witter Funds.
 
    In  addition,  Dean Witter  Services Company  Inc. ("DWSC"),  a wholly-owned
subsidiary of  InterCapital,  serves as  manager  for the  following  investment
companies for which TCW Funds Management, Inc. is the investment adviser: TCW/DW
Core  Equity Trust, TCW/DW  Mid-Cap Equity Income Trust,  TCW/ DW Latin American
Growth Fund, TCW/DW Income and Growth Fund, TCW/DW Small Cap Growth Fund, TCW/DW
Balanced Fund,  TCW/DW  North American  Government  Income Trust,  TCW/DW  Total
Return  Trust, TCW/DW  Emerging Markets  Opportunities Trust,  TCW/DW Term Trust
2000, TCW/DW Term Trust  2002 and TCW/DW Term  Trust 2003 (the "TCW/DW  Funds").
InterCapital  also serves as: (i)  sub-adviser to Templeton Global Opportunities
Trust, an  open-end  investment company;  (ii)  administrator of  The  BlackRock
Strategic   Term  Trust  Inc.,  a   closed-end  investment  company;  and  (iii)
sub-administrator of  MassMutual Participation  Investors and  Templeton  Global
Governments Income Trust, closed-end investment companies.
 
    Pursuant  to an Investment Management Agreement (the "Management Agreement")
with the Investment  Manager, the Fund  has retained the  Investment Manager  to
supervise  the investment of  the Fund's assets including  the placing of orders
for the  purchase and  sale  of portfolio  securities. The  Investment  Manager,
through  consultation with Morgan  Grenfell Investment Services  Ltd. (the "Sub-
Adviser") and through its own portfolio management staff, obtains and  evaluates
such  information and  advice relating to  the economy,  securities markets, and
specific securities as it considers  necessary or useful to continuously  manage
the assets of the Fund in a manner consistent with its investment objective.
 
    Under  the  terms  of  the  Management  Agreement,  the  Investment  Manager
maintains certain of  the Fund's  books and records  and furnishes,  at its  own
expense, such office space, facilities, equipment, clerical help and bookkeeping
and  certain legal services as the Fund may reasonably require in the conduct of
its  business,  including  the   preparation  of  prospectuses,  statements   of
additional  information, proxy statements and reports  required to be filed with
federal and state securities commissions (except insofar as the participation or
assistance of independent accountants  and attorneys is, in  the opinion of  the
Investment Manager, necessary or desirable). In addition, the Investment Manager
pays  the salaries  of all  personnel, including officers  of the  Fund, who are
employees of the Investment Manager. The Investment Manager also bears the  cost
of  telephone service,  heat, light, power  and other utilities  provided to the
Fund. The Investment  Manager has  retained DWSC to  perform its  administrative
services under the Agreement.
 
    Expenses   not  expressly  assumed  by  the  Investment  Manager  under  the
Management Agreement, by the Sub-Adviser pursuant to the Sub-Advisory  Agreement
(see below) or by the distributor of the Fund's shares, Dean Witter Distributors
Inc.  ("Distributors" or the "Distributor") (see "Purchase of Fund Shares") will
be paid by the Fund. The expenses borne by the Fund include, but are not limited
to: charges  and  expenses  of  any registrar;  custodian,  stock  transfer  and
dividend  disbursing agent; brokerage commissions; taxes; engraving and printing
of share  certificates; registration  costs of  the Fund  and its  shares  under
federal  and state securities laws; the  cost and expense of printing, including
typesetting,  and  distributing  Prospectuses   and  Statements  of   Additional
Information  of the Fund and supplements thereto to the Fund's shareholders; all
expenses of shareholders' and trustees' meetings and of preparing, printing  and
mailing  of  proxy  statements  and reports  to  shareholders;  fees  and travel
expenses of trustees or members of any  advisory board or committee who are  not
employees of the Investment Manager or Sub-Adviser or any corporate affiliate of
the  Investment Manager or  Sub-Adviser; all expenses  incident to any dividend,
withdrawal or redemption options;  charges and expenses  of any outside  service
used  for pricing  of the  Fund's shares;  fees and  expenses of  legal counsel,
including counsel to the trustees who are not interested persons of the Fund  or
of the Investment Manager or Sub-Adviser (not including compensation or expenses
of  attorneys  who  are employees  of  the Investment  Manager)  and independent
accountants; membership dues  of industry associations;  interest on the  Fund's
borrowings;  postage;  insurance premiums  on  property or  personnel (including
officers and trustees)  of the Fund  which inure to  its benefit;  extraordinary
expenses including, but not limited to, legal
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
claims  and liabilities  and litigation  costs and  any indemnification relating
thereto (depending upon the nature of the legal claim, liability or lawsuit) and
all other costs of the Fund's operations properly payable by the Fund.
 
    The  Management  Agreement   provides  that  in   the  absence  of   willful
misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of its obligation
thereunder,  the Investment  Manager is  not liable  to the  Fund or  any of its
investors for any act or  omission by the Investment  Manager or for any  losses
sustained  by the  Fund or  its investors.  The Management  Agreement in  no way
restricts the Investment Manager from acting as investment manager or adviser to
others.
 
    As full compensation for the services  and facilities furnished to the  Fund
and  expenses of the Fund  assumed by the Investment  Manager, the Fund pays the
Investment Manager monthly compensation calculated daily by applying the  annual
rate of 1.0% to the daily net assets of the Fund.
 
    Pursuant  to  a Sub-Advisory  Agreement between  the Investment  Manager and
Sub-Adviser,  the  Sub-Adviser  has  been  retained,  subject  to  the   overall
supervision  of  the  Investment  Manager  and  the  Trustees  of  the  Fund, to
continuously  furnish   investment   advice   concerning   individual   security
selections,  asset allocations and overall economic trends with respect to Japan
and to manage the Fund's portfolio subject to the supervision of the  Investment
Manager.  On occasion, the Sub-Adviser will  also provide the Investment Manager
with investment  advice concerning  potential investment  opportunities for  the
Fund which are available outside of Japan.
 
   
    Morgan  Grenfell  Investment Services  Limited ("MGIS")  was organized  as a
British corporation in  1972 and  manages, as of  December 31,  1995, assets  of
approximately  $12.9 billion  for primarily  U.S. corporate  and public employee
benefit plans, investment companies, endowments and foundations. MGIS' principal
office is located at 20 Finsbury  Circus, London, England. MGIS is a  subsidiary
of  London  based Morgan  Grenfell Asset  Management Limited  which is  itself a
subsidiary of London-based Morgan Grenfell Group plc (which is owned by Deutsche
Bank AG,  an  international commercial  and  investment banking  group)  and  is
registered  as an investment adviser under  the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.
In 1838  Morgan  Grenfell was  founded  to provide  merchant  banking  services,
primarily  trade financing between Great Britain and the United States. In 1958,
its investment management arm began operations. In recent years Morgan  Grenfell
Group  plc  has achieved  a  prominent position  in  the securities  industry by
providing investment and  commercial banking services,  financial services,  and
discretionary  management  and advisory  services  covering all  of  the world's
leading securities markets.  Morgan Grenfell Asset  Management Limited,  through
its  various investment management subsidiaries, which have extensive experience
in  global  investment  management,  is  managing,  as  of  December  31,  1995,
approximately $95 billion worldwide.
    
 
    Both the Investment Manager and the Sub-Adviser have authorized any of their
directors,  officers and employees who have been elected as Trustees or officers
of the Fund to serve in the capacities in which they have been elected. Services
furnished by the  Investment Manager  and the  Sub-Adviser may  be furnished  by
directors, officers and employees of the Investment Manager and the Sub-Adviser.
In  connection with  the services rendered  by the  Sub-Adviser, the Sub-Adviser
bears the following expenses:  (a) the salaries and  expenses of its  personnel;
and  (b) all expenses incurred by it  in connection with performing the services
provided by it as Sub-Adviser, as described above.
 
    As full compensation for the services  and facilities furnished to the  Fund
and  the Investment Manager and expenses of  the Fund and the Investment Manager
assumed by the Sub-Adviser, the Investment Manager pays the Sub-Adviser  monthly
compensation  equal  to 40%  of  the Investment  Manager's  monthly compensation
payable under the Management Agreement.
 
    Pursuant to the Management Agreement  and the Sub-Advisory Agreement,  total
operating expenses of the Fund are subject to applicable limitations under rules
and  regulations of  states where  the Fund  is authorized  to sell  its shares.
Therefore, operating  expenses  of the  Fund  are effectively  subject  to  such
limitations  as the same may  be amended from time  to time. Presently, the most
restrictive limitation  is  as  follows:  If, in  any  fiscal  year,  the  total
operating expenses of a fund, exclusive of taxes,
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
interest,  brokerage fees, distribution fees  and extraordinary expenses (to the
extent permitted by  applicable state securities  laws and regulations),  exceed
2  1/2% of  the first $30,000,000  of average daily  net assets, 2%  of the next
$70,000,000 and 1 1/2% of any  excess over $100,000,000, the Investment  Manager
will  reimburse  such  fund for  the  amount  of such  excess.  Pursuant  to the
Sub-Advisory Agreement,  if any  such reimbursement  is made  by the  Investment
Manager,  the Investment Manager  will, in turn,  be reimbursed for  40% of such
payment by the Sub-Adviser. The reimbursement, if any, will be calculated  daily
and credited on a monthly basis.
 
    The  Investment Manager  will pay  the organizational  expenses of  the Fund
incurred prior to the offering of the Fund's shares. The Fund will reimburse the
Investment Manager  for  such expenses  in  accordance  with the  terms  of  the
Underwriting  Agreement between the Fund and Distributors, in an amount of up to
a maximum of $250,000. The Fund will defer and will amortize the  organizational
expenses on the straight line method over a period not to exceed five years from
the date of commencement of the Fund's operations.
 
    The  Management Agreement and the  Sub-Advisory Agreement (the "Agreements")
were initially approved by the Trustees on February 15, 1996 and by InterCapital
as the  then  sole shareholder  on  February 28,  1996.  The Agreements  may  be
terminated  at any time, without penalty, on thirty days' notice by the Trustees
of the Fund, by the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares of the Fund,
as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "Act"), or  by
the  Investment Manager  and/or Sub-Adviser.  The Agreements  will automatically
terminate in the event of their assignment (as defined in the Act).
 
    Under their terms, the  Agreements will continue in  effect until April  30,
1997,  and from year to year  thereafter, provided continuance of the Agreements
is approved at least annually  by the vote of the  holders of a majority of  the
outstanding shares of the Fund, as defined in the Act, or by the Trustees of the
Fund; provided that in either event such continuance is approved annually by the
vote  of a  majority of  the Trustees  of the  Fund who  are not  parties to the
Agreement or "interested persons" (as defined in the Act) of any such party (the
"Independent Trustees"), which vote must be  cast in person at a meeting  called
for the purpose of voting on such approval.
 
    The Fund has acknowledged that the name "Dean Witter" is a property right of
DWR.  The Fund has agreed that DWR or its parent company may use, or at any time
permit others to use, the name "Dean  Witter". The Fund has also agreed that  in
the   event  the  Agreement  is  terminated,   or  if  the  affiliation  between
InterCapital and its  parent is  terminated, the  Fund will  eliminate the  name
"Dean Witter" from its name if DWR or its parent company shall so request.
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The  Trustees and Executive  Officers of the  Fund, their principal business
occupations during the  last five  years and  their affiliations,  if any,  with
InterCapital,  and with  the 80 Dean  Witter Funds  and the 12  TCW/DW Funds are
shown below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME, AGE, POSITION WITH FUND
         AND ADDRESS               PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
- ------------------------------  --------------------------------------------------
<S>                             <C>
Michael Bozic (55)              Chairman and  Chief  Executive Officer  of  Levitz
Trustee                         Furniture   Corporation  (since  November,  1995);
c/o Levitz Furniture            Director or  Trustee  of the  Dean  Witter  Funds;
Corporation                     formerly  President and Chief Executive Officer of
6111 Broken Sound Parkway,      Hills Department  Stores (May,  1991-July,  1995);
N.W.                            formerly  Chairman  and  Chief  Executive  Officer
Boca Raton, Florida             (January, 1987-August,  1990)  and  President  and
                                Chief  Operating  Officer  (August, 1990-February,
                                1991) of  the Sears  Merchandise Group  of  Sears,
                                Roebuck  and Co.; Director or  Trustee of the Dean
                                Witter  Funds;  Director  of  Eaglemark  Financial
                                Services,  Inc.,  the United  Negro  College Fund,
                                Weirton Steel  Corporation and  Domain Inc.  (home
                                decor retailer).
Charles A. Fiumefreddo* (62)    Chairman,  Chief Executive Officer and Director of
Chairman, President, Chief      InterCapital,  Dean   Witter   Distributors   Inc.
 Executive Officer and Trustee  ("Distributors")  and  Dean  Witter  Trust Company
Two World Trade Center          ("DWSC"); Executive Vice President and Director of
New York, New York              DWR; Chairman, Director or Trustee, President  and
                                Chief  Executive Officer of the Dean Witter Funds;
                                Chairman, Chief Executive  Officer and Trustee  of
                                the  TCW/DW Funds;  Chairman and  Director of Dean
                                Witter Trust  Company  ("DWTC");  Director  and/or
                                officer  of  various  DWDC  subsidiaries; formerly
                                Executive Vice  President  and  Director  of  DWDC
                                (until February, 1993).
Edwin J. Garn (63)              Director  or  Trustee  of the  Dean  Witter Funds;
Trustee                         formerly   United    States    Senator    (R-Utah)
c/o Huntsman Chemical           (1974-1992) and Chairman, Senate Banking Committee
Corporation                     (1980-1986);  formerly  Mayor of  Salt  Lake City,
500 Huntsman Way                Utah  (1971-1974);   formerly   Astronaut,   Space
Salt Lake City, Utah 84111      Shuttle   Discovery  (April   12-19,  1985);  Vice
                                Chairman,  Huntsman  Chemical  Corporation  (since
                                January,  1993); Director of  Franklin Quest (time
                                management  systems)  and  John  Alden   Financial
                                Corp.;  member of  the board of  various civic and
                                charitable organizations.
John R. Haire (71)              Chairman of the  Audit Committee  and Chairman  of
Trustee                         the Committee of Independent Directors or Trustees
Two World Trade Center          and  Director or Trustee of the Dean Witter Funds;
439 East 51st Street            Trustee of the  TCW/DW Funds; formerly  President,
New York, New York              Council  for  Aid  to  Education  (1978-1989)  and
                                Chairman and  Chief  Executive Officer  of  Anchor
                                Corporation,  an  Investment  Adviser (1964-1978);
                                Director  of   Washington   National   Corporation
                                (insurance).
</TABLE>
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME, AGE, POSITION WITH FUND
         AND ADDRESS               PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
- ------------------------------  --------------------------------------------------
<S>                             <C>
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson (47)      Senior Partner, Johnson Smick International, Inc.,
Trustee                         a consulting firm; Koch Professor of International
c/o Johnson Smick               Economics  and Director  of the  Center for Global
International, Inc.             Market Studies at  George Mason University  (since
1133 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.   September,  1990); Co-  Chairman and  a founder of
Washington, D.C.                the Group of Seven Council (G7C), an international
                                economic  commission   (since  September,   1990);
                                Director  or  Trustee  of the  Dean  Witter Funds;
                                Trustee of the  TCW/DW Funds;  Director of  NASDAQ
                                (since  June, 1995); Director of Greenwich Capital
                                Markets  Inc.,   (broker-dealer);  formerly   Vice
                                Chairman  of the Board of Governors of the Federal
                                Reserve System (February,  1986-August, 1990)  and
                                Assistant   Secretary   of   the   U.S.   Treasury
                                (1982-1986).
Paul Kolton (72)                Director or  Trustee  of the  Dean  Witter  Funds;
Trustee                         Chairman  of the  Audit Committee  and Chairman of
c/o Gordon Altman Butowsky      the Committee  of  the  Independent  Trustees  and
 Weitzen Shalov & Wein          Trustee  of the TCW/DW Funds; formerly Chairman of
Counsel to the Independent      the  Financial   Accounting   Standards   Advisory
Trustees                        Council  and Chairman and  Chief Executive Officer
114 West 47th Street            of the American  Stock Exchange;  Director of  UCC
New York, New York              Investors Holding Inc. (Uniroyal Chemical Company,
                                Inc.);    director    or   trustee    of   various
                                not-for-profit organizations.
Michael E. Nugent (59)          General Partner, Triumph Capital, L.P., a  private
Trustee                         investment   partnership   (since   April,  1988);
Triumph Capital, L.P.           Director or Trustee of the Dean Witter Funds,  and
237 Park Avenue                 Trustee   of  the  TCW/DW   Funds;  formerly  Vice
New York, New York              President, Bankers  Trust Company  and BT  Capital
                                Corporation   (1984-1988);  Director   of  various
                                business organizations.
Philip J. Purcell* (52)         Chairman of  the  Board  of  Directors  and  Chief
Trustee                         Executive  Officer of  DWDC, DWR  and Novus Credit
Two World Trade Center          Services Inc.; Director of InterCapital, DWSC  and
New York, New York              Distributors;  Director  or  Trustee  of  the Dean
                                Witter Funds; Director  and/or officer of  various
                                DWDC subsidiaries.
John L. Schroeder (65)          Retired;  Director or  Trustee of  the Dean Witter
Trustee                         Funds; Trustee of  the TCW/DW  Funds; Director  of
c/o Gordon Altman Butowsky      Citizens  Utilities  Company;  formerly  Executive
Weitzen Shalov & Wein           Vice President and Chief Investment Officer of the
 Counsel to the Independent     Home Insurance  Company  (August,  1991-September,
Trustees                        1995);  Director  or  Trustee of  the  Dean Witter
114 West 47th Street            Funds; Director  of  Citizens  Utilities  Company;
New York, New York              formerly  Chairman and Chief Investment Officer of
                                Axe-Houghton Management and the Axe-Houghton Funds
                                (April, 1983-June,  1991) and  President of  USF&G
                                Financial Services Inc. (June, 1990-June, 1991).
Sheldon Curtis (64)             Senior   Vice  President,  Secretary  and  General
Vice President, Secretary       Counsel of  InterCapital  and  DWSC;  Senior  Vice
 and General Counsel            President  and  Secretary  of  DWTC;  Senior  Vice
Two World Trade Center          President,  Assistant   Secretary  and   Assistant
New York, New York              General   Counsel   of   Distributors;   Assistant
                                Secretary of  DWR; Vice  President, Secretary  and
                                General  Counsel of the Dean  Witter Funds and the
                                TCW/DW Funds.
</TABLE>
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME, AGE, POSITION WITH FUND
         AND ADDRESS               PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
- ------------------------------  --------------------------------------------------
<S>                             <C>
Thomas F. Caloia (50)           First  Vice  President   (since  May,  1991)   and
Treasurer                       Assistant   Treasurer  (since  January,  1993)  of
Two World Trade Center          InterCapital; First Vice  President and  Assistant
New York, New York              Treasurer of DWSC and Treasurer of the Dean Witter
                                Funds   and  the  TCW/DW  Funds;  previously  Vice
                                President of InterCapital.
<FN>
- ------------
*Denotes Trustees who are "interested persons" of the Fund, as defined in the
 Act.
</TABLE>
    
 
    In addition,  Robert  M.  Scanlan,  President  of  InterCapital,  and  Chief
Operating   Officer  of   InterCapital,  DWSC,   Executive  Vice   President  of
Distributors and DWTC  and Director  of DWTC,  David A.  Hughey, Executive  Vice
President   and  Chief   Administrative  Officer   of  InterCapital   and  DWSC,
Distributors and DWTC and Director of DWTC, Edmund C. Puckhaber, Executive  Vice
President of InterCapital and Director of DWTC, Robert S. Giambrone, Senior Vice
President  of InterCapital, DWSC, Distributors and DWTC and Joseph J. McAlinden,
Mark Bavoso,  Edward  F.  Gaylor  and Paul  Vance,  Senior  Vice  Presidents  of
InterCapital,  are Vice Presidents of the  Fund. In addition, Marilyn K. Cranney
and Barry  Fink,  First  Vice  Presidents  and  Assistant  General  Counsels  of
InterCapital  and DWSC, and Lou Anne D.  McInnis and Ruth Rossi, Vice Presidents
and Assistant General  Counsels of InterCapital  and DWSC, and  Carsten Otto,  a
Staff Attorney with InterCapital, are Assistant Secretaries of the Fund.
 
THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES, THE INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES, AND THE COMMITTEES
 
    The  Board of Trustees consists of nine (9) trustees. These same individuals
also serve as directors or  trustees for all of the  Dean Witter Funds, and  are
referred  to in this  section as Trustees. As  of the date  of this Statement of
Additional Information, there are a total of 80 Dean Witter Funds, comprised  of
120  portfolios. As  of January 31,  1996, the  Dean Witter Funds  had total net
assets of approximately $73.5 billion and more than five million shareholders.
 
    Seven Trustees (77%  of the total  number) have no  affiliation or  business
connection with InterCapital or any of its affiliated persons and do not own any
stock  or other securities issued by  InterCapital's parent company, DWDC. These
are the "disinterested" or "independent"  Trustees. The other two Trustees  (the
"management  Trustees")  are affiliated  with  InterCapital. Five  of  the seven
independent Trustees are also Independent Trustees of the TCW/DW Funds.
 
    Law and regulation establish both general guidelines and specific duties for
the Independent Trustees.  The Dean  Witter Funds seek  as Independent  Trustees
individuals  of distinction and  experience in business  and finance, government
service or academia; these are people whose advice and counsel are in demand  by
others  and for  whom there is  often competition.  To accept a  position on the
Funds' Boards, such individuals may reject other attractive assignments  because
the  Funds make  substantial demands  on their time.  Indeed, by  serving on the
Funds' Boards, certain Trustees who would  otherwise be qualified and in  demand
to serve on bank boards would be prohibited by law from doing so.
 
