AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS INC
485BPOS, 1997-12-31
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    As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on December 31, 1997
    

                        Securities Act File No. 333-23017
                    Investment Company Act File No. 811-08085

                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                    FORM N-1A

             Registration Statement Under The Securities Act of 1933

   
                         Post-Effective Amendment No. 2
    

                                       and

         Registration Statement Under The Investment Company Act of 1940

   
                                 Amendment No. 5
    

                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
               (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

                 One Corporate Drive, Shelton, Connecticut 06484
               (Address of Principal Executive Offices) (Zip Code)

                                 (800) 628-6039
              (Registrant's Telephone Number, Including Area Code)

                         ERIC C. FREED, ESQ., SECRETARY
                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
                 One Corporate Drive, Shelton, Connecticut 06484
                     (Name and Address of Agent for Service)

                                   Copies to:

                             ROBERT K. FULTON, ESQ.
                                WERNER & KENNEDY
               1633 Broadway, 46th Floor, New York, New York 10019

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

   
             [X]   immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b).
           _____   on _______ pursuant to paragraph (b) of rule 485.
           _____   60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1).
           _____   on _______ pursuant to paragraph (a)(1).
           _____   75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2).
           _____   on _______ pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of rule 485.
           _____   this post-effective amendment designates a new effective
                   date for a previously filed post-effective amendment.
    

      Shares of the Various Classes of American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
                     (Title of Securities Being Registered)

              This Registration Statement has also been executed by
                         American Skandia Master Trust.

<PAGE>
                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.

   
      Post-Effective Amendment No. 2 to Registration Statement on Form N-1A
    

                              CROSS REFERENCE SHEET

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

Form N-1A Item Number:                               Part A Prospectus Caption:

     <S>  <C>                                        <C>   <C>            
     1.                                              Cover Page
     2.                                              Expense Information
     3.  (a)                                         Financial Highlights
         (b)                                         *
         (c)(d)                                      Performance of the Funds
     4.                                              Organization and Capitalization of the Company;
                                                          Investment Programs of the Funds; Certain
                                                          Risk Factors and Investment Methods
     5.  (a)(b)(c)(d)(f)                             Management of the Funds
         (e)                                         Other Information
         (g)                                         Portfolio Transactions
     5A.                                             *
     6.  (a)(b)(c)(d)                                Organization and Capitalization of the Company
         (e)                                         Other Information
         (f)(g)                                      Dividends, Capital Gains and Taxes
         (h)                                         How to Buy Shares; Special Information on the
                                                          "Master/Feeder" Fund Structure
     7.  (a)                                         Other Information
         (b)                                         Determination of Net Asset Value; How to Buy
Shares
         (c)                                         Special Investment Programs and Privileges
         (d)(e)(f)(g)                                How to Buy Shares
     8.  (a)(b)(d)                                   How to Redeem Shares
         (c)                                         Shareholder Account Rules and Policies
     9.                                              *


                                                     Part B Statement of Additional Information Caption:

   
     10.                                             Cover Page
     11.                                             Cover Page
     12.                                             General Information
     13. (a)(c)                                      Investment Programs of the Funds
         (b)                                         Fundamental Investment Restrictions
         (d)                                         Portfolio Transactions
     14.                                             Management of the Company
     15. (a)(b)                                      Capital Stock of the Company & Principal Holders
                                                          of Securities
         (c)                                         Management of the Company
     16. (a)(b)                                      See Prospectus; Investment Advisory &
                                                          Administration Services; Management of the
                                                          Company
         (c)(e)(g)(i)                                *
         (d)                                         Investment Advisory & Administration Services
         (f)                                         See Prospectus; Distribution Arrangements
         (h)                                         Other Information
     17. (a)(b)(c)                                      Portfolio Transactions
         (d)(e)                                      *
     18. (a)                                         Capital Stock of the Company & Principal Holders
                                                          of Securities
         (b)                                         *
     19. (a)(c)                                      Additional Information on the Purchase and
                                                          Redemption of Shares
         (b)                                         Determination of Net Asset Value
     20.                                             Additional Tax Considerations
     21.                                             Distribution Arrangements
     22.                                             Additional Performance Information
     23.                                             Financial Statements
</TABLE>
    


Part C

         Information  required  to be  included in Part C is set forth under the
appropriate Item, so numbered, in Part C to this Registration Statement.


* Not Applicable

<PAGE>



                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.

                               P R O S P E C T U S
                  Class A, Class B, Class C and Class X Shares

   
                                December 31, 1997
                        ---------------------------------


              ASAF FOUNDERS INTERNATIONAL SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND

                  ASAF T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL EQUITY FUND

                         ASAF JANUS OVERSEAS GROWTH FUND

                     ASAF FOUNDERS SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND

                   ASAF T. ROWE PRICE SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND

                   ASAF ROBERTSON STEPHENS VALUE + GROWTH FUND

                         ASAF JANUS CAPITAL GROWTH FUND

                     ASAF LORD ABBETT GROWTH AND INCOME FUND

                         ASAF INVESCO EQUITY INCOME FUND

                  ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND

                       ASAF FEDERATED HIGH YIELD BOND FUND

                           ASAF TOTAL RETURN BOND FUND


                           ASAF JPM MONEY MARKET FUND
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------

This Prospectus  explains the basic information you should know before investing
in the  above  funds.  Five  of  the  funds  seek  their  respective  investment
objectives  by  investing  all of their  investable  assets  in a  corresponding
portfolio of American  Skandia  Master Trust which has an  investment  objective
identical to that of the investing  fund. The  investment  experience of each of
these  funds  directly  corresponds  with  the  investment   experience  of  its
corresponding  portfolio.  Please read this Prospectus carefully and keep it for
future reference. Additional information about the funds has been filed with the
Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  (the  "Commission")  in  a  Statement  of
Additional  Information ("SAI"),  dated December 31, 1997, which is incorporated
by reference into this  Prospectus.  To obtain a copy of the SAI without charge,
call  1-800-SKANDIA or write to "American  Skandia Advisor Funds,  Inc." at P.O.
Box 8012, Boston,  Massachusetts 02266-8012. The Commission maintains a Web site
(http:/ /www.sec.gov) that contains the SAI, material incorporated by reference,
and other  information  regarding  American  Skandia  Advisor  Funds,  Inc.  and
American Skandia Master Trust.
    

An  investment  in the  ASAF  JPM  Money  Market  Fund is  neither  insured  nor
guaranteed by the U.S. Government. While the ASAF JPM Money Market Fund seeks to
maintain a stable net asset value of $1.00 per share,  there can be no assurance
that the fund will be able to achieve this goal.

Mutual fund shares are not deposits or  obligations  of, or  guaranteed  by, any
bank or other  depository  institution.  Shares are not insured by the FDIC, the
Federal Reserve Board, or any other agency,  and are subject to investment risk,
including the possible loss of the principal amount invested.

THESE  SECURITIES  HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR  DISAPPROVED  BY THE SECURITIES AND
EXCHANGE  COMMISSION OR ANY STATE  SECURITIES  COMMISSION NOR HAS THE SECURITIES
AND  EXCHANGE  COMMISSION  OR ANY STATE  SECURITIES  COMMISSION  PASSED UPON THE
ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A
CRIMINAL OFFENSE.


             American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc. (the "Company") is an open-end
management  investment  company  comprised  of thirteen  diversified  investment
portfolios  (each a "Fund" and together the "Funds").  Five of the Funds -- ASAF
T. Rowe Price  International  Equity Fund,  ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund, ASAF
INVESCO  Equity  Income  Fund,  ASAF Total  Return  Bond Fund and ASAF JPM Money
Market Fund (each a "Feeder Fund" and together the "Feeder Funds") -- invest all
of their investable assets in a corresponding  portfolio (each a "Portfolio" and
together the  "Portfolios") of American  Skandia Master Trust (the "Trust"),  an
open-end management investment company comprised of five diversified  investment
portfolios.   Each  Portfolio  invests  in  securities  in  accordance  with  an
investment objective,  investment policies and limitations identical to those of
its corresponding  Feeder Fund. This "master/feeder" fund structure differs from
that of the other Funds of the Company and many other investment companies which
directly invest and manage their own portfolio of securities. Those Funds of the
Company which currently are not organized under a "master/feeder" fund structure
(the  "Non-Feeder  Funds")  retain the right to invest  all of their  investable
assets in a corresponding  Portfolio of the Trust in the future.  For additional
information  regarding the "master/feeder"  fund structure,  see this Prospectus
under "Special Information on the 'Master/Feeder' Fund Structure."


             American Skandia Investment Services,  Incorporated ("ASISI" or the
"Investment  Manager")  acts as the  investment  manager for both the Non-Feeder
Funds and the Portfolios. Currently, ASISI engages a sub-advisor ("Sub-advisor")
for the  investment  management  of each  Non-Feeder  Fund  and  Portfolio.  The
following  table  highlights  certain  features of each Fund (and  corresponding
Portfolio, where applicable):
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

Fund/Portfolio:        Sub-Advisor:              Investment Goal:               Investment Style:

<S>                    <C>                       <C>                            <C> 
Int'l Small            Founders Asset            Capital growth                 Invests primarily in securities of foreign
Capitalization         Management, Inc.                                         companies with market capitalizations or
                                                                                annual revenues of $1 billion or less.

Int'l Equity           Rowe Price-Fleming        Total return on assets         Invests primarily in common stocks of
                       International, Inc.       from long-term growth of       established foreign companies which have
                                                 capital and income             the potential for growth of capital or
                                                                                income or both.

Overseas Growth        Janus Capital Corporation  Capital growth                Invests  primarily in
                                                                                common stocks of companies  located  outside
                                                                                the United States.

Small Capitalization   Founders Asset            Capital growth                 Invests primarily in common stocks of U.S.
                       Management, Inc.                                         companies with market capitalizations or
                                                                                annual revenues of $1.5 billion or less.

Small Company Value    T. Rowe Price             Long-term capital growth       Invests primarily in common stocks of U.S.
                       Associates, Inc.                                         companies with market capitalizations of $1
                                                                                billion or less that appear to be
                                                                                undervalued.

Value + Growth         Robertson, Stephens &     Capital growth                 Invests primarily in growth companies
                       Company Investment                                       believed to have favorable relationships
                       Management, L.P.                                         between price/earnings ratios and growth
                                                                                rates.

Capital Growth         Janus Capital             Capital growth                 Invests primarily in common stocks.
                       Corporation

Growth and Income      Lord, Abbett & Co.        Long term capital growth       Invests primarily in securities which are
                                                 and income                     selling at reasonable prices in relation to
                                                                                value.

Equity Income          INVESCO Trust Company     High current income and,       Invests in securities which will provide a
                                                 secondarily, capital growth    relatively high yield and stable return and
                                                                                which, over a period of years, may also
                                                                                provide capital appreciation.

Strategic Balanced     American Century          Capital growth and current     Invests in common stocks that are
                       Investment                income                         considered to have better-than-average
                       Management, Inc.                                         prospects for appreciation and the
                                                                                remainder in bonds and other fixed income
                                                                                securities.

High Yield Bond        Federated Investment      High current income            Invests primarily in lower-rated fixed
                       Counseling                                               income securities.

Total Return Bond      Pacific Investment        Maximize total return,         Invests in fixed-income securities of
                       Management Company        consistent with                varying maturities with an expected average
                                                 preservation of capital        portfolio duration from three to six years.

Money Market           J.P. Morgan               Maximize current income        Maintains a dollar-weighted average
                       Investment Management     and maintain high levels       portfolio maturity of not more than 90 days
                       Inc.                      of liquidity                   and invests in high quality U.S.
                                                                                dollar-denominated money market instruments.

</TABLE>


<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          T A B L E  O F   C O N T E N T S

<S>      <C>                                                                                                             <C>
   
EXPENSE INFORMATION.......................................................................................................5


         Shareholder Transaction Expenses.................................................................................5
         Annual Fund Operating Expenses...................................................................................5
         Expense Examples.................................................................................................6

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS......................................................................................................8

INVESTMENT PROGRAMS OF THE FUNDS.........................................................................................10


         ASAF Founders International Small Capitalization Fund...........................................................10
         ASAF T. Rowe Price International Equity Fund....................................................................14
         ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund.................................................................................16
         ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund.........................................................................19
         ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund.....................................................................23
         ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund.....................................................................25
         ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund..................................................................................28
         ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund.........................................................................30
         ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund.................................................................................31
         ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund...................................................................33
         ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund.............................................................................37
         ASAF Total Return Bond Fund.....................................................................................39
         ASAF JPM Money Market Fund......................................................................................46


CERTAIN RISK FACTORS AND INVESTMENT METHODS..............................................................................48

PERFORMANCE OF THE FUNDS.................................................................................................54

HOW TO BUY SHARES........................................................................................................54

SPECIAL INVESTMENT PROGRAMS AND PRIVILEGES...............................................................................61

HOW TO REDEEM SHARES.....................................................................................................63

HOW TO EXCHANGE SHARES...................................................................................................64

DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE.........................................................................................65

SHAREHOLDER ACCOUNT RULES AND POLICIES...................................................................................65

ORGANIZATION AND CAPITALIZATION OF THE COMPANY...........................................................................66

SPECIAL INFORMATION ON THE "MASTER/FEEDER" FUND STRUCTURE................................................................67

MANAGEMENT OF THE FUNDS..................................................................................................69

         The Directors, Trustees and Officers............................................................................69
         The Investment Manager..........................................................................................69
         The Sub-Advisors................................................................................................69
         Fees and Expenses...............................................................................................73
         The Administrator...............................................................................................75

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS...................................................................................................76

DIVIDENDS, CAPITAL GAINS AND TAXES.......................................................................................77

OTHER INFORMATION........................................................................................................79
</TABLE>
    

<PAGE>


                               EXPENSE INFORMATION

     The maximum transaction costs and anticipated  aggregate operating expenses
associated with investing in Class A, Class B, Class C or Class X shares of each
Fund are reflected in the following tables:

SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            High Yield Bond & Total Return Bond                   All Other Funds:
                                     Funds:
                                            Class A      Class B & X     Class C         Class A     Class B & X    Class C
<S>                                           <C>           <C>            <C>             <C>           <C>          <C>
   
Maximum Sales Charge on Purchases
(as % of offering price)                      4.25%         None           None            5.00%         None         None
Maximum Contingent Deferred Sales
Charge
(as % of lower of original purchase           None(1)       6.00%(2)       1.00%(2)        None(1)
price or redemption proceeds)                                                                        6.00%(2)     1.00%(2)
Redemption Fees                               None(3)       None(3)        None(3)         None(3)       None(3)      None(3)
Exchange Fees                                 None          None           None            None          None         None
</TABLE>
    

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES (as % of average net assets):
                                                                                                      Total  Expenses
                           Management        Fee    12b-1  Distribution      Other Expenses           (after any
ASAF Fund:                 (after     any    fee    Fees(4)                  (after any               reimbursement)(5)
                           waivers)                                          reimbursement)(5)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<S>  <C>                          <C>                      <C>                      <C>                      <C>    
   
Int'l  Small
Capitalization
     Class A                      1.10                     0.50                     0.50                     2.10
     Class B, C & X               1.10                     1.00                     0.50                     2.60
International Equity
     Class A                      1.00                     0.50                     0.60                     2.10
     Class B, C & X               1.00                     1.00                     0.60                     2.60
Overseas Growth
     Class A                      1.00                     0.50                     0.60                     2.10
     Class B, C & X               1.00                     1.00                     0.60                     2.60
Small Capitalization
     Class A                      0.90                     0.50                     0.30                     1.70
     Class B, C & X               0.90                     1.00                     0.30                     2.20
Small Company Value
     Class A                      1.00                     0.50                     0.25                     1.75
     Class B, C & X               1.00                     1.00                     0.25                     2.25
Value + Growth
     Class A                      1.00                     0.50                     0.30                     1.80
     Class B, C & X               1.00                     1.00                     0.30                     2.30
Capital Growth
     Class A                      1.00                     0.50                     0.20                     1.70
     Class B, C & X               1.00                     1.00                     0.20                     2.20
Growth and Income
     Class A                      0.80                     0.50                     0.30                     1.60
     Class B, C & X               0.80                     1.00                     0.30                     2.10
Equity Income
     Class A                      0.75                     0.50                     0.30                     1.55
     Class B, C & X               0.75                     1.00                     0.30                     2.05
Strategic Balanced
     Class A                      0.90                     0.50                     0.20                     1.60
     Class B, C & X               0.90                     1.00                     0.20                     2.10
High Yield Bond
     Class A                      0.70                     0.50                     0.30                     1.50
     Class B, C & X               0.70                     1.00                     0.30                     2.00
Total Return Bond
     Class A                      0.65                     0.50                     0.25                     1.40
     Class B, C & X               0.65                     1.00                     0.25                     1.90
Money Market
     Class A                      0.50                     0.50                     0.50                     1.50
     Class B, C & X               0.50                     1.00                     0.50                     2.00
</TABLE>
    


(1) Under certain  circumstances,  purchases of Class A shares not subject to an
initial  sales  charge will be subject to a  contingent  deferred  sales  charge
("CDSC") if redeemed within 12 months of the calendar month of purchase.  For an
additional discussion of the Class A CDSC, see this Prospectus under "How to Buy
Shares."  

     (2) If you purchase  Class B or X shares,  you do not pay an initial  sales
charge but you may incur a CDSC if you  redeem  some or all of your Class B or X
shares before the end of the seventh year after which you purchased such shares.
The CDSC is 6%, 5%, 4%, 3%, 2%, 2% and 1% for redemptions occurring in years one
through seven,  respectively.  No CDSC is charged after the seventh year. If you
purchase  Class C shares,  you do not pay an  initial  sales  charge but you may
incur a CDSC if you redeem  some or all of your Class C shares  within 12 months
of the  calendar  month of purchase.  For a  discussion  of the Class B, X and C
CDSC, see this Prospectus under "How to Buy Shares."

     (3) A $10 fee may be imposed for wire transfers of redemption proceeds. For
an additional discussion of wire redemptions,  see this Prospectus under "How to
Redeem Shares."

     (4) As a result of distribution  fees, a long-term investor in the Fund may
pay more than the  economic  equivalent  of the maximum  front-end  sales charge
permitted by the rules of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.

   
     (5) Expenses  shown are based on estimated  amounts for the current  fiscal
year. The Investment  Manager has voluntarily  agreed to reimburse  and/or waive
fees for each Fund until October 31, 1998 so that each Fund's operating expenses
(and,  in the case of the  Feeder  Funds,  the  Feeder  Fund's pro rata share of
operating expenses of the Fund's corresponding  Portfolio),  exclusive of taxes,
interest,  brokerage commissions,  distribution fees and extraordinary expenses,
do not exceed specified percentages of the Fund's average net assets as follows:
ASAF Founders  International  Small  Capitalization  Fund -- 1.60%; ASAF T. Rowe
Price  International  Equity Fund -- 1.60%;  ASAF Janus  Overseas  Growth Fund -
1.60%;  ASAF Founders  Small  Capitalization  Fund -- 1.20%;  ASAF T. Rowe Price
Small Company Value Fund -- 1.25%; ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund -
1.30%;  ASAF Janus  Capital  Growth Fund -- 1.20%;  ASAF Lord Abbett  Growth and
Income Fund - 1.10%;  ASAF INVESCO  Equity  Income Fund -- 1.05%;  ASAF American
Century Strategic Balanced Fund -- 1.10%; ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund --
1.00%;  ASAF Total Return Bond Fund -- 0.90%;  and ASAF JPM Money Market Fund --
1.00%.  Such voluntary  agreements may be discontinued at any time after October
31, 1998.  Absent these  reimbursements,  the estimated "other expenses" for all
classes  of shares of the Funds  would be:  ASAF  Founders  International  Small
Capitalization  Fund - 1.08%;  ASAF T. Rowe Price  International  Equity  Fund -
0.95%;   ASAF  Janus  Overseas   Growth  Fund  -  1.30%,   ASAF  Founders  Small
Capitalization Fund - .85%; ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund - 0.84%;
ASAF Robertson  Stephens Value + Growth Fund - 1.20%;  ASAF Janus Capital Growth
Fund - 0.74%;  ASAF Lord  Abbett  Growth and Income Fund - 1.20%;  ASAF  INVESCO
Equity Income Fund - 0.88%;  ASAF  American  Century  Strategic  Balanced Fund -
0.99%;  ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund - 0.85%; ASAF Total Return Bond Fund
- - 0.88%; and ASAF JPM Money Market Fund - 1.18%.  Absent  investment  management
fee waivers,  the investment  management fee for the ASAF Janus Overseas  Growth
Fund  would be  1.10%,  the  investment  management  fee for the ASAF  Robertson
Stephens Value + Growth Fund would be 1.10%,  and the investment  management fee
for the ASAF Lord  Abbett  Growth and Income Fund would be 1.00%.  Absent  these
reimbursements  and waivers,  the estimated  "total expenses" for Class A shares
and Class B, C and X shares, respectively,  of the Funds would be: ASAF Founders
International  Small  Capitalization  Fund - 2.68% and 3.18%; ASAF T. Rowe Price
International  Equity Fund - 2.45% and 2.95%;  ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund -
2.90% and 3.40%; ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund - 2.25% and 2.75%; ASAF
T. Rowe  Price  Small  Company  Value  Fund - 2.34% and  2.84%;  ASAF  Robertson
Stephens Value + Growth Fund - 2.80% and 3.30%; ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund -
2.24% and 2.74%; ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund - 2.70% and 3.20%; ASAF
INVESCO Equity Income Fund - 2.13% and 2.63%;  ASAF American  Century  Strategic
Balanced Fund - 2.39% and 2.89%; ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund - 2.05% and
2.55%;  ASAF Total Return Bond Fund - 2.03% and 2.53%; and ASAF JPM Money Market
Fund  -  2.18%  and  2.68%.  For  an  additional   discussion  of  Fund  expense
limitations, see the Company's SAI under "Fund Expenses."
    


             Expenses  shown  for  each  of the  Feeder  Funds  are  based  upon
distribution and administration  fees for the Fund and management fees and other
expenses for the Fund's  corresponding  Portfolio.  The Directors of the Company
believe  that the  aggregate  per share  expenses of the Feeder  Funds and their
corresponding  Portfolios over the long term will be approximately  equal to the
expenses  the Funds would incur if their  assets were  invested  directly in the
type of securities held by their corresponding Portfolios.  The Directors of the
Company also believe that  investment in the Portfolios by investors in addition
to the Feeder  Funds may enable the  Portfolios  to achieve  economies  of scale
which could reduce expenses. The expenses and, accordingly, the returns of other
funds that may invest in the Portfolios may differ from the expenses and returns
of the Feeder Funds. For additional  information  regarding the  "master/feeder"
fund  structure,   see  this  Prospectus  under  "Special   Information  on  the
'Master/Feeder' Fund Structure."

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXPENSE EXAMPLES:

             Full  Redemption.  You would have paid the following  expenses on a
$1,000 investment,  assuming a hypothetical 5% annual return and full redemption
of your shares at the end of each period shown below:

                                               1 Year                                            3 Years
ASAF Fund:                   Class A     Class B      Class C    Class X(*)      Class A     Class B    Class C    Class X(*)
- ---------                    -------     -------      -------    -------         -------     -------    -------    -------   

<S>                             <C>         <C>         <C>          <C>           <C>         <C>         <C>        <C>
   
Int'l            Small          70          87          37           87            113         122         82         124
Capitalization


International Equity            70          87          37           87            113         122         82         124

Overseas Growth                 70          87          37           87            113         122         82         124

Small Capitalization            67          83          33           83            102         110         70         111

Small Company Value             67          83          33           84            103         111         71         113

Value + Growth                  68          84          34           84            105         113         73         114

Capital Growth                  67          83          33           83            102         110         70         111

Growth and Income               66          82          32           82             99         107         67         108

Equity Income                   65          81          31           82             97         105         65         107

Strategic Balanced              66          82          32           82             99         107         67         108

High Yield Bond                 57          80          30           81             88         103         63         105

Total Return Bond               56          79          29           80             85         100         60         102

Money Market                    65          80          30           81             96         103         63         105
</TABLE>
    
             No  Redemption.  You would have paid the  following  expenses  on a
$1,000 investment, assuming a hypothetical 5% annual return and no redemption of
your shares at the end of each period shown below:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                               1 Year                                            3 Years
ASAF Fund:                   Class A     Class B      Class C    Class X(*)      Class A     Class B    Class C    Class X(*)
- ---------                    -------     -------      -------    -------         -------     -------    -------    -------   

<S>                             <C>         <C>         <C>          <C>           <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
   
Int'l            Small          70          27          27           27            113         82          82          84
Capitalization

International Equity            70          27          27           27            113         82          82          84

Overseas Growth                 70          27          27           27            113         82          82          84

Small Capitalization            67          23          23           23            102         70          70          71

Small Company Value             67          23          23           24            103         71          71          73

Value + Growth                  68          24          24           24            105         73          73          74

Capital Growth                  67          23          23           23            102         70          70          71

Growth and Income               66          22          22           22             99         67          67          68

Equity Income                   65          21          21           22             97         65          65          67

Strategic Balanced              66          22          22           22             99         67          67          68

High Yield Bond                 57          20          20           21             88         63          63          65

Total Return Bond               56          19          19           20             85         60          60          62

Money Market                    65          20          20           21             96         63          63          65
</TABLE>
    
     (*) Expense  examples for  purchases of Class X shares of the Funds reflect
the shareholder's  receipt of additional "bonus shares." For a discussion of the
issuance  of "bonus  shares,"  see this  Prospectus  under  "How to Buy  Shares:
Purchase of Class X Shares."

             The above  tables are provided to assist you in  understanding  the
various  costs and expenses  that you would bear  directly or  indirectly  as an
investor in the Fund(s).  THE EXAMPLES  PROVIDED  SHOULD NOT BE  CONSIDERED AS A
REPRESENTATION  OF THE FUNDS' PAST OR FUTURE  EXPENSES.  ACTUAL  EXPENSES MAY BE
GREATER OR LESS THAN THOSE SHOWN.  IN ADDITION,  WHILE THE EXAMPLES  ASSUME A 5%
ANNUAL  RETURN,  EACH FUND'S ACTUAL  PERFORMANCE  WILL VARY AND MAY RESULT IN AN
ACTUAL RETURN THAT IS GREATER OR LESS THAN 5%.


<PAGE>


   
FINANCIAL  HIGHLIGHTS  (Selected per share data for an average share outstanding
from July 28, 1997, the date shares were first sold  subsequent to the effective
date of the Company's  registration  statement under the Securities Act of 1933,
through October 31, 1997, and ratios  throughout such period):  The tables below
contain  financial  information  which has been audited in conjunction  with the
annual  audit of the  financial  statements  of the Company by Coopers & Lybrand
L.L.P.,  Independent Auditors. Audited Financial Statements for the period ended
October 31, 1997 and the  Independent  Auditors'  Report thereon are included in
the Company's SAI, which is available without charge upon request to the Company
at P.O. Box 8012, Boston,  Massachusetts 02266-8012 or by calling 1-800-SKANDIA.
Further  information  about the  performance  of the Funds is  contained  in the
Company's  annual report which also may be obtained  without charge upon request
to the Company at that address or phone  number.  The  information  presented in
these financial  highlights is historical and is not intended to indicate future
performance  of the Funds.  No  financial  information  is included for the ASAF
Janus Overseas  Growth Fund, the ASAF Robertson  Stephens Value + Growth Fund or
the ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund, as these Funds had not been offered
prior to the date of this Prospectus.
    
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          Increase (Decrease) from
                            Net            Investment Operations                                        Supplemental Data
                           Asset    ------------------------------------                       Net    ---------------------
                           Value       Net          Net         Total                         Asset              Net Assets
                         Beginning  Investment    Realized       from     Less Distributions  Value              at End of
                            of        Income    & Unrealized  Investment       From Net       End of    Total      Period
                          Period      (Loss)    Gain (Loss)   Operations  Investment Income   Period  Return(2)  (in 000's)
                         ---------  ----------  ------------  ----------  ------------------  ------  ---------  ----------
                                                                                         
ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
INTERNATIONAL EQUITY
FUND:
=================
<S>                       <C>         <C>          <C>          <C>            <C>            <C>       <C>        <C>   
 Class A                  $  9.74     $ 0.01       $(0.82)      $(0.81)        $     --       $ 8.93    (8.32)%    $  218
 Class B                    10.00      (0.01)       (0.83)       (0.84)              --         9.16    (8.40)%       390
 Class C                    10.00      (0.01)       (0.83)       (0.84)              --         9.16    (8.40)%       198
 Class X                    10.00      (0.01)       (0.81)       (0.82)              --         9.18    (8.20)%       756
ASAF JANUS
CAPITAL GROWTH FUND:
=================
 Class A                  $ 11.18     $ 0.09       $ 0.13       $ 0.22         $     --       $11.40     1.97%     $  706
 Class B                    10.00       0.06         0.13         0.19               --        10.19     1.90%      1,718
 Class C                    10.00       0.05         0.14         0.19               --        10.19     1.90%        452
 Class X                    10.00       0.05         0.15         0.20               --        10.20     2.00%      1,474
ASAF INVESCO
EQUITY INCOME FUND:
=================
 Class A                  $  9.98     $ 0.14       $ 0.33       $ 0.47         $     --       $10.45     4.71%     $  471
 Class B                    10.00       0.10         0.35         0.45               --        10.45     4.50%      1,408
 Class C                    10.00       0.10         0.36         0.46               --        10.46     4.60%        255
 Class X                    10.00       0.11         0.34         0.45               --        10.45     4.50%      1,174
ASAF TOTAL
RETURN BOND FUND:
=================
 Class A                  $ 10.07     $ 0.15       $ 0.09       $ 0.24         $  (0.03)      $10.28     2.39%     $   61
 Class B                    10.00       0.10         0.09         0.19            (0.03)       10.16     1.90%        547
 Class C                    10.00       0.10         0.09         0.19            (0.03)       10.16     1.93%        165
 Class X                    10.00       0.09         0.10         0.19            (0.02)       10.17     1.94%        410
ASAF JPM
MONEY MARKET FUND:
=================
 Class A                  $  1.00     $0.009       $   --       $0.009         $ (0.009)      $ 1.00     0.92%     $  307
 Class B                     1.00      0.007           --        0.007           (0.007)        1.00     0.75%        354
 Class C                     1.00      0.007           --        0.007           (0.007)        1.00     0.71%        332
 Class X                     1.00      0.008           --        0.008           (0.008)        1.00     0.77%        566
</TABLE>
 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  Ratio of
                                                                                    Net
                        Supplemental Data          Ratios of Expenses to         Investment
                       --------------------         Average Net Assets**           Income
                                  Average    ----------------------------------  (Loss) to
                       Portfolio Commission       After             Before        Average
                       Turnover     Rate         Expense           Expense          Net
                       Rate(3)    Paid(3)    Reimbursement(1)  Reimbursement(1)  Assets(1)
                       --------  ----------  ----------------  ----------------  ----------
                                                                  
ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
INTERNATIONAL EQUITY
FUND:
=================
<S>                        <C>    <C>              <C>               <C>             <C>  
 Class A                   1%     $ 0.0486         2.10%             51.87%          0.07%
 Class B                   1%     $ 0.0486         2.60%             38.12%         (0.51)%
 Class C                   1%     $ 0.0486         2.60%             33.95%         (0.53)%
 Class X                   1%     $ 0.0486         2.60%             46.77%         (0.28)%
ASAF JANUS
CAPITAL GROWTH FUND:
=================
 Class A                  83%     $ 0.0325         1.70%             26.77%          2.72%
 Class B                  83%     $ 0.0325         2.20%             16.45%          2.27%
 Class C                  83%     $ 0.0325         2.20%             15.78%          1.95%
 Class X                  83%     $ 0.0325         2.20%             24.39%          2.05%
ASAF INVESCO
EQUITY INCOME FUND:
=================
 Class A                  46%     $ 0.0581         1.55%             29.14%          4.81%
 Class B                  46%     $ 0.0581         2.05%             19.54%          3.68%
 Class C                  46%     $ 0.0581         2.05%             20.89%          3.82%
 Class X                  46%     $ 0.0581         2.05%             36.25%          4.05%
ASAF TOTAL
RETURN BOND FUND:
=================
 Class A                  93%          N/A         1.40%             66.92%          4.42%
 Class B                  93%          N/A         1.90%             39.35%          4.13%
 Class C                  93%          N/A         1.90%             33.68%          4.32%
 Class X                  93%          N/A         1.90%             67.46%          3.94%
ASAF JPM
MONEY MARKET FUND:
=================
 Class A                  --           N/A         1.50%             31.53%          3.34%
 Class B                  --           N/A         2.00%             37.83%          2.98%
 Class C                  --           N/A         2.00%             24.34%          2.85%
 Class X                  --           N/A         2.00%             39.71%          2.97%
</TABLE>

 
(1) Annualized
(2) Total return for Class X shares does not reflect the payment of bonus
    shares.
(3) Reflects the Portfolio Turnover Rate and Average Commission Rate Paid of the
    Trust's Portfolios from the commencement of operations of each Portfolio
    (June 10, 1997 for the ASMT T. Rowe Price International Equity Portfolio and
    ASMT Janus Capital Growth Portfolio, June 18, 1997 for the ASMT INVESCO
    Equity Income Portfolio and ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond Portfolio, and June
    19, 1997 for the ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio).
**  Represents the combined ratios for the respective fund and its respective
    pro rata share of its Master Portfolio.
Per share data has been calculated based on the average daily number of shares
outstanding throughout the period.
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      Increase (Decrease) from                                       Supplemental
                                                       Investment Operations                                         Data
                                        Net     ------------------------------------                         Net     ---------
                                       Asset       Net          Net         Total                           Asset
                                       Value    Investment    Realized       from     Less Distributions    Value
                                     Beginning    income    & Unrealized  Investment       From Net        End of      Total
                                     of Period    (Loss)    Gain (Loss)   Operations  Investment Income    Period    Return(2)
                                     ---------  ----------  ------------  ----------  ------------------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                                
ASAF FOUNDERS INTERNATIONAL
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:
=========================
<S>                                   <C>         <C>          <C>          <C>             <C>            <C>         <C>    
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $ 0.05       $(0.18)      $(0.13)         $   --         $  9.87     (1.30)%
 Class B                                10.00       0.04        (0.19)       (0.15)             --            9.85     (1.50)%
 Class C                                10.00       0.04        (0.18)       (0.14)             --            9.86     (1.40)%
 Class X                                10.00       0.04        (0.20)       (0.16)             --            9.84     (1.60)%
ASAF FOUNDERS
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:
=========================
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $(0.03)      $(0.03)      $(0.06)         $   --         $  9.94     (0.60)%
 Class B                                10.00      (0.04)       (0.03)       (0.07)             --            9.93     (0.70)%
 Class C                                10.00      (0.04)       (0.02)       (0.06)             --            9.94     (0.60)%
 Class X                                10.00      (0.04)       (0.03)       (0.07)             --            9.93     (0.70)%
ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND:
=========================
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $ 0.02       $ 0.44       $ 0.46          $   --         $ 10.46      4.60%
 Class B                                10.00         --         0.44         0.44              --           10.44      4.40%
 Class C                                10.00         --         0.45         0.45              --           10.45      4.50%
 Class X                                10.00         --         0.44         0.44              --           10.44      4.40%
ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY
STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND:
=========================
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $ 0.04       $(0.05)      $(0.01)         $   --         $  9.99     (0.10)%
 Class B                                10.00       0.02        (0.06)       (0.04)             --            9.96     (0.40)%
 Class C                                10.00       0.02        (0.04)       (0.02)             --            9.98     (0.20)%
 Class X                                10.00       0.02        (0.06)       (0.04)             --            9.96     (0.40)%
ASAF FEDERATED
HIGH YIELD BOND FUND:
=========================
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $ 0.05       $(0.07)      $(0.02)         $(0.05)        $  9.93     (0.23)%
 Class B                                10.00       0.04        (0.07)       (0.03)          (0.04)           9.93     (0.30)%
 Class C                                10.00       0.03        (0.07)       (0.04)          (0.03)           9.93     (0.36)%
 Class X                                10.00       0.04        (0.07)       (0.03)          (0.04)           9.93     (0.25)%
</TABLE>
 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                         Ratio of
                                                                                                           Net
                                        Supplemental Data                 Ratios of Expenses to         Investment
                                  --------------------------------          Average Net Assets            Income
                                  Net Assets             Average    ----------------------------------  (Loss) to
                                  at End of   Portfolio Commission       After             Before        Average
                                    Period    Turnover     Rate         Expense           Expense          Net
                                  (in 000's)    Rate       Paid     Reimbursement(1)  Reimbursement(1)  Assets(1)
                                  ----------  --------  ----------  ----------------  ----------------  ----------
                                                                                      
ASAF FOUNDERS INTERNATIONAL
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:
=========================
<S>                                 <C>                  <C>              <C>              <C>              <C>  
 Class A                            $  106         --    $ 0.0590         2.10%            136.49%          2.03%
 Class B                               230         --      0.0590         2.60%             90.64%          1.62%
 Class C                                79         --      0.0590         2.60%             55.02%          1.72%
 Class X                               206         --      0.0590         2.60%             54.45%          1.58%
ASAF FOUNDERS
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:
=========================
 Class A                            $  193         --    $ 0.0529         1.70%            105.48%         (1.16)%
 Class B                               353         --      0.0529         2.20%             57.99%         (1.73)%
 Class C                                74         --      0.0529         2.20%             42.48%         (1.73)%
 Class X                               270         --      0.0529         2.20%             47.29%         (1.70)%
ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND:
=========================
 Class A                            $  383         --    $ 0.0412         1.75%             54.47%          0.69%
 Class B                             1,155         --      0.0412         2.25%             30.14%          0.17%
 Class C                               335         --      0.0412         2.25%             33.60%          0.02%
 Class X                               640         --      0.0412         2.25%             22.43%          0.19%
ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY
STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND:
=========================
 Class A                            $  257          2%   $ 0.0186         1.60%             37.87%          1.56%
 Class B                               381          2%     0.0186         2.10%             29.90%          0.79%
 Class C                               215          2%     0.0186         2.10%             38.96%          0.78%
 Class X                               398          2%     0.0186         2.10%             26.66%          1.07%
ASAF FEDERATED
HIGH YIELD BOND FUND:
=========================
 Class A                            $2,154         11%   $    N/A         1.50%             30.49%          4.76%
 Class B                               920         11%        N/A         2.00%             30.22%          3.15%
 Class C                               206         11%        N/A         2.00%             29.26%          3.55%
 Class X                               556         11%        N/A         2.00%             30.95%          3.65%
</TABLE>

 
(1) Annualized
(2) Total return for Class X shares does not reflect the payment of bonus
    shares.
Per share data has been calculated based on the average daily number of shares
outstanding throughout the period.
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 
<PAGE>




                        INVESTMENT PROGRAMS OF THE FUNDS

             The investment objective,  policies and limitations for each of the
Funds are described  below and should be considered  separately.  The investment
objective,  policies and  limitations of each Feeder Fund are identical to those
of its corresponding  Portfolio. As such, the following discussion of the Feeder
Funds,  including  references to the Directors of the Company,  apply equally to
the Funds' corresponding Portfolios and the Trustees of the Trust, respectively.
Each Feeder Fund seeks to meet its investment  objective by investing all of its
investable  assets in a  corresponding  Portfolio  of the  Trust,  which in turn
invests  directly in a portfolio of securities in accordance with the investment
objective, policies and limitations of its Feeder Fund.

             While certain policies apply to all Funds and Portfolios, generally
each  Fund and  Portfolio  has a  different  investment  objective  and  certain
policies  may  vary.  As a result,  the  risks,  opportunities  and  returns  of
investing  in each  Fund may  differ.  Those  investment  policies  specifically
labeled as "fundamental" may not be changed without  shareholder  approval.  The
investment  objective of each Fund and Portfolio is not a fundamental policy and
may be changed by the  Directors  of the  Company or the  Trustees of the Trust,
where applicable,  without  shareholder  approval.  The investment  policies and
limitations of the Funds and Portfolios,  unless  otherwise  specified,  are not
fundamental policies and may also be changed without shareholder approval.

             There can be no assurance that the investment objective of any Fund
or  Portfolio  will be  achieved.  Risks  relating  to  various  securities  and
instruments  in which the Funds and  Portfolios may invest are described in this
Prospectus  and the  Company's SAI under  "Certain  Risk Factors and  Investment
Methods." Additional information about the investment  objectives,  policies and
limitations,  as well as certain fundamental  investment  restrictions,  of each
Fund and Portfolio may be found in the Company's SAI under "Investment  Programs
of the Funds" and "Fundamental Investment Restrictions."

             Subject  to the  approval  of the  Directors  of the  Company,  the
Company  may add one or more  Funds and may cease to offer any one or more Funds
in the future.  Any such addition or cessation shall be subject to obtaining any
required regulatory approvals.

ASAF FOUNDERS INTERNATIONAL SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
capital growth.

Investment Policies:

             To achieve its objective,  the Fund normally  invests  primarily in
securities  issued by foreign  companies  which have market  capitalizations  or
annual revenues of $1 billion or less. These securities may represent  companies
in both established and emerging economies throughout the world.

             At least 65% of the Fund's total assets  normally  will be invested
in foreign  securities  representing a minimum of three countries.  The Fund may
invest  in  larger  foreign  companies  or in  U.S.-based  companies  if, in the
Sub-advisor's opinion, they represent better prospects for capital appreciation.

             Risks of Investments in Small and Medium-Sized Companies.  The Fund
normally will invest a significant proportion of its assets in the securities of
small and medium-sized  companies.  As used with respect to this Fund, small and
medium-sized  companies  are those which are still in the  developing  stages of
their life cycles and are  attempting  to achieve rapid growth in both sales and
earnings.  Capable  management and fertile  operating  areas are two of the most
important characteristics of such companies. In addition, these companies should
employ sound financial and accounting policies;  demonstrate  effective research
and successful product development and marketing; provide efficient service; and
possess pricing flexibility.

             Investments in small and  medium-sized  companies  involve  greater
risk than is  customarily  associated  with more  established  companies.  These
companies often have sales and earnings growth rates which exceed those of large
companies.  Such growth rates may in turn be reflected in more rapid share price
appreciation. However, smaller companies often have limited operating histories,
product lines,  markets, or financial resources,  and they may be dependent upon
one-person  management.  These  companies may be subject to intense  competition
from larger  entities,  and the  securities  of such  companies may have limited
marketability  and may be subject to more abrupt or erratic  movements  in price
than  securities  of  larger  companies  or  the  market  averages  in  general.
Therefore,  the net asset value of the Fund's shares may  fluctuate  more widely
than the popular market averages.

             Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may invest without limit in American
Depositary  Receipts  ("ADRs")  and  foreign   securities.   The  term  "foreign
securities" refers to securities of issuers,  wherever organized,  which, in the
judgment of the Sub-advisor, have their principal business activities outside of
the United States. The determination of whether an issuer's principal activities
are outside of the United  States will be based on the  location of the issuer's
assets,  personnel,  sales, and earnings,  and specifically on whether more than
50% of the issuer's  assets are located,  or more than 50% of the issuer's gross
income is earned,  outside of the United States, or on whether the issuer's sole
or principal  stock exchange  listing is outside of the United  States.  Foreign
securities  typically will be traded on the applicable country's principal stock
exchange but may also be traded on regional exchanges or over-the-counter. For a
discussion  of  ADRs,  see this  Prospectus  under  "Certain  Risk  Factors  and
Investment Methods."

             Foreign  investments of the Fund may include  securities  issued by
companies  located  in  countries  not  considered  to be  major  industrialized
nations.  Such  countries are subject to more  economic,  political and business
risk than  major  industrialized  nations,  and the  securities  they  issue are
expected to be more  volatile  and more  uncertain as to payment of interest and
principal.  The  secondary  market for such  securities  is  expected to be less
liquid than for securities of major industrialized  nations.  Such countries may
include  (but are not  limited  to):  Argentina,  Australia,  Austria,  Belgium,
Bolivia,  Brazil, Chile, China,  Colombia,  Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic,
Denmark,  Ecuador, Egypt, Finland, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Indonesia,
Ireland,  Italy, Israel, Jordan,  Malaysia,  Mexico,  Netherlands,  New Zealand,
Nigeria, North Korea, Norway,  Pakistan,  Paraguay,  Peru, Philippines,  Poland,
Portugal,  Singapore,  Slovak Republic,  South Africa,  South Korea,  Spain, Sri
Lanka,  Sweden,  Switzerland,  Taiwan,  Thailand,  Turkey,  Uruguay,  Venezuela,
Vietnam and the countries of the former Soviet  Union.  Investments  may include
securities  created  through  the Brady  Plan,  a program  under  which  heavily
indebted countries have restructured their bank debt into bonds.

             Investments in foreign  securities  involve certain risks which are
not typically associated with U.S. investments.  For a discussion of the special
risks  involved in investing in developing  countries and certain risks involved
in investing in foreign securities,  in general,  including the risk of currency
fluctuations,  see this  Prospectus  and the Company's  SAI under  "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment Methods."

             Foreign Currency Exchange  Contracts.  The Fund is permitted to use
forward foreign currency  contracts in connection with the purchase or sale of a
specific   security.   The  Fund  may  conduct  its  foreign  currency  exchange
transactions  on a spot (i.e.,  cash) basis at the spot rate  prevailing  in the
foreign exchange  currency  market,  or on a forward basis to "lock in" the U.S.
dollar  price of the  security.  By  entering  into a forward  contract  for the
purchase or sale, for a fixed amount of U.S.  dollars,  of the amount of foreign
currency involved in the underlying  transactions,  the Fund attempts to protect
itself   against   possible  loss  resulting  from  an  adverse  change  in  the
relationship  between the U.S. dollar and the applicable foreign currency during
the period  between the date on which the  security is purchased or sold and the
date on which such payments are made or received.

             In addition,  the Fund may enter into forward contracts for hedging
purposes.  When the  Sub-advisor  believes  that the  currency  of a  particular
foreign  country may suffer a substantial  decline  against the U.S.  dollar (or
sometimes against another  currency),  the Fund may enter into forward contracts
to  sell,  for  a  fixed-dollar  or  other  currency  amount,  foreign  currency
approximating the value of some or all of the Fund's  securities  denominated in
that  currency.  The precise  matching of the forward  contract  amounts and the
value of the  securities  involved  will not  generally be possible.  The future
value of such  securities  in foreign  currencies  changes as a  consequence  of
market movements in the value of those securities  between the date on which the
contract is entered into and the date it expires.

             The Fund  generally  will not enter into forward  contracts  with a
term greater than one year. In addition,  the Fund generally will not enter into
forward  contracts  or  maintain  a net  exposure  to such  contracts  where the
fulfillment  of the  contracts  would  require  the Fund to deliver an amount of
foreign currency in excess of the value of the Fund's securities or other assets
denominated in that currency.  Under normal circumstances,  consideration of the
possibility of changes in currency  exchange rates will be incorporated into the
Fund's long-term investment strategies.  In the event that forward contracts are
considered  to be  illiquid,  the  securities  would be  subject  to the  Fund's
limitation on investing in illiquid securities.  For an additional discussion of
foreign currency  contracts and the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus
and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Fixed-Income  Securities.   The  Fund  may  invest  in  convertible
securities, preferred stocks, bonds, debentures, and other corporate obligations
when the Sub-advisor  believes that these  investments  offer  opportunities for
capital  appreciation.  Current  income will not be a substantial  factor in the
selection of these securities.


   
             The Fund will  only  invest in  bonds,  debentures,  and  corporate
obligations  (other than  convertible  securities  and  preferred  stock)  rated
investment  grade (BBB or higher) at the time of  purchase.  Bonds in the lowest
investment grade category (BBB) have speculative  characteristics,  with changes
in the economy or other circumstances more likely to lead to a weakened capacity
of the bonds to make principal and interest payments than would occur with bonds
rated  in  higher  categories.   Convertible  securities  and  preferred  stocks
purchased by the Fund may be rated in medium and lower  categories by Moody's or
S&P (Ba or lower by Moody's and BB or lower by S&P), but will not be rated lower
than B. The Fund may also invest in unrated convertible securities and preferred
stocks  in  instances  in which  the  Sub-advisor  believes  that the  financial
condition  of the  issuer  or  the  protection  afforded  by  the  terms  of the
securities  limits risk to a level  similar to that of  securities  eligible for
purchase by the Fund rated in categories no lower than B. Securities rated B are
referred to as  "high-risk"  securities,  generally  lack  characteristics  of a
desirable  investment,  and are deemed  speculative with respect to the issuer's
capacity to pay interest and repay  principal  over a long period of time. At no
time  will the Fund  have  more  than 5% of its  total  assets  invested  in any
fixed-income  securities  (not  including  convertible  securities and preferred
stock)  which are rated below  investment  grade as a result of a  reduction  in
rating after purchase or are unrated.  For a description of securities  ratings,
see the Appendix to the  Company's  SAI. For a discussion  of the special  risks
involved in investing in lower-rated  debt  securities,  see this Prospectus and
the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."
    

             The  fixed-income  securities  in which  the Fund  may  invest  are
generally subject to two kinds of risk: credit risk and market risk. Credit risk
relates to the ability of the issuer to meet interest or principal payments,  or
both,  as they come due. The ratings given a security by Moody's and S&P provide
a generally  useful guide as to such credit  risk.  The lower the rating given a
security by such rating service, the greater the credit risk such rating service
perceives to exist with respect to such security.  Increasing the amount of Fund
assets invested in unrated or lower-grade securities, while intended to increase
the yield produced by those assets,  also will increase the credit risk to which
those assets are subject. Market risk relates to the fact that the market values
of securities in which the Fund may invest generally will be affected by changes
in the level of interest  rates.  An  increase  in  interest  rates will tend to
reduce the market values of such securities, whereas a decline in interest rates
will tend to increase their values.  Medium- and lower-rated  securities (Baa or
BBB and lower) and non-rated securities of comparable quality tend to be subject
to wider fluctuations in yields and market values than higher-rated  securities.
Medium-rated   securities   (those   rated   Baa  or   BBB)   have   speculative
characteristics while lower-rated securities are predominantly speculative.  The
Fund is not required to dispose of straight  debt  securities  whose ratings are
downgraded below Baa or BBB subsequent to the Fund's purchase of the securities,
unless such a  disposition  is necessary  to reduce the Fund's  holdings of such
securities  to less  than 5% of its total  assets.  Relying  in part on  ratings
assigned by credit agencies in making investments will not protect the Fund from
the risk that fixed-income securities in which it invests will decline in value,
since credit ratings represent evaluations of the safety of principal,  dividend
and interest  payments on preferred stocks and debt  securities,  not the market
values of such securities, and such ratings may not be changed on a timely basis
to reflect subsequent events.

             The  Sub-advisor  seeks to reduce overall risk  associated with the
investments of the Fund through  diversification  and  consideration of relevant
factors affecting the value of securities.  No assurance can be given,  however,
regarding  the degree of success  that will be achieved in this regard or in the
Fund achieving its investment objective.

             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the  Company,  the Fund may invest up to 15% of the market value of
its net assets,  measured at the time of purchase,  in securities  which are not
readily marketable,  including repurchase agreements maturing in more than seven
days.  Securities which are not readily  marketable are those that, for whatever
reason,  cannot be  disposed  of within  seven  days in the  ordinary  course of
business  at  approximately  the  amount  at  which  the  Fund  has  valued  the
investment.

             The Fund may invest in Rule 144A securities  (securities  issued in
offerings  made pursuant to Rule 144A under the  Securities  Act of 1933).  Rule
144A securities may be resold to qualified institutional buyers as defined under
Rule  144A  and may or may  not be  deemed  to be  readily  marketable.  Factors
considered in evaluating  whether such a security is readily  marketable include
eligibility for trading,  trading activity,  dealer interest,  purchase interest
and ownership transfer requirements.  The Sub-advisor is required to monitor the
readily  marketable  nature of each Rule 144A security no less  frequently  than
quarterly. For an additional discussion of Rule 144A securities and illiquid and
restricted securities, and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Borrowing. The Fund may borrow money from banks in amounts up to 33
1/3% of the Fund's total assets.  If the Fund borrows money, its share price may
be subject to greater  fluctuation until the borrowing is repaid.  The Fund will
attempt  to  minimize  such  fluctuations  by  not  purchasing  securities  when
borrowings  are greater than 5% of the value of the Fund's total assets.  For an
additional  discussion of the Fund's  limitations on borrowing and certain risks
involved in  borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under  "Certain  Risk Factors and
Investment  Methods"  and  the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental   Investment
Restrictions."

             Futures  Contracts  and  Options.  The Fund may enter into  futures
contracts (or options thereon) for hedging purposes.  The acquisition or sale of
a futures  contract  could occur,  for example,  if the Fund held or  considered
purchasing  equity  securities and sought to protect itself from fluctuations in
prices without buying or selling those securities.  The Fund may also enter into
interest  rate and foreign  currency  futures  contracts.  Interest rate futures
contracts currently are traded on a variety of fixed-income securities.  Foreign
currency futures contracts  currently are traded on the British pound,  Canadian
dollar, Japanese yen, Swiss franc, German mark and on Eurodollar deposits.

             An option is a right to buy or sell a security at a specified price
within a  limited  period  of time.  The Fund may write  ("sell")  covered  call
options  on any or all of its  portfolio  securities  from  time  to time as the
Sub-advisor  shall deem  appropriate.  The extent of the Fund's  option  writing
activities  will  vary  from  time  to time  depending  upon  the  Sub-advisor's
evaluation of market, economic and monetary conditions.

             The Fund may  purchase  options on  securities  and stock  indices.
Options on stock indices are similar to options on securities.  However, because
options on stock indices do not involve the delivery of an underlying  security,
the option  represents  the  holder's  right to obtain from the writer in cash a
fixed multiple of the amount by which the exercise price exceeds (in the case of
a put) or is  less  than  (in the  case of a  call)  the  closing  value  of the
underlying index on the exercise date. The purpose of these  transactions is not
to generate gain, but to "hedge" against  possible loss.  Therefore,  successful
hedging  activity  will  not  produce  net gain to the  Fund.  The Fund may also
purchase  put and call  options  on  futures  contracts.  An option on a futures
contract  provides the holder with the right to enter into a "long"  position in
the  underlying  futures  contract,  in the case of a call option,  or a "short"
position in the underlying  futures contract,  in the case of a put option, at a
fixed exercise price to a stated expiration date. Upon exercise of the option by
the holder, a contract market clearing house  establishes a corresponding  short
position  for the  writer  of the  option,  in the case of a call  option,  or a
corresponding long position, in the case of a put option.

             The Fund will not, as to any  positions,  whether long,  short or a
combination  thereof,  enter into  futures  and  options  thereon  for which the
aggregate initial margins and premiums exceed 5% of the fair market value of its
total assets after taking into account  unrealized profits and losses on options
entered  into.  The Fund may buy and sell  options  on  foreign  currencies  for
hedging  purposes  in a manner  similar  to that in  which  futures  on  foreign
currencies would be utilized.  For an additional discussion of futures contracts
and  options  and the  risks  involved  therein,  see  this  Prospectus  and the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Temporary Investments.  Up to 100% of the assets of the Fund may be
invested  temporarily in U.S.  government  obligations,  commercial  paper, bank
obligations,   repurchase   agreements,   negotiable   U.S.   dollar-denominated
obligations of domestic and foreign  branches of U.S.  depository  institutions,
U.S.  branches  of  foreign  depository  institutions,  and  foreign  depository
institutions,  in  cash,  or in  other  cash  equivalents,  if  the  Sub-advisor
determines  it  to  be  appropriate  for  purposes  of  enhancing  liquidity  or
preserving capital in light of prevailing market or economic  conditions.  While
the Fund is in a defensive  position,  the opportunity to achieve capital growth
will be limited, and, to the extent that this assessment of market conditions is
incorrect,  the Fund will be foregoing the  opportunity  to benefit from capital
growth resulting from increases in the value of equity investments.

             U.S.  government  obligations  include  Treasury  bills,  notes and
bonds, and issues of United States agencies,  authorities and instrumentalities.
Some government  obligations,  such as Government National Mortgage  Association
pass-through  certificates,  are  supported  by the full faith and credit of the
United States  Treasury.  Other  obligations,  such as securities of the Federal
Home Loan  Banks,  are  supported  by the right of the issuer to borrow from the
United States  Treasury;  and others,  such as bonds issued by Federal  National
Mortgage Association (a private  corporation),  are supported only by the credit
of the  agency,  authority  or  instrumentality.  The Fund  also may  invest  in
obligations  issued by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(IBRD or "World Bank").

             The Fund may also  acquire  certificates  of deposit  and  bankers'
acceptances  of banks which meet  criteria  established  by the Directors of the
Company, if any. A certificate of deposit is a short-term  obligation of a bank.
A bankers'  acceptance  is a time draft drawn by a borrower  on a bank,  usually
relating to an international commercial transaction.

             The obligations of foreign branches of U.S. depository institutions
may be general  obligations of the parent depository  institution in addition to
being an  obligation  of the issuing  branch.  These  obligations,  and those of
foreign  depository  institutions,  may be limited by the terms of the  specific
obligation and by  governmental  regulation.  The payment of these  obligations,
both interest and principal,  also may be affected by governmental action in the
country of domicile of the institution or branch, such as imposition of currency
controls and interest  limitations.  In connection with these  investments,  the
Fund will be  subject to the risks  associated  with the  holding  of  portfolio
securities overseas,  such as possible changes in investment or exchange control
regulations,  expropriation,  confiscatory  taxation,  or political or financial
instability.

             Obligations of U.S. branches of foreign depository institutions may
be general obligations of the parent depository institution in addition to being
an  obligation  of the  issuing  branch,  or may be  limited  by the  terms of a
specific  foreign  regulation  applicable to the depository  institutions and by
government regulation (both domestic and foreign).

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company,  the Fund may enter into  repurchase  agreements  with
banks or well-established  securities dealers. All repurchase agreements entered
into by the Fund will be fully  collateralized  and marked to market daily.  The
Fund has not  adopted  any limits on the amount of its total  assets that may be
invested in repurchase  agreements  which mature in less than seven days.  For a
discussion of repurchase agreements and certain risks involved therein, see this
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Portfolio  Turnover.  The  Fund  reserves  the  right  to sell  its
securities,  regardless of the length of time that they have been held,  when it
is  determined by the  Sub-advisor  that those  securities  have attained or are
unable to meet the  investment  objective  of the Fund.  The Fund may  engage in
short-term  trading and therefore  normally will have annual portfolio  turnover
rates  which are  considered  to be high and may be greater  than those of other
investment companies seeking capital appreciation.  Portfolio turnover rates may
also increase as a result of the need for the Fund to effect significant amounts
of purchases or redemptions of portfolio securities due to economic,  market, or
other factors that are not within the Sub-advisor's control. For a discussion of
portfolio  turnover and its effects,  see this  Prospectus and the Company's SAI
under "Portfolio Transactions."

ASAF T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL EQUITY FUND:

Investment  Objective:  The investment  objective of the Fund is to seek a total
return on its assets from  long-term  growth of capital and income,  principally
through  investments  in  common  stocks  of  established,  non-U.S.  companies.
Investments may be made solely for capital  appreciation or solely for income or
any  combination of both for the purpose of achieving a higher  overall  return.
Total return consists of capital appreciation or depreciation,  dividend income,
and currency gains or losses.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund intends to diversify  investments  broadly among countries
and to normally have at least three different countries represented in the Fund.
The Fund may invest in countries  of the Far East and Western  Europe as well as
South  Africa,   Australia,   Canada  and  other  areas  (including   developing
countries).  Under unusual circumstances,  the Fund may invest substantially all
of its assets in one or two countries.

             In seeking its objective,  the Fund will invest primarily in common
stocks of established  foreign  companies which have the potential for growth of
capital  or income or both.  However,  the Fund may also  invest in a variety of
other  equity-related  securities,   such  as  preferred  stocks,  warrants  and
convertible  securities,  as well as corporate and governmental debt securities,
when considered  consistent with the Fund's  investment  objectives and program.
Under normal market  conditions,  the Fund's investment in securities other than
common stocks is limited to no more than 35% of total assets.  Under exceptional
economic or market conditions  abroad,  the Fund may temporarily invest all or a
major portion of its assets in U.S.  government  obligations or debt obligations
of U.S.  companies.  The Fund will not purchase any debt  security  which at the
time of  purchase is rated below  investment  grade.  This would not prevent the
Fund from  retaining  a security  downgraded  to below  investment  grade  after
purchase.

             The  Fund may also  invest  its  reserves  in  domestic  as well as
foreign money market instruments.  Also, the Fund may enter into forward foreign
currency exchange contracts in order to protect against uncertainty in the level
of future foreign exchange rates.

             In  addition  to  the  investments   described  below,  the  Fund's
investments may include,  but are not limited to, American  Depositary  Receipts
(ADRs),  bonds,  notes,  other  debt  securities  of  foreign  issuers,  and the
securities of foreign  investment  funds or trusts  (including  passive  foreign
investment companies).

             Cash  Reserves.  While the Fund will remain  primarily  invested in
common stocks, it may, for temporary defensive measures, invest in cash reserves
without  limitation.  The  Fund  may  establish  and  maintain  reserves  as the
Sub-advisor  believes  is  advisable  to  facilitate  the Fund's cash flow needs
(e.g.,  redemptions,  expenses and  purchases of  portfolio  securities)  or for
temporary,  defensive purposes.  The Fund's reserves may be invested in domestic
and foreign money market  instruments rated within the top two credit categories
by a national  rating  organization,  or if unrated,  of  equivalent  investment
quality as determined by the Sub-advisor.

             Convertible  Securities,  Preferred Stocks, and Warrants.  The Fund
may  invest  in  debt  or  preferred  equity  securities   convertible  into  or
exchangeable  for  equity  securities.  Preferred  stocks  are  securities  that
represent an ownership interest in a corporation providing the owner with claims
on the company's  earnings and assets before common stock owners, but after bond
owners. Warrants are options to buy a stated number of shares of common stock at
a specified  price any time during the life of the warrants  (generally,  two or
more years).

             Foreign Currency  Transactions.  The Fund will normally conduct its
foreign currency exchange  transactions  either on a spot (i.e.,  cash) basis at
the spot rate prevailing in the foreign  currency  exchange  market,  or through
entering into forward contracts to purchase or sell foreign currencies. The Fund
will generally not enter into a forward contract with a term of greater than one
year.

             The  Fund  will  generally  enter  into  forward  foreign  currency
exchange  contracts only under two  circumstances.  First,  when the Fund enters
into a contract for the purchase or sale of a security  denominated in a foreign
currency,  it may  desire to "lock in" the U.S.  dollar  price of the  security.
Second, when the Sub-advisor  believes that the currency of a particular foreign
country may suffer or enjoy a substantial movement against another currency,  it
may enter into a forward contract to sell or buy the former foreign currency (or
another  currency  which acts as a proxy for that  currency)  approximating  the
value  of some  or all of the  Fund's  securities  denominated  in such  foreign
currency. Under certain circumstances, the Fund may commit a substantial portion
or the entire value of its portfolio to the consummation of these contracts. The
Sub-advisor  will  consider  the effect such a  commitment  of its  portfolio to
forward  contracts  would  have on the  investment  program  of the Fund and the
flexibility of the Fund to purchase additional  securities.  For a discussion of
foreign currency  contracts and the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus
and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Futures Contracts and Options.  The Fund may enter into stock index
or currency  futures  contracts  (or options  thereon) to hedge a portion of the
Fund,  to provide an efficient  means of regulating  the Fund's  exposure to the
equity markets,  or as a hedge against changes in prevailing  levels of currency
exchange rates. The Fund will not use futures contracts for leveraging purposes.
Such  contracts may be traded on U.S. or foreign  exchanges.  The Fund may write
covered call  options and  purchase put and call options on foreign  currencies,
securities,  and  stock  indices.  The  aggregate  market  value  of the  Fund's
currencies or portfolio  securities covering call or put options will not exceed
25% of the Fund's  total  assets.  The Fund will not commit  more than 5% of its
total assets to premiums when purchasing call or put options.  For an additional
discussion of futures contracts and options and the risks involved therein,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Hybrid  Investments.  The Fund may  invest  up to 10% of its  total
assets in hybrid instruments.  As part of its investment program and to maintain
greater  flexibility,  the Fund may invest in these instruments,  which have the
characteristics of futures, options and securities.  Such instruments may take a
variety of forms,  such as debt instruments with interest or principal  payments
determined by reference to the value of a currency,  security index or commodity
at a future point in time. The risks of such investments  would reflect both the
risks of investing in futures, options,  currencies,  and securities,  including
volatility and illiquidity.  Under certain conditions, the redemption value of a
hybrid instrument could be zero. For a discussion of hybrid  investments and the
risks  involved  therein,  see the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and
Investment Methods."

             Passive  Foreign  Investment  Companies.  The Fund may purchase the
securities of certain foreign  investment funds or trusts called passive foreign
investment companies. Such trusts have been the only or primary way to invest in
certain  countries.  In addition  to bearing  their  proportionate  share of the
Fund's expenses (management fees and operating expenses), shareholders will also
indirectly bear similar expenses of such trusts.

   
             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company,  the Fund may acquire  illiquid  securities.  The Fund
will not invest more than 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities. Illiquid
securities do not include securities  eligible for resale under Rule 144A of the
Securities Act of 1933 that have been determined by the Sub-advisor to be liquid
under guidelines  promulgated by the Directors of the Company.  For a discussion
of illiquid and restricted securities,  and the risks involved therein, see this
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."
    

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company,  the Fund may enter into repurchase  agreements with a
well-established  securities  dealer or a bank which is a member of the  Federal
Reserve  System.  For a discussion  of repurchase  agreements  and certain risks
involved therein, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

     Borrowing.  For a discussion  of the Fund's  limitations  on borrowing  and
certain risks  involved in borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under "Certain Risk
Factors  and  Investment  Methods"  and the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental
Investment Restrictions."

ASAF JANUS OVERSEAS GROWTH FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
long-term growth of capital.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund pursues its objective  primarily  through  investments  in
common stocks of issuers  located  outside the United  States.  The Fund has the
flexibility to invest on a worldwide basis in companies and organizations of any
size,  regardless  of country of  organization  or place of  principal  business
activity.

             The Fund  normally  invests  at least  65% of its  total  assets in
securities  of issuers from at least five  different  countries,  excluding  the
United  States.  Although  the Fund intends to invest  substantially  all of its
assets in issuers located  outside the United States,  it may at times invest in
U.S.  issuers  and it may at times  invest  all of its assets in fewer than five
countries or even a single country.

             The Fund  invests  primarily  in common  stocks of foreign  issuers
selected for their growth  potential.  The Fund may invest to a lesser degree in
other types of securities,  including  preferred stocks,  warrants,  convertible
securities  and debt  securities.  Debt  securities  that the Fund may  purchase
include  corporate  bonds and  debentures  (not to exceed  35% of net  assets in
high-yield/high-risk   securities);   government   securities;   mortgage-   and
asset-backed securities (not to exceed 25% of assets); zero coupon bonds (not to
exceed 10% of  assets);  indexed/structured  securities;  high-grade  commercial
paper;  certificates of deposit; and repurchase agreements.  Such securities may
offer growth potential because of anticipated  changes in interest rates, credit
standing,  currency  relationships or other factors. The Fund may also invest in
short-term  debt  securities,  including  money  market  funds  managed  by  the
Sub-advisor, as a means of receiving a return on idle cash.

             When  the  Sub-advisor  believes  that  market  conditions  are not
favorable for profitable  investing or when the Sub-advisor is otherwise  unable
to locate  favorable  investment  opportunities,  the Fund's  investments may be
hedged to a greater degree and/or its cash or similar  investments may increase.
In other  words,  the Fund does not  always  stay fully  invested  in stocks and
bonds.  Cash or similar  investments  are a residual - they represent the assets
that remain after the  Sub-advisor has committed  available  assets to desirable
investment  opportunities.  When the Fund's cash position increases,  it may not
participate in stock market  advances or declines to the extent that it would if
it remained more fully invested in common stocks.

             The  fundamental  risk associated with any common stock fund is the
risk that the value of the  stocks it holds  might  decrease.  Stock  values may
fluctuate in response to the activities of an individual  company or in response
to general market and/or economic conditions.  Historically,  common stocks have
provided greater  long-term  returns and have entailed greater  short-term risks
than other  investment  choices.  Smaller or newer  issuers  are more  likely to
realize more substantial  growth as well as suffer more significant  losses than
larger or more  established  issuers.  Investments in such companies can be both
more volatile and more speculative.

             The Fund may invest in "special  situations"  from time to time.  A
special situation arises when, in the opinion of the Sub-advisor, the securities
of a  particular  issuer will be  recognized  and  appreciate  in value due to a
specific  development  with  respect  to that  issuer.  Developments  creating a
special  situation  might  include,  among others,  a new product or process,  a
technological breakthrough, a management change or other extraordinary corporate
event,  or  differences  in  market  supply  of and  demand  for  the  security.
Investment in special  situations  may carry an  additional  risk of loss in the
event that the  anticipated  development  does not occur or does not attract the
expected attention.

             Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may invest  without limit in foreign
securities. The Fund may invest substantially all of its assets in common stocks
of foreign  issuers to the extent the  Sub-advisor  believes  that the  relevant
market  environment  favors  profitable  investing  in  those  securities.   The
Sub-advisor  generally  takes a "bottom up"  approach to building  the Fund.  In
other  words,  the  Sub-advisor  seeks to  identify  individual  companies  with
earnings  growth  potential  that may not be  recognized  by the market at large
regardless of country of organization or place of principal  business  activity.
Although  themes  may  emerge in the Fund,  securities  are  generally  selected
without regard to any defined allocation among countries,  geographic regions or
industry sectors, or other similarly defined selection procedure. Realization of
income is not a significant investment consideration. Any income realized on the
Fund's investments will be incidental to its objective.  For a discussion of the
risks  involved  in  investing  in  foreign  securities,  including  the risk of
currency fluctuations,  see this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Futures, Options and Other Derivative Instruments. The Fund may use
options,  futures and other types of  derivatives  for hedging  purposes or as a
means of  enhancing  return.  The Fund  may  enter  into  futures  contracts  on
securities,  financial  indices  and  foreign  currencies  and  options  on such
contracts  ("futures  contracts")  and may  invest  in  options  on  securities,
financial  indices and foreign  currencies  ("options"),  forward  contracts and
interest  rate  swaps  and  swap-related  products   (collectively   "derivative
instruments").  The Fund intends to use most derivative instruments primarily to
hedge  the  value  of its  portfolio  against  potential  adverse  movements  in
securities  prices,  foreign  currency  markets or interest  rates. To a limited
extent,  the Fund may also use derivative  instruments for non-hedging  purposes
such as seeking to increase the Fund's  income or  otherwise  seeking to enhance
return.

             Although the Sub-advisor believes the use of derivative instruments
will benefit the Fund,  the Fund's  performance  could be worse than if the Fund
had not used such instruments if the Sub-advisor's judgment proves incorrect.

             When  the  Fund  invests  in a  derivative  instrument,  it  may be
required to segregate  cash or other liquid assets with its custodian to "cover"
the  Fund's  position.  Assets  segregated  or set  aside  generally  may not be
disposed of so long as the Fund maintains the positions requiring segregation or
cover.   Segregating  assets  could  diminish  the  Fund's  return  due  to  the
opportunity losses of foregoing other potential  investments with the segregated
assets.

             The Fund  may  also  use  futures,  options  and  other  derivative
instruments  to protect the portfolio  from  movements in securities  prices and
interest rates. The Fund may also use a variety of currency hedging  techniques,
including forward currency contracts,  to manage exchange rate risk with respect
to investments exposed to foreign currency fluctuations.

             For an additional  discussion  of futures and options  transactions
and the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment  Methods" and the Company's SAI under "Investment  Objectives and
Policies" and "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             When-Issued,  Delayed Delivery and Forward  Transactions.  The Fund
may purchase  securities  on a  when-issued  or delayed  delivery  basis,  which
generally  involves the purchase of a security  with payment and delivery due at
some time in the  future.  The Fund does not earn  interest  on such  securities
until settlement and bears the risk of market value  fluctuations in between the
purchase and  settlement  dates.  For an additional  discussion  of  when-issued
securities  and certain  risks  involved  therein,  see the  Company's SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Repurchase  Agreements.   The  Fund  may  engage  in  a  repurchase
agreement  with  respect to any  security in which it is  authorized  to invest.
Repurchase agreements that mature in more than seven days will be subject to the
15% limit on illiquid  investments.  While it is not possible to  eliminate  all
risks from these transactions,  it is the policy of the Fund to limit repurchase
agreements to those parties whose  creditworthiness  has been reviewed and found
satisfactory by the Sub-advisor  pursuant to guidelines adopted by the Directors
of the Company.  Pursuant to an exemptive  order granted by the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission,  the Fund and other funds  advised or  sub-advised  by the
Sub-advisor  may  invest  in  repurchase   agreements  and  other  money  market
instruments  through a joint  trading  account.  For a discussion  of repurchase
agreements and the risks involved  therein,  see this Prospectus  under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Reverse Repurchase Agreements.  The Fund may use reverse repurchase
agreements to provide cash to satisfy unusually heavy redemption requests or for
other temporary or emergency purposes without the necessity of selling portfolio
securities,  or to earn  additional  income  on  portfolio  securities,  such as
Treasury bills or notes.  In a reverse  repurchase  agreement,  the Fund sells a
security to another party, such as a bank or  broker-dealer,  in return for cash
and agrees to repurchase the instrument at a particular  price and time. While a
reverse  repurchase  agreement is  outstanding,  the Fund will maintain cash and
appropriate  liquid  assets  in a  segregated  custodial  account  to cover  its
obligation  under the  agreement.  The Fund will enter into  reverse  repurchase
agreements  only with parties that the  Sub-advisor  deems  creditworthy.  For a
discussion of reverse repurchase  agreements and the risks involved therein, see
this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors  of the  Company,  the Fund may  invest up to 15% of its net assets in
securities  that are  considered  illiquid  because of the  absence of a readily
available  market or due to legal or contractual  restrictions.  Some securities
cannot be sold to the U.S.  public  because  of their  terms or  because  of SEC
regulations.  The Sub-advisor may determine that securities  eligible for resale
under Rule 144A under the  Securities  Act of 1933,  which cannot be sold to the
U.S.  public  but  can be sold  to  institutional  investors,  are  liquid.  The
Sub-advisor will follow  guidelines  established by the Directors of the Company
in  making  liquidity   determinations   for  Rule  144A  securities  and  other
securities,  including  privately placed  commercial  paper. For a discussion of
illiquid  securities and the risks involved  therein,  see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Borrowing.  Subject  to the Fund's  restrictions  on  borrowing  as
described in general in this paragraph,  the Fund may borrow money. The Fund may
borrow money for temporary or emergency purposes in amounts up to 33 1/3% of its
total  assets.  The Fund may  mortgage  or pledge  securities  as  security  for
borrowings in amounts up to 15% of its net assets.

             Lower-Rated  High-Yield Bonds. The Fund may invest up to 35% of its
net assets in corporate debt  securities that are rated below  investment  grade
(securities rated BB or lower by Standard & Poor's Ratings Services ("Standard &
Poor's")  or Ba  or  lower  by  Moody's  Investors  Services,  Inc.  ("Moody's")
(commonly referred to as "junk bonds")).

             The Fund may also invest in unrated debt  securities of foreign and
domestic  issuers.  Unrated debt,  while not  necessarily  of lower quality than
rated securities,  may not have as broad a market.  Unrated debt securities will
be  included  in the 35% limit of the Fund  unless  the  Sub-advisor  deems such
securities to be the equivalent of investment grade securities. For a discussion
of these instruments and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus and the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Portfolio   Turnover.   The  Fund  generally  intends  to  purchase
securities  for long-term  investment  rather than  short-term  gains.  However,
short-term  transactions  may result from  liquidity  needs,  securities  having
reached a price or yield objective, anticipated changes in interest rates or the
credit standing of an issuer, or by reason of economic or other developments not
foreseen at the time of the  investment  decision.  Changes are made in the Fund
whenever the  Sub-advisor  believes  such changes are  desirable,  and portfolio
turnover rates are generally not a factor in making buy and sell decisions.

             To  a  limited  extent,   the  Fund  may  purchase   securities  in
anticipation of relatively  short-term  price gains.  The Fund may also sell one
security and simultaneously  purchase the same or a comparable  security to take
advantage of short-term differentials in bond yields or securities prices. For a
discussion of portfolio  turnover and its effects,  see this  Prospectus and the
Company's SAI under "Portfolio Transactions."


ASAF FOUNDERS SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
capital growth.

Investment Policies:

             To achieve its  objective,  the Fund  normally will invest at least
65% of its  total  assets  in  common  stocks  of  U.S.  companies  with  market
capitalizations   or  annual   revenues   of  $1.5   billion  or  less.   Market
capitalization is a measure of the size of a company and is based upon the total
market  value of a company's  outstanding  equity  securities.  Ordinarily,  the
common stocks of the U.S. companies selected for this Fund will not be listed on
a  national  securities  exchange  but will be  traded  in the  over-the-counter
market.

             Risks of Investments in Small and Medium-Sized Companies.  The Fund
normally will invest a significant proportion of its assets in the securities of
small and medium-sized  companies.  As used with respect to this Fund, small and
medium-sized  companies  are those which are still in the  developing  stages of
their life cycles and are  attempting  to achieve rapid growth in both sales and
earnings.  Capable  management and fertile  operating  areas are two of the most
important characteristics of such companies. In addition, these companies should
employ sound financial and accounting policies;  demonstrate  effective research
and successful product development and marketing; provide efficient service; and
possess pricing flexibility.

             Investments in small and  medium-sized  companies  involve  greater
risk than is  customarily  associated  with more  established  companies.  These
companies often have sales and earnings growth rates which exceed those of large
companies.  Such growth rates may in turn be reflected in more rapid share price
appreciation. However, smaller companies often have limited operating histories,
product lines,  markets, or financial resources,  and they may be dependent upon
one-person  management.  These  companies may be subject to intense  competition
from larger  entities,  and the  securities  of such  companies may have limited
marketability  and may be subject to more abrupt or erratic  movements  in price
than  securities  of  larger  companies  or  the  market  averages  in  general.
Therefore,  the net asset value of the Fund's shares may  fluctuate  more widely
than the popular market averages.

   
             Fixed  Income  Securities.  The  Fund  may  invest  in  convertible
securities, preferred stocks, bonds, debentures, and other corporate obligations
when the Sub-advisor  believes that these  investments  offer  opportunities for
capital  appreciation.  Current  income will not be a substantial  factor in the
selection of these  securities.  Bonds,  debentures,  and corporate  obligations
(other than  convertible  securities and preferred  stock) purchased by the Fund
will be rated investment grade at the time of purchase (Baa or higher by Moody's
Investors  Service,  Inc.  ("Moody's")  or BBB or  higher by  Standard  & Poor's
("S&P")).  Bonds in the lowest  investment  grade category (Baa or BBB) may have
speculative characteristics,  with changes in the economy or other circumstances
more  likely  to  lead to a  weakened  capacity  of the  bonds'  issuer  to make
principal  and  interest  payments  than would  occur with bonds rated in higher
categories.  Convertible  securities and preferred  stocks purchased by the Fund
may be rated in medium  and lower  categories  by Moody's or S&P (Ba or lower by
Moody's  and BB or lower by S&P),  but will not be rated  lower than B. The Fund
may also  invest in  unrated  convertible  securities  and  preferred  stocks in
instances in which the Sub-advisor  believes that the financial condition of the
issuer or the protection  afforded by the terms of the securities limits risk to
a level similar to that of securities eligible for purchase by the Fund rated in
categories  no lower than B.  Securities  rated B are referred to as "high risk"
securities,  generally lack characteristics of a desirable  investment,  and are
deemed  speculative  with respect to the  issuer's  capacity to pay interest and
repay  principal  over a long period of time. At no time will the Fund have more
than 5% of its assets  invested in any  fixed-income  securities  (not including
convertible  securities  and preferred  stock) which are rated below  investment
grade as a result of a reduction in rating after purchase or are unrated.  For a
description of securities ratings,  see the Appendix to the Company's SAI. For a
discussion of the special risks involved in  lower-rated  debt  securities,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."
    

