PURISIMA FUNDS
485APOS, 1998-06-15
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                                       As filed with the Securities and Exchange
                                                     Commission on June 15, 1998

                                                      Registration No. 333-09153
                                                              File No. 811-07737

================================================================================
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

                                 -------------

                                    FORM N-1A
             REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
                         POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 4    [X]
                                       and
         REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
                                 AMENDMENT NO. 5     [X]

                               THE PURISIMA FUNDS
               (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

                             13100 SKYLINE BOULEVARD
                         WOODSIDE, CALIFORNIA 94062-4547
                    (Address of Principal Executive Offices)

       REGISTRANT'S TELEPHONE NUMBER, INCLUDING AREA CODE: (415) 851-7925

                                KENNETH L. FISHER
                            13100 Skyline Boulevard.
                         Woodside, California 94062-4547
                     (Name and Address of Agent for Service)

                                    Copy to:
                               David Hearth, Esq.
                      Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker LLP
                        345 California Street, 29th Floor
                             San Francisco, CA 94104



It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box):

               [ ]  Immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
               [ ]  On , 1998, pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 485
               [ ]  60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
               [ ]  On __(date)____, pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
               [ ]  75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)
               [X]  On August 31, 1998, pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of Rule 485
<PAGE>
                               THE PURISIMA FUNDS

                              CROSS REFERENCE SHEET

     (Pursuant  to Rule 481  showing  the  location  in the  Prospectus  and the
Statement of Additional Information of the responses to the Items of Parts A and
B of Form N-1A).

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            Caption or Subheading in Prospectus or
          Item No. on Form N-1A                             Statement of Additional Information
          ---------------------                             -----------------------------------

<S>       <C>                                               <C>
1.        Cover Page                                        Cover Page

2.        Synopsis                                          "Summary of Expenses and Example" and
                                                            "Prospectus Summary"

3.        Condensed Financial Information                   "Financial Highlights": The Purisima Funds

4.        General Description of Registrant                 The Purisima Funds; Investment Objective;
                                                            Investment Policies and Risk Considerations;
                                                            Investment Limitations

5.        Management of the Fund                            Management; Transfer and Dividend Disbursing
                                                            Agent, Custodian and Independent Accountants

5A.       Management's Discussion of Fund                   Funds Semi-Annual Report
          Performance

6.        Capital Stock and Other Securities                Capital Structure; Dividends and Distributions;
                                                            Taxes; Shareholder Reports and Information

7.        Purchase of Securities Being Offered              How to Purchase Shares; Pricing of Fund Shares;
                                                            How to Exchange Shares; Retirement Plans;
                                                            Service and  Distribution Plan

8.        Redemption or Repurchase                          How to Redeem Shares; Pricing of Fund Shares;
                                                            How to Exchange Shares

9.        Legal Proceedings                                 (1)
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
PART B-INFORMATION REQUIRED IN STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            Caption or Subheading in Prospectus or
         Item No. on Form N-1A                              Statement of Additional Information
         ---------------------                              -----------------------------------

<S>      <C>                                                <C>
10.      Cover Page                                         Cover Page

11.      Table of Contents                                  Table of Contents

12.      General Information and History                    (2)

13.      Investment Objectives and Policies                 Additional Investment Information; Investment
                                                            Restrictions

14.      Management of the Fund                             Additional Trust Information

15.      Control Persons and Principal Holders of           Additional Trust Information
         Securities

16.      Investment Advisory and Other Services             Additional Trust Information

17.      Brokerage Allocation and Other Policies            Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage

18.      Capital Stock and Other Securities                 Description of Shares

19.      Purchase, Redemption and Pricing                   Included in the Prospectus under the heading
         of Securities Being Offered                        "How to Purchase Shares," "Pricing of Fund
                                                            Shares," "How to Exchange Shares" and "How to
                                                            Redeem Shares" and in the Statement of Additional
                                                            Information under the headings "Individual
                                                            Retirement Accounts"

20.      Tax Status                                         Included in the Prospectus under the headings
                                                            "Taxes" and "Dividends and Distributions" and in
                                                            the Statement of Additional Information under the
                                                            heading "Taxes" and "Additional Investment
                                                            Information"

21.      Underwriters                                       (1)

22.      Calculation of Performance Data                    Included in the Prospectus under the heading
                                                            "Fund Performance" and in the Statement of
                                                            Additional Information under the heading 
                                                            "Performance Information"

23.      Financial Statements                               Financial Statements
</TABLE>
- ----------------------
(1) Answer negative or inapplicable
(2) Complete answer to Item is contained in the Prospectus
<PAGE>
                                                As filed with the Securities and
                                            Exchange Commission on June 15, 1998

                                                      Registration No. 333-09153
                                                              File No. 811-07737


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------











                                     Part A

                               COMBINED PROSPECTUS

                               THE PURISIMA FUNDS
                               ------------------

                         The Purisima Total Return Fund
                         The Purisima Pure American Fund
                         The Purisima Pure Foreign Fund







- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
   
                               THE PURISIMA FUNDS
                               ------------------
    










                                   PROSPECTUS
















   
                                                      AUGUST 31, 1998
    
<PAGE>
   
                         The Purisima Total Return Fund
                         The Purisima Pure American Fund
                         The Purisima Pure Foreign Fund

         The  Purisima  Funds (the  "Trust") is a no-load,  open-end  management
investment  company  consisting of three separate  diversified  portfolios  (the
"Funds"), each of which is a separate mutual fund.

o        The Purisima Total Return Fund (the "Total Return Fund")

         The  investment  objective  of this Fund is to  produce a high level of
         total return.  The Fund may emphasize  investments in common stocks and
         other  equity-type  securities,  or  securities  acquired  primarily to
         produce income,  or a combination of both,  depending on the assessment
         of market conditions by the Fund's investment  adviser.  When selecting
         securities,  the Fund's  investment  adviser will be limited (except as
         discussed  herein)  only by its  best  judgment  as to what  will  help
         achieve the Fund's investment objective.

o        The Purisima Pure American Fund (the "American Fund")

         This Fund seeks to provide investors with a high level of total return.
         The Fund limits its  portfolio  to those  securities  and assets in the
         domestic component of the Total Return Fund.

o        The Purisima Pure Foreign Fund (the "Foreign Fund")

         This Fund seeks to provide investors with a high level of total return.
         The Fund limits its  portfolio  to those  securities  and assets in the
         foreign component of the Total Return Fund.

         Fisher  Investments,  Inc.  (the  "Adviser")  serves as the  investment
adviser to the Funds. Kenneth L. Fisher,  founder,  Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer of Fisher Investments, Inc., manages the investment program of the Funds
and is  primarily  responsible  for  the  day-to-day  management  of the  Funds'
investment portfolios.

         This Prospectus  sets forth  concisely the information  about the Funds
that you should know before  investing.  You are advised to read this Prospectus
carefully and keep it for future reference.

         A Statement of Additional Information,  dated August 31, 1998, which is
incorporated  herein  by  reference,  has been  filed  with the  Securities  and
Exchange Commission ("SEC"). The Statement of Additional Information,  which may
be revised from time-to-time, contains further
    
<PAGE>
information  about the Fund and is available,  without charge, by writing to the
Fund at P.O. Box 5354, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201-5354, or calling 1-800-841-2858.

   
         These   securities  have  not  been  approved  or  disapproved  by  the
Securities  and  Exchange   Commission  nor  has  the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission  passed  upon  the  accuracy  or  adequacy  of this  prospectus.  Any
representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

         There can be no  assurance  that the  investment  objective of any Fund
will be achieved.

                           The Purisima Funds
                           13100 Skyline Boulevard
                           Woodside, California 94062
                           August 31, 1998
    
<PAGE>
                                Table of Contents

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                                                     <C>
Expense Summary..........................................................................................1

Shareholder Transaction Expenses.........................................................................1

Annual Operating Expenses................................................................................1

Financial Highlights.....................................................................................2

 Adviser Investment Returns..............................................................................4

 Prospectus Summary......................................................................................5

 Investment Objectives and Policies......................................................................6

Portfolio Securities, Investment Techniques and Related Risks............................................8

Principal Investment Limitations........................................................................13

Management..............................................................................................13

Service and Distribution Plan...........................................................................15

Pricing of Fund Shares..................................................................................16

How to Purchase Shares..................................................................................17

How to Exchange Shares..................................................................................20

How to Redeem Shares....................................................................................22

Dividends and Distributions.............................................................................25

Shareholder Reports and Information.....................................................................25

Retirement Plans........................................................................................26

Taxes...................................................................................................26

Capital Structure.......................................................................................27

Transfer and Dividend Disbursing Agent, Custodian and Independent Accountants...........................27
</TABLE>
    
<PAGE>
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                                    <C>
Fund Performance........................................................................................28
</TABLE>

No  person  has  been  authorized  to  give  any  information  or  to  make  any
representations  not contained in this  Prospectus  and, if given or made,  such
information or representations must not be relied upon as having been authorized
by the  Funds or their  distributor.  This  prospectus  does not  constitute  an
offering  by the  Funds in any  jurisdiction  in  which  such  offering  may not
lawfully be made.
    
<PAGE>
Expense Summary

   
         The following  information  is designed to assist you in  understanding
the expenses you will bear directly or indirectly as a shareholder of the Funds.
Shareholder Transaction Expenses are charges that you pay when buying or selling
shares of a Fund. Annual Operating  Expenses are paid out of a Fund's assets and
include fees for portfolio  management,  maintenance  of  shareholder  accounts,
general Fund  administration,  shareholder  servicing,  custody,  accounting and
other services.  The Annual Operating  Expenses are the expenses  expected to be
incurred  by a Fund during the  current  fiscal  year.  Actual  total  operating
expenses may be higher or lower than those  indicated.  An example  based on the
summary is also shown.
    

Shareholder Transaction Expenses

   
Maximum Sales Load Imposed on Purchases                                None
Maximum Sales Load Imposed on Reinvested Dividends                     None
Deferred Sales Load Imposed on Redemptions                             None
Redemption Fees*                                                       None
Exchange Fees                                                          None

* A fee of $9.00 is  charged  for each  wire  redemption.  Investment  advisors,
broker-dealers  and other  financial  intermediaries  may  independently  charge
additional fees for shareholder  transactions (purchases and redemptions) or for
other services. Please see their materials for more information.
    

Annual Operating Expenses
(as a percentage of average net assets)



   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        Total Return Fund         American Fund           Foreign Fund
<S>                                           <C>                     <C>                    <C>  
Management Fees                               1.00%                   0.85%                  0.90%

Rule 12b-1 expenses (1)                       0.25%                   0.25%                  0.25%

Other expenses after
expense reimbursement                         0.25%                   0.15%                  0.25%

Total Fund operating                          1.50%                   1.25%                  1.40%
expenses after expense
reimbursement (2)
</TABLE>


         (1)      The maximum level of distribution  expenses is 0.25% per annum
                  of  each  Fund's   average  net  assets.   See   "Service  and
                  Distribution  Plan"  for  further  details.  The  distribution
                  expenses for long-term shareholders may total more than the
    
                                        1
<PAGE>
                  maximum  sales  charge  that  would have been  permissible  if
                  imposed entirely as an initial sales charge.

   
         (2)      Expenses  for the  Total  Return  Fund  are  based  on  actual
                  expenses  and  expense  limitations  for the fiscal year ended
                  August  31,  1997.  Expenses  for the  American  Fund  and the
                  Foreign  Fund are  estimated.  Although not required to do so,
                  the Adviser has agreed to limit the annual operating  expenses
                  of the Total Return Fund to 1.50%,  the American Fund to 1.25%
                  and the  Foreign  Fund to 1.40%  (excluding  interest,  taxes,
                  brokerage and extraordinary expenses). The expense limitations
                  may be terminated or revised at any time. Absent the voluntary
                  limitation for the Total Return Fund,  "Other  Expenses" would
                  have been 19.72%,  and "Total Fund Operating  Expenses"  would
                  have been 20.97% for the period ending August 31, 1997.

                  In subsequent years,  overall operating expenses for each Fund
                  may  not  fall  below  the  applicable   voluntary  percentage
                  limitation  until the  Adviser has been fully  reimbursed  for
                  fees  reduced  or  expenses  paid by it under  the  Investment
                  Advisory  Agreement.  Each Fund will  reimburse the Adviser in
                  the  three  following  years  if  operating  expenses  (before
                  reimbursement)   are  less  than  the  applicable   percentage
                  limitation charged to the Fund.
    

Example


   
                      Total Return Fund       American Fund        Foreign Fund
One Year                    $ 15                  $ 13                 $ 14
Three Years                 $ 47                  $ 40                 $ 44
Five Years                  $ 82                   NA                   NA
Ten Years                   $178                   NA                   NA


         The example  assumes that the Adviser  will limit the annual  operating
expenses of each Fund to the total shown. The example should not be considered a
representation  of past or future expenses.  Actual Fund expenses may be greater
or less than those shown. The assumption of a 5% return,  as used in the example
above, is required by the Securities and Exchange Commission's regulations.  The
5%  assumption  is  applicable  to all mutual funds and does not  represent  the
projected or actual performance of any Fund.
    
                                       2
<PAGE>
Financial Highlights

   
         The financial  information  below has been audited by Price Waterhouse,
LLP,  independent  accountant,  whose  unqualified  report  covering  the period
indicated below is  incorporated  by reference  herein and appears in the annual
report  to  shareholders.  The  table  should  be read in  conjunction  with the
financial  statements  and  related  notes  incorporated  by  reference  in  the
Statement  of  Additional  Information.  Further  information  about the  Fund's
performance  is contained in its annual  report,  which may be obtained  without
charge by writing or calling the address or telephone on the cover page.

For a share outstanding through the period:

                                                 Six months
                                                   ended          Oct. 28, 1996*
The Purisima                                   Feb. 28, 1998           to
Total Return Fund                               (unaudited)       Aug. 31, 1997

Net Asset Value,
Beginning of Period                            $     11.87        $     10.00

Income from Investment Operations:
Net Investment Income (Loss)                         -0.01               0.02

Net Realized and Unrealized
Gains on Securities                                   1.71               1.85

Total from Investment Operations                      1.70               1.87

Less Distributions:
     Dividends From Net Investment Income+           -0.02                --

Net Asset Value, End of Period                 $     13.57        $     11.87

Total Return ^                                       25.69%             18.70%

Net Assets at End of Period ('000)             $    10,560        $     4,236

Ratio of Expenses to Average Net Assets:
Before Expense Reimbursement#                         3.80%             20.97%
After Expense Reimbursement#                          1.50%              1.50%

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average #
Net Assets (Net of Expense Reimbursement)            -0.16%              0.56%

Portfolio Turnover Rate ^                             7.90%              1.35%

Average Commission Rate Paid Per Share         $    0.0330        $    0.0326

* Commencement of operations
^ Not annualized
# Annualized
+Net investment income per share has been
computed before adjustments for book/tax differences

    
                                        3
<PAGE>
   
Adviser Investment Returns

         Set forth in the following table is certain  performance  data provided
by the  Adviser  relating  to the  performance  record  of the  Adviser  for the
domestic and foreign components of the Total Return Fund, each of which used the
respective  investment  objective,  policies and restrictions  specified in this
prospectus  for the American Fund and the Foreign Fund.  The Adviser  separately
managed the  domestic  and foreign  components  of the Total  Return  Fund.  The
accounts  represented by each  component  were the only accounts  managed by the
Adviser  with full regard for the policies  and  restrictions  that apply to the
American  Fund and the Foreign Fund.  The results  presented are not intended to
predict or suggest the return to be experienced by the American or Foreign Funds
or the return an investor  might achieve by investing in the American or Foreign
Funds.

Investment Returns

                                                            Avg. Annual Return
                                                              from Inception
                                         12 months            (Oct. 28, 1996)
                                           ended                  through
                                       June 30, 1998           June 30, 1998
Domestic component
of Total Return Fund                      ______%                 ______%

S&P 500                                   ______%                 ______%
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Foreign component
of Total Return Fund                      ______%                 ______%

MSCI EAFE                                 ______%                 ______%
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


         Please read the following  important  notes  concerning the performance
information:

         1.       The results  account for both income and capital  appreciation
                  or  depreciation  (total  return).  Returns  are  net  of  all
                  applicable fees and expenses (no fees or expenses apply to the
                  indexes).

         2.       Investors should note that the American and Foreign Funds will
                  compute and disclose their average annual  compounded  rate of
                  return using the standard  formula set forth in Securities and
                  Exchange  Commission  ("SEC") rules,  which differs in certain
                  respects from returns noted above. The SEC total return and
    
                                        4
<PAGE>
   
                  calculation  method calls for computation and disclosure of an
                  average annual  compounded rate of return for one-,  five- and
                  ten-year  periods or shorter periods from  inception.  The SEC
                  formula  provides a rate of return that equates a hypothetical
                  initial  investment of $1,000 to an ending  redeemable  value.
                  The returns shown above are net of advisory fees in accordance
                  with the SEC calculation formula,  which requires that returns
                  shown be net of advisory fees as well as all other  applicable
                  Fund operating expenses.

         3.       All Fund level fees and expenses and cash for the Total Return
                  Fund are apportioned pro rata according to relative net assets
                  of the two components of the Total Return Fund.

         4.       The  Standard  &  Poor's  500  Stock  Index  ("S&P  500) is an
                  unmanaged  index  composed of 500 widely  held  common  stocks
                  listed on the NYSE,  AMEX and OTC markets.  The Morgan Stanley
                  Capital  International  Europe,  Australasia,  Far East  Index
                  ("MSCI EAFE") is an unmanaged  capitalization  weighted  index
                  that includes all major  developed  world stock markets except
                  those in North America.

Prospectus Summary

         General.  The Purisima Funds (the "Trust") is a Delaware business trust
organized  on  June  27,  1996,  and is  registered  as an  open-end  management
investment  company  under the  Investment  Company Act of 1940, as amended (the
"1940 Act").  Purisima offers investors three no-load  diversified mutual funds:
The Purisima Total Return Fund, The Purisima Pure American Fund and The Purisima
Pure Foreign Fund. Each Fund has its own investment objective and policies.  See
"Investment Objectives and Policies" for a full discussion.

         The Investment Adviser.  The Adviser,  Fisher  Investments,  Inc., is a
registered investment adviser organized as a California corporation in 1986. The
adviser  managed  approximately  $2.0 billion for  corporations,  pension plans,
endowments,  foundations,  governmental  agencies and  individuals  as of August
1998.  Kenneth L. Fisher,  the founder,  Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
the Adviser controls the Adviser. The adviser manages the investment program for
the Funds and is primarily  responsible  for the  day-to-day  management  of the
Funds' portfolio. See "Management."

         Management  Fee. For its services,  the Adviser  receives a fee accrued
daily and paid  monthly at the annual  rate of 1.00% of daily net assets for the
Total Return Fund,  0.85% for the American  Fund and 0.90% for the Foreign Fund.
See "Management."

         Investment  Risks.  Like  all  investments,  any  investment  in a Fund
involves  certain risks.  The securities  held by the Funds and the value of the
Funds' shares will fluctuate  with market and other economic  conditions so that
investors' shares, when redeemed,  may be worth more or less than their original
cost.  The Total  Return Fund and Foreign Fund invest in  securities  of foreign
companies  and present  higher  risks than mutual funds  investing  only in U.S.
companies.
    
                                        5
<PAGE>
   
Investment in any one Fund, or in any  combination of Funds,  is not intended to
constitute a balanced investment  program.  See "Investment Risks" for a further
discussion of certain risks.

         Minimum Purchase.  The minimum initial  investment in a Fund is $25,000
(or $2,000 for IRAs).

         Offering  Price.  Shares are offered at their net asset value without a
sales charge and may be redeemed at their net asset value on any  business  day.
See "How to Purchase Shares" and "How to Redeem Shares."

         Dividend and Distributions. Each Fund expects to declare dividends from
net investment  income--if  any--annually  and distribute  substantially all net
realized  capital gains-- if any--at least  annually.  The Board of Trustees may
determine to declare dividends and make  distributions  more or less frequently.
You may elect to reinvest all income  dividends and capital gains  distributions
in shares of the Fund or in cash as designated on the Purchase  Application.  If
you do not specify an election,  dividends and capital gains  distributions (net
of any required tax  withholding)  are  automatically  reinvested  in additional
shares at the net asset value in effect on the  business  day after the dividend
record date.

         You  may  change  your   election  at  any  time  by  sending   written
notification to the Funds.

Investment Objectives and Policies

         General. The following descriptions are designed to help you choose the
Fund that best fits your investment  needs. You may want to pursue more than one
objective by investing in more than one Fund. There can be no assurance that any
objective  will be  met.  In  addition,  each  Fund  may use  certain  types  of
investments  and  investment  techniques  that are  described  under the caption
"Portfolio   Securities,   Investment  Techniques  and  Related  Risks."  For  a
discussion  of  certain  risks  associated  with  an  investment  in the  Funds,
including the use of derivatives, see "Investment Risks."

         The Purisima Total Return Fund

         The  investment  objective  of the Total  Return Fund is to seek a high
level of total  return.  The  Fund  invests  in a  portfolio  allocated  between
domestic and foreign common stocks,  corporate and governmental debt securities,
short-term money market instruments and other equity type securities.
    

         The relative percentages of assets invested in equity, fixed income and
money market  securities  are not fixed and will vary depending on the Adviser's
assessment  of economic and market  conditions.  At times,  when the  investment
climate is viewed as favorable,  common stocks and other equity-type  securities
may be emphasized (up to 100% of the Fund's total assets).  Conversely, when the
Adviser  believes  that,  in light of  economic  and market  conditions,  a more
defensive  position  would be appropriate  and that the Fund's  objective may be
more
                                        6
<PAGE>
readily  attained by  investing  in fixed  income  securities  and money  market
investments,  these  investments  will be  emphasized  (up to 100% of the Fund's
total assets).  Likewise,  the relative  percentages of Fund assets  invested in
U.S.  and foreign  securities  is not fixed,  and from time to time the Fund may
invest up to 100% of its total assets in U.S.  securities,  or up to 100% of its
total assets (directly and indirectly  through  depository  receipts) in foreign
securities.

         In the same manner,  and except as discussed below, the Fund may invest
in portfolio  securities without regard to objective investment criteria such as
company  size  (market  capitalization),  earnings  history,  valuation or other
factors.  At times,  the Fund may emphasize  securities of small,  mid- or large
capitalization   companies.  In  addition,  at  times  the  Fund  may  emphasize
securities of companies which it believes are undervalued  relative to earnings,
book value or other factors or companies which it expects to have  above-average
earnings growth prospects.  When selecting securities,  the Adviser will, except
as otherwise  described  below,  be limited only by its best judgment as to what
will help achieve the Fund's investment objective.

   
         In seeking to achieve  the Fund's  investment  objective,  the  Adviser
divides  investment  opportunities into a number of categories and allocates the
Fund's  investments among those categories that it believes may provide the most
attractive investment opportunities.  The domestic and foreign equity categories
are two  important  categories.  Within the  foreign  equity  category,  country
selection  is a high  priority,  and the Adviser  generally  approaches  country
selection on a contrarian  basis by avoiding  those  countries  that the Adviser
considers to be too popular or "over bought" by  investors.  Within the domestic
equity   category,    the   Adviser   evaluates   various   criteria   such   as
large-capitalization  stocks  versus  small-capitalization  stocks,  and  growth
stocks  versus value stocks,  in an effort to determine  which areas may provide
the most attractive  investment  opportunities at that time. From  time-to-time,
the Fund's portfolio may emphasize  heavily either domestic or foreign equities.
During  other  periods,  if the  Adviser  anticipates  the  potential  for  poor
prospects generally in the U.S. or foreign equity sectors, the Adviser may adopt
a more defensive strategy by investing  substantially in fixed income securities
and money market instruments, or may seek to hedge its portfolio through the use
of index put options and other derivative  hedging  techniques.  See "Additional
Investment Information" in the Statement of Additional Information.

         The Purisima Pure American Fund

         The  investment  objective of the American Fund is to seek a high level
of total return.  The Fund's holdings are limited to the same domestic portfolio
assets held by the Total Return Fund.  The Fund invests in a portfolio  that may
be composed of common  stocks and other  equity-type  securities,  corporate and
government debt  securities and short-term  money market  instruments.  Like the
Total  Return  Fund,  the  relative  percentages  of assets  invested in equity,
fixed-income  and money market  securities are not fixed and will vary depending
on the Adviser's assessment of domestic economic and market conditions. The Fund
tends to favor  large  capitalization  stocks;  however,  the Adviser is free to
emphasize small  capitalization  stocks. The Adviser is limited only by its best
judgment as to what will help achieve the Fund's
    
                                        7
<PAGE>
   
investment  objective.  See  "Portfolio  Securities,  Investment  Techniques and
Related Risks" for the investment instruments this Fund may acquire.

         The Purisima Pure Foreign Fund

         The investment objective of the Foreign Fund is to seek a high level of
total  return.  The Fund's  holdings are limited to the same  foreign  portfolio
assets held by the Total Return Fund.  The Fund invests in a portfolio  that may
be composed of common  stocks and other  equity-type  securities,  corporate and
government  debt  securities,  and  short-term  money  market  instruments.  The
relative percentages of assets invested in equity, fixed-income and money market
securities are not fixed and will vary depending on the Adviser's  assessment of
global economic and market conditions.  The Adviser generally approaches country
selection on a contrarian  basis by avoiding  those  countries  that the Adviser
considers to be too popular or "overbought" by investors. The Adviser is limited
only by its best  judgment as to what will help  achieve  the Fund's  investment
objective.   For   temporary  or  defensive   purposes   this  Fund  may  invest
substantially  all of its assets in domestic  short-term fixed income securities
and instruments.  See "Portfolio  Securities,  Investment Techniques and Related
Risks" for the investment instruments this Fund may acquire.

Portfolio Securities, Investment Techniques and Related Risks

         The following  provides a summary of the securities and techniques used
by the Funds.  The  Statement of Additional  Information  contains more detailed
information about these investments and the risks associated with them.

         Equity Securities. The Funds may invest in equity securities, including
common stock,  preferred stock,  convertible  securities,  warrants,  rights and
depository receipts. To the extent that a Fund's portfolio is primarily invested
in common stocks and other equity-type  securities,  that Fund's net asset value
may be subject to greater  fluctuation  than a portfolio  primarily  invested in
fixed income securities.

         Each Fund will limit its  investments in warrants and rights to no more
than 5% of its net assets,  valued at the lower of cost or market.  Warrants and
rights entitle the holder to buy equity  securities  during a specific period of
time. A Fund will make such investments only if the underlying equity securities
are deemed  appropriate  by the Adviser for  inclusion in the Fund's  portfolio.
Warrants and rights  acquired by a Fund in units or attached to  securities  are
not subject to these restrictions.