    All  of the Independent Trustees serve as members of the Audit Committee and
the Committee of the Independent Trustees.  Three of them also serve as  members
of  the Derivatives Committee. During the calendar year ended December 31, 1995,
the three Committees held a combined  total of fifteen meetings. The  Committees
hold  some  meetings at  InterCapital's offices  and some  outside InterCapital.
Management Trustees or  officers do not  attend these meetings  unless they  are
invited for purposes of furnishing information or making a report.
 
    The  Committee of the  Independent Trustees is  charged with recommending to
the full Board  approval of management,  advisory and administration  contracts,
Rule  12b-1  plans  and distribution  and  underwriting  agreements; continually
reviewing Fund performance;  checking on  the pricing  of portfolio  securities,
brokerage  commissions, transfer agent costs  and performance, and trading among
Funds in the  same complex; and  approving fidelity bond  and related  insurance
coverage and allocations, as well as other matters that arise from time to time.
The Independent Trustees are required to select and nominate individuals to fill
any  Independent Trustee vacancy on the Board of  any Fund that has a Rule 12b-1
plan of distribution. Most of the Dean Witter Funds have such a plan.
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
    The Audit  Committee is  charged with  recommending to  the full  Board  the
engagement  or  discharge  of  the  Fund's  independent  accountants;  directing
investigations into matters  within the  scope of  the independent  accountants'
duties,  including the power  to retain outside  specialists; reviewing with the
independent accountants the audit plan  and results of the auditing  engagement;
approving  professional  services provided  by  the independent  accountants and
other accounting firms prior to the performance of such services; reviewing  the
independence  of the independent accountants; considering the range of audit and
non-audit fees;  reviewing  the  adequacy  of  the  Fund's  system  of  internal
controls;  and preparing  and submitting Committee  meeting minutes  to the full
Board.
 
    Finally, the  Board of  each  Fund has  formed  a Derivatives  Committee  to
establish  parameters for and oversee the activities of the Fund with respect to
derivative investments, if any, made by the Fund.
 
DUTIES OF CHAIRMAN OF COMMITTEES
 
    The  Chairman  of  the  Committees   maintains  an  office  at  the   Funds'
headquarters  in New York.  He is responsible for  keeping abreast of regulatory
and industry developments and the  Funds' operations and management. He  screens
and/or  prepares  written  materials  and  identifies  critical  issues  for the
Independent Trustees  to  consider,  develops agendas  for  Committee  meetings,
determines  the type and amount of information  that the Committees will need to
form a  judgment  on various  issues,  and  arranges to  have  that  information
furnished to Committee members. He also arranges for the services of independent
experts and consults with them in advance of meetings to help refine reports and
to  focus on critical issues. Members of  the Committees believe that the person
who serves  as Chairman  of all  three Committees  and guides  their efforts  is
pivotal to the effective functioning of the Committees.
 
    The  Chairman of the  Committees also maintains  continuous contact with the
Funds' management, with independent counsel to the Independent Trustees and with
the Funds' independent auditors.  He arranges for a  series of special  meetings
involving  the  annual  review  of  investment  advisory,  management  and other
operating contracts of  the Funds  and, on  behalf of  the Committees,  conducts
negotiations with the Investment Manager and other service providers. In effect,
the  Chairman of the Committees  serves as a combination  of chief executive and
support staff of the Independent Trustees.
 
    The Chairman of the Committees is not employed by any other organization and
devotes his time primarily to the services he performs as Committee Chairman and
Independent Trustee of the  Dean Witter Funds and  as an Independent Trustee  of
the  TCW/DW Funds.  The current  Committee Chairman has  had more  than 35 years
experience as a senior executive in the investment company industry.
 
ADVANTAGES OF HAVING SAME INDIVIDUALS AS INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES FOR ALL DEAN
WITTER FUNDS
 
    The Independent Trustees and the  Funds' management believe that having  the
same  Independent  Trustees  for  each  of  the  Dean  Witter  Funds  avoids the
duplication  of  effort  that  would  arise  from  having  different  groups  of
individuals  serving as Independent  Trustees for each  of the Funds  or even of
sub-groups of Funds.  They believe  that having  the same  individuals serve  as
Independent  Trustees of  all the  Funds tends  to increase  their knowledge and
expertise regarding matters which affect the Fund complex generally and enhances
their ability  to negotiate  on behalf  of  each Fund  with the  Fund's  service
providers. This arrangement also precludes the possibility of separate groups of
Independent  Trustees arriving at conflicting decisions regarding operations and
management of the  Funds and  avoids the cost  and confusion  that would  likely
ensue.  Finally, having the  same Independent Trustees serve  on all Fund Boards
enhances the ability of  each Fund to  obtain, at modest  cost to each  separate
Fund,  the services of Independent Trustees, and a Chairman of their Committees,
of the caliber, experience and business  acumen of the individuals who serve  as
Independent Trustees of the Dean Witter Funds.
 
COMPENSATION OF INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES
 
    The  Fund will pay each  Independent Trustee an annual  fee of $1,000 plus a
per meeting fee of $50  for meetings of the Board  of Trustees or committees  of
the Board of Trustees attended by the Trustee (the Fund will pay the Chairman of
the  Audit Committee  an annual  fee of $750  and will  pay the  Chairman of the
Committee of the  Independent Trustees an  additional annual fee  of $2,400,  in
each case inclusive of the Committee meeting fees). The Fund will also reimburse
such Trustees for travel and other out-of-
 
                                       10
<PAGE>
pocket  expenses incurred  by them in  connection with  attending such meetings.
Trustees and  officers  of  the Fund  who  are  or have  been  employed  by  the
Investment  Manager or  an affiliated  company will  receive no  compensation or
expense reimbursement from the Fund. Payments  will commence as of the time  the
Fund  begins paying  management fees, which,  pursuant to an  undertaking by the
Investment Manager, will  be at such  time as the  Fund has $50  million of  net
assets  or six months  from the date  of commencement of  the Fund's operations,
whichever occurs first.
 
    At such time as  the Fund has been  in operation, and has  paid fees to  the
Independent  Trustees, for  a full  fiscal year,  and assuming  that during such
fiscal year the Fund holds  the same number of  Board and committee meetings  as
were held by the other Dean Witter Funds during the calendar year ended December
31, 1995, it is estimated that the compensation paid to each Independent Trustee
during such fiscal year will be the amount shown in the following table:
 
                         FUND COMPENSATION (ESTIMATED)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   AGGREGATE
                                                                 COMPENSATION
NAME OF INDEPENDENT TRUSTEE                                      FROM THE FUND
- --------------------------------------------------------------  ---------------
<S>                                                             <C>
Michael Bozic.................................................      $2,000
Edwin J. Garn.................................................       2,000
John R. Haire.................................................       4,600*
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson.........................................       2,000
Paul Kolton...................................................       2,000
Michael E. Nugent.............................................       2,000
John L. Schroeder.............................................       2,000
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
*   Of Mr. Haire's compensation from the Fund, $3,150 is paid to him as Chairman
    of the Committee of the Independent Trustees ($2,400) and as Chairman of the
    Audit Committee ($750).
 
    The  following  table  illustrates  the  compensation  paid  to  the  Fund's
Independent Trustees for the calendar year ended December 31, 1995 for  services
to  the 79 Dean Witter Funds and, in  the case of Messrs. Haire, Johnson, Kolton
and Nugent, the 11  TCW/DW Funds that  were in operation  at December 31,  1995.
With  respect to Messrs. Haire, Johnson, Kolton and Nugent, the TCW/DW Funds are
included solely because of a limited exchange privilege between those Funds  and
five  Dean Witter Money Market Funds. Mr.  Schroeder was elected as a Trustee of
the TCW/DW Funds on April 20, 1995.
 
           CASH COMPENSATION FROM DEAN WITTER FUNDS AND TCW/DW FUNDS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   FOR SERVICE AS    TOTAL CASH
                               FOR SERVICE                          CHAIRMAN OF     COMPENSATION
                              AS DIRECTOR OR                       COMMITTEES OF    FOR SERVICES
                               TRUSTEE AND       FOR SERVICE AS     INDEPENDENT          TO
                             COMMITTEE MEMBER     TRUSTEE AND        DIRECTORS/        79 DEAN
                                OF 79 DEAN      COMMITTEE MEMBER    TRUSTEES AND       WITTER
                                  WITTER          OF 11 TCW/DW         AUDIT        FUNDS AND 11
NAME OF INDEPENDENT TRUSTEE       FUNDS              FUNDS           COMMITTEES     TCW/DW FUNDS
- ---------------------------  ----------------   ----------------   --------------   -------------
<S>                          <C>                <C>                <C>              <C>
Michael Bozic..............      $126,050           --                 --             $126,050
Edwin J. Garn..............       136,450           --                 --              136,450
John R. Haire..............        98,450           $82,038           $217,350**       397,838
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson......       136,450            82,038            --              218,488
Paul Kolton................       136,450            54,788             36,900***      228,138
Michael E. Nugent..........       124,200            75,038            --              199,238
John L. Schroeder..........       136,450            46,964            --              183,414
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
**  For the 79 Dean Witter Funds in operation at December 31, 1995.
 
*** For the 11 TCW/DW Funds in operation at December 31, 1995.
 
    As of the date  of this Statement of  Additional Information, the  aggregate
number of shares of beneficial interest of the Fund owned by the Fund's officers
and  Trustees  as a  group  was less  than  1 percent  of  the Fund's  shares of
beneficial interest outstanding.
 
                                       11
<PAGE>
INVESTMENT PRACTICES AND POLICIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    FOREIGN SECURITIES.   As stated in  the Prospectus, the  Fund may invest  in
securities  issued by foreign  issuers. Investors should  carefully consider the
risks of investing in securities  of foreign issuers and securities  denominated
in  non-U.S. currencies. Fluctuations in the  relative rates of exchange between
the currencies  of  different  nations  will affect  the  value  of  the  Fund's
investments.  Changes in  foreign currency exchange  rates relative  to the U.S.
dollar will affect  the U.S. dollar  value of the  Fund's assets denominated  in
that currency and thereby impact upon the Fund's total return on such assets.
 
    Foreign  currency  exchange rates  are determined  by  forces of  supply and
demand on the foreign exchange markets. These forces are themselves affected  by
the   international  balance  of  payments  and  other  economic  and  financial
conditions, government intervention,  speculation and  other factors.  Moreover,
foreign currency exchange rates may be affected by the regulatory control of the
exchanges on which currencies trade.
 
    Investments  in  foreign securities  will  also occasion  risks  relating to
political  and  economic  developments  abroad,  including  the  possibility  of
expropriations  or confiscatory taxation, limitations on  the use or transfer of
Fund  assets  and  any  effects   of  foreign  social,  economic  or   political
instability. Foreign companies are not subject to the regulatory requirements of
U.S.  companies and, as  such, there may be  less publicly available information
about such companies.  Moreover, foreign  companies are not  subject to  uniform
accounting,   auditing  and  financial   reporting  standards  and  requirements
comparable to those applicable to U.S. companies.
 
    Securities of foreign issuers may be less liquid than comparable  securities
of  U.S.  issuers  and, as  such,  their  price changes  may  be  more volatile.
Furthermore, foreign exchanges and broker-dealers are generally subject to  less
government   and   exchange  scrutiny   and   regulation  then   their  American
counterparts. Brokerage commissions,  dealer concessions  and other  transaction
costs may be higher on foreign markets than in the U.S. In addition, differences
in clearance and settlement procedures on foreign markets may occasion delays in
settlements  of Fund  trades effected in  such markets. Inability  to dispose of
portfolio securities due to settlement delays could result in losses to the Fund
due to subsequent declines in value of such securities and the inability of  the
Fund to make intended security purchases due to settlement problems could result
in a failure of the Fund to make potentially advantageous investments.
 
    FORWARD   FOREIGN  CURRENCY  EXCHANGE  CONTRACTS.     As  discussed  in  the
Prospectus, the Fund may enter into forward foreign currency exchange  contracts
("forward contracts") as a hedge against fluctuations in future foreign exchange
rates.  The Fund will conduct its  foreign currency exchange transactions either
on a spot (i.e., cash) basis at the spot rate prevailing in the foreign currency
exchange market, or through entering into forward contracts to purchase or  sell
foreign  currencies. A  forward contract involves  an obligation  to purchase or
sell a specific currency at a future date, which may be any fixed number of days
from the date of the contract agreed upon by the parties, at a price set at  the
time  of  the  contract. These  contracts  are  traded in  the  interbank market
conducted directly  between  currency  traders (usually  large,  commercial  and
investment  banks)  and their  customers. Such  forward  contracts will  only be
entered into with  United States  banks and  their foreign  branches or  foreign
banks whose assets total $1 billion or more. A forward contract generally has no
deposit requirement, and no commissions are charged at any stage for trades.
 
    When  management  of the  Fund believes  that the  currency of  a particular
foreign country may suffer  a substantial movement against  the U.S. dollar,  it
may  enter into a  forward contract to purchase  or sell, for  a fixed amount of
dollars or  other currency,  the amount  of foreign  currency approximating  the
value  of some  or all  of the Fund's  portfolio securities  denominated in such
foreign currency.  The  Fund will  not  enter  into such  forward  contracts  or
maintain  a  net  exposure  to  such contracts  where  the  consummation  of the
contracts would obligate the  Fund to deliver an  amount of foreign currency  in
excess  of  the  value  of  the  Fund's  portfolio  securities  or  other assets
denominated in that currency. Under  normal circumstances, consideration of  the
prospect  for  currency  parities  will be  incorporated  into  the  longer term
 
                                       12
<PAGE>
investment decisions  made with  regard to  overall diversification  strategies.
However,  the management of the  Fund believes that it  is important to have the
flexibility to enter  into such forward  contracts when it  determines that  the
best  interests of the Fund will be served. The Fund's custodian bank will place
cash, U.S. Government  securities or  other appropriate liquid  high grade  debt
securities  in a segregated account of the Fund  in an amount equal to the value
of the Fund's total  assets committed to the  consummation of forward  contracts
entered  into  under the  circumstances set  forth  above. If  the value  of the
securities placed  in  the  segregated  account  declines,  additional  cash  or
securities  will be placed in the account on  a daily basis so that the value of
the account will equal the amount of the Fund's commitments with respect to such
contracts.
 
    Where, for example, the Fund is  hedging a portfolio position consisting  of
foreign  securities denominated in  a foreign currency  against adverse exchange
rate moves vis-a-vis the  U.S. dollar, at the  maturity of the forward  contract
for  delivery by the  Fund of a foreign  currency, the Fund  may either sell the
portfolio security and make delivery of  the foreign currency, or it may  retain
the  security and  terminate its contractual  obligation to  deliver the foreign
currency by purchasing an  "offsetting" contract with  the same currency  trader
obligating  it to purchase,  on the same  maturity date, the  same amount of the
foreign currency (however, the  ability of the Fund  to terminate a contract  is
contingent  upon the willingness  of the currency trader  with whom the contract
has been entered into to permit an offsetting transaction). It is impossible  to
forecast  the  market value  of portfolio  securities at  the expiration  of the
contract. Accordingly, it may be necessary  for the Fund to purchase  additional
foreign  currency on the spot market (and  bear the expense of such purchase) if
the market value of the security is less than the amount of foreign currency the
Fund is obligated to deliver and if a decision is made to sell the security  and
make  delivery of the foreign currency. Conversely,  it may be necessary to sell
on the spot market some  of the foreign currency received  upon the sale of  the
portfolio  securities if its market value exceeds the amount of foreign currency
the Fund is obligated to deliver.
 
    If the Fund retains  the portfolio securities and  engages in an  offsetting
transaction,  the Fund will  incur a gain or  loss to the  extent that there has
been movement in  spot or forward  contract prices.  If the Fund  engages in  an
offsetting transaction, it may subsequently enter into a new forward contract to
sell  the  foreign currency.  Should forward  prices  decline during  the period
between the Fund's entering into  a forward contract for  the sale of a  foreign
currency  and the date it enters into an offsetting contract for the purchase of
the foreign currency, the Fund  will realize a gain to  the extent the price  of
the  currency it  has agreed to  sell exceeds the  price of the  currency it has
agreed to purchase. Should forward prices increase, the Fund will suffer a  loss
to  the extent the price  of the currency it has  agreed to purchase exceeds the
price of the currency it has agreed to sell.
 
    If the Fund purchases a fixed-income  security which is denominated in  U.S.
dollars  but which will pay  out its principal based upon  a formula tied to the
exchange rate  between the  U.S. dollar  and a  foreign currency,  it may  hedge
against  a decline  in the principal  value of  the security by  entering into a
forward contract to  sell an amount  of the relevant  foreign currency equal  to
some or all of the principal value of the security.
 
    At  times when  the Fund  has written  a call  option on  a security  or the
currency in  which it  is  denominated, it  may wish  to  enter into  a  forward
contract  to purchase  or sell  the foreign  currency in  which the  security is
denominated. A  forward contract  would,  for example,  hedge  the risk  of  the
security on which a call option has been written declining in value to a greater
extent  than the  value of the  premium received  for the option.  The Fund will
maintain with its Custodian at all  times, cash, U.S. Government securities,  or
other  appropriate high grade debt obligations  in a segregated account equal in
value to  all  forward  contract obligations  and  option  contract  obligations
entered into in hedge situations such as this.
 
    Although  the Fund values its assets daily in terms of U.S. dollars, it does
not intend to convert its holdings of foreign currencies into U.S. dollars on  a
daily  basis. It will, however, do so from time to time, and investors should be
aware of the costs of currency conversion. Although foreign exchange dealers  do
not  charge a fee for  conversion, they do realize a  profit based on the spread
between the prices at
 
                                       13
<PAGE>
which they are buying and selling various currencies. Thus a dealer may offer to
sell a foreign currency to the Fund at one rate, while offering a lesser rate of
exchange should the Fund desire to resell that currency to the dealer.
 
    REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS.  When cash may be  available for only a few days,  it
may  be invested by the Fund in repurchase  agreements until such time as it may
otherwise be invested  or used for  payments of obligations  of the Fund.  These
agreements,  which  may be  viewed as  a type  of secured  lending by  the Fund,
typically involve the acquisition by the Fund of debt securities from a  selling
financial   institution  such  as  a  bank,  savings  and  loan  association  or
broker-dealer. The  agreement provides  that  the Fund  will  sell back  to  the
institution,  and that the institution  will repurchase, the underlying security
("collateral") at a specified price and at  a fixed time in the future,  usually
not  more than  seven days  from the  date of  purchase. The  collateral will be
maintained in  a  segregated account  and  will be  marked  to market  daily  to
determine  that the value of the collateral, as specified in the agreement, does
not decrease below the  purchase price plus accrued  interest. If such  decrease
occurs, additional collateral will be requested and, when received, added to the
account  to maintain full collateralization. The  Fund will accrue interest from
the institution until the  time when the repurchase  is to occur. Although  such
date  is deemed by the  Fund to be the maturity  date of a repurchase agreement,
the maturities of securities subject to repurchase agreements are not subject to
any limits.
 
    While repurchase agreements involve certain risks not associated with direct
investments in debt securities, the Fund follows procedures designed to minimize
such risks. These procedures include effecting repurchase transactions only with
large,  well-capitalized  and  well-established  financial  institutions   whose
financial  condition  will be  continually monitored  by the  Investment Manager
subject to  procedures established  by the  Board of  Trustees of  the Fund.  In
addition,  as  described  above,  the value  of  the  collateral  underlying the
repurchase agreement will be at least  equal to the repurchase price,  including
any  accrued interest  earned on  the repurchase  agreement. In  the event  of a
default or bankruptcy by a selling financial institution, the Fund will seek  to
liquidate  such  collateral.  However, the  exercising  of the  Fund's  right to
liquidate such collateral  could involve  certain costs  or delays  and, to  the
extent  that  proceeds  from  any  sale upon  a  default  of  the  obligation to
repurchase were less than the repurchase price, the Fund could suffer a loss. It
is the current policy of the Fund not to invest in repurchase agreements that do
not mature within  seven days if  any such investment,  together with any  other
illiquid  assets held by the  Fund, amounts to more than  15% of its net assets.
The Fund's  investments in  repurchase agreements  may at  times be  substantial
when,   in  the  view  of  the  Investment  Manager,  liquidity,  tax  or  other
considerations warrant.
 
    REVERSE REPURCHASE  AGREEMENTS AND  DOLLAR ROLLS.   The  Fund may  also  use
reverse  repurchase  agreements  and  dollar rolls  as  part  of  its investment
strategy. Reverse repurchase agreements involve  sales by the Fund of  portfolio
assets  concurrently with an agreement by the Fund to repurchase the same assets
at a later date at a fixed price. Generally, the effect of such a transaction is
that the Fund  can recover all  or most of  the cash invested  in the  portfolio
securities  involved during the term of  the reverse repurchase agreement, while
it will be  able to  keep the interest  income associated  with those  portfolio
securities.  Such transactions are only advantageous if the interest cost to the
Fund of the reverse  repurchase transaction is less  than the cost of  obtaining
the cash otherwise.
 
    The  Fund may enter into dollar rolls in which the Fund sells securities for
delivery in  the  current  months and  simultaneously  contracts  to  repurchase
substantially  similar (same type  and coupon) securities  on a specified future
date. During the roll  period, the Fund forgoes  principal and interest paid  on
the  securities. The Fund  is compensated by the  difference between the current
sales price and the lower forward price for the future purchase (often  referred
to  as the "drop") as well as by the interest earned on the cash proceeds of the
initial sale.
 
    The Fund will  establish a  segregated account  with its  custodian bank  in
which  it will  maintain cash, U.S.  Government Securities or  other liquid high
grade debt obligations equal in value  to its obligations in respect of  reverse
repurchase agreements and dollar rolls. Reverse repurchase agreements and dollar
rolls  involve the  risk that  the market  value of  the securities  the Fund is
obligated to repurchase under the
 
                                       14
<PAGE>
agreement may decline  below the  repurchase price. In  the event  the buyer  of
securities  under  a  reverse  repurchase agreement  or  dollar  roll  files for
bankruptcy or becomes insolvent, the Fund's use of proceeds of the agreement may
be restricted pending  a determination  by the other  party, or  its trustee  or
receiver, whether to enforce the Fund's obligation to repurchase the securities.
Reverse  repurchase  agreements  and  dollar  rolls  are  speculative techniques
involving leverage, and are considered borrowings by the Fund.
 