             The  fixed-income  securities  in which  the Fund  may  invest  are
generally subject to two kinds of risk: credit risk and market risk. Credit risk
relates to the ability of the issuer to meet interest or principal payments,  or
both,  as they come due. The ratings given a security by Moody's and S&P provide
a generally  useful guide as to such credit  risk.  The lower the rating given a
security by such rating service, the greater the credit risk such rating service
perceives to exist with respect to such security.  Increasing the amount of Fund
assets invested in unrated or lower-grade securities, while intended to increase
the yield produced by those assets,  also will increase the credit risk to which
those assets are subject. Market risk relates to the fact that the market values
of securities in which the Fund may invest generally will be affected by changes
in the level of interest  rates.  An  increase  in  interest  rates will tend to
reduce the market values of such securities, whereas a decline in interest rates
will tend to increase their values.  Medium- and lower-rated  securities (Baa or
BBB and lower) and non-rated securities of comparable quality tend to be subject
to wider fluctuations in yields and market values than higher-rated  securities.
Medium-rated   securities   (those   rated   Baa  or   BBB)   have   speculative
characteristics while lower-rated securities are predominantly speculative.  The
Fund is not required to dispose of straight  debt  securities  whose ratings are
downgraded below Baa or BBB subsequent to the Fund's purchase of the securities,
unless such a  disposition  is necessary  to reduce the Fund's  holdings of such
securities  to less  than 5% of its total  assets.  Relying  in part on  ratings
assigned by credit agencies in making investments will not protect the Fund from
the risk that fixed-income securities in which it invests will decline in value,
since credit ratings represent evaluations of the safety of principal,  dividend
and interest  payments on preferred stocks and debt  securities,  not the market
values of such securities, and such ratings may not be changed on a timely basis
to reflect subsequent events.

             The  Sub-advisor  seeks to reduce overall risk  associated with the
investments of the Fund through  diversification  and  consideration of relevant
factors affecting the value of securities.  No assurance can be given,  however,
regarding  the degree of success  that will be achieved in this regard or in the
Fund achieving its investment objective.

             Foreign  Securities.  The Fund  may  invest  in  dollar-denominated
American   Depositary  Receipts  ("ADRs")  which  are  traded  on  exchanges  or
over-the-counter  in the United States without limit, and in foreign securities.
The  term  "foreign  securities"  refers  to  securities  of  issuers,  wherever
organized,  which,  in the  judgment of the  Sub-advisor,  have their  principal
business  activities  outside of the United States. The determination of whether
an issuer's principal  activities are outside of the United States will be based
on the location of the issuer's  assets,  personnel,  sales,  and earnings,  and
specifically  on whether  more than 50% of the issuer's  assets are located,  or
more than 50% of the  issuer's  gross  income is  earned,  outside of the United
States,  or on whether the issuer's sole or principal stock exchange  listing is
outside of the United States. Foreign securities typically will be traded on the
applicable country's principal stock exchange but may also be traded on regional
exchanges or  over-the-counter.  For a discussion of ADRs,  see this  Prospectus
under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Foreign  investments of the Fund may include  securities  issued by
companies  located  in  countries  not  considered  to be  major  industrialized
nations.  Such  countries are subject to more  economic,  political and business
risk than  major  industrialized  nations,  and the  securities  they  issue are
expected to be more  volatile  and more  uncertain as to payment of interest and
principal.  The  secondary  market for such  securities  is  expected to be less
liquid than for securities of major industrialized  nations.  Such countries may
include  (but are not  limited  to):  Argentina,  Australia,  Austria,  Belgium,
Bolivia,  Brazil, Chile, China,  Colombia,  Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic,
Denmark,  Ecuador, Egypt, Finland, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Indonesia,
Ireland,  Italy, Israel, Jordan,  Malaysia,  Mexico,  Netherlands,  New Zealand,
Nigeria, North Korea, Norway,  Pakistan,  Paraguay,  Peru, Philippines,  Poland,
Portugal,  Singapore,  Slovak Republic,  South Africa,  South Korea,  Spain, Sri
Lanka,  Sweden,  Switzerland,  Taiwan,  Thailand,  Turkey,  Uruguay,  Venezuela,
Vietnam and the countries of the former Soviet  Union.  Investments  may include
securities  created  through  the Brady  Plan,  a program  under  which  heavily
indebted  countries have restructured their bank debt into bonds. Since the Fund
will pay dividends in dollars,  it may incur currency conversion costs. The Fund
will not invest more than 25% of its total assets in any one foreign country.

             Investments in foreign  securities  involve certain risks which are
not typically associated with U.S. investments.  For a discussion of the special
risks  involved in investing in developing  countries and certain risks involved
in investing in foreign securities,  in general,  including the risk of currency
fluctuations,  see this  Prospectus  and the Company's  SAI under  "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment Methods."

             Foreign Currency Exchange  Contracts.  The Fund is permitted to use
forward foreign currency  contracts in connection with the purchase or sale of a
specific   security.   The  Fund  may  conduct  its  foreign  currency  exchange
transactions  on a spot (i.e.,  cash) basis at the spot rate  prevailing  in the
foreign exchange  currency  market,  or on a forward basis to "lock in" the U.S.
dollar  price of the  security.  By  entering  into a forward  contract  for the
purchase or sale, for a fixed amount of U.S.  dollars,  of the amount of foreign
currency involved in the underlying  transactions,  the Fund attempts to protect
itself   against   possible  loss  resulting  from  an  adverse  change  in  the
relationship  between the U.S. dollar and the applicable foreign currency during
the period  between the date on which the  security is purchased or sold and the
date on which such payments are made or received.

             In addition,  the Fund may enter into forward contracts for hedging
purposes.  When the  Sub-advisor  believes  that the  currency  of a  particular
foreign  country may suffer a substantial  decline  against the U.S.  dollar (or
sometimes against another  currency),  the Fund may enter into forward contracts
to  sell,  for a  fixed  dollar  or  other  currency  amount,  foreign  currency
approximating the value of some or all of the Fund's  securities  denominated in
that  currency.  The precise  matching of the forward  contract  amounts and the
value of the  securities  involved  will not  generally be possible.  The future
value of such  securities  in foreign  currencies  changes as a  consequence  of
market movements in the value of those securities  between the date on which the
contract is entered into and the date it expires.

             The Fund  generally  will not enter into forward  contracts  with a
term greater than one year. In addition,  the Fund generally will not enter into
forward  contracts  or  maintain  a net  exposure  to such  contracts  where the
fulfillment  of the  contracts  would  require  the Fund to deliver an amount of
foreign currency in excess of the value of the Fund's securities or other assets
denominated in that currency.  Under normal circumstances,  consideration of the
possibility of changes in currency  exchange rates will be incorporated into the
Fund's long-term investment strategies.  In the event that forward contracts are
considered  to be  illiquid,  the  securities  would be  subject  to the  Fund's
limitation on investing in illiquid securities.  For an additional discussion of
foreign currency  contracts and the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus
and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the  Company,  the Fund may invest up to 15% of the market value of
its net assets,  measured at the time of purchase,  in securities  which are not
readily marketable,  including repurchase agreements maturing in more than seven
days.  Securities which are not readily  marketable are those that, for whatever
reason,  cannot be  disposed  of within  seven  days in the  ordinary  course of
business  at  approximately  the  amount  at  which  the  Fund  has  valued  the
investment.

             The Fund may invest in Rule 144A securities  (securities  issued in
offerings  made pursuant to Rule 144A under the  Securities  Act of 1933).  Rule
144A securities may be resold to qualified institutional buyers as defined under
Rule  144A  and may or may  not be  deemed  to be  readily  marketable.  Factors
considered in evaluating  whether such a security is readily  marketable include
eligibility for trading, trading activity,  dealer interest,  purchase interest,
and ownership transfer requirements.  The Sub-advisor is required to monitor the
readily  marketable  nature of each Rule 144A security no less  frequently  than
quarterly. For an additional discussion of Rule 144A securities and illiquid and
restricted securities, and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Borrowing. The Fund may borrow money from banks in amounts up to 33
1/3% of the Fund's total assets.  If the Fund borrows money, its share price may
be subject to greater  fluctuation until the borrowing is repaid.  The Fund will
attempt  to  minimize  such  fluctuations  by  not  purchasing  securities  when
borrowings  are greater than 5% of the value of the Fund's total assets.  For an
additional  discussion of the Fund's  limitations on borrowing and certain risks
involved in  borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under  "Certain  Risk Factors and
Investment  Methods"  and  the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental   Investment
Restrictions."

             Futures  Contracts  and  Options.  The Fund may enter into  futures
contracts (or options thereon) for hedging purposes.  The acquisition or sale of
a futures  contract  could occur,  for example,  if the Fund held or  considered
purchasing  equity  securities and sought to protect itself from fluctuations in
prices without buying or selling those securities.  The Fund may also enter into
interest  rate and foreign  currency  futures  contracts.  Interest rate futures
contracts currently are traded on a variety of fixed-income securities.  Foreign
currency futures contracts  currently are traded on the British pound,  Canadian
dollar, Japanese yen, Swiss franc, German mark and on Eurodollar deposits.

             An option is a right to buy or sell a security at a specified price
within a  limited  period  of time.  The Fund may write  ("sell")  covered  call
options  on any or all of its  portfolio  securities  from  time  to time as the
Sub-advisor  shall deem  appropriate.  The extent of the Fund's  option  writing
activities  will  vary  from  time  to time  depending  upon  the  Sub-advisor's
evaluation of market, economic and monetary conditions.

             The Fund may  purchase  options on  securities  and stock  indices.
Options on stock indices are similar to options on securities.  However, because
options on stock indices do not involve the delivery of an underlying  security,
the option  represents  the  holder's  right to obtain from the writer in cash a
fixed multiple of the amount by which the exercise price exceeds (in the case of
a put) or is  less  than  (in the  case of a  call)  the  closing  value  of the
underlying index on the exercise date. The purpose of these  transactions is not
to generate gain, but to "hedge" against  possible loss.  Therefore,  successful
hedging  activity  will  not  produce  net gain to the  Fund.  The Fund may also
purchase  put and call  options  on  futures  contracts.  An option on a futures
contract  provides the holder with the right to enter into a "long"  position in
the  underlying  futures  contract,  in the case of a call option,  or a "short"
position in the underlying  futures contract,  in the case of a put option, at a
fixed exercise price to a stated expiration date. Upon exercise of the option by
the holder, a contract market clearing house  establishes a corresponding  short
position  for the  writer  of the  option,  in the case of a call  option,  or a
corresponding long position, in the case of a put option.

             The Fund will not, as to any  positions,  whether long,  short or a
combination  thereof,  enter into  futures  and  options  thereon  for which the
aggregate initial margins and premiums exceed 5% of the fair market value of its
total assets after taking into account  unrealized profits and losses on options
entered  into.  The Fund may buy and sell  options  on  foreign  currencies  for
hedging  purposes  in a manner  similar  to that in  which  futures  on  foreign
currencies would be utilized.  For an additional discussion of futures contracts
and  options  and the  risks  involved  therein,  see  this  Prospectus  and the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Temporary Investments.  Up to 100% of the assets of the Fund may be
invested  temporarily in U.S.  government  obligations,  commercial  paper, bank
obligations,   repurchase   agreements,   negotiable   U.S.   dollar-denominated
obligations of domestic and foreign  branches of U.S.  depository  institutions,
U.S.  branches  of  foreign  depository  institutions,  and  foreign  depository
institutions,  cash, or in other cash equivalents, if the Sub-advisor determines
it to be appropriate for purposes of enhancing  liquidity or preserving  capital
in light of  prevailing  market or economic  conditions.  While the Fund is in a
defensive  position,  the opportunity to achieve capital growth will be limited,
and, to the extent that this assessment of market  conditions is incorrect,  the
Fund will be foregoing the opportunity to benefit from capital growth  resulting
from increases in the value of equity investments.

             U.S.  government  obligations  include  Treasury  bills,  notes and
bonds, and issues of United States agencies,  authorities and instrumentalities.
Some government  obligations,  such as Government National Mortgage  Association
pass-through  certificates,  are  supported  by the full faith and credit of the
United States  Treasury.  Other  obligations,  such as securities of the Federal
Home Loan  Banks,  are  supported  by the right of the issuer to borrow from the
United States  Treasury;  and others,  such as bonds issued by Federal  National
Mortgage Association (a private  corporation),  are supported only by the credit
of the  agency,  authority  or  instrumentality.  The Fund  also may  invest  in
obligations  issued by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(IBRD or "World Bank").

             The Fund may also  acquire  certificates  of deposit  and  bankers'
acceptances  of banks which meet  criteria  established  by the Directors of the
Company, if any. A certificate of deposit is a short-term  obligation of a bank.
A bankers'  acceptance  is a time draft drawn by a borrower  on a bank,  usually
relating to an international commercial transaction.

             The obligations of foreign branches of U.S. depository institutions
may be general  obligations of the parent depository  institution in addition to
being an  obligation  of the issuing  branch.  These  obligations,  and those of
foreign  depository  institutions,  may be limited by the terms of the  specific
obligation and by  governmental  regulation.  The payment of these  obligations,
both interest and principal,  also may be affected by governmental action in the
country of domicile of the institution or branch, such as imposition of currency
controls and interest  limitations.  In connection with these  investments,  the
Fund will be  subject to the risks  associated  with the  holding  of  portfolio
securities overseas,  such as possible changes in investment or exchange control
regulations,  expropriation,  confiscatory  taxation,  or political or financial
instability.

             Obligations of U.S. branches of foreign depository institutions may
be general obligations of the parent depository institution in addition to being
an  obligation  of the  issuing  branch,  or may be  limited  by the  terms of a
specific  foreign  regulation  applicable to the depository  institutions and by
government regulation (both domestic and foreign).

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company,  the Fund may enter into  repurchase  agreements  with
banks or well-established  securities dealers. All repurchase agreements entered
into by the Fund will be fully  collateralized  and marked to market daily.  The
Fund has not  adopted  any limits on the amount of its total  assets that may be
invested in repurchase  agreements  which mature in less than seven days.  For a
discussion of repurchase agreements and certain risks involved therein, see this
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Portfolio  Turnover.  The  Fund  reserves  the  right  to sell  its
securities,  regardless of the length of time that they have been held,  when it
is  determined by the  Sub-advisor  that those  securities  have attained or are
unable to meet the  investment  objective  of the Fund.  The Fund may  engage in
short-term  trading and therefore  normally will have annual portfolio  turnover
rates  which are  considered  to be high and may be greater  than those of other
investment companies seeking capital appreciation.  Portfolio turnover rates may
also increase as a result of the need for the Fund to effect significant amounts
of purchases or redemptions of portfolio securities due to economic,  market, or
other factors that are not within the Sub-advisor's control. For a discussion of
portfolio  turnover and its effects,  see this  Prospectus and the Company's SAI
under "Portfolio Transactions."

ASAF T. ROWE PRICE SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The investment  objective of the Fund is to provide
long-term capital growth by investing primarily in  small-capitalization  stocks
that appear to be undervalued.

Investment Policies:

             Reflecting a value  approach to  investing,  the Fund will seek the
stocks of  companies  whose  current  stock  prices do not appear to  adequately
reflect their  underlying value as measured by assets,  earnings,  cash flow, or
business  franchises.  The Fund will invest at least 65% of its total  assets in
companies  with a  market  capitalization  of $1  billion  or less  that  appear
undervalued by various  measures,  such as  price/earnings  or price/book  value
ratios.

             Although the Fund will invest  primarily in U.S. common stocks,  it
may also purchase other types of securities,  for example,  foreign  securities,
convertible  stocks and bonds, and warrants when considered  consistent with the
Fund's investment objective and policies.  The Fund may also engage in a variety
of  investment  management  practices,  such as buying and  selling  futures and
options.

             In managing the Fund, the Sub-advisor will apply a value investment
approach. Value investors seek to buy a stock (or other security) when its price
is low relative to its perceived  worth.  They hope to identify  companies whose
stocks are currently out of favor or are not followed closely by stock analysts.
Often these stocks have above-average yields and offer the potential for capital
appreciation  as other  investors  recognize  their intrinsic value and drive up
their prices. Some of the principal measures used to identify such stocks are:

             (i) Price/Earnings  Ratio. Dividing a stock's price by its earnings
per share  generates a  price/earnings  or P/E ratio. A stock with a P/E that is
significantly  below  that of its  peers,  the  market  as a  whole,  or its own
historical norm may represent an attractive opportunity.

             (ii) Price/Book Value Ratio.  This ratio,  calculated by dividing a
stock's  price by its book  value  per  share,  indicates  how a stock is priced
relative to the accounting  (i.e.,  book) value of the company's assets. A ratio
below the  market,  that of its  competitors,  or its own  historic  norm  could
indicate an undervalued situation.

             (iii) Dividend Yield. Value investors look for undervalued  assets.
A stock's  dividend yield is found by dividing its annual  dividend by its share
price.  A yield  significantly  above a stock's own historic norm or that of its
peers may suggest an investment opportunity.

             (iv)  Price/Cash  Flow.  Dividing a stock's  price by the company's
cash flow per share,  rather than its  earnings  or book value,  provides a more
useful  measure of value in some  cases.  A ratio below that of the market or of
its peers suggests the market may be incorrectly valuing the company's cash flow
for reasons that may be temporary.

             (v) Undervalued  Assets.  This analysis  compares a company's stock
price with its underlying  asset values,  its projected value in the private (as
opposed to public)  market,  or its expected value if the company or parts of it
were sold or liquidated.

             (vi) Restructuring Opportunities. The market can react favorably to
the announcement or the successful  implementation of a corporate restructuring,
financial  reengineering,  or asset  redeployment.  Such events can result in an
increase in a company's  stock price.  A value  investor  may try to  anticipate
these actions and invest before the market  places an  appropriate  value on any
actual or expected changes.

             Risks of a Value Approach to Small-Cap  Investing.  Small companies
- -- those with a capitalization (market value) of $1 billion or less -- may offer
greater  potential for capital  appreciation  since they are often overlooked or
undervalued by investors. Small-capitalization stocks are less actively followed
by stock analysts than are larger-capitalization stocks, and less information is
available  to  evaluate  small-cap  stock  prices.  As a result,  compared  with
larger-capitalization  stocks,  there  may be  greater  variations  between  the
current stock price and the estimated  underlying  value,  which could represent
greater opportunity for appreciation.

             Investing  in  small  companies  involves  greater  risk as well as
greater  opportunity  than  is  customarily  associated  with  more  established
companies.  Stocks of small  companies  may be subject to more abrupt or erratic
price  movements  than larger company  securities.  Small  companies  often have
limited product lines, markets, or financial resources, and their management may
lack depth and experience.  In addition,  a value approach to investing includes
the risks that 1) the market will not recognize a security's intrinsic value for
an  unexpectedly  long time,  and 2) a stock that is judged to be undervalued is
actually  appropriately  priced due to intractable or fundamental  problems that
are not yet apparent.

             Common and Preferred  Stocks.  Stocks represent shares of ownership
in a company.  Generally,  preferred  stock has a specified  dividend  and ranks
after  bonds and  before  common  stocks in its  claim on  income  for  dividend
payments and on assets should the company be liquidated.  After other claims are
satisfied,  common  stockholders  participate  in company  profits on a pro rata
basis; profits may be paid out in dividends or reinvested in the company to help
it grow.  Increases  and  decreases  in  earnings  are  usually  reflected  in a
company's stock price, so common stocks generally have the greatest appreciation
and  depreciation  potential of all corporate  securities.  While most preferred
stocks pay a dividend,  the Fund may purchase  preferred  stock where the issuer
has omitted, or is in danger of omitting, payment of its dividend.
Such  investments  would  be  made  primarily  for  their  capital  appreciation
potential.

             Convertible Securities and Warrants. The Fund may invest in debt or
preferred  equity  securities   convertible  into  or  exchangeable  for  equity
securities.  Traditionally,   convertible  securities  have  paid  dividends  or
interest  at rates  higher  than  common  stocks but lower  than  nonconvertible
securities.  They generally  participate in the  appreciation or depreciation of
the underlying stock into which they are convertible, but to a lesser degree. In
recent years,  convertibles  have been  developed  which combine higher or lower
current  income with options and other  features.  Warrants are options to buy a
stated number of shares of common stock at a specified  price anytime during the
life of the warrants (generally, two or more years).

             Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may  invest  up to 20% of its  total
assets   (excluding    reserves)   in   foreign   securities.    These   include
nondollar-denominated    securities    traded    outside   of   the   U.S.   and
dollar-denominated  securities of foreign  issuers  traded in the U.S.  (such as
ADRs).  Some of the  countries in which the Fund may invest may be considered to
be developing and may involve special risks.  For a discussion of these risks as
well as the risks involved in investing in foreign securities,  in general,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Foreign Currency Transactions.  Investors in foreign securities may
"hedge" their exposure to potentially unfavorable currency changes by purchasing
a contract  to  exchange  one  currency  for  another on some  future  date at a
specified  exchange rate. In certain  circumstances,  a "proxy  currency" may be
substituted for the currency in which the investment is denominated,  a strategy
known as "proxy  hedging."  For a  discussion  of  foreign  currency  contracts,
certain  risks  involved  therein,  and  the  risks  of  currency   fluctuations
generally,  see this  Prospectus  and the  Company's  SAI under  "Certain  Risks
Factors and Investment Methods."

             Fixed Income Securities.  The Fund may invest in debt securities of
any type without regard to quality or rating. Such securities would be purchased
in companies that meet the investment criteria for the Fund. The price of a bond
fluctuates with changes in interest  rates,  rising when interest rates fall and
falling when interest rates rise.

             High-Yield/High-Risk  Investing.  The  Fund  will  not  purchase  a
noninvestment-grade  debt  security  (or junk  bond) if  immediately  after such
purchase the Fund would have more than 5% of its total  assets  invested in such
securities.  For a discussion  of the risks  involved in investing in high-yield
lower-rated  debt  securities,  see this  Prospectus and the Company's SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Hybrid  Instruments.  The Fund may  invest  up to 10% of its  total
assets in hybrid  instruments.  Hybrids  can have  volatile  prices and  limited
liquidity and their use by the Fund may not be successful.  These instruments (a
type of potentially  high-risk  derivative) can combine the  characteristics  of
securities, futures, and options. For example, the principal amount, redemption,
or conversion  terms of a security  could be related to the market price of some
commodity,  currency,  or securities index. Such securities may bear interest or
pay dividends at below market (or even relatively  nominal) rates. Under certain
conditions,  the  redemption  value of such an investment  could be zero.  For a
discussion of hybrid  investments,  see the  Company's  SAI under  "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment Methods."

             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company, the Fund may acquire illiquid securities (no more than
15% of net  assets).  For a  discussion  of  illiquid  securities  and the risks
involved therein, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Private Placements  (Restricted  Securities).  These securities are
sold directly to a small number of investors usually institutions. Unlike public
offerings,  such  securities are not registered  with the  Commission.  Although
certain of these  securities  may be readily sold,  for example under Rule 144A,
the sale of others may involve substantial delays and additional costs.  Subject
to guidelines  promulgated  by the  Directors of the Company,  the Fund will not
invest  more  than  15% of its  net  assets  in  illiquid  securities.  Illiquid
securities  do not include  securities  eligible for resale under Rule 144A that
have  been  determined  by  the  Sub-advisor  to  be  liquid  under   guidelines
promulgated  by the  Directors of the Company.  For a discussion of illiquid and
restricted  securities,  and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus and
the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Cash Position.  The Fund will hold a certain  portion of its assets
in U.S.  and  foreign  dollar-denominated  money  market  securities,  including
repurchase  agreements,  in the two highest rating  categories,  maturing in one
year or less. For  temporary,  defensive  purposes,  the Fund may invest without
limitation in such  securities.  This reserve position  provides  flexibility in
meeting redemptions, expenses, and the timing of new investments and serves as a
short-term defense during periods of unusual market volatility.

             Borrowing.  The Fund can borrow  money  from  banks as a  temporary
measure for emergency purposes,  to facilitate redemption requests, or for other
purposes  consistent  with the Fund's  investment  objective  and program.  Such
borrowings may be collateralized with Fund assets, subject to restrictions.  For
an  additional  discussion  of the Fund's  limitations  on borrowing and certain
risks involved in borrowing, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and
Investment  Methods"  and  the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental   Investment
Restrictions."

             Futures and Options.  The Fund may enter into futures contracts (or
options thereon) to hedge all or a portion of its portfolio,  as a hedge against
changes in prevailing levels of interest rates or currency exchange rates, or as
an efficient  means of adjusting its exposure to the bond,  stock,  and currency
markets.  The Fund will not use futures contracts for leveraging  purposes.  The
Fund may also write call and put options and  purchase  put and call  options on
securities, financial indices, and currencies. The aggregate market value of the
Fund's securities or currencies covering call or put options will not exceed 25%
of the Fund's total assets.  For an additional  discussion of futures  contracts
and options and the risks involved  therein,  see this Prospectus under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

ASAF ROBERTSON STEPHENS VALUE + GROWTH FUND:


     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
capital appreciation.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund will invest primarily in growth companies  believed by the
Sub-advisor to have favorable  relationships  between  price/earnings ratios and
growth rates in sectors offering the potential for above-average returns.

             In selecting  investments for the Fund, the  Sub-advisor's  primary
emphasis is typically on evaluating a company's  management,  growth  prospects,
business  operations,  revenues,  earnings,  cash flows,  and  balance  sheet in
relationship  to its share price.  The  Sub-advisor  may select  stocks which it
believes are undervalued relative to the current stock price.  Undervaluation of
a stock  can  result  from a  variety  of  factors,  such as a lack of  investor
recognition  of (1) the value of a  business  franchise  and  continuing  growth
potential,  (2) a  new,  improved  or  upgraded  product,  service  or  business
operation,  (3) a positive  change in either the economic or business  condition
for a company,  (4)  expanding  or changing  markets that provide a company with
either new earnings  direction or  acceleration,  or (5) a catalyst,  such as an
impending  or  potential  asset  sale or change in  management,  that could draw
increased investor attention to a company.  The Sub-advisor also may use similar
factors to identify stocks which it believes to be overvalued, and may engage in
short sales of such securities.

             The Fund may also  engage in the  following  investment  practices,
each of which involves certain special risks.

             Investments in Smaller Companies. The Fund may invest a substantial
portion of its assets in securities  issued by small  companies.  Such companies
may offer greater  opportunities for capital appreciation than larger companies,
but  investments  in such  companies may involve  certain  special  risks.  Such
companies may have limited product lines,  markets,  or financial  resources and
may be dependent on a limited  management group. While the markets in securities
of such companies have grown rapidly in recent years,  such securities may trade
less  frequently  and in smaller  volume than more widely held  securities.  The
values of these  securities  may  fluctuate  more  sharply  than  those of other
securities,  and the Fund may  experience  some  difficulty in  establishing  or
closing out positions in these securities at prevailing market prices. There may
be less publicly available  information about the issuers of these securities or
less market interest in such  securities  than in the case of larger  companies,
and it may take a longer  period of time for the  prices of such  securities  to
reflect  the full  value of their  issuers'  underlying  earnings  potential  or
assets.

             Some  securities of smaller  issuers may be restricted as to resale
or may otherwise be highly illiquid.  The ability of the Fund to dispose of such
securities  may be greatly  limited,  and the Fund may have to  continue to hold
such securities  during periods when the  Sub-advisor  would otherwise have sold
the security.  It is possible that the  Sub-advisor or its affiliates or clients
may hold  securities  issued by the same  issuers,  and may in some  cases  have
acquired the securities at different  times, on more favorable terms, or at more
favorable  prices,  than the Fund.  The Fund will not invest,  in the aggregate,
more than 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities.  Securities eligible for
resale under Rule 144A of the  Securities  Act of 1933 could be deemed  "liquid"
when saleable in a readily  available  market.  For a discussion of illiquid and
restricted  securities and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Short Sales.  When the Sub-advisor  anticipates that the price of a
security  will  decline,  it may sell the  security  short and  borrow  the same
security from a broker or other  institution  to complete the sale. The Fund may
make a profit or incur a loss  depending  upon  whether the market  price of the
security  decreases or increases between the date of the short sale and the date
on which the Fund must  replace the borrowed  security.  All short sales must be
fully  collateralized,   and  the  Fund  will  not  sell  securities  short  if,
immediately  after and as a result of the sale, the value of all securities sold
short by the Fund exceeds 25% of its total  assets.  The Fund limits short sales
of any one issuer's securities to 2% of the Fund's total assets and to 2% of any
one class of the issuer's securities.

             Foreign Securities. The Fund may invest up to 35% of its net assets
in securities  principally  traded in foreign markets.  The Fund may buy or sell
foreign  currencies and options and futures contracts on foreign  currencies for
hedging purposes in connection with its foreign investments.

             The  Fund may also at times  invest a  substantial  portion  of its
assets in securities of issuers in  developing  countries.  Although many of the
securities in which the Fund may invest are traded on securities exchanges,  the
Fund may trade in limited  volume,  and the exchanges may not provide all of the
conveniences or protections  provided by securities  exchanges in more developed
markets.  The Fund may  also  invest a  substantial  portion  of its  assets  in
securities traded in the  over-the-counter  markets in such countries and not on
any exchange,  which may affect the liquidity of the  investment  and expose the
Fund to the credit risk of their  counterparties  in trading those  investments.
For a discussion of the risks involved in investing in developing  countries and
investing  in foreign  securities  in  general,  including  the risk of currency
fluctuations,  see this  Prospectus  and the Company's  SAI under  "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment Methods."

             Debt  Securities.  The Fund may invest in debt securities from time
to time, if the Sub-advisor  believes that such  investments  might help achieve
the Fund's  investment  objective.  The  Sub-advisor  expects  that under normal
circumstances  the Fund will not  likely  invest a  substantial  portion  of its
assets in debt securities.

             The Fund will invest only in securities rated "investment grade" or
considered by the  Sub-advisor  to be of comparable  quality.  Investment  grade
securities are rated Baa or higher by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's)
or BBB or higher by Standard & Poor's Corporation ("S&P").  Securities rated Baa
or  BBB  lack   outstanding   investment   characteristics,   have   speculative
characteristics,  and are  subject  to  greater  credit  and  market  risks than
higher-rated  securities.   For  a  description  of  Moody's  and  S&P's  rating
categories, see the Appendix to the Company's SAI.


             The Fund may also  invest  in  so-called  "zero-coupon"  bonds  and
"payment-in-kind"  bonds. Zero-coupon bonds are issued at a significant discount
from face value and pay  interest  only at  maturity  rather  than at  intervals
during the life of the security.  Payment-in-kind bonds allow the issuer, at its
option,  to make  current  interest  payments on the bonds  either in cash or in
additional bonds. The values of zero-coupon bonds and payment-in-kind  bonds are
subject to greater  fluctuation in response to changes in market  interest rates
than bonds which pay interest  currently,  and may involve  greater  credit risk
than such bonds.


             The Fund will not  necessarily  dispose of a security when its debt
rating  is  reduced  below  its  rating at the time of  purchase,  although  the
Sub-advisor  will  monitor  the  investment  to  determine   whether   continued
investment  in the  security  will  assist  in  meeting  the  Fund's  investment
objective.

             Options and Futures. The Fund may buy and sell call and put options
to hedge  against  changes in net asset value or to attempt to realize a greater
current return. In addition,  through the purchase and sale of futures contracts
and related options, the Fund may at times seek to hedge against fluctuations in
net asset value and to attempt to increase its investment return.

             The Fund's ability to engage in options and futures strategies will
depend  on the  availability  of  liquid  markets  in  such  instruments.  It is
impossible  to predict the amount of trading  interest that may exist in various
types of options or futures contracts. Therefore, there is no assurance that the
Fund will be able to utilize  these  instruments  effectively  for the  purposes
stated above.

             The  Fund  expects  that  its  options  and  futures   transactions
generally  will be conducted on  recognized  exchanges.  The Fund may in certain
instances purchase and sell options in the over-the-counter  markets. The Fund's
ability to terminate options in the over-the-counter markets may be more limited
than for  exchange-traded  options,  and such transactions also involve the risk
that securities  dealers  participating in such transactions  would be unable to
meet  their  obligations  to  the  Fund.  The  Fund  will,  however,  engage  in
over-the-counter transactions only when appropriate exchange-traded transactions
are  unavailable  and when,  in the  opinion  of the  Sub-advisor,  the  pricing
mechanism and liquidity of the over-the-counter markets are satisfactory and the
participants are responsible parties likely to meet their obligations.

     Index  Futures  and  Options.  The  Fund  may buy and  sell  index  futures
contracts  ("index futures") and options on index futures and on indices (or may
purchase  warrants whose value is based on the value from time to time of one or
more  foreign  securities  indices) for hedging  purposes.  An index future is a
contract to buy or sell units of a  particular  bond or stock index at an agreed
price on a specified future date.  Depending on the change in value of the index
between the time when the Fund enters into and  terminates  an index  futures or
option transaction,  the Fund realizes a gain or loss. The Fund may also buy and
sell index futures and options to increase its investment return.

     LEAPs and BOUNDs.  The Fund may purchase long-term  exchange-traded  equity
options called Long-Term Equity Anticipation  Securities ("LEAPs") and Buy-Write
Options Unitary Derivatives  ("BOUNDs").  LEAPs provide a holder the opportunity
to participate in the underlying  securities'  appreciation in excess of a fixed
dollar amount,  and BOUNDs provide a holder the opportunity to retain  dividends
on the underlying  securities while potentially  participating in the underlying
securities' capital  appreciation up to a fixed dollar amount. The Fund will not
purchase  these  options  with  respect to more than 25% of the value of its net
assets.

             For a  discussion  of options and  futures  and the risks  involved
therein,  see this  Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

             Sector  Concentration.  At times, the Fund may invest more than 25%
of its assets in  securities  of issuers in one or more market  sectors such as,
for example,  the technology sector. A market sector may be made up of companies
in a  number  of  related  industries.  The  Fund  would  only  concentrate  its
investments in a particular market sector if the Sub-advisor were to believe the
investment  return  available from  concentration  in that sector  justifies any
additional  risk  associated with  concentration  in that sector.  When the Fund
concentrates its investments in a market sector, financial,  economic, business,
and other  developments  affecting  issuers in that  sector  will have a greater
effect on the Fund than if it had not  concentrated  its assets in that  sector.
The Fund may not  concentrate  its assets in securities of issuers  having their
principal business activities in a single industry.

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company, the Fund may enter into repurchase  agreements.  These
transactions must be fully collateralized at all times, but involve some risk to
the Fund if the other party should  default on its  obligations  and the Fund is
delayed or  prevented  from  recovering  the  collateral.  For a  discussion  of
repurchase  agreements and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Defensive  Strategies.  At times,  the  Sub-advisor  may judge that
market   conditions   make  pursuing  the  Fund's  basic   investment   strategy
inconsistent  with the best interests of its  shareholders.  At such times,  the
Sub-advisor may temporarily use alternative  strategies,  primarily  designed to
reduce  fluctuations in the values of the Fund's assets.  In implementing  these
"defensive" strategies, the Fund may invest in U.S. Government securities, other
high-quality debt instruments,  and other securities the Sub-advisor believes to
be consistent with the Fund's best interests.

     Portfolio Turnover.  The Fund may have higher portfolio turnover than other
mutual funds with similar objectives. For a discussion of portfolio turnover and
its  effects,  see  this  Prospectus  and the  Company's  SAI  under  "Portfolio
Transactions."


ASAF JANUS CAPITAL GROWTH FUND:

Investment Objective:  The investment objective of the Fund is to seek growth of
capital. Realization of income is not a significant investment consideration and
any income realized on the Fund's investments,  therefore, will be incidental to
the Fund's objective.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund will pursue its objective by investing primarily in common
stocks.  Common stock  investments  will be in industries and companies that the
Sub-advisor  believes are  experiencing  favorable demand for their products and
services,   and  which  operate  in  a  favorable   competitive  and  regulatory
environment.  Although  the  Sub-advisor  expects to invest  primarily in equity
securities,  the  Sub-advisor  may  increase  the Fund's cash  position  without
limitation  when the Sub-advisor is of the opinion that  appropriate  investment
opportunities for capital growth with desirable risk/reward  characteristics are
unavailable.  The Fund may also invest to a lesser  degree in preferred  stocks,
convertible securities, warrants, and debt securities when the Fund perceives an
opportunity  for  capital  growth from such  securities  or so that the Fund may
receive a return on its idle cash.  Debt  securities  that the Fund may purchase
include  corporate bonds and debentures (not to exceed 5% of net assets in bonds
rated below investment grade), government securities, mortgage- and asset-backed
securities,  zero-coupon bonds,  indexed/structured notes, high-grade commercial
paper,  certificates of deposit and repurchase  agreements.  For a discussion of
risks  involved in  lower-rated  securities,  mortgage-backed  and  asset-backed
securities  and zero coupon  bonds,  see this  Prospectus  and the Company's SAI
under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Although it is the general  policy of the Fund to purchase and hold
securities  for  capital  growth,  changes  in the  Fund  will  be  made  as the
Sub-advisor  deems  advisable.  For example,  portfolio  changes may result from
liquidity needs,  securities  having reached a price objective,  or by reason of
developments  not  foreseen  at the time of the  original  investment  decision.
Portfolio  changes may be effected  for other  reasons.  In such  circumstances,
investment income will increase and may constitute a large portion of the return
on the Fund and the Fund will not participate in the market advances or declines
to the extent that it would if it were fully invested.

             The Fund may invest in "special  situations"  from time to time.  A
"special  situation"  arises  when,  in  the  opinion  of the  Sub-advisor,  the
securities of a particular  company will be recognized  and  appreciate in value
due to a specific development, such as a technological breakthrough,  management
change or new  product  at that  company.  Investment  in  "special  situations"
carries an additional risk of loss in the event that the anticipated development
does not occur or does not attract the expected attention.

             Foreign  Securities.  The  Fund  may also  purchase  securities  of
foreign  issuers,  including  foreign equity and debt  securities and depositary
receipts.  Foreign  securities  are selected on a  stock-by-stock  basis without
regard to any defined allocation among countries or geographic regions. However,
certain  factors  such as  expected  levels of  inflation,  government  policies
influencing business  conditions,  the outlook for currency  relationships,  and
prospects for economic growth among  countries,  regions or geographic areas may
warrant greater  consideration in selecting  foreign stocks. No more than 25% of
the Fund's assets may be invested in foreign  securities  denominated in foreign
currency  and not publicly  traded in the United  States.  For a  discussion  of
depositary  receipts and the risks involved in investing in foreign  securities,
including  the  risk of  currency  fluctuations,  see  this  Prospectus  and the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Futures,  Options  and Other  Derivative  Instruments.  Subject  to
certain  limitations,  the Fund may  purchase and write  options on  securities,
financial indices,  and foreign currencies,  and may invest in futures contracts
on securities,  financial indices, and foreign currencies ("futures contracts"),
options on  futures  contracts,  forward  contracts  and swaps and  swap-related
products. These instruments will be used primarily to hedge the Fund's positions
against  potential  adverse  movements in securities  prices,  foreign  currency
markets or interest rates. To a limited extent, the Fund may also use derivative
instruments  for  non-hedging  purposes such as increasing  the Fund's income or
otherwise  enhancing return. The Fund will not use futures contracts and options
for leveraging  purposes.  There can be no assurance,  however,  that the use of
these  instruments  by the Fund  will  assist  it in  achieving  its  investment
objective.  The use of futures,  options,  forward  contracts and swaps involves
investment  risks and  transaction  costs to which the Fund would not be subject
absent the use of these  strategies.  The Sub-advisor may, from time to time, at
its  own  expense,  call  upon  the  experience  of  experts  to  assist  it  in
implementing  these  strategies.  The Fund may also use a  variety  of  currency
hedging  techniques,  including forward currency  contracts,  to manage exchange
rate risk with respect to investments exposed to foreign currency  fluctuations.
For an additional  discussion of futures and options  transactions and the risks
involved therein,  see this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment Methods."

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company, the Fund may enter into repurchase  agreements,  which
involve  the  purchase of a security  by the Fund and a  simultaneous  agreement
(generally  with a bank or dealer) to repurchase the security from the Fund at a
specified  date or upon demand.  The Fund's  repurchase  agreements  will at all
times be fully  collateralized.  Pursuant to an exemptive  order  granted by the
Commission,  the Fund and other funds advised by the  Sub-advisor  may invest in
repurchase agreements and other money market instruments through a joint trading
account.  For a  discussion  of  repurchase  agreements  and the risks  involved
therein,  see  this  Prospectus  under  "Certain  Risk  Factors  and  Investment
Methods."

             Reverse Repurchase Agreements.  The Fund is permitted to enter into
reverse repurchase agreements. In a reverse repurchase agreement, the Fund sells
a security and agrees to repurchase it at a mutually agreed upon date and price.
For a  discussion  of  reverse  repurchase  agreements  and the  risks  involved
therein,  see  this  Prospectus  under  "Certain  Risk  Factors  and  Investment
Methods."

             When-Issued,  Delayed Delivery and Forward  Transactions.  The Fund
may purchase  securities  on a  when-issued  or delayed  delivery  basis,  which
generally  involves the purchase of a security  with payment and delivery due at
some time in the  future.  The Fund does not earn  interest  on such  securities
until settlement and bears the risk of market value  fluctuations in between the
purchase and  settlement  dates.  For an additional  discussion  of  when-issued
securities  and certain  risks  involved  therein,  see the  Company's SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the  Company,  the Fund may also invest up to 15% of its net assets
in securities that are considered  illiquid  because of the absence of a readily
available  market  or due  to  legal  or  contractual  restrictions.  Securities
eligible  for  resale  under  Rule  144A  of the  Securities  Act of  1933,  and
commercial  paper issued under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933, could
be deemed "liquid" when saleable in a readily available market. For a discussion
of illiquid securities and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Lower-Rated  High-Yield  Bonds. The Fund may invest no more than 5%
of its net assets (at the time of investment) in lower-rated  high-yield  bonds.
For a discussion of these instruments and the risks involved  therein,  see this
Prospectus  and the  Company's SAI under  "Certain  Risk Factors and  Investment
Methods."

             Borrowing.  Subject to the Fund's  restrictions  on borrowing,  the
Fund  may  also  borrow  money  from  banks.  For a  discussion  of  the  Fund's
limitations  on borrowing  and certain  risks  involved in  borrowing,  see this
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods" and the Company's
SAI under "Fundamental Investment Restrictions."

             Portfolio Turnover. Because investment changes usually will be made
without  reference to the length of time a security has been held, a significant
number of short-term  transactions may result. To a limited extent, the Fund may
also purchase  individual  securities in anticipation  of relatively  short-term
price gains, and the rate of portfolio turnover will not be a determining factor
in the sale of such securities.  For a discussion of portfolio  turnover and its
effects,   see  this   Prospectus   and  the  Company's  SAI  under   "Portfolio
Transactions."

ASAF LORD ABBETT GROWTH AND INCOME FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective of the Fund is long-term
growth of capital and income while attempting to avoid excessive fluctuations in
market value.

Investment Policies:

             The  Sub-advisor  will try to keep the Fund's  assets  invested  in
those securities which are selling at reasonable prices in relation to value. To
do so, the Fund may forgo some  opportunities for gains when, in the judgment of
the  Sub-advisor,  they  carry  excessive  risk.  The  Sub-advisor  will  try to
anticipate  major changes in the economy and select stocks for the Fund which it
believes will benefit most from these changes.

             The  Fund  normally   will  invest  in  common  stocks   (including
securities  convertible  into  common  stocks) of seasoned  companies  which are
expected to show above-average  growth and which the Sub-advisor  believes to be
in sound financial condition. Although the prices of common stocks fluctuate and
their dividends vary, historically, common stocks held over long periods of time
have  appreciated in value and their dividends have increased when the companies
they represent have prospered and grown.

             The  Sub-advisor  will be constantly  balancing the opportunity for
profit  against the risk of loss for the Fund. In the past,  very few industries
have continuously  provided the best investment  opportunities.  The Sub-advisor
will take a flexible  approach  and  adjust  the Fund to reflect  changes in the
opportunity for sound investments relative to the risks assumed.  Therefore, the
Fund will sell  securities  that the  Sub-advisor  judges to be  overpriced  and
reinvest the proceeds in other securities  which the Sub-advisor  believes offer
better values.

             At such times that the Sub-advisor deems appropriate and consistent
with this Fund's  investment  objective,  the Fund may:  (a) write  covered call
options  which are  traded on a national  securities  exchange  with  respect to
securities  in the Fund;  (b)  invest up to 10% of the Fund's net assets (at the
time of investment) in foreign securities;  and (c) invest in straight bonds and
other  debt  securities,  including  lower-rated  high-yield  bonds.  It is  not
intended for the Fund to write  covered call options with respect to  securities
with an  aggregate  market  value of more than 10% of the Fund's gross assets at
the time an option is written. For a discussion of the risks involved in options
transactions  and in investing in  lower-rated  high-yield  debt  securities  or
foreign  securities,  see this  Prospectus  and the Company's SAI under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment  Methods." For an additional  description of covered
options, see the Company's SAI under "Investment Objectives and Policies."

             The Fund will not  purchase  securities  for trading  purposes.  To
create reserve purchasing power and also for temporary defensive  purposes,  the
Fund  may  invest  in  short-term  debt  and  other  high  quality  fixed-income
securities.

             Lower-Rated  High-Yield  Bonds. The Fund may invest no more than 5%
of its net assets (at the time of investment)  in  lower-rated  (BB/Ba or lower)
high-yield  bonds. For a description of these instruments and the risks involved
therein,  see this  Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

             Illiquid  Securities.  The  Fund  may  invest  up to 15% of its net
assets  in  securities  that are  illiquid  by  virtue  of legal or  contractual
restrictions on resale or the absence of a readily available market.  Subject to
guidelines  promulgated  by the Directors of the Company,  the  Sub-advisor  may
determine that certain  securities  eligible for resale pursuant to Rule 144A of
the  Securities  Act of 1933  are  liquid  and  therefore  not  subject  to this
limitation.  For a  discussion  of  these  instruments  and the  risks  involved
therein, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods"
and the Company's SAI under "Investment Objectives and Policies."

     Borrowing.  For a discussion  of  limitations  on borrowing by the Fund and
risks involved in borrowing, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and
Investment Methods."


ASAF INVESCO EQUITY INCOME FUND:

Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the Fund is to seek  high
current  income while  following  sound  investment  practices.  Capital  growth
potential is an  additional,  but secondary,  consideration  in the selection of
portfolio securities.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund seeks to achieve its  objective by investing in securities
which will provide a relatively  high yield and stable return and which,  over a
period of years, may also provide capital  appreciation.  The Fund normally will
invest at least 65% of its assets in  dividend-paying,  marketable common stocks
of domestic and foreign issuers.  Up to 10% of the Fund's assets may be invested
in  equity  securities  that do not pay  regular  dividends.  The Fund also will
invest in convertible bonds, preferred stocks and debt securities. In periods of
uncertain market and economic conditions,  as determined by the Directors of the
Company,  the Fund may depart from the basic  investment  objective and assume a
defensive  position  with up to 50% of its assets  temporarily  invested in high
quality corporate bonds, or notes and government issues, or held in cash.

             The Fund's investments in common stocks may, of course,  decline in
value.  To minimize  the risk this  presents,  the  Sub-advisor  only invests in
common stocks and equity  securities  of domestic and foreign  issuers which are
marketable;  and  will not  invest  more  than 5% of the  Fund's  assets  in the
securities  of any one company or more than 25% of the Fund's  assets in any one
industry.

             Debt  Securities.  The Fund's  investments in debt  securities will
generally be subject to both credit risk and market risk. Credit risk relates to
the ability of the issuer to meet  interest or principal  payments,  or both, as
they come due.  Market risk  relates to the fact that the market  values of debt
securities  in which the Fund invests  generally  will be affected by changes in
the level of interest  rates.  An increase in interest rates will tend to reduce
the market values of debt  securities,  whereas a decline in interest rates will
tend to increase their values.  Although the  Sub-advisor  will limit the Fund's
debt security  investments to securities it believes are not highly speculative,
both kinds of risk are increased by investing in debt securities rated below the
top four grades by Standard & Poor's Corporation ("Standard & Poor's) or Moody's
Investors  Services,  Inc.  ("Moody's") and unrated debt securities,  other than
Government National Mortgage Association modified pass-through certificates.

             In order to decrease its risk in investing in debt securities,  the
Fund will invest no more than 15% of its assets in debt  securities  rated below
AAA, AA, A or BBB by Standard & Poor's, or Aaa, Aa, A or Baa by Moody's,  and in
no event will the Fund ever invest in a debt security rated below Caa by Moody's
or CCC by Standard & Poor's.  Lower rated  bonds by Moody's  (categories  Ba, B,
Caa) are of poorer quality and may have speculative characteristics. Bonds rated
Caa may be in default or there may be present elements of danger with respect to
principal or interest. Lower rated bonds by Standard & Poor's (categories BB, B,
CCC) include those which are regarded, on balance, as predominantly  speculative
with  respect to the issuer's  capacity to pay  interest and repay  principal in
accordance  with their terms;  BB indicates the lowest degree of speculation and
CCC a high degree of speculation. While such bonds will likely have some quality
and protective  characteristics,  these are outweighed by large uncertainties or
major risk exposures to adverse conditions.
For a description securities ratings, see the Appendix to the Company's SAI.

             While the  Sub-advisor  will monitor all of the debt  securities in
the Fund for the  issuers'  ability  to make  required  principal  and  interest
payments and other quality  factors,  the  Sub-advisor  may retain in the Fund a
debt security whose rating is changed to one below the minimum  rating  required
for purchase of such a security.  For a discussion of the special risks involved
in lower-rated  bonds,  see this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Portfolio  Turnover.  There  are  no  fixed  limitations  regarding
portfolio turnover.  The rate of portfolio turnover may fluctuate as a result of
constantly  changing economic  conditions and market  circumstances.  Securities
initially satisfying the Fund's basic objectives and policies may be disposed of
when they are no longer  suitable.  As a result,  the  Fund's  annual  portfolio
turnover  rate may be higher  than that of other  investment  companies  seeking
current  income  with  capital  growth  as  a  secondary  consideration.  For  a
discussion of portfolio  turnover and its effects,  see this  Prospectus and the
Company's SAI under "Portfolio Transactions."

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company,  the Fund may enter into  repurchase  agreements  with
respect  to  debt  instruments  eligible  for  investment  by  the  Fund.  These
agreements  are entered  into with member banks of the Federal  Reserve  System,
registered  broker-dealers,  and registered  government securities dealers which
are deemed  creditworthy.  A repurchase agreement is a means of investing moneys
for a  short  period.  In a  repurchase  agreement,  the  Fund  acquires  a debt
instrument  (generally  a security  issued by the U.S.  Government  or an agency
thereof, a banker's acceptance or a certificate of deposit) subject to resale to
the seller at an agreed upon price and date  (normally,  the next business day).
In the event that the original  seller  defaults on its obligation to repurchase
the  security,  the Fund  could  incur  costs or delays in  seeking to sell such
security.  To minimize risk, the securities underlying each repurchase agreement
will be maintained with the Fund's  custodian in an amount at least equal to the
repurchase  price under the agreement  (including  accrued  interest),  and such
agreements will be effected only with parties that meet certain creditworthiness
standards  established by the Directors of the Company.  The Fund will not enter
into a repurchase agreement maturing in more than seven days if as a result more
than  15% of the  Fund's  net  assets  would  be  invested  in  such  repurchase
agreements and other illiquid securities.  The Fund has not adopted any limit on
the amount of its total  assets that may be invested  in  repurchase  agreements
maturing in seven days or less.

             Lending Portfolio Securities. The Fund also may lend its securities
to qualified  brokers,  dealers,  banks, or other financial  institutions.  This
practice  permits the Fund to earn income,  which,  in turn,  can be invested in
additional  securities  to pursue  the  Fund's  investment  objective.  Loans of
securities by the Fund will be  collateralized  by cash,  letters of credit,  or
securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or its agencies, equal to
at least 100% of the current market value of the loaned  securities,  determined
on  a  daily  basis.   Lending  securities  involves  certain  risks,  the  most
significant  of which is the risk that a borrower may fail to return a portfolio
security. The Sub-advisor monitors the creditworthiness of borrowers in order to
minimize such risks. The Fund will not lend any security if, as a result of such
loan, the aggregate value of securities then on loan would exceed 33 1/3% of the
Fund's total net assets (taken at market value). For an additional discussion of
the Fund's  limitations  on lending and certain risks  involved in lending,  see
this  Prospectus  under  "Certain Risk Factors and  Investment  Methods" and the
Company's SAI under "Fundamental Investment Restrictions."

             Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may  invest  up to 25% of its  total
assets in foreign securities. Investments in securities of foreign companies and
in  foreign  markets  involve  certain  additional  risks  not  associated  with
investments in domestic companies and markets.  The Fund may invest in countries
considered to be developing which may involve special risks. For a discussion of
these risks and the risks of investing in foreign  securities,  in general,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors  of the  Company,  the Fund may  invest up to 15% of its net assets in
securities  that are illiquid by virtue of legal or contractual  restrictions on
resale or the  absence of a readily  available  market.  The  Directors,  or the
Investment Manager or the Sub-advisor acting pursuant to authority  delegated by
the  Directors,  may  determine  that a  readily  available  market  exists  for
securities eligible for resale pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of
1933, or any successor to that rule, and therefore that such  securities are not
subject to the foregoing  limitation.  For a discussion of restricted securities
and the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

     Borrowing.  For a discussion  of the Fund's  limitations  on borrowing  and
certain risks  involved in borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under "Certain Risk
Factors  and  Investment  Methods"  and the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental
Investment Restrictions."



<PAGE>


ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
capital growth and current income.

Investment Policies:

             It is the Sub-advisor's  intention to maintain approximately 60% of
the Fund's assets in common stocks that are  considered  by the  Sub-advisor  to
have  better-than-average  prospects for appreciation and the remainder in bonds
and other fixed income securities.

             Equity  Investments.  With the  equity  portion  of the  Fund,  the
Sub-advisor  seeks capital growth by investing in securities,  primarily  common
stocks,  that meet  certain  fundamental  and  technical  standards of selection
(relating  primarily  to earnings  and revenue  acceleration)  and have,  in the
opinion of the Sub-advisor,  better-than-average  potential for appreciation. So
long as a sufficient  number of such  securities are available,  the Sub-advisor
intends  to keep  the  equity  portion  of the  Fund  fully  invested  in  these
securities  regardless of the movement of stock prices  generally.  The Fund may
purchase securities only of companies that have a record of at least three years
continuous operation.

             The  Sub-advisor  selects,  for the  equity  portion  of the  Fund,
securities of companies whose earnings and revenue trends meet the Sub-advisor's
standards  of  selection.  The size of the  companies  in which the Fund invests
tends  to  give  it its  own  characteristics  of  volatility  and  risk.  These
differences come about because  developments such as new or improved products or
methods, which would be relatively  insignificant to a large company, may have a
substantial  impact on the earnings and revenues of a small company and create a
greater demand and a higher value for its shares. However, a new product failure
which could  readily be absorbed by a large company can cause a rapid decline in
the value of the shares of a smaller  company.  Hence, it could be expected that
the volatility of the Fund will be impacted by the size of companies in which it
invests.

             Fixed  Income  Investments.  The  Sub-advisor  intends to  maintain
approximately 40% of the Fund's assets in fixed income securities, approximately
80%  of  which  will  be  invested  in  domestic  fixed  income  securities  and
approximately 20% of which will be invested in foreign fixed income  securities.
This  percentage  will  fluctuate  from  time to time and may be higher or lower
depending on the mix the  Sub-advisor  believes will provide the most  favorable
outlook  for  achieving  the Fund's  objectives.  A minimum of 25% of the Fund's
assets will be invested in fixed income senior securities.

             The fixed income  portion of the Fund will  include  U.S.  Treasury
securities,  securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or a foreign
government, or an agency or instrumentality of the U.S. or a foreign government,
and non-convertible debt obligations issued by U.S. or foreign corporations. The
Fund may also invest in mortgage-related and other asset-backed  securities.  As
with the  equity  portion  of the  Fund,  the bond  portion  of the Fund will be
diversified  among  the  various  types of fixed  income  investment  categories
described  above. The  Sub-advisor's  strategy is to actively manage the Fund by
investing the Fund's assets in sectors it believes are undervalued  (relative to
the other sectors) and which  represent  better  relative  long-term  investment
opportunities.

             The value of fixed income securities fluctuates based on changes in
interest  rates,  currency  values and the credit  quality  of the  issuer.  The
Sub-advisor  will  actively  manage the Fund,  adjusting  the  weighted  average
portfolio  maturity as  necessary  in  response to expected  changes in interest
rates. During periods of rising interest rates, the weighted average maturity of
the  Fund  may be moved to the  shorter  end of its  maturity  range in order to
reduce the effect of bond price  declines  on the Fund's net asset  value.  When
interest  rates are falling and bond prices are  rising,  the  weighted  average
portfolio maturity may be moved toward the longer end of its maturity range.

             Debt  securities  that  comprise  part of the Fund's  fixed  income
portfolio will primarily be limited to "investment grade" obligations.  However,
the Fund  may  invest  up to 10% of its  fixed  income  assets  in "high  yield"
securities.  "Investment  grade"  means  that  at the  time  of  purchase,  such
obligations  are  rated  within  the four  highest  categories  by a  nationally
recognized  statistical rating organization for example, at least Baa by Moody's
Investors  Service,  Inc.  ("Moody's")  or BBB by Standard & Poor's  Corporation
("S&P"), or, if not rated, are of equivalent investment quality as determined by
the  Sub-advisor.  According to Moody's,  bonds rated Baa are  medium-grade  and
possess some  speculative  characteristics.  A BBB rating by S&P indicates S&P's
belief that a security exhibits a satisfactory degree of safety and capacity for
repayment,  but is more vulnerable to adverse  economic  conditions and changing
circumstances.  "High yield" securities,  sometimes referred to as "junk bonds,"
are  higher  risk,   non-convertible  debt  obligations  that  are  rated  below
investment grade  securities,  or are unrated,  but with similar credit quality.
For a description of securities ratings, see the Appendix to the Company's SAI.

             There are no credit or maturity  restrictions  on the fixed  income
securities  in which the high yield  portion of the Fund may be  invested.  Debt
securities rated lower than Baa by Moody's or BBB by S&P or their equivalent are
considered  by  many  to  be  predominantly  speculative.  Changes  in  economic
conditions or other circumstances are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity
to make principal and interest payments on such securities than is the case with
higher quality debt securities. Regardless of rating levels, all debt securities
considered  for  purchase  by  the  Fund  are  analyzed  by the  Sub-advisor  to
determine,  to the extent reasonably  possible,  that the planned  investment is
sound, given the investment objective of the Fund. For an additional  discussion
of  lower-rated   securities  and  certain  risks  involved  therein,  see  this
Prospectus  and the  Company's SAI under  "Certain  Risk Factors and  Investment
Methods."

     Under normal market conditions,  the maturities of fixed-income  securities
in which the Fund invests will range from 2 to 30 years.

             In  determining  the  allocation  of assets  among U.S. and foreign
capital markets, the Sub-advisor considers the condition and growth potential of
the various  economies;  the relative  valuations  of the  markets;  and social,
political,  and  economic  factors  that may affect the  markets.  In  selecting
securities  in  foreign  currencies,  the  Sub-advisor  considers,  among  other
factors,  the impact of foreign exchange rates relative to the U.S. dollar value
of such  securities.  The  Sub-advisor  may seek to  hedge  all or a part of the
Fund's foreign  currency  exposure  through the use of forward foreign  currency
contracts or options thereon.

             Foreign Securities.  The Fund may invest up to 25% of its assets in
the  securities  of  foreign  issuers,  including  debt  securities  of  foreign
governments  and their agencies  primarily from  developed  markets,  when these
securities meet its standards of selection.  The Fund may make such  investments
either  directly in foreign  securities,  or by purchasing  depositary  receipts
("DRs") for foreign securities. DRs are securities listed on exchanges or quoted
in the  over-the-counter  market in one  country  but  represent  the  shares of
issuers  domiciled in other  countries.  DRs may be  sponsored  or  unsponsored.
Direct  investments  in  foreign  securities  may  be  made  either  on  foreign
securities exchanges or in the over-the-counter markets.

             The Fund may  invest  in  common  stocks,  convertible  securities,
preferred stocks, bonds, notes and other debt securities of foreign issuers, and
debt securities of foreign  governments  and their agencies.  The credit quality
standards  applicable  to  domestic  securities  purchased  by the Fund are also
applicable to its foreign  securities  investments.  For a discussion of certain
risks involved in investing in foreign  securities,  see this Prospectus and the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Forward Currency Exchange Contracts. Some of the foreign securities
held by the Fund may be denominated  in foreign  currencies.  Other  securities,
such as DRs,  may be  denominated  in U.S.  dollars,  but  have a value  that is
dependent on the performance of a foreign security, as valued in the currency of
its home country.  As a result, the value of the Fund may be affected by changes
in the exchange rates between foreign currencies and the U.S. dollar, as well as
by changes in the market values of the securities themselves. The performance of
foreign  currencies  relative to the U.S.  dollar may be a factor in the overall
performance of the Fund.

             To protect  against  adverse  movements in exchange  rates  between
currencies, the Fund may, for hedging purposes only, enter into forward currency
exchange  contracts  and buy put and call options  relating to currency  futures
contracts.  A forward currency exchange contract  obligates the Fund to purchase
or sell a specific currency at a future date at a specific price. An option is a
contractual  right  to  acquire  a  financial  asset,  such as a  security,  the
securities of a market index, a foreign currency or a foreign currency  exchange
contract,  at a  specified  price at the end of a specified  term.  The Fund may
elect to enter  into a forward  currency  exchange  contract  with  respect to a
specific purchase or sale of a security, or with respect to the Fund's positions
generally. By entering into a forward currency exchange contract with respect to
the specific  purchase or sale of a security  denominated in a foreign currency,
the Fund can "lock in" an exchange rate between the trade and  settlement  dates
for  that  purchase  or  sale.  This  practice  is  sometimes   referred  to  as
"transaction  hedging." The Fund may enter into  transaction  hedging  contracts
with respect to all or a substantial portion of its foreign securities trades.

             When  the  Sub-advisor  believes  that a  particular  currency  may
decline in value  compared to the U.S.  dollar,  the Fund may enter into forward
currency  exchange  contracts  to sell the  value  of some or all of the  Fund's
securities either denominated in, or whose value is tied to, that currency. This
practice is sometimes referred to as "portfolio hedging." The Fund may not enter
into a portfolio  hedging  transaction where it would be obligated to deliver an
amount of foreign  currency in excess of the  aggregate  value of its  portfolio
securities  or other  assets  denominated  in, or whose  value is tied to,  that
currency.  The Fund will make use of the portfolio  hedging to the extent deemed
appropriate by the  Sub-advisor.  However,  it is anticipated that the Fund will
enter into portfolio hedges much less frequently than transaction hedges.

             If the  Fund  enters  into  a  forward  contract,  the  Fund,  when
required,  will  instruct its custodian  bank to segregate  cash or other liquid
assets in a separate  account in an amount  sufficient  to cover its  obligation
under the  contract.  Those  assets will be valued at market  daily,  and if the
value of the segregated securities declines,  additional cash or securities will
be added so that the value of the  account  is not less  than the  amount of the
Fund's commitment. At any given time, no more than 10% of the Fund's assets will
be  committed to a  segregated  account in  connection  with  portfolio  hedging
transactions.

             Predicting  the  relative  future  values  of  currencies  is  very
difficult,  and there is no  assurance  that any  attempt  to  protect  the Fund
against adverse currency  movements through the use of forward currency exchange
contracts will be successful.  In addition, the use of forward currency exchange
contracts  tends to limit the potential  gains that might result from a positive
change in the  relationships  between the foreign  currency and the U.S. dollar.
For an additional  discussion of foreign currency  exchange  contracts,  certain
risks involved  therein and the risks of currency  fluctuations  generally,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Mortgage-Related  and Other Asset-Backed  Securities.  The Fund may
purchase   mortgage-related   and  other   asset-backed   securities.   Mortgage
pass-through  securities  are  securities  representing  interests in "pools" of
mortgages in which payments of both interest and principal on the securities are
generally made monthly, in effect "passing through" monthly payments made by the
individual  borrowers  on the  residential  mortgage  loans  that  underlie  the
securities (net of fees paid to the issuer or guarantor of the securities).

             Payment of  principal  and interest on some  mortgage  pass-through
securities  (but not the  market  value  of the  securities  themselves)  may be
guaranteed  by the full faith and credit of the U.S.  government  in the case of
securities guaranteed by the Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA), or
guaranteed by agencies or  instrumentalities  of the U.S. government in the case
of securities  guaranteed by the Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA) or
the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC),  which are supported only by
the  discretionary  authority  of the U.S.  government  to purchase the agency's
obligations.

             Mortgage pass-through securities created by nongovernmental issuers
(such as  commercial  banks,  savings and loan  institutions,  private  mortgage
insurance companies, mortgage bankers and other secondary market issuers) may be
supported  by various  forms of insurance or  guarantees,  including  individual
loan,  title,  pool and hazard  insurance  and  letters of credit,  which may be
issued by governmental entities, private insurers, or the mortgage poolers.

             The Fund may also  invest in  collateralized  mortgage  obligations
(CMOs).  CMOs are  mortgage-backed  securities  issued by  government  agencies;
single-purpose,   stand-alone  financial  subsidiaries;  trusts  established  by
financial institutions; or similar institutions. The Fund may buy CMOs that are:
(i)  collateralized  by pools of  mortgages in which  payment of  principal  and
interest of each mortgage is guaranteed by an agency or  instrumentality  of the
U.S.  government;  (ii) collateralized by pools of mortgages in which payment of
principal  and  interest  are  guaranteed  by the issuer,  and the  guarantee is
collateralized by U.S. government  securities;  or (iii) securities in which the
proceeds  of the issue are  invested  in  mortgage  securities  and  payments of
principal   and  interest   are   supported  by  the  credit  of  an  agency  or
instrumentality  of the U.S.  government.  For a  discussion  of  certain  risks
involved  in  mortgage  related  and  other  asset-back  securities,   see  this
Prospectus  and the  Company's SAI under  "Certain  Risk Factors and  Investment
Methods."

             Portfolio  Turnover.  Investment  decisions  to  purchase  and sell
securities are based on the anticipated contribution of the security in question
to the Fund's objectives.  The rate of portfolio turnover is irrelevant when the
Sub-advisor  believes  a change  is in order to  achieve  those  objectives  and
accordingly,  the annual  portfolio  turnover  rate cannot be  anticipated.  The
portfolio  turnover  of the Fund may be higher  than  other  mutual  funds  with
similar  investment  objectives.  For a discussion of portfolio turnover and its
effects,   see  this   Prospectus   and  the  Company's  SAI  under   "Portfolio
Transactions."

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company, the Fund may invest in repurchase agreements when such
transactions  present  an  attractive  short-term  return  on  cash  that is not
otherwise  committed to the purchase of  securities  pursuant to the  investment
policies of the Fund.

             The Fund will limit repurchase agreement transactions to securities
issued by the U.S.  government,  its  agencies and  instrumentalities,  and will
enter into such  transactions  with those banks and  securities  dealers who are
deemed  creditworthy  pursuant  to  criteria  adopted  by the  Directors  of the
Company.  The Fund  will  invest no more  than 15% of its  assets in  repurchase
agreements  maturing in more than seven days.  For a  discussion  of  repurchase
agreements  and  certain  risks  involved  therein,  see this  Prospectus  under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Derivative  Securities.  To the extent  permitted by its investment
objectives  and policies,  the Fund may invest in  securities  that are commonly
referred to as "derivative"  securities.  Generally, a derivative is a financial
arrangement  the value of which is based on, or "derived"  from,  a  traditional
security,  asset,  or  market  index.  Certain  derivative  securities  are more
accurately   described  as   "index/structured"   securities.   Index/structured
securities  are  derivative  securities  whose value or performance is linked to
other equity  securities  (such as depositary  receipts),  currencies,  interest
rates, indices or other financial indicators ("reference indices").

             Some "derivatives" such as mortgage-related  and other asset-backed
securities are in many respects like any other investment,  although they may be
more volatile or less liquid than more traditional debt securities.

             There are many different  types of  derivatives  and many different
ways to use them. Futures and options are commonly used for traditional  hedging
purposes to attempt to protect a fund from exposure to changing  interest rates,
securities  prices, or currency exchange rates and for cash management  purposes
as a low-cost  method of gaining  exposure  to a  particular  securities  market
without investing directly in those securities.

             The  Fund  may not  invest  in a  derivative  security  unless  the
reference index or the instrument to which it relates is an eligible  investment
for the Fund. For example,  a security whose  underlying  value is linked to the
price of oil would not be a permissible investment since the Fund may not invest
in oil and gas  leases or  futures.  The  return on a  derivative  security  may
increase  or  decrease,  depending  upon  changes  in  the  reference  index  or
instrument to which it relates.

             There are a range of risks associated with derivative  investments,
including: the risk that the underlying security, interest rate, market index or
other   financial   asset  will  not  move  in  the  direction  the  Sub-advisor
anticipates;  the possibility that there may be no liquid secondary  market,  or
the possibility  that price  fluctuation  limits may be imposed by the exchange,
either of which may make it difficult or impossible to close out a position when
desired;  the risk that adverse price movements in an instrument can result in a
loss substantially greater than the Fund's initial investment; and the risk that
the  counterparty  will fail to perform its  obligations.  For a  discussion  of
certain risks involved in investing in derivative securities,  including futures
and options contracts,  see this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             When-Issued  Transactions.  The Fund  may  sometimes  purchase  new
issues of securities  on a when-issued  basis without limit when, in the opinion
of the Sub-advisor, such purchases will further the investment objectives of the
Fund.  For a discussion of  when-issued  securities  and certain risks  involved
therein,  see the  Company's  SAI under  "Certain  Risk  Factors and  Investment
Methods."

             Short Sales.  The Fund may engage in short sales if, at the time of
the short sale, the Fund owns or has the right to acquire an equal amount of the
security being sold short at no additional  cost. These  transactions  allow the
Fund to  hedge  against  price  fluctuations  by  locking  in a sale  price  for
securities it does not wish to sell immediately.

   
             The Fund may make a short  sale when it wants to sell the  security
it owns at a current  attractive  price but also wishes to defer  recognition of
gain or loss for federal  income tax  purposes,  and for purposes of  satisfying
certain tests  applicable to regulated  investment  companies under the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 (the "Code") and Regulations.
    

             Rule 144A  Securities.  The Fund may,  from time to time,  purchase
Rule 144A securities when they present attractive investment  opportunities that
otherwise  meet the Fund's  criteria for  selection.  Rule 144A  securities  are
securities   that  are  privately   placed  with  and  traded  among   qualified
institutional  buyers  rather  than  the  general  public.  Although  Rule  144A
securities  are considered  "restricted  securities,"  they are not  necessarily
illiquid.

             With respect to securities eligible for resale under Rule 144A, the
Staff of the  Commission  has  taken the  position  that the  liquidity  of such
securities  in the  portfolio  of a fund  offering  redeemable  securities  is a
question of fact for the board of directors to determine,  such determination to
be based upon a consideration of the readily  available  trading markets and the
review  of any  contractual  restrictions.  Accordingly,  the  Directors  of the
Company are  responsible  for  developing  and  establishing  the guidelines and
procedures for determining the liquidity of Rule 144A securities.  As allowed by
Rule 144A, the Directors of the Company have  delegated the day-to-day  function
of determining  the liquidity of Rule 144A  securities to the  Sub-advisor.  The
Directors  retain  the  responsibility  to  monitor  the  implementation  of the
guidelines and procedures they have adopted.

             Since the  secondary  market  for such  securities  is  limited  to
certain qualified institutional  investors, the liquidity of such securities may
be limited  accordingly  and the Fund may,  from time to time,  hold a Rule 144A
security  that is illiquid.  In such an event,  the  Sub-advisor  will  consider
appropriate  remedies to minimize the effect on the Fund's  liquidity.  The Fund
may not invest  more than 15% of its assets in illiquid  securities  (securities
that may not be sold  within  seven  days at  approximately  the  price  used in
determining the net asset value of Fund shares). For an additional discussion of
Rule 144A  securities  and illiquid  and  restricted  securities,  and the risks
involved therein, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

     Borrowing.  For a discussion  of the Fund's  limitations  on borrowing  and
certain risks  involved in borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under "Certain Risk
Factors  and  Investment  Methods"  and the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental
Investment Restrictions."

ASAF FEDERATED HIGH YIELD BOND FUND:

Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the Fund is to seek  high
current  income by investing  primarily in fixed  income  securities.  The fixed
income securities in which the Fund intends to invest are lower-rated  corporate
debt  obligations.  Lower-rated debt obligations are generally  considered to be
high risk investments.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund will invest at least 65% of its assets in lower-rated (BBB
or lower) corporate debt obligations. Under normal circumstances,  the Fund will
not invest more than 10% of the value of its total assets in equity  securities.
The fixed income  securities in which the Fund may invest  include,  but are not
limited to: preferred stocks, convertible securities,  bonds, debentures, notes,
equipment lease certificates and equipment trust certificates.

             Other permitted investments for the Fund currently include, but are
not limited  to, the  following:  commercial  paper;  obligations  of the United
States;  notes,  bonds,  and discount  notes of the  following  U.S.  government
agencies  or  instrumentalities:  Federal  Home  Loan  Banks,  Federal  National
Mortgage  Association,  Government National Mortgage  Association,  Federal Farm
Credit  Banks,  Tennessee  Valley  Authority,  Export-Import  Bank of the United
States,  Commodity  Credit  Corporation,  Federal  Financing Bank,  Student Loan
Marketing  Association,  Federal  Home Loan  Mortgage  Corporation,  or National
Credit Union Administration;  time and savings deposits (including  certificates
of deposit) in  commercial  or savings  banks whose  deposits are insured by the
Bank Insurance Fund ("BIF"), or the Savings Association Insurance Fund ("SAIF"),
including  certificates  of deposit issued by and other time deposits in foreign
branches of  BIF-insured  banks;  bankers'  acceptances  issued by a BIF-insured
bank, or issued by the bank's Edge Act  subsidiary  and  guaranteed by the bank,
with remaining  maturities of nine months or less. The total  acceptances of any
bank held by the Fund cannot  exceed 0.25 of 1% of such  bank's  total  deposits
according to the bank's last published statement of condition preceding the date
of acceptance; and general obligations of any state, territory, or possession of
the United States, or their political  subdivisions,  so long as they are either
(1) rated in one of the four highest grades by nationally recognized statistical
rating  organizations or (2) issued by a public housing agency and backed by the
full faith and credit of the United States.

             The  corporate  debt  obligations  in which the Fund may invest are
generally  rated BBB or lower by  Standard  & Poor's  Corporation  ("Standard  &
Poor's") or Baa or lower by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's"),  or are
not rated but are determined by the Sub-advisor to be of comparable quality. For
a description  of  securities  ratings,  see the Appendix to the Company's  SAI.
There is no lower limit with  respect to rating  categories  for  securities  in
which the Fund may invest.

             Special Risks of Lower-Rated  Debt Obligations or "Junk Bonds." The
corporate  debt  obligations  in which the Fund  invests  are usually not in the
three highest rating categories of a nationally  recognized rating  organization
(AAA,  AA, or A for  Standard & Poor's and Aaa, Aa or A for  Moody's) but are in
the lower rating  categories  or are unrated but are of  comparable  quality and
have  speculative  characteristics  or are  speculative.  Lower-rated or unrated
bonds are commonly  referred to as "junk bonds." There is no minimal  acceptable
rating for a security  to be  purchased  or held in the Fund,  and the Fund may,
from  time to time,  purchase  or hold  securities  rated in the  lowest  rating
category or securities in default.

             Lower-rated  securities  will  usually  offer  higher  yields  than
higher-rated  securities.  However,  there is more risk of loss of principal and
interest  associated  with  these  investments.   This  is  because  of  reduced
creditworthiness and increased risk of default. Lower-rated securities generally
tend to reflect short-term corporate and market developments to a greater extent
than  higher-rated  securities  which react  primarily  to  fluctuations  in the
general level of interest rates.  Short-term  corporate and market  developments
affecting  the prices or  liquidity  of  lower-rated  securities  could  include
adverse news affecting  major issuers,  underwriters,  or dealers in lower-rated
securities.  In  addition,  since  there  are  fewer  investors  in  lower-rated
securities, it may be harder to sell the securities at an optimum time.

             As a result of these factors,  lower-rated  securities tend to have
more  price  volatility  and  carry  more  risk to  principal  and  income  than
higher-rated securities.  An economic downturn may adversely affect the value of
some lower-rated  bonds.  Such a downturn may especially affect highly leveraged
companies or companies in cyclically sensitive  industries,  where deterioration
in a company's  cash flow may impair its ability to meet its  obligation  to pay
principal and interest to bondholders in a timely fashion. From time to time, as
a result of changing conditions, issuers of lower-rated bonds may seek or may be
required to restructure  the terms and  conditions of the  securities  they have
issued. As a result of these restructurings,  holders of lower-rated  securities
may receive less  principal and interest than they had bargained for at the time
such bonds were purchased.  In the event of a  restructuring,  the Fund may bear
additional legal or  administrative  expenses in order to maximize recovery from
an issuer.

             The secondary  trading  market for  lower-rated  bonds is generally
less liquid than the secondary  trading market for higher-rated  bonds.  Certain
institutions, including federally insured savings and loan associations, may not
legally purchase and hold lower-rated  bonds, which could have an adverse impact
on the overall liquidity of the market.  Adverse publicity and the perception of
investors  relating to issuers,  underwriters,  dealers or  underlying  business
conditions,  whether or not warranted by fundamental  analysis,  may also affect
the price or liquidity of  lower-rated  bonds.  On occasion,  therefore,  it may
become  difficult to price or dispose of a particular  security in the Fund. For
an additional  discussion of the risks involved in lower-rated  securities,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Illiquid  and   Restricted   Securities.   Subject  to   guidelines
promulgated  by the  Directors of the Company,  the Fund may acquire  securities
which are  subject to legal or  contractual  delays,  restrictions  and costs on
resale.  As  a  matter  of  investment  policy  which  can  be  changed  without
shareholder  approval,  the Fund will not invest more than 15% of its net assets
in illiquid securities,  which include certain private placements not determined
to be liquid  under  criteria  established  by the  Directors of the Company and
repurchase  agreements  providing  for  settlement in more than seven days after
notice.  Securities eligible for resale under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of
1933,  and  commercial  paper issued under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of
1933, could be deemed "liquid" when saleable in a readily available market.  For
an additional  discussion of illiquid and restricted  securities,  and the risks
involved therein, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             When-Issued  and  Delayed  Delivery  Transactions.   The  Fund  may
purchase  securities on a when-issued or delayed  delivery basis. In when-issued
and delayed delivery transactions, the Fund relies on the seller to complete the
transaction. The seller's failure to complete the transaction may cause the Fund
to miss a price  or  yield  considered  to be  advantageous.  For an  additional
discussion of these  transactions  and certain risks involved  therein,  see the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Temporary  Investments.  The Fund may also  invest all or a part of
its assets  temporarily  in cash or cash  items  during  time of unusual  market
conditions  for  defensive  purposes  or to maintain  liquidity.  Cash items may
include,  but are not limited to:  certificates  of  deposit;  commercial  paper
(generally  lower-rated);  short-term notes; obligations issued or guaranteed as
to  principal  and  interest by the U.S.  government  or any of its  agencies or
instrumentalities; and repurchase agreements.

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors  of the Company,  the Fund may enter into  repurchase  agreements  and
certain  securities  in which the Fund  invests  may be  purchased  pursuant  to
repurchase agreements. For an additional discussion of repurchase agreements and
the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and
Investment Methods."

     Borrowing.  For a discussion  of the Fund's  limitations  on borrowing  and
certain risks  involved in borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under "Certain Risk
Factors  and  Investment  Methods"  and the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental
Investment Restrictions."

             Zero Coupon Bonds. The Fund may, from time to time, own zero coupon
bonds or pay-in-kind  securities.  A zero coupon bond makes no periodic interest
payments and the entire obligation  becomes due only upon maturity.  Pay-in-kind
securities  make  periodic  payments in the form of  additional  securities  (as
opposed to cash). The price of zero coupon bonds and pay-in-kind  securities are
generally more sensitive to fluctuations in interest rates than are conventional
bonds. Additionally, federal tax law requires that interest on zero coupon bonds
and  pay-in-kind  securities  be  reported as income to the Fund even though the
Fund  received  no cash  interest  until the  maturity  or payment  date of such
securities.