         Fixed Income Securities. Each Fund, as appropriate, may invest in fixed
income securities issued by domestic or foreign  corporations or other entities,
or by U.S. or foreign  governments or their agencies or  instrumentalities.  The
Foreign Fund will invest in U.S.  government or domestic fixed income securities
only for temporary or defensive purposes.  No Fund is limited as to the maturity
of its  fixed  income  investments.  Corporate  and  foreign  governmental  debt
securities  are subject to the risk of the issuer's  inability to meet principal
and
    
                                        8
<PAGE>
interest  payments on the obligations  (credit risk), and may also be subject to
price  volatility  due to such  factors as  interest  rate  sensitivity,  market
perception of the  creditworthiness  of the issuer and general market  liquidity
(market risk).  The market value of all debt  obligations is affected by changes
in prevailing  interest rates.  The market value of such  instruments  generally
reacts inversely to interest rate changes. If prevailing interest rates decline,
the market value of debt obligations generally increases. If prevailing interest
rates increase,  the market value of debt obligations  generally  decreases.  In
general,  the  longer  the  maturity  of a  debt  obligation,  the  greater  its
sensitivity to changes in interest rates.

   
         In order to reduce the risk of  non-payment of principal or interest on
these securities, fixed income securities purchased by the Funds will be limited
to investment  grade fixed income  securities.  Investment  grade securities are
those  securities  which,  at the time of  purchase,  are rated  within the four
highest rating categories by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's") (Baa or
higher),  Standard  &  Poor's  Corporation  ("S&P")  (BBB or  higher),  or other
nationally recognized  securities rating organizations,  or securities which are
unrated but deemed by the  Adviser to be  comparable  in quality to  instruments
that are so rated.  Obligations  rated in the  lowest  of the top four  ratings,
though   considered   investment  grade,  are  considered  to  have  speculative
characteristics,  and changes in economic  conditions or other circumstances are
more  likely to lead to a  weakened  capacity  to make  principal  and  interest
payments  than is the case  with  higher  rated  securities.  Subsequent  to its
purchase by a Fund, a rated  security may cease to be rated or its rating may be
reduced below the minimum rating  required for purchase by the Fund. The Adviser
will consider such an event in determining  whether the Fund should  continue to
hold the security, but such an event will not require the Fund to dispose of the
security.  See the Statement of  Additional  Information  for a  description  of
applicable debt ratings.

         Fixed  income   securities  in  which  the  Funds  may  invest  include
obligations issued by the U.S.  government or by any agency,  instrumentality or
sponsored  enterprise thereof supported by the full faith and credit of the U.S.
government, the authority of the issuer to borrow from the U.S. Treasury, or the
discretionary  authority of the U.S.  government to purchase the  obligations of
the agency,  instrumentality  or enterprise;  obligations fully guaranteed as to
principal and interest by an agency,  instrumentality or sponsored enterprise of
the   U.S.   government;   and   obligations   of  U.S.   government   agencies,
instrumentalities or sponsored  enterprises which are not guaranteed.  The Funds
may also  invest in zero  coupon  U.S.  Treasury  securities  and in zero coupon
securities  issued by financial  institutions,  which  represent a proportionate
interest  in  underlying  U.S.  Treasury  securities.  A Fund will not invest in
mortgage- and asset-backed  securities if after the purchase more than 5% of the
Fund's net assets would be invested in these securities.

         Money Market  Instruments.  During times when the Adviser believes that
adverse economic or market conditions justify such actions, the Funds may invest
temporarily up to 100% of their total assets in short-term,  high-quality  money
market  instruments.  The Funds  may also  invest  in such  instruments  pending
investment  in  other  types  of  securities,  to  meet  anticipated  redemption
requests,  and/or to retain the  flexibility  to respond  promptly to changes in
market and economic conditions. It is impossible to predict when or for how long
the Adviser may employ these strategies.
    
                                        9
<PAGE>
   
         Money market  instruments are short-term,  high-quality debt securities
(rated in the top two categories by S&P, Moody's or other nationally  recognized
securities  rating  organizations)  denominated in U.S.  dollars or other freely
convertible currency,  including short-term  obligations issued or guaranteed by
the U.S.  government,  its agencies or  instrumentalities,  U.S. finance company
obligations,  corporate  commercial  paper,  obligations of banks and repurchase
agreements.  The  Funds'  repurchase  agreements  will be fully  collateralized.
However, if the seller of the securities fails to pay the agreed-upon repurchase
price on the delivery date, a Fund's risks may include the costs of disposing of
the  collateral  and losses that might result from any delays in  foreclosing on
the collateral.  There is no limit on the amount of a Fund's net assets that may
be subject to repurchase agreements maturing in seven days or less.

         The Funds'  investments  in money market  instruments  may also include
securities  issued by other  investment  companies  that invest in high quality,
short-term debt securities (i.e., money market instruments).  In addition to the
advisory fees and other expenses the Funds bear directly in connection  with its
own operations,  as a shareholder of another investment company, the Funds would
bear their pro rata portion of the other investment  company's advisory fees and
other expenses, and such fees and other expenses will be borne indirectly by the
Funds' shareholders.

         Smaller  Capitalization  Companies.  The Funds may invest a substantial
portion of their  assets in  companies  with modest  capitalization,  as well as
start-up  companies.  While the Adviser  believes  that small- and  medium-sized
companies as well as start-up  companies can provide  greater  growth  potential
than  larger,  more  mature  companies,  investing  in the  securities  of these
companies also involves greater risk, potential price volatility and cost. These
companies   often  involve   higher  risks  because  they  lack  the  management
experience, financial resources, product diversification,  markets, distribution
channels and competitive  strengths of larger  companies.  In addition,  in many
instances,  the frequency and volume of their trading is substantially less than
is typical of larger companies.  Therefore,  the securities of smaller companies
as well as start-up  companies may be subject to wider price  fluctuations.  The
spreads between the bid and asked prices of the securities of these companies in
the U.S.  over-the-counter  and other  markets  typically  are  larger  than the
spreads for more actively traded  securities.  As a result, a Fund could incur a
loss if it  determined to sell such a security  shortly  after its  acquisition.
When making large sales, a Fund may have to sell portfolio holdings at discounts
from quoted  prices or may have to make a series of small sales over an extended
period of time due to the trading volume of smaller company securities.

         Investors should be aware that, based on the foregoing factors,  to the
extent a Fund invests a significant  portion of its assets in the  securities of
smaller  companies,  an  investment  in the Fund may be subject to greater price
fluctuations  than  if  it  invested  primarily  in  larger,   more  established
companies.

         Foreign  Securities.  The Total Return Fund and Foreign Fund may invest
without  limitation  in  securities  of foreign  issuers  through  sponsored and
unsponsored  Depositary  Receipts ("DRs"),  e.g.,  American  Depositary Receipts
("ADRs"),  European  Depositary  Receipts ("EDRs"),  Global Depositary  Receipts
("GDRs"), Continental Depositary Receipts ("CDRs"), or
    
                                       10
<PAGE>
   
other forms of DRs, and may invest up to 5% (25% for the Foreign  Fund) of their
net  assets  at the time of  purchase  directly  in the  securities  of  foreign
issuers. DRs are receipts typically issued in connection with a United States or
foreign bank or trust company which evidence ownership of underlying  securities
issued by a foreign  corporation.  Unsponsored  DRs differ from sponsored DRs in
that the  establishment  of unsponsored DRs is not approved by the issuer of the
underlying securities.  As a result, available information concerning the issuer
may not be as current or reliable as the  information for sponsored DRs, and the
price of unsponsored DRs may be more volatile.

         Investments in foreign  securities  involve  special  risks,  costs and
opportunities  which are in addition to those inherent in domestic  investments.
Political, economic or social instability of the issuer or the country of issue,
the possibility of  expropriation or confiscatory  taxation,  limitations on the
removal of assets or diplomatic  developments,  and the  possibility  of adverse
changes in investment  or exchange  control  regulations  are among the inherent
risks.  Securities of some foreign companies are less liquid,  more volatile and
more difficult to value than  securities of comparable U.S.  companies.  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.  Currency  fluctuations  will affect the net asset value of the
Funds  irrespective of the performance of the underlying  investments in foreign
issuers.

         Fixed-income securities that may be purchased by the Funds include debt
obligations  issued or guaranteed by foreign  governments,  their  subdivisions,
agencies  or  instrumentalities,  or by  supranational  entities  that have been
constituted  by  the  governments  of  several  countries  to  promote  economic
development,  such as The World  Bank and The Asian  Development  Bank.  Foreign
investment  in certain  foreign  government  debt is restricted or controlled to
varying degrees.

         The Funds may invest in  fixed-income  securities of issuers located in
emerging foreign markets.  Such markets  generally  include every country in the
world other than the U.S., Canada,  Japan,  Australia,  New Zealand,  Hong Kong,
Singapore,  Korea  and  most  Western  European  countries.  From  time to time,
emerging  markets have offered the  opportunity for higher returns but involve a
higher level of risk. Accordingly,  the Adviser believes that the ability of the
Funds to invest in emerging markets throughout the world may enable the Funds to
obtain a wider range of attractive  investment  opportunities.  Emerging  market
securities  include  securities  issued  or  guaranteed  by  governments,  their
agencies,  instrumentalities or central banks ("sovereign debt");  securities of
issuers organized and operated to restructure the investment  characteristics of
sovereign debt; securities of banks and other business entities;  and securities
denominated in or indexed to currencies of emerging  markets.  These  securities
include  "Brady  Bonds,"  which  afford  emerging  market  countries  a means to
restructure their outstanding commercial bank debt. Foreign governmental issuers
of debt or the governmental  authorities that control  repayment of the debt may
be unable or unwilling to repay  principal or pay interest when due and all or a
portion of the interest  payments  and/or  principal  repayment  with respect to
Brady Bonds may be uncollateralized.
    
                                       11
<PAGE>
   
         Dividends and interest payable on a Fund's foreign portfolio securities
may be subject to foreign  withholding  taxes.  To the extent such taxes are not
offset by credits or deductions  allowed to investors under U.S.  federal income
tax law,  such taxes may reduce the net return to  shareholders.  See "Taxes" in
the Statement of Additional Information. Because of these and other factors, the
value of securities of foreign companies acquired by the Funds may be subject to
greater fluctuation than the value of securities of domestic companies.
    

         Illiquid Securities. The Fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets in
illiquid  securities.  Illiquid  securities are securities  that are not readily
marketable,  including restricted securities and repurchase obligations maturing
in more than seven days.  Certain  restricted  securities  that may be resold to
institutional  investors  under Rule 144A under the  Securities Act of 1933 (the
"1933 Act") and Section 4(2)  commercial  paper may be  determined  to be liquid
under guidelines adopted by the Trust's Board of Trustees.

   
         When-Issued  Securities.  The Funds may invest  without  limitation  in
securities  purchased on a when-issued or delayed  delivery basis.  Although the
payment and interest terms of these  securities are  established at the time the
purchaser enters into the commitment, these securities may be delivered and paid
for at a future date. Purchasing when-issued securities allows a Fund to lock in
a fixed price or yield on a security  it intends to  purchase.  However,  when a
Fund  purchases  a  when-issued  security,  it  immediately  assumes the risk of
ownership, including the risk of price fluctuation.

         The greater a Fund's outstanding commitments for these securities,  the
greater the  exposure to  potential  fluctuations  in the net asset value of the
Fund. Purchasing when-issued securities may involve the additional risk that the
yield  available  in the market when the delivery  occurs may be higher,  or the
market price lower,  than that  obtained at the time of  commitment.  Although a
Fund may be able to sell these  securities  prior to the delivery  date, it will
purchase  when-issued  securities  for the  purpose of  actually  acquiring  the
securities, unless, after entering into the commitment, a sale appears desirable
for investment reasons. When required by SEC guidelines, the Fund will designate
permissible liquid assets to secure its outstanding  commitments for when-issued
securities.

         Hedging Strategies.  The Funds may use various options transactions for
the  purpose  of  hedging  or  earning  additional  income,  which may be deemed
speculative.  There can be no assurance  that such efforts will succeed.  A Fund
may write (i.e. sell) call and put options,  and buy put or call options.  These
options may relate to particular securities or stock or bond indexes, may or may
not be  listed  on a  securities  exchange,  and may or may not be issued by the
Options   Clearing   Corporation.   These  options  are  considered   derivative
instruments  because they derive their value from the  performance of underlying
assets,  interest  rates or indices.  No Fund will purchase put and call options
where the aggregate  premiums on its  outstanding  options  exceed 5% of its net
assets at the time of purchase,  and will not write  options on more than 25% of
the value of its net assets (measured at the time an option is written). Options
trading is a highly  specialized  activity  that entails  greater than  ordinary
investment  risks.  In  addition,  unlisted  options  are  not  subject  to  the
protections afforded purchasers of listed options issued by the Options Clearing
Corporation,  which performs the obligations of its members if they default.  It
is  contemplated  the Funds' use of options will primarily be limited to options
on stock
    
                                       12
<PAGE>
   
indexes. These options are based on indexes of stock prices that change in value
according  to the market  value of the stocks  they  include.  Some stock  index
options are based on a broad market index,  such as the New York Stock  Exchange
Composite  Index or the  Standard  & Poor's 500  Composite  Index.  Other  index
options are based on a market segment or on stocks in a single  industry.  Stock
index  options are traded  primarily on  securities  exchanges.  The value of an
index  option  depends  primarily  on movements in the value of the index rather
than in the price of a single  security.  The primary risks  associated with the
use of options are: (a) the imperfect  correlation  between the change in market
value of the  instruments  held by a Fund and the price of the  option;  (b) the
possible  inability  to control  losses by closing its  position  where a liquid
secondary  market  does not exist;  (c) losses  caused by  unanticipated  market
movements;  and (d) the Adviser's  ability to predict correctly the direction of
securities  prices or the stock  market  generally,  and economic  factors.  For
further  discussion of risks involved with the use of options,  see  "Additional
Investment  Information  - Hedging  Strategies"  in the  Statement of Additional
Information.

         Portfolio Turnover.  In order to achieve a Fund's investment objective,
the Adviser will generally  purchase and sell  securities  without regard to the
length of time the  security  has been held.  The Adviser  intends to purchase a
given security  whenever it believes it will contribute to the stated  objective
of the Fund,  even if the same  security has only recently been sold. A Fund may
sell a given security, regardless of how long it has been held in the portfolio,
and whether the sale is at a gain or loss,  if the Adviser  believes  that it is
appropriate  to do so.  High  portfolio  turnover in any year will result in the
payment by the Fund of above-average  transaction  costs and could result in the
payment by shareholders of above-average amounts of taxes on realized investment
gains. The annual portfolio  turnover for each Fund is currently  expected to be
less than 100%; however,  the Funds do not consider each portfolio turnover rate
as a limiting factor.

 Principal Investment Limitations

         Each Fund has adopted certain fundamental investment  restrictions that
may be changed only with the approval by a majority of its outstanding shares. A
list  of the  Funds'  restrictions,  both  fundamental  and  nonfundamental,  is
contained in the  Statement  of  Additional  Information.  In order to provide a
degree  of  flexibility,  each  Fund's  investment  objective,  as well as other
policies  which are not deemed  fundamental,  may be  modified  by the  trustees
without shareholder  approval.  Any change in a Fund's investment  objective may
result in the Fund's having investment  objectives  different from the objective
which the  shareholder  considered  appropriate at the time of investment in the
Fund.  However,  no Fund will change its investment  objective  without  written
notice to shareholders sent at least 30 days in advance of any such change.
    

Management

   
         As a Delaware  business  trust,  the business  affairs of the Trust are
managed by its Board of Trustees. The trustees establish the Fund's policies and
supervise  and review its  management.  The Trust,  on behalf of the Funds,  has
entered into an investment  management  agreement with Fisher Investments,  Inc.
(the "Investment Management Agreement"), pursuant to which the
    
                                       13
<PAGE>
   
Adviser  furnishes  continuous  investment  advisory  services to the Funds. The
day-to-day operations of the Funds are administered by the officers of the Trust
and by the Adviser pursuant to the terms of the Investment Management Agreement.

         Investment Adviser. Fisher Investments,  Inc., 13100 Skyline Boulevard,
Woodside, California,  94062-4547, is the Fund's investment adviser. The Adviser
supervises  and manages the  investment  portfolio of the Funds,  and subject to
such  policies as the  trustees may  determine,  directs the purchase or sale of
investment  securities in the  day-to-day  management  of the Funds'  investment
portfolios. As of August 1998 the Adviser managed approximately $2.0 billion for
large  corporations,  pension  plans,  endowments,   foundations,   governmental
agencies and  individuals.  Kenneth L. Fisher,  the founder,  Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of the Adviser, controls the Adviser.

         Mr.  Fisher  serves  as the  Funds'  portfolio  manager  and as such is
primarily responsible for the day-to-day management of the Funds' portfolio.  He
has served as portfolio  manager of the Total Return Fund since its commencement
of  operations  in October  1996.  Mr.  Fisher  has over 20 years of  investment
management   experience.   Mr.  Fisher  began  Fisher   Investments  as  a  sole
proprietorship  in 1978 and  incorporated  the  company  under  the name  Fisher
Investments, Inc. in 1986.

         Under the  Investment  Management  Agreement,  the Adviser,  at its own
expense and without reimbursement from the Funds, furnishes office space and all
necessary office  facilities,  equipment and executive  personnel for making the
investment  decisions  necessary  for managing the Funds and  maintaining  their
organization, and pays the salaries and fees of all officers and trustees of the
Trust (except the fees paid to those trustees who are not interested  persons of
the Trust or the Adviser). For the foregoing, the Adviser receives a monthly fee
of 1/12 of 1.00% of the average daily net assets of the Total Return Fund, 0.90%
of the Foreign Fund and 0.85% of the American Fund. The Adviser may  voluntarily
reduce all or a portion of its advisory  fee and/or  absorb  operating  expenses
that the Funds are obligated to pay from  time-to-time.  See "Expense  Summary."
The Investment Management Agreement permits the Adviser to seek reimbursement of
any  reductions  made to its  management  fee and any payments by the Adviser of
operating  expenses  that the Funds are  obligated to pay within the  three-year
period  following  such  reduction or payment,  subject to the Fund's ability to
effect such  reimbursement  and remain in  compliance  with  applicable  expense
limitations.  See  "Additional  Trust  Information - Investment  Adviser" in the
Statement of Additional  Information for a further discussion.  The rates of the
advisory fees are higher than those paid by most mutual  funds.  The factors the
Adviser  considers in determining which brokers or dealers to use for the Funds'
portfolio transactions are described in the Statement of Additional Information.
Provided the Funds receive prompt execution at competitive  prices,  the Adviser
may  consider  the  sale  of  the  Fund's   shares  as  a  factor  in  selecting
broker-dealers.

         Administration.   Pursuant   to  an   Administration   Agreement   (the
"Administration Agreement"), Investment Company Administration Corporation, (the
"Administrator"  or  "ICAC"),  2020 East  Financial  Way,  Suite 100,  Glendora,
California,  91741,  acts as  administrator  for the  Funds.  The  Administrator
supervises  the  overall  administration  of the Funds  including,  among  other
responsibilities, the preparation and filing of documents required for
    
                                       14
<PAGE>
   
compliance by the Trust with applicable laws and regulations,  arranging for the
maintenance  of  books  and  records  of the  trust  and  supervision  of  other
organizations  that  provide  service  to  the  Trust.  For  its  administrative
services,  the  Administrator  receives from the Funds a fee, computed daily and
payable monthly,  based on the Funds' aggregate average net assets at the annual
rate of 0.10% of first $200  million of average net  assets,  0.05% of next $300
million average net assets,  and 0.03% thereafter,  subject to an annual minimum
of $40,000 per Fund, plus reimbursement of out-of-pocket expenses.

         Distribution.  First Fund  Distributors,  Inc.  ("First  Fund") acts as
distributor  for the Funds  pursuant to a Distribution  Agreement  between First
Fund and the Trust on behalf of the Funds (the "Distribution Agreement"). Shares
also may be sold by authorized  dealers who have entered into dealer  agreements
with First Fund or the Trust.  First Fund is an affiliate of the  administrator.
First Fund  receives no fee for its  distribution  services.  See  "Service  and
Distribution Plan."

         Expenses.  In  addition  to  the  fees  payable  under  the  Investment
Management  Agreement and the  Administration  Agreement,  the Funds pays all of
their own other expenses,  including without  limitation:  the cost of preparing
and printing its registration statement required under the 1933 Act and the 1940
Act and any amendments  thereto;  the expense of registering shares with the SEC
and filing  required  notifications  in the various  states;  the  printing  and
distribution costs of prospectuses mailed to existing  shareholders,  reports to
shareholders,  reports to government authorities and proxy statements; fees paid
to trustees  who are not  interested  persons of the Trust or Adviser;  interest
charges; taxes; legal expenses;  association membership dues; auditing services;
insurance  premiums;  brokerage  commissions  and  expenses in  connection  with
portfolio transactions; fees and expenses of the custodian of the Funds' assets;
printing and mailing  expenses  and charges and expenses of dividend  disbursing
agents,   administration  and  accounting  services  agents,  pricing  services,
custodians,  registrars and stock transfer agents;  and payments pursuant to the
Funds' Service and Distribution Plan. See "Service and Distribution Plan."

Service and Distribution Plan

         The Funds have  adopted a Service and  Distribution  Plan (the  "Plan")
pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act. The Plan authorizes  payments by each
Fund in connection  with the  distribution of its shares at an annual rate of up
to 0.25% of the Fund's average daily net assets.

         Payments  may be made by a Fund  under  the  Plan  for the  purpose  of
financing  any activity  primarily  intended to result in the sales of shares of
the Fund as determined by the trustees.  Such activities  include:  advertising;
compensation   of  the  Funds'  Adviser  (as   distribution   coordinator)   and
distributor,  compensation  for sales and sales marketing  activities of others,
such  as  the  Adviser,   dealers,   distributors  or  financial   institutions;
shareholder account servicing;  production and dissemination of prospectuses and
sales and  marketing  materials;  and capital or other  expenses  of  associated
equipment,  rent, salaries,  bonuses, interest and other overhead. To the extent
any  activity is one which the Funds may finance  without a Plan,  the Funds may
also make payments to finance such activity  outside of the Plan and not subject
to its limitations. The Adviser may also finance certain distribution activities
out of the Adviser's own
    
                                       15
<PAGE>
   
resources.   Payments  under  the  Plan  are  not  tied  exclusively  to  actual
distribution and service expenses,  and the payments may exceed distribution and
service expenses actually  incurred.  It is possible that in the future payments
to the Adviser under the Plan will exceed actual distribution  expenses incurred
by the Adviser, resulting in a profit for the Adviser.
    

Pricing of Fund Shares

   
         The  price  you pay when  buying a Fund's  shares,  and the  price  you
receive when selling  (redeeming) a Fund's shares, is the net asset value of the
shares next determined  after receipt and acceptance of a purchase or redemption
request in proper form.  No front end sales charge or  commission of any kind is
added by a Fund upon a purchase and no charge is deducted upon a redemption. The
Funds  currently  charge a $9 fee for each  redemption made by wire. See "How to
Redeem Shares."

         The per share net asset  value of each Fund is  determined  by dividing
the total value of its net assets  (meaning its assets less its  liabilities) by
the total number of its shares  outstanding at that time. The net asset value is
determined as of the close of regular trading (currently 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time)
on the New York Stock Exchange (the "Exchange") on each day the Exchange is open
for trading. This determination is applicable to all transactions in shares of a
Fund prior to that time and after the  previous  time as of which the Fund's net
asset value was  determined.  Accordingly,  investments  accepted or  redemption
requests  received in proper form prior to the close of regular trading on a day
the  Exchange is open for trading will be valued as of the close of trading that
day, and  investments  accepted or redemption  requests  received in proper form
after that time will be valued as of the close of the next trading day.

         Investments  are  considered  received only when an  investor's  check,
wired funds or  electronically  transferred  funds are received by a Fund or its
agent or subagent.  Investments  by telephone  pursuant to an  investor's  prior
authorization  to the Fund to draw on his or her  bank  account  are  considered
received when the proceeds from the bank account are received by the Fund, which
generally takes two to three banking days.

         Securities that are traded on a recognized stock exchange are valued at
the last sale price on the  securities  exchange  on which such  securities  are
primarily traded.  Securities traded on only over-the-counter markets are valued
on the basis of closing  over-the-counter  trade  prices.  Securities  for which
there were no transactions are valued at the closing bid prices. Debt securities
(other than short-term  instruments) are valued at prices furnished by a pricing
service,   subject  to  review  and  possible  revision  by  the  Adviser.   Any
modification  of the price of a debt security  furnished by a pricing service is
made pursuant to procedures adopted by the trustees.  Debt instruments  maturing
within 60 days are valued by the amortized cost method. Any securities for which
market  quotations  are not readily  available are valued at their fair value as
determined in good faith by the Adviser  pursuant to guidelines  established  by
the trustees.
    
                                       16
<PAGE>
How to Purchase Shares

   
         The Funds are no-load  mutual  funds,  so you may  purchase,  redeem or
exchange  shares  directly at net asset  value  without  paying a sales  charge.
Because each Fund's net asset value changes  daily,  your purchase price will be
the next net asset value  determined  after the Fund,  or its agent or subagent,
receives and accepts your purchase order. See "Pricing of Fund Shares."
    

                                                    Initial           Additional
                                                    Minimum           Minimum
         Type of Account                            Investment        Investment
         ---------------                            ----------        ----------

         Regular                                    $25,000           $1,000

         Automatic Investment Plan                  $25,000           $100

         Gift to Minors                             $25,000           $1,000

         Individual Retirement
         Account ("IRA")                            $2,000            $100

   
         Each Fund  reserves  the right to reject any order for the  purchase of
its shares or to limit or suspend,  without  prior  notice,  the offering of its
shares.  The required  minimum  investments may be waived in the case of certain
qualified  retirement  plans.  The Funds will not accept your account if you are
investing for another person as attorney-in-fact. The Funds also will not accept
accounts with a "Power of Attorney" in the registration  section of the Purchase
Application.

         How to  Open  Your  Account  by  Mail.  Please  complete  the  Purchase
Application which accompanies this Prospectus. You may duplicate any application
or you can obtain  additional  copies of the Purchase  Application and a copy of
the IRA Purchase Application from the Funds by calling  1-800-841-2858.  (Please
complete an IRA Application to establish an IRA.)
    

Your completed Purchase Application should be mailed directly to:

         The Purisima Funds
         P.O. Box 5354
         Cincinnati, Ohio 45201-5354

To purchase shares by overnight or express mail, please use the following street
address:

         The Purisima Funds
         312 Walnut Street, 21st Floor
         Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
                                       17
<PAGE>
   
         All applications  must be accompanied by payment in the form of a check
made payable to "The Purisima Funds." All purchases must be made in U.S. dollars
and checks must be drawn on U.S.  banks.  No cash,  credit  cards or third party
checks will be accepted.  When a purchase is made by check and a  redemption  or
exchange  is made  shortly  thereafter,  the Funds will  delay the  mailing of a
redemption check for a 15 day holding period. If you contemplate  needing access
to your  investment  shortly after  purchase,  you should purchase the shares by
wire as discussed below.