    LENDING OF  PORTFOLIO SECURITIES.    Consistent with  applicable  regulatory
requirements, the Fund may lend its portfolio securities to brokers, dealers and
other  financial institutions, provided that such loans are callable at any time
by the Fund (subject to notice provisions described below), and are at all times
secured by  cash or  cash  equivalents, which  are  maintained in  a  segregated
account  pursuant to applicable regulations  and that are equal  to at least the
market value, determined daily, of the loaned securities. The advantage of  such
loans  is that the Fund continues to receive the income on the loaned securities
while at  the  same time  earning  interest on  the  cash amounts  deposited  as
collateral,  which will be invested in short-term obligations. The Fund will not
lend its portfolio securities  if such loans  are not permitted  by the laws  or
regulations of any state in which its shares are qualified for sale and will not
lend more than 25% of the value of its total assets. A loan may be terminated by
the borrower on one business day's notice, or by the Fund on four business days'
notice.  If the borrower fails to deliver the loaned securities within four days
after receipt  of notice,  the Fund  could  use the  collateral to  replace  the
securities  while holding the borrower liable for any excess of replacement cost
over collateral. As with any extensions of  credit, there are risks of delay  in
recovery  and in  some cases even  loss of  rights in the  collateral should the
borrower of the securities fail  financially. However, these loans of  portfolio
securities  will only  be made to  firms deemed  by the Fund's  management to be
creditworthy and when the income which  can be earned from such loans  justifies
the  attendant risks. Upon termination of the  loan, the borrower is required to
return the securities to the Fund. Any  gain or loss in the market price  during
the  loan period would inure to the Fund. The creditworthiness of firms to which
the Fund lends its portfolio securities will be monitored on an ongoing basis by
the Investment  Manager  pursuant to  procedures  adopted and  reviewed,  on  an
ongoing basis, by the Board of Trustees of the Fund.
 
    When  voting or consent rights which accompany loaned securities pass to the
borrower, the Fund will follow the  policy of calling the loaned securities,  to
be  delivered within one day after notice, to permit the exercise of such rights
if the matters involved would have a material effect on the Fund's investment in
such loaned securities.  The Fund will  pay reasonable finder's,  administrative
and  custodial fees in  connection with a  loan of its  securities. However, the
Fund has no  intention of  lending any of  its portfolio  securities during  its
fiscal year ending November 30, 1996.
 
    WHEN-ISSUED  AND DELAYED DELIVERY SECURITIES  AND FORWARD COMMITMENTS.  From
time to  time the  Fund may  purchase  securities on  a when-issued  or  delayed
delivery basis or may purchase or sell securities on a forward commitment basis.
When  such transactions are  negotiated, the price  is fixed at  the time of the
commitment, but delivery and payment  can take place a  month or more after  the
date  of  commitment.  While  the  Fund  will  only  purchase  securities  on  a
when-issued, delayed delivery or forward commitment basis with the intention  of
acquiring the securities, the Fund may sell the securities before the settlement
date, if it is deemed advisable. The securities so purchased or sold are subject
to market fluctuation and no interest or dividends accrue to the purchaser prior
to the settlement date. At the time the Fund makes the commitment to purchase or
sell  securities on a when-issued, delayed delivery or forward commitment basis,
it will record the  transaction and thereafter reflect  the value, each day,  of
such  security  purchased,  or  if  a sale,  the  proceeds  to  be  received, in
determining its net asset value. At the time of delivery of the securities,  the
value  may be more or less  than the purchase or sale  price. The Fund will also
establish a  segregated  account  with  its custodian  bank  in  which  it  will
continually maintain cash or cash equivalents or other high grade debt portfolio
securities   equal  in  value  to  commitments   to  purchase  securities  on  a
when-issued, delayed  delivery  or  forward commitment  basis.  Subject  to  the
foregoing  restrictions, the Fund may purchase  securities on such basis without
limit. The Investment Manager and the Board of Trustees do not believe that  the
Fund's  net asset value will be adversely affected by the purchase of securities
on such basis.
 
                                       15
<PAGE>
    WHEN, AS AND IF ISSUED  SECURITIES.  The Fund  may purchase securities on  a
"when,  as and if issued" basis under which the issuance of the security depends
upon the  occurrence  of a  subsequent  event, such  as  approval of  a  merger,
corporate reorganization, leveraged buyout or debt restructuring. The commitment
for the purchase of any such security will not be recognized in the portfolio of
the  Fund until the Investment Manager  determines that issuance of the security
is probable.  At  such  time, the  Fund  will  record the  transaction  and,  in
determining  its net asset value, will reflect  the value of the security daily.
At such  time,  the Fund  will  also establish  a  segregated account  with  its
custodian  bank in which it will maintain cash or cash equivalents or other high
grade debt portfolio  securities equal  in value to  recognized commitments  for
such  securities.  Once  a  segregated  account  has  been  established,  if the
anticipated event does  not occur and  the securities are  not issued, the  Fund
will have lost an investment opportunity. The value of the Fund's commitments to
purchase  the  securities of  any one  issuer,  together with  the value  of all
securities of such issuer owned by the Fund,  may not exceed 5% of the value  of
the  Fund's total  assets at  the time the  initial commitment  to purchase such
securities is made  (see "Investment  Restrictions"). Subject  to the  foregoing
restrictions,  the Fund may purchase securities  on such basis without limit. An
increase in the  percentage of the  Fund's assets committed  to the purchase  of
securities  on a "when, as  and if issued" basis  may increase the volatility of
its net asset value. The Investment Manager and the Trustees do not believe that
the net asset value of  the Fund will be adversely  affected by its purchase  of
securities  on such basis. The Fund may also  sell securities on a "when, as and
if issued"  basis  provided  that  the issuance  of  the  security  will  result
automatically from the exchange or conversion of a security owned by the Fund at
the time of the sale.
 
    RIGHTS  AND WARRANTS.  The Fund may invest up  to 5% of the value of its net
assets in warrants, including not more than 2% in warrants not listed on  either
the  New York or American Stock Exchange.  Warrants are, in effect, an option to
purchase equity securities at a specific  price, generally valid for a  specific
period  of time, and have no voting rights,  pay no dividends and have no rights
with respect to the corporations issuing them. The Fund may acquire warrants and
stock rights attached  to other  securities without reference  to the  foregoing
limitations.
 
    PRIVATE  PLACEMENTS.  The  Fund may invest up  to 5% of  its total assets in
securities which are  subject to restrictions  on resale because  they have  not
been  registered under the  Securities Act of 1933,  as amended (the "Securities
Act"), or which are otherwise  not readily marketable. (Securities eligible  for
resale  pursuant to Rule 144A of the Securities Act, and determined to be liquid
pursuant to the procedures discussed in the following paragraph, are not subject
to the foregoing restriction.) Limitations on the resale of such securities  may
have  an adverse effect  on their marketability,  and may prevent  the Fund from
disposing of them promptly at reasonable prices.  The Fund may have to bear  the
expense  of registering such  securities for resale and  the risk of substantial
delays in effecting such registration.
 
    The Securities and Exchange Commission  ("SEC") has adopted Rule 144A  under
the  Securities Act,  which permits  the Fund  to sell  restricted securities to
qualified institutional  buyers  without  limitation.  The  Investment  Manager,
pursuant  to  procedures  adopted by  the  Trustees  of the  Fund,  will  make a
determination as to the liquidity of  each restricted security purchased by  the
Fund. The procedures require that the following factors be taken into account in
making  a liquidity determination: (1) the  frequency of trades and price quotes
for the security; (2) the number  of dealers and other potential purchasers  who
have issued quotes on the security; (3) any dealer undertakings to make a market
in  the security;  and (4)  the nature  of the  security and  the nature  of the
marketplace trades (the time  needed to dispose of  the security, the method  of
soliciting  offers, and the mechanics of  transfer). If a restricted security is
determined to  be  "liquid", such  security  will  not be  included  within  the
category  "illiquid securities", which under the  SEC's current policies may not
exceed 15%  of  the Fund's  net  assets,  and will  not  be subject  to  the  5%
limitation set out in the preceding paragraph.
 
    The  market for certain  private placements purchased  pursuant to Rule 144A
may be  initially  small  or  may,  subsequent  to  purchase,  become  illiquid.
Furthermore,   the  Investment  Manager  may  not  posses  all  the  information
concerning an  issue of  securities that  it  wishes to  purchase in  a  private
placement  to  which it  would normally  have had  access, had  the registration
statement necessitated by a public offering  been filed with the Securities  and
Exchange Commission.
 
                                       16
<PAGE>
OPTIONS AND FUTURES TRANSACTIONS
 
    The  Fund  may write  covered call  options against  securities held  in its
portfolio and covered  put options  on eligible portfolio  securities and  stock
indexes  and purchase options of the same series to effect closing transactions,
and may hedge against potential changes  in the market value of investments  (or
anticipated  investments) and facilitate  the reallocation of  the Fund's assets
into and out of equities and fixed-income securities by purchasing put and  call
options  on  portfolio  (or  eligible  portfolio)  securities  and  engaging  in
transactions involving futures contracts and options on such contracts. The Fund
may also hedge against potential changes  in the market value of the  currencies
in  which  its  investments  (or  anticipated  investments)  are  denominated by
purchasing put  and  call  options  on currencies  and  engage  in  transactions
involving currency futures contracts and options on such contracts.
 
    Call  and put  options on  U.S. Treasury notes,  bonds and  bills and equity
securities  are  listed  on  Exchanges  and  are  written  in   over-the-counter
transactions  ("OTC options"). Listed options are issued by the Options Clearing
Corporation ("OCC")  and other  clearing entities  including foreign  exchanges.
Ownership  of a listed call option gives the  Fund the right to buy from the OCC
the underlying security covered by the option at the stated exercise price  (the
price per unit of the underlying security) by filing an exercise notice prior to
the  expiration date of the option. The writer (seller) of the option would then
have the obligation to sell to the OCC the underlying security at that  exercise
price prior to the expiration date of the option, regardless of its then current
market  price. Ownership of a listed put option would give the Fund the right to
sell the  underlying security  to the  OCC at  the stated  exercise price.  Upon
notice  of exercise  of the  put option, the  writer of  the put  would have the
obligation to purchase  the underlying  security from  the OCC  at the  exercise
price.
 
    OPTIONS  ON TREASURY BONDS AND NOTES.  Because trading in options written on
Treasury bonds and notes tends to center on the most recently auctioned  issues,
the  exchanges on which such securities  trade will not continue indefinitely to
introduce options with new expirations to replace expiring options on particular
issues. Instead,  the  expirations introduced  at  the commencement  of  options
trading  on a  particular issue will  be allowed  to run their  course, with the
possible addition of a  limited number of new  expirations as the original  ones
expire.  Options trading on each issue of bonds or notes will thus be phased out
as new options are listed on more recent issues, and options representing a full
range of expirations will not ordinarily  be available for every issue on  which
options are traded.
 
    OPTIONS ON TREASURY BILLS.  Because a deliverable Treasury bill changes from
week to week, writers of Treasury bill calls cannot provide in advance for their
potential   exercise  settlement  obligations  by   acquiring  and  holding  the
underlying security. However,  if the  Fund holds  a long  position in  Treasury
bills with a principal amount of the securities deliverable upon exercise of the
option,  the position may be  hedged from a risk standpoint  by the writing of a
call option. For so long as the  call option is outstanding, the Fund will  hold
the Treasury bills in a segregated account with its Custodian, so that they will
be treated as being covered.
 
    OPTIONS  ON FOREIGN CURRENCIES.  The Fund  may purchase and write options on
foreign currencies  for purposes  similar to  those involved  with investing  in
forward  foreign currency exchange  contracts. For example,  in order to protect
against  declines  in  the  dollar  value  of  portfolio  securities  which  are
denominated  in a  foreign currency,  the Fund  may purchase  put options  on an
amount of such foreign currency equivalent to the current value of the portfolio
securities involved. As a result, the Fund would be enabled to sell the  foreign
currency  for a fixed  amount of U.S.  dollars, thereby "locking  in" the dollar
value of the portfolio securities (less the amount of the premiums paid for  the
options).  Conversely, the Fund may purchase  call options on foreign currencies
in which securities it  anticipates purchasing are denominated  to secure a  set
U.S. dollar price for such securities and protect against a decline in the value
of  the U.S. dollar  against such foreign  currency. The Fund  may also purchase
call and put options to close out written option positions.
 
    The Fund may also write call options on foreign currency to protect  against
potential  declines in its portfolio securities which are denominated in foreign
currencies. If the  U.S. dollar  value of the  portfolio securities  falls as  a
result of a decline in the exchange rate between the foreign currency in which a
 
                                       17
<PAGE>
security  is denominated and the U.S. dollar, then a loss to the Fund occasioned
by such value  decline would be  ameliorated by  receipt of the  premium on  the
option  sold. At the  same time, however, the  Fund gives up  the benefit of any
rise in value of the relevant  portfolio securities above the exercise price  of
the  option and, in fact, only receives a benefit from the writing of the option
to the extent that the value of  the portfolio securities falls below the  price
of  the premium received. The Fund may also write options to close out long call
option positions.
 
    The markets in foreign  currency options are relatively  new and the  Fund's
ability  to establish and close out positions  on such options is subject to the
maintenance of a liquid secondary market. Although the Fund will not purchase or
write such options unless  and until, in  the opinion of  the management of  the
Fund, the market for them has developed sufficiently to ensure that the risks in
connection  with such options are not greater  than the risks in connection with
the underlying  currency, there  can be  no assurance  that a  liquid  secondary
market  will exist for  a particular option  at any specific  time. In addition,
options on  foreign  currencies are  affected  by  all of  those  factors  which
influence foreign exchange rates and investments generally.
 
    The  value  of a  foreign  currency option  depends  upon the  value  of the
underlying currency relative to the U.S. dollar.  As a result, the price of  the
option  position may vary with changes in the value of either or both currencies
and have  no  relationship to  the  investment  merits of  a  foreign  security,
including  foreign securities held  in a "hedged"  investment portfolio. Because
foreign  currency  transactions  occurring  in  the  interbank  market   involve
substantially  larger amounts  than those  that may  be involved  in the  use of
foreign currency options, investors may be disadvantaged by having to deal in an
odd lot market (generally  consisting of transactions of  less than $1  million)
for the underlying foreign currencies at prices that are less favorable than for
round lots.
 
    There  is  no  systematic reporting  of  last sale  information  for foreign
currencies or  any  regulatory  requirement that  quotations  available  through
dealers  or other market sources be firm or revised on a timely basis. Quotation
information available is generally representative of very large transactions  in
the  interbank market and  thus may not  reflect relatively smaller transactions
(i.e., less than $1  million) where rates may  be less favorable. The  interbank
market in foreign currencies is a global, around-the-clock market. To the extent
that  the U.S. options markets  are closed while the  markets for the underlying
currencies remain open, significant price and  rate movements may take place  in
the underlying markets that are not reflected in the options market.
 
    OTC  OPTIONS.  Exchange-listed  options are issued by  the OCC which assures
that all transactions  in such options  are properly executed.  OTC options  are
purchased from or sold (written) to dealers or financial institutions which have
entered  into direct agreements with the  Fund. With OTC options, such variables
as expiration date, exercise price and  premium will be agreed upon between  the
Fund  and the  transacting dealer, without  the intermediation of  a third party
such as the OCC. If the transacting dealer fails to make or take delivery of the
securities underlying an option it has written, in accordance with the terms  of
that  option, the Fund would lose the premium paid for the option as well as any
anticipated benefit  of the  transaction. The  Fund will  engage in  OTC  option
transactions  only with primary U.S. Government securities dealers recognized by
the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
 
    COVERED CALL WRITING.  The Fund  is permitted to write covered call  options
on  portfolio securities  and the  U.S. dollar  and foreign  currencies, without
limit, in order to aid in achieving its investment objective. Generally, a  call
option  is "covered"  if the  Fund owns,  or has  the right  to acquire, without
additional cash consideration (or for additional cash consideration held for the
Fund  by  its  Custodian  in  a  segregated  account)  the  underlying  security
(currency) subject to the option except that in the case of call options on U.S.
Treasury  Bills, the Fund  might own U.S.  Treasury Bills of  a different series
from those underlying  the call option,  but with a  principal amount and  value
corresponding  to the exercise price  and a maturity date  no later than that of
the securities (currency) deliverable  under the call option.  A call option  is
also  covered if the  Fund holds a call  on the same  security (currency) as the
underlying security (currency) of the  written option, where the exercise  price
of the call used for coverage is equal to or less than the exercise price of the
call  written or greater than the exercise price of the call written if the mark
to
 
                                       18
<PAGE>
market difference is maintained by the Fund in cash, U.S. Government  securities
or  other  high grade  debt obligations  which  the Fund  holds in  a segregated
account maintained with its Custodian.
 
    The Fund  will receive  from the  purchaser, in  return for  a call  it  has
written,  a "premium"; i.e., the price of  the option. Receipt of these premiums
may better enable  the Fund  to achieve  a greater  total return  than would  be
realized  from holding the underlying securities (currency) alone. Moreover, the
income received from  the premium will  offset a portion  of the potential  loss
incurred  by the  Fund if  the securities  (currency) underlying  the option are
ultimately sold (exchanged)  by the Fund  at a loss.  The premium received  will
fluctuate  with varying economic  market conditions. If the  market value of the
portfolio securities  (or the  currencies in  which they  are denominated)  upon
which  call options have been written increases, the Fund may receive less total
return from the portion of its portfolio upon which calls have been written than
it would have had such calls not been written.
 
    As regards listed options and certain OTC options, during the option period,
the Fund  may be  required, at  any  time, to  deliver the  underlying  security
(currency)  against payment of  the exercise price  on any calls  it has written
(exercise of  certain  listed  and  OTC  options  may  be  limited  to  specific
expiration  dates). This  obligation is  terminated upon  the expiration  of the
option period or at such earlier time when the writer effects a closing purchase
transaction. A closing  purchase transaction  is accomplished  by purchasing  an
option  of the same series  as the option previously  written. However, once the
Fund has been assigned an exercise notice,  the Fund will be unable to effect  a
closing purchase transaction.
 
    Closing purchase transactions are ordinarily effected to realize a profit on
an  outstanding call  option to prevent  an underlying  security (currency) from
being called, to permit the sale of  an underlying security (or the exchange  of
the  underlying currency) or to enable the  Fund to write another call option on
the underlying security  (currency) with  either a different  exercise price  or
expiration  date or  both. Also, effecting  a closing  purchase transaction will
permit the cash or proceeds from  the concurrent sale of any securities  subject
to the option to be used for other investments by the Fund. The Fund may realize
a  net gain or loss  from a closing purchase  transaction depending upon whether
the amount of the premium received on the  call option is more or less than  the
cost  of  effecting the  closing purchase  transaction. Any  loss incurred  in a
closing purchase transaction  may be  wholly or partially  offset by  unrealized
appreciation  in  the  market  value  of  the  underlying  security  (currency).
Conversely, a gain resulting from a closing purchase transaction could be offset
in whole  or in  part  or exceeded  by a  decline  in the  market value  of  the
underlying security (currency).
 
    If a call option expires unexercised, the Fund realizes a gain in the amount
of the premium on the option less the commission paid. Such a gain, however, may
be  offset  by  depreciation in  the  market  value of  the  underlying security
(currency) during the  option period. If  a call option  is exercised, the  Fund
realizes  a gain  or loss  from the sale  of the  underlying security (currency)
equal to the difference  between the purchase price  of the underlying  security
(currency)  and the  proceeds of  the sale of  the security  (currency) plus the
premium received for on the option less the commission paid.
 
    Options written by a Fund normally have expiration dates of from up to  nine
months (equity securities) to eighteen months (fixed-income securities) from the
date  written. The  exercise price of  a call option  may be below,  equal to or
above the current market value of the underlying security (currency) at the time
the option is written. See "Risks of Options and Futures Transactions," below.
 
    COVERED PUT WRITING.  As a writer  of a covered put option, the Fund  incurs
an  obligation to buy the  security underlying the option  from the purchaser of
the put, at the option's exercise price at any time during the option period, at
the purchaser's election (certain listed and OTC put options written by the Fund
will be  exercisable  by the  purchaser  only on  a  specific date).  A  put  is
"covered"  if,  at  all  times,  the Fund  maintains,  in  a  segregated account
maintained on  its  behalf  at  the  Fund's  Custodian,  cash,  U.S.  Government
securities  or other high grade  obligations in an amount  equal to at least the
exercise price of the option, at all times during the option period.  Similarly,
a  short put  position could be  covered by  the Fund by  its purchase  of a put
option on the same  security as the underlying  security of the written  option,
where  the exercise price of  the purchased option is equal  to or more than the
exercise price of the  put written or  less than the exercise  price of the  put
written    if    the   mark    to   market    difference   is    maintained   by
 
                                       19
<PAGE>
the  Fund  in  cash,  U.S.  Government  securities  or  other  high  grade  debt
obligations  which  the Fund  holds in  a segregated  account maintained  at its
Custodian. In writing puts, the Fund assumes the risk of loss should the  market
value  of the underlying security decline below the exercise price of the option
(any loss being decreased by the receipt of the premium on the option  written).
In  the  case of  listed  options, during  the option  period,  the Fund  may be
required, at any time, to make payment of the exercise price against delivery of
the underlying security. The operation of and limitations on covered put options
in other respects are substantially identical to those of call options.
 
    The Fund will write put options for two purposes: (1) to receive the  income
derived  from  the premiums  paid  by purchasers;  and  (2) when  the Investment
Manager wishes to purchase the security  underlying the option at a price  lower
than its current market price, in which case it will write the covered put at an
exercise price reflecting the lower purchase price sought. The potential gain on
a  covered put option is limited to the premium received on the option (less the
commissions paid  on  the  transaction)  while the  potential  loss  equals  the
difference between the exercise price of the option and the current market price
of  the underlying securities when  the put is exercised,  offset by the premium
received (less the commissions paid on the transaction).
 