             Many corporate debt obligations,  including many lower-rated bonds,
permit the issuers to call the  security and thereby  redeem  their  obligations
earlier than the stated  maturity  dates.  Issuers are more likely to call bonds
during periods of declining  interest  rates. In these cases, if the Fund owns a
bond which is called, the Fund will receive its return of principal earlier than
expected and would likely be required to reinvest the proceeds at lower interest
rates,  thus reducing  income to the Fund. For an additional  discussion of zero
coupon bonds,  see the Company's SAI under  "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may  invest  up to 10% of its  total
assets in foreign securities which are not publicly traded in the United States.
For a discussion of the risks involved in investing in foreign  securities,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Reducing Risks of Lower-Rated Securities.  The Sub-advisor believes
that the risks of investing in lower-rated securities may be reduced. There can,
however,  be no  assurances  that such  risks  will  actually  be reduced by the
following methods. The professional  portfolio management techniques used by the
Sub-advisor to attempt to reduce these risks include:

     Credit  Research.  The Sub-advisor  will perform its own credit analysis in
addition to using nationally  recognized rating organizations and other sources,
including  discussions  with the  issuer's  management,  the  judgment  of other
investment  analysts,  and its own informed judgment.  The Sub-advisor's  credit
analysis will consider the issuer's financial  soundness,  its responsiveness to
changes in interest  rates and business  conditions,  and its  anticipated  cash
flow, interest,  or dividend coverage and earnings. In evaluating an issuer, the
Sub-advisor  places  special  emphasis  on the  estimated  current  value of the
issuer's assets rather than historical cost.

     Diversification.  The  Sub-advisor  invests in securities of many different
issuers, industries, and economic sectors to reduce portfolio risk.

     Economic  Analysis.  The Sub-advisor will analyze current  developments and
trends  in  the  economy  and  in  the  financial  markets.  When  investing  in
lower-rated  securities,  timing and selection are critical, and analysis of the
business cycle can be important.

ASAF TOTAL RETURN BOND FUND:

Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund  is to  seek to
maximize total return,  consistent with preservation of capital. The Sub-advisor
will seek to employ  prudent  investment  management  techniques,  especially in
light of the broad range of investment instruments in which the Fund may invest.

Investment Policies:

             In selecting  securities for the Fund, the Sub-advisor will utilize
economic forecasting, interest rate anticipation, credit and call risk analysis,
foreign  currency  exchange  rate  forecasting,  and  other  security  selection
techniques.  The  proportion  of the Fund's  assets  committed to  investment in
securities with particular  characteristics  (such as maturity,  type and coupon
rate) will vary based on the  Sub-advisor's  outlook  for the U.S.  and  foreign
economies,  the  financial  markets and other  factors.  The Fund will invest at
least 65% of its assets in the following types of securities which may be issued
by domestic  or foreign  entities  and  denominated  in U.S.  dollars or foreign
currencies: securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies
or   instrumentalities;   corporate  debt  securities,   including   convertible
securities and commercial  paper;  mortgage and other  asset-backed  securities;
inflation-indexed bonds issued by both governments and corporations;  structured
notes,  including  hybrid  or  "indexed"  securities,  and loan  participations;
variable and floating rate debt securities;  bank certificates of deposit, fixed
time  deposits  and  bankers'  acceptances;  repurchase  agreements  and reverse
repurchase agreements; obligations of foreign governments or their subdivisions,
agencies  and   instrumentalities,   international   agencies  or  supranational
entities; and foreign currency  exchange-related  securities,  including foreign
currency warrants.

             The  Fund  will  invest  in  fixed-income   securities  of  varying
maturities.  The  average  portfolio  duration of the Fund  generally  will vary
within a three- to six-year time frame based on the  Sub-advisor's  forecast for
interest  rates.  The Fund may  invest up to 10% of its  assets in fixed  income
securities  that are  rated  below  investment  grade  but  rated B or higher by
Moody's Investors  Services,  Inc.  ("Moody's") or Standard & Poor's Corporation
("S&P")  (or, if unrated,  determined  by the  Sub-advisor  to be of  comparable
quality). The Fund will maintain an overall  dollar-weighted  average quality of
at least A (as rated by Moody's  or S&P).  In the event  that  ratings  services
assign  different  ratings to the same security,  the Sub-advisor will determine
which rating it believes best reflects the  security's  quality and risk at that
time, which may be the higher of the several assigned ratings.  Securities rated
B are judged to be  predominantly  speculative with respect to their capacity to
pay  interest  and  repay   principal  in  accordance  with  the  terms  of  the
obligations.  The  Sub-advisor  will seek to reduce  the risks  associated  with
investing in such  securities by limiting the Fund's holdings in such securities
and by the  depth of its own  credit  analysis.  For a  discussion  of the risks
involved in lower-rated  high-yield bonds, see this Prospectus and the Company's
SAI under  "Certain Risk Factors and  Investment  Methods." For a description of
securities ratings, see the Appendix to the Company's SAI.

             The  Fund  may  invest  up to  20%  of  its  assets  in  securities
denominated  in foreign  currencies,  and may invest  beyond  this limit in U.S.
dollar-denominated   securities  of  foreign  issuers.  Fund  holdings  will  be
concentrated  in areas of the bond market (based on quality,  sector,  coupon or
maturity) which the Sub-advisor believes to be relatively undervalued.

             The Fund may buy or sell interest rate futures  contracts,  options
on  interest  rate  futures  contracts  and options on debt  securities  for the
purpose of hedging  against  changes in the value of  securities  which the Fund
owns or anticipates purchasing due to anticipated changes in interest rates. The
Fund may engage in foreign  currency  transactions.  Foreign  currency  exchange
transactions may be entered into the purpose of hedging against foreign currency
exchange risk arising from the Fund's  investment or  anticipated  investment in
securities denominated in foreign currencies.

             The Fund  may  enter  into  swap  agreements  for the  purposes  of
attempting to obtain a particular  investment return at a lower cost to the Fund
than if the Fund had  invested  directly in an  instrument  that  provided  that
desired  return.  In addition,  the Fund may purchase and sell  securities  on a
when-issued  and delayed  delivery  basis and enter into forward  commitments to
purchase securities; lend its securities to brokers, dealers and other financial
institutions to earn income; and borrow money for investment purposes.

             The "total  return" sought by the Fund will consist of interest and
dividends  from  underlying   securities,   capital  appreciation  reflected  in
unrealized  increases  in value of  portfolio  securities  or realized  from the
purchase  and sale of  securities,  and use of futures and options or gains from
favorable changes in foreign currency exchange rates.  Generally,  over the long
term,  the total  return  obtained by a portfolio  investing  primarily in fixed
income securities is not expected to be as great as that obtained by a portfolio
investing in equity securities. At the same time, the market risk and volatility
of a fixed  income  portfolio  is  expected  to be less  than  that of an equity
portfolio, so that a fixed income portfolio is generally considered to be a more
conservative  investment.  The  change  in the  market  value  of  fixed  income
securities (and therefore their capital appreciation or depreciation) is largely
a function of changes in the  current  level of interest  rates.  When  interest
rates are  falling,  a  portfolio  with a shorter  duration  generally  will not
generate as high a level of total return as a portfolio with a longer  duration.
Conversely,  when interest rates are rising, a portfolio with a shorter duration
will generally  outperform longer duration  portfolios.  When interest rates are
flat, shorter duration portfolios  generally will not achieve as high a level of
return as longer duration portfolios (assuming that long-term interest rates are
higher than short-term interest rates, which is commonly the case). With respect
to the composition of any fixed-income portfolio, the longer the duration of the
portfolio,  the greater the potential for total return,  with, however,  greater
attendant  market risk and price  volatility than for a portfolio with a shorter
duration.  The market value of securities  denominated in currencies  other than
U.S.  dollars  also may be affected by movements  in foreign  currency  exchange
rates.

             The  Fund's  investments  include,  but are  not  limited  to,  the
following:

             U.S.  Government   Securities.   U.S.  Government   securities  are
obligations  of,  or  guaranteed  by,  the  U.S.  Government,  its  agencies  or
instrumentalities.  Some U.S.  Government  securities,  such as Treasury  bills,
notes and bonds, and securities  guaranteed by the Government  National Mortgage
Association  ("GNMA"),  are supported by the full faith and credit of the United
States;  others,  such as those of the Federal Home Loan Banks, are supported by
the right of the issuer to borrow from the U.S. Treasury;  others, such as those
of the Federal  National  Mortgage  Association  ("FNMA"),  are supported by the
discretionary  authority  of  the  U.S.  Government  to  purchase  the  agency's
obligations;  and still others, such as the Student Loan Marketing  Association,
are supported only by the credit of the instrumentality.

             Corporate  Debt  Securities.   Corporate  debt  securities  include
corporate bonds, debentures, notes and other similar corporate debt instruments,
including convertible securities.  Debt securities may be acquired with warrants
attached.  Corporate  income-producing  securities  may  also  include  forms of
preferred or preference stock. The rate of return or return of principal on some
debt obligations may be linked or indexed to the level of exchange rates between
the U.S.  dollar and a foreign  currency or currencies.  Investment in corporate
debt  securities that are below  investment  grade (rated below Baa (Moody's) or
BBB  (S&P)) are  described  as  "speculative"  both by  Moody's  and S&P.  For a
description of the special risks involved with lower-rated high-yield bonds, see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."  For a  description  of  securities  ratings,  see the Appendix to the
Company's SAI.

             Convertible   Securities.   The  Fund  may  invest  in  convertible
securities, which may offer higher income than the common stocks into which they
are convertible.  Typically,  convertible securities are callable by the issuing
company,  which  may,  in effect,  force  conversion  before  the  holder  would
otherwise choose.

             The convertible  securities in which the Fund may invest consist of
bonds,  notes,  debentures  and  preferred  stocks  which  may be  converted  or
exchanged at a stated or determinable  exchange ratio into underlying  shares of
common  stock.  The Fund may be required  to permit the issuer of a  convertible
security to redeem the security, convert it into the underlying common stock, or
sell it to a third party.  Thus, the Fund may not be able to control whether the
issuer of a convertible security chooses to convert that security. If the issuer
chooses to do so, this action could have an adverse effect on the Fund's ability
to achieve its investment objective.

         While  some  countries  or  companies  may  be  regarded  as  favorable
investments,  pure fixed income opportunities may be unattractive or limited due
to insufficient supply, legal or technical restrictions. In such cases, the Fund
may consider  equity  securities or  convertible  bonds to gain exposure to such
investments.

             Loan  Participation and Assignments.  The Fund may invest in fixed-
and floating-rate loans arranged through private  negotiations between an issuer
of  debt  instruments  and  one  or  more  financial  institutions  ("lenders").
Generally, the Fund's investments in loans are expected to take the form of loan
participations and assignments of portions of loans from third parties.

             Large  loans  to  corporation  or  governments  may  be  shared  or
syndicated  among several  lenders,  usually banks.  The Fund may participate in
such  syndicates,  or  can  buy  part  of a  loan,  becoming  a  direct  lender.
Participations and assignments involve special types of risk,  including limited
marketability and the risks of being a lender.  See "Illiquid  Securities" below
for a discussion of the limits on the Fund's investments in loan  participations
and   assignments   with  limited   marketability.   If  the  Fund  purchases  a
participation, it may only be able to enforce its rights through the lender, and
may  assume  the  credit  risk of the lender in  addition  to the  borrower.  In
assignments,  the Fund's  rights  against the  borrower may be more limited than
those held by the original lender.

             Variable and Floating Rate  Securities.  Variable and floating rate
securities  provide for a periodic  adjustment  in the interest rate paid on the
obligations.  The terms of such obligations must provide that interest rates are
adjusted  periodically  based upon an interest rate adjustment index as provided
in the  respective  obligations.  The adjustment  intervals may be regular,  and
range  from  daily up to  annually,  or may be event  based,  such as based on a
change in the prime rate.

             The Fund may invest in floating rate debt instruments ("floaters").
The  interest  rate on a floater  is a  variable  rate  which is tied to another
interest rate, such as a money-market  index or Treasury bill rate. The interest
rate on a  floater  resets  periodically,  typically  every six  months.  While,
because of the interest  rate reset  feature,  floaters  provide the Fund with a
certain  degree of  protection  against rises in interest  rates,  the Fund will
participate in any declines in interest rates as well.

             The Fund may also invest in inverse  floating rate debt instruments
("inverse  floaters").  The interest  rate on an inverse  floater  resets in the
opposite direction from the market rate of interest to which the inverse floater
is  indexed.  An inverse  floating  rate  security  may  exhibit  greater  price
volatility than a fixed rate obligation of similar credit quality. The Fund will
not invest more than 5% of its net assets in any combination of inverse floater,
interest only, or principal only securities.

             Inflation-Indexed  Bonds.  Inflation-indexed bonds are fixed income
securities whose principal value is periodically  adjusted according to the rate
of inflation. The interest rate on these bonds is generally fixed at issuance at
a rate lower than typical  bonds.  Over the life of an  inflation-indexed  bond,
however,  interest will be paid based on a principal value which is adjusted for
inflation.  For example, if the Fund purchased an inflation-indexed  bond with a
par  value  of  $1,000  and a 3%  real  rate  of  return  coupon  (payable  1.5%
semi-annually), and inflation over the first six months was 1%, the mid-year par
value of the bond would be $1,010  and the first  semi-annual  interest  payment
would be $15.15 ($1,010 times 1.5%).

             Repayment of the original bond principal upon maturity (as adjusted
for  inflation)  is guaranteed  in the case of U.S.  Treasury  inflation-indexed
bonds, even during a period of deflation.  However,  the current market value of
the bonds is not  guaranteed,  and will  fluctuate.  The Fund may also invest in
other inflation related bonds which may or may not provide a similar  guarantee.
If a guarantee of principal is not provided, the adjusted principal value of the
bond repaid at maturity may be less than the original principal.

             The  value of  inflation-indexed  bonds is  expected  to  change in
response to changes in real  interest  rates (which are nominal  interest  rates
adjusted for inflation). If inflation were to rise at a faster rate than nominal
interest  rates,  real interest rates would  decline,  leading to an increase in
value of  inflation-indexed  bonds.  In  contrast,  if  nominal  interest  rates
increased  at a faster  rate than  inflation,  real  interest  rates would rise,
leading to a decrease in value of inflation-indexed bonds.

             While these  securities are expected to be protected from long-term
inflationary trends,  short-term increases in inflation may lead to a decline in
value.  If interest rates rise due to reasons other than inflation (for example,
due to changes in currency  exchange  rates),  investors in these securities may
not be protected to the extent that the increase is not  reflected in the bond's
inflation measure.

             The U.S. Treasury has only recently begun issuing inflation-indexed
bonds. As such, there is no trading history of these  securities,  and there can
be no assurance that a liquid market in these instruments will develop, although
one is expected.  There also can be no  assurance  that the U.S.  Treasury  will
issue  any  particular  amount  of  inflation-indexed   bonds.  Certain  foreign
governments,  such as the United  Kingdom,  Canada and Australia,  have a longer
history  of  issuing  inflation-indexed  bonds,  and there may be a more  liquid
market in certain of these countries for these securities.

             Any increase in the principal amount of an  inflation-indexed  bond
will be considered taxable ordinary income, even though investors do not receive
their  principal  until  maturity.   For  information  about  the  possible  tax
consequences of investing in inflation-indexed  bonds, see this Prospectus under
"Dividends, Capital Gains and Taxes."

             Mortgage-Related  and Other Asset-Backed  Securities.  The Fund may
invest all of its assets in mortgage-related and other asset-backed  securities,
including  mortgage   pass-through   securities  and   collateralized   mortgage
obligations. The value of some mortgage- or asset-backed securities in which the
Fund invests may be  particularly  sensitive to changes in  prevailing  interest
rates,  and, like the other  investments of the Fund, the ability of the Fund to
successfully  utilize these  instruments  may depend in part upon the ability of
the Sub-advisor to forecast interest rates and other economic factors correctly.
For a description of these  securities  and the special risks involved  therein,
see this  Prospectus  and the  Company's  SAI under  "Certain  Risk  Factors and
Investment  Methods" and the  Company's  SAI under  "Investment  Programs of the
Funds."

             Repurchase  Agreements.  For the purpose of achieving  income,  the
Fund may enter into repurchase agreements,  subject to guidelines promulgated by
the Directors of the Company.  The Fund will not invest more than 15% of its net
assets (taken at current market value) in repurchase agreements maturing in more
than  seven  days.  For a  discussion  of  repurchase  agreements  and the risks
involved therein, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Reverse Repurchase Agreements, Dollar Rolls and Other Borrowings. A
reverse repurchase agreement involves the sale of a security by the Fund and its
agreement to repurchase the  instrument at a specified  time and price,  and for
some purposes may be considered a borrowing.

             The Fund may also enter into dollar rolls,  in which the Fund sells
mortgage-backed  or other  securities  for  delivery  in the  current  month and
simultaneously  contracts  to purchase  substantially  similar  securities  on a
specified  future date.  In the case of dollar rolls  involving  mortgage-backed
securities,  the  mortgage-backed  securities  that are purchased will be of the
same  type and  will  have the same  interest  rate as those  sold,  but will be
supported by  different  pools of  mortgages.  The Fund  forgoes  principal  and
interest  paid during the roll period on the  securities  sold in a dollar roll,
but the Fund is compensated  by the  difference  between the current sales price
and the lower price for the future purchase as well as by any interest earned on
the proceeds of the securities sold. The Fund also could be compensated  through
the receipt of fee income equivalent to a lower forward price.

             These  practices  will tend to  exaggerate  the effect on net asset
value of any  increase  or  decrease  in the value of the Fund and may cause the
Fund to liquidate  portfolio  positions when it would not be  advantageous to do
so. The Fund will  maintain a  segregated  account  consisting  of cash or other
liquid assets to cover its obligations under reverse  repurchase  agreements and
dollar rolls.  Reverse repurchase  agreements and dollar rolls will be subject o
the Portfolio's  limitations on borrowing as discussed in this Prospectus  under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods." Apart from transactions involving
reverse repurchase  agreements and dollar rolls, the Fund will not borrow money,
except for temporary  administrative  purposes.  For an additional discussion of
the risks involved in borrowing and in reverse repurchase  agreements,  see this
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods" and the Company's
SAI under "Fundamental Investment Restrictions."

             When-Issued,  Delayed-Delivery and Forward Commitment Transactions.
The Fund may purchase or sell securities on a when-issued,  delayed  delivery or
forward commitment basis. These transactions involve a commitment by the Fund to
purchase or sell securities for a predetermined price or yield, with payment and
delivery  taking  place more than seven  days in the  future,  or after a period
longer than the customary settlement period for that type of security. When such
purchases  are  outstanding,  the Fund  will set aside  and  maintain  until the
settlement  date,  in a segregated  account,  cash or other liquid  assets in an
amount  sufficient to meet the purchase price.  Typically,  no income accrues on
securities the Portfolio has committed to purchase prior to the time delivery of
the  securities is made,  although the Fund may earn income on securities it has
deposited in a segregated account.  When purchasing a security on a when-issued,
delayed delivery,  or forward  commitment basis, the Fund assumes the rights and
risks of  ownership  of the  security,  including  the risk of price  and  yield
fluctuations,  and takes such fluctuations into account when determining its net
asset value.  Because the Fund is not required to pay for the security until the
delivery  date,  these risks are in addition  to the risks  associated  with the
Fund's other investments.  If the Fund remains substantially fully invested at a
time when when-issued,  delayed delivery,  or forward  commitment  purchases are
outstanding,  the purchases may result in a form of leverage.  When the Fund has
sold a security on a when-issued,  delayed delivery or forward commitment basis,
the Fund does not  participate  in future  gains or losses  with  respect to the
security.  If the other party to a  transaction  fails to deliver or pay for the
securities,  the Fund could miss a favorable price or yield opportunity or could
suffer a loss. The Fund may dispose of or renegotiate a transaction  after it is
entered into, and may sell when-issued or forward committment  securities before
they are  delivered,  which may  result in a capital  gain or loss.  There is no
percentage  limitation  on the  extent  to which the Fund may  purchase  or sell
securities on a when-issued, delayed delivery, or forward commitment basis.

             Short  Sales.  The Fund may from time to time effect short sales as
part  of its  overall  portfolio  management  strategies,  including  the use of
derivative  instruments,  or to  offset  potential  declines  in  value  of long
positions in similar  securities as those sold short. A short sale (other than a
short  sale  "against  the  box") is a  transaction  in which  the Fund  sells a
security it does not own at the time of the sale in anticipation that the market
price of that  security  will  decline.  To the extent that the Fund  engages in
short  sales,  it must  (except  in the case of  short  sales  against  the box)
maintain  asset  coverage  in the  form of  cash or  other  liquid  assets  in a
segregated  account.  A short sale is  "against  the box" to the extent that the
Fund  contemporaneously  owns,  or has the  right to  obtain  at no added  cost,
securities identical to those sold short.

             Foreign  Securities.  The  Portfolio  may invest  directly in fixed
income securities of non-U.S. issuers. The Portfolio may invest up to 20% of its
assets in securities  denominated  in foreign  currencies  and may invest beyond
this  limit  in U.S.  dollar-denominated  securities  of  foreign  issuers.  The
Portfolio  may invest up to 10% of its assets in  securities of issuers based in
developing  countries.  The  Sub-advisor  has broad  discretion  to identify and
invest in  countries  that it  considers  to  qualify as  developing  countries.
Investing in the securities of issuers in any foreign country  involves  special
risks  and  considerations  not  typically  associated  with  investing  in U.S.
companies.  For a  discussion  of the risks  involved  in  investing  in foreign
securities  in  general,  and the  special  risks  of  investing  in  developing
countries,  as well as the risks of currency  fluctuations,  see this Prospectus
and the Trust's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Brady Bonds.  The Fund may invest in Brady  Bonds.  Brady Bonds are
securities  created  through the exchange of existing  commercial  bank loans to
sovereign  entities for new obligations in connection  with debt  restructurings
under a debt  restructuring  plan  introduced  by former U.S.  Secretary  of the
Treasury, Nicholas F. Brady. Brady Bonds have been issued only recently, and for
that  reason  do  not  have  a  long  payment   history.   Brady  Bonds  may  be
collateralized  or  uncollateralized,  are  issued in  various  currencies  (but
primarily  the U.S.  dollar),  and are actively  traded in the  over-the-counter
secondary  market.  Brady  Bonds  are  not  considered  to  be  U.S.  Government
Securities.  In light of the  residual  risk of Brady  Bonds  and,  among  other
factors, the history of defaults with respect to commercial bank loans by public
and private  entities in countries  issuing  Brady Bonds,  investments  in Brady
Bonds may be viewed as  speculative.  There can be no assurance that Brady Bonds
acquired  by the Fund will not be subject to  restructuring  arrangements  or to
requests  for new credit,  which may cause the Fund to suffer a loss of interest
or principal on any of its holdings.

             Foreign  Currency  Transactions.  The Fund may buy and sell foreign
currency  futures  contracts  and  options on  foreign  currencies  and  foreign
currency  futures  contracts,  enter  into  forward  foreign  currency  exchange
contracts to reduce the risks of adverse changes in foreign  exchange rates. The
Fund may enter into these  contracts for the purpose of hedging  against foreign
exchange risk arising from the Fund's  investment or  anticipated  investment in
securities  denominated  in  foreign  currencies.  For a  discussion  of foreign
currency  transactions and the risks involved  therein,  see this Prospectus and
the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Options on Securities,  Securities Indices and Currencies. The Fund
may purchase and write call and put options on  securities,  securities  indices
and on foreign  currencies,  and enter into futures contracts and use options on
futures  contracts as further described below. The Fund may also enter into swap
agreements  with respect to foreign  currencies,  interest  rates and securities
indices.  The Fund may use these techniques to hedge against changes in interest
rates,  foreign currency,  exchange rates or securities prices or as part of its
overall investment strategy.

             The Fund may purchase  options on securities to protect holdings in
an underlying or related security against a substantial decline in market value.
A fund may purchase call options on securities  to protect  against  substantial
increases  in prices of  securities  the Fund  intends to  purchase  pending its
ability to invest in such securities in an orderly manner. The Fund may sell put
or call options it has previously purchased, which could result in a net gain or
loss  depending on whether the amount  realized on the sale is more or less than
the premium and other  transaction costs paid on the put or call option which is
sold.  A fund may write a call or put option only if it is "covered" by the Fund
holding a position in the  underlying  securities  or by other means which would
permit immediate  satisfaction of the Fund's obligation as writer of the option.
Prior to exercise or  expiration,  an option may be closed out by an  offsetting
purchase or sale of an option of the same series.

             The Fund may also invest in foreign-denominated  securities and may
buy or sell put and call options on foreign currencies.  Currency options traded
on U.S. or other exchanges may be subject to position limits which may limit the
ability of the Fund to reduce  foreign  currency risk using such options.  For a
discussion  of  options  and the risks  involved  therein,  as well as the risks
involved in investing in foreign currency, see this Prospectus and the Company's
SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Swap  Agreements.  The Fund may enter into interest rate, index and
currency  exchange rate swap agreements for the purposes of attempting to obtain
a  particular  desired  return at a lower  cost to the Fund than if the Fund had
invested  directly  in an  instrument  that  yielded the  desired  return.  Swap
agreements  are  two-party  contracts  entered into  primarily by  institutional
investors  for  periods  ranging  from a few weeks to more  than one year.  In a
standard  "swap"  transaction,  two parties  agree to  exchange  the returns (or
differentials in rates of return) earned or realized on particular predetermined
investments  or  instruments.  The gross  returns to be  exchanged  or "swapped"
between the parties are  calculated  with respect to a "notional  amount," i.e.,
the return on or increase in value of a particular  dollar amount  invested at a
particular interest rate, in a particular foreign currency,  or in a "basket" of
securities  representing  a  particular  index.  Commonly  used swap  agreements
include  interest  rate caps,  under which,  in return for a premium,  one party
agrees to make payments to the other to the extent that interest  rates exceed a
specified rate or "cap";  interest floors, under which, in return for a premium,
one party agrees to make payments to the other to the extent that interest rates
fall below a specified level or "floor"; and interest rate collars,  under which
a party sells a cap and purchases a floor or vice versa in an attempt to protect
itself  against  interest  rate  movements  exceeding  given  minimum or maximum
levels.

             The "notional  amount" of a swap  agreement is only a fictive basis
on which to calculate the obligations which the parties to a swap agreement have
agreed  to  exchange.  Most  swap  agreements  entered  into by the  Fund  would
calculate  the  obligations  of the parties to the  agreement  on a "net basis."
Consequently,  the Fund's  obligations  (or rights) under a swap  agreement will
generally  be equal  only to the net  amount  to be paid or  received  under the
agreement  based on the relative  values of the positions  held by each party to
the agreement ("net amount"). The Fund's obligations under a swap agreement will
be accrued  daily  (offset  against  amounts  owed to the Fund) and any  accrued
unpaid  net  amounts  owed  to a  swap  counterparty  will  be  covered  by  the
maintenance of a segregated account consisting of cash or other liquid assets to
avoid any potential  leveraging of the Fund. The Fund will not enter into a swap
agreement  with any single party if the net amount owed or to be received  under
existing contracts with that party would exceed 5% of the Fund's total assets.

   
             Risks of Swaps.  Whether the Fund's use of swap  agreements will be
successful  in furthering  its  investment  objective  will depend on the Fund's
ability to predict  correctly  whether certain types of investment are likely to
produce  greater  returns than other  investments.  Because  they are  two-party
contracts and because they have terms of longer than seven days, swap agreements
may be  considered  illiquid.  Moreover,  the Fund bears the risk of loss of the
amount  expected to be received under a swap agreement in the event of a default
or bankruptcy of a swap agreement  counterparty.  The Sub-advisor will cause the
Fund to enter  into swap  agreements  only  with  counterparties  that  would be
eligible for  consideration  as repurchase  agreement  counterparties  under the
Fund's repurchase agreement guidelines. Certain restrictions imposed on the Fund
by the Code may limit  the  Fund's  ability  to use swap  agreements.  The swaps
market  is  relatively  new and is  largely  unregulated.  It is  possible  that
developments in the swaps market,  including potential governmental  regulation,
could adversely affect the Fund's ability to terminate  existing swap agreements
or to realize amounts to be received under such agreements.
    

             Futures  Contracts and Options on Futures  Contracts.  The Fund may
invest in interest rate futures  contracts,  stock index  futures  contracts and
foreign currency futures contracts and options thereon that are traded on a U.S.
or foreign  exchange  or board of trade.  The Fund will only enter into  futures
contracts  or futures  options  which are  standardized  and traded on a U.S. or
foreign exchange or board of trade, or similar entity, or quoted on an automated
quotation  system.  The Fund will use  financial  futures  contracts and related
options only for "bona fide"  hedging  purposes,  as such term is defined in the
applicable  regulations of the Commodity  Futures Trading  Commission,  or, with
respect to  positions  in  financial  futures  and related  options  that do not
qualify as "bona fide hedging" positions,  will enter such non-hedging positions
only to the extent that  aggregate  initial margin deposit plus premiums paid by
it for the open  futures  options  position,  less the  amount by which any such
positions  are  "in-the-money,"  would not exceed 5% of the Fund's total assets.
For an additional  discussion of futures contracts and related options,  and the
risks involved therein, see this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Hybrid  Instruments.  The Fund may invest up to 5% of its assets in
hybrid  instruments.  A hybrid  instrument  can combine the  characteristics  of
securities,  futures, and options.  Hybrids can be used as an efficient means of
pursuing a variety of investment goals,  including  currency  hedging,  duration
management,  and increased total return. For an additional  discussion of hybrid
instruments  and  certain  risks  involved  therein,  see the  Trust's SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Illiquid Securities. Subject to guidelines promulgated by the Board
of  Trustees  of the  Trust,  the Fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets in
illiquid  securities.  Certain  illiquid  securities may require pricing at fair
value  as  determined  in good  faith  under  the  supervision  of the  Board of
Trustees.  The term "illiquid securities" for this purpose means securities that
cannot be disposed of within  seven days in the  ordinary  course of business at
approximately  the amount at which the Fund has valued the securities.  Illiquid
securities   are   considered   to   include,   among  other   things,   written
over-the-counter options,  securities or other liquid assets being used as cover
for such options, repurchase agreements with maturities in excess of seven days,
certain loan participation interests,  fixed time deposits which are not subject
to prepayment or provide for withdrawal  penalties upon  prepayment  (other than
overnight  deposits),  securities  that are  subject  to  legal  or  contractual
restrictions  on resale and other  securities  whose  disposition  is restricted
under the federal securities laws (other than securities issued pursuant to Rule
144A under the Securities Act of 1933 that the  Sub-advisor has determined to be
liquid under  procedures  approved by the Board of  Directors  of the  Company).
Illiquid  securities may include  privately  placed  securities,  which are sold
directly to a small number of  investors,  usually  institutions.  Unlike public
offerings, such securities are not registered under the federal securities laws.
Although  certain of these  securities may be readily sold,  for example,  under
Rule 144A, others may be illiquid, and their sale may involve substantial delays
and additional costs.

     Portfolio Turnover.  The Fund may have higher portfolio turnover than other
mutual funds with similar investment  objectives.  For a discussion of portfolio
turnover  and its  effects,  see this  Prospectus  and the  Company's  SAI under
"Portfolio Transactions."

ASAF JPM MONEY MARKET FUND:

     Investment Objective:  The investment objective of the Fund is to seek high
current income and maintain high levels of liquidity.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund attempts to  accomplish  its  objectives by  maintaining a
dollar-weighted  average  portfolio  maturity  of not  more  than 90 days and by
investing  in the  types  of high  quality  U.S.  dollar-denominated  securities
described  below which have effective  maturities of not more than 397 days. The
Fund will invest in one or more of the types of investments described below.

             United  States  Government  Obligations.  The  Fund may  invest  in
obligations  of  the  U.S.   Government  and  its  agencies  ("U.S.   Government
Obligations")  and  instrumentalities   ("U.S.  Government   Instrumentalities")
maturing 397 days or less from the date of acquisition or purchased  pursuant to
repurchase  agreements that provide for repurchase by the seller within 397 days
from the date of acquisition.  U.S. Government Obligations, for purposes of this
Fund, include:  (i) direct obligations issued by the United States Treasury such
as Treasury bills, notes and bonds; and (ii) instruments issued or guaranteed by
government-sponsored  agencies acting under authority of Congress,  such as, but
not limited to,  obligations  of the Bank for  Cooperatives,  Federal  Financing
Bank,  Federal  Intermediate  Credit  Banks,  Federal Land Banks,  and Tennessee
Valley  Authority,  Federal Home Loan Bank and Federal Farm Credit Bureau.  U.S.
Government Instrumentalities are government agencies organized by Congress under
a Federal Charter and supervised and regulated by the U.S.  Government,  such as
the  Federal  National  Mortgage  Association  and  the  Student  Loan  Mortgage
Association. Some of these U.S. Government Obligations are supported by the full
faith and credit of the U.S. Treasury;  others are supported by the right of the
issuer  to  borrow  from the  Treasury;  others,  such as  those of the  Federal
National Mortgage Association,  are supported by the discretionary  authority of
the U.S. Government to purchase the agency's obligations;  still others, such as
those of the Student Loan Mortgage Association, are supported only by the credit
of the instrumentality. No assurance can be given that the U.S. Government would
provide financial support to the U.S. Government-sponsored  instrumentalities if
it is not obligated to do so by law.

             Bank Obligations. The Fund may invest in high quality United States
dollar-denominated   negotiable  certificates  of  deposit,  time  deposits  and
bankers'  acceptances of (i) banks,  savings and loan  associations  and savings
banks which have more than $2 billion in total  assets and are  organized  under
United  States  federal or state law,  (ii)  foreign  branches of these banks or
foreign banks of equivalent  size (Euros),  and (iii) United States  branches of
foreign  banks of  equivalent  size  (Yankees).  The Fund  may  also  invest  in
obligations of  international  banking  institutions  designated or supported by
national  governments to promote economic  reconstruction,  development or trade
between  nations  (e.g.,  the  European   Investment  Bank,  the  Inter-American
Development  Bank,  or the World Bank).  These  obligations  may be supported by
appropriated but unpaid  commitments of their member countries,  and there is no
assurance these commitments will be undertaken or met in the future.

             Commercial  Paper;  Bonds.  The Fund  may  invest  in high  quality
commercial paper and corporate bonds issued by United States  corporations.  The
Fund may also  invest in bonds and  commercial  paper of foreign  issuers if the
obligation  is United  States  dollar-denominated  and is not subject to foreign
withholding tax. For a discussion of the risks involved in foreign  investments,
see this  Prospectus  and the  Company's  SAI under  "Certain  Risk  Factors and
Investment Methods."

             Asset-Backed  Securities.  As may be  permitted by current laws and
regulations and if expressly permitted by the Directors of the Company, the Fund
may invest in securities generally referred to as asset-backed securities, which
directly or indirectly represent a participation  interest in, or are secured by
and payable from, a stream of payments  generated by  particular  assets such as
motor  vehicle  or credit  card  receivables.  Asset-backed  securities  provide
periodic  payments  that  generally  consist  of  both  interest  and  principal
payments.  Consequently,  the life of an  asset-backed  security varies with the
prepayment  experience of the underlying debt instruments.  For more information
about these instruments and the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus and
the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Synthetic  Instruments.  As may be  permitted  by current  laws and
regulations and if expressly permitted by the Directors of the Company, the Fund
may invest in certain synthetic instruments.  Such instruments generally involve
the deposit of asset-backed  securities in a trust  arrangement and the issuance
of  certificates  evidencing  interests  in  the  trust.  The  certificates  are
generally sold in private  placements in reliance on Rule 144A of the Securities
Act of 1933. The Sub-advisor will review the structure of synthetic  instruments
to identify credit and liquidity risks and will monitor such risks.

             Quality  Information.  The Fund will limit its investments to those
securities which, in accordance with guidelines  adopted by the Directors of the
Company,  present minimal credit risks. In addition,  the Fund will not purchase
any security (other than a United States  Government  security)  unless:  (i) if
rated by only one nationally recognized rating organization (such as Moody's and
Standard & Poor's),  then such organization has rated it with the highest rating
assigned  to  short-term  debt  securities;  (ii)  if  rated  by more  than  one
nationally  recognized  rating  organization,  then at  least  two  such  rating
organizations  have rated it with the highest rating assigned to short-term debt
securities;  or (iii) it is not  rated  and is  determined  to be of  comparable
quality.  Determinations of comparable  quality shall be made in accordance with
procedures  established by the Directors of the Company. These standards must be
satisfied at the time an investment  is made.  If the quality of the  investment
later declines, the Fund may continue to hold the investment, subject in certain
circumstances  to a finding by the Directors  that  disposing of the  investment
would not be in the  Fund's  best  interest.  For a  description  of  securities
ratings, see the Appendix to the Company's SAI.

             When-Issued and Delayed Delivery Securities.  The Fund may purchase
securities on a when-issued or delayed  delivery basis.  Delivery of and payment
for these  securities  may take as long as a month or more after the date of the
purchase  commitment.  The  value of  these  securities  is  subject  to  market
fluctuation  during this  period and no  interest or income  accrues to the Fund
until settlement.  The Fund maintains with the custodian a separate account with
a  segregated  portfolio  of  securities  in an amount  at least  equal to these
commitments.  When entering into a when-issued or delayed delivery  transaction,
the Fund will rely on the other  party to  consummate  the  transaction;  if the
other  party  fails to do so, the Fund may be  disadvantaged.  It is the current
policy of the Fund not to enter into  when-issued  commitments  exceeding in the
aggregate  15% of the market value of the Fund's  total assets less  liabilities
other than the  obligations  created  by these  commitments.  For an  additional
discussion of when-issued securities and certain risks involved therein, see the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines promulgated by the Directors
of the Company, the Fund is permitted to enter into repurchase agreements. For a
discussion of repurchase  agreements  and the risks involved  therein,  see this
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Reverse Repurchase Agreements.  The Fund is permitted to enter into
reverse repurchase agreements. In a reverse repurchase agreement, the Fund sells
a security and agrees to repurchase it at a mutually agreed upon date and price,
reflecting  the interest rate  effective for the term of the  agreement.  It may
also be viewed as the  borrowing  of money by the Fund.  If interest  rates rise
during the term of a reverse  repurchase  agreement,  entering  into the reverse
repurchase  agreement  may have a  negative  impact  on the  Fund's  ability  to
maintain  a net asset  value of $1.00 per  share.  For a  discussion  of reverse
repurchase  agreements and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Foreign Securities. The Fund may invest in U.S.  dollar-denominated
foreign securities.  Any foreign commercial paper must not be subject to foreign
withholding  tax at the  time  of  purchase.  Foreign  investments  may be  made
directly in securities of foreign issuers or in the form of American  Depositary
Receipts ("ADRs") and European Depositary Receipts ("EDRs"). Generally, ADRs and
EDRs are receipts  issued by a bank or trust company that evidence  ownership of
underlying  securities issued by a foreign corporation and that are designed for
use in the  domestic,  in the case of ADRs,  or  European,  in the case of EDRs,
securities  markets.  For a  discussion  of  depositary  receipts  and the risks
involved in investing in foreign securities, in general, see this Prospectus and
the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Borrowing. The Fund may borrow money from banks for non-leveraging,
temporary  or emergency  purposes in amounts up to 33 1/3% of its total  assets.
The Fund will not purchase  securities while borrowings  exceed 5% of the Fund's
total  assets.  For an  additional  discussion  of  the  Fund's  limitations  on
borrowing and certain risks  involved in borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under
"Certain  Risk  Factors and  Investment  Methods"  and the  Company's  SAI under
"Fundamental Investment Restrictions."

                   CERTAIN RISK FACTORS AND INVESTMENT METHODS

             The following is a description of certain securities and investment
methods that the Funds and  Portfolios  may invest in or use, and certain of the
risks  associated  with  such  securities  and  investment  methods.  Whether  a
particular Fund or Portfolio may invest in a specific  security or use a type of
investment  method,  as well as other risk factors  associated  with the Fund or
Portfolio's  investment  program,  are  described  in  this  Prospectus  and the
Company's SAI under "Investment  Programs of the Funds" and in the Company's SAI
under  "Fundamental  Investment  Restrictions."  The risk factors and investment
methods  described below only apply to those Funds or Portfolios that may invest
in such  securities  or use such  investment  methods.  Because  the  investment
objective,  policies and  limitations of each Feeder Fund are identical to those
of its corresponding Portfolio, the references below to the Feeder Funds and the
Directors of the Company  apply equally to the Funds'  corresponding  Portfolios
and the Trustees of the Trust, respectively.

             Derivative  Instruments.  To the extent permitted by the investment
objectives  and  policies of a Fund, a Fund may invest in  securities  and other
instruments that are commonly referred to as "derivatives." For instance, a Fund
may purchase and write call and put options on  securities,  securities  indices
and foreign currencies,  enter into futures contracts and use options on futures
contracts,  and enter into swap agreements  with respect to foreign  currencies,
interest rates, and securities indices. A Fund may use these techniques to hedge
against changes in interest rates, foreign currency exchange rates or securities
prices or as part of their overall investment strategies.

             In general,  derivative  instruments are those  securities or other
instruments  whose  value is derived  from or related to the value of some other
instrument or asset,  but not those securities whose payment of principal and/or
interest  depend  upon cash flows from  underlying  assets,  such as mortgage or
asset-backed  securities.  The value of some  derivative  instruments in which a
Fund invests may be  particularly  sensitive to changes in  prevailing  interest
rates,  and, like the other  investments  of a Fund,  the ability of the Fund to
successfully  utilize these  instruments  may depend in part upon the ability of
the Sub-advisor to forecast interest rates and other economic factors correctly.
If the Sub-advisor incorrectly forecasts such factors and has taken positions in
derivative  instruments  contrary to prevailing market trends, the Fund could be
exposed to the risk of a loss.

             A Fund might not employ any of the derivative  strategies described
below,  and no assurance can be given that any strategy used will succeed.  If a
Sub-advisor  incorrectly  forecasts  interest  rates,  market  values  or  other
economic factors in utilizing a derivatives  strategy for a Fund, the Fund might
have been in a better  position if it had not entered  into the  transaction  at
all. The use of these  strategies  involves  certain special risks,  including a
possible imperfect correlation, or even no correlation,  between price movements
of  derivative  instruments  and price  movements  of  related  investments.  In
addition,  while some strategies involving derivative instruments can reduce the
risk of loss,  they can also reduce the  opportunity for gain, or even result in
losses,  by  offsetting   favorable  price  movements  in  related  investments.
Furthermore,  a Fund may be unable to purchase or sell a portfolio security at a
time that  otherwise  would be favorable  for it to do so, or may need to sell a
portfolio security at a disadvantageous  time, due to the need to maintain asset
coverage or offsetting  positions in connection with  transactions in derivative
instruments.  A Fund  may  also be  unable  to  close  out or to  liquidate  its
derivatives positions.

             Options:

     Call  Options.  A call  option on a  security  gives the  purchaser  of the
option,  in return for a premium paid to the writer  (seller),  the right to buy
the  underlying  security  at the  exercise  price at any time during the option
period. Upon exercise by the purchaser, the writer (seller) of a call option has
the obligation to sell the  underlying  security at the exercise  price.  When a
Fund  purchases a call  option,  it will pay a premium to the party  writing the
option and a  commission  to the broker  selling  the  option.  If the option is
exercised by such Fund, the amount of the premium and the commission paid may be
greater than the amount of the brokerage commission that would be charged if the
security were to be purchased directly. By writing a call option, a Fund assumes
the risk that it may be required to deliver the  security  having a market value
higher than its market value at the time the option was  written.  The Fund will
write  call  options  in order to  obtain a return on its  investments  from the
premiums  received and will retain the  premiums  whether or not the options are
exercised.  Any  decline in the market  value of  portfolio  securities  will be
offset to the extent of the premiums received (net of transaction  costs). If an
option is  exercised,  the  premium  received  on the  option  will  effectively
increase the exercise price.

     If a Fund writes a call option on a security it already  owns,  it gives up
the opportunity for capital  appreciation above the exercise price should market
price of the underlying  security increase,  but retains the risk of loss should
the price of the underlying security decline. Writing call options also involves
the risk relating to a Fund's ability to close out options it has written.

     A call  option on a  securities  index is  similar  to a call  option on an
individual security, except that the value of the option depends on the weighted
value of the group of securities  comprising the index,  and all settlements are
made in cash. A call option may be terminated by the writer (seller) by entering
into a closing purchase  transaction in which it purchases an option of the same
series as the option previously written.

     Put Options.  A put option on a security gives the purchaser of the option,
in  return  for  premium  paid to the  writer  (seller),  the  right to sell the
underlying  security at the exercise price at any time during the option period.
Upon exercise by the purchaser, the writer of a put option has the obligation to
purchase the underlying security at the exercise price. By writing a put option,
a Fund  assumes  the risk that it may be required  to  purchase  the  underlying
security at a price in excess of its current market value.

                         A put option on a securities  index is similar to a put
option on an individual security, except
that the  value of the  option  depends  on the  weighted  value of the group of
securities comprising the index, and all settlements are made in cash.

                         A Fund may sell a call option or a put option  which it
has previously purchased prior to the
purchase  (in the  case of a call)  or the  sale  (in the  case of a put) of the
underlying security.  Any such sale would result in a net gain or loss depending
on whether the amount  received on the sale is more or less than the premium and
other transaction costs paid on the call or put which is sold.

             Futures Contracts and Related Options. A financial futures contract
calls for  delivery of a particular  security at a specified  price at a certain
time in the future.  The seller of the contract  agrees to make  delivery of the
type of  security  called  for in the  contract  and the  buyer  agrees  to take
delivery  at a specified  future  time.  A Fund may also write call  options and
purchase  put options on  financial  futures  contracts as a hedge to attempt to
protect the Fund's  securities  from a decrease  in value.  When a Fund writes a
call option on a futures contract, it is undertaking the obligation of selling a
futures  contract at a fixed price at any time during a specified  period if the
option is  exercised.  Conversely,  the  purchaser  of a put option on a futures
contract is entitled (but not  obligated) to sell a futures  contract at a fixed
price during the life of the option.

             Financial  futures  contracts  consist  of  interest  rate  futures
contracts  and  securities  index  futures  contracts.  An interest rate futures
contract  obligates the seller of the contract to deliver,  and the purchaser to
take  delivery  of,  interest  rate  securities  called for in a  contract  at a
specified  future time at a specified  price.  A stock  index  assigns  relative
values to common  stocks  included  in the index and the index  fluctuates  with
changes  in the market  values of the  common  stocks  included.  A stock  index
futures contract is a bilateral  contract pursuant to which two parties agree to
take or make  delivery of an amount of cash equal to a specified  dollar  amount
times the  difference  between  the stock  index  value at the close of the last
trading  day of the  contract  and the price at which the  futures  contract  is
originally struck. An option on a financial futures contract gives the purchaser
the right to assume a position in the contract (a long position if the option is
a call and a short  position  if the  option is a put) at a  specified  exercise
price at any time during the period of the option.

             Risks of Options  and  Futures  Contracts.  Futures  contracts  and
options can be highly  volatile  and could result in reduction of a Fund's total
return,  and a Fund's attempt to use such  investments for hedging  purposes may
not be successful.  Successful futures strategies require the ability to predict
future  movements  in  securities  prices,  interest  rates and  other  economic
factors.  A Fund's  potential  losses from the use of futures extends beyond its
initial  investment  in such  contracts.  Also,  losses from options and futures
could be  significant  if a Fund is  unable  to close  out its  position  due to
distortions in the market or lack of liquidity.

             The use of  futures  and  options  involves  investment  risks  and
transaction  costs to which a Fund would not be subject  absent the use of these
strategies.  If a Sub-advisor  seeks to protect a Fund against potential adverse
movements in the  securities,  foreign  currency or interest  rate markets using
these  instruments,  and such markets do not move in a direction  adverse to the
Fund,  the  Fund  could  be  left  in a less  favorable  position  than  if such
strategies had not been used. The successful use of these  strategies  therefore
may depend on the ability of the Sub-advisor to correctly forecast interest rate
movements and general stock market price movements. Risks inherent in the use of
futures and options include: (a) the risk that interest rates, securities prices
and currency markets will not move in the directions anticipated;  (b) imperfect
correlation between the price of futures and options and movements in the prices
of the securities or currencies being hedged; (c) the fact that skills needed to
use these  strategies  are  different  from  those  needed  to select  portfolio
securities;  (d) the  possible  absence  of a liquid  secondary  market  for any
particular  instrument  at any time;  and (e) the possible need to defer closing
out certain hedged positions to avoid adverse tax consequences. A Fund's ability
to terminate option positions established in the over-the-counter  market may be
more  limited than in the case of  exchange-traded  options and may also involve
the risk that securities  dealers  participating in such transactions would fail
to meet their obligations to such Fund.

             In  addition,  the use of futures and options  involves the risk of
imperfect  correlation  between  movements  in futures  and  options  prices and
movements  in  the  price  of  securities  that  are  the  subject  of a  hedge.
Particularly  with respect to options on stock indices and stock index  futures,
the risk of such imperfect  correlation increases as the composition of the Fund
diverges from the composition of the relevant index.

             Pursuant to regulations of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
("CFTC"), the Company has represented that:

             (i) it will not  purchase  or sell  futures  or  options on futures
contracts  or  stock   indices  for  purposes   other  than  bona  fide  hedging
transactions  (as  defined  by the CFTC) if as a result  the sum of the  initial
margin  deposits  and  premiums  required  to  establish  positions  in  futures
contracts  and related  options that do not fall within the  definition  of bona
fide  hedging  transactions  would  exceed 5% of the fair  market  value of each
Fund's net assets; and

             (ii) a Fund  will not  enter  into  any  futures  contracts  if the
aggregate amount of that Fund's commitments under outstanding  futures contracts
positions would exceed the market value of its total assets.

             Asset-Backed   Securities.   Asset-backed  securities  represent  a
participation  in, or are  secured by and  payable  from,  a stream of  payments
generated by particular  assets, for example,  credit card,  automobile or trade
receivables.  Asset-backed  commercial paper, one type of asset-backed security,
is issued by a special purpose entity,  organized solely to issue the commercial
paper and to  purchase  interests  in the  assets.  The credit  quality of these
securities  depends  primarily upon the quality of the underlying assets and the
level of credit support and/or enhancement provided.

             The  underlying  assets  (e.g.,  loans) are subject to  prepayments
which shorten the securities'  weighted average life and may lower their return.
If the credit support or  enhancement is exhausted,  losses or delays in payment
may result if the required  payments of principal and interest are not made. The
value of these  securities  also may change  because of changes in the  market's
perception  of the  creditworthiness  of the servicing  agent for the pool,  the
originator  of the pool,  or the  financial  institution  providing  the  credit
support or enhancement.

             Mortgage Pass-Through Securities.  Mortgage pass-through securities
are  securities  representing  interests in "pools" of mortgage loans secured by
residential  or commercial  real property in which payments of both interest and
principal on the  securities  are  generally  made monthly,  in effect  "passing
through" monthly payments made by the individual borrowers on the mortgage loans
which  underlie the  securities  (net of fees paid to the issuer or guarantor of
the  securities).   Early  repayment  of  principal  on  some   mortgage-related
securities  (arising from prepayments of principal due to sale of the underlying
property,  refinancing,  or  foreclosure,  net of fees and  costs  which  may be
incurred)  expose  a Fund  to a  lower  rate  of  return  upon  reinvestment  of
principal.  Also, if a security  subject to prepayment  has been  purchased at a
premium, in the event of prepayment the value of the premium would be lost. Like
other  fixed-income  securities,  when  interest  rates  rise,  the  value  of a
mortgage-related  security will generally decline;  however, when interest rates
are declining, the value of mortgage-related securities with prepayment features
may not increase as much as other  fixed-income  securities.  The value of these
securities also may change because of changes in the market's  perception of the
creditworthiness  of the federal agency or private institution that issued them.
In addition, the mortgage securities market in general may be adversely affected
by changes in governmental regulation or tax policies.

     Collateralized  Mortgage  Obligations  (CMOs).  CMOs are obligations  fully
collateralized  by a portfolio  of  mortgages  or  mortgage-related  securities.
Payments of principal and interest on the  mortgages  are passed  through to the
holders of the CMOs on the same schedule as they are received,  although certain
classes  of CMOs have  priority  over  others  with  respect  to the  receipt of
prepayments on the mortgages.  Therefore, depending on the type of CMOs in which
a Fund  invests,  the  investment  may be subject to a greater or lesser risk of
prepayment  than other types of  mortgage-related  securities.  CMOs may also be
less marketable than other securities.

     Stripped Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities. Stripped agency mortgage-backed
securities  represent  interests in a pool of mortgages,  the cash flow of which
has been separated into its interest and principal  components.  "IOs" (interest
only  securities)  receive  the  interest  portion of the cash flow while  "POs"
(principal  only  securities)  receive the principal  portion.  Stripped  Agency
Mortgage-Backed  Securities  may be issued  by U.S.  Government  Agencies  or by
private  issuers.  Unlike  other  debt  instruments  and  other  mortgage-backed
securities,  the value of IOs tends to move in the same  direction  as  interest
rates.

             The cash  flows  and  yields  on IO and PO  classes  are  extremely
sensitive  to the rate of  principal  payments  (including  prepayments)  on the
related  underlying  mortgage  assets.  For  example,  a rapid  or slow  rate of
principal  payments may have a material  adverse  effect on the prices of IOs or
POs,  respectively.  If the underlying  mortgage assets experience  greater than
anticipated  prepayments of principal,  an investor may fail to recoup fully its
initial investment in an IO class of a stripped  mortgage-backed  security, even
if the IO class is rated AAA or Aaa or is  derived  from a full faith and credit
obligation. Conversely, if the underlying mortgage assets experience slower than
anticipated  prepayments of principal,  the price on a PO class will be affected
more  severely  than  would  be  the  case  with a  traditional  mortgage-backed
security.

             Foreign  Securities.  Investments in securities of foreign  issuers
may  involve  risks  that  are not  present  with  domestic  investments.  While
investments  in foreign  securities  are  intended to reduce  risk by  providing
further diversification,  such investments involve sovereign risk in addition to
credit and market risks.  Sovereign  risk includes  local  political or economic
developments,  potential  nationalization,  withholding  taxes  on  dividend  or
interest  payments,  and currency  blockage (which would prevent cash from being
brought back to the United States).  Compared to United States issuers, there is
generally less publicly  available  information  about foreign issuers and there
may be less governmental  regulation and supervision of foreign stock exchanges,
brokers  and listed  companies.  Brokerage  commissions  on  foreign  securities
exchanges,  which may be fixed,  are generally higher than in the United States.
Foreign issuers are not generally subject to uniform accounting and auditing and
financial reporting  standards,  practices and requirements  comparable to those
applicable  to domestic  issuers.  Securities  of some foreign  issuers are less
liquid and their prices are more volatile than securities of comparable domestic
issuers.  In some countries,  there may also be the possibility of expropriation
or confiscatory  taxation,  limitations on the removal of funds or other assets,
difficulty in enforcing  contractual and other obligations,  political or social
instability  or  revolution,  or  diplomatic  developments  which  could  affect
investments  in those  countries.  Settlement  of  transactions  in some foreign
markets may be delayed or less frequent than in the United  States,  which could
affect the liquidity of investments. For example, securities which are listed on
foreign  exchanges  or  traded in  foreign  markets  may trade on days  (such as
Saturday or  Holidays)  when a Fund does not compute its price or accept  orders
for the  purchase,  redemption or exchange of its shares.  As a result,  the net
asset  value of a Fund may be  significantly  affected  by  trading on days when
shareholders cannot make transactions. Further, it may be more difficult for the
Company's  agents to keep currently  informed about corporate  actions which may
affect the price of portfolio  securities.  Communications  between the U.S. and
foreign countries may be less reliable than within the U.S., increasing the risk
of delayed settlements or loss of certificates for portfolio securities.

     Currency Fluctuations. Investments in foreign securities may be denominated
in foreign
currencies.  The value of Fund investments denominated in foreign currencies may
be affected,  favorably  or  unfavorably,  by the relative  strength of the U.S.
dollar,  changes in foreign currency and U.S. dollar exchange rates and exchange
control  regulations.  A Fund's  net asset  value per share may,  therefore,  be
affected  by changes in currency  exchange  rates.  Changes in foreign  currency
exchange rates may also affect the value of dividends and interest earned, gains
and losses  realized on the sale of  securities  and net  investment  income and
gains,  if any, to be distributed to shareholders  by a Fund.  Foreign  currency
exchange  rates  generally are  determined by the forces of supply and demand in
foreign  exchange  markets and the relative  merits of  investment  in different
countries,  actual or  perceived  changes  in  interest  rates or other  complex
factors, as seen from an international perspective. Currency exchange rates also
can be affected  unpredictably by intervention by U.S. or foreign governments or
central banks or the failure to intervene,  or by currency controls or political
developments  in the U.S.  or abroad.  In  addition,  a Fund may incur  costs in
connection  with  conversions  between  various  currencies.   Investors  should
understand  and  consider  carefully  the  special  risks  involved  in  foreign
investing.  These  risks are often  heightened  for  investments  in emerging or
developing countries.

     Developing  Countries.  Investing in developing  countries involves certain
risks not typically  associated with investing in U.S.  securities,  and imposes
risks greater than, or in addition to, risks of investing in foreign,  developed
countries.  These risks include: the risk of nationalization or expropriation of
assets or  confiscatory  taxation;  currency  devaluations  and  other  currency
exchange  rate  fluctuations;  social,  economic and political  uncertainty  and
instability (including the risk of war); more substantial government involvement
in the economy;  higher rates of  inflation;  less  government  supervision  and
regulation of the securities markets and participants in those markets; controls
on foreign investment and limitations on repatriation of invested capital and on
a Fund's ability to exchange local currencies for U.S.  dollars;  unavailability
of currency hedging  techniques in certain developing  countries;  the fact that
companies  in  developing  countries  may be smaller,  less  seasoned  and newly
organized  companies;  the  difference  in, or lack of,  auditing and  financial
reporting standards,  which may result in unavailability of material information
about issuers; the risk that it may be more difficult to obtain and/or enforce a
judgment in a court outside the United  States;  and greater  price  volatility,
substantially less liquidity and significantly  smaller market capitalization of
securities markets.

             American Depositary Receipts ("ADRs"), European Depositary Receipts
("EDRs") and Global Depositary  Receipts ("GDRs").  ADRs are  dollar-denominated
receipts  generally  issued by a domestic bank that  represents the deposit of a
security  of a foreign  issuer.  ADRs may be  publicly  traded on  exchanges  or
over-the-counter in the United States. EDRs are receipts similar to ADRs and are
issued and traded in Europe.  GDRs may be offered privately in the United States
and also  trade in public or  private  markets  in other  countries.  Depositary
receipts  may be issued as  sponsored  or  unsponsored  programs.  In  sponsored
programs,  the issuer makes  arrangements  to have its securities  traded in the
form of a depositary  receipt.  In unsponsored  programs,  the issuer may not be
directly  involved  in  the  creation  of  the  program.   Although   regulatory
requirements  with respect to sponsored and  unsponsored  programs are generally
similar,  the issuers of  unsponsored  depositary  receipts are not obligated to
disclose material information in the United States and, therefore, the import of
such information may not be reflected in the market value of such securities.

             Forward  Foreign  Currency  Exchange  Contracts.  A forward foreign
currency  exchange  contract  involves  an  obligation  to  purchase  or  sell a
specified  currency at a future date, which may be any fixed number of days from
the date the contract is agreed upon by the parties,  at a price set at the time
of the contract.  By entering into a forward foreign currency  contract,  a Fund
"locks in" the  exchange  rate  between  the  currency  it will  deliver and the
currency it will receive for the duration of the contract.  As a result,  a Fund
reduces its exposure to changes in the value of the currency it will deliver and
increases  its  exposure to changes in the value of the  currency  into which it
will  exchange.  The  effect  on the  value  of a Fund  is  similar  to  selling
securities  denominated in one currency and purchasing securities denominated in
another.  The Funds may enter into these  contracts  for the purposes of hedging
against foreign exchange risk arising from such Fund's investment or anticipated
investment  in  securities  denominated  in or exposed  to  foreign  currencies.
Although a Sub-advisor  may, from time to time,  seek to protect a Fund by using
forward  contracts,   anticipated  currency  movements  may  not  be  accurately
predicted  and the  Fund may  incur a gain or a loss on a  forward  contract.  A
forward contract may reduce a Fund's losses on securities denominated in foreign
currency,  but it may also reduce the potential gain on the securities depending
on  changes  in the  currency's  value  relative  to the  U.S.  dollar  or other
currencies.

             Lower-Rated   High-Yield   Bonds.   Lower-rated   high-yield  bonds
(commonly  known as "junk  bonds")  are  generally  considered  to be high  risk
investments  as they are subject to a higher risk of default  than  higher-rated
bonds.  In addition,  the market for lower-rated  high-yield  bonds generally is
more limited than the market for  higher-rated  bonds, and because their markets
may be thinner and less  active,  the market  prices of  lower-rated  high-yield
bonds may fluctuate more than the prices of higher-rated bonds,  particularly in
times of market stress. In addition,  while the market for high-yield  corporate
debt securities has been in existence for many years, the market in recent years
has experienced a dramatic increase in the large-scale use of such securities to
fund highly leveraged corporate  acquisitions and  restructurings.  Accordingly,
past experience may not provide an accurate  indication of future performance of
the high-yield  bond market,  especially  during periods of economic  recession.
Other risks which may be associated with  lower-rated  high-yield bonds include:
the exercise of any  redemption  or call  provisions  in a declining  market may
result in their replacement by lower yielding bonds; and legislation,  from time
to time, may adversely affect their market.  Since the risk of default is higher
among lower-rated high-yield bonds, a Sub-advisor's research and analysis are an
important  ingredient in the selection of lower-rated  high-yield bonds. Through
portfolio  diversification,  good  credit  analysis  and  attention  to  current
developments  and trends in interest rates and economic  conditions,  investment
risk may be reduced, although there is no assurance that losses will not occur.

             Illiquid and  Restricted  Securities.  The Directors of the Company
have  promulgated  guidelines  with  respect to  illiquid  securities.  Illiquid
securities are deemed as such because they are subject to  restrictions on their
resale  ("restricted  securities")  or because,  based upon their  nature or the
market  for  such  securities,  they  are  not  readily  marketable.  Restricted
securities are acquired through private  placement  transactions,  directly from
the issuer or from security holders, generally at higher yields or on terms more
favorable to investors than comparable publicly traded securities.  However, the
restrictions  on resale  may make it  difficult  for a Fund to  dispose  of such
securities at the time considered most  advantageous by its Sub-advisor,  and/or
may involve  expenses that would not be incurred in the sale of securities  that
were freely  marketable.  A Fund that may  purchase  restricted  securities  may
qualify  for and  trade  restricted  securities  in the  "institutional  trading
market"  pursuant  to Rule 144A of the  Securities  Act of 1933.  Trading in the
institutional  trading  market may enable a Sub-advisor to dispose of restricted
securities at a time the  Sub-advisor  considers  advantageous  and/or at a more
favorable  price than would be available if such  securities  were not traded in
such market.  However,  the  institutional  trading market is relatively new and
liquidity  of a Fund's  investments  in such market could be impaired if trading
does not  develop or  declines.  Risks  associated  with  restricted  securities
include the potential obligation to pay all or part of the registration expenses
in order to sell certain restricted  securities.  A considerable  period of time
may elapse  between the time of the  decision to sell a security  and the time a
Fund may be permitted to sell it under an effective registration statement.  If,
during such a period,  adverse conditions were to develop, a Fund might obtain a
less favorable price than prevailing when it decided to sell.

             Repurchase   Agreements.   The   Directors   of  the  Company  have
promulgated  guidelines  with  respect  to  repurchase  agreements.   Repurchase
agreements  are  agreements  by which a Fund  purchases a security and obtains a
simultaneous  commitment from the seller to repurchase the security at an agreed
upon price and date.  The resale  price is in excess of the  purchase  price and
reflects  an  agreed  upon  market  rate  unrelated  to the  coupon  rate on the
purchased security.  A repurchase  transaction is usually accomplished either by
crediting  the  amount  of  securities  purchased  to the  account  of a  Fund's
custodian maintained in a central depository or book-entry system or by physical
delivery of the  securities to a Fund's  custodian in return for delivery of the
purchase  price  to the  seller.  Repurchase  transactions  are  intended  to be
short-term  transactions  with the seller  repurchasing the securities,  usually
within seven days.

             A Fund which  enters into a  repurchase  agreement  bears a risk of
loss in the event  that the other  party to such an  agreement  defaults  on its
obligation and such Fund is delayed or prevented  from  exercising its rights to
dispose of the collateral  securities,  including the risk of a possible decline
in value of the  underlying  securities  during  the  period  such Fund seeks to
assert  these  rights,  as well as the risk of  incurring  expenses in asserting
these  rights  and the risk of  losing  all or part of the  income  from such an
agreement.  If the seller  institution  defaults,  a Fund might  incur a loss or
delay in the realization of proceeds if the value of the collateral securing the
repurchase   agreement   declines  and  it  might  incur  disposition  costs  in
liquidating the collateral. In the event that such a defaulting seller filed for
bankruptcy or became  insolvent,  disposition of such securities by a Fund might
be delayed pending court action.

             Reverse Repurchase Agreements. In a reverse repurchase agreement, a
Fund transfers possession of a portfolio instrument to another person, such as a
broker-dealer  or  financial  institution  in  return  for a  percentage  of the
instrument's  market value in cash and agrees that on a  stipulated  date in the
future such Fund will  repurchase  the  portfolio  instrument  by remitting  the
original  consideration  plus  interest at an agreed upon rate.  When  effecting
reverse repurchase  agreements,  assets of a Fund, in a dollar amount sufficient
to make payment for the  obligations to be  repurchased,  are segregated on such
Fund's  records at the trade date and are  maintained  until the  transaction is
settled. Reverse repurchase agreements involve the risk that the market value of
the securities  retained by the Fund may decline below the  repurchase  price of
the securities which it is obligated to repurchase.

             Borrowing.  Each Fund's  borrowings are limited so that immediately
after such borrowing the value of the Fund's assets (including  borrowings) less
its liabilities (not including borrowings) is at least three times the amount of
the borrowings.  Should a Fund, for any reason, have borrowings that do not meet
the above test then,  within  three  business  days,  such Fund must reduce such
borrowings so as to meet the necessary  test.  Under such a  circumstance,  such
Fund may have to liquidate securities at a time when it is disadvantageous to do
so. Gains made with additional funds borrowed will generally cause the net asset
value of such  Fund's  shares  to rise  faster  than  could be the case  without
borrowings.  Conversely,  if  investment  results  fail  to  cover  the  cost of
borrowings, the net asset value of such Fund could decrease faster than if there
had been no borrowings.

             Convertible   Securities  and  Warrants.   Convertible   securities
generally  participate in the  appreciation  or  depreciation  of the underlying
stock into which they are  convertible,  but to a lesser  degree.  Warrants  are
options to buy a stated  number of shares of common  stock at a specified  price
any time during the life of the  warrants.  The value of warrants may  fluctuate
more than the value of the securities  underlying such warrants.  The value of a
warrant  detached from its underlying  security will expire without value if the
rights under such warrant are not exercised prior to its expiration date.

   
             Other Investment Companies:  The Company has made arrangements with
certain money market mutual funds so that the Sub-advisors for the various Funds
can  "sweep"  excess  cash  balances  of the Fund to those  funds for  temporary
investment  purposes.  Mutual funds pay their own  operating  expenses,  and the
Funds,  as  shareholders  in the money market funds,  will  indirectly pay their
proportionate  share of such funds' expenses.  Investments in other mutual funds
and  investment  companies  will  be made  subject  to the  restrictions  of the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"),  which, among other
restrictions,  places  certain  limits on the proportion of a Fund's assets that
can be invested in other investment companies.
    

                            PERFORMANCE OF THE FUNDS

             From time to time,  a Fund's yield and total return may be included
in advertisements,  sales literature,  or shareholder reports. In addition,  the
Company may advertise the effective yield of the ASAF JPM Money Market Fund. All
figures  are based upon  historical  earnings  and are not  intended to indicate
future performance.

             The "yield" of a Fund refers to the annualized net income generated
by an investment  in that Fund over a specified  30-day period (7-day period for
the ASAF JPM Money Market Fund).  The effective  yield is calculated  similarly,
but, when annualized, the income earned by an investment in that Fund is assumed
to be  reinvested.  The effective  yield will be slightly  higher than the yield
because of the compounding effect of this assumed reinvestment.

             The "total  return" of a Fund refers to the average  annual rate of
return of an investment in the Fund.  This figure is computed by calculating the
percentage change in the value of an investment of $1,000, assuming reinvestment
of all  income  dividends  and  capital  gains  distributions,  to the  end of a
specified period.  "Total return" quotations reflect the performance of the Fund
and include the effect of capital changes.

             Additional  information  about  the  performance  of the  Funds  is
contained in the Company's SAI under "Additional  Performance  Information," and
is also  contained in the Funds' annual reports to  shareholders,  both of which
you may obtain  without  charge by writing to "American  Skandia  Advisor Funds,
Inc."  at  P.O.  Box  8012,  Boston,  Massachusetts  02266-8012  or  by  calling
1-800-SKANDIA.

       

                                HOW TO BUY SHARES

MINIMUM INVESTMENTS:

             You can open a Fund account with a minimum  initial  investment  of
$1,000 in a particular Fund and make  additional  investments to such account at
any time with as little as $50. The initial investment minimum is reduced to $50
per Fund through  "Automatic  Investment  Plans" as discussed more fully in this
Prospectus under "Special  Investment  Programs and  Privileges."  Lower minimum
initial and  additional  investments  may also be  applicable  in certain  other
circumstances,  including  purchases by certain tax deferred retirement programs
and Education  IRAs.  There is no minimum  investment  requirement  when you are
buying shares by reinvesting dividends and distributions from a Fund.

METHODS OF BUYING SHARES:

             Each  Fund  offers  four  different  classes  of  shares -- Class A
shares, Class B shares, Class C shares and Class X shares. The different classes
of shares  represent  investments  in the same  portfolio of securities  but are
subject to different  sales  charges,  expenses  and,  likely,  different  share
prices.  When you purchase  shares of the Funds, be sure to specify the class of
shares  of the  Fund(s)  you  wish  to  purchase.  If you  do not  choose,  your
investment will be made in Class A shares. See below for a detailed  description
of the purchase of Class A, B, C and X shares of the Funds.

             You  can  purchase  shares  of the  Funds  through  any  dealer  or
financial   institution  that  has  a  sales  agreement  with  American  Skandia
Marketing,  Incorporated (the  "Distributor"),  or directly through the Company.
Methods of purchasing shares include:

     Buying Shares  Through Your Dealer.  Your dealer will place your order with
the Company on your behalf.

             Buying  Shares  Through  the  Company.  Make your check  payable to
"American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc." and mail your investment, along with your
completed  account  application,  to the address  indicated on the  application.
Please  include  an  investment  dealer on the  application.  If a dealer is not
listed, the Distributor will act as your agent in buying the Shares.

     Buying  Shares  Through Wire  Transfer.  You should  instruct  your bank to
transfer funds by wire to:

                                 ABA # 011000028
                        State Street Bank & Trust Company
                              Boston, Massachusetts
                                 DDA # 99052995

                    FBO: American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
                          Fund Name and Class of Shares
                       Shareholder Name and Account Number

             Buying Shares Through  Bank-Linked  Accounts.  If you have selected
this option on your account application,  you may link your Fund account to your
designated bank account electronically. Purchase minimums and sales charges will
apply.

PURCHASE ORDERS:

             Purchase  orders for all Funds are accepted  only on a day on which
the New York Stock  Exchange  ("NYSE") is open for business (a "business  day").
Orders  for  shares  received  by Boston  Financial  Data  Services,  Inc.  (the
"Transfer  Agent") on any business day prior to the close of trading on the NYSE
(normally 4:00 p.m.  Eastern Time) will receive the offering price calculated at
the close of trading that day.  Orders received by the Transfer Agent after such
time but prior to the close of business on the next  business  day will  receive
the offering price calculated at the close of trading on that next business day.
The offering  price is the net asset value ("NAV") plus any initial sales charge
that applies.  For a discussion of how NAV is  determined,  see this  Prospectus
under  "Determination  of Net Asset  Value." If you  purchase  shares  through a
dealer,  your  dealer is  responsible  for  forwarding  payment  promptly to the
Transfer  Agent.  It is anticipated  that the NYSE will be closed  Saturdays and
Sundays and on days on which the NYSE observes New Year's Day,  President's Day,
Good Friday,  Memorial Day,  Independence  Day, Labor Day,  Thanksgiving Day and
Christmas Day.

             Each Fund and the  Distributor  or the Transfer  Agent reserves the
right to reject  any order for the  purchase  of a Fund's  shares.  The  Company
reserves the right to cancel any purchase  order for which  payment has not been
received  by the fifth  business  day  following  the  placement  of the  order.
Additionally,  if the purchase  payment does not clear,  your  purchase  will be
canceled and you could be liable for any losses or fees the Fund or the Transfer
Agent have  incurred.  If the Transfer  Agent deems it  appropriate,  additional
documentation or verification of authority may be required and an order will not
be  deemed  received  unless  and  until  such   additional   documentation   or
verification is received by the Transfer Agent.

PURCHASE OF CLASS A SHARES:

             Class A shares are sold at their offering price,  which is normally
NAV plus an initial  sales  charge that varies  depending  on the amount of your
investment. In certain instances described below, however,  purchases are either
not subject to an initial  sales charge (and the offering  price will be at NAV)
or will be eligible for reduced  initial  sales  charges.  The Fund  receives an
amount  equal to the NAV to invest  for your  account.  A  portion  of the sales
charge may be retained by the  Distributor  or  allocated  to your  dealer.  The
current  sales charge rates and  commissions  paid to dealers and brokers are as
follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  High Yield Bond & Total Return Bond Funds:       All Other Funds (including Money Market
                                                                                                   Fund):

                                 Front-end       Front-end                      Front-end       Front-end
                                 Sales Charge    Sales Charge   Commission      Sales Charge    Sales Charge   Commission
                                 (as % of        (as % of       (as % of        (as % of        (as % of       (as % of
                                  offering        amt.           offering        offering        amt.           offering
Amount of Purchase:               price)          invested)      price)          price)          invested)      price)
- ------------------               ------          ---------      ------          ------          ---------      ------

<S>       <C>                        <C>             <C>            <C>             <C>             <C>            <C>  
Less than $50,000                    4.25%           4.44%          3.50%           5.00%           5.26%          4.25%
$50,000 up to $100,000               3.75%           3.90%          3.00%           4.25%           4.44%          3.50%
$100,000 up to $250,000              3.25%           3.36%          2.50%           3.25%           3.36%          2.50%
$250,000 up to $500,000              2.25%           2.30%          1.75%           2.25%           2.30%          1.75%
$500,000 up to $1 million            1.50%           1.52%          1.25%           1.50%           1.52%          1.25%
</TABLE>

             The  Distributor  reserves  the right to  allocate up to the entire
amount of the  initial  sales  charge to dealers  for all sales with  respect to
orders  which  are  placed   during  a  particular   period.   Dealers  to  whom
substantially  the  entire  sales  charge  is  allocated  may  be  deemed  to be
"underwriters"  as that term is defined  under the  Securities  Act of 1933 (the
"1933 Act").  In addition to amounts paid to dealers as a commission  out of the
front-end  sales  charge,  the  Distributor  may,  at its own  expense,  provide
promotional incentives,  including cash compensation in excess of the applicable
sales charge to certain dealers whose  representatives have sold or are expected
to sell significant amounts of shares of one or more of the Funds.

             Purchases  Subject to a Contingent  Deferred Sales Charge ("CDSC").
There is no initial sales charge on purchases  aggregating $1 or more of Class A
shares of any one or more of the  Funds.  However,  if such  Class A shares  are
redeemed  within 12 months of the first  business day of the  calendar  month of
their  purchase,  a CDSC ("Class A CDSC") will be deducted  from the  redemption
proceeds.  The Class A CDSC will not apply to redemptions of shares purchased by
the reinvestment of dividends or capital gains  distributions  and may be waived
under certain circumstances  described below under "Waiver of Class A CDSC." The
Class A CDSC will be equal to 1.0% of the lesser of the  shares' NAV at the time
of redemption or the original amount  invested.  The Class A CDSC is not imposed
on the amount of any  increase in your  account  value over the  initial  amount
invested.  The Class A CDSC is paid to the  Distributor  to  reimburse  expenses
incurred in providing  distribution-related  services to the Fund in  connection
with the sale of Class A shares.  To determine  whether the Class A CDSC applies
to a redemption,  the Fund will first redeem shares  acquired by reinvestment of
dividends  and capital gains  distributions,  and then will redeem shares in the
order in which  they were  purchased  (such that  shares  held the  longest  are
redeemed first).

     The Distributor  will pay the dealer of record a sales  commission on these
purchases in an amount equal to 0.50% of the amount invested.

             Reduction of Initial Sales  Charges for Class A Shares.  You may be
eligible to buy Class A shares at reduced  initial  sales charge rates in one or
more of the following ways:

   
     Combined  Purchases.  Initial  sales  charge  reductions  are  available by
combining  into a single  transaction  the  purchase  of Class A shares with the
purchase of any other class of shares.  Qualifying  purchases include: (1) those
by you,  your spouse and your  children  under the age of 21, if all parties are
purchasing  shares for their own  account(s),  which may include  tax  qualified
plans such as an IRA,  SIMPLE IRA,  individual  type  403(b)(7)  plan,  a single
participant  Keogh type plan, or by a company  controlled by such individuals as
defined  in the 1940  Act;  (2)  individual  purchases  by a  trustee  (or other
fiduciary) if the  investment  is for a single trust estate or single  fiduciary
account, including a employee benefit plan other than those described above; and
(3) purchases by qualified  employee  benefit plans,  other than those described
above, of a single employer,  or of affiliated  employers as defined in the 1940
Act. Purchases made for nominee or street name accounts  (securities held in the
name of an investment  dealer or another nominee such as a bank trust department
instead of the  customer) may not be aggregated  with  purchases  made for other
accounts and may not be  aggregated  with other  nominee or street name accounts
unless otherwise qualified as described above.
    

     Rights of  Accumulation.  The initial  sales charge for your  investment in
Fund  shares may also be reduced by  aggregating  the amount of such  investment
with the current value of all Fund shares  currently owned by you at the time of
your current purchase.  The rules described above under "Combined Purchases" may
apply.

     Letter of Intent ("LOI"). You may reduce the initial sales charge rate that
applies to your  purchases of Class A shares by meeting the terms of an LOI -- a
non-binding commitment to invest a certain amount within a thirteen-month period
from your initial purchase. The total amount of your intended purchases of Class
A, B, C and X shares will  determine  the reduced  sales charge rate for Class A
shares  purchased during that period.  This can include  purchases made up to 90
days  before  the date of the LOI.  Up to 5% of the LOI  amount  will be held in
escrow  to  cover  additional  sales  charges  which  may be due if  your  total
investments over the LOI period are not sufficient to qualify for a sales charge
reduction.  The rules described above under "Combined  Purchases" may apply. For
additional  information  regarding  LOIs,  see the account  application  and the
Company's SAI under  "Additional  Information  on the Purchase and Redemption of
Shares."

   
             Waiver of All Class A Sales Charges.  No sales charge is imposed on
sales of Class A shares for the following investors: (1) the Investment Manager,
its parent  company,  any  affiliate or subsidiary  of the parent  company;  (2)
present  or former  officers,  directors,  trustees  and  employees  (and  their
parents,  spouses and dependent children) of the Company, the Investment Manager
(including,  its parent  company or any  affiliate or  subsidiary  of the parent
company) or the  Sub-advisors,  and any  retirement  plans  established  by such
entities  for their  employees;  (3)  accounts  with respect to which any person
described  in (2) above  acts as a  custodian  on  behalf of a minor  (including
Uniform  Gift to Minors Act and Uniform  Transfer to Minors Act  accounts);  (4)
present  partners  and  employees  (and their  parents,  spouses  and  dependent
children) of the Transfer  Agent and the  Company's or the Trust's legal counsel
and administrator; (5) dealers that have a sales agreement with the Distributor,
if they purchase shares for their own accounts or for retirement plans for their
employees;  (6) employees and  registered  representatives  (and their  parents,
spouses and dependent  children) of dealers or financial  institutions that have
entered into sales  arrangements  with such dealers (and are  identified  to the
Distributor)  or  with  the  Distributor;  the  purchaser  must  certify  to the
Distributor at the time of purchase that the purchase is for the purchaser's own
account  (or for the  benefit of such  employee's  parents,  spouse,  parents of
spouse, or minor children); (7) dealers, brokers, registered investment advisers
or third-party administrators or consultants that have entered into an agreement
with  the  Distributor  providing  specifically  for the use of Fund  shares  in
investment  products or services made  available to their clients (those clients
may be charged a  transaction  fee by their  dealer,  broker or adviser  for the
purchase or sale of Fund shares); (8) employees (and their parents,  spouses and
dependent  children)  of  firms  providing  the  Company,  the  Trust  or  their
affiliates  with  regular  legal,  actuarial,  auditing,  underwriting,  claims,
administrative,  computer-support,  marketing, office or other services; and (9)
any Sub-advisor of the Company or the Trust.
    