         How to Open Your Account by Wire. To avoid redemption  delays,  you may
make  purchases  by  direct  wire  transfers.  To ensure  proper  credit to your
account,  please  call the Funds at  1-800-841-2858  for  instructions  prior to
wiring  funds.  Funds  should be wired  through  the Federal  Reserve  System as
follows:

         Star Bank, n.a.
         A.B.A. Number 042000013
         For credit to The Purisima Funds
         Account Number 4864-84413
         For further credit to:
         (The Purisima __________ Fund)
         (investor account number)
         (name or account registration)

         You must promptly  complete a Purchase  Application  and mail it to the
Funds at the following address:  The Purisima Funds, P.O. Box 5354,  Cincinnati,
Ohio 45201-5354.  Payment of redemption proceeds may be delayed and taxes may be
withheld  until the Funds  receive a properly  completed  and executed  Purchase
Application.  If you wish to send it via overnight delivery, you may send it to:
The Purisima Funds, 312 Walnut Street, 21st Floor,  Cincinnati,  Ohio 45202. The
Funds  reserve  the right to refuse a  telephone  transaction  if it believes it
advisable to do so.

         If you have any questions, please call the Funds at 1-800-841-2858.

         How to Add to Your Account By Mail. You may make additional investments
by mail or by wire in the minimums  listed  above.  When adding to an account by
mail,  you  should  send the Funds  your  check,  together  with the  additional
investment form from a recent statement. If this form is unavailable, you should
send a signed note  giving the full name of the account and the account  number.
See "Additional Purchase  Information" for more information  regarding purchases
made by check or electronic funds transfer.

         How to Add to Your Account By Electronic  Funds Transfer.  You may also
make additional  investments by telephone if you have  previously  selected this
service.  By  selecting  this  service,  you  authorize  a Fund  to draw on your
preauthorized  bank  account as shown on the records of the Fund and receive the
proceeds by electronic  funds transfer.  Electronic  funds transfers may be made
commencing  ten business days after receipt by the Fund of your request to adopt
this service.  This time period allows the Fund to verify your bank information.
Investments  made by  telephone  in any one  account  must be in an amount of at
least $5,000.
    
                                       18
<PAGE>
Investments made by electronic funds transfer will be effective at the net asset
value next  computed  after  receipt by the Fund of the proceeds  from your bank
account.  See "Additional Purchase  Information" for more information  regarding
purchases  made by check or  electronic  funds  transfer.  This  service  may be
selected by  completing  the  appropriate  section on the Purchase  Application.
Changes to bank information must be made in writing and signed by all registered
holders of the account with all  signatures  guaranteed by a commercial  bank or
trust company in the United States, a member firm of the National Association of
Securities  Dealers,  Inc. ("NASD") or other eligible guarantor  institution.  A
notary public is not an acceptable guarantor. See "Pricing of Fund Shares."

   
         How to Add to Your Account by Wire. For additional  investments made by
wire transfer,  you should use the wiring  instructions listed above. Be sure to
include your account number.  Wired funds are considered  received in good order
on the day they are deposited in a Fund's  account if they reach the Fund's bank
account by the Fund's cut-off time for purchases and all required information is
provided in the wire  instructions.  The wire  instructions  will  determine the
terms of the purchase transaction.

         Automatic  Investment  Plan. You may make purchases of shares of a Fund
automatically on a regular,  monthly basis ($100 minimum per  transaction).  You
must meet the  Automatic  Investment  Plan's  (the "  Plan's")  minimum  initial
investment of $25,000 before the Plan may be  established.  Under the Plan, your
designated bank or other financial  institution debits a preauthorized amount on
your  account  each month and applies the amount to the purchase of Fund shares.
The Funds  require  ten  business  days  after the  receipt  of your  request to
initiate the Plan to verify your account information.  Generally,  the Plan will
begin on the next transaction date scheduled by the Funds for the Plan following
this ten business day period.  The Plan can be  implemented  with any  financial
institution that is a member of the Automated  Clearing House. No service fee is
currently charged by the Funds for participation in the Plan. You will receive a
statement on a quarterly  basis showing the purchases made under the Plan. A $25
fee will be imposed by the Funds if  sufficient  funds are not available in your
account or your account has been closed at the time of the automatic transaction
and your purchase will be canceled.  You will also be responsible for any losses
suffered by the Funds as a result.

         When a  purchase  is made  pursuant  to the  Plan and a  redemption  or
exchange is requested  shortly  thereafter,  the Funds will delay payment of the
redemption  proceeds  or the  completion  of an  exchange  for a 15 day  holding
period.  This delay  allows the Funds to verify that  proceeds  used to purchase
fund shares will not be returned  due to  insufficient  funds and is intended to
protect the remaining investors from loss. You may adopt the Plan at the time an
account  is  opened  by  completing  the  appropriate  section  of the  Purchase
Application.  To establish the Plan after an account is opened,  an  application
may be  obtained  from the  Funds by  calling  1-800-841-2858.  In the event you
discontinue  participation  in the Plan,  the Funds  reserve the right to redeem
your Fund account involuntarily,  upon 60 days' written notice, if the account's
net asset value is $10,000 or less.  Redeeming  all funds from your account will
discontinue your Plan privileges unless otherwise specified.
    

         Purchasing  Shares Through Other  Institutions.  If you purchase shares
through a program  of  services  offered  or  administered  by a  broker-dealer,
financial institution, or other service
                                       19
<PAGE>
   
provider, you should read the program materials,  including information relating
to fees, in addition to the Funds' Prospectus. Certain services of the Funds may
not be available or may be modified in  connection  with the program of services
provided,   and  the  broker-dealer  or  financial   institution  may  charge  a
transaction based fee,  commission or other fee on purchases of Fund shares. The
Funds may accept  requests to purchase  additional  shares into a  broker-dealer
street  name  account  only from the  broker-dealer.  Banks and other  financial
service  providers may be subject to various  state laws  regarding the services
described  above,  and may be required to register as dealers  pursuant to state
law.

         Certain  broker-dealers,   financial  institutions,  or  other  service
providers  that have entered into an agreement with the Trust may enter purchase
orders on behalf of their  customers  by phone,  with  payment to follow  within
several days as specified in the  agreement.  The Funds may effect such purchase
orders at the net asset value next  determined  after  receipt of the  telephone
purchase  order.  It is  the  responsibility  of  the  broker-dealer,  financial
institution,  or other  service  provider to place the order with the Funds on a
timely  basis.  If payment is not  received  within  the time  specified  in the
agreement, the broker-dealer,  financial institution,  or other service provider
could be held liable for any resulting fees or losses.

         Additional  Purchase  Information.  The Funds will charge a $25 service
fee against your account for any check,  wire or electronic  funds transfer that
is  returned  unpaid  and your  purchase  will be  canceled.  You  will  also be
responsible  for any  losses  suffered  by the  Funds as a  result.  In order to
relieve  you of  responsibility  for  the  safekeeping  and  delivery  of  stock
certificates, the Funds do not issue certificates.

         When a purchase is made by check or  electronic  funds  transfer  and a
redemption  or exchange is requested  shortly  thereafter,  the Funds will delay
payment of the redemption proceeds or the completion of an exchange for a 15 day
holding  period.  This delay  allows the Funds to verify that  proceeds  used to
purchase  Fund  shares  will not be returned  due to  insufficient  funds and is
intended to protect the remaining investors from loss.
    

How to Exchange Shares

   
         Shareholders  may  exchange  ($500  minimum per  transaction)  all or a
portion of their  shares in a Fund for shares in the  Countrywide  Money  Market
Fund (the "Money Market Fund"). The Money Market Fund is not affiliated with the
Trust. You must obtain a copy of the Money Market Fund prospectus from the Funds
by calling  1-800-841-2858,  and you are  advised to read it  carefully,  before
authorizing  any investment in shares of the Money Market Fund. See  "Additional
Exchange Information" regarding telephone exchanges.

         The value to be exchanged  and the price of the shares being  purchased
will be the net asset  value next  determined  by the Funds  after  receipt  and
acceptance of proper  instructions  for the exchange by the Funds or their agent
or subagent. If you desire to use the exchange privilege, you should contact the
Funds at  1-800-841-2858  for  further  information  about  the  procedures  and
effective times for exchanges.  Generally,  exchange requests received in proper
order and  accepted  by the Funds by 3:00 p.m.  (Central  Time) on a day  during
which the Funds' net asset values are determined  will be effective that day for
both a Fund being
    
                                       20
<PAGE>
purchased and the Fund being redeemed. Please note that when exchanging from the
Fund to the Money Market  Fund,  you will begin  accruing  income from the Money
Market Fund on the day following the exchange. When exchanging less than all the
balance  from the Money  Market  Fund to the Fund your  exchange  proceeds  will
exclude accrued and unpaid income from the Money Market Fund through the date of
exchange.  When  exchanging  your entire  balance  from the Money  Market  Fund,
accrued income will  automatically be exchanged into the Fund when the income is
collected from the Money Market Fund,  typically after the end of each month. An
exchange  to and from the Money  Market  Fund is treated the same as an ordinary
sale and purchase for federal income tax purposes and you generally will realize
a capital gain or loss when exchanging shares to the Money Market Fund.

   
         See "Additional Exchange Information" regarding purchases made by check
or electronic funds transfer.  If you intend to exchange shares soon after their
purchase,  you  should  purchase  the  shares  by wire or  contact  the Funds at
1-800-841-2858 for further information.

         Because of the risks  associated  with common stock  investments,  each
Fund is  intended  to be a  long-term  investment  vehicle  and not  designed to
provide  investors  with a means  of  speculating  on  short-term  stock  market
movements.   In  addition,   because  excessive  trading  can  hurt  the  Funds'
performance and Fund shareholders, the Funds reserve the right to temporarily or
permanently terminate, with or without advance notice, the exchange privilege of
any investor who makes excessive use of the exchange  privilege (e.g., more than
four exchanges per calendar  year).  Your exchanges may be restricted or refused
if a Fund receives or  anticipates  simultaneous  orders  affecting  significant
portions of the Fund's  assets.  In  particular,  a pattern of exchanges  with a
"market  timer"  strategy may be disruptive  to the Fund.  Contact the Funds for
additional information concerning the exchange privilege.

         Automatic  Exchange Plan. You may make automatic monthly exchanges from
the Money  Market Fund to a Fund  account  ($100  minimum per  transaction).  An
exchange  from one Fund to another is treated the same as an  ordinary  sale and
purchase  for federal  income tax  purposes  and  generally,  you will realize a
capital  gain or loss.  You must  meet the  Fund's  minimum  initial  investment
requirements before this Plan is established. You may adopt the Plan at the time
an account  is opened by  completing  the  appropriate  section of the  Purchase
Application.  You may obtain an application to establish the Automatic  Exchange
Plan after an account is open by calling the Funds at 1-800-841-2858.

         Additional  Exchange  Information.  When a purchase is made by check or
electronic  funds  transfer  and a redemption  or exchange is requested  shortly
thereafter,  the Funds will  delay  payment of the  redemption  proceeds  or the
completion  of an exchange  for a 15 day holding  period.  This delay allows the
Funds to verify that  proceeds used to purchase Fund shares will not be returned
due to  insufficient  funds and is intended to protect the  remaining  investors
from loss.
    

         Signature  guarantees must be signed by an authorized  signatory of the
bank, trust company, or member firm and "Signature  Guaranteed" must appear with
the signature.
                                       21
<PAGE>
How to Redeem Shares

   
         You may  redeem  shares of a Fund at any  time.  The price at which the
shares will be redeemed is the net asset value per share next  determined  after
proper  redemption  instructions  are  received  by the  Fund  or its  agent  or
subagent.  See "Pricing of Fund Shares." There are no charges for the redemption
of  shares  except  that a fee of $9 is  charged  by the  Funds  for  each  wire
redemption.  Depending upon the redemption price you receive,  you may realize a
capital gain or loss for federal income tax purposes.

         How to  Redeem  by Mail.  To  redeem  shares  by mail,  simply  send an
unconditional  written  request to the Funds  specifying the number of shares or
dollar amount to be redeemed,  the name of the Fund,  the name(s) on the account
registration  and the account  number.  A request for redemption  must be signed
exactly as the shares are  registered.  If the amount  requested is greater than
$25,000,  or the proceeds are to be sent to a person other than the recordholder
or to a location  other  than the  address of  record,  each  signature  must be
guaranteed by a commercial bank or trust company in the United States,  a member
firm of the NASD or other eligible guarantor institution. A notary public is not
an acceptable guarantor. Guarantees must be signed by an authorized signatory of
the bank, trust company,  or member firm and "Signature  Guaranteed" must appear
with the signature.  See "Additional Redemption Information" for instructions on
redeeming shares in corporate accounts. Additional documentation is required for
the redemption of shares held by persons acting pursuant to a Power of Attorney.
In case of any questions, contact the Funds in advance.

         The Funds will mail payment for redemptions  within seven business days
after they receive proper instructions for redemption.  However,  the Funds will
delay payment for a 15 day holding  period on  redemptions  of recent  purchases
made by check or electronic funds transfer. This allows the Funds to verify that
the check will not be  returned  due to  insufficient  funds and is  intended to
protect the remaining investors from loss.

         How to Redeem by  Telephone.  See  "Additional  Information"  regarding
telephone  redemptions.  Shares may be redeemed,  in an amount up to $25,000, by
calling the Funds at  1-800-841-2858.  Proceeds  redeemed by  telephone  will be
mailed to your address,  or wired or transmitted by electronic funds transfer to
your  preauthorized  bank  account  as  shown on the  records  of the  Funds.  A
redemption  request in excess of $25,000  must be made in writing  and signed by
each registered holder of the account with signatures guaranteed by a commercial
bank or trust  company  in the  United  States,  a  member  of the NASD or other
eligible  guarantor  institution.  Any written requests  received within 30 days
after an address  change made by telephone  must be  accompanied  by a signature
guarantee and no telephone  redemptions will be allowed within 30 days of such a
change.  A redemption  request  within that 30 day period must be in writing and
signed by each  registered  holder of the account  with  signatures  guaranteed.
Telephone redemptions must be in amounts of $500 or more and may not be made for
amounts greater than $25,000.

         In order to arrange for  telephone  redemptions  after your account has
been  opened or to change  the bank  account or  address  designated  to receive
redemption  proceeds,  you must send a written request to the Funds. The request
must be signed by each registered holder of the
    
                                       22
<PAGE>
   
account with the signatures  guaranteed by a commercial bank or trust company in
the  United  States,  a  member  firm of the NASD or  other  eligible  guarantor
institution.   Further   documentation  may  be  requested  from   corporations,
executors, administrators, trustees and guardians.

         Payment  of  the  redemption  proceeds  for  Fund  shares  redeemed  by
telephone  where you request wire payment will normally be made in federal funds
on the next  business  day.  Electronically  transferred  funds will  ordinarily
arrive at your bank within two to three  banking days after  transmission.  Once
funds are  transmitted,  the time and receipt are not within the Funds' control.
To change the  designated  account,  send a written  request with the signatures
guaranteed  to the Funds.  The Funds  reserve  the right to delay  payment for a
period of up to seven days after  receipt of the  redemption  request.  Once the
funds are transmitted, the time of receipt and the availability of the funds are
not  within  the  Funds'  control.  There is  currently  a $9 fee for each  wire
redemption. It will be deducted from your account.

         The  Funds  reserve  the  right to  refuse a  telephone  redemption  or
exchange  transaction  if it believes it is advisable to do so.  Procedures  for
redeeming  or  exchanging  shares of the Fund by  telephone  may be  modified or
terminated  by the Funds at any time.  In an effort to prevent  unauthorized  or
fraudulent  redemption  or  exchange  requests  by  telephone,  the  Funds  have
implemented procedures designed reasonably to assure that telephone instructions
are  genuine.  These  procedures  include:  requesting  verification  of certain
personal information; recording telephone transactions;  confirming transactions
in writing; and restricting  transmittal of redemption proceeds to preauthorized
designations.  Other procedures may be implemented from  time-to-time.  If these
procedures are followed,  the Funds and/or the Transfer Agent will not be liable
for any loss due to unauthorized or fraudulent transactions.

         You should be aware that  during  periods of  substantial  economic  or
market change,  telephone or wire redemptions may be difficult to implement.  If
you are unable to contact the Funds by telephone,  you may also redeem shares by
delivering or mailing the redemption  request to: The Purisima  Funds,  P.O. Box
5354,  Cincinnati,  Ohio  45201-5354.  If you wish to send the  information  via
overnight  delivery,  you may send it to: The Purisima Funds, 312 Walnut Street,
21st Floor, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202.

         The Funds reserve the right to suspend or postpone  redemptions  during
any period when:  trading on the Exchange is  restricted,  as  determined by the
SEC,  or the  Exchange  is closed for other than  customary  weekend and holiday
closings;  the SEC has by order permitted such suspension;  or an emergency,  as
determined  by the SEC,  exists  making  disposal  of  portfolio  securities  or
valuation of net assets of a Fund not reasonably practicable.

         Additional Redemption Information.  When a purchase is made by check or
electronic  funds  transfer  and a redemption  or exchange is requested  shortly
thereafter,  the Funds will  delay  payment of the  redemption  proceeds  or the
completion  of an exchange  for a 15 day holding  period.  This delay allows the
Funds to verify that  proceeds used to purchase Fund shares will not be returned
due to  insufficient  funds and is intended to protect the  remaining  investors
from loss.
    
                                       23
<PAGE>
         Any redemption or transfer of ownership request for corporate  accounts
will require the following written documentation:

         1.       A written letter of instruction  signed by the required number
                  of authorized officers, along with their respective positions.
                  For  redemption  requests  in excess of  $25,000,  the written
                  request must be signature  guaranteed.  A signature  guarantee
                  may be obtained from a commercial bank or trust company in the
                  United  States,  a member firm of the NASD or other  guarantor
                  and "Signature  Guaranteed" must appear with the signature.  A
                  notary public is not an acceptable guarantor.

   
         2.       A dated copy of your corporate  resolution  that states who is
                  empowered  to act,  transfer  or sell  assets on behalf of the
                  corporation.

         3.       If the corporate  resolution is more than 60 days old from the
                  date of the transaction  request,  a Certificate of Incumbency
                  from the Corporate  Secretary  which  specifically  states the
                  officer or officers named in the resolution have the authority
                  to act on the account.  The  Certificate of Incumbency must be
                  dated  within  60 days of the  requested  transaction.  If the
                  corporate  resolution  confers  authority on officers by title
                  and not by name, the  Certificate of Incumbency  must name the
                  officer(s) and their title(s).
    

         Signature  guarantees must be signed by an authorized  signatory of the
bank,  trust  company,  or member of the firm and  "Signature  Guaranteed"  must
appear with the signature.

         When  redeeming  shares from the Money Market Fund,  if you redeem less
than all of the balance of your account,  your redemption  proceeds will exclude
accrued and unpaid income  through the date of the  redemption.  When  redeeming
your entire  balance  from the Money Market  Fund,  accrued  income will be paid
separately  when the income is  collected  and paid from the Money  Market Fund,
typically at the end of the month.

   
         The Funds reserve the right to suspend or postpone  redemptions  during
any period when:  trading on the Exchange is  restricted,  as  determined by the
SEC, or that the Exchange is closed for other than customary weekend and holiday
closings;  the SEC has by order permitted such suspension;  or an emergency,  as
determined  by the SEC,  exists  making  disposal  of  portfolio  securities  or
valuation of net assets of a Fund not reasonably practicable.
    

         Due to the relatively high cost of maintaining small accounts,  if your
account balance falls below the $25,000  minimum,  except for IRA and retirement
plan accounts, as a result of a redemption or exchange or if you discontinue the
Automatic  Investment  Plan before your  account  balance  reaches the  required
minimum, you will be given a 60-day notice to reestablish the minimum balance or
activate an Automatic  Investment  Plan.  If this  requirement  is not met, your
account may be closed and the proceeds  sent to you. If your account  balance in
the Money Market Fund is redeemed,  accrued  interest will be paid at the end of
the following month.
                                       24
<PAGE>
         Systematic  Withdrawal  Plan.  The Fund offers a Systematic  Withdrawal
Plan  which  allows  you to  designate  that a fixed  amount  (limited  to those
shareholders  with a  balance  of  $100,000  or  greater  upon  commencement  of
participation  in the Plan) be  distributed  to you at  regular  intervals.  The
required  redemption  ($500  minimum  per  transaction)  takes place on the last
business  day of the month,  but if the day you  designate  falls on a Saturday,
Sunday or legal  holiday,  the  distribution  will be made on the prior business
day. Any changes made to  distribution  information  must be made in writing and
signed by each registered holder of the account with signatures  guaranteed by a
commercial bank or trust company in the United States, a member firm of the NASD
or other eligible  guarantor  institution.  A notary public is not an acceptable
guarantor.

   
         The  Systematic  Withdrawal  Plan may be  terminated by you at any time
without  charge or  penalty,  and the Funds  reserve the right to  terminate  or
modify the Systematic Withdrawal Plan upon 60-days' written notice.  Withdrawals
involve  redemption  of Fund shares and may result in a gain or loss for federal
income  tax  purposes.  An  application  for  participation  in  the  Systematic
Withdrawal Plan may be obtained from the Fund by calling 1-800-841-2858.
    

Dividends and Distributions

   
         The Funds intend to pay dividends from net investment  income,  if any,
annually and distribute substantially all net realized capital gains, if any, at
least  annually.  The Funds may make  additional  distributions  if necessary to
avoid  imposition  of a 4%  excise  tax  imposed  on net  income or other tax on
undistributed  income and gains.  You may elect to reinvest all income dividends
and capital gains  distributions in shares of a Fund or in cash as designated on
the Purchase  Application.  You may change your  election at any time by sending
written  notification to the Funds. The election is effective for  distributions
with a dividend  record date on or after the date that the Funds receive  notice
of the  election.  If you do not specify an election,  all income  dividends and
capital  gains  distributions  will  automatically  be  reinvested  in full  and
fractional  shares of the  relevant  Fund.  Shares will be  purchased at the net
asset value in effect on the  business  day after the  dividend  record date and
will be  credited  to  your  account  on such  date.  Reinvested  dividends  and
distributions  receive the same tax  treatment as those paid in cash.  Dividends
and capital gains distributions,  if any, will reduce the net asset value of the
Funds by the amount of the  dividend or capital  gains  distribution,  so that a
purchase of Fund shares shortly  before the record date for a  distribution  may
result in the receipt of taxable income that, in essence, represents a return of
capital.
    

Shareholder Reports and Information

   
         The Funds will provide the following statements and reports to keep you
current regarding the status of your investment account:
    

         Confirmation   Statements.   Except  for  Automatic   Investment   Plan
transactions, after each transaction that affects the account balance or account
registration,  you will receive a confirmation  statement.  Participants  in the
Automatic Investment Plan will receive quarterly  confirmations of all automatic
transactions.
                                       25
<PAGE>
         Account  Statements.  All shareholders  will receive  quarterly account
statements.

   
         Financial  Reports.  Financial  reports are provided to shareholders at
least semi-annually.  Annual reports will include audited financial  statements.
To reduce Fund expenses, one copy of each report will be mailed to each taxpayer
identification number even though the investor may have more than one account in
the Funds.

         If you need  information  on your account with the Funds or if you wish
to submit any applications, redemption requests, inquiries or notifications, you
should contact: The Purisima Funds, P.O. Box 5354,  Cincinnati,  Ohio 45201-5354
or call  1-800-841-2858.  If you  wish to send  the  information  via  overnight
delivery, you may send it to: The Purisima Funds, 312 Walnut Street, 21st Floor,
Cincinnati, Ohio, 45202.
    

Retirement Plans

   
         The Funds have a program  under which you may  establish an  Individual
Retirement Account ("IRA") with the Funds and into which you may roll over funds
from  an  existing  IRA.  You  may  obtain  additional   information   regarding
establishing such an account by calling the Fund at 1-800-841-2858.

         The Funds may be used as investment  vehicles for  established  defined
contribution  plans,  including 401(k),  profit-sharing,  money purchase pension
plans  ("Retirement  Plans")  and  Keogh,  SEP  IRA's.  For  details  concerning
Retirement Plans, please call 1-800-841-2858.

Taxes

         The Funds have elected (and the newer Funds intend to elect) and intend
to qualify to be treated as a regulated investment company under Subchapter M of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"). In each taxable year
that a Fund so qualifies,  the Fund (but not its shareholders)  will be relieved
of federal income tax on that part of its investment  company taxable income and
net capital gain that is distributed to  shareholders.  If in any taxable year a
Fund does not qualify as a regulated  investment company, all its taxable income
will be taxable to the Fund at corporate rates and all its distributions will be
taxable to the shareholders as dividends to the extent of the Fund's current and
accumulated earnings and profits.

         In years in which a Fund qualifies as a regulated  investment  company,
dividends from the Fund's  investment  company  taxable income  (whether paid in
cash  or  reinvested  in  additional   shares)  are  generally  taxable  to  its
shareholders as ordinary  income.  Distributions of the Fund's net capital gain,
when  designated as such, are taxable to its  shareholders as capital gain (with
the capital gains tax rate generally  dependent on the Fund's  holding  period),
regardless  of how long  they have held  their  Fund  shares  and  whether  such
distributions  are paid in cash or  reinvested in  additional  Fund shares.  The
Funds provide federal tax information to their shareholders annually,  including
information  about dividends and other  distributions  paid during the preceding
year.
    
                                       26
<PAGE>
   
         The Funds will be required to withhold  federal income tax at a rate of
31% ("backup  withholding")  from dividend  payments and redemption and exchange
proceeds if you fail to complete the  certification  section included as part of
the Purchase Application.

         The foregoing is only a summary of some of the important federal income
tax considerations  generally  affecting the Funds and their  shareholders.  See
"Taxes" in the Statement of Additional Information for further discussion. There
may  be  other  federal  income  tax  considerations  and  state  or  local  tax
considerations  applicable  to you as an investor.  You  therefore  are urged to
consult your tax adviser regarding any tax-related issues.
    

Capital Structure

   
         The Trust is a business trust established under Delaware law. The Trust
was  established  under a  Certificate  of Trust dated as of June 25, 1996.  The
Trust's  shares of  beneficial  interest  have a par  value of $0.01 per  share.
Shares of the Trust may be issued in one or more series or "funds" and each fund
may have more than one class of shares.  The Funds are  currently  authorized to
issue a single class of shares.  The Funds' shares may be issued in an unlimited
number by the trustees of the Trust.