    The Fund may also purchase put options to close out written put positions in
a manner similar to call options closing purchase transactions. In addition, the
Fund may sell a put option which  it has previously purchased prior to the  sale
of the securities (currency) underlying such option. Such a sale would result in
a  net gain or loss depending on whether the amount received on the sale is more
or less than  the premium and  other transaction  costs paid on  the put  option
sold.  Any such gain or loss could be offset  in whole or in part by a change in
the market  value  of  the  underlying security  (currency).  If  a  put  option
purchased  by the Fund expired without being sold or exercised the premium would
be lost.
 
    PURCHASING CALL AND PUT OPTIONS.  As stated in the Prospectus, the Fund  may
purchase  listed and OTC call  and put options in amounts  equalling up to 5% of
its total assets. The  Fund may purchase  call options in order  to close out  a
covered  call position (see "Covered Call Writing" above), to protect against an
increase in price of a security it  anticipates purchasing or, in the case of  a
call  option on foreign currency to hedge  against an adverse exchange rate move
of the currency in which the  security it anticipates purchasing is  denominated
vis-a-vis  the currency in which the exercise price is denominated. The purchase
of  the  call  option  to  effect  a  closing  transaction  on  a  call  written
over-the-counter  may be  a listed or  an OTC  option. In either  case, the call
purchased is likely to be on the same securities (currencies) and have the  same
terms  as the  written option. If  purchased over-the-counter,  the option would
generally be acquired from the  dealer or financial institution which  purchased
the call written by the Fund.
 
    The  Fund may purchase put options  on securities and currencies (or related
currencies) which it  holds in its  portfolio only to  protect itself against  a
decline  in the value of the security (currency). If the value of the underlying
security (currency) were to fall below  the exercise price of the put  purchased
in  an amount greater than the premium paid for the option, the Fund would incur
no additional loss. In  addition, the Fund  may sell a put  option which it  has
previously purchased prior to the sale of the securities (currencies) underlying
such option. Such a sale would result in a net gain or loss depending on whether
the  amount received  on the  sale is more  or less  than the  premium and other
transaction costs paid on the  put option which is sold.  Any such gain or  loss
could  be offset  in whole or  in part by  a change  in the market  value of the
underlying security (currency). If  a put option purchased  by the Fund  expired
without being sold or exercised, the premium would be lost.
 
    RISKS OF OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS.  The successful use of options depends on the
ability  of the Investment Manager and/or  the Sub-Adviser to forecast correctly
interest rates  and market  movements.  If the  market  value of  the  portfolio
securities  (or the  currencies in which  they are denominated)  upon which call
options have been written increases, the  Fund may receive a lower total  return
from  the portion of  its portfolio upon  which calls have  been written than it
would have  had such  calls not  been  written. During  the option  period,  the
covered  call writer has, in return for the  premium on the option, given up the
opportunity for capital appreciation above the exercise price should the  market
price of the underlying
 
                                       20
<PAGE>
security (or the currency in which it is denominated) increase, but has retained
the risk of loss should the price of the underlying security (currency) decline.
The  covered put writer also retains the risk of loss should the market value of
the underlying  security (currency)  decline  below the  exercise price  of  the
option  less the premium received on the sale  of the option. In both cases, the
writer has no  control over  the time  when it may  be required  to fulfill  its
obligation  as a  writer of the  option. Once  an option writer  has received an
exercise notice, it  cannot effect a  closing purchase transaction  in order  to
terminate  its  obligation under  the  option and  must  deliver or  receive the
underlying securities (currency) at the exercise price.
 
    Prior to exercise or expiration, an  option position can only be  terminated
by  entering into  a closing  purchase or  sale transaction.  If a  covered call
option writer is unable to effect a closing purchase transaction or to  purchase
an  offsetting over-the-counter option,  it cannot sell  the underlying security
until the option expires or the option is exercised. Accordingly, a covered call
option writer  may  not  be  able to  sell  (exchange)  an  underlying  security
(currency) at a time when it might otherwise be advantageous to do so. A covered
put  option writer who is unable to  effect a closing purchase transaction or to
purchase an offsetting over-the-counter option  would continue to bear the  risk
of  decline in the market price of  the underlying security (currency) until the
option expires  or is  exercised. In  addition, a  covered put  writer would  be
unable to utilize the amount held in cash or U.S. Government or other high grade
short-term  debt obligations as security for the put option for other investment
purposes until the exercise or expiration of the option.
 
    The Fund's ability to  close out its  position as a writer  of an option  is
dependent  upon the existence of a  liquid secondary market on option Exchanges.
There is no assurance that such a market will exist, particularly in the case of
OTC options, as such options will generally only be closed out by entering  into
a closing purchase transaction with the purchasing dealer. However, the Fund may
be  able to purchase an offsetting option  which does not close out its position
as a writer but constitutes an asset of equal value to the obligation under  the
option  written. If the Fund is not able to either enter into a closing purchase
transaction or purchase an offsetting position, it will be required to  maintain
the  securities subject to the call, or  the collateral underlying the put, even
though it might not be advantageous to do so, until a closing transaction can be
entered into (or the option is exercised or expires).
 
    Among the possible reasons for the  absence of a liquid secondary market  on
an  Exchange are:  (i) insufficient  trading interest  in certain  options; (ii)
restrictions on  transactions  imposed  by an  Exchange;  (iii)  trading  halts,
suspensions  or other restrictions imposed with respect to particular classes or
series of  options or  underlying securities;  (iv) interruption  of the  normal
operations  on an Exchange; (v)  inadequacy of the facilities  of an Exchange or
the Options Clearing Corporation  ("OCC") to handle  current trading volume;  or
(vi)  a decision by one or more  Exchanges to discontinue the trading of options
(or a  particular class  or series  of options),  in which  event the  secondary
market  on that Exchange (or in that class  or series of options) would cease to
exist, although outstanding options on that Exchange that had been issued by the
OCC as  a result  of trades  on that  Exchange would  generally continue  to  be
exercisable in accordance with their terms.
 
    Exchanges limit the amount by which the price of a futures contract may move
on any day. If the price moves equal the daily limit on successive days, then it
may prove impossible to liquidate a futures position until the daily limit moves
have ceased. In the event of adverse price movements, the Fund would continue to
be  required to  make daily  cash payments of  variation margin  on open futures
positions. In such situations, if the Fund has insufficient cash, it may have to
sell portfolio securities to meet daily variation margin requirements at a  time
when  it may be disadvantageous to do so.  In addition, the Fund may be required
to take or  make delivery of  the instruments underlying  interest rate  futures
contracts  it holds at a time when it is disadvantageous to do so. The inability
to close out options and futures positions could also have an adverse impact  on
the Fund's ability to effectively hedge its portfolio.
 
                                       21
<PAGE>
    In the event of the bankruptcy of a broker through which the Fund engages in
transactions  in options, futures or options  thereon, the Fund could experience
delays and/or losses in liquidating open positions purchased or sold through the
broker and/or  incur a  loss of  all or  part of  its margin  deposits with  the
broker. Similarly, in the event of the bankruptcy of the writer of an OTC option
purchased  by the Fund, the Fund  could experience a loss of  all or part of the
value of the option. Transactions are entered into by the Fund only with brokers
or financial institutions deemed creditworthy by the Investment Manager.
 
    Each of  the Exchanges  has established  limitations governing  the  maximum
number  of  call or  put  options on  the  same underlying  security  or futures
contract (whether or  not covered) which  may be written  by a single  investor,
whether  acting  alone or  in concert  with others  (regardless of  whether such
options are written on the same or different Exchanges or are held or written on
one or more accounts or through one or more brokers). An Exchange may order  the
liquidation  of positions found  to be in  violation of these  limits and it may
impose other sanctions or restrictions.  These position limits may restrict  the
number of listed options which the Fund may write.
 
    While the futures contracts and options transactions to be engaged in by the
Fund  for  the  purpose  of  hedging the  Fund's  portfolio  securities  are not
speculative in nature, there are risks inherent in the use of such  instruments.
One  such risk which may arise in employing futures contracts to protect against
the price volatility of  portfolio securities is that  the prices of  securities
and  indexes  subject to  futures contracts  (and  thereby the  futures contract
prices) may correlate imperfectly  with the behavior of  the cash prices of  the
Fund's  portfolio securities. Another such risk  is that prices of interest rate
futures contracts may not move in tandem with the changes in prevailing interest
rates against which the Fund seeks a hedge. A correlation may also be  distorted
by  the fact that the futures market  is dominated by short-term traders seeking
to profit from the difference between a contract or security price objective and
their cost of  borrowed funds. Such  distortions are generally  minor and  would
diminish as the contract approached maturity.
 
    The  hours of trading for options may  not conform to the hours during which
the underlying securities  are traded.  To the  extent that  the option  markets
close  before the markets  for the underlying  securities, significant price and
rate movements can take place in the underlying markets that cannot be reflected
in the option markets.
 
    STOCK INDEX OPTIONS.   Options on  stock indexes are  similar to options  on
stock  except that, rather than the right to take or make delivery of stock at a
specified price,  an option  on a  stock index  gives the  holder the  right  to
receive,  upon exercise of the option, an amount of cash if the closing level of
the stock index upon which the option is based is greater than, in the case of a
call, or less than, in the case of a put, the exercise price of the option. This
amount of cash  is equal to  such difference  between the closing  price of  the
index  and  the  exercise price  of  the  option expressed  in  dollars  times a
specified multiple  (the  "multiplier").  The multiplier  for  an  index  option
performs  a  function similar  to the  unit of  trading for  a stock  option. It
determines the total dollar value per  contract of each point in the  difference
between  the exercise price of an option and the current level of the underlying
index. A multiplier of  100 means that a  one-point difference will yield  $100.
Options  on different indexes may have  different multipliers. The writer of the
option is obligated,  in return for  the premium received,  to make delivery  of
this  amount. Unlike stock  options, all settlements  are in cash  and a gain or
loss depends  on  price  movements  in  the stock  market  generally  (or  in  a
particular  segment of the market) rather than the price movements in individual
stocks. Currently, options are traded on the S&P 100 Index and the S&P 500 Index
on the Chicago Board Options Exchange,  the Major Market Index and the  Computer
Technology  Index,  Oil  Index and  Institutional  Index on  the  American Stock
Exchange and the NYSE Index and NYSE Beta Index on the New York Stock  Exchange,
The  Financial News Composite Index on the  Pacific Stock Exchange and the Value
Line Index, National O-T-C Index and  Utilities Index on the Philadelphia  Stock
Exchange, each of which and any similar index on which options are traded in the
future  which include stocks that are not  limited to any particular industry or
segment of the market is  referred to as a  "broadly based stock market  index."
Options  on stock indexes provide  the Fund with a  means of protecting the Fund
against the  risk of  market wide  price movements.  If the  Investment  Manager
anticipates a market
 
                                       22
<PAGE>
decline,  the Fund  could purchase  a stock  index put  option. If  the expected
market decline materialized, the resulting decrease  in the value of the  Fund's
portfolio  would be offset to the extent of the increase in the value of the put
option. If  the Investment  Manager  anticipates a  market  rise, the  Fund  may
purchase  a stock index  call option to  enable the Fund  to participate in such
rise until  completion  of  anticipated  common stock  purchases  by  the  Fund.
Purchases and sales of stock index options also enable the Investment Manager to
more speedily achieve changes in the Fund's equity positions.
 
    The  Fund will be  able to write put  options on stock  indexes only if such
positions are covered by  cash, U.S. Government securities  or other high  grade
debt  obligations equal to the aggregate exercise price of the puts, which cover
is held for the  Fund in a  segregated account maintained for  it by the  Fund's
Custodian. All call options on stock indexes written by the Fund will be covered
either  by a portfolio  of stocks substantially replicating  the movement of the
index underlying the call  option or by  holding a separate  call option on  the
same stock index with a strike price no higher than the strike price of the call
option sold by the Fund.
 
    RISKS  OF OPTIONS ON INDEXES.  Because  exercises of stock index options are
settled in cash, call  writers such as  the Fund cannot  provide in advance  for
their  potential settlement obligations by  acquiring and holding the underlying
securities. A call writer can offset some of the risk of its writing position by
holding a  diversified  portfolio  of  stocks similar  to  those  on  which  the
underlying  index  is  based. However,  most  investors cannot,  as  a practical
matter, acquire and hold a portfolio  containing exactly the same stocks as  the
underlying index, and, as a result, bear a risk that the value of the securities
held  will vary from the value of the  index. Even if an index call writer could
assemble a  stock  portfolio that  exactly  reproduced the  composition  of  the
underlying  index,  the writer  still would  not  be fully  covered from  a risk
standpoint because of the "timing risk" inherent in writing index options.  When
an  index option is exercised, the amount of cash that the holder is entitled to
receive is  determined by  the difference  between the  exercise price  and  the
closing  index level  on the date  when the  option is exercised.  As with other
kinds of options, the writer will not learn that it has been assigned until  the
next  business day, at the earliest. The time lag between exercise and notice of
assignment poses  no  risk for  the  writer of  a  covered call  on  a  specific
underlying  security,  such  as  a  common  stock,  because  there  the writer's
obligation is to deliver the underlying security,  not to pay its value as of  a
fixed  time  in the  past. So  long as  the writer  already owns  the underlying
security, it can satisfy its settlement obligations by simply delivering it, and
the risk that its value  may have declined since the  exercise date is borne  by
the  exercising holder. In contrast,  even if the writer  of an index call holds
stocks that exactly match the composition  of the underlying index, it will  not
be able to satisfy its assignment obligations by delivering those stocks against
payment  of the exercise price.  Instead, it will be required  to pay cash in an
amount based on the closing index value on the exercise date; and by the time it
learns that  it  has  been  assigned,  the  index  may  have  declined,  with  a
corresponding  decrease in the value of  its stock portfolio. This "timing risk"
is an inherent limitation on  the ability of index  call writers to cover  their
risk exposure by holding stock positions.
 
    A  holder of an index option who exercises it before the closing index value
for that day is available runs the  risk that the level of the underlying  index
may  subsequently change. If such  a change causes the  exercised option to fall
out-of-the-money, the exercising holder will  be required to pay the  difference
between  the closing index value and the exercise price of the option (times the
applicable multiplier) to the assigned writer.
 
    If dissemination of the current level of an underlying index is interrupted,
or if trading is interrupted in  stocks accounting for a substantial portion  of
the  value of an index, the trading of  options on that index will ordinarily be
halted. If the trading of options on an underlying index is halted, an  exchange
may impose restrictions prohibiting the exercise of such options.
 
    FUTURES  CONTRACTS.  The Fund may purchase  and sell interest rate and stock
index futures  contracts  ("futures contracts")  that  are traded  on  U.S.  and
foreign  commodity  exchanges on  such  underlying securities  as  U.S. Treasury
bonds, notes and bills ("interest rate" futures), on the U.S. dollar and foreign
 
                                       23
<PAGE>
currencies, and such indexes as the S&P 500 Index, the Moody's  Investment-Grade
Corporate  Bond Index and  the New York Stock  Exchange Composite Index ("index"
futures).
 
    As a  futures contract  purchaser, the  Fund incurs  an obligation  to  take
delivery  of a specified amount  of the obligation underlying  the contract at a
specified time in the  future for a  specified price. As a  seller of a  futures
contract,  the Fund incurs an obligation to  deliver the specified amount of the
underlying obligation at a specified time in return for an agreed upon price.
 
    The Fund will  purchase or  sell interest  rate futures  contracts and  bond
index  futures contracts for  the purpose of  hedging its fixed-income portfolio
(or anticipated  portfolio) securities  against changes  in prevailing  interest
rates.  If the Investment Manager anticipates  that interest rates may rise and,
concomitantly, the price of fixed-income securities  fall, the Fund may sell  an
interest  rate futures contract  or a bond index  futures contract. If declining
interest rates are anticipated, the Fund  may purchase an interest rate  futures
contract to protect against a potential increase in the price of U.S. Government
securities  the Fund intends to purchase. Subsequently, appropriate fixed-income
securities may be purchased by the Fund in an orderly fashion; as securities are
purchased, corresponding  futures positions  would be  terminated by  offsetting
sales of contracts.
 
    The  Fund will purchase or sell futures  contracts on the U.S. dollar and on
foreign currencies to hedge against an anticipated rise or decline in the  value
of the U.S. dollar or foreign currency in which a portfolio security of the Fund
is denominated vis-a-vis another currency.
 
    The Fund will purchase or sell stock index futures contracts for the purpose
of  hedging its equity  portfolio (or anticipated  portfolio) securities against
changes in their prices. If the  Investment Manager anticipates that the  prices
of  stock held by  the Fund may  fall, the Fund  may sell a  stock index futures
contract.  Conversely,  if  the  Investment  Manager  wishes  to  hedge  against
anticipated  price rises in those stocks which the Fund intends to purchase, the
Fund may purchase stock index futures contracts. In addition, interest rate  and
stock  index and currency futures  contracts will be bought  or sold in order to
close out a short or long position in a corresponding futures contract.
 
    Although most interest rate  futures contracts call  for actual delivery  or
acceptance  of  securities,  the contracts  usually  are closed  out  before the
settlement date  without  the  making  or  taking  of  delivery.  Index  futures
contracts  provide for the  delivery of an  amount of cash  equal to a specified
dollar amount times the difference between the stock index value at the open  or
close  of the last trading day of the contract and the futures contract price. A
futures contract sale is closed out by effecting a futures contract purchase for
the same aggregate amount of the specific  type of equity security and the  same
delivery  date. If  the sale  price exceeds  the offsetting  purchase price, the
seller would be paid the difference and would realize a gain. If the  offsetting
purchase  price exceeds the sale price, the  seller would pay the difference and
would realize a loss.  Similarly, a futures contract  purchase is closed out  by
effecting  a futures contract sale for the same aggregate amount of the specific
type of equity security and the same delivery date. If the offsetting sale price
exceeds the purchase price, the purchaser  would realize a gain, whereas if  the
purchase  price exceeds the offsetting sale price, the purchaser would realize a
loss. There is no assurance that the Fund  will be able to enter into a  closing
transaction.
 
    INTEREST RATE FUTURES CONTRACTS.  When the Fund enters into an interest rate
futures contract, it is initially required to deposit with the Fund's Custodian,
in a segregated account in the name of the broker performing the transaction, an
"initial  margin"  of cash  or U.S.  Government securities  or other  high grade
short-term debt obligations equal  to approximately 2%  of the contract  amount.
Initial  margin requirements are  established by the  Exchanges on which futures
contracts trade and  may, from time  to time, change.  In addition, brokers  may
establish  margin  deposit  requirements  in excess  of  those  required  by the
Exchanges.
 
    Initial  margin  in  futures  transactions  is  different  from  margin   in
securities transactions in that initial margin does not involve the borrowing of
funds  by a brokers' client but is, rather,  a good faith deposit on the futures
contract which will be returned to the  Fund upon the proper termination of  the
futures  contract. The margin deposits  made are marked to  market daily and the
Fund may be required to make
 
                                       24
<PAGE>
subsequent deposits called "variation margin", with the Fund's Custodian, in the
account in the name of the broker, which are reflective of price fluctuations in
the futures  contract.  Currently,  interest  rates  futures  contracts  can  be
purchased  on  debt  securities such  as  U.S.  Treasury Bills  and  Bonds, U.S.
Treasury Notes with maturities between 6 1/2 and 10 years, GNMA Certificates and
Bank Certificates of Deposit.
 
    CURRENCY FUTURES.    Generally, foreign  currency  futures provide  for  the
delivery  of a specified amount of a given currency, on the exercise date, for a
set exercise  price  denominated in  U.S.  dollars or  other  currency.  Foreign
currency  futures contracts would be entered into  for the same reason and under
the same  circumstances  as forward  foreign  currency exchange  contracts.  The
Investment  Manager  will assess  such factors  as  cost spreads,  liquidity and
transaction costs in determining whether to utilize futures contracts or forward
contracts in its foreign currency transactions and hedging strategy.  Currently,
currency  futures exist for,  among other foreign  currencies, the Japanese yen,
German mark, Canadian dollar, British  pound, Swiss franc and European  currency
unit.
 
    Purchasers  and sellers of foreign currency futures contracts are subject to
the same risks that  apply to the  buying and selling  of futures generally.  In
addition, there are risks associated with foreign currency futures contracts and
their  use  as a  hedging device  similar  to those  associated with  options on
foreign currencies described  above. Further, settlement  of a foreign  currency
futures  contract must occur within the country issuing the underlying currency.
Thus, the  Fund must  accept or  make  delivery of  the underlying  currency  in
accordance  with any U.S.  or foreign restrictions  or regulations regarding the
maintenance of  foreign  banking  arrangements  by U.S.  residents  and  may  be
required  to pay any fees, taxes or  charges associated with such delivery which
are assessed in the issuing country.
 
    Options on foreign currency futures contracts may involve certain additional
risks. Trading options on foreign currency futures contracts is relatively  new.
The  ability to establish and close out  positions on such options is subject to
the maintenance of a liquid secondary market. To reduce this risk, the Fund will
not purchase or write options on  foreign currency futures contracts unless  and
until,  in the  Investment Manager's  opinion, the  market for  such options has
developed sufficiently that the  risks in connection with  such options are  not
greater than the risks in connection with transactions in the underlying foreign
currency.
 
    INDEX FUTURES CONTRACTS.  The Fund may invest in index futures contracts. An
index  futures contract sale  creates an obligation  by the Fund,  as seller, to
deliver cash at  a specified  future time.  An index  futures contract  purchase
would  create an obligation by the Fund,  as purchaser, to take delivery of cash
at a specified  future time.  Futures contracts on  indexes do  not require  the
physical  delivery of securities, but provide for a final cash settlement on the
expiration date  which  reflects  accumulated profits  and  losses  credited  or
debited to each party's account.
 