   
             Additionally,   no  sales  charge  is  imposed  on  the   following
transactions:  (1) shares  issued in plans of  reorganization,  such as mergers,
asset  acquisitions and exchange offers,  to which a Fund is a party; (2) shares
purchased  by  the  reinvestment  of  loan  repayments  by  a  participant  in a
retirement  plan;  (3) shares  purchased by the  reinvestment  of  distributions
received  from a Fund;  (4) shares  purchased  and paid for with the proceeds of
shares  redeemed  in the prior 180 days from a mutual  fund on which an  initial
sales  charge  or CDSC  was  paid  (other  than a  mutual  fund  managed  by the
Investment  Manager  or any of  its  affiliates);  (5)  purchases  by a  defined
contribution plan under section 401(a) of the Code (including 401(k) plans) with
at least 25 eligible employees; (6) purchases by a 403(b)(7) plan subject to the
Employee  Retirement  Income Security Act of 1974, as amended;  (7) purchases by
former participants in a qualified  retirement plan, where a portion of the plan
was  invested  in  the  Company;   (8)  purchases  by   non-qualified   deferred
compensation plans; and (9) sponsored arrangements with organizations which make
recommendations  to or permit group  solicitations of its employees,  members or
participants.
    

             In order for the above  sales  charge  reductions  or waivers to be
effective,  the  Transfer  Agent must be  notified  of the  reduction  or waiver
request  when the  purchase  order is placed.  The  Transfer  Agent may  require
evidence  of your  qualification  for such  reductions  or  waivers.  Additional
information  about the above sales charge  reductions or waivers can be obtained
from the Transfer Agent by calling 1-800-SKANDIA.

   
             Waiver of Class A CDSC. The Class A CDSC for purchases  aggregating
$1 million or more is waived in the  following  cases if shares are redeemed and
the Transfer Agent is notified:  (1) redemptions  under a Systematic  Withdrawal
Plan as described in this  Prospectus  under  "Special  Investment  Programs and
Privileges";  (2)  redemptions to pay premiums for optional  insurance  coverage
described in this Prospectus under "Special Investment Programs and Privileges";
(3)  redemptions  following  death or  post-purchase  disability  (as defined by
Section  72(m)(7) of the Code);  (4)  distributions  or loans to participants of
qualified  retirement plans and other employee benefit plans; (5) the portion of
a mandated minimum  distribution from an IRA, SIMPLE IRA or 403(b)(7) plan equal
to the percentage of your plan assets held in Class A shares of the Company; (6)
the portion of any  substantially  equal  periodic  payments  (as  described  in
Section  72(t) of the Code) equal to the  percentage of your plan assets held in
class A shares of the Company;  and (7) the return of excess  contributions made
to your IRA, SIMPLE IRA, 403(b)(7) plan or 401(k) plan.
    

             Class A  Distribution  and Service Plan.  The Company has adopted a
Distribution  and Service plan  (commonly  known as a "12b-1  Plan") for Class A
shares to compensate the  Distributor for its services and costs in distributing
Class A shares and servicing Class A shareholder  accounts (the "Class A Plan").
Under  the  Class A Plan,  the Fund  pays the  Distributor  0.50% of the  Fund's
average  daily  net  assets  attributable  to Class A  shares,  half of which is
intended  as  a  fee  for  services  provided  to  existing  shareholders.   The
Distributor  uses  distribution and service fees received under the Class A Plan
to compensate qualified dealers, brokers, banks and other financial institutions
for  services  provided  in  connection  with the sale of Class A shares and the
maintenance  of  shareholders  accounts.   Such  compensation  is  paid  by  the
Distributor  quarterly  at an  annual  rate not to  exceed  0.50% of the  Fund's
average daily net assets  attributable to Class A shares held in accounts of the
dealer or its customers.  The  calculation of such payment  excludes,  until one
year after  purchase,  shares  purchased at NAV with a CDSC.  NAV shares are not
subject to the  one-year  exclusion  in cases  where  certain  shareholders  who
invested  $1 million or more have made  arrangements  with the  Company  and the
dealer of record waives the sales commission.

PURCHASE OF CLASS B SHARES:

             Class  B  shares  are  not   offered  to   "Qualified"   purchasers
(including,  but not limited to,  IRAs,  Roth IRAs,  Education  IRAs,  SEP IRAs,
SIMPLE  IRAs,  401 plans and  403(b)(7)  plans).  Any  request  for  "Qualified"
purchases of Class B shares will normally be  considered  as a purchase  request
for Class X shares or  declined.  Because in most cases it is more  advantageous
for an investor to purchase Class A shares for amounts in excess of $500,000,  a
request  to  purchase  Class B shares  for  $500,000  or more will  normally  be
considered as a purchase request for Class A shares or declined.

             Class B shares are sold at NAV per share  without an initial  sales
charge.  However,  if  Class B  shares  are  redeemed  within  7 years  of their
purchase, a CDSC ("Class B CDSC") will be deducted from the redemption proceeds.
The Class B CDSC  will not  apply to  redemptions  of  shares  purchased  by the
reinvestment of dividends or capital gains distributions and may be waived under
certain circumstances described below. The charge will be assessed on the lesser
of the shares' NAV at the time of  redemption or the original  amount  invested.
The Class B CDSC is not imposed on the amount of any  increase  in your  account
value  over  the  initial  amount  invested.  The  Class  B CDSC  is paid to the
Distributor  to reimburse  expenses  incurred in providing  distribution-related
services  to the Fund in  connection  with the sale of Class B shares.  Although
Class B shares  are sold  without  an  initial  sales  charge,  the  Distributor
normally  pays a sales  commission  of 5.50%  (and may pay up to  6.00%)  of the
purchase  price of Class B shares to the dealer  from its own  resources  at the
time of the sale. During the initial offering period of the Class B shares,  the
Distributor  intends to pay a 6.00% up-front sales commission to the dealer. The
Distributor  has assigned its right to receive any Class B CDSC,  as well as any
distribution  and service fee discussed  below under "Class B  Distribution  and
Service Plan," to an unaffiliated third party that provides funding for up-front
sales commission payments.

             To determine whether the Class B CDSC applies to a redemption,  the
Fund will first redeem shares  acquired by reinvestment of dividends and capital
gains distributions, and then will redeem shares in the order in which they were
purchased (such that shares held the longest are redeemed first).  The amount of
the Class B CDSC will depend on the number of years since the time you  invested
and the dollar amount being redeemed, according to the following schedule:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                  Redemption During:                      Class B CDSC (as % of amount subject to charge):

                  <S>                                                           <C> 
                  1st year after purchase                                       6.0%
                  2nd year after purchase                                       5.0%
                  3rd year after purchase                                       4.0%
                  4th year after purchase                                       3.0%
                  5th year after purchase                                       2.0%
                  6th year after purchase                                       2.0%
                  7th year after purchase                                       1.0%
                  8th year after purchase                                       None
</TABLE>

             In the table,  a "year" is a 12-month  period.  All  purchases  are
considered to have been made on the first business day of the month in which the
purchase was made.

             Waiver  of Class B CDSC.  The  Class B CDSC  will be  waived in the
following  cases if shares are redeemed and the Transfer Agent is notified:  (1)
redemptions  under a Systematic  Withdrawal Plan as described in this Prospectus
under  "Special  Investment  Programs and  Privileges";  (2)  redemptions to pay
premiums for optional  insurance  coverage  described in this  Prospectus  under
"Special  Investment  Programs and  Privileges";  and (3) redemptions  following
death or post-purchase disability (as defined by Section 72(m)(7) of the Code).

             Automatic  Conversion  of Class B  Shares.  Eight  years  after you
purchase Class B shares of a Fund,  those shares will  automatically  convert to
Class  A  shares  of  that  Fund.  This  conversion  feature  relieves  Class  B
shareholders of the higher asset-based distribution charge that applies to Class
B shares under the Class B Distribution  and Service Plan described  below.  The
conversion is based on the relative NAV of the two classes, and no sales load or
other  charge is imposed.  At the time of  conversion,  a portion of the Class B
shares  purchased  through  the  reinvestment  of  dividends  or  capital  gains
("Dividend Shares") will also convert to Class A shares. The portion of Dividend
Shares that will convert is determined by the ratio of your  converting  Class B
non-Dividend  Shares to your total Class B  non-Dividend  Shares.  Under Section
1036 of the Code, the automatic  conversion of Class B shares will not result in
a gain or loss to the Fund or to affected shareholders.

             Class B  Distribution  and Service Plan.  The Company has adopted a
Distribution  and Service plan  (commonly  known as a "12b-1  Plan") for Class B
shares to compensate the  Distributor for its services and costs in distributing
Class B shares and servicing Class B shareholder  accounts (the "Class B Plan").
Under  the  Class B Plan,  the Fund  pays the  Distributor  1.00% of the  Fund's
average daily net assets attributable to Class B shares that are outstanding for
8 years or less, a quarter of which is intended as a fee for  services  provided
to existing  shareholders.  The Distributor  uses  distribution and service fees
received under the Class B Plan to compensate qualified dealers,  brokers, banks
and other financial  institutions  for services  provided in connection with the
sale of  Class B  shares  and the  maintenance  of  shareholder  accounts.  Such
compensation  is paid by the  Distributor  quarterly  at an  annual  rate not to
exceed  0.50% of the Fund's  average  daily net assets  attributable  to Class B
shares (and any shares  purchased  by the  reinvestment  of dividends or capital
gains) held for over seven years.

PURCHASE OF CLASS X SHARES:

   
             Class X shares are  currently  only offered to certain  "Qualified"
purchasers (including,  but not limited to, IRAs, Roth IRAs, Education IRAs, SEP
IRAs,  SIMPLE  IRAs  and  403(b)(7)  plans).  Any  request  for  "Non-Qualified"
purchases  of Class X shares up to $500,000  will  normally be  considered  as a
purchase request for Class B shares or declined. Any request for "Non-Qualified"
purchases  of Class X shares above  $500,000  will be  considered  as a purchase
request for Class A shares or declined.  Because it is more  advantageous for an
investor  to  purchase  Class A shares for  amounts in excess of  $1,000,000,  a
request to  purchase  Class X shares for  $1,000,000  or more will  normally  be
considered as a purchase request for Class A shares or declined.
    

             Class X shares are sold at NAV per share  without an initial  sales
charge.  In addition,  investors  purchasing  Class X shares will receive,  as a
bonus,  additional  shares having a value equal to 2.50% of the amount  invested
("Bonus Shares"). The Distributor has undertaken to pay for Bonus Shares as part
of its  services  to  the  Funds.  The  Distributor  expects  to  recover  costs
associated  with its purchases of Bonus Shares  through fees received  under the
Class X Distribution and Service Plan discussed  below.  Shares purchased by the
reinvestment  of dividends or capital gains  distributions  are not eligible for
Bonus Shares.

             Although  Class X shares are sold without an initial  sales charge,
if Class X shares are redeemed within 7 years of their purchase,  a CDSC ("Class
X CDSC") will be deducted from the  redemption  proceeds.  The Class X CDSC will
not apply to redemptions of Bonus Shares or shares purchased by the reinvestment
of  dividends or capital  gains  distributions  and may be waived under  certain
circumstances  described  below. The Class X CDSC will be assessed on the lesser
of the NAV of the  shares  at the  time of  redemption  or the  original  amount
invested.  The Class X CDSC is not imposed on the amount of any increase in your
account value over the initial amount invested.  The Class X CDSC is paid to the
Distributor  to reimburse  expenses  incurred in providing  distribution-related
services  to the Fund in  connection  with the sale of Class X shares.  Although
Class X shares  are sold  without  an  initial  sales  charge,  the  Distributor
normally  pays a sales  commission  of 3.00%  (and may pay up to  3.50%)  of the
purchase  price of Class X shares to the dealer  from its own  resources  at the
time of the sale. During the initial offering period of the Class X shares,  the
Distributor  intends to pay a 3.50% up-front sales commission to the dealer. The
Distributor  has assigned its right to receive any Class X CDSC,  as well as any
distribution  and service fee discussed  below under "Class X  Distribution  and
Service Plan," to an unaffiliated third party that provides funding for up-front
sales commission payments.

             To determine whether the Class X CDSC applies to a redemption,  the
Fund redeems shares in the following  order: (1) shares acquired by reinvestment
of  dividends  and capital  gains  distributions;  (2) shares  (including  Bonus
Shares) held for over 7 years;  (3) shares (not  including  Bonus Shares) in the
order they were  purchased  (such that  shares  held the  longest  are  redeemed
first);  and (4) Bonus Shares in the order they were  acquired  (such that Bonus
Shares held the longest are redeemed first). The amount of the Class X CDSC will
depend on the number of years since the time you invested and the dollar  amount
being redeemed, according to the following schedule:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                  Redemption During:                      Class X CDSC (as % of amount subject to charge):

                  <S>                                                           <C> 
                  1st year after purchase                                       6.0%
                  2nd year after purchase                                       5.0%
                  3rd year after purchase                                       4.0%
                  4th year after purchase                                       3.0%
                  5th year after purchase                                       2.0%
                  6th year after purchase                                       2.0%
                  7th year after purchase                                       1.0%
                  8th year after purchase                                       None
</TABLE>

             In the table,  a "year" is a 12-month  period.  All  purchases  are
considered to have been made on the first business day of the month in which the
purchase was made.

             Waiver  of Class X CDSC.  The  Class X CDSC  will be  waived in the
following  cases if shares are redeemed and the Transfer Agent is notified:  (1)
redemptions  under a Systematic  Withdrawal Plan as described in this Prospectus
under  "Special  Investment  Programs and  Privileges";  (2)  redemptions to pay
premiums for optional  insurance  coverage  described in this  Prospectus  under
"Special Investment Programs and Privileges"; (3) redemptions following death or
post-purchase  disability (as defined by Section  72(m)(7) of the Code); (4) the
portion  of a  mandated  minimum  distribution  from  an IRA,  SIMPLE  IRA or an
individual  type 403(b)(7) plan equal to the percentage of your plan assets held
in Class X shares of the  Company;  (5) the portion of any  substantially  equal
periodic  payments  (as  described  in Section  72(t) of the Code)  equal to the
percentage  of your plan  assets  held in X shares of the  Company;  and (6) the
return of excess contributions from an IRA or SIMPLE IRA.

             Automatic  Conversion  of Class X  Shares.  Eight  years  after you
purchase Class X shares of a Fund,  those shares will  automatically  convert to
Class  A  shares  of  that  Fund.  This  conversion  feature  relieves  Class  X
shareholders of the higher asset-based distribution charge that applies to Class
X shares under the Class X Distribution  and Service Plan described  below.  The
conversion is based on the relative NAV of the two classes, and no sales load or
other  charge is imposed.  At the time of  conversion,  a portion of the Class X
shares  purchased  through  the  reinvestment  of  dividends  or  capital  gains
("Dividend Shares") will also convert to Class A shares. The portion of Dividend
Shares that will convert is determined by the ratio of your  converting  Class X
non-Dividend  Shares to your total Class X  non-Dividend  Shares.  Under Section
1036 of the Code, the automatic  conversion of Class X shares will not result in
a gain or loss to the Fund or to affected shareholders.

             Class X  Distribution  and Service Plan.  The Company has adopted a
Distribution  and Service plan  (commonly  known as a "12b-1  Plan") for Class X
shares to compensate the  Distributor for its services and costs in distributing
Class X shares and servicing Class X shareholder  accounts (the "Class X Plan").
Under  the  Class X Plan,  the Fund  pays the  Distributor  1.00% of the  Fund's
average daily net assets attributable to Class X shares that are outstanding for
8 years or less, a quarter of which is intended as a fee for  services  provided
to existing  shareholders.  The Distributor  uses  distribution and service fees
received  under the Class X Plan as  reimbursement  for its  purchases  of Bonus
Shares, as well as to compensate  qualified  dealers,  brokers,  banks and other
financial  institutions  for services  provided in  connection  with the sale of
Class  X  shares  and the  maintenance  of  shareholder  accounts.  Such  latter
compensation  is paid by the  Distributor  quarterly  at an  annual  rate not to
exceed  0.50% of the Fund's  average  daily net assets  attributable  to Class X
shares (and any shares  purchased  by the  reinvestment  of dividends or capital
gains as such shares) held for over seven years.



<PAGE>


PURCHASE OF CLASS C SHARES:

             Because it is more advantageous for an investor to purchase Class A
shares for amounts in excess of $1,000,000, a request to purchase Class C shares
for  $1,000,000  or more will be  considered  as a purchase  request for Class A
shares or declined.

             Class C shares are sold at NAV per share  without an initial  sales
charge.  However,  if Class C shares are redeemed  within 12 months of the first
business day of the calendar month of their purchase, a CDSC ("Class C CDSC") of
1.0% will be deducted from the  redemption  proceeds.  The Class C CDSC will not
apply to redemptions  of shares  purchased by the  reinvestment  of dividends or
capital  gains  distributions  and may be  waived  under  certain  circumstances
described  below.  The charge  will be  assessed on the lesser of the NAV of the
shares at the time of redemption or the original  amount  invested.  The Class C
CDSC is not imposed on the amount of any increase in your account value over the
initial  amount  invested.  The  Class  C CDSC is  paid  to the  Distributor  to
reimburse its expenses of providing distribution-related services to the Fund in
connection with the sale of Class C shares.

             To determine whether the Class C CDSC applies to a redemption,  the
Fund will first redeem shares  acquired by reinvestment of dividends and capital
gains distributions, and then will redeem shares in the order in which they were
purchased (such that shares held the longest are redeemed first).

             Waiver  of Class C CDSC.  The  Class C CDSC  will be  waived in the
following  cases if shares are redeemed and the Transfer Agent is notified:  (1)
redemptions  under a Systematic  Withdrawal Plan as described in this Prospectus
under  "Special  Investment  Programs and  Privileges";  (2)  redemptions to pay
premiums for optional  insurance  coverage  described in this  Prospectus  under
"Special Investment Programs and Privileges"; (3) redemptions following death or
post-purchase  disability  (as  defined by Section  72(m)(7)  of the Code);  (4)
distributions  or loans to participants of qualified  retirement plans and other
employee benefit plans; (5) the portion of a mandated minimum  distribution from
an IRA,  SIMPLE IRA or an individual type 403(b)(7) plan equal to the percentage
of your plan  assets held in Class C shares of the  Company;  (6) the portion of
any substantially  equal periodic payments (as described in Section 72(f) of the
Code) equal to the  percentage of your plan assets held in Class C shares of the
Company;  and (7) the return of excess  contributions from an IRA, SIMPLE IRA or
401(k) plan.

             Class C  Distribution  and Service Plan.  The Company has adopted a
Distribution  and Service plan  (commonly  known as a "12b-1  Plan") for Class C
shares to compensate the  Distributor for its services and costs in distributing
Class C shares and servicing Class C shareholder  accounts (the "Class C Plan").
Under  the  Class C Plan,  the Fund  pays the  Distributor  1.00% of the  Fund's
average daily net assets  attributable to Class C shares,  a quarter of which is
intended  as  a  fee  for  services  provided  to  existing  shareholders.   The
Distributor  uses  distribution and service fees received under the Class C Plan
to compensate qualified dealers, brokers, banks and other financial institutions
for  services  provided  in  connection  with the sale of Class C shares and the
maintenance of shareholder accounts.  The Distributor currently pays a 1.00% fee
to dealers in advance  upon sale of Class C shares and  retains  the fee paid by
the Fund in the first  year.  After the  shares  have been held for a year,  the
Distributor pays the fee to dealers on a quarterly basis.

                   SPECIAL INVESTMENT PROGRAMS AND PRIVILEGES
       


             Automatic  Investment  Plans ("AIP").  You may make regular monthly
investments through an automatic  withdrawal from your bank account ($50 minimum
per Fund). Sales charges will apply.

             Automatic Dividend  Reinvestment.  Unless you indicate otherwise on
your account  application,  your dividend and capital gains  distributions  will
automatically be reinvested in additional shares at no sales charge.

             Automatic Dividend  Diversification  ("ADD"). You may automatically
reinvest dividends and capital gains  distributions paid by one Fund into shares
of the same class of  another  Fund,  provided  that you have  already  met that
Fund's minimum  initial  purchase  requirement.  No initial sales charge or CDSC
will apply to the purchased  shares.  The number of shares purchased  through an
ADD investment  program will be determined by using the NAV of the Fund in which
dividends will be reinvested  next computed after the dividend  payment is made.
All  shareholder  accounts  involved  in an ADD  investment  program  must  have
identical registrations.

             Dollar Cost Averaging ("DCA").  You can set up monthly or quarterly
exchanges in amounts of $50 or more from one Fund to the same class of shares of
another Fund,  provided that the latter is currently available for sale. You may
set up more than one of these programs  simultaneously.  You should consider the
investment  objectives and policies of a Fund before  electing to exchange money
into such Fund through the DCA  investment  program.  All  shareholder  accounts
involved in a DCA investment program must have identical registrations.

             Systematic  Withdrawal  Plan  ("SWP").  You  may  set  up  monthly,
quarterly,  semi-annual or annual  redemptions  from any account with a value of
$5,000 or more.  You may direct a Fund to make regular  payments in fixed dollar
amounts  of $50 or more,  in an amount  equal to the value of a fixed  number of
shares (5 shares or more) at the time of withdrawal,  or in an amount equal to a
fixed percentage of your account value at the time of withdrawal. Any applicable
CDSC will be waived for shares  redeemed  under a SWP where:  (i) in the case of
SWPs based on a fixed dollar  amount or number of shares,  SWP  redemptions  are
limited to no more than 10% annually of your account  value or number of shares,
respectively,  measured  from the  date the  Transfer  Agent  receives  your SWP
request;  or (ii) in the case of SWPs based on a fixed percentage  amount,  each
SWP redemption is limited to a percentage amount that would not exceed 10% on an
annualized basis of your account value at the time of withdrawal.

             Payments  under a SWP can be  directed  to you or to someone  other
than the registered  owner(s) of the account subject to the Fund's approval.  If
this  privilege  is  requested  when the account is  established,  no  signature
guarantee  is needed.  If this  privilege  is added to an  existing  account and
payments  are  directed to someone  other than the  registered  owners(s) of the
account, a signature  guarantee is required on the SWP application.  The Company
reserves the right to institute a charge for this service.

             Exchange  Privilege.  You may  exchange  your  shares of a Fund for
shares of the same class of any other Fund. You should  consider the differences
in investment  objectives and expenses of a Fund before making an exchange.  For
complete policies and restrictions governing exchanges,  including circumstances
under which a shareholder's  exchange privilege may be suspended or revoked, see
this Prospectus under "How to Exchange Shares."

             Reinvestment  Privilege. If you redeem some or all of your Class A,
B or X Fund  shares,  you  have up to 180  days to  reinvest  all or part of the
redemption proceeds in Class A shares of the Fund without paying a sales charge.
This  privilege  applies to redemptions of Class A shares on which an initial or
deferred  sales charge was paid and to redemptions of Class B and Class X shares
on which you paid a CDSC when you redeemed them. You must ask the Transfer Agent
for this privilege when you send your payment.

             Retirement  Plans.  Certain classes of Fund shares are available as
an investment  option for your  retirement  plans.  If you participate in a plan
sponsored  by your  employer,  the plan trustee or  administrator  must make the
purchase  of shares for your  retirement  plan  account.  A number of  different
retirement  plans can be used by individuals and employers  including IRAs, Roth
IRAs,  Education  IRAs, SEP IRAs,  SIMPLE IRAs,  401 plans and 403(b)(7)  plans.
Please call  1-800-SKANDIA  for the  applicable  plan  documents,  which contain
important information and applications.

             The above  programs and  privileges  may be selected at the time of
your initial investment or at a later date.

             Optional  Benefits.  American  Skandia Life  Assurance  Corporation
("ASLAC") -- an "affiliated  person" of the Company,  the Trust,  the Investment
Manager  and the  Distributor  within the  meaning of the 1940 Act -- intends to
make  certain life  insurance  coverage  available  to certain  persons on whose
behalf shares of the Funds are purchased.  The benefits of this coverage payable
at death will be related to the amounts paid to purchase shares and to the value
of the shares held for the benefit of the insured persons.  Therefore,  coverage
will terminate if all shares are redeemed.

             Purchasers of the life insurance coverage are required to authorize
periodic redemptions of Fund shares to pay the premiums for such coverage.  Such
redemptions will not be subject to contingent  deferred sales charges,  but will
have the same tax consequences as any other Fund redemptions.

   
             The above life  insurance  coverage  will be  available to eligible
persons who enroll for the coverage within a limited time period after shares in
any Fund are initially purchased or transferred. In addition, coverage cannot be
made available  unless ASLAC knows for whose benefit  shares are purchased.  For
instance, coverage cannot be made available for shares registered in the name of
your broker  unless the broker  provides  ASLAC with  information  regarding the
beneficial owners of such shares. Other restrictions on the coverage will apply,
such as the age of the  persons  upon whose life the  coverage  is issued.  This
insurance  coverage  may not be  available  in all  states and may be subject to
additional  restrictions  or  limitations  on  coverage.  As of the date of this
Prospectus,  ASLAC has not yet offered the coverage in any state.  Purchasers of
shares should also make themselves familiar with the impact on the life coverage
of purchasing  additional  shares,  reinvestment  of dividends and capital gains
distributions and redemptions.
    

             Please call  1-800-SKANDIA  for more  information  and  application
forms for any of the above programs and privileges.

                              HOW TO REDEEM SHARES

   
         You can arrange to take money out of your Fund  account on any business
day by  redeeming  some or all of your  shares.  Your shares will be sold at the
next NAV  calculated  after your order is received in good order and accepted by
the Transfer Agent. The Company offers you a number of ways to sell your shares:
in writing, by telephone,  by Automated Clearing House ("ACH") bank transfer, by
wire transfer or other means  acceptable  to the Company.  You can also set up a
Systematic  Withdrawal Plan to redeem shares on a regular basis (as described in
this Prospectus under "Special Investment Programs and Privileges").
    

         If you hold Fund shares through a retirement account, call the Transfer
Agent in advance for additional  information and any necessary forms.  There are
special income tax withholding  requirements for  distributions  from retirement
plans and you must submit a  withholding  form with your request to avoid delay.
If your  retirement  plan  account  is held for you by your  employer,  you must
arrange for the  distribution  request to be sent by the plan  administrator  or
trustee.

REDEEMING SHARES BY MAIL:

             If you want to  redeem  your  shares by mail,  write a  "letter  of
instruction" that includes the following information:

         o    Your name
         o    Fund's name
         o    Your Fund  account  number  (from your  account  statement)  
         o    Dollar amount  or  number  of shares  to be  redeemed  
         o    Any  special  payment instructions
         o    Signatures  of all  registered  owners  exactly as the account is
               registered
         o    Any special  requirements  or documents  requested by the Transfer
              Agent to assure proper  authorization of the person requesting the
              redemption

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
         Send Requests by Regular Mail to:                             Send Requests by Courier or Express Mail to:

         <S>                                                           <C>
         American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.                          American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
         P.O. Box 8012                                                 Two Heritage Drive
         Boston, Massachusetts 02266-8012                              North Quincy, Massachusetts 02171-2138
</TABLE>

REDEEMING SHARES BY TELEPHONE:

             You may also redeem  shares by telephone by calling  1-800-SKANDIA.
To receive the  redemption  price  calculated on the business day that you call,
your call must be received by the  Transfer  Agent  before the close of the NYSE
that day, which is normally 4:00 P.M. Eastern Time. Shares held in tax-qualified
retirement plans may not be redeemed by telephone.  You may have a check sent to
the address on the account  statement,  or, if you have linked your Fund account
to your  bank  account,  you may  have the  proceeds  transferred  to that  bank
account.

             Telephone  Redemptions  Paid By Check.  You may make one redemption
request by telephone in any 7-day period for any amount up to $50,000. The check
must be  payable  to all  owners of record of the shares and must be sent to the
address  on the  account.  This  service is not  available  within 30 days after
changing the address on an account.

   
             Telephone  Redemptions  Through Bank-Linked  Accounts.  If you have
selected this option on your account application, you may link your Fund account
to your designated bank account electronically. You can initiate a redemption of
Fund shares for as little as $50 or as much as $50,000  using the ACH network to
have funds transferred to your bank account.  Normally the transfer to your bank
is initiated on the business day after the redemption.
    

REDEEMING SHARES THROUGH YOUR BROKER:

             The  Distributor  has made  arrangements  to redeem Fund shares for
brokers on behalf of their customers.  Brokers may charge for this service.  The
Distributor,  acting as agent for the Funds,  stands ready to redeem each Fund's
shares upon orders from  brokers at the  offering  price next  determined  after
receipt of the order.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

             To protect you and the Fund from fraud,  redemption  requests under
the  following  situations  must be in  writing  and must  include  a  signature
guarantee (there may be other situations also requiring a signature guarantee at
the discretion of the Company or the Transfer Agent):

          o You wish to redeem  more than  $50,000  worth of shares and receive
                a check 
          o A redemption check is not payable to all shareholders listed on
               the account statement 
          o A redemption  check is not sent to the address of record on your  
               statement 
          o Shares are being  transferred  to a Fund account with a different 
               owner or name 
          o Shares are redeemed by someone other than the owners (such as 
               an Executor)

         The Transfer Agent may delay forwarding a check or processing a payment
via  bank-linked  account for the sale of recently  purchased  shares,  but only
until the purchase payment has cleared. Such delay may be as long as 15 calendar
days from the date the shares were purchased, and may be avoided if you purchase
shares  by  certified  check.  You may be  charged  a fee of up to $10 for  wire
transfers of redemption  proceeds,  which will be deducted  from such  proceeds.
There is no fee for ACH wire transfers.

         If you  have any  questions  about  any of the  above  procedures,  and
especially if you are redeeming  shares in a special  situation,  such as due to
the death of the owner, or from a retirement plan, please call 1-800-SKANDIA for
assistance.

                             HOW TO EXCHANGE SHARES

             In most cases,  shares of a Fund may be exchanged for shares of the
same class of other Funds at NAV per share at the time of exchange. Exchanges of
shares  involve a redemption of the shares of the Fund you own and a purchase of
shares of another Fund. Shares are normally redeemed from one Fund and purchased
from the other Fund in the  exchange  transaction  on the same  business  day on
which the Transfer Agent receives an exchange  request that is in proper form by
the close of the NYSE that day. Exchanges may be taxable transactions and may be
subject  to  special  tax rules  about  which you  should  consult  your own tax
adviser.

             You may  exchange  your Fund shares for shares of the same class of
any other Fund without the  imposition of a sales  charge.  If you exchange such
shares for shares of another Fund, any applicable CDSC will be calculated  based
on the date on which  you  acquired  the  original  shares.  Investors  will not
receive Bonus Shares where Class X shares are obtained through an exchange.

             Exchanges  may be  requested  in writing,  by telephone or by other
means acceptable to the Company. For written exchange requests you should submit
a letter of  instruction,  signed by all owners of the account,  to the Transfer
Agent  at P.O.  Box  8012,  Boston,  Massachusetts  02266-8012.  To  initiate  a
telephone exchange, you should call 1-800-SKANDIA.



<PAGE>


             All exchanges are subject to the following restrictions:

         o The Fund you are exchanging  into must be registered for sale in your
state.

               You may exchange  only between  Funds that are  registered in the
              same name, address and taxpayer identification number.

         o You may only exchange for shares of the same class of another Fund.

         o You must  meet the  minimum  purchase  requirements  for the Fund you
purchase by exchange.

         o    You must hold the shares you purchase when you establish your Fund
              account for at least 7 days before you can exchange them. There is
              no  holding  period if you  acquired  the  shares to be  exchanged
              through reinvestment of dividends or distributions.

             Each Fund  reserves  the right to refuse or delay  exchanges by any
person or group if, in the Investment Manager's judgment, a Fund would be unable
to invest the money effectively in accordance with its investment  objective and
policies, or would otherwise  potentially be adversely affected.  Your exchanges
may also 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  that  coincides  with a "market  timing"  strategy may be
disruptive to the Fund.

             Although a Fund will attempt to give you prior  notice  whenever it
is reasonably  able to do so, it may impose the above  restrictions at any time.
Each Fund  reserves the right to  terminate or modify the exchange  privilege in
the future.

                        DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE

             The net asset value ("NAV") per share is determined  for each class
of shares for each Fund as of the close of the NYSE (normally 4:00 p.m.  Eastern
Time) on each  business  day (as  previously  defined  under "How to Buy Shares:
Purchase  Orders") by dividing the value of the Fund or Portfolio's total assets
attributable to a class, less any liabilities,  by the number of total shares of
that class  outstanding.  The total assets of each Non-Feeder Fund and Portfolio
is determined by the market value of securities the Fund or Portfolio holds plus
any cash and other assets  maintained.  The total assets of each Feeder Fund, in
comparison, is determined by the Fund's percentage interest in its corresponding
Portfolio,  multiplied by the Portfolio's  NAV, plus any other asset held by the
Fund.

             The assets of each Non-Feeder  Fund and Portfolio  (except the ASMT
JPM  Money  Market  Portfolio)  are  valued  primarily  on the  basis of  market
quotations.  If  quotations  are not readily  available,  assets are valued by a
method  that the  Directors  of the  Company or  Trustees  of the  Trust,  where
applicable,  believe  accurately  reflects fair value.  Foreign  securities  are
valued on the basis of  quotations  from the  primary  market in which  they are
traded,  and are  translated  from the local  currency  into U.S.  dollars using
current  exchange rates.  The assets of the ASMT JPM Money Market  Portfolio are
valued by the amortized  cost method  pursuant to procedures  established by the
Directors  of the Company and the  Trustees  of the Trust.  With  respect to all
Funds and Portfolios, short-term investments that will mature in 60 days or less
are valued at amortized cost, which is intended to approximate market value.

                     SHAREHOLDER ACCOUNT RULES AND POLICIES

         o The offering of any class of Fund shares may be suspended  during any
period in which the  determination of NAV is suspended,  and may be suspended or
terminated by the Directors of the Company at any time they believe it is in the
Fund's best interest to do so.

         o Telephone transaction privileges or privileges using electronic means
for purchases, redemptions or exchanges may be modified, suspended or terminated
by a Fund at any time.  If an account has more than one owner,  the Fund and the
Transfer  Agent  may  rely  on the  instructions  of any  one  owner.  Telephone
privileges apply to each owner of the account and the dealer  representative  of
record for the account unless and until the Transfer Agent receives instructions
from an owner of the  account  indicating  otherwise.  The  Transfer  Agent will
record  any  telephone  calls to verify  data  concerning  transactions  and has
adopted other procedures to confirm that telephone  instructions or instructions
received by electronic means are genuine. If the Company does not use reasonable
procedures  the  Company  or  its  agents  may  be  liable  for  losses  due  to
unauthorized  transactions,  but otherwise the Company or its agents will not be
liable for losses or expenses  arising out of  telephone  instructions  or other
electronic means that are reasonably  believed to be genuine.  If you are unable
to reach the Transfer Agent during periods of unusual market  activity,  you may
not be able to complete a telephone transaction and should consider placing your
order by mail.

         o Purchase,  redemption or exchange  requests will not be honored until
the Transfer Agent receives all required documents in proper form.

         o Share certificates will not be issued for the Company's shares.

         o Brokers  that can  perform  account  transactions  for their  clients
through  the  National  Securities  Clearing  Corporation  are  responsible  for
obtaining  their  clients'  permission  to perform  those  transactions  and are
responsible  to  their  clients  who are  shareholders  of a Fund if the  dealer
performs any transaction erroneously or improperly.

     o All  purchases  must be made in U.S.  dollars and checks must be drawn on
U.S. banks. You may not purchase shares with a third-party check.

         o Payment  for  redeemed  shares is  forwarded  ordinarily  by check or
through  the  bank-linked  service  (as  elected  by the  shareholder)  within 7
calendar  days  after the  business  day on which the  Transfer  Agent  receives
redemption  instructions  in proper form.  Payment  will be  forwarded  within 3
business days for accounts  registered in the name of a dealer.  Redemptions may
be  suspended or payment  dates  postponed  when the NYSE is closed  (other than
weekends  or  holidays),  when  trading is  restricted  or as  permitted  by the
Commission.

         o Involuntary  redemptions  of small  accounts may be made by a Fund if
the account value has fallen below $500 (for reasons other than a drop in market
value of shares) and at least 30 days notice has been given to the shareholder.
Any applicable CDSC will be waived for such redemptions.

         o Under  unusual  circumstances  shares of a Fund may be  redeemed  "in
kind," which means that the  redemption  proceeds  will be paid with  securities
from the Fund's portfolio of securities.  For additional  information  regarding
such  redemptions,  see the Company's SAI under  "Additional  Information on the
Purchase and Redemption of Shares."

         o "Backup withholding" of Federal income tax may be applied at the rate
of  31%  from  dividends,   distributions  and  redemption  proceeds  (including
exchanges)  if you fail to  furnish  the Fund a  certified  Social  Security  or
Employer Identification Number when you sign your application, or if you violate
Internal Revenue Service regulations on the reporting of income.

         o The Company  does not charge a  transaction  fee,  but if your broker
handles your  redemption,  your broker may charge a fee. Such fee can be avoided
by redeeming your Fund shares directly  through the Transfer  Agent.  You may be
subject to a CDSC under the  circumstances  described in this  Prospectus  under
"How To Buy Shares."

                 ORGANIZATION AND CAPITALIZATION OF THE COMPANY

             The Funds are separate series of shares of the Company,  a Maryland
Corporation established on March 5, 1997 and registered under the 1940 Act as an
open-end  management  investment  company.  Each  Fund  has its  own  investment
objective,  policies and limitations, and operates as a diversified portfolio as
defined  in the 1940 Act.  The Funds each  intend to be  treated as a  regulated
investment company for federal income tax purposes.  For additional  information
regarding  the Funds'  treatment as  regulated  investment  companies,  see this
Prospectus  under  "Dividends,  Capital Gains and Taxes." Five of the Funds, the
Feeder Funds, currently invest all of their investable assets in a corresponding
Portfolio of the Trust,  in each case  receiving a  beneficial  interest in that
Portfolio. The Portfolios are separate series of shares of the Trust, a Delaware
business  trust  established  on March 6,  1997,  and  intend to be treated as a
partnership for federal tax purposes.  Those Funds which do not currently invest
all of their  investable  assets in a corresponding  Portfolio of the Trust, the
Non-Feeder Funds,  retain the right to do so in the future.  Each Portfolio,  as
well as the  Trust,  intends to comply  with all  applicable  federal  and state
securities  laws.  For  additional   information  regarding  the  Feeder  Funds'
investment in the Portfolios of the Trust,  see this  Prospectus  under "Special
Information on the 'Master/Feeder' Fund Structure."


   
             Capital Stock. The authorized capital stock of the Company consists
of the following shares (par value $.001 per share): ASAF Founders International
Small Capitalization Fund (250 million); ASAF T. Rowe Price International Equity
Fund (250 million); ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund (250 million); ASAF Founders
Small Capitalization Fund (250 million);  ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value
Fund (250 million);  ASAF Robertson  Stephens Value + Growth Fund (250 million);
ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund (250 million); ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income
Fund (250 million); ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund (250 million); ASAF American
Century  Strategic  Balanced Fund (250 million);  ASAF Federated High Yield Bond
Fund (250  million);  ASAF Total  Return Bond Fund (250  million);  and ASAF JPM
Money Market Fund (2.5 billion).
    


             Description of Shares.  The Company currently has thirteen separate
series of shares,  each of which is divided into Class A, B, C and X shares. The
Directors  of the Company are  authorized  to  establish,  from time to time and
without shareholder approval, additional series or classes of shares. The assets
of each series of shares belong only to that series, and the liabilities of each
series  are  borne  solely  by that  series  and no  other.  Shares of each Fund
represent equal proportionate interests in the assets of that Fund only and have
identical voting,  dividend,  redemption,  liquidation,  and other rights.  Each
class of shares,  however, bears different sales charges,  distribution fees and
related expenses, and has exclusive voting rights with respect to its respective
12b-1  Distribution  and  Service  Plan.  All  shares  issued  are  fully  paid,
non-assessable and freely  transferable,  and have no preference,  preemptive or
similar rights.

             Shareholder Voting and Meetings. Each shareholder is entitle to one
vote for each share (and to the appropriate  fractional vote for each fractional
share)  of the  Funds  held  upon  all  matters  submitted  to the  shareholders
generally.  Shareholders of all Funds and classes will vote together as a single
class,  except when otherwise required by applicable law or as determined by the
Directors of the Company; and provided that shareholders of a particular Fund or
class  shall not be  entitled  to vote on any  matter  which does not affect any
interest of that Fund or class,  except as otherwise required by applicable law.
The  Directors  of  the  Company  do not  intend  to  hold  annual  meetings  of
shareholders of the Funds,  and will call special  meetings of shareholders of a
Fund only if  required  under the 1940 Act and other  applicable  law,  in their
discretion or upon written  request of holders of 10% or more of the outstanding
shares of that Fund entitled to vote.

             Certain  Provisions.  Under the Maryland General Corporation Law, a
Director of the Company who is held liable for assenting to a distribution  made
in  violation  of  the  Company's  Articles  of  Incorporation  is  entitled  to
contribution from each shareholder of the Company for the amount the shareholder
accepted  knowing the  distribution  was made in violation of those  provisions.
Absent such knowledge, a shareholder will not be obligated to the Company or its
creditors  in respect of shares held in the Company  except to the extent of any
unpaid portion of the subscription price or purchase price for such shares.

                           SPECIAL INFORMATION ON THE
                         "MASTER/FEEDER" FUND STRUCTURE

             An investor in the Feeder  Funds  should be aware that these Funds,
unlike mutual funds which  directly  acquire and manage their own  portfolios of
securities,  seek to achieve  their  investment  objectives  by investing all of
their investable assets in a corresponding Portfolio of the Trust (although each
Feeder Fund may temporarily hold a de minimis amount of cash). The Portfolios of
the Trust, which have the same investment objective, policies and limitations as
their corresponding Feeder Fund, in turn invest their investable assets directly
in a portfolio of securities. Each of the Feeder Funds thus acquires an indirect
interest in the securities owned by its corresponding Portfolio.

             Each Feeder Fund's investment in its corresponding  Portfolio is in
the form of a  non-transferable  beneficial  interest.  Members  of the  general
public may not purchase a direct interest in a Portfolio of the Trust.  However,
in  addition  to selling an  interest to its  corresponding  Feeder  Fund,  each
Portfolio may sell interests to other affiliated and  non-affiliated  investment
companies  and/or  institutional  investors.  Such  investors  will  invest in a
Portfolio on the same terms and conditions as its corresponding  Feeder Fund and
will pay a  proportionate  share of the  Portfolio's  expenses.  Other investors
investing in a Portfolio,  however, are not required to sell their shares at the
same public offering price as the corresponding Feeder Fund due to variations in
sales commissions and other operating expenses. Therefore,  investors in each of
the  Feeder  Funds  should  be  aware  that  these  differences  may  result  in
differences in returns  experienced by investors in other  investment  companies
which may invest exclusively in the Portfolios.  Such differences in returns are
also present in other mutual fund structures, including funds that have multiple
classes of shares.  Currently,  of the investment  companies which may invest in
the  Portfolios,  only shares of the Feeder Funds are  available for purchase by
the general public in the United States.  Information regarding the availability
of shares of any other fund that may invest in a Portfolio  in the future can be
obtained by calling 1-800-SKANDIA.

             The Directors of the Company believe that the "master/feeder"  fund
structure  offers  opportunities  for  substantial  growth in the  assets of the
Portfolios  that may enable the  Portfolios  to realize  economies of scale that
could  reduce the  Portfolios'  operating  expenses,  thereby  producing  higher
returns and  benefiting  the  shareholders  of the Feeder Funds. A Feeder Fund's
investment in its corresponding Portfolio may, however, be adversely affected by
the actions of other investors in the Portfolio, if any. For example, if a large
investor  withdraws  from a Portfolio,  the remaining  investors may  experience
higher  pro  rata  operating   expenses,   thereby   producing   lower  returns.
Additionally,  a  Portfolio  may become less  diverse,  resulting  in  increased
portfolio  risk, and experience  decreasing  economies of scale.  However,  this
possibility  exists as well for traditionally  structured funds which have large
or institutional investors.  Funds which invest all their assets in interests in
a separate  investment  company are a relatively  new  development in the mutual
fund industry and,  therefore,  may be subject to  additional  regulations  than
traditionally structured mutual funds.

             Each of the Feeder  Funds may withdraw  (completely  redeem) all of
its assets from its corresponding  Portfolio at any time if the Directors of the
Company determine that it is in the best interest of the Fund to do so. A Feeder
Fund might withdraw, for example, if other investors in the Fund's corresponding
Portfolio  voted to, by a vote of all investors in the Portfolio  (including the
Fund), change the investment objective, policies or limitations of the Portfolio
in a manner not  acceptable  to the  Directors  of the Company.  The  investment
performance  of a Feeder Fund may be affected by a withdrawal  of all its assets
from a corresponding Portfolio. A withdrawal could also result in a distribution
"in kind" of portfolio  securities  (as opposed to a cash  distribution)  by the
Portfolio to the Feeder Fund. If  securities  are  distributed,  the Feeder Fund
could incur brokerage, tax or other charges in converting the securities to cash
or purchasing other securities. In addition, a distribution "in kind" may result
in a less diversified portfolio of investments or adversely affect the liquidity
of the Feeder Fund's investment portfolio.  In the event a Feeder Fund withdraws
all of its assets from its  corresponding  Portfolio,  or the  Directors  of the
Company  determines  that the  investment  objective of a Portfolio is no longer
consistent with the investment  objective of its corresponding Feeder Fund, such
Directors would consider what action might be taken,  including investing all of
the  Fund's  investable  assets  in  another  pooled  investment  entity  having
substantially  the  same  investment  objective  as the  Fund  or  retaining  an
investment  adviser to manage the Fund's assets  directly in accordance with the
Fund's investment objective, policies and limitations.

             The Trust's  Agreement  and  Declaration  of Trust  provides that a
Portfolio will continue without  limitation of time unless terminated by vote of
investors  holding  at  least a  majority  of the  interests  of such  Portfolio
entitled to vote or by the Trustees of the Trust by written  notice to investors
of such Portfolio. This provision is consistent with treatment of each Portfolio
as a partnership for federal income tax purposes.

             Investor Meetings and Voting. Each Portfolio normally will not hold
meetings of  investors  except as required by the 1940 Act.  Each  investor in a
Portfolio  (including a Feeder Fund) will be entitled to vote in  proportion  to
its relative beneficial interest in the Portfolio.  Whenever a Feeder Fund as an
investor  in a  Portfolio  is  requested  to vote  on  matters  pertaining  to a
Portfolio  (other than the termination of a Portfolio's  business,  which may be
determined by the Trustees of the Trust without  investor  approval),  such Fund
will hold a meeting  of Fund  shareholders  and will vote its  interest  in such
Portfolio for or against such matters  proportionately  to the  instructions  to
vote  for or  against  such  matters  received  from  Fund  shareholders.  Other
investors in the Portfolio may alone or collectively  acquire  sufficient voting
interests in the Portfolio to control  matters  relating to the operation of the
Portfolio,  which could cause or require the Fund to withdraw its  investment in
the Portfolio or take other appropriate action.

             Certain Provisions.  The Trust's Agreement and Declaration of Trust
provides that the Feeder Funds and any other  entities  permitted to invest in a
Portfolio of the Trust (e.g., other U.S. and foreign investment  companies,  and
common and  commingled  trust funds) will each be liable for all  obligations of
each  such  Portfolio  in the  event  that  the  Trust  fails  to  satisfy  such
liabilities  and  obligations.  However,  the risk of an investor in a Portfolio
(including  a Feeder  Fund)  incurring  financial  loss beyond the amount of its
investment on account of such liability is limited to circumstances in which the
Portfolio had inadequate insurance and was unable to meet its obligations out of
its assets. Accordingly, the Trustees of the Trust believe that neither a Feeder
Fund nor its  shareholders  will be  adversely  affected  by  reason of the Fund
investing in a corresponding Portfolio of the Trust.



<PAGE>


                             MANAGEMENT OF THE FUNDS

THE DIRECTORS, TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS:

             The  Directors  of the Company  and the  Trustees of the Trust have
oversight  responsibility  for  the  operations  of  each  Fund  and  Portfolio,
respectively.  As of the date of this  Prospectus,  each of the Directors of the
Company also serves as a Trustee of the Trust.  The Directors of the Company and
the Trustees of the Trust,  including a majority of the  Directors  and Trustees
who are not "interested  persons" (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the Company or
the Trust,  respectively,  have adopted written procedures  designed to identify
and reasonably address any potential  conflicts of interest which might arise as
a result of an "overlap" of Directors and Trustees, including, if necessary, the
creation  of  a  separate  board  of  trustees  of  the  Trust.  For  additional
information  concerning  the  Directors  and  officers of the  Company,  see the
Company's SAI under "Management of the Company."

THE INVESTMENT MANAGER:

             American Skandia  Investment  Services,  Incorporated  ("ASISI," as
previously defined),  One Corporate Drive,  Shelton,  Connecticut 06484, acts as
investment  manager to each of the Non-Feeder  Funds and Portfolios  pursuant to
separate  investment  management  agreements  with the  Company  and the  Trust,
respectively (the "Management Agreements"). Unlike the Non-Feeder Funds, each of
the  Feeder  Funds  invests  all of its  investable  assets  in a  corresponding
Portfolio of the Trust and thus does not require an investment manager. ASISI, a
Connecticut  corporation  organized  in 1991,  is  registered  as an  investment
adviser with the Commission and is a wholly-owned subsidiary of American Skandia
Investment  Holding  Corporation,  whose  indirect  parent is Skandia  Insurance
Company Ltd.  ("Skandia").  Skandia is a Swedish company that owns,  directly or
indirectly, a number of insurance companies in many countries.

             In addition to serving as investment manager to the Company and the
Trust,  ASISI  currently  serves as the investment  manager to American  Skandia
Trust, an open-end management investment company whose shares are made available
to life insurance companies writing variable annuity contracts and variable life
insurance  policies.  Shares  of  American  Skandia  Trust  also may be  offered
directly to qualified pension and retirement plans.

             The  Management  Agreements  provide  that ASISI will  furnish each
Non-Feeder Fund and Portfolio with investment  advice and investment  management
and  administrative  services subject to the supervision of the Directors of the
Company or the Trustees of the Trusts, where applicable,  and in conformity with
the stated  investment  objectives,  policies and  limitations of the applicable
Fund or Portfolio.  The  Investment  Manager is  responsible  for monitoring the
activities of the  Sub-advisors  it engages to manage the  Non-Feeder  Funds and
Portfolios  and reporting on such  activities to the Directors of the Company or
the Trustees of the Trust,  where applicable.  The Investment  Manager must also
provide or obtain for the Non-Feeder  Funds and the  Portfolios,  and thereafter
supervise,  such executive,  administrative,  accounting custody, transfer agent
and shareholder  servicing  services as are deemed advisable by the Directors of
the Company or the Trustees of the Trust, where applicable.

THE SUB-ADVISORS:

             ASISI currently  engages the following  Sub-advisors to conduct the
investment programs of each Non-Feeder Fund and Portfolio in accordance with the
Fund or  Portfolio's  investment  objective,  policies and  limitations  and any
investment guidelines established by the Investment Manager. Each Sub-advisor is
responsible  for,  subject to the  supervision  and  control  of the  Investment
Manager,  the purchase,  retention and disposition of securities  represented in
the Fund or Portfolio's investment portfolio.

             Unless  otherwise  noted,  each portfolio  manager listed below has
managed his or her respective Fund or Portfolio since its inception.

   
             Founders Asset Management,  Inc. ("Founders") serves as Sub-advisor
for the  ASAF  Founders  International  Small  Capitalization  Fund and the ASAF
Founders Small  Capitalization  Fund.  Founders,  located at Founders  Financial
Center,  2930  East  Third  Avenue,  Denver,  Colorado  80206,  has  acted as an
investment  advisor  since 1938 and  serves as  investment  advisor to  Founders
Discovery,  Frontier, Passport, Special, International Equity, Worldwide Growth,
Growth,  Blue Chip,  Balanced,  Government  Securities,  and Money Market Funds.
Founders, which is also the investment advisor for a number of private accounts,
managed assets aggregating approximately $6.7 billion as of September 30, 1997.
    

     The portfolio manager responsible for the day-to-day management of the ASAF
Founders  International Small  Capitalization Fund is Michael W. Gerding, a Vice
President of  Investments  of  Founders.  Mr.  Gerding is a chartered  financial
analyst who has been part of Founders' investment department since 1990..

             The portfolio manager responsible for the day-to-day  management of
the ASAF Founders Small  Capitalization Fund is Michael K. Haines, a Senior Vice
President  of  Investments  of Founders.  Mr.  Haines has been  associated  with
Founders  since  1985,  serving as a lead  portfolio  manager  and an  assistant
portfolio manager.

   
     Rowe  Price-Fleming   International,   Inc.   ("Price-Fleming")  serves  as
Sub-advisor  for  the  ASMT  T.  Rowe  Price  International   Equity  Portfolio.
Price-Fleming,  located at 100 East Pratt Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21202, was
founded in 1979 as a joint venture  between T. Rowe Price  Associates,  Inc. and
Robert Fleming  Holdings  Limited.  Price-Fleming  is one of the world's largest
international  mutual fund asset managers with  approximately  $30 billion under
management as of September 30, 1997 in its offices in Baltimore,  London, Tokyo,
Hong Kong and Singapore.
    

     An  investment   advisory  group  has  responsibility  for  the  day-to-day
management  of the  ASMT T.  Rowe  Price  International  Equity  Portfolio.  The
advisory  group for the  Portfolio  consists of Martin G. Wade,  Christopher  D.
Alderson,  Peter B. Askew, Mark J.T.  Edwards,  John R. Ford, James B.M. Seddon,
Benedict R.F. Thomas, and David J.L. Warren. Martin Wade joined Price-Fleming in
1979 and has 27 years of experience  with Fleming Group  (Fleming Group includes
Robert Fleming Holdings Ltd. and/or Jardine Fleming International Holdings Ltd.)
in research,  client service and  investment  management.  Christopher  Alderson
joined  Price-Fleming  in 1988, and has 10 years of experience  with the Fleming
Group in research and portfolio management.  Peter Askew joined Price-Fleming in
1988  and  has 21  years  of  experience  managing  multicurrency  fixed  income
portfolios.  Mark J.T. Edwards joined  Price-Fleming in 1986 and has 15 years of
experience in financial analysis.  John R. Ford joined Price-Fleming in 1982 and
has 16  years  of  experience  with  Fleming  Group in  research  and  portfolio
management.  James B.M. Seddon joined  Price-Fleming in 1987 and has 11 years of
experience in investment  management.  Benedict R.F. Thomas joined Price-Fleming
in 1988 and has 7 years of portfolio  management  experience.  David J.L. Warren
joined  Price-Fleming  in 1984 and has 16 years  experience in equity  research,
fixed income research and portfolio management.


   
             Janus Capital  Corporation  ("Janus") serves as Sub-advisor for the
ASAF Janus  Overseas  Growth Fund and the ASMT Janus Capital  Growth  Portfolio.
Janus, located at 100 Fillmore Street,  Denver,  Colorado 80206-4923,  serves as
the investment  advisor to the Janus Funds, as well as advisor or sub-advisor to
several other mutual funds and individual,  corporate, charitable and retirement
accounts. As of September 30, 1997, Janus managed assets worth approximately $67
billion.  Kansas City Southern Industries,  Inc. ("KCSI") owns approximately 83%
of the  outstanding  voting  stock of Janus,  most of which it acquired in 1984.
KCSI is a publicly-traded holding company whose primary subsidiaries are engaged
in transportation and financial services.

             The portfolio manager  responsible for management of the ASAF Janus
Overseas  Growth  Fund is  Helen  Young  Hayes,  Executive  Vice  President  and
portfolio manager of the Janus Worldwide Fund and Janus Overseas Fund. Ms. Hayes
joined Janus in 1987.  She has managed or co-managed  Janus  Worldwide  Fund and
Janus Overseas Fund since their respective inceptions.

     The portfolio manager  responsible for management of the ASMT Janus Capital
Growth  Portfolio  is Scott W.  Schoelzel.  Mr.  Schoelzel,  a Senior  Portfolio
Manager at Janus who has managed the Portfolio since August,  1997, joined Janus
in  January,  1994 as Vice  President  of  Investments.  From 1991 to 1993,  Mr.
Schoelzel was a Portfolio Manager with Founders Asset Management.

     T. Rowe Price Associates,  Inc. ("T. Rowe Price") serves as Sub-advisor for
the ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company  Value Fund. T. Rowe Price,  located at 100
East Pratt Street,  Baltimore,  Maryland 21202,  was founded in 1937 by the late
Thomas  Rowe  Price,  Jr.  As of  September  30,  1997,  T.  Rowe  Price and its
affiliates  managed over $125 billion for approximately  4.5 million  individual
and institutional accounts.
    

     The ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund is managed by an Investment
Advisory  Committee  composed  of  the  following  members:  Preston  G.  Athey,
Chairman,  Hugh M. Evans III and Gregory A. McCrickard.  The Committee  Chairman
has  day-to-day  responsibility  for managing the  Portfolio  and works with the
Committee in developing and executing the Portfolio's  investment  program.  Mr.
Athey joined T. Rowe Price in 1978 and has been managing investments since 1982.


   
             Robertson,   Stephens  &  Company   Investment   Management,   L.P.
("Robertson  Stephens")  serves as Sub-advisor  for the ASAF Robertson  Stephens
Value + Growth  Fund.  Robertson  Stephens,  a  California  limited  partnership
located at 555 California  Street,  San Francisco,  CA 94104, was formed in 1993
and is  registered  as an investment  advisor with the  Securities  and Exchange
Commission.  The sole  limited  partner  of  Robertson  Stephens  is  Robertson,
Stephens & Company,  L.L.C.,  a major  investment  banking firm  specializing in
emerging growth companies that has developed  substantial  investment  research,
underwriting,  and venture capital expertise. As of September 30, 1997 Robertson
Stephens and its  affiliates  have in excess of $5 billion  under  management in
public and private investment funds. Robertson,  Stephens & Company,  L.L.C., is
an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of BankAmerica Corporation, one of the three
largest bank holding companies in the United States.

     Ronald Elijah is the portfolio  manager  responsible  for management of the
ASAF  Robertson  Stephens  Value + Growth  Fund.  Mr.  Elijah  joined  Robertson
Stephens as a portfolio manager in 1992.

     Lord,  Abbett & Co. ("Lord Abbett") serves as Sub-advisor for the ASAF Lord
Abbett Growth and Income Fund.  Lord Abbett,  an investment  manager for over 68
years, is located at The General Motors  Building,  767 Fifth Avenue,  New York,
New York 10153-0203. As of September 30, 1997, Lord Abbett managed approximately
$25 billion in a family of mutual funds and other advisory accounts.

     The portfolio  manager  responsible  for management of the ASAF Lord Abbett
Growth and Income Fund is W. Thomas Hudson,  Jr., Executive Vice President.  Mr.
Hudson has held certain  positions  in the equity  research  department  of Lord
Abbett since 1982.


             INVESCO Trust Company  ("INVESCO")  serves as  Sub-advisor  for the
ASMT INVESCO Equity Income Portfolio.  INVESCO,  a trust company founded in 1969
and  located  at 7800 East Union  Avenue,  P.O.  Box  173706,  Denver,  Colorado
80217-3706, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of INVESCO Funds Group, Inc., which was
established in 1932. INVESCO serves as sub-advisor to INVESCO Growth Fund, Inc.,
INVESCO Dynamics Fund, Inc.,  INVESCO Money Market Funds,  Inc.,  INVESCO Income
Funds, Inc., INVESCO Tax-Free Income Funds, Inc., INVESCO Strategic  Portfolios,
Inc., INVESCO Emerging  Opportunity Funds, Inc., INVESCO Industrial Income Fund,
Inc., INVESCO Multiple Asset Funds, Inc., INVESCO Specialty Funds, Inc., INVESCO
Strategic  Portfolios,  Inc. and INVESCO Variable Investment Funds, Inc. INVESCO
Funds Group, Inc. and INVESCO are part of a global financial  services firm that
managed  approximately  $177.5  billion  of assets  as of  September  30,  1997.
AMVESCAP PLC (formerly,  "INVESCO PLC"), the parent of INVESCO Funds Group, Inc.
and INVESCO, is one of the largest independent  investment management businesses
in the world.
    

     The portfolio  managers  responsible  for the day-to-day  management of the
ASMT INVESCO Equity Income Portfolio are Charles P. Mayer, Portfolio Co-Manager,
and  Donovan  J.  (Jerry)  Paul,  Portfolio  Co-Manager.  Mr.  Mayer  began  his
investment  career in 1969 and is now a senior vice  president of INVESCO.  From
1993 to 1994, he was vice president of INVESCO,  and from 1984 to 1993, he was a
portfolio  manager with  Westinghouse  Pension.  Mr. Paul entered the investment
management  industry  in 1976 and has been a senior  vice  president  of INVESCO
since  1994.  From  1993  to  1994,  he  was  president  of  Quixote  Investment
Management, Inc.

   
             American Century Investment  Management,  Inc. ("American Century,"
formally known as, "Investors Research  Corporation")  serves as Sub-advisor for
the ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund. American Century,  located at
American Century Towers, 4500 Main Street, Kansas City, Missouri 64111, has been
providing investment advisory services to investment companies and institutional
clients since 1958. In June 1995, American Century Companies,  Inc. ("ACC"), the
parent of American Century,  acquired Benham Management  International,  Inc. In
the acquisition,  Benham Management  Corporation ("BMC"), the investment adviser
to The Benham Group of mutual  funds,  became a wholly owned  subsidiary of ACC.
Certain  employees of BMC will be providing  investment  management  services to
American  Century  funds,  while  certain  American  Century  employees  will be
providing  investment  management  services to Benham funds. As of September 30,
1997, American Century and its affiliates managed assets totaling  approximately
$63.1 billion.
    

             American Century utilizes a team of portfolio  managers,  assistant
portfolio managers and analysts acting together to manage the assets of the ASAF
American Century  Strategic  Balanced Fund. The portfolio manager members of the
portfolio team  responsible for the day-to-day  management of the equity portion
of the Fund are  James E.  Stowers  III and  Bruce  A.  Wimberly.  Mr.  Stowers,
President and Portfolio Manager,  joined American Century in 1981. Mr. Wimberly,
Portfolio  Manager,  joined American  Century in September 1994 as an Investment
Analyst.  Prior to joining  American  Century,  Mr.  Wimberly  attended  Kellogg
Graduate  School of  Management,  Northwestern  University,  from August 1992 to
August 1994, where he obtained his MBA degree.  The portfolio manager members of
the portfolio team responsible for the day-to-day management of the fixed income
portion of the Fund are Casey Colton, Norman E. Hoops, Brian Howell,  Jeffrey L.
Houston,  David Schroeder and Jeffrey R. Tyler.  Casey Colton joined BMC in 1990
as a Municipal Analyst. Norman Hoops joined American Century in November 1989 as
Vice President and Portfolio  Manager and became Senior Vice President and Fixed
Income  Portfolio  Manager in April 1993.  Brian Howell  joined BMC in 1987 as a
research  analyst  and was  promoted to his  current  position in January  1994.
Jeffrey  Houston has worked for American  Century as a Portfolio  Manager  since
November,  1990. David Schroeder joined BMC in 1990. Jeffrey Tyler,  Senior Vice
President  and  Portfolio  Manager,  joined BMC in January,  1988 as a Portfolio
Manager.

   
             Federated Investment Counseling ("Federated  Investment") serves as
Sub-advisor for the ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund.  Federated  Investment,
located at Federated Investors Tower, Pittsburgh,  Pennsylvania 15222-3779,  was
organized as a Delaware  business  trust in 1989 and is a registered  investment
advisor under the  Investment  Advisers Act of 1940.  Federated  Investment is a
wholly owned subsidiary of Federated  Investors.  Federated Investment and other
subsidiaries of Federated  Investors serve as investment advisors to a number of
investment  companies  and private  accounts.  As of September  30, 1997,  total
assets under  management or  administration  by these and other  subsidiaries of
Federated Investors was over $130 billion.
    

     The portfolio  managers  responsible  for the day-to-day  management of the
ASAF  Federated  High  Yield Bond Fund are Mark E.  Durbiano  and  Stephanie  L.
Bachhuber. Mr. Durbiano joined Federated Investors in 1982 and has been a Senior
Vice President of an affiliate of Federated Investment since January, 1996. From
1988  through  1995,  Mr.  Durbiano  was a Vice  President  of an  affiliate  of
Federated Investment. Mr. Durbiano is a Chartered Financial Analyst and received
his M.B.A. in finance from the University of Pittsburgh.  Ms.  Bachhuber  joined
Federated  Investors in 1993 as an Investment  Analyst and has been an Assistant
Vice President of an affiliate of Federated  Investment since 1996. From 1990 to
1993,  Ms.  Bachhuber  served as an Operations  Analyst at Lehman  Brothers.  Ms
Bachhuber  earned  her  M.B.A.,  with a  concentration  in  finance,  from  Duke
University in 1993.

   
             Pacific   Investment   Management   Company   ("PIMCO")  serves  as
Sub-advisor  for the ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond Portfolio.  PIMCO,  located at
840 Newport Center Drive,  Suite 360,  Newport Beach,  California  92660,  is an
investment  counseling  firm  founded  in 1971.  PIMCO is a  subsidiary  general
partnership of PIMCO Advisors L.P. ("PIMCO  Advisors").  A majority  interest in
PIMCO Advisors is held by PIMCO Partners,  G.P., a general  partnership  between
Pacific  Financial  Asset  Management  Corporation,  an  indirect  wholly  owned
subsidiary of Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company, and PIMCO Partners,  LLC, a
California  limited  liability company  controlled by the managing  directors of
PIMCO.  PIMCO is a  registered  investment  advisor  with the  Commission  and a
commodity  trading  advisor with the CFTC. As of September  30, 1997,  PIMCO had
over $108 billion of assets under management.
    

     The portfolio manager responsible for the day-to-day management of the ASMT
PIMCO Total  Return Bond  Portfolio  is William H. Gross.  Mr. Gross is Managing
Director of PIMCO and has been associated with the firm since 1971.

   
     J.P.  Morgan   Investment   Management  Inc.  ("J.P.   Morgan")  serves  as
Sub-advisor for the ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio. J.P. Morgan, with principal
offices  at 522  Fifth  Avenue,  New York,  New York  10036,  is a wholly  owned
subsidiary  of J.P.  Morgan & Co.  Incorporated  ("J.P.  Morgan & Co."),  a bank
holding company organized under the laws of Delaware which is located at 60 Wall
Street,  New York, New York 10260.  J.P.  Morgan & Co.,  through J.P. Morgan and
other   subsidiaries,   offers  a  wide  range  of  services  to   governmental,
institutional,  corporate  and  individual  customers,  and  acts as  investment
adviser to  individual  and  institutional  clients with  combined  assets under
management of  approximately  $246 billion as of September 30, 1997. J.P. Morgan
has  managed  investments  for  clients  for almost a century,  since  1913.  In
addition,  J.P.  Morgan has managed  short-term  fixed income assets for clients
since 1969. As of September 30, 1997,  these  short-term fixed assets under J.P.
Morgan's management totaled over $25 billion.
    



<PAGE>


FEES AND EXPENSES:

             Investment  Management Fees. ASISI receives a monthly fee from each
Non-Feeder  Fund and Portfolio for the  performance of its services.  ASISI pays
each  Sub-advisor a portion of such fee for the performance of the  sub-advisory
services  at no  additional  cost  to any  Fund  or  Portfolio.  The  investment
management  fee with respect to each  Non-Feeder  Fund and Portfolio may differ,
reflecting the investment  objective,  policies and  limitations of each Fund or
Portfolio  and  the  nature  of  each  Management   Agreement  and  Sub-advisory
Agreement.  Each Non-Feeder Fund and  Portfolio's  investment  management fee is
accrued daily for the purposes of determining the offering and redemption  price
of the Fund's shares. The fees payable to ASISI, based on a stated percentage of
the Non-Feeder Fund or Portfolio's average daily net assets, are as follows:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Fund/Portfolio:                                                                        Annual Rate:

<S>                                                                     <C>                <C>                  <C> 
ASAF Founders International Small Capitalization Fund:                  1.10% of the first $100  million;  plus 1.00
                                                                        % of the amount over $100 million

ASMT T. Rowe Price International Equity Portfolio:                                          1.00%

   
ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund:                                                            1.10%
    

ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund:                                                    0.90%

ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund:                                                1.00%

   
ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund:                                                1.10%
    

ASMT Janus Capital Growth Portfolio:                                                        1.00%

   
ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund:                                                    1.00%
    

ASMT INVESCO Equity Income Portfolio:                                                       0.75%

ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund:                                              0.90%

ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund:                                                        0.70%

ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond Portfolio:                                                     0.65%

ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio:                                                            0.50%

</TABLE>
             Sub-Advisory  Fees.  ASISI pays each Sub-advisor on a monthly basis
for  the  performance  of  sub-advisory   services.   The  fee  payable  to  the
Sub-advisors  with respect to each  Non-Feeder  Fund and  Portfolio  may differ,
reflecting,   among  other  things,  the  investment  objective,   policies  and
limitations  of each  Fund or  Portfolio  and the  nature  of each  Sub-advisory
Agreement.  Each  Sub-advisor's fee is accrued daily for purposes of determining
the  amount  payable by the  Investment  Manager  to the  Sub-advisor.  The fees
payable to the Sub-advisors, based on a stated percentage of the Non-Feeder Fund
or Portfolio's average daily net assets, are as follows:

     Founders Asset Management,  Inc. for the ASAF Founders  International Small
Capitalization  Fund: An annual rate of .60% of the portion of the average daily
net assets of the Fund not in excess of $100  million;  plus .50% of the portion
over $100 million.

             Rowe Price-Fleming  International,  Inc. for the ASMT T. Rowe Price
International  Equity  Portfolio:  An annual  rate of .75% of the portion of the
average  daily net assets of the  Portfolio  not in excess of $20 million;  plus
 .60% of the portion over $20 million but not in excess of $50 million; plus .50%
of the  portion  over $50  million.  When the  average  daily net  assets of the
Portfolio  equal or exceed  $200  million,  the annual  rate will be .50% of the
entire average daily net assets of the Portfolio.


   
             Janus Capital  Corporation for the ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund:
An annual  rate of .60% of the  portion of the  average  daily net assets of the
Fund not in excess of $100  million;  when the  average  daily net assets of the
Fund equal or exceed  $100  million,  the annual rate will be .50% of the entire
average daily net assets of the Fund.


     Founders Asset Management,  Inc. for the ASAF Founders Small Capitalization
Fund:  An annual rate of .50% of the portion of the average  daily net assets of
the Fund not in  excess of $250  million;  plus  .45% of the  portion  over $250
million.
    

     T. Rowe Price  Associates,  Inc.  for the ASAF T. Rowe Price Small  Company
Value Fund: An annual rate of .60% of the average daily net assets of the Fund.


   
             Robertson,  Stephens & Company Investment Management,  L.P. for the
ASAF  Robertson  Stephens  Value + Growth  Fund:  An annual  rate of .60% of the
portion  of the  average  daily  net  assets  of the Fund not in  excess of $200
million;  when the  average  daily net assets of the Fund  equal or exceed  $200
million,  the annual rate will be .50% of the entire average daily net assets of
the Fund.
    


     Janus Capital  Corporation for the ASMT Janus Capital Growth Portfolio:  An
annual rate of .45% of the average daily net assets of the Portfolio.


   
             Lord, Abbett & Co. for the ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund:
An annual  rate of .50% of the  portion of the  average  daily net assets of the
Fund not in excess of $200  million;  plus .40% of the portion over $200 million
but not in excess of $500  million;  plus .375% of the portion over $500 million
but not in excess of $700  million;  plus .35% of the portion  over $700 million
but not in excess of $900 million; when the average daily net assets of the Fund
equal or exceed $900 million, the annual rate will be .30% of the entire average
daily net assets of the Fund.
    


     INVESCO Trust  Company for the ASMT INVESCO  Equity  Income  Portfolio:  An
annual rate of .35% of the average daily net assets of the Portfolio.

     American Century Investment Management,  Inc. for the ASAF American Century
Strategic  Balanced  Fund:  An annual rate of .50% of the portion of the average
daily net  assets of the Fund not in  excess  of $50  million;  plus .45% of the
portion over $50 million.

     Federated  Investment  Counseling  for the ASAF  Federated  High Yield Bond
Fund:  An annual rate of .25% of the portion of the average  daily net assets of
the Fund not in  excess of $200  million;  plus  .20% of the  portion  over $200
million.

     Pacific Investment  Management Company for the ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond
Portfolio:  An  annual  rate of .25% of the  average  daily  net  assets  of the
Portfolio.

     J.P.  Morgan  Investment  Management  Inc.  for the ASMT JPM  Money  Market
Portfolio: An annual rate of .15% of the portion of the average daily net assets
of the Portfolio  not in excess of $500  million;  plus .09% of the portion over
$500  million but not in excess of $1 billion;  plus .06% of the portion over $1
billion..

             Fee Waivers.  The Investment  Manager and the Sub-advisors may from
time to time agree to voluntarily  waive or reduce their  respective fees, while
retaining  their ability to be reimbursed for such fees prior to the end of each
fiscal year.  Such  voluntary fee waivers or reductions  may be rescinded at any
time and without notice to investors.

   
             The  Investment  Manager  has  voluntarily  agreed  to waive  until
October 31, 1998 portions of its investment management fees equal to .10% of the
average  daily net assets of the ASAF Janus  Overseas  Growth Fund,  .10% of the
average daily net assets of the ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund, and
 .20% of the average  daily net assets of the ASAF Lord Abbett  Growth and Income
Fund.
    

             Commencing  June 1, 1997, Rowe Price Fleming  International,  Inc.,
the Sub-advisor for the ASMT T. Rowe Price International  Equity Portfolio,  has
voluntarily  agreed to waive a portion of its  sub-advisory fee equal to .25% of
the portion of the average  daily net assets of the  Portfolio  not in excess of
$20 million;  plus .10% of the portion over $20 million but not in excess of $50
million. When the average daily net assets of the Portfolio equal or exceed $200
million, such voluntary fee waiver is no longer applicable, and the sub-advisory
annual fee rate of .50% of the average daily net assets of the Portfolio will be
applied.

   
             Commencing  January  1,  1998,  Janus  Capital   Corporation,   the
Sub-advisor for the ASAF Janus Overseas  Growth Fund, has voluntarily  agreed to
waive a portion  of its  sub-advisory  fee equal to .10% of the  portion  of the
average  daily net  assets of the Fund not in excess of $100  million.  When the
average  daily  net  assets  of the Fund  equal or  exceed  $100  million,  such
voluntary fee waiver is no longer  applicable,  and the sub-advisory  annual fee
rate of .50% of the entire average daily net assets of the Fund will be applied.

             Commencing   January  1,  1998,   Robertson,   Stephens  &  Company
Investment  Management,  L.P., the Sub-advisor  for the ASAF Robertson  Stephens
Value  +  Growth  Fund,  has  voluntarily  agreed  to  waive  a  portion  of its
sub-advisory fee equal to .10% of the portion of the average daily net assets of
the Fund not in excess of $200 million. When the average daily net assets of the
Fund  equal or exceed  $200  million,  such  voluntary  fee  waiver is no longer
applicable,  and the sub-advisory  annual fee rate of .50% of the entire average
daily net assets of the Fund will be applied.

             Commencing January 1, 1998, Lord, Abbett & Co., the Sub-advisor for
the ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund, has  voluntarily  agreed to waive a
portion of its  sub-advisory  fee equal to .20% of the  portion  of the  average
daily net  assets of the Fund not in  excess of $200  million;  plus .10% of the
portion over $200 million but not in excess of $500  million;  plus .075% of the
portion  over $500 million but not in excess of $700  million;  plus .05% of the
portion  over $700 million but not in excess of $900  million.  When the average
daily net assets of the Fund equal or exceed $900  million,  such  voluntary fee
waiver is no longer applicable,  and the sub-advisory annual fee rate of .30% of
the entire average daily net assets of the Fund will be applied.
    

             Commencing June 1, 1997, J.P. Morgan  Investment  Management  Inc.,
the Sub-advisor for the ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio,  has voluntarily agreed
to waive a portion of its  sub-advisory  fee equal to .06% of the portion of the
average daily net assets of the  Portfolio  not in excess of $500 million;  plus
 .03% of the portion over $500 million but not in excess of $1 billion.

             Expenses.  Each  Fund  and  Portfolio  pays  all of  its  expenses,
including,  but not  limited  to,  the costs  incurred  in  connection  with the
maintenance of its registration,  as applicable, under the 1933 Act and the 1940
Act, printing and mailing prospectuses and SAIs to shareholders,  certain office
and  financial  accounting  services,  taxes  or  governmental  fees,  brokerage
commissions,  Fund share pricing, custodial,  transfer and shareholder servicing
agent  costs,   expenses  of  outside  counsel  and   independent   accountants,
preparation  (including,  printing  and  mailing)  of  shareholder  reports  and
expenses of director and shareholder meetings. Expenses incurred by the Funds or
Portfolios not directly attributable to any specific Fund(s) or Portfolio(s) are
allocated on the basis of the net assets of the  respective  Fund or  Portfolio.
For additional information regarding Fund and Portfolio expenses, as well as any
voluntary agreements by the Investment Manager to limit such expenses,  see this
Prospectus  under  "Expense  Information"  and the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fund
Expenses."

THE ADMINISTRATOR:

             PFPC Inc. (the "Administrator"),  103 Bellevue Parkway, Wilmington,
Delaware  19809,  a  Delaware  corporation  which  is an  indirect  wholly-owned
subsidiary  of PNC Financial  Corp.,  serves as the  administrator  for both the
Company and the Trust pursuant to separate  administration  agreements  with the
Company  and the Trust,  respectively  (the  "Administration  Agreements").  The
Administrator  provides certain fund accounting and  administrative  services to
the Company and the Trust, including, among other services,  accounting relating
to the Company and the Trust and the  investment  transactions  of the foregoing
and computing daily NAVs. The Administrator  does not have any responsibility or
authority  for the  management  of the  assets of the Funds or  Portfolios,  the
determination of their investment policies,  or for any matter pertaining to the
distribution of securities issued by the Company.

             As  compensation  for the services and  facilities  provided by the
Administrator  to the Company,  the Company has agreed to pay the  Administrator
its "out-of-pocket" expenses, plus a monthly multi-class fee of $3,000 per Fund,
plus a monthly  feeder fee of $2,000 per Feeder  Fund,  plus the  greater of the
following  monthly fee based on the average  daily net assets of the  Non-Feeder
Funds -- 0.10% (first $200 million),  0.06% (next $200  million),  0.0275% (next
$200  million),  0.02% (next $400  million)  and 0.01% (over $1 billion) -- or a
minimum monthly fee of $6,250 per Non-Feeder Fund. The  Administrator has agreed
to waive the above  monthly  multi-class  fee,  the  monthly  feeder fee and the
minimum  monthly  fee for the first two months of each  Fund's  operations,  and
thereafter will decrease such waiver by 10% increments for each of the remaining
ten months of the initial contract year.

             In  addition,  as  compensation  for the  services  and  facilities
provided  by the  Administrator  to the  Trust,  the Trust has agreed to pay the
Administrator its  "out-of-pocket"  expenses,  plus the greater of the following
monthly fee based on the  average  daily net assets of the  Portfolios  -- 0.12%
(first $200  million),  0.085% (next $200  million),  0.05% (next $200 million),
0.025% (next $400 million) and 0.02% ($1+  billion) -- or a minimum  monthly fee
of $8,333 per Portfolio. The Administrator has agreed to waive the above minimum
monthly  fee for the  first  two  months  of each  Portfolio's  operations,  and
thereafter will decrease such waiver by 10% increments for each of the remaining
ten months of the initial  contract  year.  For an additional  discussion of the
services provided by the Administrator under the Administration  Agreements, and
the  Administrator's  "out-of-pocket"  expenses,  see the  Company's  SAI  under
"Investment Advisory & Administration Services."

                             PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER:

             Each   Non-Feeder   Fund  and  Portfolio  may  sell  its  portfolio
securities,  regardless  of the length of time that they have been held,  if the
Sub-advisor  and/or the Investment Manager determines that such a disposition is
in the  Fund's  or  Portfolio's  best  interest.  Portfolio  turnover  rates may
increase as a result of the need for a Fund or Portfolio  to effect  significant
amounts of purchases or  redemptions  of portfolio  securities  due to economic,
market,  or other  factors that are not within the  Sub-advisor's  or Investment
Manager's  control.  Although  it is not  possible to predict  future  portfolio
turnover  rates  accurately,  and such  rates may vary from year to year,  it is
anticipated  that  annual  portfolio  turnover  rates for the ASMT T. Rowe Price
International  Equity  Portfolio,  ASAF T. Rowe Price Small  Company Value Fund,
ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund,  ASMT INVESCO  Equity Income  Portfolio
and ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund will not exceed 100% under normal market
conditions.   The  annual  portfolio   turnover  rates  for  the  ASAF  Founders
International Small  Capitalization  Fund, ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund, ASAF
Founders Small Capitalization Fund, ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund,
ASMT Janus Capital Growth Portfolio,  ASAF American Century  Strategic  Balanced
Fund and ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond  Portfolio are not  anticipated  to exceed
150%, 200%, 150%, 250%, 200%, 150% and 350%,  respectively,  under normal market
conditions.