         Shares  issued  by  the  Funds  have  no   preemptive,   conversion  or
subscription  rights.  Each whole share is entitled to one vote as to any matter
on which it is  entitled  to vote and each  fractional  share is  entitled  to a
proportionate  fractional vote.  Shareholders have equal and exclusive rights as
to dividends and distributions as declared by the Funds and to the net assets of
the Funds upon  liquidation or  dissolution.  Each Fund, as a separate series of
the Trust,  votes separately on matters affecting only the Fund (e.g.,  approval
of the Investment Management Agreement).  The Funds and all future series of the
Trust will vote as a single class on matters  affecting  all series of the Trust
(e.g.,  election or removal of trustees).  Voting rights are not cumulative,  so
that the  holders  of more  than 50% of the  shares  voting in any  election  of
trustees can, if they so choose,  elect all of the trustees of the Trust.  While
the  Trust is not  required  and does not  intend  to hold  annual  meetings  of
shareholders,  such meetings may be called by trustees at their  discretion,  or
upon demand by the holders of 10% or more of the outstanding shares of the Trust
for the  purpose of  electing or  removing  trustees.  Shareholders  may receive
assistance in  communicating  with other  shareholders  in  connection  with the
election or removal of trustees  pursuant to the  provisions of Section 16(c) of
the 1940 Act.
    

Transfer and Dividend Disbursing Agent, Custodian and Independent Accountants

   
         Countrywide  Fund  Services,   Inc.  312  Walnut  Street,  21st  Floor,
Cincinnati,  Ohio,  45202,  has been retained to act as the Funds'  Transfer and
Dividend  Disbursing  Agent. [UMB Bank, n.a., which has its principal address at
928 Grand  Avenue,  Kansas City,  Missouri  64141,  has been  retained to act as
Custodian  of  the  Funds'  investments.]  Neither  the  Transfer  and  Dividend
Disbursing  Agent  nor  the  Custodian  has  any  part in  deciding  the  Funds'
investment  policies or which  securities  are to be  purchased  or sold for the
Funds'  portfolios.   Price  Waterhouse  LLP  has  been  selected  to  serve  as
independent accountants of the Trust for the fiscal year ending August 31, 1999.
    
                                       27
<PAGE>
Fund Performance

   
         From time-to-time,  the Funds may advertise their "average annual total
return" over various  periods of time. An average  annual total return refers to
the rate of return which,  if applied to an initial  investment at the beginning
of a  stated  period  and  compounded  over  the  period,  would  result  in the
redeemable  value of the  investment  at the end of the stated  period  assuming
reinvestment of all dividends and distributions and reflecting the effect of all
recurring fees. An investor's  principal in the Funds and the Funds' returns are
not  guaranteed  and  will  fluctuate  according  to  market  conditions.   When
considering "average" total return figures for periods longer than one year, you
should note that the Funds'  annual  total return for any one year in the period
might have been  greater or less than the  average  for the entire  period.  The
Funds  also may use  "aggregate"  total  return  figures  for  various  periods,
representing the cumulative  change in value of an investment in the Funds for a
specific period (again reflecting changes in the Funds' share price and assuming
reinvestment of dividends and distributions).

         The Funds may quote their average annual total and/or  aggregate  total
return  for  various  time  periods  in   advertisements  or  communications  to
shareholders.  The Funds may also  compare  their  performance  to that of other
mutual funds with similar investment  objectives and to stock and other relevant
indices  or  to   rankings   prepared  by   independent   services  or  industry
publications.  For  example,  the Funds'  total  returns may be compared to data
prepared by Lipper Analytical  Services,  Inc.,  Morningstar,  Value Line Mutual
Fund Survey and CDA Investment Technologies,  Inc. Total return data as reported
in such national financial publications as The Wall Street Journal, The New York
Times, Investor's Business Daily, USA Today, Barron's, Money, and Forbes as well
as in publications of a local or regional  nature,  may be used in comparing the
Funds' performance.

         The Funds'  total  returns may also be compared to such  indices as the
Dow Jones  Industrial  Average,  Standard & Poor's 500 Composite  Index,  NASDAQ
Composite OTC Index or NASDAQ Industrials Index,  Consumer Price Index,  Russell
2000  Index,  Salomon  Brothers  High Grade  Bond  Index and the Morgan  Stanley
Europe,   Australia,   Far  East  Index.   Further  information  on  performance
measurement may be found in the Statement of Additional Information.

         Performance   quotations  of  the  Funds   represent  the  Funds'  past
performance  and should not be considered as  representative  of future results.
The  investment  return and  principal  value of an investment in the Funds will
fluctuate so that an investor's shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less
than their  original  cost.  The methods used to compute the Funds' total return
and  yield  are  described  in  more  detail  in  the  Statement  of  Additional
Information.
    

For Fund information, prices, literature, account balances and other information
about your Purisima Funds account, call 1-800-841-2858.

The Purisima Funds
P.O. Box 5354
Cincinnati, Ohio 45201-5354
                                       28
<PAGE>
                                                As filed with the Securities and
                                            Exchange Commission on June 15, 1998

                                                      Registration No. 333-09153
                                                              File No. 811-07737


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------











                                     Part B

                              COMBINED STATEMENT OF
                             ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

                               THE PURISIMA FUNDS
                               ------------------

                         The Purisima Total Return Fund
                         The Purisima Pure American Fund
                         The Purisima Pure Foreign Fund







- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
   
                         THE PURISIMA TOTAL RETURN FUND
                         THE PURISIMA PURE AMERICAN FUND
                         THE PURISIMA PURE FOREIGN FUND
    


                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION




















   
         This  Statement of  Additional  Information  dated August 31, 1998,  is
meant to be read in conjunction  with the  Prospectus  dated August 31, 1998 for
the funds  named  above  (collectively,  the  "Funds")  and is  incorporated  by
reference  in its  entirety  into the  Prospectus.  Because  this  Statement  of
Additional  Information  is not itself a prospectus,  no investment in shares of
the Funds should be made solely upon the information contained herein. Copies of
the Prospectus for the Funds may be obtained by writing the Fund, P.O. Box 5354,
Cincinnati, Ohio, 45201-5354, or calling 1-800-871-2665.  Capitalized terms used
but not defined herein have the same meanings as in the Prospectus.

         No person has been  authorized to give any  information  or to make any
representations not contained in this statement of additional  information or in
the prospectus in connection  with the offering made by the  prospectus  and, if
given or made, such  information or  representations  must not be relied upon as
having been authorized by the Funds or the distributor.  The prospectus does not
constitute an offering by the Funds in any  jurisdiction  in which such offering
may not lawfully be made.
    
<PAGE>
                                TABLE OF CONTENTS





                                                                            Page
                                                                            ----


   
ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT INFORMATION.............................................1

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS......................................................10

ADDITIONAL TRUST INFORMATION.................................................13

DISTRIBUTION OF SHARES.......................................................17

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE.........................................19

TAXES........................................................................20

DESCRIPTION OF SHARES........................................................23

INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS...............................................27

PERFORMANCE INFORMATION......................................................27

OTHER INFORMATION............................................................30

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS.........................................................32

APPENDIX A...................................................................34
    
<PAGE>
                        ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT INFORMATION

   
         This Statement of Additional Information relates to the following three
series or mutual funds of The Purisima  Funds,  a Delaware  business  trust (the
"Trust"):

                  The Purisima Total Return Fund (the "Total Return Fund"),
                  The Purisima Pure American Fund (the "American Fund"),
                  The Purisima Pure Foreign Fund (the "Foreign Fund")

         The  investment  objective  of each Fund is to  produce a high level of
total return. Because of the risks inherent in all investments,  there can be no
assurance that any Fund will meet its  objective.  No Fund is intended by itself
to constitute a balanced investment program.

         The following  information  supplements the investment  policies of the
Funds as set  forth  in the  Prospectus.  Unless  specifically  designated  as a
"fundamental"  policy (which may be changed only with the approval by a majority
of a Fund's  outstanding  shares,  as defined in the  Investment  Company Act of
1940),  all  investment  policies  described  below may be changed by the Funds'
Board of Trustees without shareholder approval.

         United States Government Obligations.  The Funds may invest in Treasury
securities  which differ only in their interest  rates,  maturities and times of
issuance.  Treasury Bills have initial maturities of one year or less;  Treasury
Notes have initial  maturities of one to ten years; and Treasury Bonds generally
have initial maturities of greater than ten years.
    

         Obligations  issued  or  guaranteed  by U.S.  Government  agencies  and
instrumentalities are supported by any of the following:  (a) the full faith and
credit of the U.S.  Treasury (for  example,  Ginnie Mae  Certificates);  (b) the
right of the issuer to borrow  from the  Treasury  (such as  obligations  of the
Federal Home Loan Banks); (c) the discretionary authority of the U.S. Government
to purchase certain obligations of the agency or instrumentality  (such as those
issued by Fannie Mae); and (d) only the credit of the agency or  instrumentality
itself (such as those issued by the Student Loan Marketing  Association).  While
the U.S. Government provides financial support to such U.S. Government-sponsored
agencies or instrumentalities,  no assurance can be given that it will always do
so because it is not so obligated.

   
         Money  Market  Instruments.  The Funds may invest in a variety of money
market instruments for temporary defensive purposes, pending investment in other
types of securities,  to meet anticipated  redemption  requests and/or to retain
the  flexibility  to  respond   promptly  to  changes  in  market  and  economic
conditions.  Commercial paper represents  short-term  unsecured promissory notes
issued in  bearer  form by banks or bank  holding  companies,  corporations  and
finance companies. Certificates of deposit are generally negotiable certificates
issued  against funds  deposited in a commercial  bank for a definite  period of
time and earning a specified return.
    
                                        1
<PAGE>
Bankers' acceptances are negotiable drafts or bills of exchange,  normally drawn
by an importer or exporter to pay for specific merchandise, which are "accepted"
by a bank, meaning, in effect, that the bank  unconditionally  agrees to pay the
face  value  of the  instrument  on  maturity.  Fixed  time  deposits  are  bank
obligations  payable at a stated  maturity date and bearing  interest at a fixed
rate.  Fixed time deposits may be withdrawn on demand by the  investor,  but may
also be subject to early  withdrawal  penalties  that vary depending upon market
conditions  and  the  remaining  maturity  of  the  obligation.   There  are  no
contractual  restrictions  on the right to transfer a  beneficial  interest in a
fixed  time  deposit  to a third  party,  although  there is no market  for such
deposits. Bank notes and bankers' acceptances rank junior to deposit liabilities
of the bank and pari passu with other senior, unsecured obligations of the bank.
Bank notes are classified as "other borrowings" on a bank's balance sheet, while
deposit notes and certificates of deposit are classified as deposits. Bank notes
are not  insured  by the  Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation  or any other
insurer.  Deposit notes are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
only to the extent of $100,000 per depositor per bank.

   
         Repurchase  Agreements.  The  Funds  may  agree to  purchase  portfolio
securities  from  financial  institutions  subject to the seller's  agreement to
repurchase  them  at  a  mutually  agreed  upon  date  and  price   ("repurchase
agreements"). Although the securities subject to a repurchase agreement may bear
maturities  exceeding one year,  settlement  for the  repurchase  agreement will
never be more than one year after a Fund's  acquisition  of the  securities  and
normally  will be  within a  shorter  period  of  time.  Securities  subject  to
repurchase  agreements are held either by the Funds'  custodian or  subcustodian
(if any), or in the Federal Reserve/Treasury Book-Entry System. The seller under
a repurchase  agreement will be required to maintain the value of the securities
subject to the agreement in an amount  exceeding the repurchase price (including
accrued interest).  Repurchase agreements may be considered loans to the seller,
collateralized  by the underlying  securities.  The risk to a Fund is limited to
the ability of the seller to pay the agreed upon sum on the repurchase  date; in
the  event  of  default,  the  repurchase  agreement  provides  that the Fund is
entitled  to sell the  underlying  collateral.  If the  value of the  collateral
declines  after the  agreement  is  entered  into,  however,  and if the  seller
defaults  under  a  repurchase  agreement  when  the  value  of  the  underlying
collateral  is less than the  repurchase  price,  the Fund could incur a loss of
both principal and interest. The Adviser monitors the value of the collateral at
the time the  agreement  is entered into and at all times during the term of the
repurchase  agreement in an effort to determine that the value of the collateral
always  equals or exceeds  the  agreed-upon  repurchase  price to be paid to the
Fund.

         Asset-Backed   Securities.   The   Funds  may   purchase   asset-backed
securities,  which are securities  backed by mortgages,  installment  contracts,
credit card  receivables  or other  assets.  Asset-backed  securities  represent
interests in "pools" of assets in which  payments of both interest and principal
on the securities are made monthly,  thus in effect  "passing  through"  monthly
payments  made by the  individual  borrowers  on the assets  that  underlie  the
securities,  net of any fees paid to the issuer or guarantor of the  securities.
The average life of  asset-backed  securities  varies with the maturities of the
underlying instruments, and the average life of a
    
                                        2
<PAGE>
   
mortgage-backed  instrument,  in particular,  is likely to be substantially less
than the original  maturity of the mortgage pools underlying the securities as a
result of mortgage  pre-payments.  For this and other reasons,  an  asset-backed
security's stated maturity may be shortened, and the security's total return may
be difficult to predict precisely. Asset-backed securities acquired by the Funds
may  include  collateralized  mortgage  obligations  ("CMOs")  issued by private
companies.

         The Funds may  acquire  several  types of  mortgage-backed  securities,
including  guaranteed  mortgage  pass-through  certificates,  which  provide the
holder with a pro rata interest in the  underlying  mortgages,  and CMOs,  which
provide  the  holder  with a  specified  interest  in the cash flow of a pool of
underlying  mortgages.   Issuers  of  CMOs  ordinarily  elect  to  be  taxed  as
pass-through   entities  known  as  real  estate  mortgage  investment  conduits
("REMICs").  CMOs are issued in multiple classes, each with a specified fixed or
floating  interest  rate and a final  distribution  date.  The relative  payment
rights of the various CMO classes may be  structured  in a variety of ways.  The
Funds will not purchase "residual" CMO interests, which normally exhibit greater
price volatility.
    

         There are a number of  important  differences  among the  agencies  and
instrumentalities of the U.S. government that issue mortgage-related  securities
and among the securities that they issue. Mortgage-related securities guaranteed
by the GNMA  include  GNMA  Mortgage  Pass-Through  Certificates  (also known as
"Ginnie  Maes"),  which are guaranteed as to the timely payment of principal and
interest  by GNMA and backed by the full faith and credit of the United  States.
GNMA is a  wholly-owned  U.S.  government  corporation  within the Department of
Housing and Urban  Development.  GNMA  certificates  also are  supported  by the
authority of GNMA to borrow funds from the U.S.  Treasury to make payments under
its  guarantee.  Mortgage-backed  securities  issued  by the FNMA  include  FNMA
Guaranteed  Mortgage  Pass-Through  Certificates  (also known as "Fannie Maes"),
which are solely the  obligations  of the FNMA and are not backed by or entitled
to the full faith and  credit of the United  States,  but are  supported  by the
discretionary  authority of the U.S. Treasury to provide certain credit support.
FNMA  is  a   government-sponsored   organization   owned  entirely  by  private
stockholders.  Fannie Maes are  guaranteed as to timely payment of the principal
and interest by FNMA.  Mortgage-related  securities  issued by the FHLMC include
FHLMC  Mortgage  Participation  Certificates  (also known as  "Freddie  Macs" or
"PCS").  FHLMC is a  corporate  instrumentality  of the United  States,  created
pursuant to an Act of  Congress,  which is owned  entirely by Federal  Home Loan
Banks.  Freddie  Macs  are  not  guaranteed  and do  not  constitute  a debt  or
obligation  of the United  States or any Federal  Home Loan Bank.  Freddie  Macs
entitle the holder to timely payment of interest,  which is guaranteed by FHLMC.
FHLMC guarantees  either ultimate  collection or timely payment of all principal
payments on the underlying  mortgage loans. When FHLMC does not guarantee timely
payment of principal, FHLMC may remit the amount due on account of its guarantee
of ultimate  payment of  principal  at any time after  default on an  underlying
mortgage, but in no event later than one year after it becomes payable.
                                        3
<PAGE>
         Non-mortgage asset-backed securities involve certain risks that are not
presented by mortgage-backed securities. Primarily, these securities do not have
the benefit of the same security interest in the underlying  collateral.  Credit
card  receivables  are  generally  unsecured and the debtors are entitled to the
protection of a number of state and federal  consumer credit laws, many of which
have  given  debtors  the right to set off  certain  amounts  owed on the credit
cards, thereby reducing the balance due. Most issuers of automobile  receivables
permit the servicers to retain possession of the underlying obligations.  If the
servicer were to sell these  obligations to another party,  there is a risk that
the purchaser  would acquire an interest  superior to that of the holders of the
related  automobile  receivables.  In  addition,  because of the large number of
vehicles involved in a typical issuance and technical  requirements  under state
laws, the trustee for the holders of the automobile  receivables may not have an
effective security interest in all of the obligations  backing such receivables.
Therefore,  there is a possibility that recoveries on repossessed collateral may
not, in some cases, be able to support payments on these securities.

   
         The  yield  characteristics  of  asset-backed  securities  differ  from
traditional debt securities.  A major difference is that the principal amount of
the obligations may be prepaid at any time because the underlying  assets (i.e.,
loans)  generally  may be prepaid at any time. As a result,  if an  asset-backed
security  is  purchased  at a premium,  a  prepayment  rate that is faster  than
expected will reduce yield to maturity,  while a prepayment  rate that is slower
than  expected will have the opposite  effect of  increasing  yield to maturity.
Conversely,  if an asset-backed security is purchased at a discount, faster than
expected prepayments will increase,  while slower than expected prepayments will
decrease,  yield to maturity.  In calculating the average weighted maturity of a
Fund,  the  maturity of  asset-backed  securities  will be based on estimates of
average life.
    

         Prepayments on asset-backed  securities generally increase with falling
interest rates and decrease with rising interest rates; furthermore,  prepayment
rates are  influenced by a variety of economic and social  factors.  In general,
the collateral  supporting  non-mortgage  asset-backed  securities is of shorter
maturity  than  mortgage  loans  and is less  likely to  experience  substantial
prepayments.  Like other fixed income  securities,  when interest rates rise the
value of an asset-backed security generally will decline; however, when interest
rates decline,  the value of an asset-backed  security with prepayment  features
may not increase as much as that of other fixed income securities.

   
         Zero-Coupon,  Step-Coupon  and  Pay-In-Kind  Securities.  The Funds may
invest in zero-coupon, step-coupon, and pay-in-kind securities. These securities
are debt securities that do not make regular interest payments.  Zero-coupon and
step-coupon  securities  are  sold  at a deep  discount  to  their  face  value.
Pay-in-kind   securities  pay  interest   through  the  issuance  of  additional
securities.  Because such  securities  do not pay current  income,  the price of
these  securities  can be volatile when interest  rates  fluctuate.  While these
securities do not pay current cash income,  federal  income tax law requires the
holders of taxable zero-coupon,  step-coupon, and certain pay-in-kind securities
to report as interest each year the portion of the original issue
    
                                        4
<PAGE>
   
discount (or deemed discount) on such securities accruing that year. In order to
qualify as a "regulated  investment  company" under the Internal Revenue Code of
1986, as amended (the "Code"), a Fund may be required to distribute a portion of
such  discount  and may be  required to dispose of other  portfolio  securities,
which may occur in periods of adverse market  prices,  in order to generate cash
to meet these distribution requirements.

         Yields and Ratings.  The yields on certain  obligations,  including the
money  market  instruments  in which the Funds may invest,  are  dependent  on a
variety of factors,  including  general economic  conditions,  conditions in the
particular market for the obligation, financial condition of the issuer, size of
the offering,  maturity of the obligation and ratings of the issue.  The ratings
of S&P, Moody's,  and other rating agencies represent their respective  opinions
as to the quality of the obligations they undertake to rate.  Ratings,  however,
are general and are not absolute standards of quality. Consequently, obligations
with the same  rating,  maturity  and interest  rate may have  different  market
prices.

         Illiquid  Securities.  Each Fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets
in illiquid  securities  (i.e.  ,  securities  that cannot be disposed of within
seven days in the normal course of business at approximately the amount at which
the Fund has valued the  securities).  The Board of Trustees or its delegate has
the ultimate  authority to determine which securities are liquid or illiquid for
purposes of this  limitation.  Certain  securities  exempt from  registration or
issued in transactions exempt from registration  ("restricted securities") under
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended  ("Securities  Act"),  that may be resold
pursuant  to Rule  144A  or  Regulation  S  under  the  Securities  Act,  may be
considered  liquid.  The Trustees have  delegated to the Adviser the  day-to-day
determination of the liquidity of a security, although it has retained oversight
and ultimate  responsibility  for such  determinations.  Certain  securities are
deemed illiquid by the Securities and Exchange Commission  including  repurchase
agreements  maturing  in greater  than seven  days and  options  not listed on a
securities  exchange or not issued by the Options  Clearing  Corporation.  These
securities will be treated as illiquid and subject to each Fund's  limitation on
illiquid securities.

         Restricted  securities  may be sold in  privately  negotiated  or other
exempt transactions,  qualified non-U.S. transactions,  such as under Regulation
S, or in a public offering with respect to which a registration  statement is in
effect under the Securities Act. Where  registration is required,  a Fund may be
obligated to pay all or part of the  registration  expenses  and a  considerable
time may elapse  between the decision to sell and the sale date. If, during such
period,  adverse market  conditions were to develop,  a Fund might obtain a less
favorable price than prevailed - when it decided to sell.  Restricted securities
will be priced at fair value as determined in good faith by the Trustees.

         If through the appreciation of illiquid  securities or the depreciation
of liquid  securities,  more than 15% of the value of a Fund's  net  assets  are
invested in  illiquid  assets,  including  restricted  securities  which are not
readily marketable, the Fund will take such steps as it deems
    
                                        5
<PAGE>
advisable, if any, to reduce the percentage of such securities to 15% or less of
the value of its net assets.

   
         Warrants. The Funds may purchase warrants and similar rights, which are
privileges  issued by a  corporation  enabling  the owners to  subscribe  to and
purchase a specified  number of shares of the  corporation at a specified  price
during a specific  period of time.  The  purchase of warrants  involves the risk
that a Fund could lose the purchase price of a warrant if the right to subscribe
to additional shares is not exercised prior to the warrant's  expiration.  Also,
the purchase of warrants involves the risk that the effective price paid for the
warrant added to the  subscription  price of the related security may exceed the
value  of the  subscribed  security's  market  price  such as when  there  is no
movement in the level of the underlying security.  No Fund will invest more than
5% of its net assets,  taken at market value, in warrants.  Warrants attached to
other securities acquired by a Fund are not subject to this restriction.

         Forward  Commitments,   When-Issued   Securities  and  Delayed-Delivery
Transactions.  The Funds  may  purchase  securities  on a  when-issued  basis or
purchase  or  sell  securities  on  a  forward   commitment   (sometimes  called
delayed-delivery)  basis. These transactions involve a commitment by the Fund to
purchase  or sell  securities  at a future  date.  The  price of the  underlying
securities and the date when the securities  will be delivered and paid for (the
settlement  date) are fixed  when the  transaction  is  negotiated.  When-issued
purchases and forward commitment  transactions are normally  negotiated directly
with the other party. The Funds will purchase  securities on a when-issued basis
or sell  securities  on a forward  commitment  basis only with the  intention of
completing the transaction and actually purchasing or selling the securities. If
deemed advisable as a matter of investment strategy, however, a Fund may dispose
of or  renegotiate  a commitment  after  entering  into it. A Fund also may sell
securities it has committed to purchase before those securities are delivered to
the Fund on the settlement date.

         When a Fund purchases securities on a when-issued,  delayed-delivery or
forward  commitment  basis, the Fund's custodian or subcustodian  will designate
liquid assets having a value (determined  daily) at least equal to the amount of
the Fund's purchase commitments.

         Hedging Strategies.  The Funds may use various options transactions for
the purpose of hedging or earning additional  income.  There can be no assurance
that such efforts will  succeed.  The Funds may write (i.e.,  sell) call and put
options,  and buy put or call  options.  These  options may relate to particular
securities or stock or bond indexes and may or may not be listed on a securities
exchange and may or may not be issued by the Options  Clearing  Corporation.  No
Fund will  purchase put and call  options  where the  aggregate  premiums on its
outstanding  options  exceed 5% of its net assets at the time of  purchase,  and
will not write options on more than 25% of the value of its net assets (measured
at the time an option is written).
    
                                        6
<PAGE>
   
         Hedging  instruments on securities  generally are used to hedge against
price movements in one or more particular  securities positions that a Fund owns
or intends to  acquire.  Hedging  instruments  on stock  indices,  in  contrast,
generally  are used to hedge  against  price  movements in broad  equity  market
sectors in which a Fund has  invested  or expects to invest.  The use of hedging
instruments is subject to applicable  regulations of the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the several options exchanges upon which they are traded and various
state  regulatory  authorities.  In  addition,  a Fund's  ability to use hedging
instruments may be limited by tax considerations.

         General.  The Funds may purchase  and write  (i.e.,  sell) put and call
options. Such options may relate to particular securities or securities indices,
and may or may not be listed on a domestic or foreign  securities  exchange  and
may or may not be issued by the Options Clearing Corporation. Options trading is
a highly  specialized  activity that entails  greater than  ordinary  investment
risk.  Options  may be  more  volatile  than  the  underlying  instruments,  and
therefore,  on a percentage  basis,  an  investment in options may be subject to
greater fluctuation than an investment in the underlying instruments themselves.
    

         A call option for a  particular  security  gives the  purchaser  of the
option the right to buy, and the writer  (seller) the  obligation  to sell,  the
underlying security at the stated exercise price at any time (or, in some cases,
on certain specified dates) prior to the expiration of the option, regardless of
the market price of the security.  A put option for a particular  security gives
the purchaser the right to sell the security at the stated exercise price at any
time prior to the expiration date of the option,  regardless of the market price
of the  security.  The  premium  paid  to the  writer  is in  consideration  for
undertaking the obligation under the option contract.

         Securities  index  options are put options and call  options on various
securities  indexes.  In most respects,  they are identical to listed options on
common stocks or bonds. The primary  difference  between  securities options and
index options occurs when index options are exercised. In the case of securities
options, the underlying security, is delivered. However, upon the exercise of an
index option, settlement does not occur by delivery of the securities comprising
the index.  The option holder who exercises the index option  receives an amount
of cash if the closing  level of the  securities  index upon which the option is
based is greater  than,  in the case of a call,  or less than,  in the case of a
put,  the  exercise  price of the  option.  This  amount of cash is equal to the
difference  between the closing price of the  securities  index and the exercise
price  of the  option  expressed  in  dollars  times  a  specified  multiple.  A
securities  index  fluctuates  with  changes in the  market  value of the stocks
included in the index.  For  example,  some stock  index  options are based on a
broad  market  index,  such as the  Standard  &  Poor's  500 or the  Value  Line
Composite Index, or a narrower market index,  such as the Standard & Poor's 100.
Indexes may also be based on an industry or market segment, such as the AMEX Oil
and  Gas  Index  or the  Computer  and  Business  Equipment  Index.  Options  on
securities indexes are currently traded on the following exchanges:  the Chicago
Board Options Exchange, the New York Stock Exchange,
                                        7
<PAGE>
the American Stock Exchange,  the Pacific Stock Exchange,  and the  Philadelphia
Stock Exchange.