    The  Fund  is  required to  maintain  margin deposits  with  brokerage firms
through which it  effects index futures  contracts in a  manner similar to  that
described  above  for interest  rate futures  contracts. Currently,  the initial
margin requirements  range from  3% to  10%  of the  contract amount  for  index
futures.  In addition,  due to  current industry  practice, daily  variations in
gains and losses on open contracts are  required to be reflected in cash in  the
form  of variation margin payments. The Fund  may be required to make additional
margin payments during the term of the contract.
 
    At any time prior to expiration of the futures contract, the Fund may  elect
to  close the  position by  taking an  opposite position  which will  operate to
terminate the Fund's position in the futures contract. A final determination  of
variation  margin is  then made, additional  cash is  required to be  paid by or
released to the Fund and the Fund realizes a loss or a gain.
 
    Currently, index futures contracts can be purchased or sold with respect to,
among others, the Standard  & Poor's 500  Stock Price Index  and the Standard  &
Poor's  100 Stock Price Index  on the Chicago Mercantile  Exchange, the New York
Stock Exchange  Composite Index  on the  New York  Futures Exchange,  the  Major
Market  Index  on  the  American Stock  Exchange,  the  Moody's Investment-Grade
 
                                       25
<PAGE>
Corporate Bond Index  on the Chicago  Board of  Trade and the  Value Line  Stock
Index on the Kansas City Board of Trade.
 
    OPTIONS  ON FUTURES CONTRACTS.  The Fund may purchase and write call and put
options on futures contracts and enter into closing transactions with respect to
such options to terminate an existing position. An option on a futures  contract
gives  the purchaser the right (in return  for the premium paid), and the writer
the obligation, to assume a position in  a futures contract (a long position  if
the option is a call and a short position if the option is a put) at a specified
exercise  price at any time during the term  of the option. Upon exercise of the
option, the delivery of the futures position by the writer of the option to  the
holder  of the option is  accompanied by delivery of  the accumulated balance in
the writer's futures margin  account, which represents the  amount by which  the
market  price of the  futures contract at  the time of  exercise exceeds, in the
case of a call, or is less than, in the case of a put, the exercise price of the
option on the futures contract.
 
    The Fund will purchase and write options on futures contracts for  identical
purposes  to  those set  forth  above for  the  purchase of  a  futures contract
(purchase of a call option or  sale of a put option)  and the sale of a  futures
contract  (purchase of a put option or sale of a call option), or to close out a
long or short  position in futures  contracts. If, for  example, the  Investment
Manager  wished  to  protect  against  an increase  in  interest  rates  and the
resulting negative  impact  on  the  value of  a  portion  of  its  fixed-income
portfolio,  it might write a  call option on an  interest rate futures contract,
the underlying security of  which correlates with the  portion of the  portfolio
the  Investment Manager seeks to hedge. Any  premiums received in the writing of
options on futures  contracts may, of  course, augment the  total return of  the
Fund  and thereby  provide a further  hedge against losses  resulting from price
declines in portions of the Fund's portfolio.
 
    The writer of an option on a futures contract is required to deposit initial
and variation margin  pursuant to  requirements similar to  those applicable  to
futures  contracts. Premiums received from the writing of an option on a futures
contract are included in initial margin deposits.
 
    LIMITATIONS ON FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS  ON FUTURES.  The Fund may  not
enter into futures contracts or purchase related options thereon if, immediately
thereafter, the amount committed to margin plus the amount paid for premiums for
unexpired  options on futures  contracts exceeds 5%  of the value  of the Fund's
total assets, after taking into  account unrealized gains and unrealized  losses
on such contracts it has entered into, provided, however, that in the case of an
option that is in-the-money (the exercise price of the call (put) option is less
(more)  than  the  market price  of  the  underlying security)  at  the  time of
purchase, the  in-the-money  amount  may  be excluded  in  calculating  the  5%.
However,  there is no overall limitation on  the percentage of the Fund's assets
which may be subject to  a hedge position. In  addition, in accordance with  the
regulations of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission ("CFTC") under which the
Fund  is exempted from registration  as a commodity pool  operator, the Fund may
only enter into futures contracts and options on futures contracts  transactions
in  accordance  with the  limitation described  above. If  the CFTC  changes its
regulations so that the Fund would  be permitted more latitude to write  options
on  futures contracts  for purposes  other than  hedging the  Fund's investments
without CFTC registration, the  Fund may engage in  such transactions for  those
purposes.  Except as described above, there are  no other limitations on the use
of futures and options thereon by the Fund.
 
    RISKS OF  TRANSACTIONS  IN  FUTURES  CONTRACTS AND  RELATED  OPTIONS.    The
successful  use of  futures and  related options depends  on the  ability of the
Investment Manager and/or the Sub-Adviser to accurately predict market, interest
rate and currency movements.  As stated in  the Prospectus the  Fund may sell  a
futures  contract to protect against the decline  in the value of securities (or
the currency in which  they are denominated)  held by the  Fund. However, it  is
possible that the futures market may advance and the value of securities (or the
currency  in which they are  denominated) held in the  portfolio of the Fund may
decline. If this occurred, the Fund would lose money on the futures contract and
also experience a decline in value  of its portfolio securities. However,  while
this  could occur for a very  brief period or to a  very small degree, over time
the value of a diversified portfolio will tend to move in the same direction  as
the futures contracts.
 
                                       26
<PAGE>
    If  the Fund purchases a  futures contract to hedge  against the increase in
value of  securities it  intends to  buy, (or  the currency  in which  they  are
denominated)  and  the value  of such  securities decreases,  then the  Fund may
determine not to invest in the securities as planned and will realize a loss  on
the  futures contract  that is  not offset by  a reduction  in the  price of the
securities.
 
    In addition, if the Fund holds a long position in a futures contract or  has
sold  a put  option on a  futures contract,  it will hold  cash, U.S. Government
securities or other high grade debt  obligations equal to the purchase price  of
the contract or the exercise price of the put option (less the amount of initial
or  variation margin on deposit) in a segregated account maintained for the Fund
by its  Custodian. Alternatively,  the Fund  could cover  its long  position  by
purchasing  a put option on the same  futures contract with an exercise price as
high or higher than the price of the contract held by the Fund.
 
    If the Fund maintains a short position  in a futures contract or has sold  a
call  option on a futures contract, it will cover this position by holding, in a
segregated account maintained at its Custodian, cash, U.S. Government securities
or other high grade debt obligations equal  in value (when added to any  initial
or variation margin on deposit) to the market value of the securities underlying
the  futures contract or the  exercise price of the  option. Such a position may
also be covered by owning the securities underlying the futures contract (in the
case of a stock index futures  contract a portfolio of securities  substantially
replicating the relevant index), or by holding a call option permitting the Fund
to  purchase the same contract at a price  no higher than the price at which the
short position was established.
 
    Exchanges may limit the amount by  which the price of futures contracts  may
move  on any day. If  the price moves equal the  daily limit on successive days,
then it may  prove impossible to  liquidate a futures  position until the  daily
limit moves have ceased. In the event of adverse price movements, the Fund would
be  required to  make daily  cash payments of  variation margin  on open futures
positions. In such situations, if the Fund has insufficient cash, it may have to
sell portfolio securities to meet daily variation margin requirements at a  time
when  it may be disadvantageous to do so.  In addition, the Fund may be required
to take delivery of the  instruments underlying interest rate futures  contracts
it  holds at a time when it is  disadvantageous to do so. The inability to close
out options  and futures  positions could  also have  an adverse  impact on  the
Fund's ability to effectively hedge its portfolio.
 
    Futures contracts and options thereon which are purchased or sold on foreign
commodities  exchanges  may  have  greater  price  volatility  than  their  U.S.
counterparts. Furthermore, foreign commodities  exchanges may be less  regulated
and under less governmental scrutiny than U.S. exchanges. Brokerage commissions,
clearing  costs and other transaction costs  may be higher on foreign exchanges.
Greater margin requirements may limit the  Fund's ability to enter into  certain
commodity  transactions on foreign exchanges. Moreover, differences in clearance
and delivery  requirements  on foreign  exchanges  may occasion  delays  in  the
settlement of the Fund's transactions effected on foreign exchanges.
 
    The  extent to which the Fund  may enter into transactions involving options
and futures contracts may be limited by the Internal Revenue Code's requirements
for qualification as a regulated investment company and the Fund's intention  to
qualify  as such. See "Dividends, Distributions and Taxes" in the Prospectus and
the Statement of Additional Information.
 
    While the futures contracts and options transactions to be engaged in by the
Fund for  the  purpose  of  hedging the  Fund's  portfolio  securities  are  not
speculative  in nature, there are risks inherent in the use of such instruments.
One such risk which may arise in employing futures contracts to protect  against
the  price volitility of portfolio securities  (and the currencies in which they
are denominated) is that the prices of securities and indexes subject to futures
contracts (and thereby  the futures contract  prices) may correlate  imperfectly
with the behavior of the cash prices of the Fund's portfolio securities (and the
currencies  in which they are denominated). Another  such risk is that prices of
interest rate  futures contracts  may not  move in  tandem with  the changes  in
prevailing  interest rates against  which the Fund seeks  a hedge. A correlation
may also be distorted (a) temporarily,  by short-term traders seeking to  profit
from  the difference  between a contract  or security price  objective and their
cost of borrowed funds; (b) by investors in futures contracts electing to  close
out their contracts through offsetting transactions
 
                                       27
<PAGE>
rather  than  meet  margin deposit  requirements;  (c) by  investors  in futures
contracts opting to make or take  delivery of underlying securities rather  than
engage  in  closing  transactions,  thereby reducing  liquidity  of  the futures
market; and (d) temporarily, by speculators who view the deposit requirements in
the futures markets as less onerous than margin requirements in the cash market.
Due to the possibility of price distortion in the futures market and because  of
the  imperfect correlation  between movements  in the  prices of  securities and
movements in the  prices of futures  contracts, a correct  forecast of  interest
rate trends may still not result in a successful hedging transaction.
 
    As  stated in the prospectus, there is  no assurance that a liquid secondary
market will exist for  futures contracts and related  options in which the  Fund
may  invest. In the event a liquid market does not exist, it may not be possible
to close out a futures  position, and in the  event of adverse price  movements,
the  Fund would continue to be required to make daily cash payments of variation
margin. In addition,  limitations imposed by  an exchange or  board of trade  on
which  futures contracts are traded may compel  or prevent the Fund from closing
out a contract which may result in  reduced gain or increased loss to the  Fund.
The absence of a liquid market in futures contracts might cause the Fund to make
or  take  delivery  of  the underlying  securities  at  a time  when  it  may be
disadvantageous to do so.
 
    Compared to the purchase or sale of futures contracts, the purchase of  call
or  put options on  futures contracts involves  less potential risk  to the Fund
because the maximum amount  at risk is  the premium paid  for the options  (plus
transaction  costs). However, there may be  circumstances when the purchase of a
call or put  option on a  futures contract would  result in a  loss to the  Fund
notwithstanding that the purchase or sale of a futures contract would not result
in  a loss, as in the  instance where there is no  movement in the prices of the
futures contract or underlying securities.
 
    The Investment  Manager  has  substantial  experience  in  the  use  of  the
investment  techniques described  above under  the heading  "Options and Futures
Transactions," which techniques  require skills different  from those needed  to
select   the  portfolio  securities  underlying   various  options  and  futures
contracts.
 
    NEW INSTUMENTS.  New futures contracts, options and other financial products
and various combinations thereof continue to  be developed. The Fund may  invest
in  any such  futures, options or  products as  may be developed,  to the extent
consistent with its investment objective and applicable regulatory requirements.
 
PORTFOLIO TURNOVER
 
    It is anticipated that  the Fund's portfolio turnover  rate will not  exceed
100%.  A 100% turnover rate would occur,  for example, if 100% of the securities
held in  the Fund's  portfolio  (excluding all  securities whose  maturities  at
acquisition were one year or less) were sold and replaced within one year.
 
INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    In addition to the investment restrictions enumerated in the Prospectus, the
investment   restrictions  listed  below  have  been  adopted  by  the  Fund  as
fundamental  policies,  except  as  otherwise   indicated.  Under  the  Act,   a
fundamental  policy may  not be changed  without the  vote of a  majority of the
outstanding voting  securities  of the  Fund,  as defined  in  the Act.  Such  a
majority  is defined as the lesser of (a) 67% or more of the shares present at a
meeting of shareholders, if the holders of 50% of the outstanding shares of  the
Fund are present or represented by proxy or (b) more than 50% of the outstanding
shares of the Fund.
 
    The Fund may not:
 
         1. Purchase or sell real estate or interests therein, although the Fund
    may  purchase securities of  issuers which engage  in real estate operations
    and securities secured by real estate or interests therein.
 
                                       28
<PAGE>
         2. Purchase  oil,  gas  or  other mineral  leases,  rights  or  royalty
    contracts  or exploration or development programs,  except that the Fund may
    invest in the securities of companies  which operate, invest in, or  sponsor
    such programs.
 
         3.  Borrow money, except that the Fund,  (i) may borrow from a bank for
    temporary or emergency purposes  and (ii) may  engage in reverse  repurchase
    agreements and dollar rolls, in amounts not exceeding 5% (taken at the lower
    of  cost or  current value)  of its total  assets (not  including the amount
    borrowed).
 
         4. Pledge its  assets or assign  or otherwise encumber  them except  to
    secure  borrowings effected within the  limitations set forth in restriction
    (3). For  the  purpose of  this  restriction, collateral  arrangements  with
    respect  to the writing of options  and collateral arrangements with respect
    to initial or variation margin for futures  are not deemed to be pledges  of
    assets.
 
         5. Issue senior securities as defined in the Act, except insofar as the
    Fund  may  be deemed  to  have issued  a senior  security  by reason  of (a)
    entering into any repurchase or reverse repurchase agreement; (b) purchasing
    any securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis; (c) purchasing or
    selling futures contracts,  forward foreign exchange  contracts or  options;
    (d)  borrowing money in accordance with restrictions described above; or (e)
    lending portfolio securities.
 
         6. Make loans of  money or securities, except:  (a) by the purchase  of
    publicly   distributed  debt  obligations  in  which  the  Fund  may  invest
    consistent with its investment objective and policies; (b) by investment  in
    repurchase agreements; or (c) by lending its portfolio securities.
 
         7. Make short sales of securities.
 
         8.  Purchase securities on margin, except  for such short-term loans as
    are necessary  for the  clearance of  portfolio securities.  The deposit  or
    payment  by  the Fund  of  initial or  variation  margin in  connection with
    futures contracts or related options thereon is not considered the  purchase
    of a security on margin.
 
         9. Engage in the underwriting of securities, except insofar as the Fund
    may  be deemed an underwriter under the  Securities Act of 1933 in disposing
    of a portfolio security.
 
        10. Invest for the  purpose of exercising control  or management of  any
    other issuer.
 
        11.  Purchase  securities  of  other  investment  companies,  except  in
    connection with a  merger, consolidation, reorganization  or acquisition  of
    assets  or in accordance with the provisions of Section 12(d) of the Act and
    any Rules promulgated thereunder.
 
        12. Purchase or  sell commodities or  commodities contracts except  that
    the Fund may purchase or sell futures contracts or options on futures.
 
    In  addition,  as  a  nonfundamental  policy, the  Fund  may  not  invest in
securities of  any issuer  if, to  the knowledge  of the  Fund, any  officer  or
Trustee  of the Fund or  any officer or director  of the Investment Manager owns
more than 1/2  of 1%  of the  outstanding securities  of such  issuer, and  such
officers,  trustees  and  directors who  own  more than  1/2  of 1%  own  in the
aggregate more than 5% of the outstanding securities of such issuers.
 
    If a percentage restriction is adhered to at the time of investment, a later
increase or  decrease  in  percentage  resulting from  a  change  in  values  of
portfolio  securities or amount of total or  net assets will not be considered a
violation of any of the foregoing restrictions.
 
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    Subject to the general supervision  of the Trustees, the Investment  Manager
and the Sub-Adviser are responsible for decisions to buy and sell securities for
the  Fund, the selection of brokers and  dealers to effect the transactions, and
the negotiation  of  brokerage  commissions,  if any.  Purchases  and  sales  of
 
                                       29
<PAGE>
securities  on  a  stock exchange  are  effected  through brokers  who  charge a
commission for their  services. In the  over-the-counter market, securities  are
generally traded on a "net" basis with dealers acting as principal for their own
accounts without a stated commission, although the price of the security usually
includes  a  profit to  the dealer.  The  Fund expects  that securities  will be
purchased at times in  underwritten offerings where the  price includes a  fixed
amount of compensation, generally referred to as the underwriter's concession or
discount.  Options and futures  transactions will usually  be effected through a
broker and a commission will be charged. On occasion, the Fund may also purchase
certain money  market instruments  directly from  an issuer,  in which  case  no
commissions or discounts are paid.
 
    The  Investment Manager  and the  Sub-Adviser currently  serve as investment
advisers to a number of clients,  including other investment companies, and  may
in  the future act  as investment adviser to  others. It is  the practice of the
Investment Manager and the Sub-Adviser  to cause purchase and sale  transactions
to be allocated among the Fund and others whose assets it manages in such manner
as  it deems  equitable. In  making such  allocations among  the Fund  and other
client accounts,  the  main factors  considered  are the  respective  investment
objectives,  the relative size  of portfolio holdings of  the same or comparable
securities, the  availability of  cash for  investment, the  size of  investment
commitments  generally  held and  the opinions  of  the persons  responsible for
managing the portfolios of the Fund and other client accounts.
 
    The policy of the Fund regarding  purchases and sales of securities for  its
portfolio  is that  primary consideration  will be  given to  obtaining the most
favorable prices and efficient executions of transactions. Consistent with  this
policy,  when  securities transactions  are effected  on  a stock  exchange, the
Fund's policy is  to pay commissions  which are considered  fair and  reasonable
without necessarily determining that the lowest possible commissions are paid in
all  circumstances.  The Fund  believes that  a requirement  always to  seek the
lowest possible commission cost could impede effective portfolio management  and
preclude  the Fund and the Investment Manager and the Sub-Adviser from obtaining
a high quality of brokerage and  research services. In seeking to determine  the
reasonableness  of brokerage commissions paid in any transaction, the Investment
Manager and the  Sub-Adviser rely  upon its experience  and knowledge  regarding
commissions  generally  charged  by  various  brokers  and  on  its  judgment in
evaluating  the  brokerage  and  research  services  received  from  the  broker
effecting  the transaction.  Such determinations are  necessarily subjective and
imprecise, and in most  cases an exact  dollar value for  those services is  not
ascertainable.
 
    The  Fund  anticipates that  certain of  its transactions  involving foreign
securities will be effected on  foreign securities exchanges. Fixed  commissions
on  such  transactions  are  generally  higher  than  negotiated  commissions on
domestic transactions. There is also  generally less government supervision  and
regulation  of  foreign  securities exchanges  and  brokers than  in  the United
States.
 
    In seeking to implement the Fund's policies, the Investment Manager and  the
Sub-Adviser   effect  transactions  with  those  brokers  and  dealers  who  the
Investment Manager and the Sub-Adviser believe provide the most favorable prices
and are capable  of providing  efficient executions. If  the Investment  Manager
and/or  the Sub-Adviser believe  such prices and  executions are obtainable from
more than one broker or dealer,  it may give consideration to placing  portfolio
transactions  with those brokers and dealers who also furnish research and other
services to the  Fund or  the Investment  Manager and/or  the Sub-Adviser.  Such
services  may include, but are not limited to, any one or more of the following:
information  as  to  the  availability  of  securities  for  purchase  or  sale;
statistical  or factual information  or opinions pertaining  to investment; wire
services; and appraisals or evaluations of portfolio securities.
 
    The information  and services  received by  the Investment  Manager and  the
Sub-Adviser from brokers and dealers may be of benefit to them in the management
of  accounts of some of their other clients and may not in all cases benefit the
Fund directly. While the receipt of  such information and services is useful  in
varying  degrees and would  generally reduce the amount  of research or services
otherwise performed by the Investment Manager and/or the Sub-Adviser and thereby
reduce their expenses, it is  of indeterminable value and  the fees paid to  the
Investment Manager and the Sub-Adviser are not reduced by any amount that may be
attributable to the value of such services.
 
                                       30
<PAGE>
    Pursuant to an order of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Fund may
effect  principal transactions in certain money market instruments with DWR. The
Fund will limit  its transactions  with DWR  to U.S.  Government and  Government
Agency  Securities, Bank  Money Instruments  (i.e., Certificates  of Deposit and
Bankers' Acceptances) and Commercial Paper.  Such transactions will be  effected
with  DWR only when the  price available from DWR  is better than that available
from other dealers.
 
    Consistent with  the  policy  described  above,  brokerage  transactions  in
securities listed on exchanges or admitted to unlisted trading privileges may be
effected  through DWR and/or affiliated broker-dealers of the Sub-Adviser, i.e.;
Morgan Grenfell Asia and  Partners Securities Pte.  Limited and Morgan  Grenfell
Asia Securities (Hong Kong Limited). In order for these broker-dealers to effect
any  portfolio  transactions  for  the  Fund,  the  commissions,  fees  or other
remuneration received  by them  must  be reasonable  and  fair compared  to  the
commissions, fees or other remuneration paid to other brokers in connection with
comparable  transactions involving similar securities being purchased or sold on
an exchange during a comparable period of time. This standard would allow DWR to
receive no more than the remuneration which would be expected to be received  by
an  unaffiliated broker in a commensurate arm's-length transaction. Furthermore,
the Board of Trustees of the Fund, including a majority of the Trustees who  are
not  "interested"  persons of  the Fund,  as  defined in  the Act,  have adopted
procedures which are reasonably designed  to provide that any commissions,  fees
or  other  remuneration  paid  to  DWR and  affiliates  of  the  Sub-Adviser are
consistent with the foregoing standard. The Fund does not reduce the  management
fee it pays to the Investment Manager by any amount of the brokerage commissions
it may pay to DWR.
 