             A 100% portfolio turnover rate would occur if all of the securities
in a portfolio of investments  were replaced during a given period.  A high rate
of portfolio  turnover  (generally in excess of 100%)  involves  correspondingly
higher brokerage  commission expenses and other transaction costs, which must be
ultimately borne by a Fund's  shareholders.  Trading in fixed income  securities
does not  generally  involve  the  payment of  brokerage  commissions,  but does
involve  indirect  transaction  costs.  High  portfolio  turnover rates may also
generate  larger taxable income and taxable capital gains than would result from
lower portfolio  turnover rates and may create higher tax liability for a Fund's
shareholders.  For  additional  information  regarding tax  liability,  see this
Prospectus  under  "Dividends,  Capital  Gains and Taxes" and the  Company's SAI
under  "Additional Tax  Considerations."  For additional  information  regarding
portfolio  turnover,   in  general,  see  the  Company's  SAI  under  "Portfolio
Transactions."

BROKERAGE ALLOCATION:

             Generally,   the  primary   consideration   in  placing   portfolio
securities  transactions  with  broker-dealers  for execution is to obtain,  and
maintain the  availability  of, execution at the best net price available and in
the most  effective  manner  possible.  The Company's and the Trust's  brokerage
allocation  policy  may  permit  a Fund  or  Portfolio,  respectively,  to pay a
broker-dealer  which furnishes  research  services a higher commission than that
which might be charged by another  broker-dealer which does not furnish research
services,  provided that such commission is deemed reasonable in relation to the
value of the services provided by such broker-dealer.  In addition,  each Fund's
or Portfolio's  Sub-advisor may consider the use of broker-dealers  that are, or
might be deemed to be, their affiliates,  and may consider sale of shares of the
Funds, or may consider or follow  recommendations of the Investment Manager that
take such sales into account,  as factors in the selection of  broker-dealers to
effect transactions, subject to the requirements of best net price available and
most favorable  execution.  In this regard,  the  Investment  Manager may direct
certain  of the  Sub-advisors  to try to  effect  a  portion  of  their  Fund or
Portfolio's  investment  transactions through broker-dealers that sell shares of
the Fund (or corresponding  Fund, in the case of the Portfolios),  to the extent
consistent  with best net price available and most favorable  execution.  For an
additional discussion of portfolio  transactions and brokerage  allocation,  see
the Company's SAI under "Portfolio Transactions."

                       DIVIDENDS, CAPITAL GAINS AND TAXES

DIVIDENDS:

             Each Fund intends to distribute substantially all of its net income
and capital gains to shareholders no less frequently than once a year. Normally,
dividends from net investment  income of the ASAF Founders  International  Small
Capitalization  Fund, ASAF T. Rowe Price  International  Equity Fund, ASAF Janus
Overseas  Growth Fund,  ASAF Founders Small  Capitalization  Fund,  ASAF T. Rowe
Price Small Company Value Fund, ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund, and
ASAF Janus  Capital  Growth Fund will be declared and paid  annually;  dividends
from the net  investment  income of the ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund,
ASAF INVESCO  Equity Income Fund and ASAF American  Century  Strategic  Balanced
Fund will be declared and paid semi-annually;  dividends from the net investment
income of the ASAF Total Return Bond Fund will be declared  and paid  quarterly;
and dividends from net  investment  income of the ASAF Federated High Yield Bond
Fund and ASAF JPM Money  Market  Fund will be declared  daily and paid  monthly.
Dividends  from the ASAF JPM Money  Market Fund are not paid on shares until the
day following the date on which the shares are issued.

DISTRIBUTION OPTIONS:

             When you open your  account,  specify on your  application  how you
want to receive your distributions.  Unless you specify otherwise, all dividends
and  distributions  will  be  automatically  reinvested  in  additional  full or
fractional  shares  of each  Fund.  You have  the  following  five  distribution
options:

             Reinvest All  Distributions  in the Fund. You can elect to reinvest
all dividends and long term capital gains  distributions in additional shares of
the applicable Fund.

     Reinvest Income Dividends Only. You can elect to reinvest investment income
dividends in a Fund while receiving capital gains distributions.

     Reinvest  Long-Term Capital Gains Only. You can elect to reinvest long-term
capital gains in the Fund while receiving dividends.

     Receive All Distributions in Cash. You can elect to receive a check for all
dividends and long-term capital gains distributions.

     Reinvest Distributions in Another Fund of the Company. You can reinvest all
distributions in another Fund of the Company.  For additional  information about
reinvesting your  distributions,  see this Prospectus under "Special  Investment
Programs and Privileges."

TAXES:

             Each Fund intends to qualify as a regulated  investment  company by
satisfying  the  requirements   under  Subchapter  M  of  the  Code,   including
requirements with respect to diversification  of assets,  distribution of income
and sources of income.  It is the Company's  policy to have each Fund distribute
to shareholders  all of its investment  income (net of expenses) and any capital
gains (net of capital losses) in accordance with the timing requirements imposed
by the  Code so that the Fund  will  satisfy  the  distribution  requirement  of
Subchapter M and not be subject to federal income taxes or the 4% excise tax.

             So long as a Fund qualifies as a regulated  investment  company for
federal  income tax  purposes,  the Fund,  in  computing  its income  subject to
federal   income  tax,  is   entitled  to  deduct  all   dividends   other  than
"preferential" dividends paid by it to its shareholders during the taxable year.
"Preferential"  dividends are  dividends  other than  dividends  which have been
distributed to shareholders pro rata without preference to any share of stock as
compared with other shares of the same class and without preference to one class
of stock as  compared  with  another,  except in  accordance  with the  former's
dividend  rights as a class.  The  Company  has  received  separate  opinions of
counsel (the "Opinions") from the law firms of Caplin & Drysdale,  Chartered and
Rogers & Wells  which,  collectively,  conclude  that the  multiple-class  share
structure of the Funds would not cause dividends  declared and paid by a Fund to
be treated as  "preferential"  dividends for this purpose.  The Opinions are not
binding  on the  Internal  Revenue  Service  (the  "IRS") and no ruling has been
obtained by the Company from the IRS on the matter. The Company does not believe
that a multiple-class structure having all of the features of the multiple-class
structure of each of the Funds,  including the Bonus Share feature applicable to
Class X shares of each of the  Funds,  has been  considered  by the IRS in other
rulings.  Furthermore,  the  Opinions  are based on the  application  of current
federal  income tax law and  relevant  authorities,  and  subsequent  changes in
federal tax law or judicial or administrative  decisions or  pronouncements  may
supersede or affect the conclusions in the Opinions.  If dividends  declared and
paid by a Fund on any  class of shares  were to be  treated  as  "preferential,"
dividends paid by the Fund to  shareholders  on all classes of shares during the
taxable year would become  non-deductible.  In this event, the Fund would not be
treated as a regulated investment company and the Fund would be taxed on its net
income,  without any  deductions  for dividends  paid to its  shareholders.  The
resulting  federal and state income tax liability,  and any related interest and
penalties, would be payable from and to the extent of such Fund's then available
assets and ultimately would be borne by all current shareholders.  The treatment
of dividends declared and paid during the taxable year on any class of shares as
preferential,  and the resulting  failure of a Fund to be treated as a regulated
investment  company,  could have additional personal income tax consequences for
shareholders of the Fund,  including the taxation of  distributions  as ordinary
income that otherwise would have been classified as net capital gains.

             Upward  adjustments  in the  principal  value of  inflation-indexed
bonds will be includable currently in a Fund's gross income  notwithstanding the
absence of a  corresponding  cash payment.  The Fund's need to  distribute  such
income   may   compel   liquidation   of   investments   under   disadvantageous
circumstances.

             Distributions  by each Fund of its net  investment  income  and the
excess,  if any,  of its net  short-term  capital  gain  over its net  long-term
capital loss are taxable to shareholders as ordinary income. These distributions
are treated as dividends for federal  income tax purposes,  but will qualify for
the 70%  dividends-received  deduction  for corporate  shareholders  only to the
extent  designated  in a  notice  from  the  Fund to its  shareholders  as being
attributable to dividends  received by the Fund.  Distributions by a Fund of the
excess,  if any,  of its net  long-term  capital  gain  over its net  short-term
capital loss will be  designated as capital gain  dividends  that are taxable to
shareholders as long-term capital gains, regardless of the length of time shares
are held by the shareholder.

             Portions  of  certain  Funds'  investment  income may be subject to
foreign  income taxes  withheld at source.  The Company may, but is not required
to, elect to  "pass-through" to the shareholders of any such Funds these foreign
taxes, in which event each  shareholder will be required to include his pro rata
portion  thereof in his gross income,  but will be able to deduct or (subject to
various limitations) claim a foreign tax credit for such amount.

             Distributions  to  shareholders  will be treated in the same manner
for  federal  income tax  purposes  whether  received in cash or  reinvested  in
additional shares of the Funds. In general, distributions by the Funds are taken
into account by the  shareholders  in the year in which they are made.  However,
certain distributions made during January will be treated as having been paid by
the Fund and received by the  shareholders on December 31 of the preceding year.
A statement  setting  forth the federal  income tax status of all  distributions
made or deemed  made  during the year,  including  any  amount of foreign  taxes
"passed  through," will be sent to  shareholders  promptly after the end of each
year.  Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  distributions  by the Funds to  certain
qualified retirement plans may be exempt from federal income tax.

             "Buying a Dividend."  When a Fund pays a dividend,  its share price
is  reduced  by the  amount of the  distribution.  If you buy  shares on or just
before the ex-dividend date (the date used for determining the record owners who
will  receive  the  dividend),  or just before a Fund  declares a capital  gains
distribution,  you will pay the full  price for the  shares  and then  receive a
portion of the price back as a taxable dividend or capital gain.

             Taxes on Transactions. Share redemptions, including redemptions for
exchanges,  are  subject  to capital  gains  tax. A capital  gain or loss is the
difference  between the price you paid for the shares and the price you received
when you sold them.

             Returns of Capital. In certain cases distributions made by the Fund
may be  considered  a  non-taxable  return of capital to  shareholders.  If that
occurs, it will be identified in notices to shareholders.  A non-taxable  return
of capital may reduce your tax basis in your Fund shares.

             The above federal  income tax  information is based on tax laws and
regulations  in  effect as of the date of this  Prospectus,  and is  subject  to
change by legislative or administrative  action.  Certain administrative actions
are  being  considered  by the IRS,  which  if  carried  out  could  affect  the
classification of certain distributions to Fund shareholders in a manner not yet
determinable.  As the foregoing  discussion is for general information only, you
should  also  review  the  more  detailed   discussion  of  federal  income  tax
considerations  relevant  to the  Funds  contained  in the  Company's  SAI under
"Additional Tax  Considerations." In addition,  you should consult with your own
tax adviser as to the effect of an investment in the Fund on your particular tax
situation,  including the  application of state and local taxes which may differ
from the federal income tax consequences described above.

                                OTHER INFORMATION

INVESTOR INFORMATION SERVICES:

             The Company provides 24-hour  information  services via a toll-free
number on Fund yields and prices,  dividends,  account balances, and your latest
transaction  as well as the  ability to request  prospectuses,  account  and tax
forms, and duplicate  statements.  In addition,  telephone  representatives  are
available  during normal  business hours to provide the information and services
you need.  Shareholder  inquiries should be made by calling 1-800-SKANDIA or, if
in writing,  to "American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc." at P.O. Box 8012, Boston,
Massachusetts 02266-8012.

             Statements   and  reports  sent  to  you  include  the   following:
confirmation   statements  (after  every  transaction,   except   reinvestments,
automatic  investments  and  systematic  withdrawals,  that affect your  account
balance  or  your  account   registration),   quarterly   consolidated   account
statements,  and financial reports (every six months).  Call the above number if
you  need  additional  copies  of  financial   reports  or  historical   account
information.  There may be a small charge for historical account information for
prior years.

DISTRIBUTOR:

             Shares of the  Company are  distributed  through  American  Skandia
Marketing,  Incorporated,  the principal  underwriter  and  distributor  for the
Company (the "Distributor," as previously defined). The Distributor,  located at
One  Corporate   Drive,   Shelton,   Connecticut   06484,  is  registered  as  a
broker-dealer  with the  Commission  and the National  Association of Securities
Dealers,  Inc. It is an "affiliated person" (within the meaning of the 1940 Act)
of the  Investment  Manager,  the Company,  the Trust,  American  Skandia Trust,
American  Skandia Life Assurance  Corporation and American  Skandia  Information
Services and Technology Corporation, being a wholly-owned subsidiary of American
Skandia Investment Holding Corporation.  The Distributor may offer shares of the
Funds directly to potential purchasers.

TRANSFER AGENT:

             Boston  Financial  Data Services,  Inc. (the  "Transfer  Agent," as
previously defined), located at Two Heritage Drive, Quincy, Massachusetts 02171,
serves as the transfer agent and dividend paying agent for the Company.

DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN CUSTODIANS:


   
             PNC Bank, located at Airport Business Center,  International  Court
2, 200 Stevens Drive, Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania 19113, serves as custodian for
all domestic cash and securities holdings of the Funds and Portfolios  investing
primarily in domestic securities.  Morgan Stanley Trust Company,  located at One
Pierrepont Plaza, Brooklyn, New York 11201, serves as custodian for all cash and
securities  holdings of the ASAF  Founders  International  Small  Capitalization
Fund,  the ASAF T. Rowe  Price  International  Equity  Fund  (and  corresponding
Portfolio),  and the ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund, and  co-custodian  for all
foreign  securities  holdings of the Funds and Portfolios which invest primarily
in domestic securities.
    

<PAGE>


LEGAL COUNSEL AND INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS:

             Werner & Kennedy,  located  at 1633  Broadway,  New York,  New York
10019,  serves as  counsel to the  Company.  Caplin &  Drysdale,  located at One
Thomas Circle, N.W., Washington,  D.C. 20005, and Rogers & Wells, located at 200
Park Avenue,  New York, New York 10166,  serve as special counsel to the Company
on certain tax matters.  Coopers & Lybrand  L.L.P.,  located at 2400 Eleven Penn
Center,  Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania 19103, has been selected as the independent
accountants of the Company.

REGISTRATION STATEMENT:

             This  Prospectus  omits  certain   information   contained  in  the
Registration  Statement  filed with the Commission.  Copies of the  Registration
Statement,  including  those items  omitted  herefrom,  may be obtained from the
Commission by paying the charges prescribed under its rules and regulations.

NO  PERSON  HAS  BEEN  AUTHORIZED  TO  GIVE  ANY  INFORMATION  OR  TO  MAKE  ANY
REPRESENTATIONS  OTHER THAN THOSE CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS,  AND INFORMATION
OR  REPRESENTATIONS  NOT HEREIN CONTAINED,  IF GIVEN OR MADE, MUST NOT BE RELIED
UPON AS HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED BY THE COMPANY OR THE TRUST. THIS PROSPECTUS DOES
NOT  CONSTITUTE  AN OFFER OR  SOLICITATION  IN ANY  JURISDICTION  IN WHICH  SUCH
OFFERING MAY NOT LAWFULLY BE MADE.

<PAGE>


                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.

                               P R O S P E C T U S
                       Class A, Class B and Class C Shares

   
                                December 31, 1997
                        ---------------------------------
    

              ASAF FOUNDERS INTERNATIONAL SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND

                  ASAF T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL EQUITY FUND

                         ASAF JANUS OVERSEAS GROWTH FUND

                     ASAF FOUNDERS SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND

                   ASAF T. ROWE PRICE SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND

                   ASAF ROBERTSON STEPHENS VALUE + GROWTH FUND

                         ASAF JANUS CAPITAL GROWTH FUND

                     ASAF LORD ABBETT GROWTH AND INCOME FUND

                         ASAF INVESCO EQUITY INCOME FUND

                  ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND

                       ASAF FEDERATED HIGH YIELD BOND FUND

                           ASAF TOTAL RETURN BOND FUND

                           ASAF JPM MONEY MARKET FUND
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
This Prospectus  explains the basic information you should know before investing
in the  above  funds.  Five  of  the  funds  seek  their  respective  investment
objectives  by  investing  all of their  investable  assets  in a  corresponding
portfolio of American  Skandia  Master Trust which has an  investment  objective
identical to that of the investing  fund. The  investment  experience of each of
these  funds  directly  corresponds  with  the  investment   experience  of  its
corresponding  portfolio.  Please read this Prospectus carefully and keep it for
future reference. Additional information about the funds has been filed with the
Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  (the  "Commission")  in  a  Statement  of
Additional  Information ("SAI"),  dated December 31, 1997, which is incorporated
by reference into this  Prospectus.  To obtain a copy of the SAI without charge,
call  1-800-SKANDIA or write to "American  Skandia Advisor Funds,  Inc." at P.O.
Box 8012, Boston,  Massachusetts 02266-8012. The Commission maintains a Web site
(http:/ /www.sec.gov) that contains the SAI, material incorporated by reference,
and other  information  regarding  American  Skandia  Advisor  Funds,  Inc.  and
American Skandia Master Trust.
    

An  investment  in the  ASAF  JPM  Money  Market  Fund is  neither  insured  nor
guaranteed by the U.S. Government. While the ASAF JPM Money Market Fund seeks to
maintain a stable net asset value of $1.00 per share,  there can be no assurance
that the fund will be able to achieve this goal.

Mutual fund shares are not deposits or  obligations  of, or  guaranteed  by, any
bank or other  depository  institution.  Shares are not insured by the FDIC, the
Federal Reserve Board, or any other agency,  and are subject to investment risk,
including the possible loss of the principal amount invested.

THESE  SECURITIES  HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR  DISAPPROVED  BY THE SECURITIES AND
EXCHANGE  COMMISSION OR ANY STATE  SECURITIES  COMMISSION NOR HAS THE SECURITIES
AND  EXCHANGE  COMMISSION  OR ANY STATE  SECURITIES  COMMISSION  PASSED UPON THE
ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A
CRIMINAL OFFENSE.

   
             American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc. (the "Company") is an open-end
management  investment  company  comprised  of thirteen  diversified  investment
portfolios  (each a "Fund" and together the "Funds").  Five of the Funds -- ASAF
T. Rowe Price  International  Equity Fund,  ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund, ASAF
INVESCO  Equity  Income  Fund,  ASAF Total  Return  Bond Fund and ASAF JPM Money
Market Fund (each a "Feeder Fund" and together the "Feeder Funds") -- invest all
of their investable assets in a corresponding  portfolio (each a "Portfolio" and
together the  "Portfolios") of American  Skandia Master Trust (the "Trust"),  an
open-end management investment company comprised of five diversified  investment
portfolios.   Each  Portfolio  invests  in  securities  in  accordance  with  an
investment objective,  investment policies and limitations identical to those of
its corresponding  Feeder Fund. This "master/feeder" fund structure differs from
that of the other Funds of the Company and many other investment companies which
directly invest and manage their own portfolio of securities. Those Funds of the
Company which currently are not organized under a "master/feeder" fund structure
(the  "Non-Feeder  Funds")  retain the right to invest  all of their  investable
assets in a corresponding  Portfolio of the Trust in the future.  For additional
information  regarding the "master/feeder"  fund structure,  see this Prospectus
under "Special Information on the 'Master/Feeder' Fund Structure."
    

             American Skandia Investment Services,  Incorporated ("ASISI" or the
"Investment  Manager")  acts as the  investment  manager for both the Non-Feeder
Funds and the Portfolios. Currently, ASISI engages a sub-advisor ("Sub-advisor")
for the  investment  management  of each  Non-Feeder  Fund  and  Portfolio.  The
following  table  highlights  certain  features of each Fund (and  corresponding
Portfolio, where applicable):

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Fund/Portfolio:        Sub-Advisor:              Investment Goal:               Investment Style:

<S>                    <C>                       <C>                            <C>
Int'l Small            Founders Asset            Capital growth                 Invests primarily in securities of foreign
Capitalization         Management, Inc.                                         companies with market capitalizations or
                                                                                annual revenues of $1 billion or less.

Int'l Equity           Rowe Price-Fleming        Total return on assets         Invests primarily in common stocks of
                       International, Inc.       from long-term growth of       established foreign companies which have
                                                 capital and income             the potential for growth of capital or
                                                                                income or both.

Overseas               Growth Janus Capital       Capital growth                Invests  primarily in
                                                                                common stocks of Corporation  companies  
                                                                                located  outside the United States.

Small Capitalization   Founders Asset            Capital growth                 Invests primarily in common stocks of U.S.
                       Management, Inc.                                         companies with market capitalizations or
                                                                                annual revenues of $1.5 billion or less.

Small Company Value    T. Rowe Price             Long-term capital growth       Invests primarily in common stocks of U.S.
                       Associates, Inc.                                         companies with market capitalizations of $1
                                                                                billion or less that appear to be
                                                                                undervalued.

Value + Growth         Robertson, Stephens &     Capital growth                 Invests primarily in growth companies
                       Company Investment                                       believed to have favorable relationships
                       Management, L.P.                                         between price/earnings ratios and growth
                                                                                rates.

Capital Growth         Janus Capital             Capital growth                 Invests primarily in common stocks.
                       Corporation

Growth and Income      Lord, Abbett & Co.        Long term capital growth       Invests primarily in securities which are
                                                 and income                     selling at reasonable prices in relation to
                                                                                value.

Equity Income          INVESCO Trust Company     High current income and,       Invests in securities which will provide a
                                                 secondarily, capital growth    relatively high yield and stable return and
                                                                                which, over a period of years, may also
                                                                                provide capital appreciation.

Strategic Balanced     American Century          Capital growth and current     Invests in common stocks that are
                       Investment                income                         considered to have better-than-average
                       Management, Inc.                                         prospects for appreciation and the
                                                                                remainder in bonds and other fixed income
                                                                                securities.

High Yield Bond        Federated Investment      High current income            Invests primarily in lower-rated fixed
                       Counseling                                               income securities.

Total Return Bond      Pacific Investment        Maximize total return,         Invests in fixed-income securities of
                       Management Company        consistent with                varying maturities with an expected average
                                                 preservation of capital        portfolio duration from three to six years.

Money Market           J.P. Morgan               Maximize current income        Maintains a dollar-weighted average
                       Investment Management     and maintain high levels       portfolio maturity of not more than 90 days
                       Inc.                      of liquidity                   and invests in high quality U.S.
                                                                                dollar-denominated money market instruments.

</TABLE>


<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          T A B L E   O F   C O N T E N T S

<S>      <C>                                                                                                              <C>
   
EXPENSE INFORMATION.......................................................................................................5

         Shareholder Transaction Expenses.................................................................................5
         Annual Fund Operating Expenses...................................................................................5
         Expense Examples.................................................................................................6

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS......................................................................................................8

INVESTMENT PROGRAMS OF THE FUNDS.........................................................................................10

         ASAF Founders International Small Capitalization Fund...........................................................10
         ASAF T. Rowe Price International Equity Fund....................................................................14
         ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund.................................................................................16
         ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund.........................................................................19
         ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund.....................................................................23
         ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund.....................................................................25
         ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund..................................................................................28
         ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund.........................................................................30
         ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund.................................................................................31
         ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund...................................................................33
         ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund.............................................................................37
         ASAF Total Return Bond Fund.....................................................................................39
         ASAF JPM Money Market Fund......................................................................................46


CERTAIN RISK FACTORS AND INVESTMENT METHODS..............................................................................48

PERFORMANCE OF THE FUNDS.................................................................................................54

HOW TO BUY SHARES........................................................................................................54

SPECIAL INVESTMENT PROGRAMS AND PRIVILEGES...............................................................................60

HOW TO REDEEM SHARES.....................................................................................................61

HOW TO EXCHANGE SHARES...................................................................................................63

DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE.........................................................................................64

SHAREHOLDER ACCOUNT RULES AND POLICIES...................................................................................64

ORGANIZATION AND CAPITALIZATION OF THE COMPANY...........................................................................65

SPECIAL INFORMATION ON THE "MASTER/FEEDER" FUND STRUCTURE................................................................66

MANAGEMENT OF THE FUNDS..................................................................................................67

         The Directors, Trustees and Officers............................................................................67
         The Investment Manager..........................................................................................67
         The Sub-Advisors................................................................................................68
         Fees and Expenses...............................................................................................71
         The Administrator...............................................................................................74

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS...................................................................................................74

DIVIDENDS, CAPITAL GAINS AND TAXES.......................................................................................74

OTHER INFORMATION........................................................................................................77
</TABLE>
    

<PAGE>


                               EXPENSE INFORMATION

     The maximum transaction costs and anticipated  aggregate operating expenses
associated with investing in Class A, Class B or Class C shares of each Fund are
reflected in the following tables:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES:

                                            High Yield Bond & Total Return Bond                   All Other Funds:
                                     Funds:
                                            Class A        Class B       Class C         Class A       Class B      Class C
<S>                                          <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>          <C>
Maximum Sales Charge on Purchases
(as % of offering price)                      4.25%         None           None            5.00%         None         None
Maximum Contingent Deferred Sales
Charge
(as % of lower of original purchase           None(1)       6.00%(2)       1.00%(2)        None(1)
price or redemption proceeds)                                                                        6.00%(2)     1.00%(2)
Redemption Fees                               None(3)       None(3)        None(3)         None(3)       None(3)      None(3)
Exchange Fees                                 None          None           None            None          None         None
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES (as % of average net assets):
                                                                                                      Total  Expenses
                           Management        Fee    12b-1  Distribution      Other Expenses           (after any
ASAF Fund:                 (after     any    fee    Fees(4)                  (after any               reimbursement)(5)
                           waivers)                                          reimbursement)(5)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                               <C>                     <C>                       <C>                      <C>  
   
Int'l Small
Capitalization
     Class A                      1.10                     0.50                     0.50                     2.10
     Class B & C                  1.10                     1.00                     0.50                     2.60
International Equity
     Class A                      1.00                     0.50                     0.60                     2.10
     Class B & C                  1.00                     1.00                     0.60                     2.60
Overseas Growth
     Class A                      1.00                     0.50                     0.60                     2.10
     Class B & C                  1.00                     1.00                     0.60                     2.60
Small Capitalization
     Class A                      0.90                     0.50                     0.30                     1.70
     Class B & C                  0.90                     1.00                     0.30                     2.20
Small Company Value
     Class A                      1.00                     0.50                     0.25                     1.75
     Class B & C                  1.00                     1.00                     0.25                     2.25
Value + Growth
     Class A                      1.00                     0.50                     0.30                     1.80
     Class B & C                  1.00                     1.00                     0.30                     2.30
Capital Growth
     Class A                      1.00                     0.50                     0.20                     1.70
     Class B & C                  1.00                     1.00                     0.20                     2.20
Growth and Income
     Class A                      0.80                     0.50                     0.30                     1.60
     Class B & C                  0.80                     1.00                     0.30                     2.10
Equity Income
     Class A                      0.75                     0.50                     0.30                     1.55
     Class B & C                  0.75                     1.00                     0.30                     2.05
Strategic Balanced
     Class A                      0.90                     0.50                     0.20                     1.60
     Class B & C                  0.90                     1.00                     0.20                     2.10
High Yield Bond
     Class A                      0.70                     0.50                     0.30                     1.50
     Class B & C                  0.70                     1.00                     0.30                     2.00
Total Return Bond
     Class A                      0.65                     0.50                     0.25                     1.40
     Class B & C                  0.65                     1.00                     0.25                     1.90
Money Market
     Class A                      0.50                     0.50                     0.50                     1.50
     Class B & C                  0.50                     1.00                     0.50                     2.00
</TABLE>
    

   
(1) Under certain  circumstances,  purchases of Class A shares not subject to an
initial  sales  charge will be subject to a  contingent  deferred  sales  charge
("CDSC") if redeemed within 12 months of the calendar month of purchase.  For an
additional discussion of the Class A CDSC, see this Prospectus under "How to Buy
Shares." (2) If you  purchase  Class B shares,  you do not pay an initial  sales
charge but you may incur a CDSC if you redeem some or all of your Class B shares
before the end of the seventh year after which you  purchased  such shares.  The
CDSC is 6%, 5%, 4%, 3%,  2%, 2% and 1% for  redemptions  occurring  in years one
through seven,  respectively.  No CDSC is charged after the seventh year. If you
purchase  Class C shares,  you do not pay an  initial  sales  charge but you may
incur a CDSC if you redeem  some or all of your Class C shares  within 12 months
of the calendar  month of purchase.  For a discussion of the Class B and C CDSC,
see this Prospectus  under "How to Buy Shares." (3) A $10 fee may be imposed for
wire  transfers of redemption  proceeds.  For an  additional  discussion of wire
redemptions,  see this Prospectus  under "How to Redeem Shares." (4) As a result
of  distribution  fees,  a long-term  investor in the Fund may pay more than the
economic equivalent of the maximum front-end sales charge permitted by the rules
of the National  Association of Securities Dealers,  Inc. (5) Expenses shown are
based on estimated  amounts for the current fiscal year. The Investment  Manager
has  voluntarily  agreed to  reimburse  and/or  waive  fees for each Fund  until
October 31, 1998 so that each Fund's operating expenses (and, in the case of the
Feeder  Funds,  the Feeder  Fund's pro rata share of  operating  expenses of the
Fund's  corresponding  Portfolio),   exclusive  of  taxes,  interest,  brokerage
commissions,  distribution  fees  and  extraordinary  expenses,  do  not  exceed
specified percentages of the Fund's average net assets as follows: ASAF Founders
International   Small   Capitalization   Fund  --  1.60%;  ASAF  T.  Rowe  Price
International  Equity Fund -- 1.60%;  ASAF Janus  Overseas  Growth Fund - 1.60%;
ASAF  Founders  Small  Capitalization  Fund -- 1.20%;  ASAF T. Rowe Price  Small
Company  Value Fund -- 1.25%;  ASAF  Robertson  Stephens  Value + Growth  Fund -
1.30%;  ASAF Janus  Capital  Growth Fund -- 1.20%;  ASAF Lord Abbett  Growth and
Income Fund - 1.10%;  ASAF INVESCO  Equity  Income Fund -- 1.05%;  ASAF American
Century Strategic Balanced Fund -- 1.10%; ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund --
1.00%;  ASAF Total Return Bond Fund -- 0.90%;  and ASAF JPM Money Market Fund --
1.00%.  Such voluntary  agreements may be discontinued at any time after October
31, 1998.  Absent these  reimbursements,  the estimated "other expenses" for all
classes  of shares of the Funds  would be:  ASAF  Founders  International  Small
Capitalization  Fund - 1.08%;  ASAF T. Rowe Price  International  Equity  Fund -
0.95%;   ASAF  Janus  Overseas   Growth  Fund  -  1.30%,   ASAF  Founders  Small
Capitalization Fund - .85%; ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund - 0.84%;
ASAF Robertson  Stephens Value + Growth Fund - 1.20%;  ASAF Janus Capital Growth
Fund - 0.74%;  ASAF Lord  Abbett  Growth and Income Fund - 1.20%;  ASAF  INVESCO
Equity Income Fund - 0.88%;  ASAF  American  Century  Strategic  Balanced Fund -
0.99%;  ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund - 0.85%; ASAF Total Return Bond Fund
- - 0.88%; and ASAF JPM Money Market Fund - 1.18%.  Absent  investment  management
fee waivers,  the investment  management fee for the ASAF Janus Overseas  Growth
Fund  would be  1.10%,  the  investment  management  fee for the ASAF  Robertson
Stephens Value + Growth Fund would be 1.10%,  and the investment  management fee
for the ASAF Lord  Abbett  Growth and Income Fund would be 1.00%.  Absent  these
reimbursements  and waivers,  the estimated  "total expenses" for Class A shares
and Class B and C shares,  respectively,  of the Funds would be:  ASAF  Founders
International  Small  Capitalization  Fund - 2.68% and 3.18%; ASAF T. Rowe Price
International  Equity Fund - 2.45% and 2.95%;  ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund -
2.90% and 3.40%; ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund - 2.25% and 2.75%; ASAF
T. Rowe  Price  Small  Company  Value  Fund - 2.34% and  2.84%;  ASAF  Robertson
Stephens Value + Growth Fund - 2.80% and 3.30%; ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund -
2.24% and 2.74%; ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund - 2.70% and 3.20%; ASAF
INVESCO Equity Income Fund - 2.13% and 2.63%;  ASAF American  Century  Strategic
Balanced Fund - 2.39% and 2.89%; ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund - 2.05% and
2.55%;  ASAF Total Return Bond Fund - 2.03% and 2.53%; and ASAF JPM Money Market
Fund  -  2.18%  and  2.68%.  For  an  additional   discussion  of  Fund  expense
limitations, see the Company's SAI under "Fund Expenses."
    

             Expenses  shown  for  each  of the  Feeder  Funds  are  based  upon
distribution and administration  fees for the Fund and management fees and other
expenses for the Fund's  corresponding  Portfolio.  The Directors of the Company
believe  that the  aggregate  per share  expenses of the Feeder  Funds and their
corresponding  Portfolios over the long term will be approximately  equal to the
expenses  the Funds would incur if their  assets were  invested  directly in the
type of securities held by their corresponding Portfolios.  The Directors of the
Company also believe that  investment in the Portfolios by investors in addition
to the Feeder  Funds may enable the  Portfolios  to achieve  economies  of scale
which could reduce expenses. The expenses and, accordingly, the returns of other
funds that may invest in the Portfolios may differ from the expenses and returns
of the Feeder Funds. For additional  information  regarding the  "master/feeder"
fund  structure,   see  this  Prospectus  under  "Special   Information  on  the
'Master/Feeder' Fund Structure."

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXPENSE EXAMPLES:

             Full  Redemption.  You would have paid the following  expenses on a
$1,000 investment,  assuming a hypothetical 5% annual return and full redemption
of your shares at the end of each period shown below:

                                         1 Year                                     3 Years
ASAF Fund:                   Class A     Class B      Class C             Class A     Class B     Class C
- ---------                    -------     -------      -------             -------     -------     -------

<S>                             <C>         <C>         <C>                 <C>         <C>          <C>
Int'l  Small                    70          87          37                  113         122          82
Capitalization

International Equity            70          87          37                  113         122          82

   
Overseas Growth                 70          87          37                  113         122          82
    

Small Capitalization            67          83          33                  102         110          70

Small Company Value             67          83          33                  103         111          71

   
Value + Growth                  68          84          34                  105         113          73
    

Capital Growth                  67          83          33                  102         110          70

   
Growth and Income               66          82          32                   99         107          67
    

Equity Income                   65          81          31                   97         105          65

Strategic Balanced              66          82          32                   99         107          67

High Yield Bond                 57          80          30                   88         103          63

Total Return Bond               56          79          29                   85         100          60

Money Market                    65          80          30                   96         103          63
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
             No  Redemption.  You would have paid the  following  expenses  on a
$1,000 investment, assuming a hypothetical 5% annual return and no redemption of
your shares at the end of each period shown below:

                                         1 Year                                     3 Years
ASAF Fund:                   Class A     Class B      Class C             Class A     Class B     Class C
- ---------                    -------     -------      -------             -------     -------     -------

<S>                             <C>         <C>         <C>                 <C>          <C>         <C>
Int'l            Small          70          27          27                  113          82          82
Capitalization

International Equity            70          27          27                  113          82          82

   
Overseas Growth                 70          27          27                  113          82          82
    

Small Capitalization            67          23          23                  102          70          70

Small Company Value             67          23          23                  103          71          71

   
Value + Growth                  68          24          24                  105          73          73
    

Capital Growth                  67          23          23                  102          70          70

   
Growth and Income               66          22          22                   99          67          67
    

Equity Income                   65          21          21                   97          65          65

Strategic Balanced              66          22          22                   99          67          67

High Yield Bond                 57          20          20                   88          63          63

Total Return Bond               56          19          19                   85          60          60

Money Market                    65          20          20                   96          63          63
</TABLE>

             The above  tables are provided to assist you in  understanding  the
various  costs and expenses  that you would bear  directly or  indirectly  as an
investor in the Fund(s).  THE EXAMPLES  PROVIDED  SHOULD NOT BE  CONSIDERED AS A
REPRESENTATION  OF THE FUNDS' PAST OR FUTURE  EXPENSES.  ACTUAL  EXPENSES MAY BE
GREATER OR LESS THAN THOSE SHOWN.  IN ADDITION,  WHILE THE EXAMPLES  ASSUME A 5%
ANNUAL  RETURN,  EACH FUND'S ACTUAL  PERFORMANCE  WILL VARY AND MAY RESULT IN AN
ACTUAL RETURN THAT IS GREATER OR LESS THAN 5%.


<PAGE>


   
FINANCIAL  HIGHLIGHTS  (Selected per share data for an average share outstanding
from July 28, 1997, the date shares were first sold  subsequent to the effective
date of the Company's  registration  statement under the Securities Act of 1933,
through October 31, 1997, and ratios  throughout such period):  The tables below
contain  financial  information  which has been audited in conjunction  with the
annual  audit of the  financial  statements  of the Company by Coopers & Lybrand
L.L.P.,  Independent Auditors. Audited Financial Statements for the period ended
October 31, 1997 and the  Independent  Auditors'  Report thereon are included in
the Company's SAI, which is available without charge upon request to the Company
at P.O. Box 8012, Boston,  Massachusetts 02266-8012 or by calling 1-800-SKANDIA.
Further  information  about the  performance  of the Funds is  contained  in the
Company's  annual report which also may be obtained  without charge upon request
to the Company at that address or phone  number.  The  information  presented in
these financial  highlights is historical and is not intended to indicate future
performance  of the Funds.  No  financial  information  is included for the ASAF
Janus Overseas  Growth Fund, the ASAF Robertson  Stephens Value + Growth Fund or
the ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund, as these Funds had not been offered
prior to the date of this Prospectus.
    

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                          Increase (Decrease) from
                            Net            Investment Operations                                        Supplemental Data
                           Asset    ------------------------------------                       Net    ---------------------
                           Value       Net          Net         Total                         Asset              Net Assets
                         Beginning  Investment    Realized       from     Less Distributions  Value              at End of
                            of        Income    & Unrealized  Investment       From Net       End of    Total      Period
                          Period      (Loss)    Gain (Loss)   Operations  Investment Income   Period  Return     (in 000's)
                         ---------  ----------  ------------  ----------  ------------------  ------  ---------  ----------
                                                                                         
ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
INTERNATIONAL EQUITY
FUND:
=================
 <S>                      <C>         <C>          <C>          <C>            <C>            <C>       <C>        <C>   
 Class A                  $  9.74     $ 0.01       $(0.82)      $(0.81)        $     --       $ 8.93    (8.32)%    $  218
 Class B                    10.00      (0.01)       (0.83)       (0.84)              --         9.16    (8.40)%       390
 Class C                    10.00      (0.01)       (0.83)       (0.84)              --         9.16    (8.40)%       198

ASAF JANUS
CAPITAL GROWTH FUND:
=================
 Class A                  $ 11.18     $ 0.09       $ 0.13       $ 0.22         $     --       $11.40     1.97%     $  706
 Class B                    10.00       0.06         0.13         0.19               --        10.19     1.90%      1,718
 Class C                    10.00       0.05         0.14         0.19               --        10.19     1.90%        452

ASAF INVESCO
EQUITY INCOME FUND:
=================
 Class A                  $  9.98     $ 0.14       $ 0.33       $ 0.47         $     --       $10.45     4.71%     $  471
 Class B                    10.00       0.10         0.35         0.45               --        10.45     4.50%      1,408
 Class C                    10.00       0.10         0.36         0.46               --        10.46     4.60%        255

ASAF TOTAL
RETURN BOND FUND:
=================
 Class A                  $ 10.07     $ 0.15       $ 0.09       $ 0.24         $  (0.03)      $10.28     2.39%     $   61
 Class B                    10.00       0.10         0.09         0.19            (0.03)       10.16     1.90%        547
 Class C                    10.00       0.10         0.09         0.19            (0.03)       10.16     1.93%        165

ASAF JPM
MONEY MARKET FUND:
=================
 Class A                  $  1.00     $0.009       $   --       $0.009         $ (0.009)      $ 1.00     0.92%     $  307
 Class B                     1.00      0.007           --        0.007           (0.007)        1.00     0.75%        354
 Class C                     1.00      0.007           --        0.007           (0.007)        1.00     0.71%        332
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 

                                                                                  Ratio of
                                                                                    Net
                        Supplemental Data          Ratios of Expenses to         Investment
                       --------------------         Average Net Assets**           Income
                                  Average    ----------------------------------  (Loss) to
                       Portfolio Commission       After             Before        Average
                       Turnover     Rate         Expense           Expense          Net
                       Rate(2)    Paid(2)    Reimbursement(1)  Reimbursement(1)  Assets(1)
                       --------  ----------  ----------------  ----------------  ----------
                                                                  
ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
INTERNATIONAL EQUITY
FUND:
=================
<S>                        <C>    <C>              <C>               <C>             <C>  
 Class A                   1%     $ 0.0486         2.10%             51.87%          0.07%
 Class B                   1%     $ 0.0486         2.60%             38.12%         (0.51)%
 Class C                   1%     $ 0.0486         2.60%             33.95%         (0.53)%

ASAF JANUS
CAPITAL GROWTH FUND:
=================
 Class A                  83%     $ 0.0325         1.70%             26.77%          2.72%
 Class B                  83%     $ 0.0325         2.20%             16.45%          2.27%
 Class C                  83%     $ 0.0325         2.20%             15.78%          1.95%

ASAF INVESCO
EQUITY INCOME FUND:
=================
 Class A                  46%     $ 0.0581         1.55%             29.14%          4.81%
 Class B                  46%     $ 0.0581         2.05%             19.54%          3.68%
 Class C                  46%     $ 0.0581         2.05%             20.89%          3.82%

ASAF TOTAL
RETURN BOND FUND:
=================
 Class A                  93%          N/A         1.40%             66.92%          4.42%
 Class B                  93%          N/A         1.90%             39.35%          4.13%
 Class C                  93%          N/A         1.90%             33.68%          4.32%

ASAF JPM
MONEY MARKET FUND:
=================
 Class A                  --           N/A         1.50%             31.53%          3.34%
 Class B                  --           N/A         2.00%             37.83%          2.98%
 Class C                  --           N/A         2.00%             24.34%          2.85%
</TABLE>


 
(1) Annualized
(2) Reflects the Portfolio Turnover Rate and Average Commission Rate Paid of the
    Trust's Portfolios from the commencement of operations of each Portfolio
    (June 10, 1997 for the ASMT T. Rowe Price International Equity Portfolio and
    ASMT Janus Capital Growth Portfolio, June 18, 1997 for the ASMT INVESCO
    Equity Income Portfolio and ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond Portfolio, and June
    19, 1997 for the ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio).
**  Represents the combined ratios for the respective fund and its respective
    pro rata share of its Master Portfolio.
Per share data has been calculated based on the average daily number of shares
outstanding throughout the period.
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      Increase (Decrease) from                                       Supplemental
                                                       Investment Operations                                         Data
                                        Net     ------------------------------------                         Net     ---------
                                       Asset       Net          Net         Total                           Asset
                                       Value    Investment    Realized       from     Less Distributions    Value
                                     Beginning    income    & Unrealized  Investment       From Net        End of      Total
                                     of Period    (Loss)    Gain (Loss)   Operations  Investment Income    Period    Return(2)
                                     ---------  ----------  ------------  ----------  ------------------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                                
ASAF FOUNDERS INTERNATIONAL
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:
=========================
<S>                                   <C>         <C>          <C>          <C>             <C>            <C>         <C>    
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $ 0.05       $(0.18)      $(0.13)         $   --         $  9.87     (1.30)%
 Class B                                10.00       0.04        (0.19)       (0.15)             --            9.85     (1.50)%
 Class C                                10.00       0.04        (0.18)       (0.14)             --            9.86     (1.40)%

ASAF FOUNDERS
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:
=========================
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $(0.03)      $(0.03)      $(0.06)         $   --         $  9.94     (0.60)%
 Class B                                10.00      (0.04)       (0.03)       (0.07)             --            9.93     (0.70)%
 Class C                                10.00      (0.04)       (0.02)       (0.06)             --            9.94     (0.60)%

ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND:
=========================
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $ 0.02       $ 0.44       $ 0.46          $   --         $ 10.46      4.60%
 Class B                                10.00         --         0.44         0.44              --           10.44      4.40%
 Class C                                10.00         --         0.45         0.45              --           10.45      4.50%

ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY
STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND:
=========================
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $ 0.04       $(0.05)      $(0.01)         $   --         $  9.99     (0.10)%
 Class B                                10.00       0.02        (0.06)       (0.04)             --            9.96     (0.40)%
 Class C                                10.00       0.02        (0.04)       (0.02)             --            9.98     (0.20)%

ASAF FEDERATED
HIGH YIELD BOND FUND:
=========================
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $ 0.05       $(0.07)      $(0.02)         $(0.05)        $  9.93     (0.23)%
 Class B                                10.00       0.04        (0.07)       (0.03)          (0.04)           9.93     (0.30)%
 Class C                                10.00       0.03        (0.07)       (0.04)          (0.03)           9.93     (0.36)%
</TABLE>

 

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                         Ratio of
                                                                                                           Net
                                        Supplemental Data                 Ratios of Expenses to         Investment
                                  --------------------------------          Average Net Assets            Income
                                  Net Assets             Average    ----------------------------------  (Loss) to
                                  at End of   Portfolio Commission       After             Before        Average
                                    Period    Turnover     Rate         Expense           Expense          Net
                                  (in 000's)    Rate       Paid     Reimbursement(1)  Reimbursement(1)  Assets(1)
                                  ----------  --------  ----------  ----------------  ----------------  ----------
                                                                                      
ASAF FOUNDERS INTERNATIONAL
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:
=========================
<S>                                 <C>                  <C>              <C>              <C>              <C>  
 Class A                            $  106         --    $ 0.0590         2.10%            136.49%          2.03%
 Class B                               230         --      0.0590         2.60%             90.64%          1.62%
 Class C                                79         --      0.0590         2.60%             55.02%          1.72%

ASAF FOUNDERS
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:
=========================
 Class A                            $  193         --    $ 0.0529         1.70%            105.48%         (1.16)%
 Class B                               353         --      0.0529         2.20%             57.99%         (1.73)%
 Class C                                74         --      0.0529         2.20%             42.48%         (1.73)%

ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND:
=========================
 Class A                            $  383         --    $ 0.0412         1.75%             54.47%          0.69%
 Class B                             1,155         --      0.0412         2.25%             30.14%          0.17%
 Class C                               335         --      0.0412         2.25%             33.60%          0.02%

ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY
STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND:
=========================
 Class A                            $  257          2%   $ 0.0186         1.60%             37.87%          1.56%
 Class B                               381          2%     0.0186         2.10%             29.90%          0.79%
 Class C                               215          2%     0.0186         2.10%             38.96%          0.78%

ASAF FEDERATED
HIGH YIELD BOND FUND:
=========================
 Class A                            $2,154         11%   $    N/A         1.50%             30.49%          4.76%
 Class B                               920         11%        N/A         2.00%             30.22%          3.15%
 Class C                               206         11%        N/A         2.00%             29.26%          3.55%

</TABLE>

 
(1) Annualized

Per share data has been calculated based on the average daily number of shares
outstanding throughout the period.
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 
<PAGE>




                        INVESTMENT PROGRAMS OF THE FUNDS

             The investment objective,  policies and limitations for each of the
Funds are described  below and should be considered  separately.  The investment
objective,  policies and  limitations of each Feeder Fund are identical to those
of its corresponding  Portfolio. As such, the following discussion of the Feeder
Funds,  including  references to the Directors of the Company,  apply equally to
the Funds' corresponding Portfolios and the Trustees of the Trust, respectively.
Each Feeder Fund seeks to meet its investment  objective by investing all of its
investable  assets in a  corresponding  Portfolio  of the  Trust,  which in turn
invests  directly in a portfolio of securities in accordance with the investment
objective, policies and limitations of its Feeder Fund.

             While certain policies apply to all Funds and Portfolios, generally
each  Fund and  Portfolio  has a  different  investment  objective  and  certain
policies  may  vary.  As a result,  the  risks,  opportunities  and  returns  of
investing  in each  Fund may  differ.  Those  investment  policies  specifically
labeled as "fundamental" may not be changed without  shareholder  approval.  The
investment  objective of each Fund and Portfolio is not a fundamental policy and
may be changed by the  Directors  of the  Company or the  Trustees of the Trust,
where applicable,  without  shareholder  approval.  The investment  policies and
limitations of the Funds and Portfolios,  unless  otherwise  specified,  are not
fundamental policies and may also be changed without shareholder approval.

             There can be no assurance that the investment objective of any Fund
or  Portfolio  will be  achieved.  Risks  relating  to  various  securities  and
instruments  in which the Funds and  Portfolios may invest are described in this
Prospectus  and the  Company's SAI under  "Certain  Risk Factors and  Investment
Methods." Additional information about the investment  objectives,  policies and
limitations,  as well as certain fundamental  investment  restrictions,  of each
Fund and Portfolio may be found in the Company's SAI under "Investment  Programs
of the Funds" and "Fundamental Investment Restrictions."

             Subject  to the  approval  of the  Directors  of the  Company,  the
Company  may add one or more  Funds and may cease to offer any one or more Funds
in the future.  Any such addition or cessation shall be subject to obtaining any
required regulatory approvals.

ASAF FOUNDERS INTERNATIONAL SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
capital growth.

Investment Policies:

             To achieve its objective,  the Fund normally  invests  primarily in
securities  issued by foreign  companies  which have market  capitalizations  or
annual revenues of $1 billion or less. These securities may represent  companies
in both established and emerging economies throughout the world.

             At least 65% of the Fund's total assets  normally  will be invested
in foreign  securities  representing a minimum of three countries.  The Fund may
invest  in  larger  foreign  companies  or in  U.S.-based  companies  if, in the
Sub-advisor's opinion, they represent better prospects for capital appreciation.

             Risks of Investments in Small and Medium-Sized Companies.  The Fund
normally will invest a significant proportion of its assets in the securities of
small and medium-sized  companies.  As used with respect to this Fund, small and
medium-sized  companies  are those which are still in the  developing  stages of
their life cycles and are  attempting  to achieve rapid growth in both sales and
earnings.  Capable  management and fertile  operating  areas are two of the most
important characteristics of such companies. In addition, these companies should
employ sound financial and accounting policies;  demonstrate  effective research
and successful product development and marketing; provide efficient service; and
possess pricing flexibility.

             Investments in small and  medium-sized  companies  involve  greater
risk than is  customarily  associated  with more  established  companies.  These
companies often have sales and earnings growth rates which exceed those of large
companies.  Such growth rates may in turn be reflected in more rapid share price
appreciation. However, smaller companies often have limited operating histories,
product lines,  markets, or financial resources,  and they may be dependent upon
one-person  management.  These  companies may be subject to intense  competition
from larger  entities,  and the  securities  of such  companies may have limited
marketability  and may be subject to more abrupt or erratic  movements  in price
than  securities  of  larger  companies  or  the  market  averages  in  general.
Therefore,  the net asset value of the Fund's shares may  fluctuate  more widely
than the popular market averages.

             Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may invest without limit in American
Depositary  Receipts  ("ADRs")  and  foreign   securities.   The  term  "foreign
securities" refers to securities of issuers,  wherever organized,  which, in the
judgment of the Sub-advisor, have their principal business activities outside of
the United States. The determination of whether an issuer's principal activities
are outside of the United  States will be based on the  location of the issuer's
assets,  personnel,  sales, and earnings,  and specifically on whether more than
50% of the issuer's  assets are located,  or more than 50% of the issuer's gross
income is earned,  outside of the United States, or on whether the issuer's sole
or principal  stock exchange  listing is outside of the United  States.  Foreign
securities  typically will be traded on the applicable country's principal stock
exchange but may also be traded on regional exchanges or over-the-counter. For a
discussion  of  ADRs,  see this  Prospectus  under  "Certain  Risk  Factors  and
Investment Methods."

             Foreign  investments of the Fund may include  securities  issued by
companies  located  in  countries  not  considered  to be  major  industrialized
nations.  Such  countries are subject to more  economic,  political and business
risk than  major  industrialized  nations,  and the  securities  they  issue are
expected to be more  volatile  and more  uncertain as to payment of interest and
principal.  The  secondary  market for such  securities  is  expected to be less
liquid than for securities of major industrialized  nations.  Such countries may
include  (but are not  limited  to):  Argentina,  Australia,  Austria,  Belgium,
Bolivia,  Brazil, Chile, China,  Colombia,  Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic,
Denmark,  Ecuador, Egypt, Finland, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Indonesia,
Ireland,  Italy, Israel, Jordan,  Malaysia,  Mexico,  Netherlands,  New Zealand,
Nigeria, North Korea, Norway,  Pakistan,  Paraguay,  Peru, Philippines,  Poland,
Portugal,  Singapore,  Slovak Republic,  South Africa,  South Korea,  Spain, Sri
Lanka,  Sweden,  Switzerland,  Taiwan,  Thailand,  Turkey,  Uruguay,  Venezuela,
Vietnam and the countries of the former Soviet  Union.  Investments  may include
securities  created  through  the Brady  Plan,  a program  under  which  heavily
indebted countries have restructured their bank debt into bonds.

             Investments in foreign  securities  involve certain risks which are
not typically associated with U.S. investments.  For a discussion of the special
risks  involved in investing in developing  countries and certain risks involved
in investing in foreign securities,  in general,  including the risk of currency
fluctuations,  see this  Prospectus  and the Company's  SAI under  "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment Methods."

             Foreign Currency Exchange  Contracts.  The Fund is permitted to use
forward foreign currency  contracts in connection with the purchase or sale of a
specific   security.   The  Fund  may  conduct  its  foreign  currency  exchange
transactions  on a spot (i.e.,  cash) basis at the spot rate  prevailing  in the
foreign exchange  currency  market,  or on a forward basis to "lock in" the U.S.
dollar  price of the  security.  By  entering  into a forward  contract  for the
purchase or sale, for a fixed amount of U.S.  dollars,  of the amount of foreign
currency involved in the underlying  transactions,  the Fund attempts to protect
itself   against   possible  loss  resulting  from  an  adverse  change  in  the
relationship  between the U.S. dollar and the applicable foreign currency during
the period  between the date on which the  security is purchased or sold and the
date on which such payments are made or received.

             In addition,  the Fund may enter into forward contracts for hedging
purposes.  When the  Sub-advisor  believes  that the  currency  of a  particular
foreign  country may suffer a substantial  decline  against the U.S.  dollar (or
sometimes against another  currency),  the Fund may enter into forward contracts
to  sell,  for  a  fixed-dollar  or  other  currency  amount,  foreign  currency
approximating the value of some or all of the Fund's  securities  denominated in
that  currency.  The precise  matching of the forward  contract  amounts and the
value of the  securities  involved  will not  generally be possible.  The future
value of such  securities  in foreign  currencies  changes as a  consequence  of
market movements in the value of those securities  between the date on which the
contract is entered into and the date it expires.

             The Fund  generally  will not enter into forward  contracts  with a
term greater than one year. In addition,  the Fund generally will not enter into
forward  contracts  or  maintain  a net  exposure  to such  contracts  where the
fulfillment  of the  contracts  would  require  the Fund to deliver an amount of
foreign currency in excess of the value of the Fund's securities or other assets
denominated in that currency.  Under normal circumstances,  consideration of the
possibility of changes in currency  exchange rates will be incorporated into the
Fund's long-term investment strategies.  In the event that forward contracts are
considered  to be  illiquid,  the  securities  would be  subject  to the  Fund's
limitation on investing in illiquid securities.  For an additional discussion of
foreign currency  contracts and the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus
and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Fixed-Income  Securities.   The  Fund  may  invest  in  convertible
securities, preferred stocks, bonds, debentures, and other corporate obligations
when the Sub-advisor  believes that these  investments  offer  opportunities for
capital  appreciation.  Current  income will not be a substantial  factor in the
selection of these securities.

   
             The Fund will  only  invest in  bonds,  debentures,  and  corporate
obligations  (other than  convertible  securities  and  preferred  stock)  rated
investment  grade (BBB or higher) at the time of  purchase.  Bonds in the lowest
investment grade category (BBB) have speculative  characteristics,  with changes
in the economy or other circumstances more likely to lead to a weakened capacity
of the bonds to make principal and interest payments than would occur with bonds
rated  in  higher  categories.   Convertible  securities  and  preferred  stocks
purchased by the Fund may be rated in medium and lower  categories by Moody's or
S&P (Ba or lower by Moody's and BB or lower by S&P), but will not be rated lower
than B. The Fund may also invest in unrated convertible securities and preferred
stocks  in  instances  in which  the  Sub-advisor  believes  that the  financial
condition  of the  issuer  or  the  protection  afforded  by  the  terms  of the
securities  limits risk to a level  similar to that of  securities  eligible for
purchase by the Fund rated in categories no lower than B. Securities rated B are
referred to as  "high-risk"  securities,  generally  lack  characteristics  of a
desirable  investment,  and are deemed  speculative with respect to the issuer's
capacity to pay interest and repay  principal  over a long period of time. At no
time  will the Fund  have  more  than 5% of its  total  assets  invested  in any
fixed-income  securities  (not  including  convertible  securities and preferred
stock)  which are rated below  investment  grade as a result of a  reduction  in
rating after purchase or are unrated.  For a description of securities  ratings,
see the Appendix to the  Company's  SAI. For a discussion  of the special  risks
involved in investing in lower-rated  debt  securities,  see this Prospectus and
the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."
    

             The  fixed-income  securities  in which  the Fund  may  invest  are
generally subject to two kinds of risk: credit risk and market risk. Credit risk
relates to the ability of the issuer to meet interest or principal payments,  or
both,  as they come due. The ratings given a security by Moody's and S&P provide
a generally  useful guide as to such credit  risk.  The lower the rating given a
security by such rating service, the greater the credit risk such rating service
perceives to exist with respect to such security.  Increasing the amount of Fund
assets invested in unrated or lower-grade securities, while intended to increase
the yield produced by those assets,  also will increase the credit risk to which
those assets are subject. Market risk relates to the fact that the market values
of securities in which the Fund may invest generally will be affected by changes
in the level of interest  rates.  An  increase  in  interest  rates will tend to
reduce the market values of such securities, whereas a decline in interest rates
will tend to increase their values.  Medium- and lower-rated  securities (Baa or
BBB and lower) and non-rated securities of comparable quality tend to be subject
to wider fluctuations in yields and market values than higher-rated  securities.
Medium-rated   securities   (those   rated   Baa  or   BBB)   have   speculative
characteristics while lower-rated securities are predominantly speculative.  The
Fund is not required to dispose of straight  debt  securities  whose ratings are
downgraded below Baa or BBB subsequent to the Fund's purchase of the securities,
unless such a  disposition  is necessary  to reduce the Fund's  holdings of such
securities  to less  than 5% of its total  assets.  Relying  in part on  ratings
assigned by credit agencies in making investments will not protect the Fund from
the risk that fixed-income securities in which it invests will decline in value,
since credit ratings represent evaluations of the safety of principal,  dividend
and interest  payments on preferred stocks and debt  securities,  not the market
values of such securities, and such ratings may not be changed on a timely basis
to reflect subsequent events.

             The  Sub-advisor  seeks to reduce overall risk  associated with the
investments of the Fund through  diversification  and  consideration of relevant
factors affecting the value of securities.  No assurance can be given,  however,
regarding  the degree of success  that will be achieved in this regard or in the
Fund achieving its investment objective.

   
             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the  Company,  the Fund may invest up to 15% of the market value of
its net assets,  measured at the time of purchase,  in securities  which are not
readily marketable,  including repurchase agreements maturing in more than seven
days.  Securities which are not readily  marketable are those that, for whatever
reason,  cannot be  disposed  of within  seven  days in the  ordinary  course of
business  at  approximately  the  amount  at  which  the  Fund  has  valued  the
investment.
    

             The Fund may invest in Rule 144A securities  (securities  issued in
offerings  made pursuant to Rule 144A under the  Securities  Act of 1933).  Rule
144A securities may be resold to qualified institutional buyers as defined under
Rule  144A  and may or may  not be  deemed  to be  readily  marketable.  Factors
considered in evaluating  whether such a security is readily  marketable include
eligibility for trading,  trading activity,  dealer interest,  purchase interest
and ownership transfer requirements.  The Sub-advisor is required to monitor the
readily  marketable  nature of each Rule 144A security no less  frequently  than
quarterly. For an additional discussion of Rule 144A securities and illiquid and
restricted securities, and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Borrowing. The Fund may borrow money from banks in amounts up to 33
1/3% of the Fund's total assets.  If the Fund borrows money, its share price may
be subject to greater  fluctuation until the borrowing is repaid.  The Fund will
attempt  to  minimize  such  fluctuations  by  not  purchasing  securities  when
borrowings  are greater than 5% of the value of the Fund's total assets.  For an
additional  discussion of the Fund's  limitations on borrowing and certain risks
involved in  borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under  "Certain  Risk Factors and
Investment  Methods"  and  the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental   Investment
Restrictions."

             Futures  Contracts  and  Options.  The Fund may enter into  futures
contracts (or options thereon) for hedging purposes.  The acquisition or sale of
a futures  contract  could occur,  for example,  if the Fund held or  considered
purchasing  equity  securities and sought to protect itself from fluctuations in
prices without buying or selling those securities.  The Fund may also enter into
interest  rate and foreign  currency  futures  contracts.  Interest rate futures
contracts currently are traded on a variety of fixed-income securities.  Foreign
currency futures contracts  currently are traded on the British pound,  Canadian
dollar, Japanese yen, Swiss franc, German mark and on Eurodollar deposits.

             An option is a right to buy or sell a security at a specified price
within a  limited  period  of time.  The Fund may write  ("sell")  covered  call
options  on any or all of its  portfolio  securities  from  time  to time as the
Sub-advisor  shall deem  appropriate.  The extent of the Fund's  option  writing
activities  will  vary  from  time  to time  depending  upon  the  Sub-advisor's
evaluation of market, economic and monetary conditions.

             The Fund may  purchase  options on  securities  and stock  indices.
Options on stock indices are similar to options on securities.  However, because
options on stock indices do not involve the delivery of an underlying  security,
the option  represents  the  holder's  right to obtain from the writer in cash a
fixed multiple of the amount by which the exercise price exceeds (in the case of
a put) or is  less  than  (in the  case of a  call)  the  closing  value  of the
underlying index on the exercise date. The purpose of these  transactions is not
to generate gain, but to "hedge" against  possible loss.  Therefore,  successful
hedging  activity  will  not  produce  net gain to the  Fund.  The Fund may also
purchase  put and call  options  on  futures  contracts.  An option on a futures
contract  provides the holder with the right to enter into a "long"  position in
the  underlying  futures  contract,  in the case of a call option,  or a "short"
position in the underlying  futures contract,  in the case of a put option, at a
fixed exercise price to a stated expiration date. Upon exercise of the option by
the holder, a contract market clearing house  establishes a corresponding  short
position  for the  writer  of the  option,  in the case of a call  option,  or a
corresponding long position, in the case of a put option.

             The Fund will not, as to any  positions,  whether long,  short or a
combination  thereof,  enter into  futures  and  options  thereon  for which the
aggregate initial margins and premiums exceed 5% of the fair market value of its
total assets after taking into account  unrealized profits and losses on options
entered  into.  The Fund may buy and sell  options  on  foreign  currencies  for
hedging  purposes  in a manner  similar  to that in  which  futures  on  foreign
currencies would be utilized.  For an additional discussion of futures contracts
and  options  and the  risks  involved  therein,  see  this  Prospectus  and the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Temporary Investments.  Up to 100% of the assets of the Fund may be
invested  temporarily in U.S.  government  obligations,  commercial  paper, bank
obligations,   repurchase   agreements,   negotiable   U.S.   dollar-denominated
obligations of domestic and foreign  branches of U.S.  depository  institutions,
U.S.  branches  of  foreign  depository  institutions,  and  foreign  depository
institutions,  in  cash,  or in  other  cash  equivalents,  if  the  Sub-advisor
determines  it  to  be  appropriate  for  purposes  of  enhancing  liquidity  or
preserving capital in light of prevailing market or economic  conditions.  While
the Fund is in a defensive  position,  the opportunity to achieve capital growth
will be limited, and, to the extent that this assessment of market conditions is
incorrect,  the Fund will be foregoing the  opportunity  to benefit from capital
growth resulting from increases in the value of equity investments.

             U.S.  government  obligations  include  Treasury  bills,  notes and
bonds, and issues of United States agencies,  authorities and instrumentalities.
Some government  obligations,  such as Government National Mortgage  Association
pass-through  certificates,  are  supported  by the full faith and credit of the
United States  Treasury.  Other  obligations,  such as securities of the Federal
Home Loan  Banks,  are  supported  by the right of the issuer to borrow from the
United States  Treasury;  and others,  such as bonds issued by Federal  National
Mortgage Association (a private  corporation),  are supported only by the credit
of the  agency,  authority  or  instrumentality.  The Fund  also may  invest  in
obligations  issued by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(IBRD or "World Bank").

             The Fund may also  acquire  certificates  of deposit  and  bankers'
acceptances  of banks which meet  criteria  established  by the Directors of the
Company, if any. A certificate of deposit is a short-term  obligation of a bank.
A bankers'  acceptance  is a time draft drawn by a borrower  on a bank,  usually
relating to an international commercial transaction.

             The obligations of foreign branches of U.S. depository institutions
may be general  obligations of the parent depository  institution in addition to
being an  obligation  of the issuing  branch.  These  obligations,  and those of
foreign  depository  institutions,  may be limited by the terms of the  specific
obligation and by  governmental  regulation.  The payment of these  obligations,
both interest and principal,  also may be affected by governmental action in the
country of domicile of the institution or branch, such as imposition of currency
controls and interest  limitations.  In connection with these  investments,  the
Fund will be  subject to the risks  associated  with the  holding  of  portfolio
securities overseas,  such as possible changes in investment or exchange control
regulations,  expropriation,  confiscatory  taxation,  or political or financial
instability.

             Obligations of U.S. branches of foreign depository institutions may
be general obligations of the parent depository institution in addition to being
an  obligation  of the  issuing  branch,  or may be  limited  by the  terms of a
specific  foreign  regulation  applicable to the depository  institutions and by
government regulation (both domestic and foreign).

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company,  the Fund may enter into  repurchase  agreements  with
banks or well-established  securities dealers. All repurchase agreements entered
into by the Fund will be fully  collateralized  and marked to market daily.  The
Fund has not  adopted  any limits on the amount of its total  assets that may be
invested in repurchase  agreements  which mature in less than seven days.  For a
discussion of repurchase agreements and certain risks involved therein, see this
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Portfolio  Turnover.  The  Fund  reserves  the  right  to sell  its
securities,  regardless of the length of time that they have been held,  when it
is  determined by the  Sub-advisor  that those  securities  have attained or are
unable to meet the  investment  objective  of the Fund.  The Fund may  engage in
short-term  trading and therefore  normally will have annual portfolio  turnover
rates  which are  considered  to be high and may be greater  than those of other
investment companies seeking capital appreciation.  Portfolio turnover rates may
also increase as a result of the need for the Fund to effect significant amounts
of purchases or redemptions of portfolio securities due to economic,  market, or
other factors that are not within the Sub-advisor's control. For a discussion of
portfolio  turnover and its effects,  see this  Prospectus and the Company's SAI
under "Portfolio Transactions."

ASAF T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL EQUITY FUND:

Investment  Objective:  The investment  objective of the Fund is to seek a total
return on its assets from  long-term  growth of capital and income,  principally
through  investments  in  common  stocks  of  established,  non-U.S.  companies.
Investments may be made solely for capital  appreciation or solely for income or
any  combination of both for the purpose of achieving a higher  overall  return.
Total return consists of capital appreciation or depreciation,  dividend income,
and currency gains or losses.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund intends to diversify  investments  broadly among countries
and to normally have at least three different countries represented in the Fund.
The Fund may invest in countries  of the Far East and Western  Europe as well as
South  Africa,   Australia,   Canada  and  other  areas  (including   developing
countries).  Under unusual circumstances,  the Fund may invest substantially all
of its assets in one or two countries.

             In seeking its objective,  the Fund will invest primarily in common
stocks of established  foreign  companies which have the potential for growth of
capital  or income or both.  However,  the Fund may also  invest in a variety of
other  equity-related  securities,   such  as  preferred  stocks,  warrants  and
convertible  securities,  as well as corporate and governmental debt securities,
when considered  consistent with the Fund's  investment  objectives and program.
Under normal market  conditions,  the Fund's investment in securities other than
common stocks is limited to no more than 35% of total assets.  Under exceptional
economic or market conditions  abroad,  the Fund may temporarily invest all or a
major portion of its assets in U.S.  government  obligations or debt obligations
of U.S.  companies.  The Fund will not purchase any debt  security  which at the
time of  purchase is rated below  investment  grade.  This would not prevent the
Fund from  retaining  a security  downgraded  to below  investment  grade  after
purchase.

             The  Fund may also  invest  its  reserves  in  domestic  as well as
foreign money market instruments.  Also, the Fund may enter into forward foreign
currency exchange contracts in order to protect against uncertainty in the level
of future foreign exchange rates.

             In  addition  to  the  investments   described  below,  the  Fund's
investments may include,  but are not limited to, American  Depositary  Receipts
(ADRs),  bonds,  notes,  other  debt  securities  of  foreign  issuers,  and the
securities of foreign  investment  funds or trusts  (including  passive  foreign
investment companies).

             Cash  Reserves.  While the Fund will remain  primarily  invested in
common stocks, it may, for temporary defensive measures, invest in cash reserves
without  limitation.  The  Fund  may  establish  and  maintain  reserves  as the
Sub-advisor  believes  is  advisable  to  facilitate  the Fund's cash flow needs
(e.g.,  redemptions,  expenses and  purchases of  portfolio  securities)  or for
temporary,  defensive purposes.  The Fund's reserves may be invested in domestic
and foreign money market  instruments rated within the top two credit categories
by a national  rating  organization,  or if unrated,  of  equivalent  investment
quality as determined by the Sub-advisor.

             Convertible  Securities,  Preferred Stocks, and Warrants.  The Fund
may  invest  in  debt  or  preferred  equity  securities   convertible  into  or
exchangeable  for  equity  securities.  Preferred  stocks  are  securities  that
represent an ownership interest in a corporation providing the owner with claims
on the company's  earnings and assets before common stock owners, but after bond
owners. Warrants are options to buy a stated number of shares of common stock at
a specified  price any time during the life of the warrants  (generally,  two or
more years).

             Foreign Currency  Transactions.  The Fund will normally conduct its
foreign currency exchange  transactions  either on a spot (i.e.,  cash) basis at
the spot rate prevailing in the foreign  currency  exchange  market,  or through
entering into forward contracts to purchase or sell foreign currencies. The Fund
will generally not enter into a forward contract with a term of greater than one
year.

             The  Fund  will  generally  enter  into  forward  foreign  currency
exchange  contracts only under two  circumstances.  First,  when the Fund enters
into a contract for the purchase or sale of a security  denominated in a foreign
currency,  it may  desire to "lock in" the U.S.  dollar  price of the  security.
Second, when the Sub-advisor  believes that the currency of a particular foreign
country may suffer or enjoy a substantial movement against another currency,  it
may enter into a forward contract to sell or buy the former foreign currency (or
another  currency  which acts as a proxy for that  currency)  approximating  the
value  of some  or all of the  Fund's  securities  denominated  in such  foreign
currency. Under certain circumstances, the Fund may commit a substantial portion
or the entire value of its portfolio to the consummation of these contracts. The
Sub-advisor  will  consider  the effect such a  commitment  of its  portfolio to
forward  contracts  would  have on the  investment  program  of the Fund and the
flexibility of the Fund to purchase additional  securities.  For a discussion of
foreign currency  contracts and the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus
and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Futures Contracts and Options.  The Fund may enter into stock index
or currency  futures  contracts  (or options  thereon) to hedge a portion of the
Fund,  to provide an efficient  means of regulating  the Fund's  exposure to the
equity markets,  or as a hedge against changes in prevailing  levels of currency
exchange rates. The Fund will not use futures contracts for leveraging purposes.
Such  contracts may be traded on U.S. or foreign  exchanges.  The Fund may write
covered call  options and  purchase put and call options on foreign  currencies,
securities,  and  stock  indices.  The  aggregate  market  value  of the  Fund's
currencies or portfolio  securities covering call or put options will not exceed
25% of the Fund's  total  assets.  The Fund will not commit  more than 5% of its
total assets to premiums when purchasing call or put options.  For an additional
discussion of futures contracts and options and the risks involved therein,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Hybrid  Investments.  The Fund may  invest  up to 10% of its  total
assets in hybrid instruments.  As part of its investment program and to maintain
greater  flexibility,  the Fund may invest in these instruments,  which have the
characteristics of futures, options and securities.  Such instruments may take a
variety of forms,  such as debt instruments with interest or principal  payments
determined by reference to the value of a currency,  security index or commodity
at a future point in time. The risks of such investments  would reflect both the
risks of investing in futures, options,  currencies,  and securities,  including
volatility and illiquidity.  Under certain conditions, the redemption value of a
hybrid instrument could be zero. For a discussion of hybrid  investments and the
risks  involved  therein,  see the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and
Investment Methods."

             Passive  Foreign  Investment  Companies.  The Fund may purchase the
securities of certain foreign  investment funds or trusts called passive foreign
investment companies. Such trusts have been the only or primary way to invest in
certain  countries.  In addition  to bearing  their  proportionate  share of the
Fund's expenses (management fees and operating expenses), shareholders will also
indirectly bear similar expenses of such trusts.

             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company,  the Fund may acquire  illiquid  securities.  The Fund
will not invest more than 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities. Illiquid
securities do not include securities  eligible for resale under Rule 144A of the
Securities Act of 1933 that have been determined by the Sub-advisor to be liquid
under guidelines  promulgated by the Directors of the Company.  For a discussion
of illiquid and restricted securities,  and the risks involved therein, see this
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company,  the Fund may enter into repurchase  agreements with a
well-established  securities  dealer or a bank which is a member of the  Federal
Reserve  System.  For a discussion  of repurchase  agreements  and certain risks
involved therein, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

     Borrowing.  For a discussion  of the Fund's  limitations  on borrowing  and
certain risks  involved in borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under "Certain Risk
Factors  and  Investment  Methods"  and the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental
Investment Restrictions."


ASAF JANUS OVERSEAS GROWTH FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
long-term growth of capital.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund pursues its objective  primarily  through  investments  in
common stocks of issuers  located  outside the United  States.  The Fund has the
flexibility to invest on a worldwide basis in companies and organizations of any
size,  regardless  of country of  organization  or place of  principal  business
activity.

             The Fund  normally  invests  at least  65% of its  total  assets in
securities  of issuers from at least five  different  countries,  excluding  the
United  States.  Although  the Fund intends to invest  substantially  all of its
assets in issuers located  outside the United States,  it may at times invest in
U.S.  issuers  and it may at times  invest  all of its assets in fewer than five
countries or even a single country.

             The Fund  invests  primarily  in common  stocks of foreign  issuers
selected for their growth  potential.  The Fund may invest to a lesser degree in
other types of securities,  including  preferred stocks,  warrants,  convertible
securities  and debt  securities.  Debt  securities  that the Fund may  purchase
include  corporate  bonds and  debentures  (not to exceed  35% of net  assets in
high-yield/high-risk   securities);   government   securities;   mortgage-   and
asset-backed securities (not to exceed 25% of assets); zero coupon bonds (not to
exceed 10% of  assets);  indexed/structured  securities;  high-grade  commercial
paper;  certificates of deposit; and repurchase agreements.  Such securities may
offer growth potential because of anticipated  changes in interest rates, credit
standing,  currency  relationships or other factors. The Fund may also invest in
short-term  debt  securities,  including  money  market  funds  managed  by  the
Sub-advisor, as a means of receiving a return on idle cash.

             When  the  Sub-advisor  believes  that  market  conditions  are not
favorable for profitable  investing or when the Sub-advisor is otherwise  unable
to locate  favorable  investment  opportunities,  the Fund's  investments may be
hedged to a greater degree and/or its cash or similar  investments may increase.
In other  words,  the Fund does not  always  stay fully  invested  in stocks and
bonds.  Cash or similar  investments  are a residual - they represent the assets
that remain after the  Sub-advisor has committed  available  assets to desirable
investment  opportunities.  When the Fund's cash position increases,  it may not
participate in stock market  advances or declines to the extent that it would if
it remained more fully invested in common stocks.

             The  fundamental  risk associated with any common stock fund is the
risk that the value of the  stocks it holds  might  decrease.  Stock  values may
fluctuate in response to the activities of an individual  company or in response
to general market and/or economic conditions.  Historically,  common stocks have
provided greater  long-term  returns and have entailed greater  short-term risks
than other  investment  choices.  Smaller or newer  issuers  are more  likely to
realize more substantial  growth as well as suffer more significant  losses than
larger or more  established  issuers.  Investments in such companies can be both
more volatile and more speculative.

             The Fund may invest in "special  situations"  from time to time.  A
special situation arises when, in the opinion of the Sub-advisor, the securities
of a  particular  issuer will be  recognized  and  appreciate  in value due to a
specific  development  with  respect  to that  issuer.  Developments  creating a
special  situation  might  include,  among others,  a new product or process,  a
technological breakthrough, a management change or other extraordinary corporate
event,  or  differences  in  market  supply  of and  demand  for  the  security.
Investment in special  situations  may carry an  additional  risk of loss in the
event that the  anticipated  development  does not occur or does not attract the
expected attention.

             Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may invest  without limit in foreign
securities. The Fund may invest substantially all of its assets in common stocks
of foreign  issuers to the extent the  Sub-advisor  believes  that the  relevant
market  environment  favors  profitable  investing  in  those  securities.   The
Sub-advisor  generally  takes a "bottom up"  approach to building  the Fund.  In
other  words,  the  Sub-advisor  seeks to  identify  individual  companies  with
earnings  growth  potential  that may not be  recognized  by the market at large
regardless of country of organization or place of principal  business  activity.
Although  themes  may  emerge in the Fund,  securities  are  generally  selected
without regard to any defined allocation among countries,  geographic regions or
industry sectors, or other similarly defined selection procedure. Realization of
income is not a significant investment consideration. Any income realized on the
Fund's investments will be incidental to its objective.  For a discussion of the
risks  involved  in  investing  in  foreign  securities,  including  the risk of
currency fluctuations,  see this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Futures, Options and Other Derivative Instruments. The Fund may use
options,  futures and other types of  derivatives  for hedging  purposes or as a
means of  enhancing  return.  The Fund  may  enter  into  futures  contracts  on
securities,  financial  indices  and  foreign  currencies  and  options  on such
contracts  ("futures  contracts")  and may  invest  in  options  on  securities,
financial  indices and foreign  currencies  ("options"),  forward  contracts and
interest  rate  swaps  and  swap-related  products   (collectively   "derivative
instruments").  The Fund intends to use most derivative instruments primarily to
hedge  the  value  of its  portfolio  against  potential  adverse  movements  in
securities  prices,  foreign  currency  markets or interest  rates. To a limited
extent,  the Fund may also use derivative  instruments for non-hedging  purposes
such as seeking to increase the Fund's  income or  otherwise  seeking to enhance
return.

             Although the Sub-advisor believes the use of derivative instruments
will benefit the Fund,  the Fund's  performance  could be worse than if the Fund
had not used such instruments if the Sub-advisor's judgment proves incorrect.

             When  the  Fund  invests  in a  derivative  instrument,  it  may be
required to segregate  cash or other liquid assets with its custodian to "cover"
the  Fund's  position.  Assets  segregated  or set  aside  generally  may not be
disposed of so long as the Fund maintains the positions requiring segregation or
cover.   Segregating  assets  could  diminish  the  Fund's  return  due  to  the
opportunity losses of foregoing other potential  investments with the segregated
assets.

             The Fund  may  also  use  futures,  options  and  other  derivative
instruments  to protect the portfolio  from  movements in securities  prices and
interest rates. The Fund may also use a variety of currency hedging  techniques,
including forward currency contracts,  to manage exchange rate risk with respect
to investments exposed to foreign currency fluctuations.