   
         A Fund's  obligation  to sell an  instrument  subject to a call  option
written by it, or to purchase an instrument  subject to a put option  written by
it, may be terminated  prior to the expiration  date of the option by the Fund's
execution of a closing purchase transaction,  which is effected by purchasing on
an exchange  an option of the same series  (i.e.,  same  underlying  instrument,
exercise price and expiration date) as the option previously  written. A closing
purchase  transaction  will  ordinarily  be  effected  to realize a profit on an
outstanding  option,  to prevent an underlying  instrument from being called, to
permit the sale of the  underlying  instrument or to permit the writing of a new
option  containing  different terms on such underlying  instrument.  The cost of
such a  liquidation  purchase  plus  transaction  costs may be greater  than the
premium  received  upon the  original  option,  in which  event a Fund will have
incurred  a  loss  in the  transaction.  There  is no  assurance  that a  liquid
secondary market will exist for any particular option. An option writer,  unable
to  effect  a  closing  purchase  transaction,  will  not be able  to  sell  the
underlying  instrument  or  liquidate  the assets held as  collateral  until the
option  expires or the optioned  instrument is delivered  upon exercise with the
result  that the  writer in such  circumstances  will be  subject to the risk of
market decline or appreciation in the instrument during such period.

         If an option purchased by a Fund expires unexercised, the Fund realizes
a  loss  equal  to the  premium  paid.  If a Fund  enters  into a  closing  sale
transaction  on an option  purchased  by it, the Fund will realize a gain if the
premium received by the Fund on the closing transaction is more than the premium
paid to purchase the option,  or a loss if it is less. If an option written by a
Fund  expires  on the  stipulated  expiration  date or if a Fund  enters  into a
closing purchase  transaction,  it will realize a gain (or loss if the cost of a
closing purchase transaction exceeds the net premium received when the option is
sold).  If an option  written by a Fund is  exercised,  the proceeds of the sale
will be  increased  by the net  premium  originally  received  and the Fund will
realize a gain or loss.
    

         Certain Risks  Regarding  Options.  There are a number of special risks
associated  with  transactions  in options.  For example,  there are significant
differences  between the securities and options  markets that could result in an
imperfect correlation between these markets,  causing a given transaction to not
achieve its objectives.  In addition,  a liquid  secondary market for particular
options,  whether traded  over-the-counter or on an exchange,  may be absent for
various  reasons,  including:  there may be  insufficient  trading  interest  in
certain  options;  restrictions  may  be  imposed  by  an  exchange  on  opening
transactions  or closing  transactions  or both;  trading halts,  suspensions or
other  restrictions may be imposed with respect to particular  classes or series
of  options or  underlying  securities  or  currencies;  unusual  or  unforeseen
circumstances may interrupt normal operations on an exchange;  the facilities of
an exchange or the Options Clearing Corporation may not at all times be adequate
to handle current trading value; or one or more exchanges could, for economic or
other reasons, decide or be compelled to discontinue the
                                        8
<PAGE>
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 that had been issued by the
Options  Clearing  Corporation  as a result  of trades  on that  exchange  would
continue to be exercisable in accordance with their terms.

   
         Successful use by a Fund of options on stock indexes will be subject to
the ability of the Adviser to correctly  predict  movements in the directions of
the stock market.  This requires different skills and techniques than predicting
changes in the prices of individual securities. In addition, a Fund's ability to
effectively  hedge all or a  portion  of the  securities  in its  portfolio,  in
anticipation of or during a market decline,  through transactions in put options
on stock  indexes,  depends  on the  degree  to  which  price  movements  in the
underlying  index  correlate with the price  movements of the securities held by
the Fund.  Because the Funds' securities will not duplicate the components of an
index, the correlation will not be perfect.  Consequently,  a Fund will bear the
risk that the prices of its  securities  being  hedged will not move in the same
amount  as the  prices  of its put  options  on the  stock  indexes.  It is also
possible that there may be a negative correlation between the index and a Fund's
securities  which would result in a loss on both such securities and the options
on securities indexes acquired by the Fund.

         The hours of trading for  options  may not conform to the hours  during
which the  underlying  securities  are  traded.  To the extent  that the options
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  options  markets.  The  purchase  of  options  is  a  highly
specialized  activity which involves  investment  techniques and risks different
from those  associated  with ordinary  portfolio  securities  transactions.  The
purchase of  securities  index  options  involves  the risk that the premium and
transaction  costs  paid by a Fund in  purchasing  an  option  will be lost as a
result of  unanticipated  movements in prices of the  securities  comprising the
securities index on which the option is based.

         There is no  assurance  that a liquid  secondary  market on an  options
exchange will exist for any particular  option,  or at any particular  time, and
for some options no secondary market on an exchange or elsewhere may exist. If a
Fund is unable to close out a call  option  on  securities  that it has  written
before  the  option is  exercised,  the Fund may be  required  to  purchase  the
optioned  securities  in order to  satisfy  its  obligation  under the option to
deliver  such  securities.  If a  Fund  is  unable  to  effect  a  closing  sale
transaction  with respect to options on  securities  that it has  purchased,  it
would have to exercise the option in order to realize any profit and would incur
transaction costs upon the purchase and sale of the underlying securities.

         Cover for Options  Positions.  Transactions  using options  (other than
options that a Fund has  purchased)  expose a Fund to an  obligation  to another
party. No Fund will enter into any such  transactions  unless it owns either (1)
an offsetting  ("covered")  position in securities or other options or (2) cash,
receivables and short-term debt securities with a value  sufficient at all times
to cover its  potential  obligations  not covered as provided in (1) above.  The
Funds will
    
                                        9
<PAGE>
   
comply with Securities and Exchange  Commission  guidelines  regarding cover for
these  instruments  and, if the guidelines so require,  designate  liquid assets
with their Custodian in the prescribed amount.  Under current SEC guidelines,  a
Fund will  segregate  assets to cover  transactions  in which the Fund writes or
sells options.

         Assets  used as cover or held in a  segregated  account  cannot be sold
while the position in the corresponding option is open, unless they are replaced
with similar assets. As a result,  the commitment of a large portion of a Fund's
assets to cover or in segregated  accounts could impede portfolio  management or
the Fund's ability to meet redemption requests or other current obligations.

         Investment  Companies.  Each Fund intends to limit its  investments  in
securities  issued  by  other  investment   companies  so  that,  as  determined
immediately after a purchase of such securities is made: (a) not more than 5% of
the value of the Fund's total assets will be invested in the  securities  of any
one investment  company;  (b) not more than 10% of the value of its total assets
will be invested in the aggregate in  securities  of  investment  companies as a
group;  and (c) not  more  than 3% of the  outstanding  voting  stock of any one
investment company will be owned by the Fund or by the Trust as a whole.

         Calculation of Portfolio Turnover Rate. The portfolio turnover rate for
each  Fund is  calculated  by  dividing  the  lesser  of  purchases  or sales of
portfolio  investments for the reporting  period by the monthly average value of
the portfolio  investments  owned during the reporting  period.  The calculation
excludes all securities, including options, whose maturities or expiration dates
at the time of  acquisition  are one year or less.  Portfolio  turnover may vary
greatly  from  year to year as well as  within  a  particular  year,  and may be
affected by cash requirements for redemption of shares and by requirements which
enable a Fund to receive  favorable tax treatment.  The Funds are not restricted
by policy  with  regard to  portfolio  turnover  and will  make  changes  in its
investment  portfolio  from time to time as business and economic  conditions as
well as market prices may dictate. It is anticipated the portfolio turnover rate
for each Fund will  generally  not  exceed  100%.  However,  this  should not be
considered as a limiting factor.
    

                             INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

   
         Each Fund has adopted certain investment  restrictions  consistent with
its investment objective.  The following restrictions supplement those set forth
in the Prospectus.  Unless otherwise noted,  whenever an investment  restriction
states a maximum  percentage  of a Fund's  assets  that may be  invested  in any
security  or  other  asset,  such  percentage  restriction  will  be  determined
immediately after and as a result of the Fund's  acquisition of such security or
other asset. Accordingly,  any subsequent change in values, net assets, or other
circumstances  will not be considered  when  determining  whether the investment
complies with a Fund's investment  limitations except with respect to the Fund's
restrictions on borrowings as set forth in fundamental restriction 7 below.
    
                                       10
<PAGE>
   
         No Fund's fundamental  restrictions can be changed without the approval
of the  holders  of the  lesser  of:  (i) 67% of the  Fund's  shares  present or
represented at a  shareholders  meeting at which the holders of more than 50% of
such shares are present or represented; or (ii) more than 50% of the outstanding
shares of the Fund.

The following are the Fund's fundamental investment restrictions.

          No Fund may :
    

         1.       Issue  senior  securities,   except  as  permitted  under  the
                  Investment  Company  Act of 1940 (the "1940  Act");  provided,
                  however,  the  Fund  may  engage  in  transactions   involving
                  options, futures and options on futures contracts.

         2.       Lend money or securities (except by purchasing debt securities
                  or entering into  repurchase  agreements or lending  portfolio
                  securities).

         3.       With  respect  to  seventy-five  percent  (75%)  of its  total
                  assets,  purchase  (a) the  securities  of any issuer  (except
                  securities   of  the  U.S.   government   or  any   agency  or
                  instrumentality  thereof),  if such purchase  would cause more
                  than five percent (5%) of the value of the Fund's total assets
                  to be  invested  in  securities  of any one  issuer or (b) the
                  securities of any issuer if such purchase would cause the Fund
                  to own more than ten percent (10%) of the  outstanding  voting
                  securities of any one issuer.

         4.       Purchase the securities of any issuer if, as a result,  25% or
                  more of the value of its total assets,  determined at the time
                  an   investment   is  made,   exclusive  of  U.S.   government
                  securities,  are in securities  issued by companies  primarily
                  engaged in the same industry.

         5.       Act as an underwriter or distributor of securities  other than
                  shares  of the Fund  except  to the  extent  that  the  Fund's
                  participation  as part of a group  in  bidding  or by  bidding
                  alone,  for the purchase of permissible  investments  directly
                  from an issuer or  selling  shareholders  for the  Fund's  own
                  portfolio may be deemed to be an  underwriting,  and except to
                  the extent  that the Fund may be deemed an  underwriter  under
                  the  Securities  Act  by  virtue  of  disposing  of  portfolio
                  securities.

         6.       Purchase  or sell real  estate (but this shall not prevent the
                  Fund from  investing  in  securities  that are  backed by real
                  estate  or  issued by  companies  that  invest or deal in real
                  estate or in  participation  interests in pools of real estate
                  mortgage loans exclusive of investments in real estate limited
                  partnerships).
                                       11
<PAGE>
   
         7.       Borrow  money,  except  that the Fund may borrow  money from a
                  bank for temporary or emergency  purposes (not for leveraging)
                  in an amount not  exceeding  33-1/3% of the value of its total
                  assets (including the amount borrowed) less liabilities (other
                  than  borrowings).  Any borrowings  that exceed 33-1/3% of the
                  Fund's  total assets by reason of a decline in net asset value
                  will be reduced  within three days to the extent  necessary to
                  comply with the  33-1/3%  limitation.  Transactions  involving
                  options, futures and options on futures, will not be deemed to
                  be borrowings if properly covered by designated  liquid assets
                  where appropriate.
    

         8.       Purchase or sell physical commodities or commodities contracts
                  unless  acquired as a result of  ownership  of  securities  or
                  other  instruments  (but this shall not  prevent the Fund from
                  engaging in transactions involving foreign currencies, futures
                  contracts,  options on futures  contracts or options,  or from
                  investing  in  securities  or  other  instruments   backed  by
                  physical commodities).

The following  investment  restrictions are not fundamental,  and may be changed
without shareholder approval.

   
          No Fund may :
    

         1.       Purchase  warrants,  valued at the lower of cost or market, in
                  excess of 5% of the Fund's net  assets.  Warrants  acquired by
                  the Fund in units or attached to securities are not subject to
                  this restrictions.

         2.       Purchase  securities of other  investment  companies except to
                  the  extent  permitted  by the  1940  Act  and the  rules  and
                  regulations thereunder.

         3.       Make  investments  for the  purpose of  exercising  control or
                  management  of any  company  except that the Fund or its agent
                  may vote portfolio securities in their discretion.

         4.       Acquire   illiquid   securities   if,  as  a  result  of  such
                  investments, more than fifteen percent (15%) of the Fund's net
                  assets (taken at market value at the time of each  investment)
                  would be invested in illiquid securities.

         5.       Purchase   securities   on  margin   (except  to  obtain  such
                  short-term  credits  as are  necessary  for the  clearance  of
                  purchases and sales of  securities)  or participate in a joint
                  trading account; provided,  however, the Fund may (i) purchase
                  or sell  futures  contracts  and  options  thereon,  (ii) make
                  initial  and  variation  margin  payments in  connection  with
                  purchases or sales of futures  contracts or options on futures
                  contracts,  (iii)  write or invest in put or call  options  on
                  securities and
                                       12
<PAGE>
                  indexes,  and (iv)  engage in foreign  currency  transactions.
                  (The  "bunching"  of  orders  for  the  sale  or  purchase  of
                  marketable  portfolio securities with other accounts under the
                  management of the Adviser to save  brokerage  costs or average
                  prices  among  them  is  not  deemed  to  result  in  a  joint
                  securities trading account.)

         6.       Borrow  money except for  temporary  bank  borrowings  (not in
                  excess of five percent (5%) of the value of its total  assets)
                  for emergency or extraordinary  purposes, or engage in reverse
                  repurchase  agreements,  or pledge any of its assets except to
                  secure  borrowings  and only to an extent not greater than ten
                  percent (10%) of the value of the Fund's net assets; provided,
                  however,  the  Fund  may  engage  in  transactions   involving
                  options.  The  Fund  will  not  purchase  any  security  while
                  borrowings  representing  more than 5% of its total assets are
                  outstanding.
   

         In determining  industry  classification with respect to the Funds, the
Adviser  intends  to use the  industry  classification  titles  in the  Standard
Industrial Classification Manual.

         A guarantee of a security is not deemed to be a security  issued by the
guarantor  when  the  value  of all  securities  issued  and  guaranteed  by the
guarantor,  and owned by a Fund,  does not exceed 10% of the value of the Fund's
total assets.
    

                          ADDITIONAL TRUST INFORMATION

         Trustees and Officers.  Information regarding the Board of Trustees and
officers of the Trust,  including their principal business occupations during at
least  the  last  five  years,  is  set  forth  below.  Each  Trustee  who is an
"interested  person" of the Trust or the  Adviser as defined in the 1940 Act, is
indicated  by an  asterisk.  Except  where  otherwise  indicated,  each  of  the
individuals below has served in his or her present capacity with the Trust since
July 1996.  The address of each of the officers and Trustees is c/o The Purisima
Funds, 13100 Skyline Blvd., Woodside, CA 94062-4547.
                                       13
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
   
                  Year    Position(s) Held    Other Principal
Name              Born    with Trust          Occupation(s) During Past Five Years
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                <C>     <C>                <C>
Kenneth L.         ___     President          Chief  Executive  Officer  and  majority  shareholder  of
Fisher(1)                  and Trustee        the Adviser, and has  served in such capacities since the
                                              incorporation of the Adviser  in  1986. Prior thereto, he
                                              was   the  founder  of   Fisher   Investments,   a   sole
                                              proprietorship   which  commenced   operations  in  1978.

Sherrilyn A.       ___     Assistant          Senior Vice  President and  Corporate  Secretary  of  the
Fisher                     Secretary          Adviser.   Ms.  Fisher   has   been   employed   by   the
                                              Adviser since 1984.

Pierson E. Clair   ___     Trustee            Vice  President  of  Blummer  Chocolate   Company   where
III                                           he  has  been  employed  since  1970 and served  as  Vice
                                              President   since  1980.  Director  of  Signature  Foods,
                                              Inc.

Bryan F. Morse     ___     Trustee            Sole  proprietor  of  Bryan  F. Morse, RIA, a  registered
                                              investment adviser since 1990.

Grover T.          ___     Trustee            Attorney in private practice in Palo Alto, California for
Wickersham                                    more  than  five  years  and  has been Chairman  of Oxcal
                                              Venture  Corporation,   a  venture  capital  fund,  since
                                              January  of  1996.  Director of  the California  Culinary
                                              Academy,    a   San   Francisco-based    public   company
                                              engaged in  culinary  education,  since  March  of  1996.
                                              Prior  to  entering  private  practice  in June  of 1981,
                                              served  as a Branch  Chief of the  Los  Angeles  Regional
                                              Office of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
</TABLE>

         The  Trustees of the Trust who are  officers of the Adviser  receive no
remuneration  from the Trust.  Each of the other  Trustees is paid a fee of $500
for each  meeting  attended  and is  reimbursed  for the  expenses of  attending
meetings.  The table below sets forth the  compensation  of the Trustees for the
fiscal year ended August 31, 1997. Mr. Fisher did not receive any Trustees fees.

- --------
(1)       "Interested person" of the Trust, as defined in the 1940 Act.
                                       14
<PAGE>
                               COMPENSATION TABLE


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                    Pension or Retirement                             Total
                  Aggregate         Benefits Accrued As       Estimated Annual        Compensation from
                  Compensation      Part of                   Benefits                Company
Name of Person    from Company      Company Expenses          Upon Retirement         Paid to Directors
- --------------    ------------      ----------------          ---------------         -----------------
<S>               <C>                       <C>                        <C>            <C>  
Mr. Fisher        $   0                     $0                         $0             $   0
Mr. Clair         $1500                     $0                         $0             $1500
Mr. Morse         $1500                     $0                         $0             $1500
Mr. Wickersham    $1500                     $0                         $0             $1500
</TABLE>


   
         Principal Shareholders.  As of July 31, 1998, the officers and trustees
of the Trust  owned,  as a group,  ___% of the Total Return  Fund's  outstanding
securities.  To the best knowledge of the Trust's officers,  shareholders owning
5% or more of the  outstanding  shares of the Total Return Fund as of the record
date specified are as follows:

                             Shareholder Name                Percentage Held
         Fund                and Address                     as of July 31, 1998
         ----                ---------------------           -------------------

Total Return Fund                                                    ____%


         Investment  Adviser.  The  investment  adviser  to the  Funds is Fisher
Investments,  Inc.  (the  "Adviser").  Mr.  Kenneth  L.  Fisher is the  founder,
Chairman  and  Chief  Executive  Officer  of  the  Adviser  and  is  a  majority
shareholder of the Adviser. As such, he controls the Adviser.

         Pursuant to the Investment  Management  Agreement  entered into between
the Trust on behalf of each Fund and the  Adviser  (the  "Investment  Management
Agreement"), the Adviser determines the composition of the Fund's portfolio, the
nature and timing of the  changes  to the  Fund's  portfolio,  and the manner of
implementing  such  changes.  The  Adviser  also (a)  provides  each  Fund  with
investment  advice,  research  and related  services for the  investment  of its
assets, subject to such directions as it may receive from the Board of Trustees;
(b) pays all of the Trust's executive  officers' salaries and executive expenses
(if any); (c) pays all expenses  incurred in performing its investment  advisory
duties under the Investment  Management  Agreement;  and (d) furnishes the Funds
with  office  space and certain  administrative  services.  The  services of the
Adviser or any affiliate  thereof are not deemed to be exclusive and the Adviser
or any  affiliate  thereof may provide  similar  services to other series of the
Trust,  other  investment  companies and other clients,  and may engage in other
activities.  The Funds may reimburse the Adviser (on a cost recovery basis only)
for any services performed for the Funds by the Adviser outside its duties under
the Investment Management Agreement.
    
                                       15
<PAGE>
   
         The  Investment  Management  Agreement is dated as of October 25, 1996.
The  Investment  Management  Agreement  has an initial  term of two years from a
Fund's  commencement  of  operations  and  thereafter is required to be approved
annually  by the Board of Trustees of the Trust or by vote of a majority of each
Fund's  outstanding  voting securities (as defined in the 1940 Act). Each annual
renewal  must also be approved by the vote of a majority of the Trustees who are
not parties to the Investment  Management Agreement or interested persons of any
such party, cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such
approval.  The  Investment  Management  Agreement  was approved by the vote of a
majority  of the  Trustees  who are not  parties  to the  Investment  Management
Agreement or  interested  persons of any such party on September 26, 1996 and by
the initial  shareholder  of the Total  Return Fund on September  26, 1996.  The
Investment  Management  Agreement is  terminable  with respect to a Fund without
penalty on 60-days' written notice by the Trustees, by vote of a majority of the
Fund's  outstanding  voting  securities,  or by the Adviser,  and will terminate
automatically in the event of its assignment (as defined in the 1940 Act).

         The Adviser  voluntarily  agreed to  reimburse  each Fund to the extent
aggregate  annual  operating  expenses  exceed the expense  limits stated in the
Prospectus.  Those  limits  may be  terminated  at  any  time  in the  Adviser's
discretion  upon  notice  to the  relevant  Fund  and  certain  of  its  agents.
Reimbursement of expenses in excess of the applicable limitation will be paid to
a Fund by reducing the Adviser's fee, subject to later  adjustment.  The Adviser
may from time to time voluntarily  absorb expenses for a Fund in addition to the
reimbursement of expenses in excess of the foregoing.

         The  Investment  Management  Agreement  permits  the  Adviser  to  seek
reimbursement  of any reductions made to its management fee and payments made to
limit  expenses  which are the  responsibility  of a Fund within the  three-year
period  following such  reduction,  subject to approval by the Board of Trustees
and the Fund's  ability to effect such  reimbursement  and remain in  compliance
with  applicable  expense  limitations.  Any  such  management  fee  or  expense
reimbursement  will  be  accounted  for  only  in the  notes  to  the  financial
statements of the Fund as a contingent liability of a Fund until such time as it
appears that the Fund will be able to effect such reimbursement. At such time as
it appears probable that a Fund is able to effect such reimbursement, the amount
of  reimbursement  that the Fund is able to effect will be accrued as an expense
of the Fund for that current period.

         As  compensation  for its  services,  each Fund  pays to the  Adviser a
monthly  advisory  fee at the  annual  rate  specified  in the  Prospectus.  The
organizational  expenses of the Total  Return Fund were  advanced by the Adviser
and were reimbursed by that Fund. For the period commencing  October 28, 1996 to
August 31, 1997,  the Adviser  waived its advisory fee of $9,327 and  reimbursed
the Total Return Fund expenses in the amount of $173,958.

         The Investment Management Agreement provides that the Adviser shall not
be liable  to the  Funds or their  shareholders  for any  error of  judgment  or
mistake of law or for anything
    
                                       16
<PAGE>
other  than  willful  misfeasance,  bad  faith,  gross  negligence  or  reckless
disregard of its obligations or duties.

   
         Administrator.  Investment Company Administration Corporation serves as
the Funds' Administrator. Pursuant to an administration agreement with the Trust
on behalf of each Fund, the Administrator  supervises the overall administration
of the  Trust  and  the  Funds  including,  among  other  responsibilities,  the
preparation and filing of all documents  required for compliance by the Trust or
the Funds with applicable laws and regulations, arranging for the maintenance of
books  and  records  of the  Trust  and the  Funds,  and  supervision  of  other
organizations that provide services to the Funds. Certain junior officers of the
Trust and the Funds may be provided by the Administrator.  [The Trust has agreed
to pay the  Administrator an annual fee equal to 0.10% of the first $200 million
of average daily net assets,  0.05% of the next $300 million of such net assets,
and 0.03% thereafter, subject to a minimum annual fee of $40,000 per Fund.]

         Custodian,  Transfer Agent and Dividend  Paying Agent.  UMB Bank,  N.A.
(the  "Custodian")  serves as the custodian and Countrywide Fund Services,  Inc.
serves as the transfer and dividend paying agent for the Funds.  Under the terms
of the respective  agreements,  the Custodian is responsible for the receipt and
delivery of the Funds' securities and cash, and Countrywide Fund Services,  Inc.
is responsible for processing  purchase and redemption  requests for Fund shares
as well as the  recordkeeping  of  ownership  of the Funds'  shares,  payment of
dividends  as declared by the  Trustees  and the  issuance of  confirmations  of
transactions  and  annual   statements  to   shareholders.   The  Custodian  and
Countrywide Fund Services,  Inc. do not exercise any supervisory  functions over
the management of the Trust or the Funds or the purchase and sale of securities.
    

         Legal Counsel. The validity of the shares offered by the Prospectus has
been passed on by Paul, Hastings,  Janofsky & Walker LLP, 345 California Street,
San Francisco, California 94104.

   
         Independent  Accountants.  Price  Waterhouse  LLP are  the  independent
accountants  for the Funds.  They are responsible for performing an audit of the
Funds'  year-end  financial  statements as well as providing  accounting and tax
advice to the management of the Trust. The financial statements  incorporated by
reference in this  Statement of  Additional  Information  from the Annual Report
have been so included in reliance on the report of Price Waterhouse LLP given on
the said authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting.
    

                             DISTRIBUTION OF SHARES

   
         First Fund Distributors,  Inc. (the  "Distributor") an affiliate of the
Administrator,  serves as  distributor  of the Funds  pursuant to a Distribution
Agreement with the Trust on behalf of each Funds (the "Distribution Agreement").
Shares may also be sold by authorized dealers who
    
                                       17
<PAGE>
   
have entered  into dealer  agreements  with the  Distributor  or the Trust.  The
Distribution  Agreement is dated as of July 10,  1997.  The  Agreement  has been
renewed  through  [July 10,  1999] and  thereafter  is  required  to be approved
annually  by the Board of  Trustees of the Trust or by vote of a majority of the
Fund's  outstanding  voting securities (as defined in the 1940 Act). Each annual
renewal  must also be approved by the vote of a majority of the Trustees who are
not parties to the  Distribution  Agreement  or  interested  persons of any such
party,  case in person at a meeting  called  for the  purpose  of voting on such
approval.  The  Agreement was approved by the vote of a majority of the Trustees
who are not parties to the Agreement or interested  persons of any such party on
[July 16, 1998.] The Agreement is terminable without penalty on 60-days' written
notice by the  Trustees,  by vote of a majority of a Fund's  outstanding  voting
securities, or by the Distributor, and will terminate automatically in the event
of its assignment (as defined in the 1940 Act).