UNDERWRITING
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    Dean  Witter Distributors Inc. (the "Underwriter") has agreed to purchase up
to 10,000,000 shares from the Fund,  which number may be increased or  decreased
in  accordance  with  the  Underwriting  Agreement.  The  Underwriting Agreement
provides that the obligation of the Underwriter is subject to certain conditions
precedent (such as the filing of certain forms and documents required by various
federal and state agencies and the rendering of certain opinions of counsel) and
that the Underwriter will be obligated to purchase the shares on April 26, 1996,
or such other date as  may be agreed upon between  the Underwriter and the  Fund
(the  "Closing  Date"). Shares  will not  be  issued and  dividends will  not be
declared by the Fund until after the Closing Date.
 
    The Underwriter will purchase shares from  the Fund at $10.00 per share.  No
underwriting  discounts or selling commissions will be deducted from the initial
public  offering  price.  The  Underwriter  will,  however,  receive  contingent
deferred sales charges from future redemptions of such shares.
 
    The  Underwriter shall, regardless of  its expected underwriting commitment,
be entitled  and obligated  to purchase  only  the number  of shares  for  which
purchase  orders have been received  by the Underwriter prior  to 2:00 p.m., New
York time, on the third business day  preceding the Closing Date, or such  other
date as may be agreed to between the parties.
 
    The  minimum number of Fund  shares which may be  purchased pursuant to this
offering is 100  shares. Certificates for  shares purchased will  not be  issued
unless requested by the shareholder in writing.
 
    The  Underwriter has agreed to pay  certain expenses of the initial offering
and the subsequent Continuous Offering of the Fund's shares. The Fund has agreed
to  pay  certain  compensation  to  the  Underwriter  pursuant  to  a  Plan   of
Distribution pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Act, to compensate the Underwriter
for  services  it  renders and  the  expenses  it bears  under  the Underwriting
Agreement (see  "The Distributor").  The  Fund will  bear  the cost  of  initial
typesetting,  printing  and  distribution  of  Prospectuses  and  Statements  of
Additional Information and  supplements thereto  to shareholders.  The Fund  has
agreed  to  indemnify  the Underwriter  against  certain  liabilities, including
liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.
 
                                       31
<PAGE>
PURCHASE OF FUND SHARES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    As discussed in the Prospectus, shares  of the Fund are distributed by  Dean
Witter Distributors Inc. (the "Distributor"). The Distributor has entered into a
dealer agreement with DWR, which through its own sales organization sells shares
of the Fund. In addition, the Distributor may enter into similar agreements with
other  selected dealers ("Selected Broker-Dealers"). The Distributor, a Delaware
corporation, is a  wholly-owned subsidiary of  DWDC. The Trustees  of the  Fund,
including  a majority of the Trustees who are not, and were not at the time they
voted, interested persons of the Fund,  as defined in the Act (the  "Independent
Trustees"), approved, at their meeting held on February 15, 1996, a Distribution
Agreement  (the "Distribution  Agreement") appointing  the Distributor exclusive
distributor of  the Fund's  shares and  providing for  the Distributor  to  bear
distribution  expenses not  borne by  the Fund.  By its  terms, the Distribution
Agreement continues until April  30, 1997, and provides  that it will remain  in
effect from year to year thereafter if approved by the Board.
 
    The  Distributor bears all expenses it may incur in providing services under
the Distribution Agreement. Such expenses include the payment of commissions for
sales of the Fund's shares and incentive compensation to account executives. The
Distributor also pays certain  expenses in connection  with the distribution  of
the  Fund's shares, including the costs  of preparing, printing and distributing
advertising or promotional materials, and the costs of printing and distributing
prospectuses and supplements thereto  used in connection  with the offering  and
sale  of the  Fund's shares.  The Fund bears  the costs  of initial typesetting,
printing  and   distribution  of   prospectuses  and   supplements  thereto   to
shareholders.  The Fund  also bears  the costs of  registering the  Fund and its
shares under federal  and state securities  laws. The Fund  and the  Distributor
have  agreed  to indemnify  each  other against  certain  liabilities, including
liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. Under the Distribution
Agreement, the Distributor uses  its best efforts in  rendering services to  the
Fund,  but in the absence of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or
reckless disregard of its obligations, the Distributor is not liable to the Fund
or any of its shareholders  for any error of judgment  or mistake of law or  for
any act or omission or for any losses sustained by the Fund or its shareholders.
 
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION
 
    To  compensate the  Distributor for the  services it or  any selected dealer
provides and for  the expenses it  bears under the  Distribution Agreement,  the
Fund  has adopted a  Plan of Distribution  pursuant to Rule  12b-1 under the Act
(the "Plan")  pursuant  to which  the  Fund pays  the  Distributor  compensation
accrued  daily and payable monthly at the annual  rate of 1.0% of the lesser of:
(a) the  average daily  aggregate gross  sales of  the Fund's  shares since  the
inception of the Fund (not including reinvestments of dividends or capital gains
distributions),  less the average daily aggregate  net asset value of the Fund's
shares redeemed  since the  Fund's inception  upon which  a contingent  deferred
sales  charge has been imposed or upon which such charge has been waived; or (b)
the Fund's average daily  net assets. The Distributor  receives the proceeds  of
contingent  deferred  sales charges  imposed on  certain redemptions  of shares,
which are separate and apart from payments made pursuant to the Plan.
 
    The Distributor has informed the Fund that an amount of the fees payable  by
the  Fund each year pursuant  to the Plan of Distribution  equal to 0.25% of the
Fund's average daily net  assets is characterized as  a "service fee" under  the
Rules  of Fair Practice of the  National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.
(of which the Distributor is a member). Such fee is a payment made for  personal
service and/or the maintenance of shareholder accounts. The remaining portion of
the  Plan of Distribution fee  payments made by the  Fund is characterized as an
"asset-based sales charge"  as such is  defined by the  aforementioned Rules  of
Fair Practice.
 
    The  Plan was adopted by a vote of  the Trustees of the Fund on February 15,
1996 at a meeting of the Trustees called for the purpose of voting on such Plan.
The vote included the vote of a majority of the Trustees of the Fund who are not
"interested persons" of the Fund (as defined in the Act) and who have no  direct
or  indirect financial interest  in the operation of  the Plan (the "Independent
12b-1 Trustees").  In making  their decision  to adopt  the Plan,  the  Trustees
requested from the Distributor and received such
 
                                       32
<PAGE>
information  as they  deemed necessary to  make an informed  determination as to
whether or  not  adoption  of  the  Plan  was  in  the  best  interests  of  the
shareholders  of the Fund. After due  consideration of the information received,
the Trustees, including the Independent 12b-1 Trustees, determined that adoption
of the Plan would  benefit the shareholders of  the Fund. InterCapital, as  sole
shareholder  of the Fund, approved the Plan  on February 28, 1996, whereupon the
Plan went into effect.
 
    Under its terms, the Plan will continue  in effect until April 30, 1997  and
will remain in effect from year to year thereafter, provided such continuance is
approved annually by a vote of the Trustees in the manner described above. Under
the  Plan and as  required by Rule  12b-1, the Trustees  will receive and review
promptly after the end of each fiscal  quarter a written report provided by  the
Distributor  of the amounts expended  by the Distributor under  the Plan and the
purpose for which such expenditures were made.
 
    Pursuant to  the Plan  and as  required  by Rule  12b-1, the  Trustees  will
receive  and review promptly  after the end  of each calendar  quarter a written
report provided by the  Distributor of the amounts  expended by the  Distributor
under the Plan and the purpose for which such expenditures were made.
 
    The  Plan was adopted  in order to  permit the implementation  of the Fund's
method of distribution. Under  this distribution method shares  of the Fund  are
sold  without a sales load  being deducted at the time  of purchase, so that the
full amount of an investor's purchase payment will be invested in shares without
any deduction  for  sales charges.  Shares  of the  Fund  may be  subject  to  a
contingent deferred sales charge, payable to the Distributor, if redeemed during
the  six years after  their purchase. DWR compensates  its account executives by
paying them, from its own funds, commissions for the sale of the Fund's  shares,
currently  a gross sales  credit of up  to 5% of  the amount sold  and an annual
residual commission of  up to 0.25  of 1%  of the current  value (not  including
reinvested  dividends  or distributions)  of the  amount  sold. The  gross sales
credit is  a  charge which  reflects  commissions paid  by  DWR to  its  account
executives  and Fund  associated distribution-related  expenses, including sales
compensation and overhead and other branch office distribution-related  expenses
including: (a) the expenses of operating DWR's branch offices in connection with
the  sale  of Fund  shares,  including lease  costs,  the salaries  and employee
benefits  of   operations   and   sales  support   personnel,   utility   costs,
communications  costs and the costs of stationery and supplies; (b) the costs of
client sales seminars; (c) travel expenses of mutual fund sales coordinators  to
promote  the sale  of Fund  shares; and  (d) other  expenses relating  to branch
promotion of  Fund  share sales.  Payments  may also  be  made with  respect  to
distribution  expenses incurred in  connection with the  distribution of shares,
including personal services  to shareholders  with respect to  holdings of  such
shares,  of an  investment company whose  assets are  acquired by the  Fund in a
tax-free reorganization. The distribution fee that the Distributor receives from
the Fund under the  Plan, in effect, offsets  distribution expenses incurred  on
behalf  of the Fund and opportunity costs, such as the gross sales credit and an
assumed interest  charge  thereon  ("carrying  charge").  In  the  Distributor's
reporting  of  the  distribution expenses  to  the Fund,  such  assumed interest
(computed at the "broker's  call rate") has been  calculated on the gross  sales
credit  as it is reduced  by amounts received by  the Distributor under the Plan
and any  contingent deferred  sales  charges received  by the  Distributor  upon
redemption  of shares  of the Fund.  No other  interest charge is  included as a
distribution expense in the Distributor's calculation of its distribution  costs
for  this  purpose. The  broker's  call rate  is  the interest  rate  charged to
securities brokers on loans secured by exchange-listed securities.
 
    At any given time, the  expenses in distributing shares  of the Fund may  be
more or less than the total of (i) the payments made by the Fund pursuant to the
Plan  and  (ii)  the  proceeds  of contingent  deferred  sales  charges  paid by
investors upon redemption of shares. Because  there is no requirement under  the
Plan that the Distributor be reimbursed for all expenses or any requirement that
the  Plan be continued from year to year, this excess amount does not constitute
a liability of the Fund. Although there  is no legal obligation for the Fund  to
pay  distribution expenses  in excess  of payments made  under the  Plan and the
proceeds of contingent deferred sales charges paid by investors upon  redemption
of  shares, if for any reason the Plan is terminated, the Trustees will consider
at that time the manner in which to treat such expenses. Any cumulative expenses
incurred,   but    not   yet    recovered   through    distribution   fees    or
contin-
 
                                       33
<PAGE>
gent  deferred  sales  charges,  may  or may  not  be  recovered  through future
distribution fees or contingent deferred sales charges.
 
    No interested person of the Fund nor any  Trustee of the Fund who is not  an
interested person of the Fund, as defined in the Act, has any direct or indirect
financial  interest in the operation  of the Plan except  to the extent that the
Distributor, InterCapital, DWSC  and DWR or  certain of their  employees may  be
deemed  to  have such  an  interest as  a result  of  benefits derived  from the
successful operation of the Plan  or as a result of  receiving a portion of  the
amounts expended thereunder by the Fund.
 
    The  Plan may not be  amended to increase materially  the amount to be spent
for the services described therein without  approval of the shareholders of  the
Fund,  and all  material amendments  of the  Plan must  also be  approved by the
Trustees in the manner described above. The Plan may be terminated at any  time,
without  payment of any penalty, by vote  of a majority of the Independent 12b-1
Trustees or by a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of  the
Fund (as defined in the Act) on not more than thirty days' written notice to any
other  party to the  Plan. So long  as the Plan  is in effect,  the election and
nomination of Independent Trustees shall be  committed to the discretion of  the
Independent Trustees.
 
DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The  net asset value per share of the  Fund is determined once daily at 4:00
p.m. New York time on each day that the New York Stock Exchange is open (or,  on
days when the New York Stock Exchange closes prior to 4:00 p.m., at such earlier
time), and on each other day in which there is a sufficient degree of trading in
the  Fund's investments to affect the net asset value, except that the net asset
value may not be computed on a day on which no orders to purchase, or tenders to
sell or redeem, Fund shares have been received by taking the value of all assets
of the  Fund, subtracting  its liabilities,  dividing by  the number  of  shares
outstanding  and  adjusting to  the nearest  cent. The  New York  Stock Exchange
currently observes the following holidays: New Year's Day; President's Day; Good
Friday; Memorial  Day;  Independence  Day;  Labor  Day;  Thanksgiving  Day;  and
Christmas Day.
 
    As stated in the Prospectus, short-term securities with remaining maturities
of  sixty days  or less at  the time of  purchase are valued  at amortized cost,
unless the  Trustees determine  such  does not  reflect the  securities'  market
value,  in which  case these securities  will be  valued at their  fair value as
determined by the Trustees. Other short-term debt securities will be valued on a
mark-to-market basis until such  time as they reach  a remaining maturity of  60
days,  whereupon they will be valued at  amortized cost using their value on the
61st day unless  the Trustees determine  such does not  reflect the  securities'
market  value, in which case these securities will be valued at their fair value
as determined by the Trustees. Listed  options on debt securities are valued  at
the  latest sale price on the exchange on  which they are listed unless no sales
of such options have taken place that day, in which case they will be valued  at
the  mean between their  latest bid and  asked prices. Unlisted  options on debt
securities and all options on equity  securities are valued at the mean  between
their  latest bid and asked prices. Futures  are valued at the latest sale price
on the commodities exchange  on which they trade  unless the Trustees  determine
that  such price does not reflect their market value, in which case they will be
valued at their fair value as  determined by the Trustees. All other  securities
and  other assets  are valued at  their fair  value as determined  in good faith
under procedures established by and under the supervision of the Trustees.
 
    Generally, trading in foreign securities, as well as corporate bonds, United
States government  securities and  money  market instruments,  is  substantially
completed  each day at  various times prior to  the close of  the New York Stock
Exchange. The values of such securities used in computing the net asset value of
the Fund's shares  are determined as  of such times.  Foreign currency  exchange
rates  are also generally  determined prior to  the close of  the New York Stock
Exchange. Occasionally, events which  affect the values  of such securities  and
such exchange rates may occur between the times at which they are determined and
the  close of the New York Stock Exchange and will therefore not be reflected in
the computation of the  Fund's net asset value.  If events materially  affecting
the  value of  such securities occur  during such period,  then these securities
will be valued at their fair value as determined in good faith under  procedures
established by and under the supervision of the Trustees.
 
                                       34
<PAGE>
SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    Upon the purchase of shares of the Fund, a Shareholder Investment Account is
opened  for the investor on  the books of the Fund  and maintained by the Fund's
transfer agent, Dean  Witter Trust Company  (the "Transfer Agent").  This is  an
open  account in which shares owned by the investor are credited by the Transfer
Agent in lieu  of issuance of  a share  certificate. If a  share certificate  is
desired,  it must be requested in writing for each transaction. Certificates are
issued only for full shares and may  be redeposited in the account at any  time.
There  is no charge  to the investor  for issuance of  a certificate. Whenever a
shareholder instituted  transaction takes  place in  the Shareholder  Investment
Account,  the shareholder will be mailed  a confirmation of the transaction from
the Fund or from DWR or other selected broker-dealer.
 
    AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT  OF DIVIDENDS  AND  DISTRIBUTIONS.   As stated  in  the
Prospectus,   all  income   dividends  and   capital  gains   distributions  are
automatically paid  in  full and  fractional  shares  of the  Fund,  unless  the
shareholder  requests that they be paid in  cash. Each purchase of shares of the
Fund is made upon the condition that the Transfer Agent is thereby automatically
appointed as agent of  the investor to receive  all dividends and capital  gains
distributions  on shares owned by the investor. Such dividends and distributions
will be paid, at  the net asset value  per share, in shares  of the Fund (or  in
cash  if the shareholder so requests) as of  the close of business on the record
date. At any time  an investor may  request the Transfer  Agent, in writing,  to
have  subsequent dividends and/or capital gains distributions paid to him or her
in cash rather  than shares. To  assure sufficient time  to process the  charge,
such  request should be  received by the  Transfer Agent at  least five business
days prior to the record  date of the dividend or  distribution. In the case  of
recently  purchased  shares for  which registration  instructions have  not been
received on the  record date,  cash payments will  be made  to the  Distributor,
which  will  be  forwarded  to  the  shareholder,  upon  the  receipt  of proper
instructions.
 
    TARGETED  DIVIDENDS.-SM-    In  states  where  it  is  legally  permissible,
shareholders  may also have all income dividends and capital gains distributions
automatically invested in shares  of a Dean Witter  Fund other than Dean  Witter
Japan  Fund.  Such investment  will  be made  as  described above  for automatic
investment in  shares of  the Fund,  at the  net asset  value per  share of  the
selected Dean Witter Fund as of the close of business on the payment date of the
dividend  or  distribution and  will begin  to  earn dividends,  if any,  in the
selected Dean Witter  Fund the next  business day. Shareholders  of Dean  Witter
Japan  Fund must  be shareholders  of the Dean  Witter Fund  targeted to receive
investments from  dividends  at  the  time they  enter  the  Targeted  Dividends
program. Investors should review the prospectus of the targeted Dean Witter Fund
before entering the program.
 
    EASYINVEST.-SM-    Shareholders may  subscribe  to EasyInvest,  an automatic
purchase plan  which  provides  for  any  amount  from  $100  to  $5,000  to  be
transferred automatically from a checking or savings account, on a semi-monthly,
monthly  or quarterly basis, to  the Transfer Agent for  investment in shares of
the Fund. Shares purchased through EasyInvest will be added to the shareholder's
existing account at  the net asset  value calculated the  same business day  the
transfer  of  funds is  effected.  For further  information  or to  subscribe to
EasyInvest,  shareholders   should  contact   their   DWR  or   other   selected
broker-dealer account executive or the Transfer Agent.
 
    INVESTMENT  OF DIVIDENDS OR DISTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED IN CASH.  As discussed in
the Prospectus,  any shareholder  who  receives a  cash payment  representing  a
dividend  or distribution  may invest such  dividend or distribution  at the net
asset value next  determined after receipt  by the Transfer  Agent, without  the
imposition  of a contingent deferred sales  charge upon redemption, by returning
the check or the  proceeds to the  Transfer Agent within  thirty days after  the
payment  date.  If  the  shareholder  returns  the  proceeds  of  a  dividend or
distribution, such funds must  be accompanied by  a signed statement  indicating
that  the proceeds  constitute a dividend  or distribution to  be invested. Such
investment will be made at the net  asset value per share next determined  after
receipt of the check or proceeds by the Transfer Agent.
 
    SYSTEMATIC  WITHDRAWAL PLAN.   As discussed in  the Prospectus, a systematic
withdrawal plan (the "Withdrawal Plan") is available for shareholders who own or
purchase shares of the  Fund having a  minimum value of  $10,000 based upon  the
then  current  net asset  value.  The Withdrawal  Plan  provides for  monthly or
quarterly (March, June, September and December) checks in any dollar amount, not
less than  $25,  or in  any  whole percentage  of  the account  balance,  on  an
annualized basis. Any applicable
 
                                       35
<PAGE>
contingent  deferred sales charge  will be imposed on  shares redeemed under the
Withdrawal Plan  (see "Redemptions  and Repurchases--Contingent  Deferred  Sales
Charge"  in  the Prospectus).  Therefore, any  shareholder participating  in the
Withdrawal Plan will have sufficient shares redeemed from his or her account  so
that  the  proceeds  (net  of  any  applicable  deferred  sales  charge)  to the
shareholder will be the designated monthly or quarterly amount.
 
    The Transfer Agent acts as an agent for the shareholder in tendering to  the
Fund  for redemption sufficient full and fractional shares to provide the amount
of the periodic  withdrawal payment  designated in the  application. The  shares
will  be  redeemed at  their net  asset value  determined, at  the shareholder's
option, on the tenth or twenty-fifth day (or next following business day) of the
relevant month or quarter and normally a  check for the proceeds will be  mailed
by  the Transfer Agent within  five business days after  the date of redemption.
The Withdrawal Plan may be terminated at any time by the Fund.
 
    Withdrawal Plan payments should  not be considered  as dividends, yields  or
income.  If periodic withdrawal plan payments continuously exceed net investment
income and  net capital  gains, the  shareholder's original  investment will  be
correspondingly reduced and ultimately exhausted.
 
    Each  withdrawal constitutes  a redemption  of shares  and any  gain or loss
realized must  be  recognized for  Federal  income tax  purposes.  Although  the
shareholder  may  make  additional  investments  of  $2,500  or  more  under the
Withdrawal Plan,  withdrawals made  concurrently  with purchases  of  additional
shares  may  be  inadvisable because  of  the contingent  deferred  sales charge
applicable to the redemption of shares purchased during the preceding six  years
(see "Redemptions and Repurchases-- Contingent Deferred Sales Charge").
 
    Any  shareholder who wishes to have  payments under the Withdrawal Plan made
to a third party or sent to an address other than the one listed on the  account
must  send complete written instructions to the  Transfer Agent to enroll in the
Withdrawal Plan.  The  shareholder's  signature on  such  instructions  must  be
guaranteed   by  an  eligible   guarantor  acceptable  to   the  Transfer  Agent
(shareholders should  contact  the Transfer  Agent  for a  determination  as  to
whether  a particular institution is such  an eligible guarantor). A shareholder
may, at any time, change the amount and interval of withdrawal payments  through
his  or her Account Executive or by written nomination to the Transfer Agent. In
addition, the party and/or  the address to  which the checks  are mailed may  be
changed by written notification to the Transfer Agent, with signature guarantees
required  in the manner described above.  The shareholder may also terminate the
Withdrawal Plan at  any time by  written notice  to the Transfer  Agent. In  the
event  of  such  termination,  the  account  will  be  continued  as  a  regular
shareholder investment account. The shareholder may  also redeem all or part  of
the   shares  held  in  the  Withdrawal   Plan  account  (see  "Redemptions  and
Repurchases" in the Prospectus) at any time.
 