             For an additional  discussion  of futures and options  transactions
and the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment  Methods" and the Company's SAI under "Investment  Objectives and
Policies" and "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             When-Issued,  Delayed Delivery and Forward  Transactions.  The Fund
may purchase  securities  on a  when-issued  or delayed  delivery  basis,  which
generally  involves the purchase of a security  with payment and delivery due at
some time in the  future.  The Fund does not earn  interest  on such  securities
until settlement and bears the risk of market value  fluctuations in between the
purchase and  settlement  dates.  For an additional  discussion  of  when-issued
securities  and certain  risks  involved  therein,  see the  Company's SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Repurchase  Agreements.   The  Fund  may  engage  in  a  repurchase
agreement  with  respect to any  security in which it is  authorized  to invest.
Repurchase agreements that mature in more than seven days will be subject to the
15% limit on illiquid  investments.  While it is not possible to  eliminate  all
risks from these transactions,  it is the policy of the Fund to limit repurchase
agreements to those parties whose  creditworthiness  has been reviewed and found
satisfactory by the Sub-advisor  pursuant to guidelines adopted by the Directors
of the Company.  Pursuant to an exemptive  order granted by the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission,  the Fund and other funds  advised or  sub-advised  by the
Sub-advisor  may  invest  in  repurchase   agreements  and  other  money  market
instruments  through a joint  trading  account.  For a discussion  of repurchase
agreements and the risks involved  therein,  see this Prospectus  under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Reverse Repurchase Agreements.  The Fund may use reverse repurchase
agreements to provide cash to satisfy unusually heavy redemption requests or for
other temporary or emergency purposes without the necessity of selling portfolio
securities,  or to earn  additional  income  on  portfolio  securities,  such as
Treasury bills or notes.  In a reverse  repurchase  agreement,  the Fund sells a
security to another party, such as a bank or  broker-dealer,  in return for cash
and agrees to repurchase the instrument at a particular  price and time. While a
reverse  repurchase  agreement is  outstanding,  the Fund will maintain cash and
appropriate  liquid  assets  in a  segregated  custodial  account  to cover  its
obligation  under the  agreement.  The Fund will enter into  reverse  repurchase
agreements  only with parties that the  Sub-advisor  deems  creditworthy.  For a
discussion of reverse repurchase  agreements and the risks involved therein, see
this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors  of the  Company,  the Fund may  invest up to 15% of its net assets in
securities  that are  considered  illiquid  because of the  absence of a readily
available  market or due to legal or contractual  restrictions.  Some securities
cannot be sold to the U.S.  public  because  of their  terms or  because  of SEC
regulations.  The Sub-advisor may determine that securities  eligible for resale
under Rule 144A under the  Securities  Act of 1933,  which cannot be sold to the
U.S.  public  but  can be sold  to  institutional  investors,  are  liquid.  The
Sub-advisor will follow  guidelines  established by the Directors of the Company
in  making  liquidity   determinations   for  Rule  144A  securities  and  other
securities,  including  privately placed  commercial  paper. For a discussion of
illiquid  securities and the risks involved  therein,  see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Borrowing.  Subject  to the Fund's  restrictions  on  borrowing  as
described in general in this paragraph,  the Fund may borrow money. The Fund may
borrow money for temporary or emergency purposes in amounts up to 33 1/3% of its
total  assets.  The Fund may  mortgage  or pledge  securities  as  security  for
borrowings in amounts up to 15% of its net assets.

             Lower-Rated  High-Yield Bonds. The Fund may invest up to 35% of its
net assets in corporate debt  securities that are rated below  investment  grade
(securities rated BB or lower by Standard & Poor's Ratings Services ("Standard &
Poor's")  or Ba  or  lower  by  Moody's  Investors  Services,  Inc.  ("Moody's")
(commonly referred to as "junk bonds")).

             The Fund may also invest in unrated debt  securities of foreign and
domestic  issuers.  Unrated debt,  while not  necessarily  of lower quality than
rated securities,  may not have as broad a market.  Unrated debt securities will
be  included  in the 35% limit of the Fund  unless  the  Sub-advisor  deems such
securities to be the equivalent of investment grade securities. For a discussion
of these instruments and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus and the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Portfolio   Turnover.   The  Fund  generally  intends  to  purchase
securities  for long-term  investment  rather than  short-term  gains.  However,
short-term  transactions  may result from  liquidity  needs,  securities  having
reached a price or yield objective, anticipated changes in interest rates or the
credit standing of an issuer, or by reason of economic or other developments not
foreseen at the time of the  investment  decision.  Changes are made in the Fund
whenever the  Sub-advisor  believes  such changes are  desirable,  and portfolio
turnover rates are generally not a factor in making buy and sell decisions.

             To  a  limited  extent,   the  Fund  may  purchase   securities  in
anticipation of relatively  short-term  price gains.  The Fund may also sell one
security and simultaneously  purchase the same or a comparable  security to take
advantage of short-term differentials in bond yields or securities prices. For a
discussion of portfolio  turnover and its effects,  see this  Prospectus and the
Company's SAI under "Portfolio Transactions."

ASAF FOUNDERS SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
capital growth.

Investment Policies:

             To achieve its  objective,  the Fund  normally will invest at least
65% of its  total  assets  in  common  stocks  of  U.S.  companies  with  market
capitalizations   or  annual   revenues   of  $1.5   billion  or  less.   Market
capitalization is a measure of the size of a company and is based upon the total
market  value of a company's  outstanding  equity  securities.  Ordinarily,  the
common stocks of the U.S. companies selected for this Fund will not be listed on
a  national  securities  exchange  but will be  traded  in the  over-the-counter
market.

             Risks of Investments in Small and Medium-Sized Companies.  The Fund
normally will invest a significant proportion of its assets in the securities of
small and medium-sized  companies.  As used with respect to this Fund, small and
medium-sized  companies  are those which are still in the  developing  stages of
their life cycles and are  attempting  to achieve rapid growth in both sales and
earnings.  Capable  management and fertile  operating  areas are two of the most
important characteristics of such companies. In addition, these companies should
employ sound financial and accounting policies;  demonstrate  effective research
and successful product development and marketing; provide efficient service; and
possess pricing flexibility.

             Investments in small and  medium-sized  companies  involve  greater
risk than is  customarily  associated  with more  established  companies.  These
companies often have sales and earnings growth rates which exceed those of large
companies.  Such growth rates may in turn be reflected in more rapid share price
appreciation. However, smaller companies often have limited operating histories,
product lines,  markets, or financial resources,  and they may be dependent upon
one-person  management.  These  companies may be subject to intense  competition
from larger  entities,  and the  securities  of such  companies may have limited
marketability  and may be subject to more abrupt or erratic  movements  in price
than  securities  of  larger  companies  or  the  market  averages  in  general.
Therefore,  the net asset value of the Fund's shares may  fluctuate  more widely
than the popular market averages.

   
             Fixed  Income  Securities.  The  Fund  may  invest  in  convertible
securities, preferred stocks, bonds, debentures, and other corporate obligations
when the Sub-advisor  believes that these  investments  offer  opportunities for
capital  appreciation.  Current  income will not be a substantial  factor in the
selection of these  securities.  Bonds,  debentures,  and corporate  obligations
(other than  convertible  securities and preferred  stock) purchased by the Fund
will be rated investment grade at the time of purchase (Baa or higher by Moody's
Investors  Service,  Inc.  ("Moody's")  or BBB or  higher by  Standard  & Poor's
("S&P")).  Bonds in the lowest  investment  grade category (Baa or BBB) may have
speculative characteristics,  with changes in the economy or other circumstances
more  likely  to  lead to a  weakened  capacity  of the  bonds'  issuer  to make
principal  and  interest  payments  than would  occur with bonds rated in higher
categories.  Convertible  securities and preferred  stocks purchased by the Fund
may be rated in medium  and lower  categories  by Moody's or S&P (Ba or lower by
Moody's  and BB or lower by S&P),  but will not be rated  lower than B. The Fund
may also  invest in  unrated  convertible  securities  and  preferred  stocks in
instances in which the Sub-advisor  believes that the financial condition of the
issuer or the protection  afforded by the terms of the securities limits risk to
a level similar to that of securities eligible for purchase by the Fund rated in
categories  no lower than B.  Securities  rated B are referred to as "high risk"
securities,  generally lack characteristics of a desirable  investment,  and are
deemed  speculative  with respect to the  issuer's  capacity to pay interest and
repay  principal  over a long period of time. At no time will the Fund have more
than 5% of its assets  invested in any  fixed-income  securities  (not including
convertible  securities  and preferred  stock) which are rated below  investment
grade as a result of a reduction in rating after purchase or are unrated.  For a
description of securities ratings,  see the Appendix to the Company's SAI. For a
discussion of the special risks involved in  lower-rated  debt  securities,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."
    

             The  fixed-income  securities  in which  the Fund  may  invest  are
generally subject to two kinds of risk: credit risk and market risk. Credit risk
relates to the ability of the issuer to meet interest or principal payments,  or
both,  as they come due. The ratings given a security by Moody's and S&P provide
a generally  useful guide as to such credit  risk.  The lower the rating given a
security by such rating service, the greater the credit risk such rating service
perceives to exist with respect to such security.  Increasing the amount of Fund
assets invested in unrated or lower-grade securities, while intended to increase
the yield produced by those assets,  also will increase the credit risk to which
those assets are subject. Market risk relates to the fact that the market values
of securities in which the Fund may invest generally will be affected by changes
in the level of interest  rates.  An  increase  in  interest  rates will tend to
reduce the market values of such securities, whereas a decline in interest rates
will tend to increase their values.  Medium- and lower-rated  securities (Baa or
BBB and lower) and non-rated securities of comparable quality tend to be subject
to wider fluctuations in yields and market values than higher-rated  securities.
Medium-rated   securities   (those   rated   Baa  or   BBB)   have   speculative
characteristics while lower-rated securities are predominantly speculative.  The
Fund is not required to dispose of straight  debt  securities  whose ratings are
downgraded below Baa or BBB subsequent to the Fund's purchase of the securities,
unless such a  disposition  is necessary  to reduce the Fund's  holdings of such
securities  to less  than 5% of its total  assets.  Relying  in part on  ratings
assigned by credit agencies in making investments will not protect the Fund from
the risk that fixed-income securities in which it invests will decline in value,
since credit ratings represent evaluations of the safety of principal,  dividend
and interest  payments on preferred stocks and debt  securities,  not the market
values of such securities, and such ratings may not be changed on a timely basis
to reflect subsequent events.

             The  Sub-advisor  seeks to reduce overall risk  associated with the
investments of the Fund through  diversification  and  consideration of relevant
factors affecting the value of securities.  No assurance can be given,  however,
regarding  the degree of success  that will be achieved in this regard or in the
Fund achieving its investment objective.

             Foreign  Securities.  The Fund  may  invest  in  dollar-denominated
American   Depositary  Receipts  ("ADRs")  which  are  traded  on  exchanges  or
over-the-counter  in the United States without limit, and in foreign securities.
The  term  "foreign  securities"  refers  to  securities  of  issuers,  wherever
organized,  which,  in the  judgment of the  Sub-advisor,  have their  principal
business  activities  outside of the United States. The determination of whether
an issuer's principal  activities are outside of the United States will be based
on the location of the issuer's  assets,  personnel,  sales,  and earnings,  and
specifically  on whether  more than 50% of the issuer's  assets are located,  or
more than 50% of the  issuer's  gross  income is  earned,  outside of the United
States,  or on whether the issuer's sole or principal stock exchange  listing is
outside of the United States. Foreign securities typically will be traded on the
applicable country's principal stock exchange but may also be traded on regional
exchanges or  over-the-counter.  For a discussion of ADRs,  see this  Prospectus
under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Foreign  investments of the Fund may include  securities  issued by
companies  located  in  countries  not  considered  to be  major  industrialized
nations.  Such  countries are subject to more  economic,  political and business
risk than  major  industrialized  nations,  and the  securities  they  issue are
expected to be more  volatile  and more  uncertain as to payment of interest and
principal.  The  secondary  market for such  securities  is  expected to be less
liquid than for securities of major industrialized  nations.  Such countries may
include  (but are not  limited  to):  Argentina,  Australia,  Austria,  Belgium,
Bolivia,  Brazil, Chile, China,  Colombia,  Costa Rica, Croatia, Czech Republic,
Denmark,  Ecuador, Egypt, Finland, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Indonesia,
Ireland,  Italy, Israel, Jordan,  Malaysia,  Mexico,  Netherlands,  New Zealand,
Nigeria, North Korea, Norway,  Pakistan,  Paraguay,  Peru, Philippines,  Poland,
Portugal,  Singapore,  Slovak Republic,  South Africa,  South Korea,  Spain, Sri
Lanka,  Sweden,  Switzerland,  Taiwan,  Thailand,  Turkey,  Uruguay,  Venezuela,
Vietnam and the countries of the former Soviet  Union.  Investments  may include
securities  created  through  the Brady  Plan,  a program  under  which  heavily
indebted  countries have restructured their bank debt into bonds. Since the Fund
will pay dividends in dollars,  it may incur currency conversion costs. The Fund
will not invest more than 25% of its total assets in any one foreign country.

             Investments in foreign  securities  involve certain risks which are
not typically associated with U.S. investments.  For a discussion of the special
risks  involved in investing in developing  countries and certain risks involved
in investing in foreign securities,  in general,  including the risk of currency
fluctuations,  see this  Prospectus  and the Company's  SAI under  "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment Methods."

             Foreign Currency Exchange  Contracts.  The Fund is permitted to use
forward foreign currency  contracts in connection with the purchase or sale of a
specific   security.   The  Fund  may  conduct  its  foreign  currency  exchange
transactions  on a spot (i.e.,  cash) basis at the spot rate  prevailing  in the
foreign exchange  currency  market,  or on a forward basis to "lock in" the U.S.
dollar  price of the  security.  By  entering  into a forward  contract  for the
purchase or sale, for a fixed amount of U.S.  dollars,  of the amount of foreign
currency involved in the underlying  transactions,  the Fund attempts to protect
itself   against   possible  loss  resulting  from  an  adverse  change  in  the
relationship  between the U.S. dollar and the applicable foreign currency during
the period  between the date on which the  security is purchased or sold and the
date on which such payments are made or received.

             In addition,  the Fund may enter into forward contracts for hedging
purposes.  When the  Sub-advisor  believes  that the  currency  of a  particular
foreign  country may suffer a substantial  decline  against the U.S.  dollar (or
sometimes against another  currency),  the Fund may enter into forward contracts
to  sell,  for a  fixed  dollar  or  other  currency  amount,  foreign  currency
approximating the value of some or all of the Fund's  securities  denominated in
that  currency.  The precise  matching of the forward  contract  amounts and the
value of the  securities  involved  will not  generally be possible.  The future
value of such  securities  in foreign  currencies  changes as a  consequence  of
market movements in the value of those securities  between the date on which the
contract is entered into and the date it expires.

             The Fund  generally  will not enter into forward  contracts  with a
term greater than one year. In addition,  the Fund generally will not enter into
forward  contracts  or  maintain  a net  exposure  to such  contracts  where the
fulfillment  of the  contracts  would  require  the Fund to deliver an amount of
foreign currency in excess of the value of the Fund's securities or other assets
denominated in that currency.  Under normal circumstances,  consideration of the
possibility of changes in currency  exchange rates will be incorporated into the
Fund's long-term investment strategies.  In the event that forward contracts are
considered  to be  illiquid,  the  securities  would be  subject  to the  Fund's
limitation on investing in illiquid securities.  For an additional discussion of
foreign currency  contracts and the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus
and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the  Company,  the Fund may invest up to 15% of the market value of
its net assets,  measured at the time of purchase,  in securities  which are not
readily marketable,  including repurchase agreements maturing in more than seven
days.  Securities which are not readily  marketable are those that, for whatever
reason,  cannot be  disposed  of within  seven  days in the  ordinary  course of
business  at  approximately  the  amount  at  which  the  Fund  has  valued  the
investment.

             The Fund may invest in Rule 144A securities  (securities  issued in
offerings  made pursuant to Rule 144A under the  Securities  Act of 1933).  Rule
144A securities may be resold to qualified institutional buyers as defined under
Rule  144A  and may or may  not be  deemed  to be  readily  marketable.  Factors
considered in evaluating  whether such a security is readily  marketable include
eligibility for trading, trading activity,  dealer interest,  purchase interest,
and ownership transfer requirements.  The Sub-advisor is required to monitor the
readily  marketable  nature of each Rule 144A security no less  frequently  than
quarterly. For an additional discussion of Rule 144A securities and illiquid and
restricted securities, and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Borrowing. The Fund may borrow money from banks in amounts up to 33
1/3% of the Fund's total assets.  If the Fund borrows money, its share price may
be subject to greater  fluctuation until the borrowing is repaid.  The Fund will
attempt  to  minimize  such  fluctuations  by  not  purchasing  securities  when
borrowings  are greater than 5% of the value of the Fund's total assets.  For an
additional  discussion of the Fund's  limitations on borrowing and certain risks
involved in  borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under  "Certain  Risk Factors and
Investment  Methods"  and  the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental   Investment
Restrictions."

             Futures  Contracts  and  Options.  The Fund may enter into  futures
contracts (or options thereon) for hedging purposes.  The acquisition or sale of
a futures  contract  could occur,  for example,  if the Fund held or  considered
purchasing  equity  securities and sought to protect itself from fluctuations in
prices without buying or selling those securities.  The Fund may also enter into
interest  rate and foreign  currency  futures  contracts.  Interest rate futures
contracts currently are traded on a variety of fixed-income securities.  Foreign
currency futures contracts  currently are traded on the British pound,  Canadian
dollar, Japanese yen, Swiss franc, German mark and on Eurodollar deposits.

             An option is a right to buy or sell a security at a specified price
within a  limited  period  of time.  The Fund may write  ("sell")  covered  call
options  on any or all of its  portfolio  securities  from  time  to time as the
Sub-advisor  shall deem  appropriate.  The extent of the Fund's  option  writing
activities  will  vary  from  time  to time  depending  upon  the  Sub-advisor's
evaluation of market, economic and monetary conditions.

             The Fund may  purchase  options on  securities  and stock  indices.
Options on stock indices are similar to options on securities.  However, because
options on stock indices do not involve the delivery of an underlying  security,
the option  represents  the  holder's  right to obtain from the writer in cash a
fixed multiple of the amount by which the exercise price exceeds (in the case of
a put) or is  less  than  (in the  case of a  call)  the  closing  value  of the
underlying index on the exercise date. The purpose of these  transactions is not
to generate gain, but to "hedge" against  possible loss.  Therefore,  successful
hedging  activity  will  not  produce  net gain to the  Fund.  The Fund may also
purchase  put and call  options  on  futures  contracts.  An option on a futures
contract  provides the holder with the right to enter into a "long"  position in
the  underlying  futures  contract,  in the case of a call option,  or a "short"
position in the underlying  futures contract,  in the case of a put option, at a
fixed exercise price to a stated expiration date. Upon exercise of the option by
the holder, a contract market clearing house  establishes a corresponding  short
position  for the  writer  of the  option,  in the case of a call  option,  or a
corresponding long position, in the case of a put option.

             The Fund will not, as to any  positions,  whether long,  short or a
combination  thereof,  enter into  futures  and  options  thereon  for which the
aggregate initial margins and premiums exceed 5% of the fair market value of its
total assets after taking into account  unrealized profits and losses on options
entered  into.  The Fund may buy and sell  options  on  foreign  currencies  for
hedging  purposes  in a manner  similar  to that in  which  futures  on  foreign
currencies would be utilized.  For an additional discussion of futures contracts
and  options  and the  risks  involved  therein,  see  this  Prospectus  and the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Temporary Investments.  Up to 100% of the assets of the Fund may be
invested  temporarily in U.S.  government  obligations,  commercial  paper, bank
obligations,   repurchase   agreements,   negotiable   U.S.   dollar-denominated
obligations of domestic and foreign  branches of U.S.  depository  institutions,
U.S.  branches  of  foreign  depository  institutions,  and  foreign  depository
institutions,  cash, or in other cash equivalents, if the Sub-advisor determines
it to be appropriate for purposes of enhancing  liquidity or preserving  capital
in light of  prevailing  market or economic  conditions.  While the Fund is in a
defensive  position,  the opportunity to achieve capital growth will be limited,
and, to the extent that this assessment of market  conditions is incorrect,  the
Fund will be foregoing the opportunity to benefit from capital growth  resulting
from increases in the value of equity investments.

             U.S.  government  obligations  include  Treasury  bills,  notes and
bonds, and issues of United States agencies,  authorities and instrumentalities.
Some government  obligations,  such as Government National Mortgage  Association
pass-through  certificates,  are  supported  by the full faith and credit of the
United States  Treasury.  Other  obligations,  such as securities of the Federal
Home Loan  Banks,  are  supported  by the right of the issuer to borrow from the
United States  Treasury;  and others,  such as bonds issued by Federal  National
Mortgage Association (a private  corporation),  are supported only by the credit
of the  agency,  authority  or  instrumentality.  The Fund  also may  invest  in
obligations  issued by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(IBRD or "World Bank").

             The Fund may also  acquire  certificates  of deposit  and  bankers'
acceptances  of banks which meet  criteria  established  by the Directors of the
Company, if any. A certificate of deposit is a short-term  obligation of a bank.
A bankers'  acceptance  is a time draft drawn by a borrower  on a bank,  usually
relating to an international commercial transaction.

             The obligations of foreign branches of U.S. depository institutions
may be general  obligations of the parent depository  institution in addition to
being an  obligation  of the issuing  branch.  These  obligations,  and those of
foreign  depository  institutions,  may be limited by the terms of the  specific
obligation and by  governmental  regulation.  The payment of these  obligations,
both interest and principal,  also may be affected by governmental action in the
country of domicile of the institution or branch, such as imposition of currency
controls and interest  limitations.  In connection with these  investments,  the
Fund will be  subject to the risks  associated  with the  holding  of  portfolio
securities overseas,  such as possible changes in investment or exchange control
regulations,  expropriation,  confiscatory  taxation,  or political or financial
instability.

             Obligations of U.S. branches of foreign depository institutions may
be general obligations of the parent depository institution in addition to being
an  obligation  of the  issuing  branch,  or may be  limited  by the  terms of a
specific  foreign  regulation  applicable to the depository  institutions and by
government regulation (both domestic and foreign).

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company,  the Fund may enter into  repurchase  agreements  with
banks or well-established  securities dealers. All repurchase agreements entered
into by the Fund will be fully  collateralized  and marked to market daily.  The
Fund has not  adopted  any limits on the amount of its total  assets that may be
invested in repurchase  agreements  which mature in less than seven days.  For a
discussion of repurchase agreements and certain risks involved therein, see this
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Portfolio  Turnover.  The  Fund  reserves  the  right  to sell  its
securities,  regardless of the length of time that they have been held,  when it
is  determined by the  Sub-advisor  that those  securities  have attained or are
unable to meet the  investment  objective  of the Fund.  The Fund may  engage in
short-term  trading and therefore  normally will have annual portfolio  turnover
rates  which are  considered  to be high and may be greater  than those of other
investment companies seeking capital appreciation.  Portfolio turnover rates may
also increase as a result of the need for the Fund to effect significant amounts
of purchases or redemptions of portfolio securities due to economic,  market, or
other factors that are not within the Sub-advisor's control. For a discussion of
portfolio  turnover and its effects,  see this  Prospectus and the Company's SAI
under "Portfolio Transactions."

ASAF T. ROWE PRICE SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The investment  objective of the Fund is to provide
long-term capital growth by investing primarily in  small-capitalization  stocks
that appear to be undervalued.

Investment Policies:

             Reflecting a value  approach to  investing,  the Fund will seek the
stocks of  companies  whose  current  stock  prices do not appear to  adequately
reflect their  underlying value as measured by assets,  earnings,  cash flow, or
business  franchises.  The Fund will invest at least 65% of its total  assets in
companies  with a  market  capitalization  of $1  billion  or less  that  appear
undervalued by various  measures,  such as  price/earnings  or price/book  value
ratios.

             Although the Fund will invest  primarily in U.S. common stocks,  it
may also purchase other types of securities,  for example,  foreign  securities,
convertible  stocks and bonds, and warrants when considered  consistent with the
Fund's investment objective and policies.  The Fund may also engage in a variety
of  investment  management  practices,  such as buying and  selling  futures and
options.

             In managing the Fund, the Sub-advisor will apply a value investment
approach. Value investors seek to buy a stock (or other security) when its price
is low relative to its perceived  worth.  They hope to identify  companies whose
stocks are currently out of favor or are not followed closely by stock analysts.
Often these stocks have above-average yields and offer the potential for capital
appreciation  as other  investors  recognize  their intrinsic value and drive up
their prices. Some of the principal measures used to identify such stocks are:

             (i) Price/Earnings  Ratio. Dividing a stock's price by its earnings
per share  generates a  price/earnings  or P/E ratio. A stock with a P/E that is
significantly  below  that of its  peers,  the  market  as a  whole,  or its own
historical norm may represent an attractive opportunity.

             (ii) Price/Book Value Ratio.  This ratio,  calculated by dividing a
stock's  price by its book  value  per  share,  indicates  how a stock is priced
relative to the accounting  (i.e.,  book) value of the company's assets. A ratio
below the  market,  that of its  competitors,  or its own  historic  norm  could
indicate an undervalued situation.

             (iii) Dividend Yield. Value investors look for undervalued  assets.
A stock's  dividend yield is found by dividing its annual  dividend by its share
price.  A yield  significantly  above a stock's own historic norm or that of its
peers may suggest an investment opportunity.

             (iv)  Price/Cash  Flow.  Dividing a stock's  price by the company's
cash flow per share,  rather than its  earnings  or book value,  provides a more
useful  measure of value in some  cases.  A ratio below that of the market or of
its peers suggests the market may be incorrectly valuing the company's cash flow
for reasons that may be temporary.

             (v) Undervalued  Assets.  This analysis  compares a company's stock
price with its underlying  asset values,  its projected value in the private (as
opposed to public)  market,  or its expected value if the company or parts of it
were sold or liquidated.

             (vi) Restructuring Opportunities. The market can react favorably to
the announcement or the successful  implementation of a corporate restructuring,
financial  reengineering,  or asset  redeployment.  Such events can result in an
increase in a company's  stock price.  A value  investor  may try to  anticipate
these actions and invest before the market  places an  appropriate  value on any
actual or expected changes.

             Risks of a Value Approach to Small-Cap  Investing.  Small companies
- -- those with a capitalization (market value) of $1 billion or less -- may offer
greater  potential for capital  appreciation  since they are often overlooked or
undervalued by investors. Small-capitalization stocks are less actively followed
by stock analysts than are larger-capitalization stocks, and less information is
available  to  evaluate  small-cap  stock  prices.  As a result,  compared  with
larger-capitalization  stocks,  there  may be  greater  variations  between  the
current stock price and the estimated  underlying  value,  which could represent
greater opportunity for appreciation.

             Investing  in  small  companies  involves  greater  risk as well as
greater  opportunity  than  is  customarily  associated  with  more  established
companies.  Stocks of small  companies  may be subject to more abrupt or erratic
price  movements  than larger company  securities.  Small  companies  often have
limited product lines, markets, or financial resources, and their management may
lack depth and experience.  In addition,  a value approach to investing includes
the risks that 1) the market will not recognize a security's intrinsic value for
an  unexpectedly  long time,  and 2) a stock that is judged to be undervalued is
actually  appropriately  priced due to intractable or fundamental  problems that
are not yet apparent.

             Common and Preferred  Stocks.  Stocks represent shares of ownership
in a company.  Generally,  preferred  stock has a specified  dividend  and ranks
after  bonds and  before  common  stocks in its  claim on  income  for  dividend
payments and on assets should the company be liquidated.  After other claims are
satisfied,  common  stockholders  participate  in company  profits on a pro rata
basis; profits may be paid out in dividends or reinvested in the company to help
it grow.  Increases  and  decreases  in  earnings  are  usually  reflected  in a
company's stock price, so common stocks generally have the greatest appreciation
and  depreciation  potential of all corporate  securities.  While most preferred
stocks pay a dividend,  the Fund may purchase  preferred  stock where the issuer
has omitted, or is in danger of omitting, payment of its dividend.
Such  investments  would  be  made  primarily  for  their  capital  appreciation
potential.

             Convertible Securities and Warrants. The Fund may invest in debt or
preferred  equity  securities   convertible  into  or  exchangeable  for  equity
securities.  Traditionally,   convertible  securities  have  paid  dividends  or
interest  at rates  higher  than  common  stocks but lower  than  nonconvertible
securities.  They generally  participate in the  appreciation or depreciation of
the underlying stock into which they are convertible, but to a lesser degree. In
recent years,  convertibles  have been  developed  which combine higher or lower
current  income with options and other  features.  Warrants are options to buy a
stated number of shares of common stock at a specified  price anytime during the
life of the warrants (generally, two or more years).

             Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may  invest  up to 20% of its  total
assets   (excluding    reserves)   in   foreign   securities.    These   include
nondollar-denominated    securities    traded    outside   of   the   U.S.   and
dollar-denominated  securities of foreign  issuers  traded in the U.S.  (such as
ADRs).  Some of the  countries in which the Fund may invest may be considered to
be developing and may involve special risks.  For a discussion of these risks as
well as the risks involved in investing in foreign securities,  in general,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Foreign Currency Transactions.  Investors in foreign securities may
"hedge" their exposure to potentially unfavorable currency changes by purchasing
a contract  to  exchange  one  currency  for  another on some  future  date at a
specified  exchange rate. In certain  circumstances,  a "proxy  currency" may be
substituted for the currency in which the investment is denominated,  a strategy
known as "proxy  hedging."  For a  discussion  of  foreign  currency  contracts,
certain  risks  involved  therein,  and  the  risks  of  currency   fluctuations
generally,  see this  Prospectus  and the  Company's  SAI under  "Certain  Risks
Factors and Investment Methods."

             Fixed Income Securities.  The Fund may invest in debt securities of
any type without regard to quality or rating. Such securities would be purchased
in companies that meet the investment criteria for the Fund. The price of a bond
fluctuates with changes in interest  rates,  rising when interest rates fall and
falling when interest rates rise.

             High-Yield/High-Risk  Investing.  The  Fund  will  not  purchase  a
noninvestment-grade  debt  security  (or junk  bond) if  immediately  after such
purchase the Fund would have more than 5% of its total  assets  invested in such
securities.  For a discussion  of the risks  involved in investing in high-yield
lower-rated  debt  securities,  see this  Prospectus and the Company's SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Hybrid  Instruments.  The Fund may  invest  up to 10% of its  total
assets in hybrid  instruments.  Hybrids  can have  volatile  prices and  limited
liquidity and their use by the Fund may not be successful.  These instruments (a
type of potentially  high-risk  derivative) can combine the  characteristics  of
securities, futures, and options. For example, the principal amount, redemption,
or conversion  terms of a security  could be related to the market price of some
commodity,  currency,  or securities index. Such securities may bear interest or
pay dividends at below market (or even relatively  nominal) rates. Under certain
conditions,  the  redemption  value of such an investment  could be zero.  For a
discussion of hybrid  investments,  see the  Company's  SAI under  "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment Methods."

             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company, the Fund may acquire illiquid securities (no more than
15% of net  assets).  For a  discussion  of  illiquid  securities  and the risks
involved therein, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

   
             Private Placements  (Restricted  Securities).  These securities are
sold directly to a small number of investors usually institutions. Unlike public
offerings,  such  securities are not registered  with the  Commission.  Although
certain of these  securities  may be readily sold,  for example under Rule 144A,
the sale of others may involve substantial delays and additional costs.  Subject
to guidelines  promulgated  by the  Directors of the Company,  the Fund will not
invest  more  than  15% of its  net  assets  in  illiquid  securities.  Illiquid
securities  do not include  securities  eligible for resale under Rule 144A that
have  been  determined  by  the  Sub-advisor  to  be  liquid  under   guidelines
promulgated  by the  Directors of the Company.  For a discussion of illiquid and
restricted  securities,  and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus and
the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."
    

             Cash Position.  The Fund will hold a certain  portion of its assets
in U.S.  and  foreign  dollar-denominated  money  market  securities,  including
repurchase  agreements,  in the two highest rating  categories,  maturing in one
year or less. For  temporary,  defensive  purposes,  the Fund may invest without
limitation in such  securities.  This reserve position  provides  flexibility in
meeting redemptions, expenses, and the timing of new investments and serves as a
short-term defense during periods of unusual market volatility.

             Borrowing.  The Fund can borrow  money  from  banks as a  temporary
measure for emergency purposes,  to facilitate redemption requests, or for other
purposes  consistent  with the Fund's  investment  objective  and program.  Such
borrowings may be collateralized with Fund assets, subject to restrictions.  For
an  additional  discussion  of the Fund's  limitations  on borrowing and certain
risks involved in borrowing, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and
Investment  Methods"  and  the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental   Investment
Restrictions."

             Futures and Options.  The Fund may enter into futures contracts (or
options thereon) to hedge all or a portion of its portfolio,  as a hedge against
changes in prevailing levels of interest rates or currency exchange rates, or as
an efficient  means of adjusting its exposure to the bond,  stock,  and currency
markets.  The Fund will not use futures contracts for leveraging  purposes.  The
Fund may also write call and put options and  purchase  put and call  options on
securities, financial indices, and currencies. The aggregate market value of the
Fund's securities or currencies covering call or put options will not exceed 25%
of the Fund's total assets.  For an additional  discussion of futures  contracts
and options and the risks involved  therein,  see this Prospectus under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

ASAF ROBERTSON STEPHENS VALUE + GROWTH FUND:


     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
capital appreciation.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund will invest primarily in growth companies  believed by the
Sub-advisor to have favorable  relationships  between  price/earnings ratios and
growth rates in sectors offering the potential for above-average returns.

             In selecting  investments for the Fund, the  Sub-advisor's  primary
emphasis is typically on evaluating a company's  management,  growth  prospects,
business  operations,  revenues,  earnings,  cash flows,  and  balance  sheet in
relationship  to its share price.  The  Sub-advisor  may select  stocks which it
believes are undervalued relative to the current stock price.  Undervaluation of
a stock  can  result  from a  variety  of  factors,  such as a lack of  investor
recognition  of (1) the value of a  business  franchise  and  continuing  growth
potential,  (2) a  new,  improved  or  upgraded  product,  service  or  business
operation,  (3) a positive  change in either the economic or business  condition
for a company,  (4)  expanding  or changing  markets that provide a company with
either new earnings  direction or  acceleration,  or (5) a catalyst,  such as an
impending  or  potential  asset  sale or change in  management,  that could draw
increased investor attention to a company.  The Sub-advisor also may use similar
factors to identify stocks which it believes to be overvalued, and may engage in
short sales of such securities.

             The Fund may also  engage in the  following  investment  practices,
each of which involves certain special risks.

             Investments in Smaller Companies. The Fund may invest a substantial
portion of its assets in securities  issued by small  companies.  Such companies
may offer greater  opportunities for capital appreciation than larger companies,
but  investments  in such  companies may involve  certain  special  risks.  Such
companies may have limited product lines,  markets,  or financial  resources and
may be dependent on a limited  management group. While the markets in securities
of such companies have grown rapidly in recent years,  such securities may trade
less  frequently  and in smaller  volume than more widely held  securities.  The
values of these  securities  may  fluctuate  more  sharply  than  those of other
securities,  and the Fund may  experience  some  difficulty in  establishing  or
closing out positions in these securities at prevailing market prices. There may
be less publicly available  information about the issuers of these securities or
less market interest in such  securities  than in the case of larger  companies,
and it may take a longer  period of time for the  prices of such  securities  to
reflect  the full  value of their  issuers'  underlying  earnings  potential  or
assets.

             Some  securities of smaller  issuers may be restricted as to resale
or may otherwise be highly illiquid.  The ability of the Fund to dispose of such
securities  may be greatly  limited,  and the Fund may have to  continue to hold
such securities  during periods when the  Sub-advisor  would otherwise have sold
the security.  It is possible that the  Sub-advisor or its affiliates or clients
may hold  securities  issued by the same  issuers,  and may in some  cases  have
acquired the securities at different  times, on more favorable terms, or at more
favorable  prices,  than the Fund.  The Fund will not invest,  in the aggregate,
more than 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities.  Securities eligible for
resale under Rule 144A of the  Securities  Act of 1933 could be deemed  "liquid"
when saleable in a readily  available  market.  For a discussion of illiquid and
restricted  securities and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Short Sales.  When the Sub-advisor  anticipates that the price of a
security  will  decline,  it may sell the  security  short and  borrow  the same
security from a broker or other  institution  to complete the sale. The Fund may
make a profit or incur a loss  depending  upon  whether the market  price of the
security  decreases or increases between the date of the short sale and the date
on which the Fund must  replace the borrowed  security.  All short sales must be
fully  collateralized,   and  the  Fund  will  not  sell  securities  short  if,
immediately  after and as a result of the sale, the value of all securities sold
short by the Fund exceeds 25% of its total  assets.  The Fund limits short sales
of any one issuer's securities to 2% of the Fund's total assets and to 2% of any
one class of the issuer's securities.

             Foreign Securities. The Fund may invest up to 35% of its net assets
in securities  principally  traded in foreign markets.  The Fund may buy or sell
foreign  currencies and options and futures contracts on foreign  currencies for
hedging purposes in connection with its foreign investments.

             The  Fund may also at times  invest a  substantial  portion  of its
assets in securities of issuers in  developing  countries.  Although many of the
securities in which the Fund may invest are traded on securities exchanges,  the
Fund may trade in limited  volume,  and the exchanges may not provide all of the
conveniences or protections  provided by securities  exchanges in more developed
markets.  The Fund may  also  invest a  substantial  portion  of its  assets  in
securities traded in the  over-the-counter  markets in such countries and not on
any exchange,  which may affect the liquidity of the  investment  and expose the
Fund to the credit risk of their  counterparties  in trading those  investments.
For a discussion of the risks involved in investing in developing  countries and
investing  in foreign  securities  in  general,  including  the risk of currency
fluctuations,  see this  Prospectus  and the Company's  SAI under  "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment Methods."

             Debt  Securities.  The Fund may invest in debt securities from time
to time, if the Sub-advisor  believes that such  investments  might help achieve
the Fund's  investment  objective.  The  Sub-advisor  expects  that under normal
circumstances  the Fund will not  likely  invest a  substantial  portion  of its
assets in debt securities.

             The Fund will invest only in securities rated "investment grade" or
considered by the  Sub-advisor  to be of comparable  quality.  Investment  grade
securities are rated Baa or higher by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's)
or BBB or higher by Standard & Poor's Corporation ("S&P").  Securities rated Baa
or  BBB  lack   outstanding   investment   characteristics,   have   speculative
characteristics,  and are  subject  to  greater  credit  and  market  risks than
higher-rated  securities.   For  a  description  of  Moody's  and  S&P's  rating
categories, see the Appendix to the Company's SAI.


             The Fund may also  invest  in  so-called  "zero-coupon"  bonds  and
"payment-in-kind"  bonds. Zero-coupon bonds are issued at a significant discount
from face value and pay  interest  only at  maturity  rather  than at  intervals
during the life of the security.  Payment-in-kind bonds allow the issuer, at its
option,  to make  current  interest  payments on the bonds  either in cash or in
additional bonds. The values of zero-coupon bonds and payment-in-kind  bonds are
subject to greater  fluctuation in response to changes in market  interest rates
than bonds which pay interest  currently,  and may involve  greater  credit risk
than such bonds.


             The Fund will not  necessarily  dispose of a security when its debt
rating  is  reduced  below  its  rating at the time of  purchase,  although  the
Sub-advisor  will  monitor  the  investment  to  determine   whether   continued
investment  in the  security  will  assist  in  meeting  the  Fund's  investment
objective.

             Options and Futures. The Fund may buy and sell call and put options
to hedge  against  changes in net asset value or to attempt to realize a greater
current return. In addition,  through the purchase and sale of futures contracts
and related options, the Fund may at times seek to hedge against fluctuations in
net asset value and to attempt to increase its investment return.

             The Fund's ability to engage in options and futures strategies will
depend  on the  availability  of  liquid  markets  in  such  instruments.  It is
impossible  to predict the amount of trading  interest that may exist in various
types of options or futures contracts. Therefore, there is no assurance that the
Fund will be able to utilize  these  instruments  effectively  for the  purposes
stated above.

             The  Fund  expects  that  its  options  and  futures   transactions
generally  will be conducted on  recognized  exchanges.  The Fund may in certain
instances purchase and sell options in the over-the-counter  markets. The Fund's
ability to terminate options in the over-the-counter markets may be more limited
than for  exchange-traded  options,  and such transactions also involve the risk
that securities  dealers  participating in such transactions  would be unable to
meet  their  obligations  to  the  Fund.  The  Fund  will,  however,  engage  in
over-the-counter transactions only when appropriate exchange-traded transactions
are  unavailable  and when,  in the  opinion  of the  Sub-advisor,  the  pricing
mechanism and liquidity of the over-the-counter markets are satisfactory and the
participants are responsible parties likely to meet their obligations.

     Index  Futures  and  Options.  The  Fund  may buy and  sell  index  futures
contracts  ("index futures") and options on index futures and on indices (or may
purchase  warrants whose value is based on the value from time to time of one or
more  foreign  securities  indices) for hedging  purposes.  An index future is a
contract to buy or sell units of a  particular  bond or stock index at an agreed
price on a specified future date.  Depending on the change in value of the index
between the time when the Fund enters into and  terminates  an index  futures or
option transaction,  the Fund realizes a gain or loss. The Fund may also buy and
sell index futures and options to increase its investment return.

     LEAPs and BOUNDs.  The Fund may purchase long-term  exchange-traded  equity
options called Long-Term Equity Anticipation  Securities ("LEAPs") and Buy-Write
Options Unitary Derivatives  ("BOUNDs").  LEAPs provide a holder the opportunity
to participate in the underlying  securities'  appreciation in excess of a fixed
dollar amount,  and BOUNDs provide a holder the opportunity to retain  dividends
on the underlying  securities while potentially  participating in the underlying
securities' capital  appreciation up to a fixed dollar amount. The Fund will not
purchase  these  options  with  respect to more than 25% of the value of its net
assets.

             For a  discussion  of options and  futures  and the risks  involved
therein,  see this  Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

             Sector  Concentration.  At times, the Fund may invest more than 25%
of its assets in  securities  of issuers in one or more market  sectors such as,
for example,  the technology sector. A market sector may be made up of companies
in a  number  of  related  industries.  The  Fund  would  only  concentrate  its
investments in a particular market sector if the Sub-advisor were to believe the
investment  return  available from  concentration  in that sector  justifies any
additional  risk  associated with  concentration  in that sector.  When the Fund
concentrates its investments in a market sector, financial,  economic, business,
and other  developments  affecting  issuers in that  sector  will have a greater
effect on the Fund than if it had not  concentrated  its assets in that  sector.
The Fund may not  concentrate  its assets in securities of issuers  having their
principal business activities in a single industry.

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company, the Fund may enter into repurchase  agreements.  These
transactions must be fully collateralized at all times, but involve some risk to
the Fund if the other party should  default on its  obligations  and the Fund is
delayed or  prevented  from  recovering  the  collateral.  For a  discussion  of
repurchase  agreements and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Defensive  Strategies.  At times,  the  Sub-advisor  may judge that
market   conditions   make  pursuing  the  Fund's  basic   investment   strategy
inconsistent  with the best interests of its  shareholders.  At such times,  the
Sub-advisor may temporarily use alternative  strategies,  primarily  designed to
reduce  fluctuations in the values of the Fund's assets.  In implementing  these
"defensive" strategies, the Fund may invest in U.S. Government securities, other
high-quality debt instruments,  and other securities the Sub-advisor believes to
be consistent with the Fund's best interests.

     Portfolio Turnover.  The Fund may have higher portfolio turnover than other
mutual funds with similar objectives. For a discussion of portfolio turnover and
its  effects,  see  this  Prospectus  and the  Company's  SAI  under  "Portfolio
Transactions."


ASAF JANUS CAPITAL GROWTH FUND:

Investment Objective:  The investment objective of the Fund is to seek growth of
capital. Realization of income is not a significant investment consideration and
any income realized on the Fund's investments,  therefore, will be incidental to
the Fund's objective.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund will pursue its objective by investing primarily in common
stocks.  Common stock  investments  will be in industries and companies that the
Sub-advisor  believes are  experiencing  favorable demand for their products and
services,   and  which  operate  in  a  favorable   competitive  and  regulatory
environment.  Although  the  Sub-advisor  expects to invest  primarily in equity
securities,  the  Sub-advisor  may  increase  the Fund's cash  position  without
limitation  when the Sub-advisor is of the opinion that  appropriate  investment
opportunities for capital growth with desirable risk/reward  characteristics are
unavailable.  The Fund may also invest to a lesser  degree in preferred  stocks,
convertible securities, warrants, and debt securities when the Fund perceives an
opportunity  for  capital  growth from such  securities  or so that the Fund may
receive a return on its idle cash.  Debt  securities  that the Fund may purchase
include  corporate bonds and debentures (not to exceed 5% of net assets in bonds
rated below investment grade), government securities, mortgage- and asset-backed
securities,  zero-coupon bonds,  indexed/structured notes, high-grade commercial
paper,  certificates of deposit and repurchase  agreements.  For a discussion of
risks  involved in  lower-rated  securities,  mortgage-backed  and  asset-backed
securities  and zero coupon  bonds,  see this  Prospectus  and the Company's SAI
under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Although it is the general  policy of the Fund to purchase and hold
securities  for  capital  growth,  changes  in the  Fund  will  be  made  as the
Sub-advisor  deems  advisable.  For example,  portfolio  changes may result from
liquidity needs,  securities  having reached a price objective,  or by reason of
developments  not  foreseen  at the time of the  original  investment  decision.
Portfolio  changes may be effected  for other  reasons.  In such  circumstances,
investment income will increase and may constitute a large portion of the return
on the Fund and the Fund will not participate in the market advances or declines
to the extent that it would if it were fully invested.

             The Fund may invest in "special  situations"  from time to time.  A
"special  situation"  arises  when,  in  the  opinion  of the  Sub-advisor,  the
securities of a particular  company will be recognized  and  appreciate in value
due to a specific development, such as a technological breakthrough,  management
change or new  product  at that  company.  Investment  in  "special  situations"
carries an additional risk of loss in the event that the anticipated development
does not occur or does not attract the expected attention.

             Foreign  Securities.  The  Fund  may also  purchase  securities  of
foreign  issuers,  including  foreign equity and debt  securities and depositary
receipts.  Foreign  securities  are selected on a  stock-by-stock  basis without
regard to any defined allocation among countries or geographic regions. However,
certain  factors  such as  expected  levels of  inflation,  government  policies
influencing business  conditions,  the outlook for currency  relationships,  and
prospects for economic growth among  countries,  regions or geographic areas may
warrant greater  consideration in selecting  foreign stocks. No more than 25% of
the Fund's assets may be invested in foreign  securities  denominated in foreign
currency  and not publicly  traded in the United  States.  For a  discussion  of
depositary  receipts and the risks involved in investing in foreign  securities,
including  the  risk of  currency  fluctuations,  see  this  Prospectus  and the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Futures,  Options  and Other  Derivative  Instruments.  Subject  to
certain  limitations,  the Fund may  purchase and write  options on  securities,
financial indices,  and foreign currencies,  and may invest in futures contracts
on securities,  financial indices, and foreign currencies ("futures contracts"),
options on  futures  contracts,  forward  contracts  and swaps and  swap-related
products. These instruments will be used primarily to hedge the Fund's positions
against  potential  adverse  movements in securities  prices,  foreign  currency
markets or interest rates. To a limited extent, the Fund may also use derivative
instruments  for  non-hedging  purposes such as increasing  the Fund's income or
otherwise  enhancing return. The Fund will not use futures contracts and options
for leveraging  purposes.  There can be no assurance,  however,  that the use of
these  instruments  by the Fund  will  assist  it in  achieving  its  investment
objective.  The use of futures,  options,  forward  contracts and swaps involves
investment  risks and  transaction  costs to which the Fund would not be subject
absent the use of these  strategies.  The Sub-advisor may, from time to time, at
its  own  expense,  call  upon  the  experience  of  experts  to  assist  it  in
implementing  these  strategies.  The Fund may also use a  variety  of  currency
hedging  techniques,  including forward currency  contracts,  to manage exchange
rate risk with respect to investments exposed to foreign currency  fluctuations.
For an additional  discussion of futures and options  transactions and the risks
involved therein,  see this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment Methods."

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company, the Fund may enter into repurchase  agreements,  which
involve  the  purchase of a security  by the Fund and a  simultaneous  agreement
(generally  with a bank or dealer) to repurchase the security from the Fund at a
specified  date or upon demand.  The Fund's  repurchase  agreements  will at all
times be fully  collateralized.  Pursuant to an exemptive  order  granted by the
Commission,  the Fund and other funds advised by the  Sub-advisor  may invest in
repurchase agreements and other money market instruments through a joint trading
account.  For a  discussion  of  repurchase  agreements  and the risks  involved
therein,  see  this  Prospectus  under  "Certain  Risk  Factors  and  Investment
Methods."

             Reverse Repurchase Agreements.  The Fund is permitted to enter into
reverse repurchase agreements. In a reverse repurchase agreement, the Fund sells
a security and agrees to repurchase it at a mutually agreed upon date and price.
For a  discussion  of  reverse  repurchase  agreements  and the  risks  involved
therein,  see  this  Prospectus  under  "Certain  Risk  Factors  and  Investment
Methods."

             When-Issued,  Delayed Delivery and Forward  Transactions.  The Fund
may purchase  securities  on a  when-issued  or delayed  delivery  basis,  which
generally  involves the purchase of a security  with payment and delivery due at
some time in the  future.  The Fund does not earn  interest  on such  securities
until settlement and bears the risk of market value  fluctuations in between the
purchase and  settlement  dates.  For an additional  discussion  of  when-issued
securities  and certain  risks  involved  therein,  see the  Company's SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the  Company,  the Fund may also invest up to 15% of its net assets
in securities that are considered  illiquid  because of the absence of a readily
available  market  or due  to  legal  or  contractual  restrictions.  Securities
eligible  for  resale  under  Rule  144A  of the  Securities  Act of  1933,  and
commercial  paper issued under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933, could
be deemed "liquid" when saleable in a readily available market. For a discussion
of illiquid securities and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Lower-Rated  High-Yield  Bonds. The Fund may invest no more than 5%
of its net assets (at the time of investment) in lower-rated  high-yield  bonds.
For a discussion of these instruments and the risks involved  therein,  see this
Prospectus  and the  Company's SAI under  "Certain  Risk Factors and  Investment
Methods."

             Borrowing.  Subject to the Fund's  restrictions  on borrowing,  the
Fund  may  also  borrow  money  from  banks.  For a  discussion  of  the  Fund's
limitations  on borrowing  and certain  risks  involved in  borrowing,  see this
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods" and the Company's
SAI under "Fundamental Investment Restrictions."

             Portfolio Turnover. Because investment changes usually will be made
without  reference to the length of time a security has been held, a significant
number of short-term  transactions may result. To a limited extent, the Fund may
also purchase  individual  securities in anticipation  of relatively  short-term
price gains, and the rate of portfolio turnover will not be a determining factor
in the sale of such securities.  For a discussion of portfolio  turnover and its
effects,   see  this   Prospectus   and  the  Company's  SAI  under   "Portfolio
Transactions."

ASAF LORD ABBETT GROWTH AND INCOME FUND:


     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective of the Fund is long-term
growth of capital and income while attempting to avoid excessive fluctuations in
market value.

Investment Policies:

             The  Sub-advisor  will try to keep the Fund's  assets  invested  in
those securities which are selling at reasonable prices in relation to value. To
do so, the Fund may forgo some  opportunities for gains when, in the judgment of
the  Sub-advisor,  they  carry  excessive  risk.  The  Sub-advisor  will  try to
anticipate  major changes in the economy and select stocks for the Fund which it
believes will benefit most from these changes.

             The  Fund  normally   will  invest  in  common  stocks   (including
securities  convertible  into  common  stocks) of seasoned  companies  which are
expected to show above-average  growth and which the Sub-advisor  believes to be
in sound financial condition. Although the prices of common stocks fluctuate and
their dividends vary, historically, common stocks held over long periods of time
have  appreciated in value and their dividends have increased when the companies
they represent have prospered and grown.

             The  Sub-advisor  will be constantly  balancing the opportunity for
profit  against the risk of loss for the Fund. In the past,  very few industries
have continuously  provided the best investment  opportunities.  The Sub-advisor
will take a flexible  approach  and  adjust  the Fund to reflect  changes in the
opportunity for sound investments relative to the risks assumed.  Therefore, the
Fund will sell  securities  that the  Sub-advisor  judges to be  overpriced  and
reinvest the proceeds in other securities  which the Sub-advisor  believes offer
better values.

             At such times that the Sub-advisor deems appropriate and consistent
with this Fund's  investment  objective,  the Fund may:  (a) write  covered call
options  which are  traded on a national  securities  exchange  with  respect to
securities  in the Fund;  (b)  invest up to 10% of the Fund's net assets (at the
time of investment) in foreign securities;  and (c) invest in straight bonds and
other  debt  securities,  including  lower-rated  high-yield  bonds.  It is  not
intended for the Fund to write  covered call options with respect to  securities
with an  aggregate  market  value of more than 10% of the Fund's gross assets at
the time an option is written. For a discussion of the risks involved in options
transactions  and in investing in  lower-rated  high-yield  debt  securities  or
foreign  securities,  see this  Prospectus  and the Company's SAI under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment  Methods." For an additional  description of covered
options, see the Company's SAI under "Investment Objectives and Policies."

             The Fund will not  purchase  securities  for trading  purposes.  To
create reserve purchasing power and also for temporary defensive  purposes,  the
Fund  may  invest  in  short-term  debt  and  other  high  quality  fixed-income
securities.

             Lower-Rated  High-Yield  Bonds. The Fund may invest no more than 5%
of its net assets (at the time of investment)  in  lower-rated  (BB/Ba or lower)
high-yield  bonds. For a description of these instruments and the risks involved
therein,  see this  Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

             Illiquid  Securities.  The  Fund  may  invest  up to 15% of its net
assets  in  securities  that are  illiquid  by  virtue  of legal or  contractual
restrictions on resale or the absence of a readily available market.  Subject to
guidelines  promulgated  by the Directors of the Company,  the  Sub-advisor  may
determine that certain  securities  eligible for resale pursuant to Rule 144A of
the  Securities  Act of 1933  are  liquid  and  therefore  not  subject  to this
limitation.  For a  discussion  of  these  instruments  and the  risks  involved
therein, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods"
and the Company's SAI under "Investment Objectives and Policies."

     Borrowing.  For a discussion  of  limitations  on borrowing by the Fund and
risks involved in borrowing, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and
Investment Methods."


ASAF INVESCO EQUITY INCOME FUND:

Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the Fund is to seek  high
current  income while  following  sound  investment  practices.  Capital  growth
potential is an  additional,  but secondary,  consideration  in the selection of
portfolio securities.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund seeks to achieve its  objective by investing in securities
which will provide a relatively  high yield and stable return and which,  over a
period of years, may also provide capital  appreciation.  The Fund normally will
invest at least 65% of its assets in  dividend-paying,  marketable common stocks
of domestic and foreign issuers.  Up to 10% of the Fund's assets may be invested
in  equity  securities  that do not pay  regular  dividends.  The Fund also will
invest in convertible bonds, preferred stocks and debt securities. In periods of
uncertain market and economic conditions,  as determined by the Directors of the
Company,  the Fund may depart from the basic  investment  objective and assume a
defensive  position  with up to 50% of its assets  temporarily  invested in high
quality corporate bonds, or notes and government issues, or held in cash.

             The Fund's investments in common stocks may, of course,  decline in
value.  To minimize  the risk this  presents,  the  Sub-advisor  only invests in
common stocks and equity  securities  of domestic and foreign  issuers which are
marketable;  and  will not  invest  more  than 5% of the  Fund's  assets  in the
securities  of any one company or more than 25% of the Fund's  assets in any one
industry.

             Debt  Securities.  The Fund's  investments in debt  securities will
generally be subject to both credit risk and market risk. Credit risk relates to
the ability of the issuer to meet  interest or principal  payments,  or both, as
they come due.  Market risk  relates to the fact that the market  values of debt
securities  in which the Fund invests  generally  will be affected by changes in
the level of interest  rates.  An increase in interest rates will tend to reduce
the market values of debt  securities,  whereas a decline in interest rates will
tend to increase their values.  Although the  Sub-advisor  will limit the Fund's
debt security  investments to securities it believes are not highly speculative,
both kinds of risk are increased by investing in debt securities rated below the
top four grades by Standard & Poor's Corporation ("Standard & Poor's) or Moody's
Investors  Services,  Inc.  ("Moody's") and unrated debt securities,  other than
Government National Mortgage Association modified pass-through certificates.

             In order to decrease its risk in investing in debt securities,  the
Fund will invest no more than 15% of its assets in debt  securities  rated below
AAA, AA, A or BBB by Standard & Poor's, or Aaa, Aa, A or Baa by Moody's,  and in
no event will the Fund ever invest in a debt security rated below Caa by Moody's
or CCC by Standard & Poor's.  Lower rated  bonds by Moody's  (categories  Ba, B,
Caa) are of poorer quality and may have speculative characteristics. Bonds rated
Caa may be in default or there may be present elements of danger with respect to
principal or interest. Lower rated bonds by Standard & Poor's (categories BB, B,
CCC) include those which are regarded, on balance, as predominantly  speculative
with  respect to the issuer's  capacity to pay  interest and repay  principal in
accordance  with their terms;  BB indicates the lowest degree of speculation and
CCC a high degree of speculation. While such bonds will likely have some quality
and protective  characteristics,  these are outweighed by large uncertainties or
major risk exposures to adverse conditions.
For a description securities ratings, see the Appendix to the Company's SAI.

             While the  Sub-advisor  will monitor all of the debt  securities in
the Fund for the  issuers'  ability  to make  required  principal  and  interest
payments and other quality  factors,  the  Sub-advisor  may retain in the Fund a
debt security whose rating is changed to one below the minimum  rating  required
for purchase of such a security.  For a discussion of the special risks involved
in lower-rated  bonds,  see this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Portfolio  Turnover.  There  are  no  fixed  limitations  regarding
portfolio turnover.  The rate of portfolio turnover may fluctuate as a result of
constantly  changing economic  conditions and market  circumstances.  Securities
initially satisfying the Fund's basic objectives and policies may be disposed of
when they are no longer  suitable.  As a result,  the  Fund's  annual  portfolio
turnover  rate may be higher  than that of other  investment  companies  seeking
current  income  with  capital  growth  as  a  secondary  consideration.  For  a
discussion of portfolio  turnover and its effects,  see this  Prospectus and the
Company's SAI under "Portfolio Transactions."

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company,  the Fund may enter into  repurchase  agreements  with
respect  to  debt  instruments  eligible  for  investment  by  the  Fund.  These
agreements  are entered  into with member banks of the Federal  Reserve  System,
registered  broker-dealers,  and registered  government securities dealers which
are deemed  creditworthy.  A repurchase agreement is a means of investing moneys
for a  short  period.  In a  repurchase  agreement,  the  Fund  acquires  a debt
instrument  (generally  a security  issued by the U.S.  Government  or an agency
thereof, a banker's acceptance or a certificate of deposit) subject to resale to
the seller at an agreed upon price and date  (normally,  the next business day).
In the event that the original  seller  defaults on its obligation to repurchase
the  security,  the Fund  could  incur  costs or delays in  seeking to sell such
security.  To minimize risk, the securities underlying each repurchase agreement
will be maintained with the Fund's  custodian in an amount at least equal to the
repurchase  price under the agreement  (including  accrued  interest),  and such
agreements will be effected only with parties that meet certain creditworthiness
standards  established by the Directors of the Company.  The Fund will not enter
into a repurchase agreement maturing in more than seven days if as a result more
than  15% of the  Fund's  net  assets  would  be  invested  in  such  repurchase
agreements and other illiquid securities.  The Fund has not adopted any limit on
the amount of its total  assets that may be invested  in  repurchase  agreements
maturing in seven days or less.

             Lending Portfolio Securities. The Fund also may lend its securities
to qualified  brokers,  dealers,  banks, or other financial  institutions.  This
practice  permits the Fund to earn income,  which,  in turn,  can be invested in
additional  securities  to pursue  the  Fund's  investment  objective.  Loans of
securities by the Fund will be  collateralized  by cash,  letters of credit,  or
securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or its agencies, equal to
at least 100% of the current market value of the loaned  securities,  determined
on  a  daily  basis.   Lending  securities  involves  certain  risks,  the  most
significant  of which is the risk that a borrower may fail to return a portfolio
security. The Sub-advisor monitors the creditworthiness of borrowers in order to
minimize such risks. The Fund will not lend any security if, as a result of such
loan, the aggregate value of securities then on loan would exceed 33 1/3% of the
Fund's total net assets (taken at market value). For an additional discussion of
the Fund's  limitations  on lending and certain risks  involved in lending,  see
this  Prospectus  under  "Certain Risk Factors and  Investment  Methods" and the
Company's SAI under "Fundamental Investment Restrictions."

             Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may  invest  up to 25% of its  total
assets in foreign securities. Investments in securities of foreign companies and
in  foreign  markets  involve  certain  additional  risks  not  associated  with
investments in domestic companies and markets.  The Fund may invest in countries
considered to be developing which may involve special risks. For a discussion of
these risks and the risks of investing in foreign  securities,  in general,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Illiquid  Securities.  Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors  of the  Company,  the Fund may  invest up to 15% of its net assets in
securities  that are illiquid by virtue of legal or contractual  restrictions on
resale or the  absence of a readily  available  market.  The  Directors,  or the
Investment Manager or the Sub-advisor acting pursuant to authority  delegated by
the  Directors,  may  determine  that a  readily  available  market  exists  for
securities eligible for resale pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of
1933, or any successor to that rule, and therefore that such  securities are not
subject to the foregoing  limitation.  For a discussion of restricted securities
and the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

     Borrowing.  For a discussion  of the Fund's  limitations  on borrowing  and
certain risks  involved in borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under "Certain Risk
Factors  and  Investment  Methods"  and the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental
Investment Restrictions."



<PAGE>


ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
capital growth and current income.

Investment Policies:

             It is the Sub-advisor's  intention to maintain approximately 60% of
the Fund's assets in common stocks that are  considered  by the  Sub-advisor  to
have  better-than-average  prospects for appreciation and the remainder in bonds
and other fixed income securities.

             Equity  Investments.  With the  equity  portion  of the  Fund,  the
Sub-advisor  seeks capital growth by investing in securities,  primarily  common
stocks,  that meet  certain  fundamental  and  technical  standards of selection
(relating  primarily  to earnings  and revenue  acceleration)  and have,  in the
opinion of the Sub-advisor,  better-than-average  potential for appreciation. So
long as a sufficient  number of such  securities are available,  the Sub-advisor
intends  to keep  the  equity  portion  of the  Fund  fully  invested  in  these
securities  regardless of the movement of stock prices  generally.  The Fund may
purchase securities only of companies that have a record of at least three years
continuous operation.

             The  Sub-advisor  selects,  for the  equity  portion  of the  Fund,
securities of companies whose earnings and revenue trends meet the Sub-advisor's
standards  of  selection.  The size of the  companies  in which the Fund invests
tends  to  give  it its  own  characteristics  of  volatility  and  risk.  These
differences come about because  developments such as new or improved products or
methods, which would be relatively  insignificant to a large company, may have a
substantial  impact on the earnings and revenues of a small company and create a
greater demand and a higher value for its shares. However, a new product failure
which could  readily be absorbed by a large company can cause a rapid decline in
the value of the shares of a smaller  company.  Hence, it could be expected that
the volatility of the Fund will be impacted by the size of companies in which it
invests.

             Fixed  Income  Investments.  The  Sub-advisor  intends to  maintain
approximately 40% of the Fund's assets in fixed income securities, approximately
80%  of  which  will  be  invested  in  domestic  fixed  income  securities  and
approximately 20% of which will be invested in foreign fixed income  securities.
This  percentage  will  fluctuate  from  time to time and may be higher or lower
depending on the mix the  Sub-advisor  believes will provide the most  favorable
outlook  for  achieving  the Fund's  objectives.  A minimum of 25% of the Fund's
assets will be invested in fixed income senior securities.

             The fixed income  portion of the Fund will  include  U.S.  Treasury
securities,  securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or a foreign
government, or an agency or instrumentality of the U.S. or a foreign government,
and non-convertible debt obligations issued by U.S. or foreign corporations. The
Fund may also invest in mortgage-related and other asset-backed  securities.  As
with the  equity  portion  of the  Fund,  the bond  portion  of the Fund will be
diversified  among  the  various  types of fixed  income  investment  categories
described  above. The  Sub-advisor's  strategy is to actively manage the Fund by
investing the Fund's assets in sectors it believes are undervalued  (relative to
the other sectors) and which  represent  better  relative  long-term  investment
opportunities.

             The value of fixed income securities fluctuates based on changes in
interest  rates,  currency  values and the credit  quality  of the  issuer.  The
Sub-advisor  will  actively  manage the Fund,  adjusting  the  weighted  average
portfolio  maturity as  necessary  in  response to expected  changes in interest
rates. During periods of rising interest rates, the weighted average maturity of
the  Fund  may be moved to the  shorter  end of its  maturity  range in order to
reduce the effect of bond price  declines  on the Fund's net asset  value.  When
interest  rates are falling and bond prices are  rising,  the  weighted  average
portfolio maturity may be moved toward the longer end of its maturity range.

             Debt  securities  that  comprise  part of the Fund's  fixed  income
portfolio will primarily be limited to "investment grade" obligations.  However,
the Fund  may  invest  up to 10% of its  fixed  income  assets  in "high  yield"
securities.  "Investment  grade"  means  that  at the  time  of  purchase,  such
obligations  are  rated  within  the four  highest  categories  by a  nationally
recognized  statistical rating organization for example, at least Baa by Moody's
Investors  Service,  Inc.  ("Moody's")  or BBB by Standard & Poor's  Corporation
("S&P"), or, if not rated, are of equivalent investment quality as determined by
the  Sub-advisor.  According to Moody's,  bonds rated Baa are  medium-grade  and
possess some  speculative  characteristics.  A BBB rating by S&P indicates S&P's
belief that a security exhibits a satisfactory degree of safety and capacity for
repayment,  but is more vulnerable to adverse  economic  conditions and changing
circumstances.  "High yield" securities,  sometimes referred to as "junk bonds,"
are  higher  risk,   non-convertible  debt  obligations  that  are  rated  below
investment grade  securities,  or are unrated,  but with similar credit quality.
For a description of securities ratings, see the Appendix to the Company's SAI.

             There are no credit or maturity  restrictions  on the fixed  income
securities  in which the high yield  portion of the Fund may be  invested.  Debt
securities rated lower than Baa by Moody's or BBB by S&P or their equivalent are
considered  by  many  to  be  predominantly  speculative.  Changes  in  economic
conditions or other circumstances are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity
to make principal and interest payments on such securities than is the case with
higher quality debt securities. Regardless of rating levels, all debt securities
considered  for  purchase  by  the  Fund  are  analyzed  by the  Sub-advisor  to
determine,  to the extent reasonably  possible,  that the planned  investment is
sound, given the investment objective of the Fund. For an additional  discussion
of  lower-rated   securities  and  certain  risks  involved  therein,  see  this
Prospectus  and the  Company's SAI under  "Certain  Risk Factors and  Investment
Methods."

     Under normal market conditions,  the maturities of fixed-income  securities
in which the Fund invests will range from 2 to 30 years.

             In  determining  the  allocation  of assets  among U.S. and foreign
capital markets, the Sub-advisor considers the condition and growth potential of
the various  economies;  the relative  valuations  of the  markets;  and social,
political,  and  economic  factors  that may affect the  markets.  In  selecting
securities  in  foreign  currencies,  the  Sub-advisor  considers,  among  other
factors,  the impact of foreign exchange rates relative to the U.S. dollar value
of such  securities.  The  Sub-advisor  may seek to  hedge  all or a part of the
Fund's foreign  currency  exposure  through the use of forward foreign  currency
contracts or options thereon.

             Foreign Securities.  The Fund may invest up to 25% of its assets in
the  securities  of  foreign  issuers,  including  debt  securities  of  foreign
governments  and their agencies  primarily from  developed  markets,  when these
securities meet its standards of selection.  The Fund may make such  investments
either  directly in foreign  securities,  or by purchasing  depositary  receipts
("DRs") for foreign securities. DRs are securities listed on exchanges or quoted
in the  over-the-counter  market in one  country  but  represent  the  shares of
issuers  domiciled in other  countries.  DRs may be  sponsored  or  unsponsored.
Direct  investments  in  foreign  securities  may  be  made  either  on  foreign
securities exchanges or in the over-the-counter markets.

             The Fund may  invest  in  common  stocks,  convertible  securities,
preferred stocks, bonds, notes and other debt securities of foreign issuers, and
debt securities of foreign  governments  and their agencies.  The credit quality
standards  applicable  to  domestic  securities  purchased  by the Fund are also
applicable to its foreign  securities  investments.  For a discussion of certain
risks involved in investing in foreign  securities,  see this Prospectus and the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Forward Currency Exchange Contracts. Some of the foreign securities
held by the Fund may be denominated  in foreign  currencies.  Other  securities,
such as DRs,  may be  denominated  in U.S.  dollars,  but  have a value  that is
dependent on the performance of a foreign security, as valued in the currency of
its home country.  As a result, the value of the Fund may be affected by changes
in the exchange rates between foreign currencies and the U.S. dollar, as well as
by changes in the market values of the securities themselves. The performance of
foreign  currencies  relative to the U.S.  dollar may be a factor in the overall
performance of the Fund.

             To protect  against  adverse  movements in exchange  rates  between
currencies, the Fund may, for hedging purposes only, enter into forward currency
exchange  contracts  and buy put and call options  relating to currency  futures
contracts.  A forward currency exchange contract  obligates the Fund to purchase
or sell a specific currency at a future date at a specific price. An option is a
contractual  right  to  acquire  a  financial  asset,  such as a  security,  the
securities of a market index, a foreign currency or a foreign currency  exchange
contract,  at a  specified  price at the end of a specified  term.  The Fund may
elect to enter  into a forward  currency  exchange  contract  with  respect to a
specific purchase or sale of a security, or with respect to the Fund's positions
generally. By entering into a forward currency exchange contract with respect to
the specific  purchase or sale of a security  denominated in a foreign currency,
the Fund can "lock in" an exchange rate between the trade and  settlement  dates
for  that  purchase  or  sale.  This  practice  is  sometimes   referred  to  as
"transaction  hedging." The Fund may enter into  transaction  hedging  contracts
with respect to all or a substantial portion of its foreign securities trades.

             When  the  Sub-advisor  believes  that a  particular  currency  may
decline in value  compared to the U.S.  dollar,  the Fund may enter into forward
currency  exchange  contracts  to sell the  value  of some or all of the  Fund's
securities either denominated in, or whose value is tied to, that currency. This
practice is sometimes referred to as "portfolio hedging." The Fund may not enter
into a portfolio  hedging  transaction where it would be obligated to deliver an
amount of foreign  currency in excess of the  aggregate  value of its  portfolio
securities  or other  assets  denominated  in, or whose  value is tied to,  that
currency.  The Fund will make use of the portfolio  hedging to the extent deemed
appropriate by the  Sub-advisor.  However,  it is anticipated that the Fund will
enter into portfolio hedges much less frequently than transaction hedges.

             If the  Fund  enters  into  a  forward  contract,  the  Fund,  when
required,  will  instruct its custodian  bank to segregate  cash or other liquid
assets in a separate  account in an amount  sufficient  to cover its  obligation
under the  contract.  Those  assets will be valued at market  daily,  and if the
value of the segregated securities declines,  additional cash or securities will
be added so that the value of the  account  is not less  than the  amount of the
Fund's commitment. At any given time, no more than 10% of the Fund's assets will
be  committed to a  segregated  account in  connection  with  portfolio  hedging
transactions.

             Predicting  the  relative  future  values  of  currencies  is  very
difficult,  and there is no  assurance  that any  attempt  to  protect  the Fund
against adverse currency  movements through the use of forward currency exchange
contracts will be successful.  In addition, the use of forward currency exchange
contracts  tends to limit the potential  gains that might result from a positive
change in the  relationships  between the foreign  currency and the U.S. dollar.
For an additional  discussion of foreign currency  exchange  contracts,  certain
risks involved  therein and the risks of currency  fluctuations  generally,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Mortgage-Related  and Other Asset-Backed  Securities.  The Fund may
purchase   mortgage-related   and  other   asset-backed   securities.   Mortgage
pass-through  securities  are  securities  representing  interests in "pools" of
mortgages in which payments of both interest and principal on the securities are
generally made monthly, in effect "passing through" monthly payments made by the
individual  borrowers  on the  residential  mortgage  loans  that  underlie  the
securities (net of fees paid to the issuer or guarantor of the securities).

             Payment of  principal  and interest on some  mortgage  pass-through
securities  (but not the  market  value  of the  securities  themselves)  may be
guaranteed  by the full faith and credit of the U.S.  government  in the case of
securities guaranteed by the Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA), or
guaranteed by agencies or  instrumentalities  of the U.S. government in the case
of securities  guaranteed by the Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA) or
the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC),  which are supported only by
the  discretionary  authority  of the U.S.  government  to purchase the agency's
obligations.

             Mortgage pass-through securities created by nongovernmental issuers
(such as  commercial  banks,  savings and loan  institutions,  private  mortgage
insurance companies, mortgage bankers and other secondary market issuers) may be
supported  by various  forms of insurance or  guarantees,  including  individual
loan,  title,  pool and hazard  insurance  and  letters of credit,  which may be
issued by governmental entities, private insurers, or the mortgage poolers.

             The Fund may also  invest in  collateralized  mortgage  obligations
(CMOs).  CMOs are  mortgage-backed  securities  issued by  government  agencies;
single-purpose,   stand-alone  financial  subsidiaries;  trusts  established  by
financial institutions; or similar institutions. The Fund may buy CMOs that are:
(i)  collateralized  by pools of  mortgages in which  payment of  principal  and
interest of each mortgage is guaranteed by an agency or  instrumentality  of the
U.S.  government;  (ii) collateralized by pools of mortgages in which payment of
principal  and  interest  are  guaranteed  by the issuer,  and the  guarantee is
collateralized by U.S. government  securities;  or (iii) securities in which the
proceeds  of the issue are  invested  in  mortgage  securities  and  payments of
principal   and  interest   are   supported  by  the  credit  of  an  agency  or
instrumentality  of the U.S.  government.  For a  discussion  of  certain  risks
involved  in  mortgage  related  and  other  asset-back  securities,   see  this
Prospectus  and the  Company's SAI under  "Certain  Risk Factors and  Investment
Methods."

             Portfolio  Turnover.  Investment  decisions  to  purchase  and sell
securities are based on the anticipated contribution of the security in question
to the Fund's objectives.  The rate of portfolio turnover is irrelevant when the
Sub-advisor  believes  a change  is in order to  achieve  those  objectives  and
accordingly,  the annual  portfolio  turnover  rate cannot be  anticipated.  The
portfolio  turnover  of the Fund may be higher  than  other  mutual  funds  with
similar  investment  objectives.  For a discussion of portfolio turnover and its
effects,   see  this   Prospectus   and  the  Company's  SAI  under   "Portfolio
Transactions."

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors of the Company, the Fund may invest in repurchase agreements when such
transactions  present  an  attractive  short-term  return  on  cash  that is not
otherwise  committed to the purchase of  securities  pursuant to the  investment
policies of the Fund.

             The Fund will limit repurchase agreement transactions to securities
issued by the U.S.  government,  its  agencies and  instrumentalities,  and will
enter into such  transactions  with those banks and  securities  dealers who are
deemed  creditworthy  pursuant  to  criteria  adopted  by the  Directors  of the
Company.  The Fund  will  invest no more  than 15% of its  assets in  repurchase
agreements  maturing in more than seven days.  For a  discussion  of  repurchase
agreements  and  certain  risks  involved  therein,  see this  Prospectus  under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Derivative  Securities.  To the extent  permitted by its investment
objectives  and policies,  the Fund may invest in  securities  that are commonly
referred to as "derivative"  securities.  Generally, a derivative is a financial
arrangement  the value of which is based on, or "derived"  from,  a  traditional
security,  asset,  or  market  index.  Certain  derivative  securities  are more
accurately   described  as   "index/structured"   securities.   Index/structured
securities  are  derivative  securities  whose value or performance is linked to
other equity  securities  (such as depositary  receipts),  currencies,  interest
rates, indices or other financial indicators ("reference indices").

             Some "derivatives" such as mortgage-related  and other asset-backed
securities are in many respects like any other investment,  although they may be
more volatile or less liquid than more traditional debt securities.

             There are many different  types of  derivatives  and many different
ways to use them. Futures and options are commonly used for traditional  hedging
purposes to attempt to protect a fund from exposure to changing  interest rates,
securities  prices, or currency exchange rates and for cash management  purposes
as a low-cost  method of gaining  exposure  to a  particular  securities  market
without investing directly in those securities.

             The  Fund  may not  invest  in a  derivative  security  unless  the
reference index or the instrument to which it relates is an eligible  investment
for the Fund. For example,  a security whose  underlying  value is linked to the
price of oil would not be a permissible investment since the Fund may not invest
in oil and gas  leases or  futures.  The  return on a  derivative  security  may
increase  or  decrease,  depending  upon  changes  in  the  reference  index  or
instrument to which it relates.

             There are a range of risks associated with derivative  investments,
including: the risk that the underlying security, interest rate, market index or
other   financial   asset  will  not  move  in  the  direction  the  Sub-advisor
anticipates;  the possibility that there may be no liquid secondary  market,  or
the possibility  that price  fluctuation  limits may be imposed by the exchange,
either of which may make it difficult or impossible to close out a position when
desired;  the risk that adverse price movements in an instrument can result in a
loss substantially greater than the Fund's initial investment; and the risk that
the  counterparty  will fail to perform its  obligations.  For a  discussion  of
certain risks involved in investing in derivative securities,  including futures
and options contracts,  see this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             When-Issued  Transactions.  The Fund  may  sometimes  purchase  new
issues of securities  on a when-issued  basis without limit when, in the opinion
of the Sub-advisor, such purchases will further the investment objectives of the
Fund.  For a discussion of  when-issued  securities  and certain risks  involved
therein,  see the  Company's  SAI under  "Certain  Risk  Factors and  Investment
Methods."

             Short Sales.  The Fund may engage in short sales if, at the time of
the short sale, the Fund owns or has the right to acquire an equal amount of the
security being sold short at no additional  cost. These  transactions  allow the
Fund to  hedge  against  price  fluctuations  by  locking  in a sale  price  for
securities it does not wish to sell immediately.

   
             The Fund may make a short  sale when it wants to sell the  security
it owns at a current  attractive  price but also wishes to defer  recognition of
gain or loss for federal  income tax  purposes,  and for purposes of  satisfying
certain tests  applicable to regulated  investment  companies under the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 (the "Code") and Regulations.
    

             Rule 144A  Securities.  The Fund may,  from time to time,  purchase
Rule 144A securities when they present attractive investment  opportunities that
otherwise  meet the Fund's  criteria for  selection.  Rule 144A  securities  are
securities   that  are  privately   placed  with  and  traded  among   qualified
institutional  buyers  rather  than  the  general  public.  Although  Rule  144A
securities  are considered  "restricted  securities,"  they are not  necessarily
illiquid.

             With respect to securities eligible for resale under Rule 144A, the
Staff of the  Commission  has  taken the  position  that the  liquidity  of such
securities  in the  portfolio  of a fund  offering  redeemable  securities  is a
question of fact for the board of directors to determine,  such determination to
be based upon a consideration of the readily  available  trading markets and the
review  of any  contractual  restrictions.  Accordingly,  the  Directors  of the
Company are  responsible  for  developing  and  establishing  the guidelines and
procedures for determining the liquidity of Rule 144A securities.  As allowed by
Rule 144A, the Directors of the Company have  delegated the day-to-day  function
of determining  the liquidity of Rule 144A  securities to the  Sub-advisor.  The
Directors  retain  the  responsibility  to  monitor  the  implementation  of the
guidelines and procedures they have adopted.

             Since the  secondary  market  for such  securities  is  limited  to
certain qualified institutional  investors, the liquidity of such securities may
be limited  accordingly  and the Fund may,  from time to time,  hold a Rule 144A
security  that is illiquid.  In such an event,  the  Sub-advisor  will  consider
appropriate  remedies to minimize the effect on the Fund's  liquidity.  The Fund
may not invest  more than 15% of its assets in illiquid  securities  (securities
that may not be sold  within  seven  days at  approximately  the  price  used in
determining the net asset value of Fund shares). For an additional discussion of
Rule 144A  securities  and illiquid  and  restricted  securities,  and the risks
involved therein, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

     Borrowing.  For a discussion  of the Fund's  limitations  on borrowing  and
certain risks  involved in borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under "Certain Risk
Factors  and  Investment  Methods"  and the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental
Investment Restrictions."