         As set forth in the  Prospectus,  the Trust has  adopted a Service  and
Distribution  Plan (the  "Plan")  pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act. The
Plan authorizes payments by each Fund in connection with the distribution of its
shares  at an  annual  rate,  as  determined  from  time to time by the Board of
Trustees,  of up to 0.25% of the Fund's average daily net assets. For the period
commencing  October  28,  1996 to August 31,  1997,  the Total  Return Fund paid
$2,332 in distribution expenses to the Adviser, as distribution coordinator, for
advertising,  printing  and  mailing  of  prospectuses  to  other  than  current
shareholders and compensation to sales personnel, pursuant to the Plan.

         On September 26, 1996, the Board of Trustees of the Trust,  including a
majority of the  Trustees  who are not  interested  persons of the Trust and who
have no direct or indirect financial interest in the operation of the 12b-1 Plan
or in any  agreement  related  to the 12b-1 Plan (the  "Rule  12b-1  Trustees"),
adopted the 12b-1 Plan for the Trust,  initially for the Total Return Fund.  The
Plan was  adopted  in  anticipation  that each Fund will  benefit  from the Plan
through increased sales of shares of the Fund, thereby  ultimately  reducing the
Fund's expense ratio and providing an asset size that allows the Adviser greater
flexibility  in  management.  The 12b-1 Plan provides that it shall  continue in
effect  from year to year  provided  that a majority of the Board of Trustees of
the Trust,  including a majority of the Rule 12b-1  Trustees,  vote  annually to
continue the 12b-1 Plan. The Plan may be terminated at any time by a vote of the
Rule  12b-1  Trustees  of a Fund or by a vote of a majority  of the  outstanding
shares.  Any change in the Plan that would materially  increase the distribution
expenses  of  a  Fund  provided  for  in  the  Plan  requires  approval  of  the
shareholders and the Board of Trustees, including the Rule 12b-1 Trustees.

         While the Plan is in effect,  the selection and  nomination of Trustees
who are not interested  persons of the Trust will be committed to the discretion
of the Trustees of the Trust who are not  interested  persons of the Trust.  The
Board of Trustees must review the amount and purposes of  expenditures  pursuant
to the Plan  quarterly  as  reported  to it by the  officers  of the Trust.  All
distribution fees paid by a Fund under the 12b-1 Plan will be paid in accordance
with
    
                                       18
<PAGE>
Rule 2830 of the Conduct Rules of the National Association of Securities Dealers
Regulation, Inc., as such Rules may change from time to time.

                      PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE

   
         Subject to policies  established by the Board of Trustees,  the Adviser
is primarily  responsible  for arranging  the execution of the Funds'  portfolio
transactions  and the  allocation  of brokerage  activities.  In arranging  such
transactions,  the  Adviser  will seek to obtain best  execution  for the Funds,
taking  into  account  such  factors  as  price,  size of order,  difficulty  of
execution,  operational  facilities  of the firm  involved,  the firm's  risk in
positioning  a  block  of  securities  and  research,   market  and  statistical
information  provided by such firm. While the Adviser generally seeks reasonable
competitive  commission rates, the Funds will not necessarily always receive the
lowest commission available.

         The  Funds  have no  obligation  to deal  with any  broker  or group of
brokers in executing  transactions in portfolio securities.  Brokers who provide
supplemental  research,  market and  statistical  information to the Adviser may
receive orders for  transactions by the Funds.  The term  "research,  market and
statistical  information"  includes  advice as to the value of  securities,  the
advisability of purchasing or selling securities, the availability of securities
or  purchasers or sellers of  securities,  and  furnishing  analyses and reports
concerning  issuers,  industries,   securities,  economic  factors  and  trends,
portfolio  strategy,  and the  performance of accounts.  Information so received
will be in addition to and not in lieu of the services  required to be performed
by the Adviser under the Investment Management Agreement and the expenses of the
Adviser  will not  necessarily  be  reduced  as a result of the  receipt of such
supplemental  information.  Such  information  may be useful to the  Adviser  in
providing services to clients other than the Funds, and not all such information
may be used by the  Adviser  in  connection  with the  Funds.  Conversely,  such
information  provided to the Adviser by brokers and dealers  through  whom other
clients of the Adviser in the future may effect  securities  transactions may be
useful to the  Adviser in  providing  services  to the Funds.  To the extent the
Adviser receives valuable  research,  market and statistical  information from a
broker-dealer,  the Adviser  intends to direct orders for Fund  transactions  to
that broker-dealer,  subject to the foregoing policies,  regulatory constraints,
and  the  ability  of that  broker-dealer  to  provide  competitive  prices  and
commission  rates. In accordance  with the rules of the National  Association of
Securities Dealers,  Inc., the Funds may also direct brokerage to broker-dealers
who  facilitate  sales of the  Funds'  shares,  subject to also  obtaining  best
execution as described above from such broker-dealer.

         A portion of the securities in which the Funds may invest are traded in
the  over-the-counter  markets,  and the Funds intend to deal  directly with the
dealers  who make  markets  in the  securities  involved,  except as  limited by
applicable  law and in certain  circumstances  where better prices and execution
are available  elsewhere.  Securities  traded  through market makers may include
markups or markdowns, which are generally not determinable.  Under the 1940 Act,
persons  affiliated with the Funds are prohibited from dealing with the Funds as
principal in
    
                                       19
<PAGE>
   
the purchase and sale of securities  except after application for and receipt of
an exemptive  order from the  Securities and Exchange  Commission.  The 1940 Act
restricts  transactions  involving the Funds and their "affiliates,"  including,
among others, the Trust's Trustees, officers, and employees and the Adviser, and
any affiliates of such affiliates. Affiliated persons of the Funds are permitted
to serve as its broker in over-the-counter  transactions  conducted on an agency
basis only.

         Investment decisions for the Funds are made independently from those of
accounts  advised by the Adviser or its affiliates.  However,  the same security
may be held in the  portfolios  of  more  than  one  account.  When  two or more
accounts advised by the Adviser simultaneously engage in the purchase or sale of
the same security, the prices and amounts will be equitably allocated among each
account.  In some  cases,  this  procedure  may  adversely  affect  the price or
quantity of the  security  available to a  particular  account.  In other cases,
however,  an account's  ability to participate in large volume  transactions may
produce better executions and prices.

         Total  brokerage  commissions  paid by the Total Return Fund during the
period October 28, 1996 (inception) to August 31, 1997 totaled $2,341,  of which
$1,856 (79%) was paid to firms which provided  research or other services to the
Adviser.
    

                                      TAXES

   
         General. Each Fund believes that it has qualified (or will qualify) for
tax treatment as regulated  investment company ("RIC") under Subchapter M of the
Code for its fiscal year , and intends to be able to continue to so qualify.  In
order to do so, a Fund must distribute to its shareholders for each taxable year
at least 90% of its investment company taxable income  (consisting  generally of
net investment  income,  net short-term  capital gain and net gains from certain
foreign currency  transactions) and must meet several  additional  requirements:
(1) the Fund must derive at least 90% of its gross income each taxable year from
dividends,  interest,  payments with respect to securities loans, and gains from
the sale or other  disposition  of  securities or foreign  currencies,  or other
income (including gains from options, futures or forward contracts) derived with
respect to its business of investing in securities or those  currencies;  (2) at
the close of each quarter of the Fund's  taxable year, at least 50% of the value
of its  total  assets  must be  represented  by cash and cash  items  (including
receivables),  U.S. government  securities,  securities of other RICs, and other
securities, with these other securities limited, with respect to any one issuer,
to an amount that does not exceed 5% of the value of the Fund's total assets and
that  does not  represent  more  than  10% of the  issuer's  outstanding  voting
securities; and (3) at the close of each quarter of the Fund's taxable year, not
more than 25% of the value of its total  assets may be  invested  in  securities
(other than U.S.  government  securities or the securities of other RICs) of any
one issuer.

         Dividends and other distributions declared by the Funds in, and payable
to shareholders of record as of a date in, October,  November or December of any
year will be deemed to have
    
                                       20
<PAGE>
   
been paid by the Funds and received by the  shareholders  on December 31 of that
year if the  distributions  are paid by the Funds during the following  January.
Accordingly,  those  distributions will be taxed to shareholders for the year in
which that December 31 falls.

         The  Funds  may  invest  in  securities  of  foreign  issuers,  forward
contracts and options.  These investments involve complex rules to determine the
character and timing of recognition of income  received in connection  therewith
by the Funds.

         Any gain or loss  realized  by a Fund  upon the  expiration  or sale of
options held by it generally will be capital gain or loss.  Expiration of a call
option  written by a Fund will result in short-term  capital gain. Any security,
option,  or other  position  entered  into or held by a Fund that  substantially
diminishes  its  risk of loss  from  any  other  position  held by the  Fund may
constitute a "straddle" for federal income tax purposes.  In general,  straddles
are subject to certain rules that may affect the amount, character and timing of
a Fund's gains and losses with respect to straddle positions by requiring, among
other  things,  that the loss  realized  on  disposition  of one  position  of a
straddle be deferred  until gain is realized on  disposition  of the  offsetting
position;  the Fund's  holding  period in certain  straddle  positions not begin
until the straddle is terminated  (possibly  resulting in the gain being treated
as short-term  capital gain rather than long-term capital gain); and that losses
recognized  with respect to certain  straddle  positions,  which would otherwise
constitute  short-term  capital losses,  be treated as long-term capital losses.
Different elections are available to a Fund that may mitigate the effects of the
straddle rules.

         Certain options  (including options on a broad-based index, such as the
Standard & Poor's 500 index) and forward  contracts  that are subject to Section
1256 of the Code ("Section 1256  Contracts")  and that are held by a Fund at the
end of its taxable year  generally will be required to be "marked to market" for
federal income tax purposes,  that is, deemed to have been sold at market value.
Sixty  percent of any net gain or loss  recognized on these deemed sales and 60%
of any net gain or loss realized from any actual sales of Section 1256 Contracts
will be treated as  long-term  capital  gain or loss,  and the  balance  will be
treated as short-term gain or loss.
    

         Section  988 of the Code  contains  special  tax  rules  applicable  to
certain foreign  currency  transactions  that may affect the amount,  timing and
character of income,  gain or loss  recognized  by the Fund.  Under these rules,
foreign   exchange   gain   or   loss   realized   with   respect   to   foreign
currency-denominated  debt  instruments,  foreign  currency  forward  contracts,
foreign  currency-denominated  payables  and  receivables  and foreign  currency
options and futures contracts (other than options and futures contracts that are
governed by the  mark-to-market  and 60/40 rules of Section 1256 of the Code and
for which no election is made) is treated as ordinary  income or loss. Some part
of the Fund's gain or loss on the sale or other  disposition  of securities of a
foreign  corporation may, because of changes in foreign currency exchange rates,
be treated as ordinary income or loss under Section 988 of the Code, rather than
capital gain or loss.
                                       21
<PAGE>
   
         A portion of the dividends  from a Fund's  investment  company  taxable
income  (whether paid in cash or  reinvested  in additional  Fund shares) may be
eligible  for the  dividends-received  deduction  allowed to  corporations.  The
eligible  portion may not exceed the  aggregate  dividends  received by the Fund
from U.S.  corporations.  However,  that  portion  of  dividends  received  by a
corporate  shareholder  and  deducted by it  pursuant to the  dividends-received
deduction  may  be  subject  to  the  alternative   minimum  tax.  In  addition,
availability  of  the  deduction  is  subject  to  certain  holding  period  and
debt-financing limitations.

         All or a portion  of a loss  realized  upon the sale or  redemption  of
shares  of a Fund  may be  disallowed  to the  extent  shares  of the  Fund  are
purchased (including shares acquired by means of reinvested dividends) within 30
days  before or after such  redemption.  Investors  also should be aware that if
shares are purchased  shortly before the record date for any  distribution,  the
shareholder  will pay full price for the shares and receive  some portion of the
price back as a taxable dividend or capital gain distribution.

         A Fund will be subject to a  nondeductible  4% excise tax on net income
to the  extent  it  fails  to  distribute  by  the  end  of  any  calendar  year
substantially  all of its  ordinary  income for that year and  capital  gain net
income for the one-year  period ending on October 31 of that year,  plus certain
other amounts.

         Foreign Taxes. Dividends and interest received by a Fund may be subject
to income,  withholding,  or other taxes imposed by foreign countries that would
reduce the yield on the Fund's  portfolio  securities.  Tax conventions  between
certain  countries and the United  States may reduce or eliminate  these foreign
taxes,  however, and many foreign countries do not impose taxes on capital gains
in respect of investments by foreign investors. If more than 50% of the value of
a Fund's total assets at the close of its taxable year consists of securities of
foreign  corporations,  the Fund will be eligible to, and may,  file an election
with the Internal Revenue Service that will enable its shareholders,  in effect,
to receive the  benefit of the  foreign  tax credit with  respect to any foreign
income taxes paid by it. Pursuant to the election, a Fund will treat those taxes
as dividends paid to its  shareholders  and each shareholder will be required to
(1)  include  in  gross  income,  and  treat  as paid by him or her,  his or her
proportionate  share of those  taxes,  (2) treat his or her share of those taxes
and of any dividend paid by the Fund that represents income from foreign sources
as his or her own income  from those  sources,  and (3) either  deduct the taxes
deemed paid by him or her in computing his taxable income or, alternatively, use
the foregoing  information in calculating  the foreign tax credit against his or
her federal  income tax. A Fund will report to its  shareholders  shortly  after
each  taxable  year their  respective  shares of the Fund's  income from sources
within, and taxes paid to, foreign countries if it makes this election.

         Passive  Foreign  Investment  Companies.  If a Fund  acquires  stock in
certain  non-U.S.  corporations  that receive at least 75% of their annual gross
income from passive sources (such as sources that produce  interest,  dividends,
rental, royalty or capital gain income) or hold at least
    
                                       22
<PAGE>
   
50% of  their  assets  in such  passive  sources  ("passive  foreign  investment
companies"),  the Fund could be subject  to  federal  income tax and  additional
interest charges on "excess distributions" received from such companies or gains
from the sale of stock in such  companies,  even if all income or gain  actually
received by the Fund is timely  distributed to its shareholders.  The Fund would
not be able to pass through to its shareholders any credit or deduction for such
tax. In some cases,  elections  may be  available  that would  ameliorate  these
adverse tax  consequences,  but such elections would require the Fund to include
certain  amounts as income or gain  (subject  to the  distribution  requirements
described  above)  without a concurrent  receipt of cash and could result in the
conversion of capital gain to ordinary  income. A Fund may limit its investments
in passive  foreign  investment  companies  or dispose  of such  investments  if
potential adverse tax consequences are deemed material in particular situations.
Because  it is not always  possible  to  identify a foreign  issuer as a passive
foreign investment company in advance of making the investment, a Fund may incur
the tax in some instances.

         Non-U.S.  Shareholders.  Distributions of net investment  income by the
Fund to a  shareholder  who, as to the United  States,  is a  nonresident  alien
individual,   nonresident  alien  fiduciary  of  a  trust  or  estate,   foreign
corporation,  or foreign partnership ("foreign  shareholder") will be subject to
U.S.  withholding tax at a rate of 30% (or lower treaty rate).  Withholding will
not apply if a dividend paid by a Fund to a foreign  shareholder is "effectively
connected  with  the  conduct  of a U.S.  trade  or  business"  and the  foreign
shareholder provides the Fund with the certification required by the IRS to that
effect, in which case the reporting and withholding  requirements  applicable to
domestic  taxpayers will apply.  Distributions  of net capital gain to a foreign
shareholder generally are not subject to withholding.

         The  foregoing  is a general and  abbreviated  summary of certain  U.S.
federal income tax considerations affecting the Funds and their shareholders and
is based on current provisions of the Code and applicable Treasury  Regulations,
which are subject to change  (possibly on a  retroactive  basis).  Investors are
urged to consult  their own tax advisers for more detailed  information  and for
information  regarding  any  foreign,   state  and  local  taxes  applicable  to
distributions received from the Funds.

         The foregoing  discussion and the related  discussion in the Prospectus
has been prepared by the  management of the Funds,  and does not purport to be a
complete  description  of all tax  implications  of an  investment in the Funds.
Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker LLP, legal counsel to the Funds, has expressed
no opinion in respect  thereof.  Shareholders  should consult their own advisers
concerning the application of federal,  state and local tax to their  particular
situations.
    

                              DESCRIPTION OF SHARES

         The Trust Agreement permits the Board of Trustees to issue an unlimited
number of full and  fractional  shares  of  beneficial  interest  of one or more
separate series or classes representing
                                       23
<PAGE>
   
interests in different  investment  portfolios.  The Trust may hereafter  create
series in addition to the Funds.  Under the terms of the Trust  Agreement,  each
share of a Fund has a par value of $0.01, represents a proportionate interest in
the Fund with each other share of its class and is  entitled  to such  dividends
and distributions out of the income belonging to the Fund as are declared by the
Trustees.  Upon any liquidation of a Fund, shareholders are entitled to share in
the net assets of the Fund  available for  distribution.  Shares do not have any
preemptive  or  conversion  rights.  The right of redemption is described in the
Prospectus. Pursuant to the terms of the 1940 Act, the right of a shareholder to
redeem  shares and the date of payment by a Fund may be suspended  for more than
seven  days (a) for any  period  during  which the New York  Stock  Exchange  is
closed, other than the customary weekends or holidays, or trading in the markets
the Fund  normally  utilizes is closed or is  restricted  as  determined  by the
Securities and Exchange Commission,  (b) during any emergency,  as determined by
the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission,  as a  result  of  which  it is  not
reasonably  practicable  for the Fund to dispose of  instruments  owned by it or
fairly to determine the value of its net assets, or (c) for such other period as
the Securities and Exchange Commission may by order permit for the protection of
the  shareholders  of the Fund.  The  Trust may also  suspend  or  postpone  the
recordation  of the  transfer  of its shares upon the  occurrence  of any of the
foregoing  conditions.  In addition,  the Trust reserves the right to adopt,  by
action of the Trustees,  a policy pursuant to which it may, without  shareholder
approval,  redeem  all of a  shareholder's  shares  (a) if such  shares  have an
aggregate  value  below  a  designated  amount,  (b) to  the  extent  that  such
shareholder owns shares equal to or in excess of a percentage of the outstanding
shares determined from time to time by the Trustees, (c) to the extent that such
shareholder  owns shares equal to or in excess of a percentage,  determined from
time to time by the Trustees,  of the outstanding shares of the Trust, or (d) if
the  Trustees  determine  that it is not  practical,  efficient  or advisable to
continue the  operation of a Fund and that any  applicable  requirements  of the
1940 Act have been met.  Shares when issued as described in the  Prospectus  are
validly issued, fully paid and nonassessable.

         If additional funds are created, the proceeds received by each fund for
each issue or sale of its shares,  and all net investment  income,  realized and
unrealized gain and proceeds  thereof,  subject only to the rights of creditors,
will be specifically  allocated to and constitute the underlying  assets of that
fund.  The  underlying  assets of each fund will be  segregated  on the books of
accounts,  and will be charged with the  liabilities in respect to that fund and
with a share of the general  liabilities of the Trust.  Expenses with respect to
the  portfolios of the Trust will normally be allocated in proportion to the net
asset value of the  respective  portfolios  except where  allocations  of direct
expenses can otherwise be fairly made.
    

         Rule 18f-2 under the 1940 Act provides that any matter  required by the
provisions  of the  1940  Act or  applicable  state  law,  or  otherwise,  to be
submitted to the holders of the outstanding  voting  securities of an investment
company  such as the Trust  shall not be deemed to have been  effectively  acted
upon unless approved by the holders of a majority of the  outstanding  shares of
each investment  portfolio affected by such matter.  Rule 18f-2 further provides
that an
                                       24
<PAGE>
investment  portfolio  shall be deemed to be  affected  by a matter  unless  the
interest of each investment portfolio in the matter are substantially  identical
or the matter does not affect any interest of the  investment  portfolio.  Under
the Rule, the approval of an investment advisory agreement,  a distribution plan
subject  to Rule  12b-1  under  the  1940  Act or any  change  in a  fundamental
investment  policy would be effectively acted upon with respect to an investment
portfolio  only if  approved  by a majority  of the  outstanding  shares of such
investment portfolio. However, Rule 18f-2 also provides that the ratification of
the  appointment  of  independent  accountants,  the  approval of the  principal
underwriting  contracts  and the election of Trustees may be  effectively  acted
upon by  shareholders  of the Trust  voting  together in the  aggregate  without
regard to a particular investment portfolio.

         The term "majority of the outstanding  shares" of either the Trust or a
particular fund or investment  portfolio means the vote of the lesser of (i) 67%
or more of the  shares  of the  Trust or such  fund or  portfolio  present  at a
meeting,  if the holders of more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the Trust
or such fund or portfolio are present or represented by proxy, or (ii) more than
50% of the outstanding shares of the Trust or such fund or portfolio.

         As a general  matter,  the Trust does not hold annual or other meetings
of shareholders.  This is because the Trust Agreement  provides for shareholders
voting only for the election or removal of one or more Trustees, if a meeting is
called for that purpose, and for certain other designated matters.  Each Trustee
serves until the next meeting of shareholders, if any, called for the purpose of
considering the election or reelection of such Trustee or of a successor to such
Trustee,  and until the election and  qualification  of his  successor,  if any,
elected at such meeting, or until such Trustee sooner dies, resigns,  retires or
is removed by the holders of two-thirds of the shares.

         Under  Delaware  law,  shareholders  of the  Trust  are  not  generally
personally  liable for obligations of the Trust. The Delaware Business Trust Act
provides that a shareholder  of a Delaware  business  trust shall be entitled to
the same limitation of liability  extended to shareholders of private for-profit
corporations. However, no similar statutory or other authority limiting business
trust  shareholder  liability exists in many states.  As a result, to the extent
that a Delaware  business trust or a shareholder is subject to the  jurisdiction
of courts in such other  states,  the courts may not apply  Delaware law and may
thereby  subject the Trust's  shareholders  to liability.  To guard against this
risk,  the Trust  Agreement (i) contains an express  disclaimer  of  shareholder
liability for acts or  obligations  of the Trust and will require that notice of
such  disclaimer be given in each agreement,  obligation and instrument  entered
into  or  executed  by  the  Trust  or  its  Trustees  and  (ii)   provides  for
indemnification  out of  the  property  of the  Trust  of any  shareholder  held
personally  liable for the  obligations of the Trust.  Thus, the risk of a Trust
shareholder  incurring  financial loss beyond his or her  investment  because of
shareholder  liability is limited to circumstances in which all of the following
factors  are  present:  (1) a court  refused  to  apply  Delaware  law;  (2) the
liability  arose  under  tort  law or,  if not,  no  contractual  limitation  of
liability  was in effect;  and (3) the Trust  itself would be unable to meet its
obligations.
                                       25
<PAGE>
         The Trust  Agreement  provides  that each  Trustee of the Trust will be
liable for his or her own willful  misfeasance,  bad faith,  gross negligence or
reckless  disregard  of the  duties  involved  in the  conduct  of the office of
Trustees ("disabling conduct"), and for nothing else, and will not be liable for
errors of  judgment or mistakes  of fact or law.  The Trust  Agreement  provides
further that the Trust will indemnify Trustees and officers of the Trust against
liabilities  and  expenses  incurred in  connection  with  litigation  and other
proceedings in which they may be involved (or with which they may be threatened)
by reason of their  positions with the Trust,  except that no Trustee or officer
will be indemnified  against any liability to the Trust or its  shareholders  to
which he would otherwise be subject by reason of disabling conduct.

         The  Trust  Agreement  provides  that  each  shareholder,  by virtue of
becoming such,  will be held to have expressly  assented and agreed to the terms
of the Trust Agreement and to have become a party thereto.

         The  Trust  Agreement  also  contains  procedures  for the  removal  of
Trustees by its shareholders. At any meeting of shareholders, duly called and at
which a quorum is present,  the shareholders may, by the affirmative vote of the
holders of  two-thirds  of the votes  entitled  to be cast  thereon,  remove any
Trustee or Trustees  from office and may elect a successor or successors to fill
any resulting vacancies for unexpired terms of removed Trustees.

   
         Upon the written  request of the holders of shares entitled to not less
than ten percent (10%) of all the votes entitled to be cast at such meeting, the
Secretary of the Trust shall promptly call a special meeting of shareholders for
the purpose of voting upon the question of removal of any Trustee.  Whenever ten
or more  shareholders  of record  who have  been  such for at least  six  months
preceding the date of application,  and who hold in the aggregate  either shares
having a net asset value of at least $25,000 or at least one percent (1%) of the
total  outstanding  shares,  whichever  is  less,  shall  apply  to the  Trust's
Secretary  in  writing,  stating  that  they  wish  to  communicate  with  other
shareholders  with a view to  obtaining  signatures  to submit a  request  for a
meeting  as  described  above and  accompanied  by a form of  communication  and
request which they wish to transmit,  the  Secretary  shall within five business
days after such application  either:  (1) afford to such applicants  access to a
list of the names and addresses of all  shareholders as recorded on the books of
the  Trust;  or (2)  inform  such  applicants  as to the  approximate  number of
shareholders of record and the approximate  cost of mailing to them the proposed
communication and form of request.
    

         If the Secretary elects to follow the course specified in clause (2) of
the last sentence of the preceding  paragraph,  the Secretary,  upon the written
request of such applicants, accompanied by a tender of the material to be mailed
and of the reasonable  expenses of mailing,  shall, with reasonable  promptness,
mail such material to all  shareholders of record at their addresses as recorded
on the books unless  within five  business  days after such tender the Secretary
shall  mail to such  applicants  and  file  with  the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission,  together  with a copy  of the  material  to be  mailed,  a  written
statement signed by at least a majority of the Board of
                                       26
<PAGE>
Trustees  to the effect that in their  opinion  either  such  material  contains
untrue  statements  of fact or  omits  to  state  facts  necessary  to make  the
statements  contained  therein  not  misleading,  or  would be in  violation  of
applicable law, and specifying the basis of such opinion.

         After  opportunity  for hearing  upon the  objections  specified in the
written  statement so filed, the Securities and Exchange  Commission may, and if
demanded by the Board of Trustees or by such  applicants  shall,  enter an order
either  sustaining one or more of such  objections or refusing to sustain any of
them. If the Securities and Exchange Commission shall enter an order refusing to
sustain any of such  objections,  or if, after the entry of an order  sustaining
one or more of such  objections,  the Securities and Exchange  Commission  shall
find, after notice and opportunity for hearing, that all objections so sustained
have been met, and shall enter an order so declaring,  the Secretary  shall mail
copies of such material of all shareholders with reasonable promptness after the
entry of such order and the renewal of such tender.

                         INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS

   
         Individuals who receive compensation or earned income, even if they are
active  participants  in  a  qualified   retirement  plan  (or  certain  similar
retirement plans), may establish their own tax-sheltered  Individual  Retirement
Account  ("IRA").  The Funds offer a prototype  IRA plan which may be adopted by
individuals  for rollovers  from existing  IRAs or  retirement  plans.  There is
currently no charge for establishing an IRA account, although there is an annual
maintenance  fee.  Earnings  on  amounts  held  in an IRA are  not  taxed  until
withdrawal.
    