    DIRECT INVESTMENTS THROUGH TRANSFER AGENT.  As discussed in the  Prospectus,
a  shareholder may  make additional  investments in Fund  shares at  any time by
sending a check in any amount, not less than $100, payable to Dean Witter  Japan
Fund, directly to the Fund's Transfer Agent. Such amounts will be applied to the
purchase  of Fund shares  at the net  asset value per  share next computed after
receipt of the check or  purchase payment by the  Transfer Agent. The shares  so
purchased will be credited to the investor's account.
 
EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE
 
    As discussed in the Prospectus, the Fund makes available to its shareholders
an Exchange Privilege whereby shareholders of the Fund may exchange their shares
for  shares of  other Dean  Witter Funds sold  with a  contingent deferred sales
charge ("CDSC funds"), and  for shares of Dean  Witter Short-Term U.S.  Treasury
Trust,  Dean Witter  Limited Term Municipal  Trust, Dean  Witter Short-Term Bond
Fund, Dean Witter Balanced Income Fund,  Dean Witter Balanced Growth Fund,  Dean
Witter  Intermediate Term U.S.  Treasury Trust and five  Dean Witter Funds which
are money  market funds  (the foregoing  eleven non-CDSC  funds are  hereinafter
referred  to as the "Exchange Funds"). Exchanges may be made after the shares of
the Fund acquired by  purchase (not by exchange  or dividend reinvestment)  have
been  held for thirty days.  There is no waiting  period for exchanges of shares
acquired by exchange or dividend reinvestment.  An exchange will be treated  for
federal income tax purposes the same as a repurchase or redemption of shares, on
which the shareholder may realize a capital gain or loss.
 
                                       36
<PAGE>
    Any  new account  established through the  Exchange Privilege  will have the
same registration and cash dividend or dividend reinvestment plan as the present
account,  unless  the  Transfer  Agent  receives  written  notification  to  the
contrary.  For  telephone  exchanges,  the exact  registration  of  the existing
account and the account number must be provided.
 
    Any shares  held  in  certificate  form cannot  be  exchanged  but  must  be
forwarded  to the  Transfer Agent and  deposited into  the shareholder's account
before being eligible for exchange.  (Certificates mailed in for deposit  should
not be endorsed.)
 
    As  described  below, and  in the  Prospectus  under the  captions "Exchange
Privilege" and "Contingent Deferred Sales  Charge", a contingent deferred  sales
charge  ("CDSC") may  be imposed  upon a  redemption, depending  on a  number of
factors, including the number of years from the time of purchase until the  time
of  redemption or exchange  ("holding period"). When  shares of the  Fund or any
other CDSC fund are exchanged  for shares of an  Exchange Fund, the exchange  is
executed  at no charge to the shareholder, without the imposition of the CDSC at
the time of the exchange. During the  period of time the shareholder remains  in
the  Exchange  Fund (calculated  from the  last day  of the  month in  which the
Exchange Fund shares were acquired), the holding period or "year since  purchase
payment made" is frozen. When shares are redeemed out of the Exchange Fund, they
will  be subject  to a CDSC  which would  be based upon  the period  of time the
shareholder held shares in a CDSC fund. However, in the case of shares exchanged
into an Exchange Fund on  or after April 23, 1990,  upon a redemption of  shares
which results in a CDSC being imposed, a credit (not to exceed the amount of the
CDSC)  will be given in an amount  equal to the Exchange Fund 12b-1 distribution
fees, if any, incurred  on or after  that date which  are attributable to  those
shares.  Shareholders  acquiring shares  of an  Exchange  Fund pursuant  to this
exchange privilege may  exchange those  shares back into  a CDSC  fund from  the
Exchange  Fund, with no CDSC being imposed  on such exchange. The holding period
previously frozen when shares  were first exchanged for  shares of the  Exchange
Fund  resumes on the last  day of the month  in which shares of  a CDSC fund are
reacquired. A CDSC is imposed only  upon an ultimate redemption, based upon  the
time  (calculated as  described above)  the shareholder  was invested  in a CDSC
fund.
 
    In addition, shares of the  Fund may be acquired  in exchange for shares  of
Dean  Witter Funds sold  with a front-end sales  charge ("front-end sales charge
funds"), but shares  of the  Fund, however acquired,  may not  be exchanged  for
shares  of  front-end sales  charge funds.  Shares  of a  CDSC fund  acquired in
exchange for shares of a front-end sales charge fund (or in exchange for  shares
of  other Dean Witter  Funds for which  shares of a  front-end sales charge fund
have been exchanged) are not subject to any CDSC upon their redemption.
 
    When shares initially purchased in a  CDSC fund are exchanged for shares  of
another  CDSC fund, or for  shares of an Exchange Fund,  the date of purchase of
the shares of the fund exchanged into, for purposes of the CDSC upon redemption,
will be the  last day  of the  month in which  the shares  being exchanged  were
originally  purchased.  In allocating  the purchase  payments between  funds for
purposes of the CDSC, the amount which represents the current net asset value of
shares at the time of the exchange  which were (i) purchased more than three  or
six years (depending on the CDSC schedule applicable to the shares) prior to the
exchange,   (ii)  originally  acquired  through  reinvestment  of  dividends  or
distributions and  (iii) acquired  in  exchange for  shares of  front-end  sales
charge  funds, or  for shares  of other  Dean Witter  Funds for  which shares of
front-end sales charge funds have been  exchanged (all such shares called  "Free
Shares"),  will be  exchanged first. Shares  of Dean Witter  American Value Fund
acquired prior  to  April  30,  1984, shares  of  Dean  Witter  Dividend  Growth
Securities  Inc. and  Dean Witter  Natural Resource  Development Securities Inc.
acquired prior  to July  2, 1984,  and  shares of  Dean Witter  Strategist  Fund
acquired  prior to November 8, 1989, are also considered Free Shares and will be
the first Free Shares to be  exchanged. After an exchange, all dividends  earned
on  shares in an Exchange Fund will  be considered Free Shares. If the exchanged
amount exceeds  the  value of  such  Free Shares,  an  exchange is  made,  on  a
block-by-block  basis, of  non-Free Shares held  for the longest  period of time
(except that  if  shares held  for  identical periods  of  time but  subject  to
different  CDSC schedules are  held in the same  Exchange Privilege account, the
shares of that block  that are subject  to a lower CDSC  rate will be  exchanged
prior  to the  shares of  that block that  are subject  to a  higher CDSC rate).
Shares equal
 
                                       37
<PAGE>
to any appreciation in the value of non-Free Shares exchanged will be treated as
Free Shares, and the amount of the purchase payments for the non-Free Shares  of
the fund exchanged into will be equal to the lesser of (a) the purchase payments
for, or (b) the current net asset value of, the exchanged non-Free Shares. If an
exchange  between funds would  result in exchange  of only part  of a particular
block of non-Free Shares, then shares equal to any appreciation in the value  of
the  block (up to the amount of the exchange) will be treated as Free Shares and
exchanged first, and the purchase payment for that block will be allocated on  a
pro  rata basis between the non-Free Shares of that block to be retained and the
non-Free Shares to be  exchanged. The prorated amount  of such purchase  payment
attributable to the retained non-Free Shares will remain as the purchase payment
for  such shares, and the amount of  purchase payment for the exchanged non-Free
Shares will be equal to  the lesser of (a) the  prorated amount of the  purchase
payment  for, or (b)  the current net  asset value of,  those exchanged non-Free
Shares. Based upon the procedures described in the Prospectus under the  caption
"Contingent Deferred Sales Charge", any applicable CDSC will be imposed upon the
ultimate redemption of shares of any fund, regardless of the number of exchanges
since those shares were originally purchased.
 
    With  respect to  the redemption  or repurchase of  shares of  the Fund, the
application of proceeds to the purchase of  new shares in the Fund or any  other
of  the  funds and  the general  administration of  the Exchange  Privilege, the
Transfer Agent  acts as  agent for  the Distributor  and for  the  shareholder's
selected  broker-dealer,  if any,  in the  performance  of such  functions. With
respect to exchanges, redemptions  or repurchases, the  Transfer Agent shall  be
liable  for its  own negligence  and not  for the  default or  negligence of its
correspondents or for losses in  transit. The Fund shall  not be liable for  any
default  or negligence  of the Transfer  Agent, the Distributor  or any selected
broker-dealer.
 
    The Distributor and any selected broker-dealer have authorized and appointed
the Transfer Agent to act as their  agent in connection with the application  of
proceeds of any redemption of Fund shares to the purchase of shares of any other
fund  and the general administration of the Exchange Privilege. No commission or
discounts will be paid to the Distributor or any selected broker-dealer for  any
transactions pursuant to this Exchange Privilege.
 
    Exchanges  are subject to  the minimum investment  requirement and any other
conditions imposed by each fund. (The  minimum initial investment is $5,000  for
Dean  Witter Liquid  Asset Fund Inc.,  Dean Witter Tax-Free  Daily Income Trust,
Dean Witter California  Tax-Free Daily  Income Trust  and Dean  Witter New  York
Municipal  Money Market  Trust, although those  funds may,  at their discretion,
accept initial  investments of  as  low as  $1,000.  The minimum  investment  is
$10,000  for Dean Witter Short-Term U.S.  Treasury Trust, although that fund, in
its discretion,  may accept  initial purchases  as low  as $5,000.  The  minimum
initial  investment  for all  other  Dean Witter  Funds  for which  the Exchange
Privilege is available  is $1,000.)  Upon exchange  into an  Exchange Fund,  the
shares  of  that fund  will  be held  in  a special  Exchange  Privilege Account
separately from accounts of  those shareholders who  have acquired their  shares
directly  from that  fund. As a  result, certain services  normally available to
shareholders of those funds,  including the check writing  feature, will not  be
available for funds held in that account.
 
    The  Fund and each  of the other Dean  Witter Funds may  limit the number of
times this  Exchange  Privilege  may  be exercised  by  any  investor  within  a
specified  period of  time. Also,  the Exchange  Privilege may  be terminated or
revised at any time by  the Fund and/or any of  the Dean Witter Funds for  which
shares  of the Fund have been exchanged, upon  such notice as may be required by
applicable regulatory agencies (presently sixty  days' prior written notice  for
termination  or  material revision),  provided  that six  months'  prior written
notice of  termination will  be given  to the  shareholders who  hold shares  of
Exchange  Funds, pursuant to  the Exchange Privilege,  and provided further that
the Exchange Privilege may be terminated or materially revised without notice at
times (a) when the New  York Stock Exchange is  closed for other than  customary
weekends and holidays, (b) when trading on that Exchange is restricted, (c) when
an  emergency exists  as a result  of which  disposal by the  Fund of securities
owned by it is  not reasonably practicable or  it is not reasonably  practicable
for  the Fund fairly  to determine the value  of its net  assets, (d) during any
other period when  the Securities and  Exchange Commission by  order so  permits
(provided  that applicable rules and regulations  of the Securities and Exchange
Commission shall govern as to
 
                                       38
<PAGE>
whether the conditions prescribed in (b) or (c) exist) or (e) if the Fund  would
be  unable  to  invest amounts  effectively  in accordance  with  its investment
objective, policies and restrictions.
 
    The current prospectus for each  fund describes its investment  objective(s)
and  policies, and  shareholders should obtain  a copy and  examine it carefully
before investing. An exchange  will be treated for  federal income tax  purposes
the  same as a repurchase or redemption  of shares, on which the shareholder may
realize a capital gain or loss. However, the ability to deduct capital losses on
an exchange may be limited  in situations where there  is an exchange of  shares
within  ninety days  after the shares  are purchased. The  Exchange Privilege is
only available in states where an exchange may legally be made.
 
    For further  information  regarding  the  Exchange  Privilege,  shareholders
should  contact their DWR  or other selected  broker-dealer account executive or
the Transfer Agent.
 
REDEMPTIONS AND REPURCHASES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    REDEMPTION.  As stated in the Prospectus, shares of the Fund can be redeemed
for cash at any time at the net asset value per share next determined;  however,
such  redemption  proceeds  may  be  reduced by  the  amount  of  any applicable
contingent deferred  sales  charges  (see  below).  If  shares  are  held  in  a
shareholder's  account  without  a  share  certificate,  a  written  request for
redemption to the Fund's Transfer Agent at  P.O. Box 983, Jersey City, NJ  07303
is  required. If  certificates are  held by the  shareholder, the  shares may be
redeemed by surrendering the certificates with a written request for redemption.
The share  certificate, or  an accompanying  stock power,  and the  request  for
redemption,  must be  signed by the  shareholder or shareholders  exactly as the
shares are registered. Each request  for redemption, whether or not  accompanied
by  a share certificates, must be sent  to the Fund's Transfer Agent, which will
redeem the shares at their net asset value next computed (see "Purchase of  Fund
Shares")  after it receives the request, and certificate, if any, in good order.
Any redemption request received after such  computation will be redeemed at  the
next  determined net  asset value.  The term "good  order" means  that the share
certificate, if any, and request for redemption are properly signed, accompanied
by any  documentation  required  by  the  Transfer  Agent,  and  bear  signature
guarantees  when required by  the Fund or  the Transfer Agent.  If redemption is
requested by a corporation, partnership, trust or fiduciary, the Transfer  Agent
may  require that written evidence of authority acceptance to the Transfer Agent
be submitted before such request is accepted.
 
    Whether certificates are  held by the  shareholder or shares  are held in  a
shareholder's  account, if the proceeds are to  be paid to any person other than
the record owner, or if the proceeds are to be paid to a corporation (other than
the Distributor or a selected broker-dealer for the account of the shareholder),
partnership, trust or fiduciary, or sent to the shareholder at an address  other
than  the  registered  address, signatures  must  be guaranteed  by  an eligible
guarantor. A stock power may be obtained from any dealer or commercial bank. The
Fund may change  the signature  guarantee requirements  from time  to time  upon
notice to shareholders, which may be a means of a new prospectus.
 
    CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE.  As stated in the Prospectus, a contingent
deferred  sales charge ("CDSC") will be imposed on any redemption by an investor
if after such redemption the current value of the investor's shares of the  Fund
is  less  than the  dollar amount  of all  payments by  the shareholder  for the
purchase of Fund shares during the preceding six years. However, no CDSC will be
imposed to the extent that the net  asset value of the shares redeemed does  not
exceed:  (a) the current net asset value of shares purchased more than six years
prior to  the  redemption,  plus (b)  the  current  net asset  value  of  shares
purchased  through reinvestment  of dividends  or distributions  of the  Fund or
another Dean Witter  Fund (see  "Shareholder Services  -- Targeted  Dividends"),
plus  (c) the  current net asset  value of  shares acquired in  exchange for (i)
shares of Dean Witter front-end sales charge funds, or (ii) shares of other Dean
Witter Funds  for  which  shares  of front-end  sales  charge  funds  have  been
exchanged (see "Shareholder Services -- Exchange Privilege"), plus (d) increases
in  the  net asset  value of  the investor's  shares above  the total  amount of
payments for the purchase of Fund shares made
 
                                       39
<PAGE>
during the preceding six  years. The CDSC  will be paid  to the Distributor.  In
addition,  no CDSC will be imposed on redemptions of shares which were purchased
by the employee benefit plans established  by DWR and SPS Transaction  Services,
Inc.  (an affiliate of DWR) for their  employees as qualified under Section 401K
of the Internal Revenue Code.
 
    In determining the applicability  of a CDSC to  each redemption, the  amount
which  represents an increase  in the net  asset value of  the investor's shares
above the amount of  the total payments  for the purchase  of shares within  the
last  six  years will  be redeemed  first.  In the  event the  redemption amount
exceeds such increase in value, the next portion of the amount redeemed will  be
the  amount  which  represents the  net  asset  value of  the  investor's shares
purchased more than six  years prior to the  redemption and/or shares  purchased
through  reinvestment of  dividends or  distributions and/or  shares acquired in
exchange for shares of Dean Witter  front-end sales charge funds, or for  shares
of other Dean Witter Funds for which shares of front-end sales charge funds have
been exchanged. Any portion of the amount redeemed which exceeds an amount which
represents  both such increase in  value and the value  of shares purchased more
than  six  years  prior  to  the  redemption  and/or  shares  purchased  through
reinvestment  of  dividends  or  distributions  and/or  shares  acquired  in the
above-described exchanges will be subject to a CDSC.
 
    In addition, the CDSC, if otherwise  applicable, will be waived in the  case
of:  (i) redemptions of  shares held at  the time a  shareholder dies or becomes
disabled, only  if the  shares  are (a)  registered either  in  the name  of  an
individual  shareholder (not a trust),  or in the names  of such shareholder and
his or her spouse as joint tenants with right of survivorship, or (b) held in  a
qualified  corporate  or  self-employed retirement  plan,  Individual Retirement
Account or Custodial  Account under  Section 403(b)(7) of  the Internal  Revenue
Code,  provided in either case that the  redemption is requested within one year
of the death  or initial determination  of disability, and  (ii) redemptions  in
connection  with the  following retirement  plan distributions:  (a) lump-sum or
other distributions from a qualified corporate of self-employed retirement  plan
following  retirement (or in the case of a "key employee" of a "top heavy" plan,
following attainment  of  age 59  1/2);  (b) distributions  from  an  Individual
Retirement  Account or Custodial Account under Section 403(b)(7) of the Internal
Revenue Code following attainment of age 59 1/2; and (c) a tax-free return of an
excess contribution to an  IRA. For the purpose  of determining disability,  the
Distributor  utilizes the definition of disability contained in Section 72(m)(7)
of the Code, which relates to the inability to engage in gainful employment. All
waivers  will  be  granted  only   following  receipt  by  the  Distributor   of
confirmation of the investor's entitlement.
 
    The  amount of the CDSC, if any, will  vary depending on the number of years
from the time  of payment  for the  purchase of Fund  shares until  the time  of
redemption  of such shares. For purposes of determining the number of years from
the time of any payment for the  purchase of shares, all payments made during  a
month  will be aggregated  and deemed to have  been made on the  last day of the
month. The following table sets forth the rates of the CDSC:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     CONTINGENT DEFERRED
                    YEAR SINCE                          SALES CHARGE
                     PURCHASE                        AS A PERCENTAGE OF
                   PAYMENT MADE                        AMOUNT REDEEMED
- --------------------------------------------------  ---------------------
<S>                                                 <C>
First.............................................                   5.0%
Second............................................                   4.0%
Third.............................................                   3.0%
Fourth............................................                   2.0%
Fifth.............................................                   2.0%
Sixth.............................................                   1.0%
Seventh and thereafter............................                  None
</TABLE>
 
    In determining the rate of the CDSC, it will be assumed that a redemption is
made of shares held by  the investor for the longest  period of time within  the
applicable  six-year period. This will result in  any such CDSC being imposed at
the  lowest  possible  rate.  Accordingly,  shareholders  may  redeem,   without
incurring  any CDSC,  amounts equal to  any net  increase in the  value of their
shares above the amount of
 
                                       40
<PAGE>
their purchase payments made within the past six years and amounts equal to  the
current  value of shares purchased  more than six years  prior to the redemption
and shares  purchased  through reinvestment  of  dividends or  distributions  or
acquired  in exchange for shares of Dean Witter front-end sales charge funds, or
for shares of other Dean Witter Funds for which shares of front-end sales charge
funds have been  exchanged. The  CDSC will be  imposed, in  accordance with  the
table  shown above, on any redemptions within six years of purchase which are in
excess of these amounts and which  redemptions are not (a) requested within  one
year  of death or initial  determination of disability of  a shareholder, or (b)
made  pursuant  to  certain  taxable  distributions  from  retirement  plans  or
retirement accounts, as described above.
 
    PAYMENT FOR SHARES REDEEMED OR REPURCHASED.  As discussed in the Prospectus,
payment  for shares presented for repurchase or redemption will be made by check
within seven days after receipt by the Transfer Agent of the certificate  and/or
written  request  in good  order. The  term  "good order"  means that  the share
certificate,  if  any,  and  request   for  redemption,  are  properly   signed,
accompanied  by  any  documentation required  by  the Transfer  Agent,  and bear
signature guarantees  when required  by the  Fund or  the Transfer  Agent.  Such
payment  may be postponed or the right of redemption suspended at times (a) when
the New York  Stock Exchange  is closed for  other than  customary weekends  and
holidays, (b) when trading on that Exchange is restricted, (c) when an emergency
exists  as a result of which  disposal by the Fund of  securities owned by it is
not reasonably practicable  or it  is not  reasonably practicable  for the  Fund
fairly  to determine the value of its net  assets, or (d) during any period when
the Securities  and  Exchange Commission  by  order so  permits;  provided  that
applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission shall
govern  as to  whether the  conditions prescribed  in (b)  or (c)  exist. If the
shares to be  redeemed have  recently been purchased  by check,  payment of  the
redemption  proceeds may be delayed  for the minimum time  needed to verify that
the check used for investment has been honored (not more than fifteen days  from
the  time  of  receipt  of  the  check  by  the  Transfer  Agent).  Shareholders
maintaining margin  accounts  with DWR  or  another selected  broker-dealer  are
referred  to  their account  executive regarding  restrictions on  redemption of
shares of the Fund pledged in the margin account.
 
    TRANSFERS OF SHARES.  In the event a shareholder requests a transfer of  any
shares  to a  new registration,  such shares  will be  transferred without sales
charge at the time of  transfer. With regard to the  status of shares which  are
either  subject to the contingent  deferred sales charge or  free of such charge
(and with regard to the  length of time shares subject  to the charge have  been
held),  any transfer involving less than all of the shares in an account will be
made on a pro-rata basis (that is, by transferring shares in the same proportion
that the transferred shares bear to the total shares in the account  immediately
prior  to the transfer). The  transferred shares will continue  to be subject to
any applicable  contingent deferred  sales charge  as if  they had  not been  so
transferred.
 