ASAF FEDERATED HIGH YIELD BOND FUND:

Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the Fund is to seek  high
current  income by investing  primarily in fixed  income  securities.  The fixed
income securities in which the Fund intends to invest are lower-rated  corporate
debt  obligations.  Lower-rated debt obligations are generally  considered to be
high risk investments.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund will invest at least 65% of its assets in lower-rated (BBB
or lower) corporate debt obligations. Under normal circumstances,  the Fund will
not invest more than 10% of the value of its total assets in equity  securities.
The fixed income  securities in which the Fund may invest  include,  but are not
limited to: preferred stocks, convertible securities,  bonds, debentures, notes,
equipment lease certificates and equipment trust certificates.

             Other permitted investments for the Fund currently include, but are
not limited  to, the  following:  commercial  paper;  obligations  of the United
States;  notes,  bonds,  and discount  notes of the  following  U.S.  government
agencies  or  instrumentalities:  Federal  Home  Loan  Banks,  Federal  National
Mortgage  Association,  Government National Mortgage  Association,  Federal Farm
Credit  Banks,  Tennessee  Valley  Authority,  Export-Import  Bank of the United
States,  Commodity  Credit  Corporation,  Federal  Financing Bank,  Student Loan
Marketing  Association,  Federal  Home Loan  Mortgage  Corporation,  or National
Credit Union Administration;  time and savings deposits (including  certificates
of deposit) in  commercial  or savings  banks whose  deposits are insured by the
Bank Insurance Fund ("BIF"), or the Savings Association Insurance Fund ("SAIF"),
including  certificates  of deposit issued by and other time deposits in foreign
branches of  BIF-insured  banks;  bankers'  acceptances  issued by a BIF-insured
bank, or issued by the bank's Edge Act  subsidiary  and  guaranteed by the bank,
with remaining  maturities of nine months or less. The total  acceptances of any
bank held by the Fund cannot  exceed 0.25 of 1% of such  bank's  total  deposits
according to the bank's last published statement of condition preceding the date
of acceptance; and general obligations of any state, territory, or possession of
the United States, or their political  subdivisions,  so long as they are either
(1) rated in one of the four highest grades by nationally recognized statistical
rating  organizations or (2) issued by a public housing agency and backed by the
full faith and credit of the United States.

             The  corporate  debt  obligations  in which the Fund may invest are
generally  rated BBB or lower by  Standard  & Poor's  Corporation  ("Standard  &
Poor's") or Baa or lower by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's"),  or are
not rated but are determined by the Sub-advisor to be of comparable quality. For
a description  of  securities  ratings,  see the Appendix to the Company's  SAI.
There is no lower limit with  respect to rating  categories  for  securities  in
which the Fund may invest.

             Special Risks of Lower-Rated  Debt Obligations or "Junk Bonds." The
corporate  debt  obligations  in which the Fund  invests  are usually not in the
three highest rating categories of a nationally  recognized rating  organization
(AAA,  AA, or A for  Standard & Poor's and Aaa, Aa or A for  Moody's) but are in
the lower rating  categories  or are unrated but are of  comparable  quality and
have  speculative  characteristics  or are  speculative.  Lower-rated or unrated
bonds are commonly  referred to as "junk bonds." There is no minimal  acceptable
rating for a security  to be  purchased  or held in the Fund,  and the Fund may,
from  time to time,  purchase  or hold  securities  rated in the  lowest  rating
category or securities in default.

             Lower-rated  securities  will  usually  offer  higher  yields  than
higher-rated  securities.  However,  there is more risk of loss of principal and
interest  associated  with  these  investments.   This  is  because  of  reduced
creditworthiness and increased risk of default. Lower-rated securities generally
tend to reflect short-term corporate and market developments to a greater extent
than  higher-rated  securities  which react  primarily  to  fluctuations  in the
general level of interest rates.  Short-term  corporate and market  developments
affecting  the prices or  liquidity  of  lower-rated  securities  could  include
adverse news affecting  major issuers,  underwriters,  or dealers in lower-rated
securities.  In  addition,  since  there  are  fewer  investors  in  lower-rated
securities, it may be harder to sell the securities at an optimum time.

             As a result of these factors,  lower-rated  securities tend to have
more  price  volatility  and  carry  more  risk to  principal  and  income  than
higher-rated securities.  An economic downturn may adversely affect the value of
some lower-rated  bonds.  Such a downturn may especially affect highly leveraged
companies or companies in cyclically sensitive  industries,  where deterioration
in a company's  cash flow may impair its ability to meet its  obligation  to pay
principal and interest to bondholders in a timely fashion. From time to time, as
a result of changing conditions, issuers of lower-rated bonds may seek or may be
required to restructure  the terms and  conditions of the  securities  they have
issued. As a result of these restructurings,  holders of lower-rated  securities
may receive less  principal and interest than they had bargained for at the time
such bonds were purchased.  In the event of a  restructuring,  the Fund may bear
additional legal or  administrative  expenses in order to maximize recovery from
an issuer.

             The secondary  trading  market for  lower-rated  bonds is generally
less liquid than the secondary  trading market for higher-rated  bonds.  Certain
institutions, including federally insured savings and loan associations, may not
legally purchase and hold lower-rated  bonds, which could have an adverse impact
on the overall liquidity of the market.  Adverse publicity and the perception of
investors  relating to issuers,  underwriters,  dealers or  underlying  business
conditions,  whether or not warranted by fundamental  analysis,  may also affect
the price or liquidity of  lower-rated  bonds.  On occasion,  therefore,  it may
become  difficult to price or dispose of a particular  security in the Fund. For
an additional  discussion of the risks involved in lower-rated  securities,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Illiquid  and   Restricted   Securities.   Subject  to   guidelines
promulgated  by the  Directors of the Company,  the Fund may acquire  securities
which are  subject to legal or  contractual  delays,  restrictions  and costs on
resale.  As  a  matter  of  investment  policy  which  can  be  changed  without
shareholder  approval,  the Fund will not invest more than 15% of its net assets
in illiquid securities,  which include certain private placements not determined
to be liquid  under  criteria  established  by the  Directors of the Company and
repurchase  agreements  providing  for  settlement in more than seven days after
notice.  Securities eligible for resale under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of
1933,  and  commercial  paper issued under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of
1933, could be deemed "liquid" when saleable in a readily available market.  For
an additional  discussion of illiquid and restricted  securities,  and the risks
involved therein, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             When-Issued  and  Delayed  Delivery  Transactions.   The  Fund  may
purchase  securities on a when-issued or delayed  delivery basis. In when-issued
and delayed delivery transactions, the Fund relies on the seller to complete the
transaction. The seller's failure to complete the transaction may cause the Fund
to miss a price  or  yield  considered  to be  advantageous.  For an  additional
discussion of these  transactions  and certain risks involved  therein,  see the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Temporary  Investments.  The Fund may also  invest all or a part of
its assets  temporarily  in cash or cash  items  during  time of unusual  market
conditions  for  defensive  purposes  or to maintain  liquidity.  Cash items may
include,  but are not limited to:  certificates  of  deposit;  commercial  paper
(generally  lower-rated);  short-term notes; obligations issued or guaranteed as
to  principal  and  interest by the U.S.  government  or any of its  agencies or
instrumentalities; and repurchase agreements.

             Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated  by the
Directors  of the Company,  the Fund may enter into  repurchase  agreements  and
certain  securities  in which the Fund  invests  may be  purchased  pursuant  to
repurchase agreements. For an additional discussion of repurchase agreements and
the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and
Investment Methods."

     Borrowing.  For a discussion  of the Fund's  limitations  on borrowing  and
certain risks  involved in borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under "Certain Risk
Factors  and  Investment  Methods"  and the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fundamental
Investment Restrictions."

             Zero Coupon Bonds. The Fund may, from time to time, own zero coupon
bonds or pay-in-kind  securities.  A zero coupon bond makes no periodic interest
payments and the entire obligation  becomes due only upon maturity.  Pay-in-kind
securities  make  periodic  payments in the form of  additional  securities  (as
opposed to cash). The price of zero coupon bonds and pay-in-kind  securities are
generally more sensitive to fluctuations in interest rates than are conventional
bonds. Additionally, federal tax law requires that interest on zero coupon bonds
and  pay-in-kind  securities  be  reported as income to the Fund even though the
Fund  received  no cash  interest  until the  maturity  or payment  date of such
securities.

             Many corporate debt obligations,  including many lower-rated bonds,
permit the issuers to call the  security and thereby  redeem  their  obligations
earlier than the stated  maturity  dates.  Issuers are more likely to call bonds
during periods of declining  interest  rates. In these cases, if the Fund owns a
bond which is called, the Fund will receive its return of principal earlier than
expected and would likely be required to reinvest the proceeds at lower interest
rates,  thus reducing  income to the Fund. For an additional  discussion of zero
coupon bonds,  see the Company's SAI under  "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may  invest  up to 10% of its  total
assets in foreign securities which are not publicly traded in the United States.
For a discussion of the risks involved in investing in foreign  securities,  see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Reducing Risks of Lower-Rated Securities.  The Sub-advisor believes
that the risks of investing in lower-rated securities may be reduced. There can,
however,  be no  assurances  that such  risks  will  actually  be reduced by the
following methods. The professional  portfolio management techniques used by the
Sub-advisor to attempt to reduce these risks include:

     Credit  Research.  The Sub-advisor  will perform its own credit analysis in
addition to using nationally  recognized rating organizations and other sources,
including  discussions  with the  issuer's  management,  the  judgment  of other
investment  analysts,  and its own informed judgment.  The Sub-advisor's  credit
analysis will consider the issuer's financial  soundness,  its responsiveness to
changes in interest  rates and business  conditions,  and its  anticipated  cash
flow, interest,  or dividend coverage and earnings. In evaluating an issuer, the
Sub-advisor  places  special  emphasis  on the  estimated  current  value of the
issuer's assets rather than historical cost.

     Diversification.  The  Sub-advisor  invests in securities of many different
issuers, industries, and economic sectors to reduce portfolio risk.

     Economic  Analysis.  The Sub-advisor will analyze current  developments and
trends  in  the  economy  and  in  the  financial  markets.  When  investing  in
lower-rated  securities,  timing and selection are critical, and analysis of the
business cycle can be important.

ASAF TOTAL RETURN BOND FUND:

   
Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund  is to  seek to
maximize total return,  consistent with preservation of capital. The Sub-advisor
will seek to employ  prudent  investment  management  techniques,  especially in
light of the broad range of investment instruments in which the Fund may invest.
    

Investment Policies:

             In selecting  securities for the Fund, the Sub-advisor will utilize
economic forecasting, interest rate anticipation, credit and call risk analysis,
foreign  currency  exchange  rate  forecasting,  and  other  security  selection
techniques.  The  proportion  of the Fund's  assets  committed to  investment in
securities with particular  characteristics  (such as maturity,  type and coupon
rate) will vary based on the  Sub-advisor's  outlook  for the U.S.  and  foreign
economies,  the  financial  markets and other  factors.  The Fund will invest at
least 65% of its assets in the following types of securities which may be issued
by domestic  or foreign  entities  and  denominated  in U.S.  dollars or foreign
currencies: securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies
or   instrumentalities;   corporate  debt  securities,   including   convertible
securities and commercial  paper;  mortgage and other  asset-backed  securities;
inflation-indexed bonds issued by both governments and corporations;  structured
notes,  including  hybrid  or  "indexed"  securities,  and loan  participations;
variable and floating rate debt securities;  bank certificates of deposit, fixed
time  deposits  and  bankers'  acceptances;  repurchase  agreements  and reverse
repurchase agreements; obligations of foreign governments or their subdivisions,
agencies  and   instrumentalities,   international   agencies  or  supranational
entities; and foreign currency  exchange-related  securities,  including foreign
currency warrants.

             The  Fund  will  invest  in  fixed-income   securities  of  varying
maturities.  The  average  portfolio  duration of the Fund  generally  will vary
within a three- to six-year time frame based on the  Sub-advisor's  forecast for
interest  rates.  The Fund may  invest up to 10% of its  assets in fixed  income
securities  that are  rated  below  investment  grade  but  rated B or higher by
Moody's Investors  Services,  Inc.  ("Moody's") or Standard & Poor's Corporation
("S&P")  (or, if unrated,  determined  by the  Sub-advisor  to be of  comparable
quality). The Fund will maintain an overall  dollar-weighted  average quality of
at least A (as rated by Moody's  or S&P).  In the event  that  ratings  services
assign  different  ratings to the same security,  the Sub-advisor will determine
which rating it believes best reflects the  security's  quality and risk at that
time, which may be the higher of the several assigned ratings.  Securities rated
B are judged to be  predominantly  speculative with respect to their capacity to
pay  interest  and  repay   principal  in  accordance  with  the  terms  of  the
obligations.  The  Sub-advisor  will seek to reduce  the risks  associated  with
investing in such  securities by limiting the Fund's holdings in such securities
and by the  depth of its own  credit  analysis.  For a  discussion  of the risks
involved in lower-rated  high-yield bonds, see this Prospectus and the Company's
SAI under  "Certain Risk Factors and  Investment  Methods." For a description of
securities ratings, see the Appendix to the Company's SAI.

             The  Fund  may  invest  up to  20%  of  its  assets  in  securities
denominated  in foreign  currencies,  and may invest  beyond  this limit in U.S.
dollar-denominated   securities  of  foreign  issuers.  Fund  holdings  will  be
concentrated  in areas of the bond market (based on quality,  sector,  coupon or
maturity) which the Sub-advisor believes to be relatively undervalued.

             The Fund may buy or sell interest rate futures  contracts,  options
on  interest  rate  futures  contracts  and options on debt  securities  for the
purpose of hedging  against  changes in the value of  securities  which the Fund
owns or anticipates purchasing due to anticipated changes in interest rates. The
Fund may engage in foreign  currency  transactions.  Foreign  currency  exchange
transactions may be entered into the purpose of hedging against foreign currency
exchange risk arising from the Fund's  investment or  anticipated  investment in
securities denominated in foreign currencies.

             The Fund  may  enter  into  swap  agreements  for the  purposes  of
attempting to obtain a particular  investment return at a lower cost to the Fund
than if the Fund had  invested  directly in an  instrument  that  provided  that
desired  return.  In addition,  the Fund may purchase and sell  securities  on a
when-issued  and delayed  delivery  basis and enter into forward  commitments to
purchase securities; lend its securities to brokers, dealers and other financial
institutions to earn income; and borrow money for investment purposes.

             The "total  return" sought by the Fund will consist of interest and
dividends  from  underlying   securities,   capital  appreciation  reflected  in
unrealized  increases  in value of  portfolio  securities  or realized  from the
purchase  and sale of  securities,  and use of futures and options or gains from
favorable changes in foreign currency exchange rates.  Generally,  over the long
term,  the total  return  obtained by a portfolio  investing  primarily in fixed
income securities is not expected to be as great as that obtained by a portfolio
investing in equity securities. At the same time, the market risk and volatility
of a fixed  income  portfolio  is  expected  to be less  than  that of an equity
portfolio, so that a fixed income portfolio is generally considered to be a more
conservative  investment.  The  change  in the  market  value  of  fixed  income
securities (and therefore their capital appreciation or depreciation) is largely
a function of changes in the  current  level of interest  rates.  When  interest
rates are  falling,  a  portfolio  with a shorter  duration  generally  will not
generate as high a level of total return as a portfolio with a longer  duration.
Conversely,  when interest rates are rising, a portfolio with a shorter duration
will generally  outperform longer duration  portfolios.  When interest rates are
flat, shorter duration portfolios  generally will not achieve as high a level of
return as longer duration portfolios (assuming that long-term interest rates are
higher than short-term interest rates, which is commonly the case). With respect
to the composition of any fixed-income portfolio, the longer the duration of the
portfolio,  the greater the potential for total return,  with, however,  greater
attendant  market risk and price  volatility than for a portfolio with a shorter
duration.  The market value of securities  denominated in currencies  other than
U.S.  dollars  also may be affected by movements  in foreign  currency  exchange
rates.

             The  Fund's  investments  include,  but are  not  limited  to,  the
following:

             U.S.  Government   Securities.   U.S.  Government   securities  are
obligations  of,  or  guaranteed  by,  the  U.S.  Government,  its  agencies  or
instrumentalities.  Some U.S.  Government  securities,  such as Treasury  bills,
notes and bonds, and securities  guaranteed by the Government  National Mortgage
Association  ("GNMA"),  are supported by the full faith and credit of the United
States;  others,  such as those of the Federal Home Loan Banks, are supported by
the right of the issuer to borrow from the U.S. Treasury;  others, such as those
of the Federal  National  Mortgage  Association  ("FNMA"),  are supported by the
discretionary  authority  of  the  U.S.  Government  to  purchase  the  agency's
obligations;  and still others, such as the Student Loan Marketing  Association,
are supported only by the credit of the instrumentality.

             Corporate  Debt  Securities.   Corporate  debt  securities  include
corporate bonds, debentures, notes and other similar corporate debt instruments,
including convertible securities.  Debt securities may be acquired with warrants
attached.  Corporate  income-producing  securities  may  also  include  forms of
preferred or preference stock. The rate of return or return of principal on some
debt obligations may be linked or indexed to the level of exchange rates between
the U.S.  dollar and a foreign  currency or currencies.  Investment in corporate
debt  securities that are below  investment  grade (rated below Baa (Moody's) or
BBB  (S&P)) are  described  as  "speculative"  both by  Moody's  and S&P.  For a
description of the special risks involved with lower-rated high-yield bonds, see
this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."  For a  description  of  securities  ratings,  see the Appendix to the
Company's SAI.

             Convertible   Securities.   The  Fund  may  invest  in  convertible
securities, which may offer higher income than the common stocks into which they
are convertible.  Typically,  convertible securities are callable by the issuing
company,  which  may,  in effect,  force  conversion  before  the  holder  would
otherwise choose.

             The convertible  securities in which the Fund may invest consist of
bonds,  notes,  debentures  and  preferred  stocks  which  may be  converted  or
exchanged at a stated or determinable  exchange ratio into underlying  shares of
common  stock.  The Fund may be required  to permit the issuer of a  convertible
security to redeem the security, convert it into the underlying common stock, or
sell it to a third party.  Thus, the Fund may not be able to control whether the
issuer of a convertible security chooses to convert that security. If the issuer
chooses to do so, this action could have an adverse effect on the Fund's ability
to achieve its investment objective.

         While  some  countries  or  companies  may  be  regarded  as  favorable
investments,  pure fixed income opportunities may be unattractive or limited due
to insufficient supply, legal or technical restrictions. In such cases, the Fund
may consider  equity  securities or  convertible  bonds to gain exposure to such
investments.

             Loan  Participation and Assignments.  The Fund may invest in fixed-
and floating-rate loans arranged through private  negotiations between an issuer
of  debt  instruments  and  one  or  more  financial  institutions  ("lenders").
Generally, the Fund's investments in loans are expected to take the form of loan
participations and assignments of portions of loans from third parties.

             Large  loans  to  corporation  or  governments  may  be  shared  or
syndicated  among several  lenders,  usually banks.  The Fund may participate in
such  syndicates,  or  can  buy  part  of a  loan,  becoming  a  direct  lender.
Participations and assignments involve special types of risk,  including limited
marketability and the risks of being a lender.  See "Illiquid  Securities" below
for a discussion of the limits on the Fund's investments in loan  participations
and   assignments   with  limited   marketability.   If  the  Fund  purchases  a
participation, it may only be able to enforce its rights through the lender, and
may  assume  the  credit  risk of the lender in  addition  to the  borrower.  In
assignments,  the Fund's  rights  against the  borrower may be more limited than
those held by the original lender.

             Variable and Floating Rate  Securities.  Variable and floating rate
securities  provide for a periodic  adjustment  in the interest rate paid on the
obligations.  The terms of such obligations must provide that interest rates are
adjusted  periodically  based upon an interest rate adjustment index as provided
in the  respective  obligations.  The adjustment  intervals may be regular,  and
range  from  daily up to  annually,  or may be event  based,  such as based on a
change in the prime rate.

             The Fund may invest in floating rate debt instruments ("floaters").
The  interest  rate on a floater  is a  variable  rate  which is tied to another
interest rate, such as a money-market  index or Treasury bill rate. The interest
rate on a  floater  resets  periodically,  typically  every six  months.  While,
because of the interest  rate reset  feature,  floaters  provide the Fund with a
certain  degree of  protection  against rises in interest  rates,  the Fund will
participate in any declines in interest rates as well.

             The Fund may also invest in inverse  floating rate debt instruments
("inverse  floaters").  The interest  rate on an inverse  floater  resets in the
opposite direction from the market rate of interest to which the inverse floater
is  indexed.  An inverse  floating  rate  security  may  exhibit  greater  price
volatility than a fixed rate obligation of similar credit quality. The Fund will
not invest more than 5% of its net assets in any combination of inverse floater,
interest only, or principal only securities.

             Inflation-Indexed  Bonds.  Inflation-indexed bonds are fixed income
securities whose principal value is periodically  adjusted according to the rate
of inflation. The interest rate on these bonds is generally fixed at issuance at
a rate lower than typical  bonds.  Over the life of an  inflation-indexed  bond,
however,  interest will be paid based on a principal value which is adjusted for
inflation.  For example, if the Fund purchased an inflation-indexed  bond with a
par  value  of  $1,000  and a 3%  real  rate  of  return  coupon  (payable  1.5%
semi-annually), and inflation over the first six months was 1%, the mid-year par
value of the bond would be $1,010  and the first  semi-annual  interest  payment
would be $15.15 ($1,010 times 1.5%).

             Repayment of the original bond principal upon maturity (as adjusted
for  inflation)  is guaranteed  in the case of U.S.  Treasury  inflation-indexed
bonds, even during a period of deflation.  However,  the current market value of
the bonds is not  guaranteed,  and will  fluctuate.  The Fund may also invest in
other inflation related bonds which may or may not provide a similar  guarantee.
If a guarantee of principal is not provided, the adjusted principal value of the
bond repaid at maturity may be less than the original principal.

             The  value of  inflation-indexed  bonds is  expected  to  change in
response to changes in real  interest  rates (which are nominal  interest  rates
adjusted for inflation). If inflation were to rise at a faster rate than nominal
interest  rates,  real interest rates would  decline,  leading to an increase in
value of  inflation-indexed  bonds.  In  contrast,  if  nominal  interest  rates
increased  at a faster  rate than  inflation,  real  interest  rates would rise,
leading to a decrease in value of inflation-indexed bonds.

             While these  securities are expected to be protected from long-term
inflationary trends,  short-term increases in inflation may lead to a decline in
value.  If interest rates rise due to reasons other than inflation (for example,
due to changes in currency  exchange  rates),  investors in these securities may
not be protected to the extent that the increase is not  reflected in the bond's
inflation measure.

             The U.S. Treasury has only recently begun issuing inflation-indexed
bonds. As such, there is no trading history of these  securities,  and there can
be no assurance that a liquid market in these instruments will develop, although
one is expected.  There also can be no  assurance  that the U.S.  Treasury  will
issue  any  particular  amount  of  inflation-indexed   bonds.  Certain  foreign
governments,  such as the United  Kingdom,  Canada and Australia,  have a longer
history  of  issuing  inflation-indexed  bonds,  and there may be a more  liquid
market in certain of these countries for these securities.

             Any increase in the principal amount of an  inflation-indexed  bond
will be considered taxable ordinary income, even though investors do not receive
their  principal  until  maturity.   For  information  about  the  possible  tax
consequences of investing in inflation-indexed  bonds, see this Prospectus under
"Dividends, Capital Gains and Taxes."

             Mortgage-Related  and Other Asset-Backed  Securities.  The Fund may
invest all of its assets in mortgage-related and other asset-backed  securities,
including  mortgage   pass-through   securities  and   collateralized   mortgage
obligations. The value of some mortgage- or asset-backed securities in which the
Fund invests may be  particularly  sensitive to changes in  prevailing  interest
rates,  and, like the other  investments of the Fund, the ability of the Fund to
successfully  utilize these  instruments  may depend in part upon the ability of
the Sub-advisor to forecast interest rates and other economic factors correctly.
For a description of these  securities  and the special risks involved  therein,
see this  Prospectus  and the  Company's  SAI under  "Certain  Risk  Factors and
Investment  Methods" and the  Company's  SAI under  "Investment  Programs of the
Funds."

             Repurchase  Agreements.  For the purpose of achieving  income,  the
Fund may enter into repurchase agreements,  subject to guidelines promulgated by
the Directors of the Company.  The Fund will not invest more than 15% of its net
assets (taken at current market value) in repurchase agreements maturing in more
than  seven  days.  For a  discussion  of  repurchase  agreements  and the risks
involved therein, see this Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

             Reverse Repurchase Agreements, Dollar Rolls and Other Borrowings. A
reverse repurchase agreement involves the sale of a security by the Fund and its
agreement to repurchase the  instrument at a specified  time and price,  and for
some purposes may be considered a borrowing.

             The Fund may also enter into dollar rolls,  in which the Fund sells
mortgage-backed  or other  securities  for  delivery  in the  current  month and
simultaneously  contracts  to purchase  substantially  similar  securities  on a
specified  future date.  In the case of dollar rolls  involving  mortgage-backed
securities,  the  mortgage-backed  securities  that are purchased will be of the
same  type and  will  have the same  interest  rate as those  sold,  but will be
supported by  different  pools of  mortgages.  The Fund  forgoes  principal  and
interest  paid during the roll period on the  securities  sold in a dollar roll,
but the Fund is compensated  by the  difference  between the current sales price
and the lower price for the future purchase as well as by any interest earned on
the proceeds of the securities sold. The Fund also could be compensated  through
the receipt of fee income equivalent to a lower forward price.

             These  practices  will tend to  exaggerate  the effect on net asset
value of any  increase  or  decrease  in the value of the Fund and may cause the
Fund to liquidate  portfolio  positions when it would not be  advantageous to do
so. The Fund will  maintain a  segregated  account  consisting  of cash or other
liquid assets to cover its obligations under reverse  repurchase  agreements and
dollar rolls.  Reverse repurchase  agreements and dollar rolls will be subject o
the Portfolio's  limitations on borrowing as discussed in this Prospectus  under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods." Apart from transactions involving
reverse repurchase  agreements and dollar rolls, the Fund will not borrow money,
except for temporary  administrative  purposes.  For an additional discussion of
the risks involved in borrowing and in reverse repurchase  agreements,  see this
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods" and the Company's
SAI under "Fundamental Investment Restrictions."

   
             When-Issued,  Delayed-Delivery and Forward Commitment Transactions.
The Fund may purchase or sell securities on a when-issued,  delayed  delivery or
forward commitment basis. These transactions involve a commitment by the Fund to
purchase or sell securities for a predetermined price or yield, with payment and
delivery  taking  place more than seven  days in the  future,  or after a period
longer than the customary settlement period for that type of security. When such
purchases  are  outstanding,  the Fund  will set aside  and  maintain  until the
settlement  date,  in a segregated  account,  cash or other liquid  assets in an
amount  sufficient to meet the purchase price.  Typically,  no income accrues on
securities the Portfolio has committed to purchase prior to the time delivery of
the  securities is made,  although the Fund may earn income on securities it has
deposited in a segregated account.  When purchasing a security on a when-issued,
delayed delivery,  or forward  commitment basis, the Fund assumes the rights and
risks of  ownership  of the  security,  including  the risk of price  and  yield
fluctuations,  and takes such fluctuations into account when determining its net
asset value.  Because the Fund is not required to pay for the security until the
delivery  date,  these risks are in addition  to the risks  associated  with the
Fund's other investments.  If the Fund remains substantially fully invested at a
time when when-issued,  delayed delivery,  or forward  commitment  purchases are
outstanding,  the purchases may result in a form of leverage.  When the Fund has
sold a security on a when-issued,  delayed delivery or forward commitment basis,
the Fund does not  participate  in future  gains or losses  with  respect to the
security.  If the other party to a  transaction  fails to deliver or pay for the
securities,  the Fund could miss a favorable price or yield opportunity or could
suffer a loss. The Fund may dispose of or renegotiate a transaction  after it is
entered into, and may sell when-issued or forward committment  securities before
they are  delivered,  which may  result in a capital  gain or loss.  There is no
percentage  limitation  on the  extent  to which the Fund may  purchase  or sell
securities on a when-issued, delayed delivery, or forward commitment basis.
    

             Short  Sales.  The Fund may from time to time effect short sales as
part  of its  overall  portfolio  management  strategies,  including  the use of
derivative  instruments,  or to  offset  potential  declines  in  value  of long
positions in similar  securities as those sold short. A short sale (other than a
short  sale  "against  the  box") is a  transaction  in which  the Fund  sells a
security it does not own at the time of the sale in anticipation that the market
price of that  security  will  decline.  To the extent that the Fund  engages in
short  sales,  it must  (except  in the case of  short  sales  against  the box)
maintain  asset  coverage  in the  form of  cash or  other  liquid  assets  in a
segregated  account.  A short sale is  "against  the box" to the extent that the
Fund  contemporaneously  owns,  or has the  right to  obtain  at no added  cost,
securities identical to those sold short.

             Foreign  Securities.  The  Portfolio  may invest  directly in fixed
income securities of non-U.S. issuers. The Portfolio may invest up to 20% of its
assets in securities  denominated  in foreign  currencies  and may invest beyond
this  limit  in U.S.  dollar-denominated  securities  of  foreign  issuers.  The
Portfolio  may invest up to 10% of its assets in  securities of issuers based in
developing  countries.  The  Sub-advisor  has broad  discretion  to identify and
invest in  countries  that it  considers  to  qualify as  developing  countries.
Investing in the securities of issuers in any foreign country  involves  special
risks  and  considerations  not  typically  associated  with  investing  in U.S.
companies.  For a  discussion  of the risks  involved  in  investing  in foreign
securities  in  general,  and the  special  risks  of  investing  in  developing
countries,  as well as the risks of currency  fluctuations,  see this Prospectus
and the Trust's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Brady Bonds.  The Fund may invest in Brady  Bonds.  Brady Bonds are
securities  created  through the exchange of existing  commercial  bank loans to
sovereign  entities for new obligations in connection  with debt  restructurings
under a debt  restructuring  plan  introduced  by former U.S.  Secretary  of the
Treasury, Nicholas F. Brady. Brady Bonds have been issued only recently, and for
that  reason  do  not  have  a  long  payment   history.   Brady  Bonds  may  be
collateralized  or  uncollateralized,  are  issued in  various  currencies  (but
primarily  the U.S.  dollar),  and are actively  traded in the  over-the-counter
secondary  market.  Brady  Bonds  are  not  considered  to  be  U.S.  Government
Securities.  In light of the  residual  risk of Brady  Bonds  and,  among  other
factors, the history of defaults with respect to commercial bank loans by public
and private  entities in countries  issuing  Brady Bonds,  investments  in Brady
Bonds may be viewed as  speculative.  There can be no assurance that Brady Bonds
acquired  by the Fund will not be subject to  restructuring  arrangements  or to
requests  for new credit,  which may cause the Fund to suffer a loss of interest
or principal on any of its holdings.

             Foreign  Currency  Transactions.  The Fund may buy and sell foreign
currency  futures  contracts  and  options on  foreign  currencies  and  foreign
currency  futures  contracts,  enter  into  forward  foreign  currency  exchange
contracts to reduce the risks of adverse changes in foreign  exchange rates. The
Fund may enter into these  contracts for the purpose of hedging  against foreign
exchange risk arising from the Fund's  investment or  anticipated  investment in
securities  denominated  in  foreign  currencies.  For a  discussion  of foreign
currency  transactions and the risks involved  therein,  see this Prospectus and
the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Options on Securities,  Securities Indices and Currencies. The Fund
may purchase and write call and put options on  securities,  securities  indices
and on foreign  currencies,  and enter into futures contracts and use options on
futures  contracts as further described below. The Fund may also enter into swap
agreements  with respect to foreign  currencies,  interest  rates and securities
indices.  The Fund may use these techniques to hedge against changes in interest
rates,  foreign currency,  exchange rates or securities prices or as part of its
overall investment strategy.

             The Fund may purchase  options on securities to protect holdings in
an underlying or related security against a substantial decline in market value.
A fund may purchase call options on securities  to protect  against  substantial
increases  in prices of  securities  the Fund  intends to  purchase  pending its
ability to invest in such securities in an orderly manner. The Fund may sell put
or call options it has previously purchased, which could result in a net gain or
loss  depending on whether the amount  realized on the sale is more or less than
the premium and other  transaction costs paid on the put or call option which is
sold.  A fund may write a call or put option only if it is "covered" by the Fund
holding a position in the  underlying  securities  or by other means which would
permit immediate  satisfaction of the Fund's obligation as writer of the option.
Prior to exercise or  expiration,  an option may be closed out by an  offsetting
purchase or sale of an option of the same series.

             The Fund may also invest in foreign-denominated  securities and may
buy or sell put and call options on foreign currencies.  Currency options traded
on U.S. or other exchanges may be subject to position limits which may limit the
ability of the Fund to reduce  foreign  currency risk using such options.  For a
discussion  of  options  and the risks  involved  therein,  as well as the risks
involved in investing in foreign currency, see this Prospectus and the Company's
SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Swap  Agreements.  The Fund may enter into interest rate, index and
currency  exchange rate swap agreements for the purposes of attempting to obtain
a  particular  desired  return at a lower  cost to the Fund than if the Fund had
invested  directly  in an  instrument  that  yielded the  desired  return.  Swap
agreements  are  two-party  contracts  entered into  primarily by  institutional
investors  for  periods  ranging  from a few weeks to more  than one year.  In a
standard  "swap"  transaction,  two parties  agree to  exchange  the returns (or
differentials in rates of return) earned or realized on particular predetermined
investments  or  instruments.  The gross  returns to be  exchanged  or "swapped"
between the parties are  calculated  with respect to a "notional  amount," i.e.,
the return on or increase in value of a particular  dollar amount  invested at a
particular interest rate, in a particular foreign currency,  or in a "basket" of
securities  representing  a  particular  index.  Commonly  used swap  agreements
include  interest  rate caps,  under which,  in return for a premium,  one party
agrees to make payments to the other to the extent that interest  rates exceed a
specified rate or "cap";  interest floors, under which, in return for a premium,
one party agrees to make payments to the other to the extent that interest rates
fall below a specified level or "floor"; and interest rate collars,  under which
a party sells a cap and purchases a floor or vice versa in an attempt to protect
itself  against  interest  rate  movements  exceeding  given  minimum or maximum
levels.

             The "notional  amount" of a swap  agreement is only a fictive basis
on which to calculate the obligations which the parties to a swap agreement have
agreed  to  exchange.  Most  swap  agreements  entered  into by the  Fund  would
calculate  the  obligations  of the parties to the  agreement  on a "net basis."
Consequently,  the Fund's  obligations  (or rights) under a swap  agreement will
generally  be equal  only to the net  amount  to be paid or  received  under the
agreement  based on the relative  values of the positions  held by each party to
the agreement ("net amount"). The Fund's obligations under a swap agreement will
be accrued  daily  (offset  against  amounts  owed to the Fund) and any  accrued
unpaid  net  amounts  owed  to a  swap  counterparty  will  be  covered  by  the
maintenance of a segregated account consisting of cash or other liquid assets to
avoid any potential  leveraging of the Fund. The Fund will not enter into a swap
agreement  with any single party if the net amount owed or to be received  under
existing contracts with that party would exceed 5% of the Fund's total assets.

   
             Risks of Swaps.  Whether the Fund's use of swap  agreements will be
successful  in furthering  its  investment  objective  will depend on the Fund's
ability to predict  correctly  whether certain types of investment are likely to
produce  greater  returns than other  investments.  Because  they are  two-party
contracts and because they have terms of longer than seven days, swap agreements
may be  considered  illiquid.  Moreover,  the Fund bears the risk of loss of the
amount  expected to be received under a swap agreement in the event of a default
or bankruptcy of a swap agreement  counterparty.  The Sub-advisor will cause the
Fund to enter  into swap  agreements  only  with  counterparties  that  would be
eligible for  consideration  as repurchase  agreement  counterparties  under the
Fund's repurchase agreement guidelines. Certain restrictions imposed on the Fund
by the Code may limit  the  Fund's  ability  to use swap  agreements.  The swaps
market  is  relatively  new and is  largely  unregulated.  It is  possible  that
developments in the swaps market,  including potential governmental  regulation,
could adversely affect the Fund's ability to terminate  existing swap agreements
or to realize amounts to be received under such agreements.
    

             Futures  Contracts and Options on Futures  Contracts.  The Fund may
invest in interest rate futures  contracts,  stock index  futures  contracts and
foreign currency futures contracts and options thereon that are traded on a U.S.
or foreign  exchange  or board of trade.  The Fund will only enter into  futures
contracts  or futures  options  which are  standardized  and traded on a U.S. or
foreign exchange or board of trade, or similar entity, or quoted on an automated
quotation  system.  The Fund will use  financial  futures  contracts and related
options only for "bona fide"  hedging  purposes,  as such term is defined in the
applicable  regulations of the Commodity  Futures Trading  Commission,  or, with
respect to  positions  in  financial  futures  and related  options  that do not
qualify as "bona fide hedging" positions,  will enter such non-hedging positions
only to the extent that  aggregate  initial margin deposit plus premiums paid by
it for the open  futures  options  position,  less the  amount by which any such
positions  are  "in-the-money,"  would not exceed 5% of the Fund's total assets.
For an additional  discussion of futures contracts and related options,  and the
risks involved therein, see this Prospectus and the Company's SAI under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Hybrid  Instruments.  The Fund may invest up to 5% of its assets in
hybrid  instruments.  A hybrid  instrument  can combine the  characteristics  of
securities,  futures, and options.  Hybrids can be used as an efficient means of
pursuing a variety of investment goals,  including  currency  hedging,  duration
management,  and increased total return. For an additional  discussion of hybrid
instruments  and  certain  risks  involved  therein,  see the  Trust's SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Illiquid Securities. Subject to guidelines promulgated by the Board
of  Trustees  of the  Trust,  the Fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets in
illiquid  securities.  Certain  illiquid  securities may require pricing at fair
value  as  determined  in good  faith  under  the  supervision  of the  Board of
Trustees.  The term "illiquid securities" for this purpose means securities that
cannot be disposed of within  seven days in the  ordinary  course of business at
approximately  the amount at which the Fund has valued the securities.  Illiquid
securities   are   considered   to   include,   among  other   things,   written
over-the-counter options,  securities or other liquid assets being used as cover
for such options, repurchase agreements with maturities in excess of seven days,
certain loan participation interests,  fixed time deposits which are not subject
to prepayment or provide for withdrawal  penalties upon  prepayment  (other than
overnight  deposits),  securities  that are  subject  to  legal  or  contractual
restrictions  on resale and other  securities  whose  disposition  is restricted
under the federal securities laws (other than securities issued pursuant to Rule
144A under the Securities Act of 1933 that the  Sub-advisor has determined to be
liquid under  procedures  approved by the Board of  Directors  of the  Company).
Illiquid  securities may include  privately  placed  securities,  which are sold
directly to a small number of  investors,  usually  institutions.  Unlike public
offerings, such securities are not registered under the federal securities laws.
Although  certain of these  securities may be readily sold,  for example,  under
Rule 144A, others may be illiquid, and their sale may involve substantial delays
and additional costs.

     Portfolio Turnover.  The Fund may have higher portfolio turnover than other
mutual funds with similar investment  objectives.  For a discussion of portfolio
turnover  and its  effects,  see this  Prospectus  and the  Company's  SAI under
"Portfolio Transactions."

ASAF JPM MONEY MARKET FUND:

     Investment Objective:  The investment objective of the Fund is to seek high
current income and maintain high levels of liquidity.

Investment Policies:

             The Fund attempts to  accomplish  its  objectives by  maintaining a
dollar-weighted  average  portfolio  maturity  of not  more  than 90 days and by
investing  in the  types  of high  quality  U.S.  dollar-denominated  securities
described  below which have effective  maturities of not more than 397 days. The
Fund will invest in one or more of the types of investments described below.

             United  States  Government  Obligations.  The  Fund may  invest  in
obligations  of  the  U.S.   Government  and  its  agencies  ("U.S.   Government
Obligations")  and  instrumentalities   ("U.S.  Government   Instrumentalities")
maturing 397 days or less from the date of acquisition or purchased  pursuant to
repurchase  agreements that provide for repurchase by the seller within 397 days
from the date of acquisition.  U.S. Government Obligations, for purposes of this
Fund, include:  (i) direct obligations issued by the United States Treasury such
as Treasury bills, notes and bonds; and (ii) instruments issued or guaranteed by
government-sponsored  agencies acting under authority of Congress,  such as, but
not limited to,  obligations  of the Bank for  Cooperatives,  Federal  Financing
Bank,  Federal  Intermediate  Credit  Banks,  Federal Land Banks,  and Tennessee
Valley  Authority,  Federal Home Loan Bank and Federal Farm Credit Bureau.  U.S.
Government Instrumentalities are government agencies organized by Congress under
a Federal Charter and supervised and regulated by the U.S.  Government,  such as
the  Federal  National  Mortgage  Association  and  the  Student  Loan  Mortgage
Association. Some of these U.S. Government Obligations are supported by the full
faith and credit of the U.S. Treasury;  others are supported by the right of the
issuer  to  borrow  from the  Treasury;  others,  such as  those of the  Federal
National Mortgage Association,  are supported by the discretionary  authority of
the U.S. Government to purchase the agency's obligations;  still others, such as
those of the Student Loan Mortgage Association, are supported only by the credit
of the instrumentality. No assurance can be given that the U.S. Government would
provide financial support to the U.S. Government-sponsored  instrumentalities if
it is not obligated to do so by law.

             Bank Obligations. The Fund may invest in high quality United States
dollar-denominated   negotiable  certificates  of  deposit,  time  deposits  and
bankers'  acceptances of (i) banks,  savings and loan  associations  and savings
banks which have more than $2 billion in total  assets and are  organized  under
United  States  federal or state law,  (ii)  foreign  branches of these banks or
foreign banks of equivalent  size (Euros),  and (iii) United States  branches of
foreign  banks of  equivalent  size  (Yankees).  The Fund  may  also  invest  in
obligations of  international  banking  institutions  designated or supported by
national  governments to promote economic  reconstruction,  development or trade
between  nations  (e.g.,  the  European   Investment  Bank,  the  Inter-American
Development  Bank,  or the World Bank).  These  obligations  may be supported by
appropriated but unpaid  commitments of their member countries,  and there is no
assurance these commitments will be undertaken or met in the future.

             Commercial  Paper;  Bonds.  The Fund  may  invest  in high  quality
commercial paper and corporate bonds issued by United States  corporations.  The
Fund may also  invest in bonds and  commercial  paper of foreign  issuers if the
obligation  is United  States  dollar-denominated  and is not subject to foreign
withholding tax. For a discussion of the risks involved in foreign  investments,
see this  Prospectus  and the  Company's  SAI under  "Certain  Risk  Factors and
Investment Methods."

             Asset-Backed  Securities.  As may be  permitted by current laws and
regulations and if expressly permitted by the Directors of the Company, the Fund
may invest in securities generally referred to as asset-backed securities, which
directly or indirectly represent a participation  interest in, or are secured by
and payable from, a stream of payments  generated by  particular  assets such as
motor  vehicle  or credit  card  receivables.  Asset-backed  securities  provide
periodic  payments  that  generally  consist  of  both  interest  and  principal
payments.  Consequently,  the life of an  asset-backed  security varies with the
prepayment  experience of the underlying debt instruments.  For more information
about these instruments and the risks involved therein,  see this Prospectus and
the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Synthetic  Instruments.  As may be  permitted  by current  laws and
regulations and if expressly permitted by the Directors of the Company, the Fund
may invest in certain synthetic instruments.  Such instruments generally involve
the deposit of asset-backed  securities in a trust  arrangement and the issuance
of  certificates  evidencing  interests  in  the  trust.  The  certificates  are
generally sold in private  placements in reliance on Rule 144A of the Securities
Act of 1933. The Sub-advisor will review the structure of synthetic  instruments
to identify credit and liquidity risks and will monitor such risks.

             Quality  Information.  The Fund will limit its investments to those
securities which, in accordance with guidelines  adopted by the Directors of the
Company,  present minimal credit risks. In addition,  the Fund will not purchase
any security (other than a United States  Government  security)  unless:  (i) if
rated by only one nationally recognized rating organization (such as Moody's and
Standard & Poor's),  then such organization has rated it with the highest rating
assigned  to  short-term  debt  securities;  (ii)  if  rated  by more  than  one
nationally  recognized  rating  organization,  then at  least  two  such  rating
organizations  have rated it with the highest rating assigned to short-term debt
securities;  or (iii) it is not  rated  and is  determined  to be of  comparable
quality.  Determinations of comparable  quality shall be made in accordance with
procedures  established by the Directors of the Company. These standards must be
satisfied at the time an investment  is made.  If the quality of the  investment
later declines, the Fund may continue to hold the investment, subject in certain
circumstances  to a finding by the Directors  that  disposing of the  investment
would not be in the  Fund's  best  interest.  For a  description  of  securities
ratings, see the Appendix to the Company's SAI.

             When-Issued and Delayed Delivery Securities.  The Fund may purchase
securities on a when-issued or delayed  delivery basis.  Delivery of and payment
for these  securities  may take as long as a month or more after the date of the
purchase  commitment.  The  value of  these  securities  is  subject  to  market
fluctuation  during this  period and no  interest or income  accrues to the Fund
until settlement.  The Fund maintains with the custodian a separate account with
a  segregated  portfolio  of  securities  in an amount  at least  equal to these
commitments.  When entering into a when-issued or delayed delivery  transaction,
the Fund will rely on the other  party to  consummate  the  transaction;  if the
other  party  fails to do so, the Fund may be  disadvantaged.  It is the current
policy of the Fund not to enter into  when-issued  commitments  exceeding in the
aggregate  15% of the market value of the Fund's  total assets less  liabilities
other than the  obligations  created  by these  commitments.  For an  additional
discussion of when-issued securities and certain risks involved therein, see the
Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines promulgated by the Directors
of the Company, the Fund is permitted to enter into repurchase agreements. For a
discussion of repurchase  agreements  and the risks involved  therein,  see this
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Reverse Repurchase Agreements.  The Fund is permitted to enter into
reverse repurchase agreements. In a reverse repurchase agreement, the Fund sells
a security and agrees to repurchase it at a mutually agreed upon date and price,
reflecting  the interest rate  effective for the term of the  agreement.  It may
also be viewed as the  borrowing  of money by the Fund.  If interest  rates rise
during the term of a reverse  repurchase  agreement,  entering  into the reverse
repurchase  agreement  may have a  negative  impact  on the  Fund's  ability  to
maintain  a net asset  value of $1.00 per  share.  For a  discussion  of reverse
repurchase  agreements and the risks involved therein, see this Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Foreign Securities. The Fund may invest in U.S.  dollar-denominated
foreign securities.  Any foreign commercial paper must not be subject to foreign
withholding  tax at the  time  of  purchase.  Foreign  investments  may be  made
directly in securities of foreign issuers or in the form of American  Depositary
Receipts ("ADRs") and European Depositary Receipts ("EDRs"). Generally, ADRs and
EDRs are receipts  issued by a bank or trust company that evidence  ownership of
underlying  securities issued by a foreign corporation and that are designed for
use in the  domestic,  in the case of ADRs,  or  European,  in the case of EDRs,
securities  markets.  For a  discussion  of  depositary  receipts  and the risks
involved in investing in foreign securities, in general, see this Prospectus and
the Company's SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

             Borrowing. The Fund may borrow money from banks for non-leveraging,
temporary  or emergency  purposes in amounts up to 33 1/3% of its total  assets.
The Fund will not purchase  securities while borrowings  exceed 5% of the Fund's
total  assets.  For an  additional  discussion  of  the  Fund's  limitations  on
borrowing and certain risks  involved in borrowing,  see this  Prospectus  under
"Certain  Risk  Factors and  Investment  Methods"  and the  Company's  SAI under
"Fundamental Investment Restrictions."

                   CERTAIN RISK FACTORS AND INVESTMENT METHODS

             The following is a description of certain securities and investment
methods that the Funds and  Portfolios  may invest in or use, and certain of the
risks  associated  with  such  securities  and  investment  methods.  Whether  a
particular Fund or Portfolio may invest in a specific  security or use a type of
investment  method,  as well as other risk factors  associated  with the Fund or
Portfolio's  investment  program,  are  described  in  this  Prospectus  and the
Company's SAI under "Investment  Programs of the Funds" and in the Company's SAI
under  "Fundamental  Investment  Restrictions."  The risk factors and investment
methods  described below only apply to those Funds or Portfolios that may invest
in such  securities  or use such  investment  methods.  Because  the  investment
objective,  policies and  limitations of each Feeder Fund are identical to those
of its corresponding Portfolio, the references below to the Feeder Funds and the
Directors of the Company  apply equally to the Funds'  corresponding  Portfolios
and the Trustees of the Trust, respectively.

             Derivative  Instruments.  To the extent permitted by the investment
objectives  and  policies of a Fund, a Fund may invest in  securities  and other
instruments that are commonly referred to as "derivatives." For instance, a Fund
may purchase and write call and put options on  securities,  securities  indices
and foreign currencies,  enter into futures contracts and use options on futures
contracts,  and enter into swap agreements  with respect to foreign  currencies,
interest rates, and securities indices. A Fund may use these techniques to hedge
against changes in interest rates, foreign currency exchange rates or securities
prices or as part of their overall investment strategies.

             In general,  derivative  instruments are those  securities or other
instruments  whose  value is derived  from or related to the value of some other
instrument or asset,  but not those securities whose payment of principal and/or
interest  depend  upon cash flows from  underlying  assets,  such as mortgage or
asset-backed  securities.  The value of some  derivative  instruments in which a
Fund invests may be  particularly  sensitive to changes in  prevailing  interest
rates,  and, like the other  investments  of a Fund,  the ability of the Fund to
successfully  utilize these  instruments  may depend in part upon the ability of
the Sub-advisor to forecast interest rates and other economic factors correctly.
If the Sub-advisor incorrectly forecasts such factors and has taken positions in
derivative  instruments  contrary to prevailing market trends, the Fund could be
exposed to the risk of a loss.

             A Fund might not employ any of the derivative  strategies described
below,  and no assurance can be given that any strategy used will succeed.  If a
Sub-advisor  incorrectly  forecasts  interest  rates,  market  values  or  other
economic factors in utilizing a derivatives  strategy for a Fund, the Fund might
have been in a better  position if it had not entered  into the  transaction  at
all. The use of these  strategies  involves  certain special risks,  including a
possible imperfect correlation, or even no correlation,  between price movements
of  derivative  instruments  and price  movements  of  related  investments.  In
addition,  while some strategies involving derivative instruments can reduce the
risk of loss,  they can also reduce the  opportunity for gain, or even result in
losses,  by  offsetting   favorable  price  movements  in  related  investments.
Furthermore,  a Fund may be unable to purchase or sell a portfolio security at a
time that  otherwise  would be favorable  for it to do so, or may need to sell a
portfolio security at a disadvantageous  time, due to the need to maintain asset
coverage or offsetting  positions in connection with  transactions in derivative
instruments.  A Fund  may  also be  unable  to  close  out or to  liquidate  its
derivatives positions.

             Options:

     Call  Options.  A call  option on a  security  gives the  purchaser  of the
option,  in return for a premium paid to the writer  (seller),  the right to buy
the  underlying  security  at the  exercise  price at any time during the option
period. Upon exercise by the purchaser, the writer (seller) of a call option has
the obligation to sell the  underlying  security at the exercise  price.  When a
Fund  purchases a call  option,  it will pay a premium to the party  writing the
option and a  commission  to the broker  selling  the  option.  If the option is
exercised by such Fund, the amount of the premium and the commission paid may be
greater than the amount of the brokerage commission that would be charged if the
security were to be purchased directly. By writing a call option, a Fund assumes
the risk that it may be required to deliver the  security  having a market value
higher than its market value at the time the option was  written.  The Fund will
write  call  options  in order to  obtain a return on its  investments  from the
premiums  received and will retain the  premiums  whether or not the options are
exercised.  Any  decline in the market  value of  portfolio  securities  will be
offset to the extent of the premiums received (net of transaction  costs). If an
option is  exercised,  the  premium  received  on the  option  will  effectively
increase the exercise price.

     If a Fund writes a call option on a security it already  owns,  it gives up
the opportunity for capital  appreciation above the exercise price should market
price of the underlying  security increase,  but retains the risk of loss should
the price of the underlying security decline. Writing call options also involves
the risk relating to a Fund's ability to close out options it has written.

                         A call  option on a  securities  index is  similar to a
call option on an individual security, except
that the  value of the  option  depends  on the  weighted  value of the group of
securities  comprising the index,  and all  settlements are made in cash. A call
option may be  terminated  by the writer  (seller)  by  entering  into a closing
purchase  transaction  in which it purchases an option of the same series as the
option previously written.

     Put Options.  A put option on a security gives the purchaser of the option,
in  return  for  premium  paid to the  writer  (seller),  the  right to sell the
underlying  security at the exercise price at any time during the option period.
Upon exercise by the purchaser, the writer of a put option has the obligation to
purchase the underlying security at the exercise price. By writing a put option,
a Fund  assumes  the risk that it may be required  to  purchase  the  underlying
security at a price in excess of its current market value.

                         A put option on a securities  index is similar to a put
option on an individual security, except
that the  value of the  option  depends  on the  weighted  value of the group of
securities comprising the index, and all settlements are made in cash.

                         A Fund may sell a call option or a put option  which it
has previously purchased prior to the
purchase  (in the  case of a call)  or the  sale  (in the  case of a put) of the
underlying security.  Any such sale would result in a net gain or loss depending
on whether the amount  received on the sale is more or less than the premium and
other transaction costs paid on the call or put which is sold.

             Futures Contracts and Related Options. A financial futures contract
calls for  delivery of a particular  security at a specified  price at a certain
time in the future.  The seller of the contract  agrees to make  delivery of the
type of  security  called  for in the  contract  and the  buyer  agrees  to take
delivery  at a specified  future  time.  A Fund may also write call  options and
purchase  put options on  financial  futures  contracts as a hedge to attempt to
protect the Fund's  securities  from a decrease  in value.  When a Fund writes a
call option on a futures contract, it is undertaking the obligation of selling a
futures  contract at a fixed price at any time during a specified  period if the
option is  exercised.  Conversely,  the  purchaser  of a put option on a futures
contract is entitled (but not  obligated) to sell a futures  contract at a fixed
price during the life of the option.

             Financial  futures  contracts  consist  of  interest  rate  futures
contracts  and  securities  index  futures  contracts.  An interest rate futures
contract  obligates the seller of the contract to deliver,  and the purchaser to
take  delivery  of,  interest  rate  securities  called for in a  contract  at a
specified  future time at a specified  price.  A stock  index  assigns  relative
values to common  stocks  included  in the index and the index  fluctuates  with
changes  in the market  values of the  common  stocks  included.  A stock  index
futures contract is a bilateral  contract pursuant to which two parties agree to
take or make  delivery of an amount of cash equal to a specified  dollar  amount
times the  difference  between  the stock  index  value at the close of the last
trading  day of the  contract  and the price at which the  futures  contract  is
originally struck. An option on a financial futures contract gives the purchaser
the right to assume a position in the contract (a long position if the option is
a call and a short  position  if the  option is a put) at a  specified  exercise
price at any time during the period of the option.

             Risks of Options  and  Futures  Contracts.  Futures  contracts  and
options can be highly  volatile  and could result in reduction of a Fund's total
return,  and a Fund's attempt to use such  investments for hedging  purposes may
not be successful.  Successful futures strategies require the ability to predict
future  movements  in  securities  prices,  interest  rates and  other  economic
factors.  A Fund's  potential  losses from the use of futures extends beyond its
initial  investment  in such  contracts.  Also,  losses from options and futures
could be  significant  if a Fund is  unable  to close  out its  position  due to
distortions in the market or lack of liquidity.

             The use of  futures  and  options  involves  investment  risks  and
transaction  costs to which a Fund would not be subject  absent the use of these
strategies.  If a Sub-advisor  seeks to protect a Fund against potential adverse
movements in the  securities,  foreign  currency or interest  rate markets using
these  instruments,  and such markets do not move in a direction  adverse to the
Fund,  the  Fund  could  be  left  in a less  favorable  position  than  if such
strategies had not been used. The successful use of these  strategies  therefore
may depend on the ability of the Sub-advisor to correctly forecast interest rate
movements and general stock market price movements. Risks inherent in the use of
futures and options include: (a) the risk that interest rates, securities prices
and currency markets will not move in the directions anticipated;  (b) imperfect
correlation between the price of futures and options and movements in the prices
of the securities or currencies being hedged; (c) the fact that skills needed to
use these  strategies  are  different  from  those  needed  to select  portfolio
securities;  (d) the  possible  absence  of a liquid  secondary  market  for any
particular  instrument  at any time;  and (e) the possible need to defer closing
out certain hedged positions to avoid adverse tax consequences. A Fund's ability
to terminate option positions established in the over-the-counter  market may be
more  limited than in the case of  exchange-traded  options and may also involve
the risk that securities  dealers  participating in such transactions would fail
to meet their obligations to such Fund.

             In  addition,  the use of futures and options  involves the risk of
imperfect  correlation  between  movements  in futures  and  options  prices and
movements  in  the  price  of  securities  that  are  the  subject  of a  hedge.
Particularly  with respect to options on stock indices and stock index  futures,
the risk of such imperfect  correlation increases as the composition of the Fund
diverges from the composition of the relevant index.

             Pursuant to regulations of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
("CFTC"), the Company has represented that:

             (i) it will not  purchase  or sell  futures  or  options on futures
contracts  or  stock   indices  for  purposes   other  than  bona  fide  hedging
transactions  (as  defined  by the CFTC) if as a result  the sum of the  initial
margin  deposits  and  premiums  required  to  establish  positions  in  futures
contracts  and related  options that do not fall within the  definition  of bona
fide  hedging  transactions  would  exceed 5% of the fair  market  value of each
Fund's net assets; and

             (ii) a Fund  will not  enter  into  any  futures  contracts  if the
aggregate amount of that Fund's commitments under outstanding  futures contracts
positions would exceed the market value of its total assets.

             Asset-Backed   Securities.   Asset-backed  securities  represent  a
participation  in, or are  secured by and  payable  from,  a stream of  payments
generated by particular  assets, for example,  credit card,  automobile or trade
receivables.  Asset-backed  commercial paper, one type of asset-backed security,
is issued by a special purpose entity,  organized solely to issue the commercial
paper and to  purchase  interests  in the  assets.  The credit  quality of these
securities  depends  primarily upon the quality of the underlying assets and the
level of credit support and/or enhancement provided.

             The  underlying  assets  (e.g.,  loans) are subject to  prepayments
which shorten the securities'  weighted average life and may lower their return.
If the credit support or  enhancement is exhausted,  losses or delays in payment
may result if the required  payments of principal and interest are not made. The
value of these  securities  also may change  because of changes in the  market's
perception  of the  creditworthiness  of the servicing  agent for the pool,  the
originator  of the pool,  or the  financial  institution  providing  the  credit
support or enhancement.

             Mortgage Pass-Through Securities.  Mortgage pass-through securities
are  securities  representing  interests in "pools" of mortgage loans secured by
residential  or commercial  real property in which payments of both interest and
principal on the  securities  are  generally  made monthly,  in effect  "passing
through" monthly payments made by the individual borrowers on the mortgage loans
which  underlie the  securities  (net of fees paid to the issuer or guarantor of
the  securities).   Early  repayment  of  principal  on  some   mortgage-related
securities  (arising from prepayments of principal due to sale of the underlying
property,  refinancing,  or  foreclosure,  net of fees and  costs  which  may be
incurred)  expose  a Fund  to a  lower  rate  of  return  upon  reinvestment  of
principal.  Also, if a security  subject to prepayment  has been  purchased at a
premium, in the event of prepayment the value of the premium would be lost. Like
other  fixed-income  securities,  when  interest  rates  rise,  the  value  of a
mortgage-related  security will generally decline;  however, when interest rates
are declining, the value of mortgage-related securities with prepayment features
may not increase as much as other  fixed-income  securities.  The value of these
securities also may change because of changes in the market's  perception of the
creditworthiness  of the federal agency or private institution that issued them.
In addition, the mortgage securities market in general may be adversely affected
by changes in governmental regulation or tax policies.

     Collateralized  Mortgage  Obligations  (CMOs).  CMOs are obligations  fully
collateralized  by a portfolio  of  mortgages  or  mortgage-related  securities.
Payments of principal and interest on the  mortgages  are passed  through to the
holders of the CMOs on the same schedule as they are received,  although certain
classes  of CMOs have  priority  over  others  with  respect  to the  receipt of
prepayments on the mortgages.  Therefore, depending on the type of CMOs in which
a Fund  invests,  the  investment  may be subject to a greater or lesser risk of
prepayment  than other types of  mortgage-related  securities.  CMOs may also be
less marketable than other securities.

     Stripped Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities. Stripped agency mortgage-backed
securities  represent  interests in a pool of mortgages,  the cash flow of which
has been separated into its interest and principal  components.  "IOs" (interest
only  securities)  receive  the  interest  portion of the cash flow while  "POs"
(principal  only  securities)  receive the principal  portion.  Stripped  Agency
Mortgage-Backed  Securities  may be issued  by U.S.  Government  Agencies  or by
private  issuers.  Unlike  other  debt  instruments  and  other  mortgage-backed
securities,  the value of IOs tends to move in the same  direction  as  interest
rates.

             The cash  flows  and  yields  on IO and PO  classes  are  extremely
sensitive  to the rate of  principal  payments  (including  prepayments)  on the
related  underlying  mortgage  assets.  For  example,  a rapid  or slow  rate of
principal  payments may have a material  adverse  effect on the prices of IOs or
POs,  respectively.  If the underlying  mortgage assets experience  greater than
anticipated  prepayments of principal,  an investor may fail to recoup fully its
initial investment in an IO class of a stripped  mortgage-backed  security, even
if the IO class is rated AAA or Aaa or is  derived  from a full faith and credit
obligation. Conversely, if the underlying mortgage assets experience slower than
anticipated  prepayments of principal,  the price on a PO class will be affected
more  severely  than  would  be  the  case  with a  traditional  mortgage-backed
security.

             Foreign  Securities.  Investments in securities of foreign  issuers
may  involve  risks  that  are not  present  with  domestic  investments.  While
investments  in foreign  securities  are  intended to reduce  risk by  providing
further diversification,  such investments involve sovereign risk in addition to
credit and market risks.  Sovereign  risk includes  local  political or economic
developments,  potential  nationalization,  withholding  taxes  on  dividend  or
interest  payments,  and currency  blockage (which would prevent cash from being
brought back to the United States).  Compared to United States issuers, there is
generally less publicly  available  information  about foreign issuers and there
may be less governmental  regulation and supervision of foreign stock exchanges,
brokers  and listed  companies.  Brokerage  commissions  on  foreign  securities
exchanges,  which may be fixed,  are generally higher than in the United States.
Foreign issuers are not generally subject to uniform accounting and auditing and
financial reporting  standards,  practices and requirements  comparable to those
applicable  to domestic  issuers.  Securities  of some foreign  issuers are less
liquid and their prices are more volatile than securities of comparable domestic
issuers.  In some countries,  there may also be the possibility of expropriation
or confiscatory  taxation,  limitations on the removal of funds or other assets,
difficulty in enforcing  contractual and other obligations,  political or social
instability  or  revolution,  or  diplomatic  developments  which  could  affect
investments  in those  countries.  Settlement  of  transactions  in some foreign
markets may be delayed or less frequent than in the United  States,  which could
affect the liquidity of investments. For example, securities which are listed on
foreign  exchanges  or  traded in  foreign  markets  may trade on days  (such as
Saturday or  Holidays)  when a Fund does not compute its price or accept  orders
for the  purchase,  redemption or exchange of its shares.  As a result,  the net
asset  value of a Fund may be  significantly  affected  by  trading on days when
shareholders cannot make transactions. Further, it may be more difficult for the
Company's  agents to keep currently  informed about corporate  actions which may
affect the price of portfolio  securities.  Communications  between the U.S. and
foreign countries may be less reliable than within the U.S., increasing the risk
of delayed settlements or loss of certificates for portfolio securities.

     Currency Fluctuations. Investments in foreign securities may be denominated
in foreign  currencies.  The value of Fund  investments  denominated  in foreign
currencies may be affected,  favorably or unfavorably,  by the relative strength
of the U.S.  dollar,  changes in foreign currency and U.S. dollar exchange rates
and  exchange  control  regulations.  A Fund's  net asset  value per share  may,
therefore, be affected by changes in currency exchange rates. Changes in foreign
currency  exchange  rates may also affect the value of  dividends  and  interest
earned,  gains and losses  realized on the sale of securities and net investment
income and gains, if any, to be distributed to  shareholders by a Fund.  Foreign
currency  exchange  rates  generally are  determined by the forces of supply and
demand in foreign  exchange  markets and the relative  merits of  investment  in
different  countries,  actual or  perceived  changes in interest  rates or other
complex factors,  as seen from an international  perspective.  Currency exchange
rates also can be  affected  unpredictably  by  intervention  by U.S. or foreign
governments  or  central  banks or the  failure  to  intervene,  or by  currency
controls or political  developments in the U.S. or abroad.  In addition,  a Fund
may incur costs in  connection  with  conversions  between  various  currencies.
Investors should understand and consider carefully the special risks involved in
foreign investing.  These risks are often heightened for investments in emerging
or developing countries.

     Developing  Countries.  Investing in developing  countries involves certain
risks not typically  associated with investing in U.S.  securities,  and imposes
risks greater than, or in addition to, risks of investing in foreign,  developed
countries.  These risks include: the risk of nationalization or expropriation of
assets or  confiscatory  taxation;  currency  devaluations  and  other  currency
exchange  rate  fluctuations;  social,  economic and political  uncertainty  and
instability (including the risk of war); more substantial government involvement
in the economy;  higher rates of  inflation;  less  government  supervision  and
regulation of the securities markets and participants in those markets; controls
on foreign investment and limitations on repatriation of invested capital and on
a Fund's ability to exchange local currencies for U.S.  dollars;  unavailability
of currency hedging  techniques in certain developing  countries;  the fact that
companies  in  developing  countries  may be smaller,  less  seasoned  and newly
organized  companies;  the  difference  in, or lack of,  auditing and  financial
reporting standards,  which may result in unavailability of material information
about issuers; the risk that it may be more difficult to obtain and/or enforce a
judgment in a court outside the United  States;  and greater  price  volatility,
substantially less liquidity and significantly  smaller market capitalization of
securities markets.

             American Depositary Receipts ("ADRs"), European Depositary Receipts
("EDRs") and Global Depositary  Receipts ("GDRs").  ADRs are  dollar-denominated
receipts  generally  issued by a domestic bank that  represents the deposit of a
security  of a foreign  issuer.  ADRs may be  publicly  traded on  exchanges  or
over-the-counter in the United States. EDRs are receipts similar to ADRs and are
issued and traded in Europe.  GDRs may be offered privately in the United States
and also  trade in public or  private  markets  in other  countries.  Depositary
receipts  may be issued as  sponsored  or  unsponsored  programs.  In  sponsored
programs,  the issuer makes  arrangements  to have its securities  traded in the
form of a depositary  receipt.  In unsponsored  programs,  the issuer may not be
directly  involved  in  the  creation  of  the  program.   Although   regulatory
requirements  with respect to sponsored and  unsponsored  programs are generally
similar,  the issuers of  unsponsored  depositary  receipts are not obligated to
disclose material information in the United States and, therefore, the import of
such information may not be reflected in the market value of such securities.

             Forward  Foreign  Currency  Exchange  Contracts.  A forward foreign
currency  exchange  contract  involves  an  obligation  to  purchase  or  sell a
specified  currency at a future date, which may be any fixed number of days from
the date the contract is agreed upon by the parties,  at a price set at the time
of the contract.  By entering into a forward foreign currency  contract,  a Fund
"locks in" the  exchange  rate  between  the  currency  it will  deliver and the
currency it will receive for the duration of the contract.  As a result,  a Fund
reduces its exposure to changes in the value of the currency it will deliver and
increases  its  exposure to changes in the value of the  currency  into which it
will  exchange.  The  effect  on the  value  of a Fund  is  similar  to  selling
securities  denominated in one currency and purchasing securities denominated in
another.  The Funds may enter into these  contracts  for the purposes of hedging
against foreign exchange risk arising from such Fund's investment or anticipated
investment  in  securities  denominated  in or exposed  to  foreign  currencies.
Although a Sub-advisor  may, from time to time,  seek to protect a Fund by using
forward  contracts,   anticipated  currency  movements  may  not  be  accurately
predicted  and the  Fund may  incur a gain or a loss on a  forward  contract.  A
forward contract may reduce a Fund's losses on securities denominated in foreign
currency,  but it may also reduce the potential gain on the securities depending
on  changes  in the  currency's  value  relative  to the  U.S.  dollar  or other
currencies.

             Lower-Rated   High-Yield   Bonds.   Lower-rated   high-yield  bonds
(commonly  known as "junk  bonds")  are  generally  considered  to be high  risk
investments  as they are subject to a higher risk of default  than  higher-rated
bonds.  In addition,  the market for lower-rated  high-yield  bonds generally is
more limited than the market for  higher-rated  bonds, and because their markets
may be thinner and less  active,  the market  prices of  lower-rated  high-yield
bonds may fluctuate more than the prices of higher-rated bonds,  particularly in
times of market stress. In addition,  while the market for high-yield  corporate
debt securities has been in existence for many years, the market in recent years
has experienced a dramatic increase in the large-scale use of such securities to
fund highly leveraged corporate  acquisitions and  restructurings.  Accordingly,
past experience may not provide an accurate  indication of future performance of
the high-yield  bond market,  especially  during periods of economic  recession.
Other risks which may be associated with  lower-rated  high-yield bonds include:
the exercise of any  redemption  or call  provisions  in a declining  market may
result in their replacement by lower yielding bonds; and legislation,  from time
to time, may adversely affect their market.  Since the risk of default is higher
among lower-rated high-yield bonds, a Sub-advisor's research and analysis are an
important  ingredient in the selection of lower-rated  high-yield bonds. Through
portfolio  diversification,  good  credit  analysis  and  attention  to  current
developments  and trends in interest rates and economic  conditions,  investment
risk may be reduced, although there is no assurance that losses will not occur.

             Illiquid and  Restricted  Securities.  The Directors of the Company
have  promulgated  guidelines  with  respect to  illiquid  securities.  Illiquid
securities are deemed as such because they are subject to  restrictions on their
resale  ("restricted  securities")  or because,  based upon their  nature or the
market  for  such  securities,  they  are  not  readily  marketable.  Restricted
securities are acquired through private  placement  transactions,  directly from
the issuer or from security holders, generally at higher yields or on terms more
favorable to investors than comparable publicly traded securities.  However, the
restrictions  on resale  may make it  difficult  for a Fund to  dispose  of such
securities at the time considered most  advantageous by its Sub-advisor,  and/or
may involve  expenses that would not be incurred in the sale of securities  that
were freely  marketable.  A Fund that may  purchase  restricted  securities  may
qualify  for and  trade  restricted  securities  in the  "institutional  trading
market"  pursuant  to Rule 144A of the  Securities  Act of 1933.  Trading in the
institutional  trading  market may enable a Sub-advisor to dispose of restricted
securities at a time the  Sub-advisor  considers  advantageous  and/or at a more
favorable  price than would be available if such  securities  were not traded in
such market.  However,  the  institutional  trading market is relatively new and
liquidity  of a Fund's  investments  in such market could be impaired if trading
does not  develop or  declines.  Risks  associated  with  restricted  securities
include the potential obligation to pay all or part of the registration expenses
in order to sell certain restricted  securities.  A considerable  period of time
may elapse  between the time of the  decision to sell a security  and the time a
Fund may be permitted to sell it under an effective registration statement.  If,
during such a period,  adverse conditions were to develop, a Fund might obtain a
less favorable price than prevailing when it decided to sell.

             Repurchase   Agreements.   The   Directors   of  the  Company  have
promulgated  guidelines  with  respect  to  repurchase  agreements.   Repurchase
agreements  are  agreements  by which a Fund  purchases a security and obtains a
simultaneous  commitment from the seller to repurchase the security at an agreed
upon price and date.  The resale  price is in excess of the  purchase  price and
reflects  an  agreed  upon  market  rate  unrelated  to the  coupon  rate on the
purchased security.  A repurchase  transaction is usually accomplished either by
crediting  the  amount  of  securities  purchased  to the  account  of a  Fund's
custodian maintained in a central depository or book-entry system or by physical
delivery of the  securities to a Fund's  custodian in return for delivery of the
purchase  price  to the  seller.  Repurchase  transactions  are  intended  to be
short-term  transactions  with the seller  repurchasing the securities,  usually
within seven days.

             A Fund which  enters into a  repurchase  agreement  bears a risk of
loss in the event  that the other  party to such an  agreement  defaults  on its
obligation and such Fund is delayed or prevented  from  exercising its rights to
dispose of the collateral  securities,  including the risk of a possible decline
in value of the  underlying  securities  during  the  period  such Fund seeks to
assert  these  rights,  as well as the risk of  incurring  expenses in asserting
these  rights  and the risk of  losing  all or part of the  income  from such an
agreement.  If the seller  institution  defaults,  a Fund might  incur a loss or
delay in the realization of proceeds if the value of the collateral securing the
repurchase   agreement   declines  and  it  might  incur  disposition  costs  in
liquidating the collateral. In the event that such a defaulting seller filed for
bankruptcy or became  insolvent,  disposition of such securities by a Fund might
be delayed pending court action.

             Reverse Repurchase Agreements. In a reverse repurchase agreement, a
Fund transfers possession of a portfolio instrument to another person, such as a
broker-dealer  or  financial  institution  in  return  for a  percentage  of the
instrument's  market value in cash and agrees that on a  stipulated  date in the
future such Fund will  repurchase  the  portfolio  instrument  by remitting  the
original  consideration  plus  interest at an agreed upon rate.  When  effecting
reverse repurchase  agreements,  assets of a Fund, in a dollar amount sufficient
to make payment for the  obligations to be  repurchased,  are segregated on such
Fund's  records at the trade date and are  maintained  until the  transaction is
settled. Reverse repurchase agreements involve the risk that the market value of
the securities  retained by the Fund may decline below the  repurchase  price of
the securities which it is obligated to repurchase.

             Borrowing.  Each Fund's  borrowings are limited so that immediately
after such borrowing the value of the Fund's assets (including  borrowings) less
its liabilities (not including borrowings) is at least three times the amount of
the borrowings.  Should a Fund, for any reason, have borrowings that do not meet
the above test then,  within  three  business  days,  such Fund must reduce such
borrowings so as to meet the necessary  test.  Under such a  circumstance,  such
Fund may have to liquidate securities at a time when it is disadvantageous to do
so. Gains made with additional funds borrowed will generally cause the net asset
value of such  Fund's  shares  to rise  faster  than  could be the case  without
borrowings.  Conversely,  if  investment  results  fail  to  cover  the  cost of
borrowings, the net asset value of such Fund could decrease faster than if there
had been no borrowings.

             Convertible   Securities  and  Warrants.   Convertible   securities
generally  participate in the  appreciation  or  depreciation  of the underlying
stock into which they are  convertible,  but to a lesser  degree.  Warrants  are
options to buy a stated  number of shares of common  stock at a specified  price
any time during the life of the  warrants.  The value of warrants may  fluctuate
more than the value of the securities  underlying such warrants.  The value of a
warrant  detached from its underlying  security will expire without value if the
rights under such warrant are not exercised prior to its expiration date.

             Other Investment Companies:  The Company has made arrangements with
certain money market mutual funds so that the Sub-advisors for the various Funds
can  "sweep"  excess  cash  balances  of the Fund to those  funds for  temporary
investment  purposes.  Mutual funds pay their own  operating  expenses,  and the
Funds,  as  shareholders  in the money market funds,  will  indirectly pay their
proportionate  share of such funds' expenses.  Investments in other mutual funds
and  investment  companies  will  be made  subject  to the  restrictions  of the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"),  which, among other
restrictions,  places  certain  limits on the proportion of a Fund's assets that
can be invested in other investment companies.

                            PERFORMANCE OF THE FUNDS

             From time to time,  a Fund's yield and total return may be included
in advertisements,  sales literature,  or shareholder reports. In addition,  the
Company may advertise the effective yield of the ASAF JPM Money Market Fund. All
figures  are based upon  historical  earnings  and are not  intended to indicate
future performance.

             The "yield" of a Fund refers to the annualized net income generated
by an investment  in that Fund over a specified  30-day period (7-day period for
the ASAF JPM Money Market Fund).  The effective  yield is calculated  similarly,
but, when annualized, the income earned by an investment in that Fund is assumed
to be  reinvested.  The effective  yield will be slightly  higher than the yield
because of the compounding effect of this assumed reinvestment.

             The "total  return" of a Fund refers to the average  annual rate of
return of an investment in the Fund.  This figure is computed by calculating the
percentage change in the value of an investment of $1,000, assuming reinvestment
of all  income  dividends  and  capital  gains  distributions,  to the  end of a
specified period.  "Total return" quotations reflect the performance of the Fund
and include the effect of capital changes.

             Additional  information  about  the  performance  of the  Funds  is
contained in the Company's SAI under "Additional  Performance  Information," and
is also  contained in the Funds' annual reports to  shareholders,  both of which
you may obtain  without  charge by writing to "American  Skandia  Advisor Funds,
Inc."  at  P.O.  Box  8012,  Boston,  Massachusetts  02266-8012  or  by  calling
1-800-SKANDIA.

       

                                HOW TO BUY SHARES

MINIMUM INVESTMENTS:

             You can open a Fund account with a minimum  initial  investment  of
$1,000 in a particular Fund and make  additional  investments to such account at
any time with as little as $50. The initial investment minimum is reduced to $50
per Fund through  "Automatic  Investment  Plans" as discussed more fully in this
Prospectus under "Special  Investment  Programs and  Privileges."  Lower minimum
initial and  additional  investments  may also be  applicable  in certain  other
circumstances,  including  purchases by certain tax deferred retirement programs
and Education  IRAs.  There is no minimum  investment  requirement  when you are
buying shares by reinvesting dividends and distributions from a Fund.

METHODS OF BUYING SHARES:

   
             Each Fund  offers  investors  four  different  classes of shares --
Class A shares, Class B shares, Class C shares and Class X shares. The different
classes of shares represent  investments in the same portfolio of securities but
may be subject to different  sales  charges,  expenses and benefits,  and likely
will have different share prices and performance.
Only Class A, Class B and Class C shares are offered through this prospectus
    

             When you purchase shares of the Funds, be sure to specify the class
of  shares of the  Fund(s)  you wish to  purchase.  If you do not  choose,  your
investment will be made in Class A shares. See below for a detailed  description
of the purchase of Class A, B and C shares of the Funds.

   
             You  can  purchase  shares  of the  Funds  through  any  dealer  or
financial   institution  that  has  a  sales  agreement  with  American  Skandia
Marketing,  Incorporated (the  "Distributor"),  or directly through the Company.
Methods of purchasing shares include:
    

     Buying Shares  Through Your Dealer.  Your dealer will place your order with
the Company on your behalf.

             Buying  Shares  Through  the  Company.  Make your check  payable to
"American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc." and mail your investment, along with your
completed  account  application,  to the address  indicated on the  application.
Please  include  an  investment  dealer on the  application.  If a dealer is not
listed, the Distributor will act as your agent in buying the Shares.

   
     Buying  Shares  Through Wire  Transfer.  You should  instruct  your bank to
transfer funds by wire to:
    

                                 ABA # 011000028
                        State Street Bank & Trust Company
                              Boston, Massachusetts
                                 DDA # 99052995

                    FBO: American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
                          Fund Name and Class of Shares
                       Shareholder Name and Account Number

   
             Buying Shares Through  Bank-Linked  Accounts.  If you have selected
this option on your account application,  you may link your Fund account to your
designated bank account electronically. Purchase minimums and sales charges will
apply.
    