         A description  of applicable  service fees and certain  limitations  on
contributions and withdrawals,  as well as application forms, are available from
the transfer agent upon request at  1-800-841-2858.  The IRA documents contain a
disclosure statement which the Internal Revenue Service requires to be furnished
to individuals who are considering adopting an IRA. Because a retirement program
involves  commitments covering future years, it is important that the investment
objective  of  the  Fund  be  consistent  with  the   participant's   retirement
objectives.  Premature withdrawals from a retirement plan will result in adverse
tax  consequences.  Consultation  with a  competent  financial  and tax  adviser
regarding the foregoing retirement plans is recommended.

                             PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

   
         The  Funds  may from time to time  advertise  performance  data such as
"average   annual  total  return"  and  "total   return."  To   facilitate   the
comparability  of historical  performance  data from one mutual fund to another,
the SEC has developed  guidelines  for the  calculation  of average annual total
return.

         The average  annual  total  return for a Fund for a specific  period is
found by first taking a hypothetical $1,000 investment ("initial investment") in
the Fund's shares on the first day of the
    
                                       27
<PAGE>
   
period and computing the "redeemable value" of that investment at the end of the
period. The redeemable value is then divided by the initial investment, and this
quotient  is taken to the Nth root (N  representing  the  number of years in the
period)  and 1 is  subtracted  from the  result,  which is then  expressed  as a
percentage.  The calculation assumes that all income and capital gains dividends
paid by the Fund have been  reinvested  at net asset  value on the  reinvestment
dates during the period. This calculation can be expressed as follows:
    

         P(1 + T)N = ERV

         Where: T = average annual total return.

         ERV = ending  redeemable  value at the end of the period covered by the
         computation of a  hypothetical  $1,000 payment made at the beginning of
         the period.

         P = hypothetical initial payment of $1,000.

         N = period covered by the computation, expressed in terms of years.


   
         Total return  performance  for a specific period is calculated by first
taking an investment ("initial  investment") in a Fund's shares on the first day
of the period and computing the "ending value" of that  investment at the end of
the period.  The total return  percentage is then  determined by subtracting the
initial  investment  from the ending  value and  dividing  the  remainder by the
initial  investment and expressing the result as a percentage.  The  calculation
assumes  that all income and capital  gains  dividends  paid by a Fund have been
reinvested at net asset value on the reinvestment dates during the period. Total
return may also be shown as the increased  dollar value of the  investment  over
the period or as a cumulative  total return which represents the change in value
of an investment  over a stated period and may be quoted as a percentage or as a
dollar amount.
    

         The  calculations  of average  annual total return and aggregate  total
return assume the  reinvestment of all dividends and capital gain  distributions
on the  reinvestment  dates during the period.  The ending  redeemable  value is
determined by assuming  complete  redemption of the hypothetical  investment and
the deduction of all  nonrecurring  charges at the end of the period  covered by
the computations.

   
         A Fund's performance  figures will be based upon historical results and
will not necessarily be indicative of future  performance.  A Fund's returns and
net asset value will  fluctuate  and the net asset value of shares when sold may
be more or less than their  original  cost.  Any  additional  fees  charged by a
dealer or other  financial  services firm would reduce the returns  described in
this  section.  The  Total  Return  Fund's  total  return  for the  period  from
commencement  of  operations  (October 28, 1996)  through  August 31, 1997,  was
18.70%.
    
                                       28
<PAGE>
   
         From  time to  time,  in  marketing  and  other  literature,  a  Fund's
performance  may be compared to the performance of other mutual funds in general
or to  the  performance  of  particular  types  of  mutual  funds  with  similar
investment  goals,  as  tracked  by  independent   organizations.   Among  these
organizations,  Lipper  Analytical  Services,  Inc.  ("Lipper"),  a widely  used
independent  research  firm which  ranks  mutual  funds by overall  performance,
investment  objective and assets, may be cited.  Lipper performance  figures are
based on changes in net asset value, with all income and capital gains dividends
reinvested.  Such  calculations  do not include the effect of any sales  charges
imposed by other  funds.  A Fund will be compared to Lipper's  appropriate  fund
category, that is, by fund objective and portfolio holdings.

         A Fund's  performance  may also be compared to the performance of other
mutual funds by Morningstar,  Inc., which rates funds on the basis of historical
risk and total return.  Morningstar's ratings range from five stars (highest) to
one star (lowest) and represent Morningstar's  assessment of the historical risk
level and total  return of a fund as a  weighted  average  for 3, 5, and 10 year
periods.   Ratings  are  not  absolute  or  necessarily   predictive  of  future
performance.

         Evaluations of Fund performance made by independent sources may also be
used in advertisements concerning the Funds, including reprints of or selections
from  editorials  or articles  about a Fund.  Sources for Fund  performance  and
articles  about the  Funds  may  include  publications  such as  Money,  Forbes,
Kiplinger's,  Financial  World,  Business Week, U.S. News and World Report,  the
Wall Street Journal, Barron's and a variety of investment newsletters.

         A Fund may compare  its  performance  to a wide  variety of indices and
measures of  inflation  including  the Standard & Poor's Index of 500 Stocks and
the  NASDAQ   Over-the-Counter   Composite  Index.  There  are  differences  and
similarities between the investments that a Fund may purchase for its portfolios
and the investments measured by these indices.

         Occasionally  statistics may be used to specify a Fund's  volatility or
risk.  Measures of volatility or risk are generally used to compare a Fund's net
asset value or performance relative to a market index. One measure of volatility
is beta.  Beta is the  volatility  of a fund  relative  to the  total  market as
represented  by the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index.  A beta of more than 1.00
indicates  volatility  greater  than the  market,  and a beta of less  than 1.00
indicates volatility less than the market. Another measure of volatility or risk
is standard deviation.  Standard deviation is used to measure variability of net
asset value or total return around an average,  over a specified period of time.
The premise is that  greater  volatility  connotes  greater risk  undertaken  in
achieving performance.

         Marketing and other Trust  literature  may include a description of the
potential  risks and rewards  associated  with an investment  in the Funds.  The
description may include a "risk/return  spectrum" which compares a Fund to other
funds or broad categories of funds,
    
                                       29
<PAGE>
such as money  market,  bond or equity  funds,  in terms of potential  risks and
returns.  Risk/return  spectrums  also may  depict  funds  that  invest  in both
domestic and foreign  securities or a combination of bond and equity securities.
Money  market  funds are  designed to maintain a constant  $1.00 share price and
have a  fluctuating  yield.  Share price,  yield and total return of a bond fund
will  fluctuate.  The  share  price  and  return  of an  equity  fund  also will
fluctuate.  The  description  may also compare a fund to bank products,  such as
certificates  of  deposit.  Unlike  mutual  funds,  certificates  of deposit are
insured up to $100,000 by the U.S. government and offer a fixed rate of return.

   
         The Funds may include  discussions  or  illustrations  of the potential
investment goals of a prospective investor,  investment  management  techniques,
policies  or  investment  suitability  of the Funds,  economic  conditions,  the
effects of  inflation  and  historical  performance  of various  asset  classes,
including but not limited to,  stocks,  bonds and Treasury  bills.  From time to
time  advertisements  or communications to investors may summarize the substance
of  information  contained in  shareholder  reports  (including  the  investment
composition  of the  Funds),  as well as the views of the  Adviser as to current
market,  economic,  trade and interest rate  investment  strategies  and related
matters believed to be of relevance to the Funds. In addition, advertisements or
shareholder  communications  may include a discussion  of certain  attributes or
benefits to be derived by an investment  in the Funds.  Such  advertisements  or
communications may include symbols,  headlines or other material which highlight
or summarize the information discussed in more detail.
    

                                OTHER INFORMATION

   
         As set forth in the  Prospectus,  the net asset value of each Fund will
be determined as of the close of trading on each day the New York Stock Exchange
is open for  trading.  The New York Stock  Exchange is open for  trading  Monday
through Friday except New Year's Day, Martin Luther King Jr.'s Day,  Presidents'
Day, Good Friday,  Memorial Day,  Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day,
and Christmas Day. Additionally,  if any of the aforementioned holidays falls on
a  Saturday,  the New York Stock  Exchange  will not be open for  trading on the
preceding  Friday,  and when any such  holiday  falls on a Sunday,  the New York
Stock  Exchange  will not be open for  trading on the  following  Monday  unless
unusual business conditions exist, such as the ending of a monthly or the yearly
accounting period.

         Shares of the Funds may be  exchanged  for  shares of the Money  Market
Fund as provided in the Prospectus.  Countrywide Fund Services, Inc., the Funds'
transfer agent,  receives a service fee from the Money Market Fund at the annual
rate of 0.25 of 1% of the  average  daily net asset  value of the  shares of the
Fund exchanged into the Money Market Fund.
    

         With  respect to the  management  of domestic  equity  securities,  the
Adviser believes a significant  portion of the return is derived from a weighted
exposure to the market's styles. Style
                                       30
<PAGE>
is defined as the combination of market capitalization size (i.e., big, mid, and
small cap) and  valuation  (low/"value"  or  high/"growth").  The  resulting six
styles are:


                       -------------------------------------
                   M   |    BIG CAP     |       BIG CAP    |
                   A   |     VALUE      |       GROWTH     |
                   R   |                |                  |
                   K   |----------------|------------------|
                   E   |    MID-CAP     |       MID-CAP    |
                   T   |     VALUE      |       GROWTH     |
                       |                |                  |
                       |                |                  |
                       | ---------------|------------------|
                   C   |   SMALL CAP    |      SMALL CAP   |
                   A   |     VALUE      |       GROWTH     |
                   P   |                |                  |
                       -------------------------------------
                                        
                                    VALUATION


         The Adviser believes that for extended periods,  the market has favored
one style over the others. This favoritism has rotated,  with all styles leading
(and lagging) at some time. The Adviser also believes that this  observation may
be more  important in achieving  investment  returns  than  individual  stock or
manager selection.

   
         In  seeking  to  achieve a Fund's  investment  objective,  the  Adviser
utilizes  "exclusionary"  management.  This means deciding what not to own -- or
what  styles  to avoid.  In  contrast,  many  investors  utilize  "inclusionary"
management -- deciding what to own in the equity  universe.  The Adviser seeks a
high level of total  return by seeking to avoid the worst  styles and owning the
rest. By avoiding the worst  performing  parts of the market,  the Adviser seeks
relatively  lower  volatility in  investment  returns than the broad market as a
whole because in the Adviser's experience the most out-of-phase styles typically
have the highest volatility (standard deviation). In an attempt to replicate the
performance of each style, the Adviser uses  semi-passive  emulation,  i.e., the
Adviser  purchases a basket of  quantitatively  chosen  stocks  optimized to the
style's characteristics.

         Mr.  Kenneth L.  Fisher is the  portfolio  manager of the Funds.  He is
primarily known to the public through his writing.  He has written the Portfolio
Strategy column in Forbes magazine since 1984. His writings include three books,
"Super Stocks," a tutorial on fundamental stock research published in 1984, "The
Wall Street  Waltz," a financial  overview  and  historical  lessons  through 90
visualizations published in 1987, and "100 Minds that Made the Market," a set of
100 cameo  biographies  of pioneers of American  finance  published in 1993. His
writings have been
    
                                       31
<PAGE>
   
published widely and he has been interviewed by numerous financial  publications
and  programs.  The  Funds  may  refer to this  information  in their  marketing
materials.

         The  Automatic  Investing  Plan permits an investor to use "Dollar Cost
Averaging" in making investments.  Instead of trying to time market performance,
a  fixed  dollar  amount  is  invested  in  shares  of a Fund  at  predetermined
intervals.  This may help investors  reduce their average cost per share because
the agreed upon fixed  investment  amount  allows  more  shares to be  purchased
during  periods of lower share prices and fewer shares during  periods of higher
share prices. In order to be effective,  Dollar Cost Averaging should usually be
followed on a sustained,  consistent basis.  Investors should be aware, however,
that shares bought using Dollar Cost  Averaging are purchased  without regard to
their price on the day of investment or to market trends.  Dollar Cost Averaging
does not  assure a profit and does not  protect  against  losses in a  declining
market.  In  addition,  while  investors  may find Dollar Cost  Averaging  to be
beneficial,  it will not  prevent a loss if an investor  ultimately  redeems his
shares at a price which is lower than their purchase price. An investor may want
to consider his or her financial  ability to continue  purchases through periods
of low price levels.

         It is possible that  conditions may exist in the future which would, in
the opinion of the Board of Trustees,  make it undesirable for a Fund to pay for
redemptions in cash. In such cases the Board may authorize payment to be made in
portfolio securities of the Fund. However,  each Fund has obligated itself under
the 1940 Act to redeem for cash all shares  presented for  redemption by any one
shareholder  up to $250,000  (or 1% of the Fund's net assets if that is less) in
any 90-day period.  Securities delivered in payment of redemptions are valued at
the same value  assigned  to them in  computing  the net asset  value per share.
Shareholders receiving such securities generally will incur brokerage costs when
selling such securities.

         Payment for shares of a Fund may, in the discretion of the Adviser,  be
made in the form of securities that are permissible  investments for the Fund as
described in the Prospectus. For further information about this form of payment,
contact the Transfer Agent. In connection with an in-kind securities  payment, a
Fund will require,  among other things, that the securities be valued on the day
of purchase in accordance with the pricing methods used by the Fund and that the
Fund receive satisfactory assurances that it will have good and marketable title
to the  securities  received  by it; that the  securities  be in proper form for
transfer to the Fund;  and that  adequate  information  be  provided  concerning
certain tax matters relating to the securities.  Payment for shares of a Fund in
the form of  securities  will  generally  be treated  as a taxable  sale of such
securities by the shareholder.
    

                              FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

         Incorporated  by  reference  herein are the  report of the  independent
accountants  dated  October 17,  1997,  and the other  portions of  Registrant's
annual report to shareholders  for the fiscal year ended August 31, 1997,  under
the headings: "SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS,"
                                       32
<PAGE>
   
"STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES,"  "STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS," "STATEMENT OF
CHANGES  IN NET  ASSETS,"  "NOTES  TO  FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS,"  and  "REPORT  OF
INDEPENDENT  ACCOUNTANTS."  Copies of the  annual  report  are  available,  upon
request  and  without  charge,  by calling  the Funds at (800)  841-2858,  or by
writing to the following  address:  The Purisima  Funds,  13100  Skyline  Blvd.,
Woodside, CA 94062-4547.
    

         The  Prospectus  and this  Statement of Additional  Information  do not
contain all the information  included in the  Registration  Statement filed with
the Securities and Exchange  Commission under the Securities Act with respect to
the  securities  offered  by the  Fund's  Prospectus.  Certain  portions  of the
Registration  Statement have been omitted from the Prospectus and this Statement
of  Additional  Information,  pursuant  to  the  rules  and  regulations  of the
Securities and Exchange  Commission.  The Registration  Statement  including the
exhibits  filed  therewith may be examined at the office of the  Securities  and
Exchange Commission in Washington, D.C.

         Statements  contained  in  the  Prospectus  or  in  this  Statement  of
Additional  Information  as to the contents of any  contract or other  documents
referred to are not necessarily complete, and in each instance reference is made
to the copy of such  contract  or other  document  filed  as an  exhibit  to the
Registration  Statement of which the Prospectus and this Statement of Additional
Information  form a part, each such statement being qualified in all respects by
such reference.
                                       33
<PAGE>
                                   APPENDIX A

Commercial Paper Ratings
- ------------------------

         A Standard & Poor's commercial paper rating is a current  assessment of
the likelihood of timely payment of debt having an original  maturity of no more
than 365 days. The following summarizes the rating categories used by Standard &
Poor's for commercial paper in which the Fund may invest:

         "A-1" - Issue's  degree of safety  regarding  timely payment is strong.
Those issues determined to possess extremely strong safety  characteristics  are
denoted "A-1+."

         "A-2" - Issue's capacity for timely payment is  satisfactory.  However,
the relative degree of safety is not as high as for issues designated "A-1."

         Moody's commercial paper ratings are opinions of the ability of issuers
to repay punctually  promissory  obligations not having an original  maturity in
excess of 9 months.  The  following  summarizes  the rating  categories  used by
Moody's for commercial paper in which the Funds may invest:

         "Prime-1" - Issuer or related supporting institutions are considered to
have a superior  capacity for  repayment of short-term  promissory  obligations.
Prime-1  repayment   capacity  will  normally  be  evidenced  by  the  following
capacities:  leading market positions in well-established industries; high rates
of  return  on  funds  employed;  conservative  capitalization  structures  with
moderate reliance on debt and ample asset  protection;  broad margins in earning
coverage of fixed  financial  charges and high  internal  cash  generation;  and
well-established  access to a range of financial  markets and assured sources of
alternate liquidity.

         "Prime-2" - Issuer or related supporting institutions are considered to
have a strong capacity for repayment of short-term promissory obligations.  This
will normally be evidenced by many of the  characteristics  cited above but to a
lesser degree.  Earnings trends and coverage ratios,  while sound,  will be more
subject to variation.  Capitalization characteristics,  while still appropriate,
may be more  affected by external  conditions.  Ample  alternative  liquidity is
maintained.

         The three  rating  categories  of Duff & Phelps  for  investment  grade
commercial  paper are  "Duff  1,"  "Duff 2" and "Duff 3." Duff & Phelps  employs
three designations, "Duff 1+," "Duff 1" and "Duff 1-," within the highest rating
category.  The following  summarizes the rating categories used by Duff & Phelps
for commercial paper in which the Fund may invest:
                                       34
<PAGE>
         "Duff  1+" -  Debt  possesses  highest  certainty  of  timely  payment.
Short-term  liquidity,  including  internal  operating  factors and/or access to
alternative sources of funds, is outstanding, and safety is just below risk-free
U.S. Treasury short-term obligations.

         "Duff 1" - Debt  possesses  very  high  certainty  of  timely  payment.
Liquidity  factors are excellent and  supported by good  fundamental  protection
factors. Risk factors are minor.

         "Duff 1-" - Debt possesses high certainty of timely payment.  Liquidity
factors are strong and supported by good fundamental  protection  factors.  Risk
factors are very small.

         "Duff 2" - Debt possesses good certainty of timely  payment.  Liquidity
factors and company  fundamentals  are sound.  Although ongoing funding need may
enlarge total financing requirements, access to capital markets is good.

         Fitch short-term  ratings apply to debt obligations that are payable on
demand or have  original  maturities  of up to three years.  The highest  rating
category  of Fitch for  short-term  obligations  is  "F-1."  Fitch  employs  two
designations,  "F-1+" and "F-1,"  within the  highest  category.  The  following
summarizes the rating  categories  used by Fitch for  short-term  obligations in
which the Funds may invest:

         "F-1+" - Securities possess exceptionally strong credit quality. Issues
assigned  this rating are regarded as having the  strongest  degree of assurance
for timely payment.

         "F-1" - Securities possess very strong credit quality.  Issues assigned
this rating  reflect an assurance of timely payment only slightly less in degree
than issues rated "F-1+."

Fitch may also use the symbol "LOC" with its short-term ratings to indicate that
the rating is based upon a letter of credit issued by a commercial bank.

         Thomson  BankWatch  short-term  ratings  assess  the  likelihood  of an
untimely or  incomplete  payment of  principal  or  interest  of  unsubordinated
instruments  having a  maturity  of one year or less  which are issued by a bank
holding company or an entity within the holding company structure. The following
summarizes the ratings used by Thomson BankWatch in which the Fund may invest:

         "TBW-1"  - This  designation  represents  Thomson  BankWatch's  highest
rating  category and indicates a very high degree of likelihood  that  principal
and interest will be paid on a timely basis.

         "TBW-2" - this  designation  indicates  that while the degree of safety
regarding  timely  payment of  principal  and  interest is strong,  the relative
degree of safety is not as high as for issues rated "TBW-1."
                                       35
<PAGE>
         IBCA assesses the investment quality of unsecured debt with an original
maturity  of less than one year which is issued by bank  holding  companies  and
their  principal  bank  subsidiaries.   The  following   summarizes  the  rating
categories  used by IBCA for  short-term  debt  ratings  in  which  the Fund may
invest:

         "A1" -  Obligations  are  supported by the highest  capacity for timely
repayment.  Where issues possess a particularly  strong credit feature, a rating
of A1+ is assigned.

         "A2"  -  Obligations  are  supported  by a  good  capacity  for  timely
repayment.

Corporate Long-Term Investment Grade Debt Ratings
- -------------------------------------------------

Standard & Poor's Investment Grade Debt Ratings

         A Standard & Poor's  corporate  or  municipal  debt rating is a current
assessment  of the  creditworthiness  of an obligor  with  respect to a specific
obligation.  This  assessment  may  take  into  consideration  obligors  such as
guarantors,  insurers,  or lessees.  The debt rating is not a recommendation  to
purchase, sell, or hold a security, inasmuch as it does not comment as to market
price or suitability for a particular investor.

         The ratings are based on current information furnished by the issuer or
obtained by S&P from other sources it considers  reliable.  S&P does not perform
an audit in connection  with any rating and may, on occasion,  rely on unaudited
financial information.  The ratings may be changed, suspended, or withdrawn as a
result of changes  in, or  unavailability  of,  such  information,  or for other
circumstances.

         The  ratings  are  based,   in  varying   degrees,   on  the  following
considerations:

         1.       Likelihood  of  default  -  capacity  and  willingness  of the
                  obligor as to the timely  payment of interest and repayment of
                  principal in accordance with the terms of the obligation.

         2.       Nature of and provisions of the obligation.

         3.       Protection   afforded  by,  and  relative   position  of,  the
                  obligation  in the  event of  bankruptcy,  reorganization,  or
                  other  arrangement under the laws of bankruptcy and other laws
                  affecting creditors' rights.

         AAA - Debt rated  'AAA' has the highest  rating  assigned by Standard &
Poor's. Capacity to pay interest and repay principal is extremely strong.
                                       36
<PAGE>
         AA - Debt rated 'AA' has a very  strong  capacity to pay  interest  and
repay principal and differs from the highest rated issues only in small degree.

         A - Debt  rated 'A' has a strong  capacity  to pay  interest  and repay
principal  although it is somewhat more  susceptible  to the adverse  effects of
changes in  circumstances  and  economic  conditions  than debt in higher  rated
categories.

         BBB - Debt rated 'BBB' is  regarded  as having an adequate  capacity to
pay  interest  and  repay  principal.  Whereas  it  normally  exhibits  adequate
protection parameters, adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are
more likely to lead to a weakened  capacity to pay interest and repay  principal
for debt in this category than in higher rated categories.


Moody's Long-Term Investment Grade Debt Ratings

         Aaa - Bonds  which are rated Aaa are judged to be of the best  quality.
They carry the smallest degree of investment risk and are generally  referred to
as  "gilt  edged."  Interest  payments  are  protected  by  a  large  or  by  an
exceptionally   stable  margin  and  principal  is  secure.  While  the  various
protective  elements are likely to change, such changes as can be visualized are
most unlikely to impair the fundamentally strong position of such issues.

         Aa - Bonds which are rated 'Aa' are judged to be of high quality by all
standards. Together with the Aaa group they comprise what are generally known as
high grade bonds.  They are rated lower than the best bonds  because  margins of
protection may not be as large as in Aaa securities or fluctuation of protective
elements  may be of greater  amplitude  or there may be other  elements  present
which make the long-term risk appear somewhat larger than in Aaa securities.

         A - Bonds  which  are  rated  'A'  possess  many  favorable  investment
attributes and are to be considered as upper-medium grade  obligations.  Factors
giving security to principal and interest are considered adequate,  but elements
may be present which  suggest a  susceptibility  to impairment  some time in the
future.

         Baa - Bonds  which  are  rated  'Baa' are  considered  as  medium-grade
obligations  (i.e.,  they are  neither  highly  protected  nor poorly  secured).
Interest  payments and principal  security  appear  adequate for the present but
certain  protective  elements  may  be  lacking  or  may  be  characteristically
unreliable over any great length of time. Such bonds lack outstanding investment
characteristics and in fact have speculative characteristics as well.
                                       37
<PAGE>
Fitch Investors Service, Inc. Investment Grade Bond Ratings

         Fitch  investment  grade bond  ratings  provide a guide to investors in
determining the credit risk associated with a particular  security.  The ratings
represent Fitch's  assessment of the issuer's ability to meet the obligations of
a specific debt issue or class of debt in a timely manner.

         The rating takes into consideration  special features of the issue, its
relationship  to other  obligations of the issuer,  the current and  prospective
financial  condition and operating  performance of the issuer and any guarantor,
as well as the economic and political environment that might affect the issuer's
future financial strength and credit quality.

         Fitch  ratings  do not  reflect  any  credit  enhancement  that  may be
provided  by  insurance  policies  or  financial   guaranties  unless  otherwise
indicated.

         Bonds  that have the same  rating are of  similar  but not  necessarily
identical credit quality since the rating  categories do not fully reflect small
differences in the degrees of credit risk.

         Fitch  ratings  are not  recommendations  to  buy,  sell,  or hold  any
security.  Ratings  do  not  comment  on  the  adequacy  of  market  price,  the
suitability of any security for a particular investor,  or the tax-exempt nature
of taxability of payments made in respect of any security.

         Fitch ratings are based on  information  obtained  from issuers,  other
obligors,  underwriters,  their experts,  and other sources Fitch believes to be
reliable.  Fitch  does not  audit  or  verify  the  truth  or  accuracy  of such
information.  Ratings may be changed,  suspended,  or  withdrawn  as a result of
changes in, or the unavailability of, information or for other reasons.


AAA           Bonds  considered to be investment grade and of the highest credit
              quality.  The obligor has an  exceptionally  strong ability to pay
              interest and repay principal,  which is unlikely to be affected by
              reasonably foreseeable events.

AA            Bonds  considered to be  investment  grade and of very high credit
              quality. The obligor's ability to pay interest and repay principal
              is very strong, although not quite as strong as bonds rated 'AAA.'
              Because  bonds  rated in the  'AAA'  and 'AA'  categories  are not
              significantly   vulnerable  to  foreseeable  future  developments,
              short-term debt of the issuers is generally rated 'F-1+.'

A             Bonds  considered  to be  investment  grade  and  of  high  credit
              quality. The obligor's ability to pay interest and repay principal
              is considered to be strong,  but may be more vulnerable to adverse
              changes in economic  conditions and circumstances  than bonds with
              higher ratings.
                                       38
<PAGE>
BBB           Bonds considered to be investment grade and of satisfactory credit
              quality. The obligor's ability to pay interest and repay principal
              is  considered  to  be  adequate.   Adverse  changes  in  economic
              conditions  and  circumstances,  however,  are more likely to have
              adverse  impact  on  these  bonds,  and  therefore  impair  timely
              payment.  The likelihood that the ratings of these bonds will fall
              below  investment  grade is  higher  than for  bonds  with  higher
              ratings.