    REINSTATEMENT  PRIVILEGE.  As discussed in the Prospectus, a shareholder who
has had  his  or her  shares  redeemed or  repurchased  and has  not  previously
exercised  this reinstatement privilege may, within 30 days after the redemption
or repurchase, reinstate any portion or  all of the proceeds of such  redemption
or  repurchase in shares  of the Fund held  by the shareholder  at the net asset
value next determined after a reinstatement request, together with the proceeds,
is received by the Transfer Agent.
 
    Exercise of the reinstatement privilege  will not affect the federal  income
tax  and  state income  tax  treatment of  any gain  or  loss realized  upon the
redemption or repurchase, except that  if the redemption or repurchase  resulted
in  a loss and reinstatement is  made in shares of the  Fund, some or all of the
loss, depending on the amount reinstated, will not be allowed as a deduction for
federal income tax and state personal income tax purposes but will be applied to
adjust the cost basis of the shares acquired upon reinstatement.
 
DIVIDENDS, DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    As discussed in the Prospectus, the Fund will determine either to distribute
or to retain  all or part  of any net  long-term capital gains  in any year  for
reinvestment.    If   any   such    gains   are   retained,    the   Fund   will
 
                                       41
<PAGE>
pay federal  income  tax  thereon, and,  if  the  Fund makes  an  election,  the
shareholders  would  include  such  undistributed  gains  in  their  income  and
shareholders will be able to claim their share of the tax paid by the Fund as  a
credit against their individual federal income tax.
 
    Any  dividends declared in the  last quarter of any  calendar year which are
paid in the following calendar year prior to February 1 will be deemed  received
by the shareholder in the prior calendar year.
 
    Gains  or  losses on  sales  of securities  by  the Fund  will  generally be
long-term capital gains or losses if the  securities have been held by the  Fund
for  more than twelve months. Gains or losses on the sale of securities held for
twelve months or less will be generally short-term capital gains or losses.
 
    The Fund  intends  to  qualify  as  a  regulated  investment  company  under
Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the "Code"). If so qualified,
the  Fund will not be subject to federal income tax on its net investment income
and capital  gains,  if  any,  realized  during any  fiscal  year  in  which  it
distributes such income and capital gains to its shareholders.
 
    After  the  end  of  the  calendar  year,  shareholders  will  be  sent full
information on their dividends and capital gains distributions for tax purposes,
including information as to the portion taxable as ordinary income, the  portion
taxable  as  long-term  capital gains,  and  the  amount, if  any,  of dividends
eligible for the Federal dividends received deduction available to corporations.
To avoid  being subject  to a  31%  Federal backup  withholding tax  on  taxable
dividends,  capital  gains distributions  and  the proceeds  of  redemptions and
repurchases, shareholders' taxpayer identification numbers must be furnished and
certified as to their accuracy.
 
    Any dividend or capital  gains distribution received  by a shareholder  from
any  investment company will have the effect  of reducing the net asset value of
the shareholder's stock in that company by  the exact amount of the dividend  or
capital   gains  distribution.  Furthermore,  capital  gains  distributions  and
dividends are subject to  federal income taxes.  If the net  asset value of  the
shares  should be reduced below a shareholder's  cost as a result of the payment
of dividends or the distribution of  realized net long-term capital gains,  such
payment  or  distribution  would  be  in  part  a  return  of  the shareholder's
investment to the  extent of such  reduction below the  shareholder's cost,  but
nonetheless  would be fully taxable. Therefore,  an investor should consider the
tax implications of purchasing Fund  shares immediately prior to a  distribution
record date.
 
    The  Fund may elect to retain net capital gains and pay corporate income tax
thereon. In such event, each shareholder of record on the last day of the Fund's
taxable year  would be  required to  include  in income  for tax  purposes  such
shareholder's  proportionate share of the Fund's undistributed net capital gain.
In addition, each  shareholder would  be entitled to  credit such  shareholder's
proportionate  share of  the tax  paid by  the Fund  against federal  income tax
liabilities, to  claim  refunds to  the  extent  that the  credit  exceeds  such
liabilities, and to increase the basis of his shares held for federal income tax
purposes  by an amount equal to 65% of such shareholder's proportionate share of
the undistributed net capital gain.
 
    Dividends, interest and capital gains received by the Fund may give rise  to
withholding  and  other  taxes  imposed by  foreign  countries.  Tax conventions
between certain countries  and the United  States may reduce  or eliminate  such
taxes.  Investors may be entitled to claim  United States foreign tax credits or
deductions with  respect  to  such  taxes, subject  to  certain  provisions  and
limitations  contained in the Code. If more  than 50% of the Fund's total assets
at the close of its fiscal  year consist of securities of foreign  corporations,
the  Fund  would be  eligible  and would  determine whether  or  not to  file an
election with the Internal Revenue Service pursuant to which shareholders of the
Fund will be  required to  include their respective  pro rata  portions of  such
withholding  taxes in  their United States  income tax returns  as gross income,
treat such respective pro rata portions as  taxes paid by them, and deduct  such
respective   pro   rata  portions   in  computing   their  taxable   income  or,
alternatively, use  them as  foreign  tax credits  against their  United  States
income  taxes. If  the Fund does  elect to  file the election  with the Internal
Revenue Service, the Fund  will report annually to  its shareholders the  amount
per share of such withholding.
 
                                       42
<PAGE>
    SPECIAL  RULES FOR CERTAIN FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSACTIONS.  In general, gains
from foreign  currencies and  from foreign  currency options,  foreign  currency
futures and forward foreign exchange contracts relating to investments in stock,
securities  or  foreign currencies  are  currently considered  to  be qualifying
income for purposes  of determining whether  the Fund qualifies  as a  regulated
investment company. It is currently unclear, however, who will be treated as the
issuer  of certain foreign currency instruments or how foreign currency options,
futures, or forward foreign  currency contracts will be  valued for purposes  of
the  regulated investment company diversification requirements applicable to the
Fund. The Fund  may request a  private letter ruling  from the Internal  Revenue
Service on some or all of these issues.
 
    Under  Code Section 988, special rules are provided for certain transactions
in a  foreign currency  other  than the  taxpayer's functional  currency  (I.E.,
unless  certain special rules apply, currencies  other than the U.S. dollar). In
general, foreign currency gains or  losses from forward contracts, from  futures
contracts  that are not "regulated futures contracts", and from unlisted options
will be treated as ordinary income or loss under Code Section 988. Also, certain
foreign exchange gains or  losses derived with  respect to foreign  fixed-income
securities  are also  subject to Section  988 treatment.  In general, therefore,
Code Section 988 gains  or losses will  increase or decrease  the amount of  the
Fund's  investment  company  taxable  income  available  to  be  distributed  to
shareholders as ordinary income, rather than increasing or decreasing the amount
of the Fund's net capital gain. Additionally, if Code Section 988 losses  exceed
other  investment company taxable  income during a taxable  year, the Fund would
not be able to make any ordinary dividend distributions.
 
    If the Fund invests in an entity  which is classified as a "passive  foreign
investment  company" ("PFIC") for U.S. tax  purposes, the application of certain
technical tax  provisions  applying  to  such  companies  could  result  in  the
imposition  of federal income tax  with respect to such  investments at the Fund
level which could not be eliminated  by distributions to shareholders. The  U.S.
Treasury  issued  proposed  regulation  section 1.1291-  8  which  establishes a
mark-to-market regime which allows investment  companies investing in PFIC's  to
avoid  most, if  not all, of  the difficulties posed  by the PFIC  rules. In any
event, it  is  not anticipated  that  any taxes  on  the Fund  with  respect  to
investments in PFIC's would be significant.
 
    Shareholders  are urged to consult their attorneys or tax advisers regarding
specific questions as to federal, state or local taxes.
 
PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    As discussed in the  Prospectus, from time  to time the  Fund may quote  its
"total  return"  in advertisements  and  sales literature.  The  Fund's "average
annual total return" represents an annualization of the Fund's total return over
a particular period and is computed by finding the annual percentage rate  which
will  result in the ending redeemable  value of a hypothetical $1,000 investment
made at the beginning of a one, five or ten year period, or for the period  from
the  date of commencement of  the Fund's operations, if  shorter than any of the
foregoing. For periods of less than one  year, the Fund quotes its total  return
on a non-annualized basis.
 
    The  Fund may  compute its aggregate  total return for  specified periods by
determining the aggregate percentage rate which will result in the ending  value
of a hypothetical $1,000 investment made at the beginning of the period. For the
purpose  of this calculation, it is assumed that all dividends and distributions
are reinvested.  The formula  for computing  aggregate total  return involves  a
percentage  obtained  by  dividing  the  ending  value  by  the  initial  $1,000
investment and subtracting  1 from the  result. The ending  redeemable value  is
reduced by any contingent deferred sales charge at the end of the period.
 
    In  addition to the foregoing, the Fund  may advertise its total return over
different periods of time by means of aggregate, average, year-by-year or  other
types  of total  return figures.  Such calculations may  or may  not reflect the
deduction of the contingent  deferred charge which,  if reflected, would  reduce
the
 
                                       43
<PAGE>
performance  quotes. For example, the total return of the Fund may be calculated
in  the  manner  described  above,  but  without  deduction  of  any  applicable
contingent deferred sales charge.
 
    The  Fund  may  also advertise  the  growth of  hypothetical  investments of
$10,000, $50,000 and $100,000 in  shares of the Fund by  adding 1 to the  Fund's
total  aggregate total return to date (expressed as a decimal and without taking
into account the effect of applicable  CDSC) and multiplying by 10,000,  $50,000
or $100,000 as the case may be.
 
    The  Fund from time to  time may also advertise  its performance relative to
certain performance rankings and indexes compiled by independent organizations.
 
DESCRIPTION OF SHARES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The shareholders of the Fund are entitled to a full vote for each full share
held. The Trustees have been elected by InterCapital as the sole shareholder  of
the  Fund. The Trustees  themselves have the  power to alter  the number and the
terms of office of  the Trustees, and  they may at any  time lengthen their  own
terms  or  make  their  terms  of  unlimited  duration  and  appoint  their  own
successors, provided that always  at least a majority  of the Trustees has  been
elected  by  the  shareholders  of the  Fund.  Under  certain  circumstances the
Trustees may be removed  by action of the  Trustees. The shareholders also  have
the  right to remove  the Trustees following  a meeting called  for that purpose
requested in writing by the record holders  of not less than ten percent of  the
Fund's outstanding shares. The voting rights of shareholders are not cumulative,
so  that holders  of more  than 50  percent of  the shares  voting can,  if they
choose, elect all Trustees  being selected, while the  holders of the  remaining
shares would be unable to elect any Trustees.
 
    The  Declaration of Trust permits the  Trustees to authorize the creation of
additional series  of  shares  (the  proceeds of  which  would  be  invested  in
separate,  independently managed  portfolios) and  additional classes  of shares
within any  series (which  would be  used  to distinguish  among the  rights  of
different categories of shareholders, as might be required by future regulations
or  other unforeseen circumstances).  However, the Trustees  have not authorized
any such additional series or classes of shares.
 
    The Declaration  of Trust  provides that  no Trustee,  officer, employee  or
agent of the Fund is liable to the Fund or to a shareholder, nor is any Trustee,
officer,  employee or agent liable  to any third persons  in connection with the
affairs of the Fund, except as such liability may arise from his or her own  bad
faith,  willful misfeasance, gross  negligence, or reckless  disregard of his or
her duties. It also  provides that all  third persons shall  look solely to  the
Fund's  property  for  satisfaction of  claims  arising in  connection  with the
affairs of  the Fund.  With  the exceptions  stated,  the Declaration  of  Trust
provides  that  a  Trustee,  officer,  employee  or  agent  is  entitled  to  be
indemnified against all liabilities in connection with the affairs of the Fund.
 
    The Fund is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares of  beneficial
interest.  The Fund shall be of unlimited  duration subject to the provisions in
the Declaration of Trust concerning termination by action of the shareholders.
 
CUSTODIAN AND TRANSFER AGENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The Chase Manhattan Bank N.A., One Chase Plaza, New York, New York 10005, is
the Custodian of the  Fund's assets. The Custodian  has contracted with  various
foreign  banks and depositaries to hold portfolio securities of non-U.S. issuers
on behalf of the  Fund. Any of  the Fund's cash balances  with the Custodian  in
excess  of $100,000 are unprotected by  federal deposit insurance. Such balances
may, at times, be substantial.
 
    Dean Witter Trust  Company, Harborside Financial  Center, Plaza Two,  Jersey
City,  New Jersey 07311 is the Transfer  Agent of the Fund's shares and Dividend
Disbursing Agent for payment of dividends and
 
                                       44
<PAGE>
distributions on Fund shares and Agent for shareholders under various investment
plans described herein. Dean Witter Trust Company is an affiliate of Dean Witter
InterCapital  Inc.,  the   Fund's  Investment  Manager,   and  of  Dean   Witter
Distributors  Inc.,  the  Fund's  Distributor. As  Transfer  Agent  and Dividend
Disbursing  Agent,  Dean   Witter  Trust   Company's  responsibilities   include
maintaining   shareholder  accounts,   including  providing   subaccounting  and
recordkeeping  services  for  certain   retirement  accounts;  disbursing   cash
dividends  and reinvesting  dividends; processing  account registration changes;
handling purchase and redemption transactions; mailing prospectuses and reports;
mailing and tabulating proxies;  processing share certificate transactions;  and
maintaining  shareholder records and lists. For these services Dean Witter Trust
Company receives a per shareholder account fee.
 
INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    Price Waterhouse LLP serves as the independent accountants of the Fund.  The
independent  accountants  are  responsible  for  auditing  the  annual financial
statements of the Fund.
 
REPORTS TO SHAREHOLDERS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The Fund will send to shareholders, at least semi-annually, reports  showing
the  Fund's  portfolio  and  other  information.  An  annual  report  containing
financial  statements  audited  by  independent  accountants  will  be  sent  to
shareholders each year.
 
    The  Fund's fiscal year ends on November 30. The financial statements of the
Fund must  be audited  at least  once a  year by  independent accountants  whose
selection is made annually by the Fund's Board of Trustees.
 
LEGAL COUNSEL
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    Sheldon  Curtis, Esq.,  who is  an officer  and the  General Counsel  of the
Investment Manager, is an officer and the General Counsel of the Fund.
 
EXPERTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    The Statement  of  Assets and  Liabilities  of  the Fund  included  in  this
Statement  of  Additional  Information  and  incorporated  by  reference  in the
Prospectus has been so  included and incorporated in  reliance on the report  of
Price  Waterhouse LLP, independent  accountants, given on  the authority of said
firm as experts in auditing and accounting.
 
REGISTRATION STATEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    This Statement of Additional Information  and the Prospectus do not  contain
all  of the  information set  forth in the  Registration Statement  the Fund has
filed with the  Securities and  Exchange Commission.  The complete  Registration
Statement  may  be obtained  from the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission upon
payment of the fee prescribed by the rules and regulations of the Commission.
 
                                       45
<PAGE>
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
    To the Shareholder and Trustees of
Dean Witter Japan Fund
 
In our opinion, the  accompanying statement of  assets and liabilities  presents
fairly,  in all material  respects, the financial position  of Dean Witter Japan
Fund (the "Fund") at  February 28, 1996, in  conformity with generally  accepted
accounting  principles. This  financial statement  is the  responsibility of the
Fund's management; our responsibility is to express an opinion on this financial
statement based on our audit. We conducted our audit of this financial statement
in accordance with generally accepted  auditing standards which require that  we
plan  and perform  the audit  to obtain  reasonable assurance  about whether the
financial  statement  is  free  of  material  misstatement.  An  audit  includes
examining,  on a test basis, evidence  supporting the amounts and disclosures in
the  financial  statement,   assessing  the  accounting   principles  used   and
significant  estimates made by management,  and evaluating the overall financial
statement presentation. We believe  that our audit  provides a reasonable  basis
for the opinion expressed above.
 
PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
1177 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York
February 29, 1996
 
                                       46
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER JAPAN FUND
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES AT FEBRUARY 28, 1996
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                <C>
ASSETS:
  Cash...........................................................................  $ 100,000
  Deferred organizational expenses (Note 1)......................................    207,375
                                                                                   ---------
      Total Assets...............................................................    307,375
LIABILITIES:
  Organizational expenses payable (Note 1).......................................    207,375
  Commitments (Note 1 and 2).....................................................
                                                                                   ---------
      Net Assets.................................................................  $ 100,000
                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                   ---------
Net Asset Value Per Share (10,000 shares of beneficial interest outstanding;
 unlimited authorized shares of beneficial interest of $.01 par value)...........  $   10.00
                                                                                   ---------
                                                                                   ---------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------
 
    NOTE  1  --  Dean  Witter  Japan  Fund  (the  "Fund")  was  organized  as  a
Massachusetts business trust on January  22, 1996. To date  the Fund has had  no
transactions other than those relating to organizational matters and the sale of
10,000  shares of beneficial  interest for $100,000  to Dean Witter InterCapital
Inc. (the "Investment  Manager"). The  Fund is registered  under the  Investment
Company  Act of  1940, as  amended (the  "Act"), as  a non-diversified, open-end
management investment  company. Organizational  expenses  of the  Fund  incurred
prior  to  the offering  of the  Fund's shares  will be  paid by  the Investment
Manager. It is currently estimated that  the Investment Manager will incur,  and
be reimbursed by the Fund for approximately $207,375 in organizational expenses.
Actual  results  could  differ  from those  estimates.  These  expenses  will be
deferred and amortized by the Fund on the straight-line method over a period not
to exceed five years from the date of commencement of the Fund's operations.  In
the  event that, at any time during the five year period beginning with the date
of the commencement of operations, the initial shares acquired by the Investment
Manager prior to such date are  redeemed, by any holder thereof, the  redemption
proceeds payable in respect of such shares will be reduced by the pro rata share
(based  on the proportionate share  of the initial shares  redeemed to the total
number of original  shares outstanding at  the time of  redemption) of the  then
unamortized  deferred organizational expenses as of the date of such redemption.
In the  event  that  the  Fund liquidates  before  the  deferred  organizational
expenses are fully amortized, the Investment Manager shall bear such unamortized
deferred organizational expenses.
 
    NOTE  2 -- The Fund has entered into an investment management agreement with
the Investment Manager. The Investment  Manager has entered into a  Sub-Advisory
Agreement  with Morgan Grenfell Investment Services Limited (the "Sub-Adviser").
The Sub-Adviser will provide investment advice and portfolio management relating
to the Fund's investments in securities,  subject to the overall supervision  of
the  Investment  Manager.  Certain  officers and/or  trustees  of  the  Fund are
officers and/or directors of the Investment  Manager. The Fund has retained  the
Investment  Manager to supervise the investment  of the Fund's assets. Under the
terms of the Investment Management  Agreement, the Investment Manager  maintains
certain  of the Fund's books and records and furnishes, at its own expense, such
office space, facilities, equipment, supplies, clerical help and bookkeeping and
certain legal services as the Fund may reasonably require in the conduct of  its
business.  In  addition,  the  Investment  Manager  pays  the  salaries  of  all
personnel, including officers of the Fund,  who are employees of the  Investment
Manager.  The Investment  Manager also  bears the  cost of  the Fund's telephone
service, heat, light, power and other utilities.
 
    As full compensation for the services  and facilities furnished to the  Fund
and  expenses of the Fund  assumed by the Investment  Manager, the Fund will pay
the Investment Manager  monthly compensation  calculated daily  by applying  the
annual  rate of  1.0% to the  Fund's daily  net assets. As  compensation for the
services to be provided pursuant  to the Sub-Advisory Agreement, the  Investment
Manager  will  pay the  Sub-Adviser  monthly compensation  equal  to 40%  of its
monthly compensation.
 
                                       47
<PAGE>
    Shares of the Fund will be distributed by Dean Witter Distributors Inc. (the
"Distributor"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Dean Witter, Discover & Co. and  an
affiliate of the Investment Manager. The Fund has adopted a Plan of Distribution
pursuant  to Rule 12b-1 under  the Act (the "Plan").  The Plan provides that the
Distributor will bear the  expense of all  promotional and distribution  related
activities on behalf of the Fund, including the payment of commissions for sales
of  the Fund's shares and incentive compensation  to and expenses of Dean Witter
Reynolds Inc. ("DWR")  account executives and  others who engage  in or  support
distribution  of shares or who  service shareholder accounts, including overhead
and telephone expenses;  printing and distribution  of prospectuses and  reports
used  in connection with the offering of the Fund's shares to other than current
shareholders; and preparation, printing and distribution of sales literature and
advertising materials.  In  addition,  the Distributor  may  utilize  fees  paid
pursuant to the Plan to compensate DWR and others for their opportunity costs in
advancing  such amounts, which compensation  would be in the  form of a carrying
charge on any unreimbursed distribution expenses incurred.
 
    To compensate the Distributor for the services provided and for the expenses
borne by  the Distributor  and others  under the  Plan, the  Fund will  pay  the
Distributor compensation accrued daily and payable monthly at the annual rate of
1.0% of the lesser of: (a) the average daily aggregate gross sales of the Fund's
shares since the inception of the Fund (not including reinvestments of dividends
or  capital gains  distributions), less  the average  daily aggregate  net asset
value of the  Fund's shares  redeemed since the  Fund's inception  upon which  a
contingent  deferred sales charge has been imposed  or waived; or (b) the Fund's
average daily net assets.
 
    Dean Witter  Trust  Company (the  "Transfer  Agent"), an  affiliate  of  the
Investment  Manager and  the Distributor,  is the  transfer agent  of the Fund's
shares, dividend disbursing agent for payment of dividends and distributions  on
Fund shares and agent for shareholders under various investment plans.
 
    The  Investment  Manager has  undertaken  to assume  all  operating expenses
(except for the Plan fee, foreign  taxes withheld and brokerage fees) and  waive
the  compensation  provided  for  in  its  investment  management  agreement for
services rendered until such time as the  Fund has $50 million of net assets  or
until  six  months  from the  date  of  commencement of  the  Fund's operations,
whichever occurs first.
 
                                       48


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