         The rating takes into consideration  special features of the issue, its
relationship  to other  obligations of the issuer,  the current and  prospective
financial  condition and operating  performance of the issuer and any guarantor,
as well as the economic and political environment that might affect the issuer's
future financial strength.

      Bonds  that  have the  same  rating  are of  similar  but not  necessarily
identical  credit quality since the rating  categories  cannot fully reflect the
differences in the degrees of credit risk.  Moreover,  the character of the risk
factor varies from industry to industry and between  corporate,  health care and
municipal obligations.


Duff & Phelps, Inc. Long-Term Investment Grade Debt Ratings

      These  ratings  represent  a summary  opinion  of the  issuer's  long-term
fundamental   quality.   Rating   determination  is  based  on  qualitative  and
quantitative  factors  which  may  vary  according  to the  basic  economic  and
financial   characteristics   of  each  industry  and  each  issuer.   Important
considerations  are vulnerability to economic cycles as well as risks related to
such  factors  as  competition,  government  action,  regulation,  technological
obsolescence, demand shifts, cost structure, and management depth and expertise.
The projected  viability of the obligor at the trough of the cycle is a critical
determination.

      Each rating also takes into account the legal form of the security  (e.g.,
first mortgage bonds,  subordinated debt,  preferred stock, etc.). The extent of
rating  dispersion  among the various  classes of  securities  is  determined by
several factors including relative  weightings of the different security classes
in the capital  structure,  the overall credit  strength of the issuer,  and the
nature of covenant protection.  Review of indenture restrictions is important to
the analysis of a company's operating and financial constraints.

      The Credit Rating Committee  formally reviews all ratings once per quarter
(more  frequently,  if necessary).  Ratings of 'BBB-' and higher fall within the
definition  of  investment  grade  securities,  as defined by bank and insurance
supervisory authorities.
                                       39
<PAGE>
Rating
Scale         Definition
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AAA           Highest credit  quality.  The risk factors are  negligible,  being
              only slightly more than for risk-free U.S. Treasury debt.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AA+           High  credit  quality.  Protection  factors  are  strong.  Risk is
              modest, but may vary
AA            slightly from time to time because of economic conditions.
AA-

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A+            Protection factors are average but adequate. However, risk factors
A             are more variable and greater in periods of economic areas.
A-

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                       40
<PAGE>
                                       As filed with the Securities and Exchange
                                                     Commission on June 15, 1998

                                                      Registration No. 333-09153
                                                              File No. 811-07737


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------











                                     Part C

                                       of

                                    Form N-1A

                             REGISTRATION STATEMENT



                               THE PURISIMA FUNDS









- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
                               THE PURISIMA FUNDS

                            PART C. OTHER INFORMATION

Item 24.          Financial Statements and Exhibits.
                  ----------------------------------

         (a)      Financial  Statements  included  as a part of this  Registrant
                  Statement

                  1.       Included  in Part A of this  Registration  Statement:
                           Financial  Highlights for the period October 28, 1996
                           (Inception) to August 31, 1997.

                  2.       Included  in Part B of this  Registration  Statement:
                           Schedule  of  Investments  as  of  August  31,  1997;
                           Statement of Assets and  Liabilities as of August 31,
                           1997;  Statement  of  Changes  in Net  Assets for the
                           period  October  28, 1996  (Inception)  to August 31,
                           1997;  Statement of Operations for the period October
                           28, 1996  (Inception)  to August 31, 1997;  Financial
                           Highlights   for  the   period   October   28,   1996
                           (Inception) to August 31, 1997;  related  notes;  and
                           the  Independent  Auditors'  Report for The  Purisima
                           Total Return Fund (the "Fund")  dated August 31, 1997
                           are incorporated by reference to the Annual Report to
                           Shareholders  of the Fund for the period  October 28,
                           1996 (Inception) to August 31, 1997.

         (b)      Exhibits


                  1.1      Certificate  of Trust (filed with the Fund's  initial
                           registration  statement  on Form N-1A dated April 28,
                           1997)

                  1.2      Registrant's   Agreement  and  Declaration  of  Trust
                           (filed with the Fund's initial registration statement
                           on Form N-1A dated April 28, 1997)

                  2.       Registrant's  By-Laws  (filed with the Fund's initial
                           registration  statement  on Form N-1A dated April 28,
                           1997)

                  3.       None.

                  4.       None.

                  5.       Investment   Management   Agreement  by  and  between
                           Registrant   on  behalf   of  the  Fund  and   Fisher
                           Investments,  Inc.  (filed  with the  Fund's  initial
                           registration  statement  on Form N-1A dated April 28,
                           1997)

                  6.1      Distribution  Agreement by and between Registrant and
                           Sunstone Financial Group, Inc. (filed with the Fund's
                           Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 on November 5, 1996)

                  6.2      Distribution  Agreement by and between Registrant and
                           Sunstone Distribution  Services,  LLC (filed with the
                           Fund's Post  Effective  Amendment  No. 1 on April 28,
                           1997)

                  6.3      Distribution  Agreement by and between Registrant and
                           First Fund Distributors, Inc. - filed with the Fund's
                           Post Effective Amendment No. 3 November 14, 1997

                  7.       None.

                  8.       Custodian Agreement by and between Registrant and UMB
                           Bank,   N.A.   (filed   with   the   Fund's   initial
                           registration  statement  on Form N-1A dated April 28,
                           1997)
<PAGE>
                  9.1      Administration  and Fund Accounting  Agreement by and
                           between Registrant and Sunstone Financial Group, Inc.
                           (filed with the Fund's Post Effective Amendment No. 1
                           on April 28, 1997)

                  9.2      Transfer Agency  Agreement by and between  Registrant
                           and Sunstone Investor  Services,  LLC (filed with the
                           Fund's Post  Effective  Amendment  No. 1 on April 28,
                           1997)

                  9.3      Administration  Agreement  by and between  Registrant
                           and  Investment  Company  Administration  Corporation
                           (filed with the Fund's Post Effective Amendment No. 3
                           on November 14, 1997)

                  9.4      Transfer Agency  Agreement by and between  Registrant
                           and Countrywide  Fund Services,  Inc. (filed with the
                           Fund's Post Effective Amendment No. 3 on November 14,
                           1997)

                  9.5      Fund Accounting  Agreement by and between  Registrant
                           and Countrywide  Fund Services,  Inc. (filed with the
                           Fund's Post Effective Amendment No. 3 on November 14,
                           1997)

                  10.      Legal  Opinion of Heller  Ehrman  White &  McAuliffe,
                           former counsel for Registrant  (filed with the Fund's
                           initial  registration  statement  on Form N-1A  dated
                           April 28, 1997)

                  10.1     Legal Opinion of Paul,  Hastings,  Janofsky & Walker,
                           counsel  for  Registrant  for  the  addition  of  the
                           Purisima  Pure  American  Fund and the Purisima  Pure
                           Foreign  Fund (to be filed  by later  Post  Effective
                           Amendment)

                  11.      Consent of Independent Accountants (filed herewith)

                  12.      None.

                  13.1     Subscription Agreement (filed with the Fund's initial
                           registration  statement on Form N- 1A dated April 28,
                           1997)

                  13.2     Organizational  Expense  Agreement  (filed  with  the
                           Fund's  initial  registration  statement on Form N-1A
                           dated April 28, 1997)

                  14.      Individual Retirement Custodial Account Agreement and
                           Disclosure  Statement  (filed with the Fund's initial
                           registration  statement  on Form N-1A dated April 28,
                           1997)

                  15.      Registrant's  Service and Distribution  Plan pursuant
                           to Rule 12b-1  under the  Investment  Company  Act of
                           1940  (filed  with the  Fund's  initial  registration
                           statement on Form N-1A dated April 28, 1997)

                  16.      Computation  of  Performance  Figures (filed with the
                           Fund's Post Effective Amendment No. 3 on November 14,
                           1997)

                  17.      Financial Data Schedules (filed herewith)

                  18.      None.


Item 25.          Persons Controlled by or Under Common Control with Registrant.
                  --------------------------------------------------------------

Registrant  neither  controls  any person nor is under  common  control with any
other person.
<PAGE>
Item 26.          Number of Holders of Securities.
                  --------------------------------

                                                     Number of Record
                  Title of Class                     Holders as of May 29, 1998
                  --------------                     --------------------------


                  Purisima Total Return Fund         336
                  $0.01 Par Value

Item 27.          Indemnification.
                  ----------------

Registrant's Board of Trustees has adopted the following By-law provisions which
are in full force and effect and have not been modified or cancelled:


ARTICLE VI
INDEMNIFICATION OF TRUSTEES OFFICERS
EMPLOYEES AND OTHER AGENTS

     Section  1.  AGENTS,  PROCEEDINGS  AND  EXPENSES.  For the  purpose of this
Article, "agent" means any person who is or was a Trustee,  officer, employee or
other  agent of the Trust or is or was  serving at the request of the Trust as a
Trustee,  director,  officer,  employee or agent of another  foreign or domestic
corporation,  partnership,  joint  venture,  trust or other  enterprise or was a
Trustee,  director,  officer,  employee  or  agent  of  a  foreign  or  domestic
corporation that was a predecessor of another  enterprise at the request of such
predecessor  entity;  "proceeding"  means any  threatened,  pending or completed
action or proceeding, whether civil, criminal,  administrative or investigative;
and "expenses" includes, without limitation, attorney's fees and any expenses of
establishing a right to indemnification under this Article.

     Section 2.  ACTIONS  OTHER THAN BY TRUST.  The Trust  shall  indemnify  any
person  who  was or is a  party  or is  threatened  to be  made a  party  to any
proceeding  (other  than an action by or in the right of the Trust) by reason of
the fact that such  person is or was an agent of the  Trust,  against  expenses,
judgments, fines, settlements and other amounts actually and reasonably incurred
in connection  with such  proceeding,  if it is determined  that person acted in
good  faith and  reasonably  believed:  (a) in the case of conduct in his or her
official  capacity as a Trustee of the Trust, that his or her conduct was in the
Trust's best interests,  and (b) in all other cases, that his or her conduct was
at least not opposed to the  Trust's  best  interests,  and (c) in the case of a
criminal  proceeding  that he or she had no  reasonable  cause  to  believe  the
conduct of that  person was  unlawful.  The  termination  of any  proceeding  by
judgment, order, settlement, conviction or upon a plea of nolo contendere or its
equivalent  shall not of itself create a presumption that the person did not act
in good faith and in a manner which the person reasonably  believed to be in the
best  interest of the Trust or that the person had  reasonable  cause to believe
that the person's conduct was unlawful.

     Section 3. ACTIONS BY THE TRUST.  The Trust shall  indemnify any person who
was or is a party or is threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending
or completed action by or in the right of the Trust to procure a judgment in its
favor by reason of the fact  that such  person is or was an agent of the  Trust,
against expenses  actually and reasonably  incurred by that person in connection
with the  defense or  settlement  of that  action if that  person  acted in good
faith, in a manner that person believed to be in the best interests of the Trust
and with such care,  including  reasonable  inquiry,  as an  ordinarily  prudent
person in a like position would use under similar circumstances.

     Section 4. EXCLUSION OF  INDEMNIFICATION.  Notwithstanding any provision to
the contrary contained herein,  there shall be no right to  indemnification  for
any  liability  arising  by reason of  willful  misfeasance,  bad  faith,  gross
negligence,  or the reckless  disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of
the agent's office with the Trust.

No indemnification shall be made under Sections 2 or 3 of this Article:
<PAGE>
         (a) In respect of any  claim,  issue or matter as to which that  person
         shall  have been  adjudged  to be liable  on the  basis  that  personal
         benefit  was  improperly  received  by him or her,  whether  or not the
         benefit  resulted  from  an  action  taken  in  the  person's  official
         capacity; or

         (b) In respect of any  claim,  issue or matter as to which that  person
         shall  have  been  adjudged  to be liable  in the  performance  of that
         person's  duty to the Trust,  unless  and only to the  extent  that the
         court in which that action was brought shall determine upon application
         that in view of all the  circumstances of the case, that person was not
         liable by reason of the  disabling  conduct set forth in the  preceding
         paragraph  and is fairly and  reasonably  entitled to indemnity for the
         expenses which the court shall determine; or

         (c) Of amounts paid in settling or otherwise  disposing of a threatened
         or pending  action,  with or without  court  approval,  or of  expenses
         incurred in defending a threatened or pending action that is settled or
         otherwise  disposed  of without  court  approval,  unless the  required
         approval set forth in Section 6 of this Article is obtained.

     Section 5. SUCCESSFUL  DEFENSE BY AGENT. To the extent that an agent of the
Trust has been successful on the merits in defense of any proceeding referred to
in Sections 2 or 3 of this  Article or in defense of any claim,  issue or matter
therein,  before the court or other body before whom the proceeding was brought,
the agent shall be indemnified against expenses actually and reasonably incurred
by the agent in  connection  therewith,  provided  that the  Board of  Trustees,
including a majority who are disinterested,  non-party Trustees, also determines
that,  based upon a review of the  facts,  the agent was not liable by reason of
the disabling conduct referred to in Section 4 of this Article.

     Section  6.  REQUIRED  APPROVAL.  Except as  provided  in Section 5 of this
Article, any indemnification  under this Article shall be made by the Trust only
if authorized in the specific case on a determination  that  indemnification  of
the  agent  is  proper  in the  circumstances  because  the  agent  has  met the
applicable  standard of conduct set forth in Sections 2 or 3 of this Article and
is not  prohibited  from  indemnification  because of the disabling  conduct set
forth in Section 4 of this Article, by:

         (a) a majority  vote of a quorum  consisting  of  Trustees  who are not
         parties to the proceeding  and are not interested  persons of the Trust
         (as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940); or

         (b) a written opinion by an independent legal counsel.

     Section  7.  ADVANCE  OF  EXPENSES.  Expenses  incurred  in  defending  any
proceeding  may be advanced  by the Trust  before the final  disposition  of the
proceeding upon a written undertaking by or on behalf of the agent, to repay the
amount  of the  advance  if it is  ultimately  determined  that he or she is not
entitled to  indemnification,  together  with at least one of the following as a
condition  to the  advance:  (i)  security  for the  undertaking;  or  (ii)  the
existence of insurance  protecting the Trust against losses arising by reason of
any lawful  advances;  or (iii) a  determination  by a  majority  of a quorum of
Trustees who are not parties to the proceeding and are not interested persons of
the Trust, or by an independent  legal counsel in a written opinion,  based on a
review of readily  available  facts,  that  there is reason to believe  that the
agent ultimately will be found entitled to  indemnification.  Determinations and
authorizations  of payments under this Section must conform to the standards set
forth in Section 6 of this Article for determining that the  indemnification  is
permissible.

     Section 8. OTHER  CONTRACTUAL  RIGHTS.  Nothing  contained  in this Article
shall affect any right to  indemnification  to which persons other than Trustees
and officers of the Trust or any  subsidiary  hereof may be entitled by contract
or otherwise.

     Section 9. LIMITATIONS.  No  indemnification or advance shall be made under
this Article,  except as provided in Sections 5 or 6 in any circumstances  where
it appears:

         (a) that it would  be  inconsistent  with a  provision  of the  Trust's
         Agreement and Declaration of Trust, a resolution of the shareholders of
         the  Trust,  or an  agreement  in effect at the time of  accrual of the
         alleged  cause of  action  asserted  in the  proceeding  in  which  the
         expenses were  incurred or other  amounts were paid which  prohibits or
         otherwise limits indemnification; or
<PAGE>
         (b) that it would be inconsistent with any condition  expressly imposed
         by a court in approving a settlement.

     Section  10.  INSURANCE.  Upon and in the event of a  determination  by the
Board of  Trustees  of the Trust to  purchase  such  insurance,  the Trust shall
purchase and maintain  insurance on behalf of any agent of the Trust against any
liability  asserted against or incurred by the agent in such capacity or arising
out of the agent's  status as such,  but only to the extent that the Trust would
have  the  power to  indemnify  the  agent  against  that  liability  under  the
provisions of this Article and the Trust's Agreement and Declaration of Trust.

     Section 11.  FIDUCIARIES OF EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLAN. This Article VI does not
apply  to any  proceeding  against  any  Trustee,  investment  manager  or other
fiduciary of an employee  benefit plan in that person's  capacity as such,  even
though  that person may also be an agent of the Trust as defined in Section 1 of
this Article VI.  Nothing  contained in this Article VI shall limit any right to
indemnification to which such a Trustee,  investment manager, or other fiduciary
may be  entitled  by contract or  otherwise  which shall be  enforceable  to the
extent permitted by applicable law other than this Article VI.

Insofar as indemnification for liability rising under the Securities Act of 1933
may be permitted to Trustees,  officers and controlling persons of Registrant to
the foregoing provisions, or otherwise,  Registrant has been advised that in the
opinion of the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  such  indemnification  is
against public policy as expressed in the Act and is, therefore,  unenforceable.
In the event that a claim for  indemnification  against such liabilities  (other
than the  payment  by  Registrant  of  expenses  incurred  or paid by a Trustee,
officer or  controlling  person of Registrant in the  successful  defense of any
action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such Trustee,  officer or controlling
person in connection  with the securities  being  registered,  Registrant  will,
unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by  controlling
precedent,  submit to a court of appropriate  jurisdiction  the question whether
such  indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Act and
will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.

     Section 11 of the Investment  Management  Agreement  between the Registrant
and the Adviser provides for  indemnification  of the Adviser in connection with
certain  claims and  liabilities  to which the  Adviser,  in its capacity as the
Registrant's  investment  adviser,  may be  subject.  A copy  of the  Investment
Management Agreement is incorporated by reference as Exhibit 5.


Item 28.          Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser.
                  -----------------------------------------------------

Fisher Investments,  Inc., Registrant's investment adviser,  provides investment
advisory   services  for  large   corporations,   pension   plans,   endowments,
foundations,   governmental  agencies  and  individuals.   Set  forth  below  is
additional biograhpical  information and a description of any company with which
the officers and directors of Fisher Investments,  Inc. have been engaged at any
time since June 1, 1994 in the capacity of director,  officer, employee, partner
or trustee:

Kenneth L. Fisher is the Chief Executive Officer of Fisher Investments, Inc. and
Chairman of its Investment Policy Committee.  Mr. Fisher makes investment policy
and tactical  investment  decisions.  Since July 1984,  Mr. Fisher has written a
monthly  column  for  Forbes  magazine.  Mr.  Fisher has  operated  the  Adviser
(including its predecessor) since 1979.

Jeffrey L. Silk is the Director of Operations,  Senior Vice President and member
of the Investment Policy Committee of Fisher Investments, Inc. He is responsible
for overseeing the day to day activities of the trading and operations  group as
well as development of statistical databases used for screening equity and fixed
income securities. He has been employed by the Adviser since 1983.

Sherrilyn  A. Fisher is Senior Vice  President  and  Corporate  Secretary of the
Adviser. Her chief responsibilities are the overview of all activities involving
maintenance  of the office and its  facilities.  Ms. Fisher has been employed by
the Adviser since 1984.
<PAGE>
Item 29.          Principal Underwriters.
                  -----------------------

         (a) First Fund  Distributors,  Inc.  currently serves as distributor of
         the shares of:

                  Advisors Series Trust
                           Al Frank Fund (The)
                           American Trust Allegiance Fund
                           Avatar Advantage Balanced Fund (The) 
                           Avatar Advantage Equity Allocation Fund (The) 
                           Avatar Advantage Int'l Equity  Allocation Fund (The) 
                           Chase Growth Fund 
                           Edgar Lomax Value Fund  
                           Information Tech 100 Mutual Fund
                           Kaminski Poland Fund 
                           Rockhaven Fund 
                           Rockhaven Premier Dividend Fund
                  RNC Mutual Fund Group, Inc.
                  PIC Investment Trust
                  Professionally Managed Portfolios
                           Academy Value Fund
                           Avondale Total Return Fund
                           Brandes Investment Funds
                           Boston Balanced Fund
                           Osterweis Fund
                           Perkins Discovery Fund
                           Perkins Opportunity Fund
                           ProConscience Women's Equity Mutual Fund
                           Trent Equity Fund
                           Leonetti Balanced Fund
                           Lighthouse Contrarian Fund
                           U.S. Global Leaders Growth Fund
                           Harris Bretall Sullivan & Smith Growth Equity Fund
                           Pzena Focused Value Fund
                           Titan Financial Services Fund
                           PGP Korea Growth Fund
                           PGP Asia Growth Fund
                  Guinness Flight Investment Funds
                  Jurika & Voyles Fund Group
                  Masters Select Investment Trust
                  Kayne Anderson Mutual Funds
                  O'Shaughnessy Funds, Inc.
                  Fleming Capital Mutual Fund Group, Inc.
                  Fremont Mutual Funds, Inc.
                  Rainier Investment Management Mutual Funds
                  The Purisima Funds
                  UBS Private Investor Funds
                  Van Deventer & Hoch American Value Fund

         (b.) The officers of First Fund Distributors, Inc. are:

                  Robert H. Wadsworth          President and Treasurer
                  Eric Banhazl                 Vice President
                  Steven J. Paggioli           Vice President and Secretary

Each officer's  business  address with the Distributor is 4455 E. Camelback Rd.,
Ste. 261-E, Phoenix, AZ 85018.
<PAGE>
Item 30.          Location of Accounts and Records.
                  ---------------------------------

     All accounts, books or other documents required to be maintained by Section
31(a) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 and the rules promulgated thereunder
are in the possession of the  Registrant,  at  Registrant's  corporate  offices,
except (1) records held and maintained by relating to its functions as custodian
and (2) records  held and  maintained  by Sunstone  Financial  Group,  Inc.  and
Sunstone Investor Services,  LLC, 207 East Buffalo Street, Suite 400, Milwaukee,
Wisconsin,  53202,  relating to its functions as administrator,  fund accountant
and  transfer  agent up to August  31,  1997.  Subsequent  to August  31,  1997,
Investment Company Administration Corporation replaced Sunstone Financial Group,
Inc. as administrator and Countrywide Fund Services, Inc. as fund accountant and
transfer agent. The address for Investment Administration Corporation is 2020 E.
Financial Way, Suite 100, Glendora, CA 91741.


Item 31.          Management Services.
                  --------------------

All  management-related   service  contracts  entered  into  by  Registrant  are
discussed in Parts A and B of this Registration Statement.


Item 32.          Undertakings.
                  -------------


         (a)  Registrant  undertakes  to provide its Annual  Report upon request
         without charge to any recipient of a Prospectus.
<PAGE>
SIGNATURES

     Pursuant  to  the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act of  1933  and  the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant has duly caused this Amendment to
the  Registration  Statement  on Form  N-1A to be  signed  on its  behalf by the
undersigned,  thereunto  duly  authorized,  in the  City of  Woodside,  State of
California, on the 10th day of June, 1998.


                               THE PURISIMA FUNDS
                               (Registrant)


                               By: /s/ Kenneth L. Fisher
                               -------------------------------

                               Kenneth L. Fisher
                               President

     Pursuant to the  requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Amendment
to the  Registration  Statement  on Form  N-1A  has  been  signed  below  by the
following person in the capacities and on the date indicated.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Name                                   Title                                 Date
- -------------------------------        ---------------------------------     -------------



<S>                                    <C>                                   <C> 
   /s/ Kenneth L. Fisher               President; Trustee (principal         June 10, 1998
- -------------------------------        executive officer; principal     
       Kenneth L. Fisher               financial and accounting officer)
                                       


   /s/ Bryan F. Morse                  Trustee                               June 10, 1998
- -------------------------------
       Bryan F. Morse



   /s/ Grover T. Wickersham            Trustee                               June 10, 1998
- -------------------------------
       Grover T. Wickersham



                                       Trustee                               _______, 1998
- -------------------------------
   Pierson E. Clair, III
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
                                                    As filed with the Securities
                                            Exchange Commission on June 15, 1998

                                                      Registration No. 333-09153
                                                              File No. 811-07737
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------



                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

                               ------------------


                                   EXHIBITS TO
                                    FORM N-1A



             REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
                         POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 4                    [X]

                                       and

         REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
                                 AMENDMENT NO. 5                           [X]


                               THE PURISIMA FUNDS
               (Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

                             13100 Skyline Boulevard
                         Woodside, California 94062-4547
                    (Address of principal executive offices)
       Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (650) 851-7925



                               Exhibits 11 and 17
<PAGE>
                                INDEX TO EXHIBITS



Exhibit Number       Exhibit
- --------------       -------

    (11)             Consent of Price Waterhouse LLP
               
    (27)             Financial Data Schedules

                       CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS


We hereby  consent to the  incorporation  by  reference  in the  Prospectus  and
Statement of Additional  Information  constituting parts of this  Post-Effective
Amendment No. 4 to the  registration  statement on Form N-1A (the  "Registration
Statement")  of our report  dated  October 17, 1997,  relating to the  financial
statements  and  financial  highlights  appearing  in the August 31, 1997 Annual
Report  to  Shareholders  of The  Purisima  Total  Return  Fund,  which are also
incorporated by reference into the  Registration  Statement.  We also consent to
the references to us under the headings "Financial Highlights" and "Transfer and
Dividend  Disbursing  Agent,  Custodian  and  Independent  Accountants"  in  the
Prospectus and under the heading  "Independent  Accountants" in the Statement of
Additional Information.




                                             /s/ PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
Los Angeles, California
June 12, 1998

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE>                     6
<CIK>                         1019946 
<NAME>                        The Purisima Funds
<SERIES>                      
   <NUMBER>                   1
   <NAME>                     Purisima Total Return Fund
<MULTIPLIER>                  1
<CURRENCY>                    U.S. Dollars
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   6-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                              AUG-31-1998
<PERIOD-START>                                 SEP-01-1997
<PERIOD-END>                                   FEB-28-1998
<EXCHANGE-RATE>                                          1
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                            9,614,870 
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                          10,897,132 
<RECEIVABLES>                                       11,220 
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                     122,273 
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                     0 
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                  11,030,625 
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                           384,472 
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                                  0 
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                           86,269 
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                470,741 
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                          0 
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                         9,475,534 
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                                    0 
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                                    0 
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                          (16,381)
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                                   0 
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                           (181,532)
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                                 0 
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                         1,282,263 
<NET-ASSETS>                                    10,559,884 
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                   44,271 
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    4,556 
<OTHER-INCOME>                                           0 
<EXPENSES-NET>                                      54,512 
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                             (5,685)
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                          (180,804)
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                        1,276,156 
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                                    0 
<EQUALIZATION>                                           0 
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                                0 
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                                 0 
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                    0 
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                            433,405 
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                         11,842 
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                  1,291 
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                           1,089,667 
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                                  0 
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                                0 
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                                  0 
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                               0 
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                               36,330 
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                       0 
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                                    138,067 
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                             8,756,929 
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                                11.87 
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                      (0.01)
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                               1.71 
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                                 (0.02)
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                                0 
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                     0 
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                                  13.55 
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                       1.50 
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                                   0 
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                     0 
                                                           

</TABLE>


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