PURCHASE ORDERS:

             Purchase  orders for all Funds are accepted  only on a day on which
the New York Stock  Exchange  ("NYSE") is open for business (a "business  day").
Orders  for  shares  received  by Boston  Financial  Data  Services,  Inc.  (the
"Transfer  Agent") on any business day prior to the close of trading on the NYSE
(normally 4:00 p.m.  Eastern Time) will receive the offering price calculated at
the close of trading that day.  Orders received by the Transfer Agent after such
time but prior to the close of business on the next  business  day will  receive
the offering price calculated at the close of trading on that next business day.
The offering  price is the net asset value ("NAV") plus any initial sales charge
that applies.  For a discussion of how NAV is  determined,  see this  Prospectus
under  "Determination  of Net Asset  Value." If you  purchase  shares  through a
dealer,  your  dealer is  responsible  for  forwarding  payment  promptly to the
Transfer  Agent.  It is anticipated  that the NYSE will be closed  Saturdays and
Sundays and on days on which the NYSE observes New Year's Day,  President's Day,
Good Friday,  Memorial Day,  Independence  Day, Labor Day,  Thanksgiving Day and
Christmas Day.

             Each Fund and the  Distributor  or the Transfer  Agent reserves the
right to reject  any order for the  purchase  of a Fund's  shares.  The  Company
reserves the right to cancel any purchase  order for which  payment has not been
received  by the fifth  business  day  following  the  placement  of the  order.
Additionally,  if the purchase  payment does not clear,  your  purchase  will be
canceled and you could be liable for any losses or fees the Fund or the Transfer
Agent have  incurred.  If the Transfer  Agent deems it  appropriate,  additional
documentation or verification of authority may be required and an order will not
be  deemed  received  unless  and  until  such   additional   documentation   or
verification is received by the Transfer Agent.

PURCHASE OF CLASS A SHARES:

             Class A shares are sold at their offering price,  which is normally
NAV plus an initial  sales  charge that varies  depending  on the amount of your
investment. In certain instances described below, however,  purchases are either
not subject to an initial  sales charge (and the offering  price will be at NAV)
or will be eligible for reduced  initial  sales  charges.  The Fund  receives an
amount  equal to the NAV to invest  for your  account.  A  portion  of the sales
charge may be retained by the  Distributor  or  allocated  to your  dealer.  The
current  sales charge rates and  commissions  paid to dealers and brokers are as
follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  High Yield Bond & Total Return Bond Funds:       All Other Funds (including Money Market

                                                                                                   Fund):

                                 Front-end       Front-end                      Front-end       Front-end
                                 Sales Charge    Sales Charge   Commission      Sales Charge    Sales Charge   Commission
                                 (as % of        (as % of       (as % of        (as % of        (as % of       (as % of
Amount of Purchase:              offering        amt.           offering        offering        amt.           offering
- ------------------               price)          invested)      price)          price)          invested)      price)
                                 ------          ---------      ------          ------          ---------      ------

<S>                                  <C>             <C>            <C>             <C>             <C>             <C>            
Less than $50,000                    4.25%           4.44%          3.50%           5.00%           5.26%          4.25%
$50,000 up to $100,000               3.75%           3.90%          3.00%           4.25%           4.44%          3.50%
$100,000 up to $250,000              3.25%           3.36%          2.50%           3.25%           3.36%          2.50%
$250,000 up to $500,000              2.25%           2.30%          1.75%           2.25%           2.30%          1.75%
$500,000 up to $1 million            1.50%           1.52%          1.25%           1.50%           1.52%          1.25%
</TABLE>

             The  Distributor  reserves  the right to  allocate up to the entire
amount of the  initial  sales  charge to dealers  for all sales with  respect to
orders  which  are  placed   during  a  particular   period.   Dealers  to  whom
substantially  the  entire  sales  charge  is  allocated  may  be  deemed  to be
"underwriters"  as that term is defined  under the  Securities  Act of 1933 (the
"1933 Act").  In addition to amounts paid to dealers as a commission  out of the
front-end  sales  charge,  the  Distributor  may,  at its own  expense,  provide
promotional incentives,  including cash compensation in excess of the applicable
sales charge to certain dealers whose  representatives have sold or are expected
to sell significant amounts of shares of one or more of the Funds.

   
             Purchases  Subject to a Contingent  Deferred Sales Charge ("CDSC").
There is no initial sales charge on purchases  aggregating $1 or more of Class A
shares of any one or more of the  Funds.  However,  if such  Class A shares  are
redeemed  within 12 months of the first  business day of the  calendar  month of
their  purchase,  a CDSC ("Class A CDSC") will be deducted  from the  redemption
proceeds.  The Class A CDSC will not apply to redemptions of shares purchased by
the reinvestment of dividends or capital gains  distributions  and may be waived
under certain circumstances  described below under "Waiver of Class A CDSC." The
Class A CDSC will be equal to 1.0% of the lesser of the  shares' NAV at the time
of redemption or the original amount  invested.  The Class A CDSC is not imposed
on the amount of any  increase in your  account  value over the  initial  amount
invested.  The Class A CDSC is paid to the  Distributor  to  reimburse  expenses
incurred in providing  distribution-related  services to the Fund in  connection
with the sale of Class A shares.  To determine  whether the Class A CDSC applies
to a redemption,  the Fund will first redeem shares  acquired by reinvestment of
dividends  and capital gains  distributions,  and then will redeem shares in the
order in which  they were  purchased  (such that  shares  held the  longest  are
redeemed first).
    

     The Distributor  will pay the dealer of record a sales  commission on these
purchases in an amount equal to 0.50% of the amount invested.

             Reduction of Initial Sales  Charges for Class A Shares.  You may be
eligible to buy Class A shares at reduced  initial  sales charge rates in one or
more of the following ways:

   
     Combined  Purchases.  Initial  sales  charge  reductions  are  available by
combining  into a single  transaction  the  purchase  of Class A shares with the
purchase of any other class of shares.  Qualifying  purchases include: (1) those
by you,  your spouse and your  children  under the age of 21, if all parties are
purchasing  shares for their own  account(s),  which may include  tax  qualified
plans such as an IRA,  SIMPLE IRA,  individual  type  403(b)(7)  plan,  a single
participant  Keogh type plan, or by a company  controlled by such individuals as
defined  in the 1940  Act;  (2)  individual  purchases  by a  trustee  (or other
fiduciary) if the  investment  is for a single trust estate or single  fiduciary
account, including a employee benefit plan other than those described above; and
(3) purchases by qualified  employee  benefit plans,  other than those described
above, of a single employer,  or of affiliated  employers as defined in the 1940
Act. Purchases made for nominee or street name accounts  (securities held in the
name of an investment  dealer or another nominee such as a bank trust department
instead of the  customer) may not be aggregated  with  purchases  made for other
accounts and may not be  aggregated  with other  nominee or street name accounts
unless otherwise qualified as described above.
    

     Rights of  Accumulation.  The initial  sales charge for your  investment in
Fund  shares may also be reduced by  aggregating  the amount of such  investment
with the current value of all Fund shares  currently owned by you at the time of
your current purchase.  The rules described above under "Combined Purchases" may
apply.

     Letter of Intent ("LOI"). You may reduce the initial sales charge rate that
applies to your  purchases of Class A shares by meeting the terms of an LOI -- a
non-binding commitment to invest a certain amount within a thirteen-month period
from your initial purchase. The total amount of your intended purchases of Class
A, B, C and X shares will  determine  the reduced  sales charge rate for Class A
shares  purchased during that period.  This can include  purchases made up to 90
days  before  the date of the LOI.  Up to 5% of the LOI  amount  will be held in
escrow  to  cover  additional  sales  charges  which  may be due if  your  total
investments over the LOI period are not sufficient to qualify for a sales charge
reduction.  The rules described above under "Combined  Purchases" may apply. For
additional  information  regarding  LOIs,  see the account  application  and the
Company's SAI under  "Additional  Information  on the Purchase and Redemption of
Shares."

             Waiver of All Class A Sales Charges.  No sales charge is imposed on
sales of Class A shares for the following investors: (1) the Investment Manager,
its parent  company,  any  affiliate or subsidiary  of the parent  company;  (2)
present  or former  officers,  directors,  trustees  and  employees  (and  their
parents,  spouses and dependent children) of the Company, the Investment Manager
(including,  its parent  company or any  affiliate or  subsidiary  of the parent
company) or the  Sub-advisors,  and any  retirement  plans  established  by such
entities  for their  employees;  (3)  accounts  with respect to which any person
described  in (2) above  acts as a  custodian  on  behalf of a minor  (including
Uniform  Gift to Minors Act and Uniform  Transfer to Minors Act  accounts);  (4)
present  partners  and  employees  (and their  parents,  spouses  and  dependent
children) of the Transfer  Agent and the  Company's or the Trust's legal counsel
and administrator; (5) dealers that have a sales agreement with the Distributor,
if they purchase shares for their own accounts or for retirement plans for their
employees;  (6) employees and  registered  representatives  (and their  parents,
spouses and dependent  children) of dealers or financial  institutions that have
entered into sales  arrangements  with such dealers (and are  identified  to the
Distributor)  or  with  the  Distributor;  the  purchaser  must  certify  to the
Distributor at the time of purchase that the purchase is for the purchaser's own
account  (or for the  benefit of such  employee's  parents,  spouse,  parents of
spouse, or minor children); (7) dealers, brokers, registered investment advisers
or third-party administrators or consultants that have entered into an agreement
with  the  Distributor  providing  specifically  for the use of Fund  shares  in
investment  products or services made  available to their clients (those clients
may be charged a  transaction  fee by their  dealer,  broker or adviser  for the
purchase or sale of Fund shares); (8) employees (and their parents,  spouses and
dependent  children)  of  firms  providing  the  Company,  the  Trust  or  their
affiliates  with  regular  legal,  actuarial,  auditing,  underwriting,  claims,
administrative,  computer-support,  marketing, office or other services; and (9)
any Sub-advisor of the Company or the Trust.

             Additionally,   no  sales  charge  is  imposed  on  the   following
transactions:  (1) shares  issued in plans of  reorganization,  such as mergers,
asset  acquisitions and exchange offers,  to which a Fund is a party; (2) shares
purchased  by  the  reinvestment  of  loan  repayments  by  a  participant  in a
retirement  plan;  (3) shares  purchased by the  reinvestment  of  distributions
received  from a Fund;  (4) shares  purchased  and paid for with the proceeds of
shares  redeemed  in the prior 180 days from a mutual  fund on which an  initial
sales  charge  or CDSC  was  paid  (other  than a  mutual  fund  managed  by the
Investment  Manager  or any of  its  affiliates);  (5)  purchases  by a  defined
contribution plan under section 401(a) of the Code (including 401(k) plans) with
at least 25 eligible employees; (6) purchases by a 403(b)(7) plan subject to the
Employee  Retirement  Income Security Act of 1974, as amended;  (7) purchases by
former participants in a qualified  retirement plan, where a portion of the plan
was  invested  in  the  Company;   (8)  purchases  by   non-qualified   deferred
compensation plans; and (9) sponsored arrangements with organizations which make
recommendations  to or permit group  solicitations of its employees,  members or
participants.

             In order for the above  sales  charge  reductions  or waivers to be
effective,  the  Transfer  Agent must be  notified  of the  reduction  or waiver
request  when the  purchase  order is placed.  The  Transfer  Agent may  require
evidence  of your  qualification  for such  reductions  or  waivers.  Additional
information  about the above sales charge  reductions or waivers can be obtained
from the Transfer Agent by calling 1-800-SKANDIA.

   
             Waiver of Class A CDSC. The Class A CDSC for purchases  aggregating
$1 million or more is waived in the  following  cases if shares are redeemed and
the Transfer Agent is notified:  (1) redemptions  under a Systematic  Withdrawal
Plan as described in this  Prospectus  under  "Special  Investment  Programs and
Privileges";  (2)  redemptions to pay premiums for optional  insurance  coverage
described in this Prospectus under "Special Investment Programs and Privileges";
(3)  redemptions  following  death or  post-purchase  disability  (as defined by
Section  72(m)(7) of the Code);  (4)  distributions  or loans to participants of
qualified  retirement plans and other employee benefit plans; (5) the portion of
a mandated minimum  distribution from an IRA, SIMPLE IRA or 403(b)(7) plan equal
to the percentage of your plan assets held in Class A shares of the Company; (6)
the portion of any  substantially  equal  periodic  payments  (as  described  in
Section  72(t) of the Code) equal to the  percentage of your plan assets held in
class A shares of the Company;  and (7) the return of excess  contributions made
to your IRA, SIMPLE IRA, 403(b)(7) plan or 401(k) plan.
    

             Class A  Distribution  and Service Plan.  The Company has adopted a
Distribution  and Service plan  (commonly  known as a "12b-1  Plan") for Class A
shares to compensate the  Distributor for its services and costs in distributing
Class A shares and servicing Class A shareholder  accounts (the "Class A Plan").
Under  the  Class A Plan,  the Fund  pays the  Distributor  0.50% of the  Fund's
average  daily  net  assets  attributable  to Class A  shares,  half of which is
intended  as  a  fee  for  services  provided  to  existing  shareholders.   The
Distributor  uses  distribution and service fees received under the Class A Plan
to compensate qualified dealers, brokers, banks and other financial institutions
for  services  provided  in  connection  with the sale of Class A shares and the
maintenance  of  shareholders  accounts.   Such  compensation  is  paid  by  the
Distributor  quarterly  at an  annual  rate not to  exceed  0.50% of the  Fund's
average daily net assets  attributable to Class A shares held in accounts of the
dealer or its customers.  The  calculation of such payment  excludes,  until one
year after  purchase,  shares  purchased at NAV with a CDSC.  NAV shares are not
subject to the  one-year  exclusion  in cases  where  certain  shareholders  who
invested  $1 million or more have made  arrangements  with the  Company  and the
dealer of record waives the sales commission.

PURCHASE OF CLASS B SHARES:

   
             Class  B  shares  are  not   offered  to   "Qualified"   purchasers
(including,  but not limited to,  IRAs,  Roth IRAs,  Education  IRAs,  SEP IRAs,
SIMPLE IRAs,  401 plans and 403(b)(7)  plans).  Because in most cases it is more
advantageous for an investor to purchase Class A shares for amounts in excess of
$500,000,  a  request  to  purchase  Class B shares  for  $500,000  or more will
normally be considered as a purchase request for Class A shares or declined.
    

             Class B shares are sold at NAV per share  without an initial  sales
charge.  However,  if  Class B  shares  are  redeemed  within  7 years  of their
purchase, a CDSC ("Class B CDSC") will be deducted from the redemption proceeds.
The Class B CDSC  will not  apply to  redemptions  of  shares  purchased  by the
reinvestment of dividends or capital gains distributions and may be waived under
certain circumstances described below. The charge will be assessed on the lesser
of the shares' NAV at the time of  redemption or the original  amount  invested.
The Class B CDSC is not imposed on the amount of any  increase  in your  account
value  over  the  initial  amount  invested.  The  Class  B CDSC  is paid to the
Distributor  to reimburse  expenses  incurred in providing  distribution-related
services  to the Fund in  connection  with the sale of Class B shares.  Although
Class B shares  are sold  without  an  initial  sales  charge,  the  Distributor
normally  pays a sales  commission  of 5.50%  (and may pay up to  6.00%)  of the
purchase  price of Class B shares to the dealer  from its own  resources  at the
time of the sale. During the initial offering period of the Class B shares,  the
Distributor  intends to pay a 6.00% up-front sales commission to the dealer. The
Distributor  has assigned its right to receive any Class B CDSC,  as well as any
distribution  and service fee discussed  below under "Class B  Distribution  and
Service Plan," to an unaffiliated third party that provides funding for up-front
sales commission payments.

             To determine whether the Class B CDSC applies to a redemption,  the
Fund will first redeem shares  acquired by reinvestment of dividends and capital
gains distributions, and then will redeem shares in the order in which they were
purchased (such that shares held the longest are redeemed first).  The amount of
the Class B CDSC will depend on the number of years since the time you  invested
and the dollar amount being redeemed, according to the following schedule:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                  Redemption During:                      Class B CDSC (as % of amount subject to charge):

                  <S>                                                           <C> 
                  1st year after purchase                                       6.0%
                  2nd year after purchase                                       5.0%
                  3rd year after purchase                                       4.0%
                  4th year after purchase                                       3.0%
                  5th year after purchase                                       2.0%
                  6th year after purchase                                       2.0%
                  7th year after purchase                                       1.0%
                  8th year after purchase                                       None
</TABLE>

             In the table,  a "year" is a 12-month  period.  All  purchases  are
considered to have been made on the first business day of the month in which the
purchase was made.

             Waiver  of Class B CDSC.  The  Class B CDSC  will be  waived in the
following  cases if shares are redeemed and the Transfer Agent is notified:  (1)
redemptions  under a Systematic  Withdrawal Plan as described in this Prospectus
under  "Special  Investment  Programs and  Privileges";  (2)  redemptions to pay
premiums for optional  insurance  coverage  described in this  Prospectus  under
"Special  Investment  Programs and  Privileges";  and (3) redemptions  following
death or post-purchase disability (as defined by Section 72(m)(7) of the Code).

             Automatic  Conversion  of Class B  Shares.  Eight  years  after you
purchase Class B shares of a Fund,  those shares will  automatically  convert to
Class  A  shares  of  that  Fund.  This  conversion  feature  relieves  Class  B
shareholders of the higher asset-based distribution charge that applies to Class
B shares under the Class B Distribution  and Service Plan described  below.  The
conversion is based on the relative NAV of the two classes, and no sales load or
other  charge is imposed.  At the time of  conversion,  a portion of the Class B
shares  purchased  through  the  reinvestment  of  dividends  or  capital  gains
("Dividend Shares") will also convert to Class A shares. The portion of Dividend
Shares that will convert is determined by the ratio of your  converting  Class B
non-Dividend  Shares to your total Class B  non-Dividend  Shares.  Under Section
1036 of the Code, the automatic  conversion of Class B shares will not result in
a gain or loss to the Fund or to affected shareholders.

             Class B  Distribution  and Service Plan.  The Company has adopted a
Distribution  and Service plan  (commonly  known as a "12b-1  Plan") for Class B
shares to compensate the  Distributor for its services and costs in distributing
Class B shares and servicing Class B shareholder  accounts (the "Class B Plan").
Under  the  Class B Plan,  the Fund  pays the  Distributor  1.00% of the  Fund's
average daily net assets attributable to Class B shares that are outstanding for
8 years or less, a quarter of which is intended as a fee for  services  provided
to existing  shareholders.  The Distributor  uses  distribution and service fees
received under the Class B Plan to compensate qualified dealers,  brokers, banks
and other financial  institutions  for services  provided in connection with the
sale of  Class B  shares  and the  maintenance  of  shareholder  accounts.  Such
compensation  is paid by the  Distributor  quarterly  at an  annual  rate not to
exceed  0.50% of the Fund's  average  daily net assets  attributable  to Class B
shares (and any shares  purchased  by the  reinvestment  of dividends or capital
gains) held for over seven years.

PURCHASE OF CLASS C SHARES:

             Because it is more advantageous for an investor to purchase Class A
shares for amounts in excess of $1,000,000, a request to purchase Class C shares
for  $1,000,000  or more will be  considered  as a purchase  request for Class A
shares or declined.

             Class C shares are sold at NAV per share  without an initial  sales
charge.  However,  if Class C shares are redeemed  within 12 months of the first
business day of the calendar month of their purchase, a CDSC ("Class C CDSC") of
1.0% will be deducted from the  redemption  proceeds.  The Class C CDSC will not
apply to redemptions  of shares  purchased by the  reinvestment  of dividends or
capital  gains  distributions  and may be  waived  under  certain  circumstances
described  below.  The charge  will be  assessed on the lesser of the NAV of the
shares at the time of redemption or the original  amount  invested.  The Class C
CDSC is not imposed on the amount of any increase in your account value over the
initial  amount  invested.  The  Class  C CDSC is  paid  to the  Distributor  to
reimburse its expenses of providing distribution-related services to the Fund in
connection with the sale of Class C shares.

             To determine whether the Class C CDSC applies to a redemption,  the
Fund will first redeem shares  acquired by reinvestment of dividends and capital
gains distributions, and then will redeem shares in the order in which they were
purchased (such that shares held the longest are redeemed first).

             Waiver  of Class C CDSC.  The  Class C CDSC  will be  waived in the
following  cases if shares are redeemed and the Transfer Agent is notified:  (1)
redemptions  under a Systematic  Withdrawal Plan as described in this Prospectus
under  "Special  Investment  Programs and  Privileges";  (2)  redemptions to pay
premiums for optional  insurance  coverage  described in this  Prospectus  under
"Special Investment Programs and Privileges"; (3) redemptions following death or
post-purchase  disability  (as  defined by Section  72(m)(7)  of the Code);  (4)
distributions  or loans to participants of qualified  retirement plans and other
employee benefit plans; (5) the portion of a mandated minimum  distribution from
an IRA,  SIMPLE IRA or an individual type 403(b)(7) plan equal to the percentage
of your plan  assets held in Class C shares of the  Company;  (6) the portion of
any substantially  equal periodic payments (as described in Section 72(f) of the
Code) equal to the  percentage of your plan assets held in Class C shares of the
Company;  and (7) the return of excess  contributions from an IRA, SIMPLE IRA or
401(k) plan.

             Class C  Distribution  and Service Plan.  The Company has adopted a
Distribution  and Service plan  (commonly  known as a "12b-1  Plan") for Class C
shares to compensate the  Distributor for its services and costs in distributing
Class C shares and servicing Class C shareholder  accounts (the "Class C Plan").
Under  the  Class C Plan,  the Fund  pays the  Distributor  1.00% of the  Fund's
average daily net assets  attributable to Class C shares,  a quarter of which is
intended  as  a  fee  for  services  provided  to  existing  shareholders.   The
Distributor  uses  distribution and service fees received under the Class C Plan
to compensate qualified dealers, brokers, banks and other financial institutions
for  services  provided  in  connection  with the sale of Class C shares and the
maintenance of shareholder accounts.  The Distributor currently pays a 1.00% fee
to dealers in advance  upon sale of Class C shares and  retains  the fee paid by
the Fund in the first  year.  After the  shares  have been held for a year,  the
Distributor pays the fee to dealers on a quarterly basis.

                   SPECIAL INVESTMENT PROGRAMS AND PRIVILEGES

       


             Automatic  Investment  Plans ("AIP").  You may make regular monthly
investments through an automatic  withdrawal from your bank account ($50 minimum
per Fund). Sales charges will apply.

             Automatic Dividend  Reinvestment.  Unless you indicate otherwise on
your account  application,  your dividend and capital gains  distributions  will
automatically be reinvested in additional shares at no sales charge.

             Automatic Dividend  Diversification  ("ADD"). You may automatically
reinvest dividends and capital gains  distributions paid by one Fund into shares
of the same class of  another  Fund,  provided  that you have  already  met that
Fund's minimum  initial  purchase  requirement.  No initial sales charge or CDSC
will apply to the purchased  shares.  The number of shares purchased  through an
ADD investment  program will be determined by using the NAV of the Fund in which
dividends will be reinvested  next computed after the dividend  payment is made.
All  shareholder  accounts  involved  in an ADD  investment  program  must  have
identical registrations.

             Dollar Cost Averaging ("DCA").  You can set up monthly or quarterly
exchanges in amounts of $50 or more from one Fund to the same class of shares of
another Fund,  provided that the latter is currently available for sale. You may
set up more than one of these programs  simultaneously.  You should consider the
investment  objectives and policies of a Fund before  electing to exchange money
into such Fund through the DCA  investment  program.  All  shareholder  accounts
involved in a DCA investment program must have identical registrations.

             Systematic  Withdrawal  Plan  ("SWP").  You  may  set  up  monthly,
quarterly,  semi-annual or annual  redemptions  from any account with a value of
$5,000 or more.  You may direct a Fund to make regular  payments in fixed dollar
amounts  of $50 or more,  in an amount  equal to the value of a fixed  number of
shares (5 shares or more) at the time of withdrawal,  or in an amount equal to a
fixed percentage of your account value at the time of withdrawal. Any applicable
CDSC will be waived for shares  redeemed  under a SWP where:  (i) in the case of
SWPs based on a fixed dollar  amount or number of shares,  SWP  redemptions  are
limited to no more than 10% annually of your account  value or number of shares,
respectively,  measured  from the  date the  Transfer  Agent  receives  your SWP
request;  or (ii) in the case of SWPs based on a fixed percentage  amount,  each
SWP redemption is limited to a percentage amount that would not exceed 10% on an
annualized basis of your account value at the time of withdrawal.

             Payments  under a SWP can be  directed  to you or to someone  other
than the registered  owner(s) of the account subject to the Fund's approval.  If
this  privilege  is  requested  when the account is  established,  no  signature
guarantee  is needed.  If this  privilege  is added to an  existing  account and
payments  are  directed to someone  other than the  registered  owners(s) of the
account, a signature  guarantee is required on the SWP application.  The Company
reserves the right to institute a charge for this service.

             Exchange  Privilege.  You may  exchange  your  shares of a Fund for
shares of the same class of any other Fund. You should  consider the differences
in investment  objectives and expenses of a Fund before making an exchange.  For
complete policies and restrictions governing exchanges,  including circumstances
under which a shareholder's  exchange privilege may be suspended or revoked, see
this Prospectus under "How to Exchange Shares."

             Reinvestment  Privilege.  If you redeem some or all of your Class A
or B Fund  shares,  you  have  up to 180  days  to  reinvest  all or part of the
redemption proceeds in Class A shares of the Fund without paying a sales charge.
This  privilege  applies to redemptions of Class A shares on which an initial or
deferred sales charge was paid and to redemptions of Class B shares on which you
paid a CDSC when you redeemed  them.  You must ask the  Transfer  Agent for this
privilege when you send your payment.

             Retirement  Plans.  Certain classes of Fund shares are available as
an investment  option for your  retirement  plans.  If you participate in a plan
sponsored  by your  employer,  the plan trustee or  administrator  must make the
purchase  of shares for your  retirement  plan  account.  A number of  different
retirement  plans can be used by individuals and employers  including IRAs, Roth
IRAs,  Education  IRAs, SEP IRAs,  SIMPLE IRAs,  401 plans and 403(b)(7)  plans.
Please call  1-800-SKANDIA  for the  applicable  plan  documents,  which contain
important information and applications.

             The above  programs and  privileges  may be selected at the time of
your initial investment or at a later date.

             Optional  Benefits.  American  Skandia Life  Assurance  Corporation
("ASLAC") -- an "affiliated  person" of the Company,  the Trust,  the Investment
Manager  and the  Distributor  within the  meaning of the 1940 Act -- intends to
make  certain life  insurance  coverage  available  to certain  persons on whose
behalf shares of the Funds are purchased.  The benefits of this coverage payable
at death will be related to the amounts paid to purchase shares and to the value
of the shares held for the benefit of the insured persons.  Therefore,  coverage
will terminate if all shares are redeemed.

             Purchasers of the life insurance coverage are required to authorize
periodic redemptions of Fund shares to pay the premiums for such coverage.  Such
redemptions will not be subject to contingent  deferred sales charges,  but will
have the same tax consequences as any other Fund redemptions.

   
             The above life  insurance  coverage  will be  available to eligible
persons who enroll for the coverage within a limited time period after shares in
any Fund are initially purchased or transferred. In addition, coverage cannot be
made available  unless ASLAC knows for whose benefit  shares are purchased.  For
instance, coverage cannot be made available for shares registered in the name of
your broker  unless the broker  provides  ASLAC with  information  regarding the
beneficial owners of such shares. Other restrictions on the coverage will apply,
such as the age of the  persons  upon whose life the  coverage  is issued.  This
insurance  coverage  may not be  available  in all  states and may be subject to
additional  restrictions  or  limitations  on  coverage.  As of the date of this
Prospectus,  ASLAC has not yet offered the coverage in any state.  Purchasers of
shares should also make themselves familiar with the impact on the life coverage
of purchasing  additional  shares,  reinvestment  of dividends and capital gains
distributions and redemptions.
    

             Please call  1-800-SKANDIA  for more  information  and  application
forms for any of the above programs and privileges.

                              HOW TO REDEEM SHARES

   
         You can arrange to take money out of your Fund  account on any business
day by  redeeming  some or all of your  shares.  Your shares will be sold at the
next NAV  calculated  after your order is received in good order and accepted by
the Transfer Agent. The Company offers you a number of ways to sell your shares:
in writing, by telephone,  by Automated Clearing House ("ACH") bank transfer, by
wire transfer or other means  acceptable  to the Company.  You can also set up a
Systematic  Withdrawal Plan to redeem shares on a regular basis (as described in
this Prospectus under "Special Investment Programs and Privileges").
    

         If you hold Fund shares through a retirement account, call the Transfer
Agent in advance for additional  information and any necessary forms.  There are
special income tax withholding  requirements for  distributions  from retirement
plans and you must submit a  withholding  form with your request to avoid delay.
If your  retirement  plan  account  is held for you by your  employer,  you must
arrange for the  distribution  request to be sent by the plan  administrator  or
trustee.

REDEEMING SHARES BY MAIL:

             If you want to  redeem  your  shares by mail,  write a  "letter  of
instruction" that includes the following information:

         o     Your name
         o     Fund's name
         o     Your Fund  account  number  (from your  account  statement)  
         o     Dollar amount  or  number  of shares  to be  redeemed  
         o     Any  special  payment instructions  
         o     Signatures  of all  registered  owners  exactly as the
               account is registered
         o     Any special  requirements  or documents  requested by the 
               Transfer Agent to assure proper authorization of the person 
               requesting the redemption

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
         Send Requests by Regular Mail to:                             Send Requests by Courier or Express Mail to:

         <S>                                                           <C>
         American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.                          American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
         P.O. Box 8012                                                 Two Heritage Drive
         Boston, Massachusetts 02266-8012                              North Quincy, Massachusetts 02171-2138
</TABLE>

REDEEMING SHARES BY TELEPHONE:

             You may also redeem  shares by telephone by calling  1-800-SKANDIA.
To receive the  redemption  price  calculated on the business day that you call,
your call must be received by the  Transfer  Agent  before the close of the NYSE
that day, which is normally 4:00 P.M. Eastern Time. Shares held in tax-qualified
retirement plans may not be redeemed by telephone.  You may have a check sent to
the address on the account  statement,  or, if you have linked your Fund account
to your  bank  account,  you may  have the  proceeds  transferred  to that  bank
account.

             Telephone  Redemptions  Paid By Check.  You may make one redemption
request by telephone in any 7-day period for any amount up to $50,000. The check
must be  payable  to all  owners of record of the shares and must be sent to the
address  on the  account.  This  service is not  available  within 30 days after
changing the address on an account.

   
             Telephone  Redemptions  Through Bank-Linked  Accounts.  If you have
selected this option on your account application, you may link your Fund account
to your designated bank account electronically. You can initiate a redemption of
Fund shares for as little as $50 or as much as $50,000  using the ACH network to
have funds transferred to your bank account.  Normally the transfer to your bank
is initiated on the business day after the redemption.
    

REDEEMING SHARES THROUGH YOUR BROKER:

             The  Distributor  has made  arrangements  to redeem Fund shares for
brokers on behalf of their customers.  Brokers may charge for this service.  The
Distributor,  acting as agent for the Funds,  stands ready to redeem each Fund's
shares upon orders from  brokers at the  offering  price next  determined  after
receipt of the order.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

             To protect you and the Fund from fraud,  redemption  requests under
the  following  situations  must be in  writing  and must  include  a  signature
guarantee (there may be other situations also requiring a signature guarantee at
the discretion of the Company or the Transfer Agent):

         o You wish to redeem  more than  $50,000  worth of shares and receive a
         check o A redemption check is not payable to all shareholders listed on
         the account  statement o A redemption  check is not sent to the address
         of record on your  statement o Shares are being  transferred  to a Fund
         account with a different owner or name o Shares are redeemed by someone
         other than the owners (such as an Executor)

         The Transfer Agent may delay forwarding a check or processing a payment
via  bank-linked  account for the sale of recently  purchased  shares,  but only
until the purchase payment has cleared. Such delay may be as long as 15 calendar
days from the date the shares were purchased, and may be avoided if you purchase
shares  by  certified  check.  You may be  charged  a fee of up to $10 for  wire
transfers of redemption  proceeds,  which will be deducted  from such  proceeds.
There is no fee for ACH wire transfers.

         If you  have any  questions  about  any of the  above  procedures,  and
especially if you are redeeming  shares in a special  situation,  such as due to
the death of the owner, or from a retirement plan, please call 1-800-SKANDIA for
assistance.

                             HOW TO EXCHANGE SHARES

             In most cases,  shares of a Fund may be exchanged for shares of the
same class of other Funds at NAV per share at the time of exchange. Exchanges of
shares  involve a redemption of the shares of the Fund you own and a purchase of
shares of another Fund. Shares are normally redeemed from one Fund and purchased
from the other Fund in the  exchange  transaction  on the same  business  day on
which the Transfer Agent receives an exchange  request that is in proper form by
the close of the NYSE that day. Exchanges may be taxable transactions and may be
subject  to  special  tax rules  about  which you  should  consult  your own tax
adviser.

             You may  exchange  your Fund shares for shares of the same class of
any other Fund without the  imposition of a sales  charge.  If you exchange such
shares for shares of another Fund, any applicable CDSC will be calculated  based
on the date on which you acquired the original shares.

             Exchanges  may be  requested  in writing,  by telephone or by other
means acceptable to the Company. For written exchange requests you should submit
a letter of  instruction,  signed by all owners of the account,  to the Transfer
Agent  at P.O.  Box  8012,  Boston,  Massachusetts  02266-8012.  To  initiate  a
telephone exchange, you should call 1-800-SKANDIA.



<PAGE>


             All exchanges are subject to the following restrictions:

         o     The Fund you are exchanging  into must be registered for sale in 
               your state. You may exchange  only between  Funds that are  
               registered in the same name, address and taxpayer identification
               number.

         o     You may only exchange for shares of the same class of another 
               Fund.

     o You must meet the minimum purchase requirements for the Fund
               you purchase by exchange.

         o    You must hold the shares you purchase when you establish your Fund
              account for at least 7 days before you can exchange them. There is
              no  holding  period if you  acquired  the  shares to be  exchanged
              through reinvestment of dividends or distributions.

             Each Fund  reserves  the right to refuse or delay  exchanges by any
person or group if, in the Investment Manager's judgment, a Fund would be unable
to invest the money effectively in accordance with its investment  objective and
policies, or would otherwise  potentially be adversely affected.  Your exchanges
may also 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  that  coincides  with a "market  timing"  strategy may be
disruptive to the Fund.

             Although a Fund will attempt to give you prior  notice  whenever it
is reasonably  able to do so, it may impose the above  restrictions at any time.
Each Fund  reserves the right to  terminate or modify the exchange  privilege in
the future.

                        DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE

             The net asset value ("NAV") per share is determined  for each class
of shares for each Fund as of the close of the NYSE (normally 4:00 p.m.  Eastern
Time) on each  business  day (as  previously  defined  under "How to Buy Shares:
Purchase  Orders") by dividing the value of the Fund or Portfolio's total assets
attributable to a class, less any liabilities,  by the number of total shares of
that class  outstanding.  The total assets of each Non-Feeder Fund and Portfolio
is determined by the market value of securities the Fund or Portfolio holds plus
any cash and other assets  maintained.  The total assets of each Feeder Fund, in
comparison, is determined by the Fund's percentage interest in its corresponding
Portfolio,  multiplied by the Portfolio's  NAV, plus any other asset held by the
Fund.

             The assets of each Non-Feeder  Fund and Portfolio  (except the ASMT
JPM  Money  Market  Portfolio)  are  valued  primarily  on the  basis of  market
quotations.  If  quotations  are not readily  available,  assets are valued by a
method  that the  Directors  of the  Company or  Trustees  of the  Trust,  where
applicable,  believe  accurately  reflects fair value.  Foreign  securities  are
valued on the basis of  quotations  from the  primary  market in which  they are
traded,  and are  translated  from the local  currency  into U.S.  dollars using
current  exchange rates.  The assets of the ASMT JPM Money Market  Portfolio are
valued by the amortized  cost method  pursuant to procedures  established by the
Directors  of the Company and the  Trustees  of the Trust.  With  respect to all
Funds and Portfolios, short-term investments that will mature in 60 days or less
are valued at amortized cost, which is intended to approximate market value.

                     SHAREHOLDER ACCOUNT RULES AND POLICIES

         o The offering of any class of Fund shares may be suspended  during any
period in which the  determination of NAV is suspended,  and may be suspended or
terminated by the Directors of the Company at any time they believe it is in the
Fund's best interest to do so.

         o Telephone transaction privileges or privileges using electronic means
for purchases, redemptions or exchanges may be modified, suspended or terminated
by a Fund at any time.  If an account has more than one owner,  the Fund and the
Transfer  Agent  may  rely  on the  instructions  of any  one  owner.  Telephone
privileges apply to each owner of the account and the dealer  representative  of
record for the account unless and until the Transfer Agent receives instructions
from an owner of the  account  indicating  otherwise.  The  Transfer  Agent will
record  any  telephone  calls to verify  data  concerning  transactions  and has
adopted other procedures to confirm that telephone  instructions or instructions
received by electronic means are genuine. If the Company does not use reasonable
procedures  the  Company  or  its  agents  may  be  liable  for  losses  due  to
unauthorized  transactions,  but otherwise the Company or its agents will not be
liable for losses or expenses  arising out of  telephone  instructions  or other
electronic means that are reasonably  believed to be genuine.  If you are unable
to reach the Transfer Agent during periods of unusual market  activity,  you may
not be able to complete a telephone transaction and should consider placing your
order by mail.

         o Purchase,  redemption or exchange  requests will not be honored until
the Transfer Agent receives all required documents in proper form.

         o Share certificates will not be issued for the Company's shares.

         o Brokers  that can  perform  account  transactions  for their  clients
through  the  National  Securities  Clearing  Corporation  are  responsible  for
obtaining  their  clients'  permission  to perform  those  transactions  and are
responsible  to  their  clients  who are  shareholders  of a Fund if the  dealer
performs any transaction erroneously or improperly.

     o All  purchases  must be made in U.S.  dollars and checks must be drawn on
U.S. banks. You may not purchase shares with a third-party check.

         o Payment  for  redeemed  shares is  forwarded  ordinarily  by check or
through  the  bank-linked  service  (as  elected  by the  shareholder)  within 7
calendar  days  after the  business  day on which the  Transfer  Agent  receives
redemption  instructions  in proper form.  Payment  will be  forwarded  within 3
business days for accounts  registered in the name of a dealer.  Redemptions may
be  suspended or payment  dates  postponed  when the NYSE is closed  (other than
weekends  or  holidays),  when  trading is  restricted  or as  permitted  by the
Commission.

         o Involuntary  redemptions  of small  accounts may be made by a Fund if
the account value has fallen below $500 (for reasons other than a drop in market
value of shares) and at least 30 days notice has been given to the shareholder.
Any applicable CDSC will be waived for such redemptions.

         o Under  unusual  circumstances  shares of a Fund may be  redeemed  "in
kind," which means that the  redemption  proceeds  will be paid with  securities
from the Fund's portfolio of securities.  For additional  information  regarding
such  redemptions,  see the Company's SAI under  "Additional  Information on the
Purchase and Redemption of Shares."

         o "Backup withholding" of Federal income tax may be applied at the rate
of  31%  from  dividends,   distributions  and  redemption  proceeds  (including
exchanges)  if you fail to  furnish  the Fund a  certified  Social  Security  or
Employer Identification Number when you sign your application, or if you violate
Internal Revenue Service regulations on the reporting of income.

         o The Company  does not charge a  transaction  fee,  but if your broker
handles your  redemption,  your broker may charge a fee. Such fee can be avoided
by redeeming your Fund shares directly  through the Transfer  Agent.  You may be
subject to a CDSC under the  circumstances  described in this  Prospectus  under
"How To Buy Shares."

                 ORGANIZATION AND CAPITALIZATION OF THE COMPANY

             The Funds are separate series of shares of the Company,  a Maryland
Corporation established on March 5, 1997 and registered under the 1940 Act as an
open-end  management  investment  company.  Each  Fund  has its  own  investment
objective,  policies and limitations, and operates as a diversified portfolio as
defined  in the 1940 Act.  The Funds each  intend to be  treated as a  regulated
investment company for federal income tax purposes.  For additional  information
regarding  the Funds'  treatment as  regulated  investment  companies,  see this
Prospectus  under  "Dividends,  Capital Gains and Taxes." Five of the Funds, the
Feeder Funds, currently invest all of their investable assets in a corresponding
Portfolio of the Trust,  in each case  receiving a  beneficial  interest in that
Portfolio. The Portfolios are separate series of shares of the Trust, a Delaware
business  trust  established  on March 6,  1997,  and  intend to be treated as a
partnership for federal tax purposes.  Those Funds which do not currently invest
all of their  investable  assets in a corresponding  Portfolio of the Trust, the
Non-Feeder Funds,  retain the right to do so in the future.  Each Portfolio,  as
well as the  Trust,  intends to comply  with all  applicable  federal  and state
securities  laws.  For  additional   information  regarding  the  Feeder  Funds'
investment in the Portfolios of the Trust,  see this  Prospectus  under "Special
Information on the 'Master/Feeder' Fund Structure."

   
             Capital Stock. The authorized capital stock of the Company consists
of the following shares (par value $.001 per share): ASAF Founders International
Small Capitalization Fund (250 million); ASAF T. Rowe Price International Equity
Fund (250 million); ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund (250 million); ASAF Founders
Small Capitalization Fund (250 million);  ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value
Fund (250 million);  ASAF Robertson  Stephens Value + Growth Fund (250 million);
ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund (250 million); ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income
Fund (250 million); ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund (250 million); ASAF American
Century  Strategic  Balanced Fund (250 million);  ASAF Federated High Yield Bond
Fund (250  million);  ASAF Total  Return Bond Fund (250  million);  and ASAF JPM
Money Market Fund (2.5 billion).
    

             Description of Shares.  The Company currently has thirteen separate
series of shares,  each of which is divided into Class A, B, C and X shares. The
Directors  of the Company are  authorized  to  establish,  from time to time and
without shareholder approval, additional series or classes of shares. The assets
of each series of shares belong only to that series, and the liabilities of each
series  are  borne  solely  by that  series  and no  other.  Shares of each Fund
represent equal proportionate interests in the assets of that Fund only and have
identical voting,  dividend,  redemption,  liquidation,  and other rights.  Each
class of shares,  however, bears different sales charges,  distribution fees and
related expenses, and has exclusive voting rights with respect to its respective
12b-1  Distribution  and  Service  Plan.  All  shares  issued  are  fully  paid,
non-assessable and freely  transferable,  and have no preference,  preemptive or
similar rights.

             Shareholder Voting and Meetings. Each shareholder is entitle to one
vote for each share (and to the appropriate  fractional vote for each fractional
share)  of the  Funds  held  upon  all  matters  submitted  to the  shareholders
generally.  Shareholders of all Funds and classes will vote together as a single
class,  except when otherwise required by applicable law or as determined by the
Directors of the Company; and provided that shareholders of a particular Fund or
class  shall not be  entitled  to vote on any  matter  which does not affect any
interest of that Fund or class,  except as otherwise required by applicable law.
The  Directors  of  the  Company  do not  intend  to  hold  annual  meetings  of
shareholders of the Funds,  and will call special  meetings of shareholders of a
Fund only if  required  under the 1940 Act and other  applicable  law,  in their
discretion or upon written  request of holders of 10% or more of the outstanding
shares of that Fund entitled to vote.

             Certain  Provisions.  Under the Maryland General Corporation Law, a
Director of the Company who is held liable for assenting to a distribution  made
in  violation  of  the  Company's  Articles  of  Incorporation  is  entitled  to
contribution from each shareholder of the Company for the amount the shareholder
accepted  knowing the  distribution  was made in violation of those  provisions.
Absent such knowledge, a shareholder will not be obligated to the Company or its
creditors  in respect of shares held in the Company  except to the extent of any
unpaid portion of the subscription price or purchase price for such shares.

                           SPECIAL INFORMATION ON THE
                         "MASTER/FEEDER" FUND STRUCTURE

             An investor in the Feeder  Funds  should be aware that these Funds,
unlike mutual funds which  directly  acquire and manage their own  portfolios of
securities,  seek to achieve  their  investment  objectives  by investing all of
their investable assets in a corresponding Portfolio of the Trust (although each
Feeder Fund may temporarily hold a de minimis amount of cash). The Portfolios of
the Trust, which have the same investment objective, policies and limitations as
their corresponding Feeder Fund, in turn invest their investable assets directly
in a portfolio of securities. Each of the Feeder Funds thus acquires an indirect
interest in the securities owned by its corresponding Portfolio.

             Each Feeder Fund's investment in its corresponding  Portfolio is in
the form of a  non-transferable  beneficial  interest.  Members  of the  general
public may not purchase a direct interest in a Portfolio of the Trust.  However,
in  addition  to selling an  interest to its  corresponding  Feeder  Fund,  each
Portfolio may sell interests to other affiliated and  non-affiliated  investment
companies  and/or  institutional  investors.  Such  investors  will  invest in a
Portfolio on the same terms and conditions as its corresponding  Feeder Fund and
will pay a  proportionate  share of the  Portfolio's  expenses.  Other investors
investing in a Portfolio,  however, are not required to sell their shares at the
same public offering price as the corresponding Feeder Fund due to variations in
sales commissions and other operating expenses. Therefore,  investors in each of
the  Feeder  Funds  should  be  aware  that  these  differences  may  result  in
differences in returns  experienced by investors in other  investment  companies
which may invest exclusively in the Portfolios.  Such differences in returns are
also present in other mutual fund structures, including funds that have multiple
classes of shares.  Currently,  of the investment  companies which may invest in
the  Portfolios,  only shares of the Feeder Funds are  available for purchase by
the general public in the United States.  Information regarding the availability
of shares of any other fund that may invest in a Portfolio  in the future can be
obtained by calling 1-800-SKANDIA.

             The Directors of the Company believe that the "master/feeder"  fund
structure  offers  opportunities  for  substantial  growth in the  assets of the
Portfolios  that may enable the  Portfolios  to realize  economies of scale that
could  reduce the  Portfolios'  operating  expenses,  thereby  producing  higher
returns and  benefiting  the  shareholders  of the Feeder Funds. A Feeder Fund's
investment in its corresponding Portfolio may, however, be adversely affected by
the actions of other investors in the Portfolio, if any. For example, if a large
investor  withdraws  from a Portfolio,  the remaining  investors may  experience
higher  pro  rata  operating   expenses,   thereby   producing   lower  returns.
Additionally,  a  Portfolio  may become less  diverse,  resulting  in  increased
portfolio  risk, and experience  decreasing  economies of scale.  However,  this
possibility  exists as well for traditionally  structured funds which have large
or institutional investors.  Funds which invest all their assets in interests in
a separate  investment  company are a relatively  new  development in the mutual
fund industry and,  therefore,  may be subject to  additional  regulations  than
traditionally structured mutual funds.

             Each of the Feeder  Funds may withdraw  (completely  redeem) all of
its assets from its corresponding  Portfolio at any time if the Directors of the
Company determine that it is in the best interest of the Fund to do so. A Feeder
Fund might withdraw, for example, if other investors in the Fund's corresponding
Portfolio  voted to, by a vote of all investors in the Portfolio  (including the
Fund), change the investment objective, policies or limitations of the Portfolio
in a manner not  acceptable  to the  Directors  of the Company.  The  investment
performance  of a Feeder Fund may be affected by a withdrawal  of all its assets
from a corresponding Portfolio. A withdrawal could also result in a distribution
"in kind" of portfolio  securities  (as opposed to a cash  distribution)  by the
Portfolio to the Feeder Fund. If  securities  are  distributed,  the Feeder Fund
could incur brokerage, tax or other charges in converting the securities to cash
or purchasing other securities. In addition, a distribution "in kind" may result
in a less diversified portfolio of investments or adversely affect the liquidity
of the Feeder Fund's investment portfolio.  In the event a Feeder Fund withdraws
all of its assets from its  corresponding  Portfolio,  or the  Directors  of the
Company  determines  that the  investment  objective of a Portfolio is no longer
consistent with the investment  objective of its corresponding Feeder Fund, such
Directors would consider what action might be taken,  including investing all of
the  Fund's  investable  assets  in  another  pooled  investment  entity  having
substantially  the  same  investment  objective  as the  Fund  or  retaining  an
investment  adviser to manage the Fund's assets  directly in accordance with the
Fund's investment objective, policies and limitations.

             The Trust's  Agreement  and  Declaration  of Trust  provides that a
Portfolio will continue without  limitation of time unless terminated by vote of
investors  holding  at  least a  majority  of the  interests  of such  Portfolio
entitled to vote or by the Trustees of the Trust by written  notice to investors
of such Portfolio. This provision is consistent with treatment of each Portfolio
as a partnership for federal income tax purposes.

             Investor Meetings and Voting. Each Portfolio normally will not hold
meetings of  investors  except as required by the 1940 Act.  Each  investor in a
Portfolio  (including a Feeder Fund) will be entitled to vote in  proportion  to
its relative beneficial interest in the Portfolio.  Whenever a Feeder Fund as an
investor  in a  Portfolio  is  requested  to vote  on  matters  pertaining  to a
Portfolio  (other than the termination of a Portfolio's  business,  which may be
determined by the Trustees of the Trust without  investor  approval),  such Fund
will hold a meeting  of Fund  shareholders  and will vote its  interest  in such
Portfolio for or against such matters  proportionately  to the  instructions  to
vote  for or  against  such  matters  received  from  Fund  shareholders.  Other
investors in the Portfolio may alone or collectively  acquire  sufficient voting
interests in the Portfolio to control  matters  relating to the operation of the
Portfolio,  which could cause or require the Fund to withdraw its  investment in
the Portfolio or take other appropriate action.

             Certain Provisions.  The Trust's Agreement and Declaration of Trust
provides that the Feeder Funds and any other  entities  permitted to invest in a
Portfolio of the Trust (e.g., other U.S. and foreign investment  companies,  and
common and  commingled  trust funds) will each be liable for all  obligations of
each  such  Portfolio  in the  event  that  the  Trust  fails  to  satisfy  such
liabilities  and  obligations.  However,  the risk of an investor in a Portfolio
(including  a Feeder  Fund)  incurring  financial  loss beyond the amount of its
investment on account of such liability is limited to circumstances in which the
Portfolio had inadequate insurance and was unable to meet its obligations out of
its assets. Accordingly, the Trustees of the Trust believe that neither a Feeder
Fund nor its  shareholders  will be  adversely  affected  by  reason of the Fund
investing in a corresponding Portfolio of the Trust.



<PAGE>


                             MANAGEMENT OF THE FUNDS

THE DIRECTORS, TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS:

             The  Directors  of the Company  and the  Trustees of the Trust have
oversight  responsibility  for  the  operations  of  each  Fund  and  Portfolio,
respectively.  As of the date of this  Prospectus,  each of the Directors of the
Company also serves as a Trustee of the Trust.  The Directors of the Company and
the Trustees of the Trust,  including a majority of the  Directors  and Trustees
who are not "interested  persons" (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the Company or
the Trust,  respectively,  have adopted written procedures  designed to identify
and reasonably address any potential  conflicts of interest which might arise as
a result of an "overlap" of Directors and Trustees, including, if necessary, the
creation  of  a  separate  board  of  trustees  of  the  Trust.  For  additional
information  concerning  the  Directors  and  officers of the  Company,  see the
Company's SAI under "Management of the Company."

THE INVESTMENT MANAGER:

             American Skandia  Investment  Services,  Incorporated  ("ASISI," as
previously defined),  One Corporate Drive,  Shelton,  Connecticut 06484, acts as
investment  manager to each of the Non-Feeder  Funds and Portfolios  pursuant to
separate  investment  management  agreements  with the  Company  and the  Trust,
respectively (the "Management Agreements"). Unlike the Non-Feeder Funds, each of
the  Feeder  Funds  invests  all of its  investable  assets  in a  corresponding
Portfolio of the Trust and thus does not require an investment manager. ASISI, a
Connecticut  corporation  organized  in 1991,  is  registered  as an  investment
adviser with the Commission and is a wholly-owned subsidiary of American Skandia
Investment  Holding  Corporation,  whose  indirect  parent is Skandia  Insurance
Company Ltd.  ("Skandia").  Skandia is a Swedish company that owns,  directly or
indirectly, a number of insurance companies in many countries.

             In addition to serving as investment manager to the Company and the
Trust,  ASISI  currently  serves as the investment  manager to American  Skandia
Trust, an open-end management investment company whose shares are made available
to life insurance companies writing variable annuity contracts and variable life
insurance  policies.  Shares  of  American  Skandia  Trust  also may be  offered
directly to qualified pension and retirement plans.

             The  Management  Agreements  provide  that ASISI will  furnish each
Non-Feeder Fund and Portfolio with investment  advice and investment  management
and  administrative  services subject to the supervision of the Directors of the
Company or the Trustees of the Trusts, where applicable,  and in conformity with
the stated  investment  objectives,  policies and  limitations of the applicable
Fund or Portfolio.  The  Investment  Manager is  responsible  for monitoring the
activities of the  Sub-advisors  it engages to manage the  Non-Feeder  Funds and
Portfolios  and reporting on such  activities to the Directors of the Company or
the Trustees of the Trust,  where applicable.  The Investment  Manager must also
provide or obtain for the Non-Feeder  Funds and the  Portfolios,  and thereafter
supervise,  such executive,  administrative,  accounting custody, transfer agent
and shareholder  servicing  services as are deemed advisable by the Directors of
the Company or the Trustees of the Trust, where applicable.

THE SUB-ADVISORS:

             ASISI currently  engages the following  Sub-advisors to conduct the
investment programs of each Non-Feeder Fund and Portfolio in accordance with the
Fund or  Portfolio's  investment  objective,  policies and  limitations  and any
investment guidelines established by the Investment Manager. Each Sub-advisor is
responsible  for,  subject to the  supervision  and  control  of the  Investment
Manager,  the purchase,  retention and disposition of securities  represented in
the Fund or Portfolio's investment portfolio.

             Unless  otherwise  noted,  each portfolio  manager listed below has
managed his or her respective Fund or Portfolio since its inception.

   
             Founders Asset Management,  Inc. ("Founders") serves as Sub-advisor
for the  ASAF  Founders  International  Small  Capitalization  Fund and the ASAF
Founders Small  Capitalization  Fund.  Founders,  located at Founders  Financial
Center,  2930  East  Third  Avenue,  Denver,  Colorado  80206,  has  acted as an
investment  advisor  since 1938 and  serves as  investment  advisor to  Founders
Discovery,  Frontier, Passport, Special, International Equity, Worldwide Growth,
Growth,  Blue Chip,  Balanced,  Government  Securities,  and Money Market Funds.
Founders, which is also the investment advisor for a number of private accounts,
managed assets aggregating approximately $6.7 billion as of September 30, 1997.
    

     The portfolio manager responsible for the day-to-day management of the ASAF
Founders  International Small  Capitalization Fund is Michael W. Gerding, a Vice
President of  Investments  of  Founders.  Mr.  Gerding is a chartered  financial
analyst who has been part of Founders' investment department since 1990..

             The portfolio manager responsible for the day-to-day  management of
the ASAF Founders Small  Capitalization Fund is Michael K. Haines, a Senior Vice
President  of  Investments  of Founders.  Mr.  Haines has been  associated  with
Founders  since  1985,  serving as a lead  portfolio  manager  and an  assistant
portfolio manager.

   
     Rowe  Price-Fleming   International,   Inc.   ("Price-Fleming")  serves  as
Sub-advisor  for  the  ASMT  T.  Rowe  Price  International   Equity  Portfolio.
Price-Fleming,  located at 100 East Pratt Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21202, was
founded in 1979 as a joint venture  between T. Rowe Price  Associates,  Inc. and
Robert Fleming  Holdings  Limited.  Price-Fleming  is one of the world's largest
international  mutual fund asset managers with  approximately  $30 billion under
management as of September 30, 1997 in its offices in Baltimore,  London, Tokyo,
Hong Kong and Singapore.
    

     An  investment   advisory  group  has  responsibility  for  the  day-to-day
management  of the  ASMT T.  Rowe  Price  International  Equity  Portfolio.  The
advisory  group for the  Portfolio  consists of Martin G. Wade,  Christopher  D.
Alderson,  Peter B. Askew, Mark J.T.  Edwards,  John R. Ford, James B.M. Seddon,
Benedict R.F. Thomas, and David J.L. Warren. Martin Wade joined Price-Fleming in
1979 and has 27 years of experience  with Fleming Group  (Fleming Group includes
Robert Fleming Holdings Ltd. and/or Jardine Fleming International Holdings Ltd.)
in research,  client service and  investment  management.  Christopher  Alderson
joined  Price-Fleming  in 1988, and has 10 years of experience  with the Fleming
Group in research and portfolio management.  Peter Askew joined Price-Fleming in
1988  and  has 21  years  of  experience  managing  multicurrency  fixed  income
portfolios.  Mark J.T. Edwards joined  Price-Fleming in 1986 and has 15 years of
experience in financial analysis.  John R. Ford joined Price-Fleming in 1982 and
has 16  years  of  experience  with  Fleming  Group in  research  and  portfolio
management.  James B.M. Seddon joined  Price-Fleming in 1987 and has 11 years of
experience in investment  management.  Benedict R.F. Thomas joined Price-Fleming
in 1988 and has 7 years of portfolio  management  experience.  David J.L. Warren
joined  Price-Fleming  in 1984 and has 16 years  experience in equity  research,
fixed income research and portfolio management.

   
             Janus Capital  Corporation  ("Janus") serves as Sub-advisor for the
ASAF Janus  Overseas  Growth Fund and the ASMT Janus Capital  Growth  Portfolio.
Janus, located at 100 Fillmore Street,  Denver,  Colorado 80206-4923,  serves as
the investment  advisor to the Janus Funds, as well as advisor or sub-advisor to
several other mutual funds and individual,  corporate, charitable and retirement
accounts. As of September 30, 1997, Janus managed assets worth approximately $67
billion.  Kansas City Southern Industries,  Inc. ("KCSI") owns approximately 83%
of the  outstanding  voting  stock of Janus,  most of which it acquired in 1984.
KCSI is a publicly-traded holding company whose primary subsidiaries are engaged
in transportation and financial services.
    
             The portfolio manager  responsible for management of the ASAF Janus
Overseas  Growth  Fund is  Helen  Young  Hayes,  Executive  Vice  President  and
portfolio manager of the Janus Worldwide Fund and Janus Overseas Fund. Ms. Hayes
joined Janus in 1987.  She has managed or co-managed  Janus  Worldwide  Fund and
Janus Overseas Fund since their respective inceptions.

     The portfolio manager  responsible for management of the ASMT Janus Capital
Growth  Portfolio  is Scott W.  Schoelzel.  Mr.  Schoelzel,  a Senior  Portfolio
Manager at Janus who has managed the Portfolio since August,  1997, joined Janus
in  January,  1994 as Vice  President  of  Investments.  From 1991 to 1993,  Mr.
Schoelzel was a Portfolio Manager with Founders Asset Management.


   
     T. Rowe Price Associates,  Inc. ("T. Rowe Price") serves as Sub-advisor for
the ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company  Value Fund. T. Rowe Price,  located at 100
East Pratt Street,  Baltimore,  Maryland 21202,  was founded in 1937 by the late
Thomas  Rowe  Price,  Jr.  As of  September  30,  1997,  T.  Rowe  Price and its
affiliates  managed over $125 billion for approximately  4.5 million  individual
and institutional accounts.
    

     The ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund is managed by an Investment
Advisory  Committee  composed  of  the  following  members:  Preston  G.  Athey,
Chairman,  Hugh M. Evans III and Gregory A. McCrickard.  The Committee  Chairman
has  day-to-day  responsibility  for managing the  Portfolio  and works with the
Committee in developing and executing the Portfolio's  investment  program.  Mr.
Athey joined T. Rowe Price in 1978 and has been managing investments since 1982.

   
             Robertson,   Stephens  &  Company   Investment   Management,   L.P.
("Robertson  Stephens")  serves as Sub-advisor  for the ASAF Robertson  Stephens
Value + Growth  Fund.  Robertson  Stephens,  a  California  limited  partnership
located at 555 California  Street,  San Francisco,  CA 94104, was formed in 1993
and is  registered  as an investment  advisor with the  Securities  and Exchange
Commission.  The sole  limited  partner  of  Robertson  Stephens  is  Robertson,
Stephens & Company,  L.L.C.,  a major  investment  banking firm  specializing in
emerging growth companies that has developed  substantial  investment  research,
underwriting,  and venture capital expertise. As of September 30, 1997 Robertson
Stephens and its  affiliates  have in excess of $5 billion  under  management in
public and private investment funds. Robertson,  Stephens & Company,  L.L.C., is
an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of BankAmerica Corporation, one of the three
largest bank holding companies in the United States.
    
     Ronald Elijah is the portfolio  manager  responsible  for management of the
ASAF  Robertson  Stephens  Value + Growth  Fund.  Mr.  Elijah  joined  Robertson
Stephens as a portfolio manager in 1992.

   
             Lord,  Abbett & Co. ("Lord  Abbett")  serves as Sub-advisor for the
ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund. Lord Abbett, an investment  manager for
over 68 years, is located at The General Motors Building,  767 Fifth Avenue, New
York,  New York  10153-0203.  As of  September  30,  1997,  Lord Abbett  managed
approximately  $25  billion  in a family  of mutual  funds  and  other  advisory
accounts.
    

     The portfolio  manager  responsible  for management of the ASAF Lord Abbett
Growth and Income Fund is W. Thomas Hudson,  Jr., Executive Vice President.  Mr.
Hudson has held certain  positions  in the equity  research  department  of Lord
Abbett since 1982.


   
             INVESCO Trust Company  ("INVESCO")  serves as  Sub-advisor  for the
ASMT INVESCO Equity Income Portfolio.  INVESCO,  a trust company founded in 1969
and  located  at 7800 East Union  Avenue,  P.O.  Box  173706,  Denver,  Colorado
80217-3706, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of INVESCO Funds Group, Inc., which was
established in 1932. INVESCO serves as sub-advisor to INVESCO Growth Fund, Inc.,
INVESCO Dynamics Fund, Inc.,  INVESCO Money Market Funds,  Inc.,  INVESCO Income
Funds, Inc., INVESCO Tax-Free Income Funds, Inc., INVESCO Strategic  Portfolios,
Inc., INVESCO Emerging  Opportunity Funds, Inc., INVESCO Industrial Income Fund,
Inc., INVESCO Multiple Asset Funds, Inc., INVESCO Specialty Funds, Inc., INVESCO
Strategic  Portfolios,  Inc. and INVESCO Variable Investment Funds, Inc. INVESCO
Funds Group, Inc. and INVESCO are part of a global financial  services firm that
managed  approximately  $177.5  billion  of assets  as of  September  30,  1997.
AMVESCAP PLC (formerly,  "INVESCO PLC"), the parent of INVESCO Funds Group, Inc.
and INVESCO, is one of the largest independent  investment management businesses
in the world.
    

     The portfolio  managers  responsible  for the day-to-day  management of the
ASMT INVESCO Equity Income Portfolio are Charles P. Mayer, Portfolio Co-Manager,
and  Donovan  J.  (Jerry)  Paul,  Portfolio  Co-Manager.  Mr.  Mayer  began  his
investment  career in 1969 and is now a senior vice  president of INVESCO.  From
1993 to 1994, he was vice president of INVESCO,  and from 1984 to 1993, he was a
portfolio  manager with  Westinghouse  Pension.  Mr. Paul entered the investment
management  industry  in 1976 and has been a senior  vice  president  of INVESCO
since  1994.  From  1993  to  1994,  he  was  president  of  Quixote  Investment
Management, Inc.

   
             American Century Investment  Management,  Inc. ("American Century,"
formally known as, "Investors Research  Corporation")  serves as Sub-advisor for
the ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund. American Century,  located at
American Century Towers, 4500 Main Street, Kansas City, Missouri 64111, has been
providing investment advisory services to investment companies and institutional
clients since 1958. In June 1995, American Century Companies,  Inc. ("ACC"), the
parent of American Century,  acquired Benham Management  International,  Inc. In
the acquisition,  Benham Management  Corporation ("BMC"), the investment adviser
to The Benham Group of mutual  funds,  became a wholly owned  subsidiary of ACC.
Certain  employees of BMC will be providing  investment  management  services to
American  Century  funds,  while  certain  American  Century  employees  will be
providing  investment  management  services to Benham funds. As of September 30,
1997, American Century and its affiliates managed assets totaling  approximately
$63.1 billion.
    

             American Century utilizes a team of portfolio  managers,  assistant
portfolio managers and analysts acting together to manage the assets of the ASAF
American Century  Strategic  Balanced Fund. The portfolio manager members of the
portfolio team  responsible for the day-to-day  management of the equity portion
of the Fund are  James E.  Stowers  III and  Bruce  A.  Wimberly.  Mr.  Stowers,
President and Portfolio Manager,  joined American Century in 1981. Mr. Wimberly,
Portfolio  Manager,  joined American  Century in September 1994 as an Investment
Analyst.  Prior to joining  American  Century,  Mr.  Wimberly  attended  Kellogg
Graduate  School of  Management,  Northwestern  University,  from August 1992 to
August 1994, where he obtained his MBA degree.  The portfolio manager members of
the portfolio team responsible for the day-to-day management of the fixed income
portion of the Fund are Casey Colton, Norman E. Hoops, Brian Howell,  Jeffrey L.
Houston,  David Schroeder and Jeffrey R. Tyler.  Casey Colton joined BMC in 1990
as a Municipal Analyst. Norman Hoops joined American Century in November 1989 as
Vice President and Portfolio  Manager and became Senior Vice President and Fixed
Income  Portfolio  Manager in April 1993.  Brian Howell  joined BMC in 1987 as a
research  analyst  and was  promoted to his  current  position in January  1994.
Jeffrey  Houston has worked for American  Century as a Portfolio  Manager  since
November,  1990. David Schroeder joined BMC in 1990. Jeffrey Tyler,  Senior Vice
President  and  Portfolio  Manager,  joined BMC in January,  1988 as a Portfolio
Manager.

   
             Federated Investment Counseling ("Federated  Investment") serves as
Sub-advisor for the ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund.  Federated  Investment,
located at Federated Investors Tower, Pittsburgh,  Pennsylvania 15222-3779,  was
organized as a Delaware  business  trust in 1989 and is a registered  investment
advisor under the  Investment  Advisers Act of 1940.  Federated  Investment is a
wholly owned subsidiary of Federated  Investors.  Federated Investment and other
subsidiaries of Federated  Investors serve as investment advisors to a number of
investment  companies  and private  accounts.  As of September  30, 1997,  total
assets under  management or  administration  by these and other  subsidiaries of
Federated Investors was over $130 billion.
    

     The portfolio  managers  responsible  for the day-to-day  management of the
ASAF  Federated  High  Yield Bond Fund are Mark E.  Durbiano  and  Stephanie  L.
Bachhuber. Mr. Durbiano joined Federated Investors in 1982 and has been a Senior
Vice President of an affiliate of Federated Investment since January, 1996. From
1988  through  1995,  Mr.  Durbiano  was a Vice  President  of an  affiliate  of
Federated Investment. Mr. Durbiano is a Chartered Financial Analyst and received
his M.B.A. in finance from the University of Pittsburgh.  Ms.  Bachhuber  joined
Federated  Investors in 1993 as an Investment  Analyst and has been an Assistant
Vice President of an affiliate of Federated  Investment since 1996. From 1990 to
1993,  Ms.  Bachhuber  served as an Operations  Analyst at Lehman  Brothers.  Ms
Bachhuber  earned  her  M.B.A.,  with a  concentration  in  finance,  from  Duke
University in 1993.

   
             Pacific   Investment   Management   Company   ("PIMCO")  serves  as
Sub-advisor  for the ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond Portfolio.  PIMCO,  located at
840 Newport Center Drive,  Suite 360,  Newport Beach,  California  92660,  is an
investment  counseling  firm  founded  in 1971.  PIMCO is a  subsidiary  general
partnership of PIMCO Advisors L.P. ("PIMCO  Advisors").  A majority  interest in
PIMCO Advisors is held by PIMCO Partners,  G.P., a general  partnership  between
Pacific  Financial  Asset  Management  Corporation,  an  indirect  wholly  owned
subsidiary of Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company, and PIMCO Partners,  LLC, a
California  limited  liability company  controlled by the managing  directors of
PIMCO.  PIMCO is a  registered  investment  advisor  with the  Commission  and a
commodity  trading  advisor with the CFTC. As of September  30, 1997,  PIMCO had
over $108 billion of assets under management.
    

     The portfolio manager responsible for the day-to-day management of the ASMT
PIMCO Total  Return Bond  Portfolio  is William H. Gross.  Mr. Gross is Managing
Director of PIMCO and has been associated with the firm since 1971.

   
     J.P.  Morgan   Investment   Management  Inc.  ("J.P.   Morgan")  serves  as
Sub-advisor for the ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio. J.P. Morgan, with principal
offices  at 522  Fifth  Avenue,  New York,  New York  10036,  is a wholly  owned
subsidiary  of J.P.  Morgan & Co.  Incorporated  ("J.P.  Morgan & Co."),  a bank
holding company organized under the laws of Delaware which is located at 60 Wall
Street,  New York, New York 10260.  J.P.  Morgan & Co.,  through J.P. Morgan and
other   subsidiaries,   offers  a  wide  range  of  services  to   governmental,
institutional,  corporate  and  individual  customers,  and  acts as  investment
adviser to  individual  and  institutional  clients with  combined  assets under
management of  approximately  $246 billion as of September 30, 1997. J.P. Morgan
has  managed  investments  for  clients  for almost a century,  since  1913.  In
addition,  J.P.  Morgan has managed  short-term  fixed income assets for clients
since 1969. As of September 30, 1997,  these  short-term fixed assets under J.P.
Morgan's management totaled over $25 billion.
    



<PAGE>


FEES AND EXPENSES:

             Investment  Management Fees. ASISI receives a monthly fee from each
Non-Feeder  Fund and Portfolio for the  performance of its services.  ASISI pays
each  Sub-advisor a portion of such fee for the performance of the  sub-advisory
services  at no  additional  cost  to any  Fund  or  Portfolio.  The  investment
management  fee with respect to each  Non-Feeder  Fund and Portfolio may differ,
reflecting the investment  objective,  policies and  limitations of each Fund or
Portfolio  and  the  nature  of  each  Management   Agreement  and  Sub-advisory
Agreement.  Each Non-Feeder Fund and  Portfolio's  investment  management fee is
accrued daily for the purposes of determining the offering and redemption  price
of the Fund's shares. The fees payable to ASISI, based on a stated percentage of
the Non-Feeder Fund or Portfolio's average daily net assets, are as follows:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Fund/Portfolio:                                                                        Annual Rate:

<S>                                                                     <C>                <C>                   
ASAF Founders International Small Capitalization Fund:                  1.10% of the first $100  million;  plus 1.00
                                                                        % of the amount over $100 million

ASMT T. Rowe Price International Equity Portfolio:                                          1.00%

   
ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund:                                                            1.10%
    

ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund:                                                    0.90%

ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund:                                                1.00%

   
ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund:                                                1.10%

ASMT Janus Capital Growth Portfolio:                                                        1.00%
    

ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund:                                                    1.00%

ASMT INVESCO Equity Income Portfolio:                                                       0.75%

ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund:                                              0.90%

ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund:                                                        0.70%

ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond Portfolio:                                                     0.65%

ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio:                                                            0.50%
</TABLE>

             Sub-Advisory  Fees.  ASISI pays each Sub-advisor on a monthly basis
for  the  performance  of  sub-advisory   services.   The  fee  payable  to  the
Sub-advisors  with respect to each  Non-Feeder  Fund and  Portfolio  may differ,
reflecting,   among  other  things,  the  investment  objective,   policies  and
limitations  of each  Fund or  Portfolio  and the  nature  of each  Sub-advisory
Agreement.  Each  Sub-advisor's fee is accrued daily for purposes of determining
the  amount  payable by the  Investment  Manager  to the  Sub-advisor.  The fees
payable to the Sub-advisors, based on a stated percentage of the Non-Feeder Fund
or Portfolio's average daily net assets, are as follows:

     Founders Asset Management,  Inc. for the ASAF Founders  International Small
Capitalization  Fund: An annual rate of .60% of the portion of the average daily
net assets of the Fund not in excess of $100  million;  plus .50% of the portion
over $100 million.

   
             Rowe Price-Fleming  International,  Inc. for the ASMT T. Rowe Price
International  Equity  Portfolio:  An annual  rate of .75% of the portion of the
average  daily net assets of the  Portfolio  not in excess of $20 million;  plus
 .60% of the portion over $20 million but not in excess of $50 million; plus .50%
of the  portion  over $50  million.  When the  average  daily net  assets of the
Portfolio  equal or exceed  $200  million,  the annual  rate will be .50% of the
entire average daily net assets of the Portfolio.
    

   
             Janus Capital  Corporation for the ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund:
An annual  rate of .60% of the  portion of the  average  daily net assets of the
Fund not in excess of $100  million;  when the  average  daily net assets of the
Fund equal or exceed  $100  million,  the annual rate will be .50% of the entire
average daily net assets of the Fund.
    

     Founders Asset Management,  Inc. for the ASAF Founders Small Capitalization
Fund:  An annual rate of .50% of the portion of the average  daily net assets of
the Fund not in  excess of $250  million;  plus  .45% of the  portion  over $250
million.

     T. Rowe Price  Associates,  Inc.  for the ASAF T. Rowe Price Small  Company
Value Fund: An annual rate of .60% of the average daily net assets of the Fund.

   
             Robertson,  Stephens & Company Investment Management,  L.P. for the
ASAF  Robertson  Stephens  Value + Growth  Fund:  An annual  rate of .60% of the
portion  of the  average  daily  net  assets  of the Fund not in  excess of $200
million;  when the  average  daily net assets of the Fund  equal or exceed  $200
million,  the annual rate will be .50% of the entire average daily net assets of
the Fund.
    

     Janus Capital  Corporation for the ASMT Janus Capital Growth Portfolio:  An
annual rate of .45% of the average daily net assets of the Portfolio.

   
             Lord, Abbett & Co. for the ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund:
An annual  rate of .50% of the  portion of the  average  daily net assets of the
Fund not in excess of $200  million;  plus .40% of the portion over $200 million
but not in excess of $500  million;  plus .375% of the portion over $500 million
but not in excess of $700  million;  plus .35% of the portion  over $700 million
but not in excess of $900 million; when the average daily net assets of the Fund
equal or exceed $900 million, the annual rate will be .30% of the entire average
daily net assets of the Fund.
    

     INVESCO Trust  Company for the ASMT INVESCO  Equity  Income  Portfolio:  An
annual rate of .35% of the average daily net assets of the Portfolio.

     American Century Investment Management,  Inc. for the ASAF American Century
Strategic  Balanced  Fund:  An annual rate of .50% of the portion of the average
daily net  assets of the Fund not in  excess  of $50  million;  plus .45% of the
portion over $50 million.

             Federated  Investment  Counseling for the ASAF Federated High Yield
Bond Fund: An annual rate of .25% of the portion of the average daily net assets
of the Fund not in excess of $200  million;  plus .20% of the portion  over $200
million.

     Pacific Investment  Management Company for the ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond
Portfolio:  An  annual  rate of .25% of the  average  daily  net  assets  of the
Portfolio.

     J.P.  Morgan  Investment  Management  Inc.  for the ASMT JPM  Money  Market
Portfolio: An annual rate of .15% of the portion of the average daily net assets
of the Portfolio  not in excess of $500  million;  plus .09% of the portion over
$500  million but not in excess of $1 billion;  plus .06% of the portion over $1
billion..

             Fee Waivers.  The Investment  Manager and the Sub-advisors may from
time to time agree to voluntarily  waive or reduce their  respective fees, while
retaining  their ability to be reimbursed for such fees prior to the end of each
fiscal year.  Such  voluntary fee waivers or reductions  may be rescinded at any
time and without notice to investors.

   
             The  Investment  Manager  has  voluntarily  agreed  to waive  until
October 31, 1998 portions of its investment management fees equal to .10% of the
average  daily net assets of the ASAF Janus  Overseas  Growth Fund,  .10% of the
average daily net assets of the ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund, and
 .20% of the average  daily net assets of the ASAF Lord Abbett  Growth and Income
Fund.
    

             Commencing  June 1, 1997, Rowe Price Fleming  International,  Inc.,
the Sub-advisor for the ASMT T. Rowe Price International  Equity Portfolio,  has
voluntarily  agreed to waive a portion of its  sub-advisory fee equal to .25% of
the portion of the average  daily net assets of the  Portfolio  not in excess of
$20 million;  plus .10% of the portion over $20 million but not in excess of $50
million. When the average daily net assets of the Portfolio equal or exceed $200
million, such voluntary fee waiver is no longer applicable, and the sub-advisory
annual fee rate of .50% of the average daily net assets of the Portfolio will be
applied.

   
             Commencing  January  1,  1998,  Janus  Capital   Corporation,   the
Sub-advisor for the ASAF Janus Overseas  Growth Fund, has voluntarily  agreed to
waive a portion  of its  sub-advisory  fee equal to .10% of the  portion  of the
average  daily net  assets of the Fund not in excess of $100  million.  When the
average  daily  net  assets  of the Fund  equal or  exceed  $100  million,  such
voluntary fee waiver is no longer  applicable,  and the sub-advisory  annual fee
rate of .50% of the entire average daily net assets of the Fund will be applied.

             Commencing   January  1,  1998,   Robertson,   Stephens  &  Company
Investment  Management,  L.P., the Sub-advisor  for the ASAF Robertson  Stephens
Value  +  Growth  Fund,  has  voluntarily  agreed  to  waive  a  portion  of its
sub-advisory fee equal to .10% of the portion of the average daily net assets of
the Fund not in excess of $200 million. When the average daily net assets of the
Fund  equal or exceed  $200  million,  such  voluntary  fee  waiver is no longer
applicable,  and the sub-advisory  annual fee rate of .50% of the entire average
daily net assets of the Fund will be applied.

             Commencing January 1, 1998, Lord, Abbett & Co., the Sub-advisor for
the ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund, has  voluntarily  agreed to waive a
portion of its  sub-advisory  fee equal to .20% of the  portion  of the  average
daily net  assets of the Fund not in  excess of $200  million;  plus .10% of the
portion over $200 million but not in excess of $500  million;  plus .075% of the
portion  over $500 million but not in excess of $700  million;  plus .05% of the
portion  over $700 million but not in excess of $900  million.  When the average
daily net assets of the Fund equal or exceed $900  million,  such  voluntary fee
waiver is no longer applicable,  and the sub-advisory annual fee rate of .30% of
the entire average daily net assets of the Fund will be applied.
    

             Commencing June 1, 1997, J.P. Morgan  Investment  Management  Inc.,
the Sub-advisor for the ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio,  has voluntarily agreed
to waive a portion of its  sub-advisory  fee equal to .06% of the portion of the
average daily net assets of the  Portfolio  not in excess of $500 million;  plus
 .03% of the portion over $500 million but not in excess of $1 billion.

             Expenses.  Each  Fund  and  Portfolio  pays  all of  its  expenses,
including,  but not  limited  to,  the costs  incurred  in  connection  with the
maintenance of its registration,  as applicable, under the 1933 Act and the 1940
Act, printing and mailing prospectuses and SAIs to shareholders,  certain office
and  financial  accounting  services,  taxes  or  governmental  fees,  brokerage
commissions,  Fund share pricing, custodial,  transfer and shareholder servicing
agent  costs,   expenses  of  outside  counsel  and   independent   accountants,
preparation  (including,  printing  and  mailing)  of  shareholder  reports  and
expenses of director and shareholder meetings. Expenses incurred by the Funds or
Portfolios not directly attributable to any specific Fund(s) or Portfolio(s) are
allocated on the basis of the net assets of the  respective  Fund or  Portfolio.
For additional information regarding Fund and Portfolio expenses, as well as any
voluntary agreements by the Investment Manager to limit such expenses,  see this
Prospectus  under  "Expense  Information"  and the  Company's  SAI  under  "Fund
Expenses."

THE ADMINISTRATOR:

             PFPC Inc. (the "Administrator"),  103 Bellevue Parkway, Wilmington,
Delaware  19809,  a  Delaware  corporation  which  is an  indirect  wholly-owned
subsidiary  of PNC Financial  Corp.,  serves as the  administrator  for both the
Company and the Trust pursuant to separate  administration  agreements  with the
Company  and the Trust,  respectively  (the  "Administration  Agreements").  The
Administrator  provides certain fund accounting and  administrative  services to
the Company and the Trust, including, among other services,  accounting relating
to the Company and the Trust and the  investment  transactions  of the foregoing
and computing daily NAVs. The Administrator  does not have any responsibility or
authority  for the  management  of the  assets of the Funds or  Portfolios,  the
determination of their investment policies,  or for any matter pertaining to the
distribution of securities issued by the Company.

             As  compensation  for the services and  facilities  provided by the
Administrator  to the Company,  the Company has agreed to pay the  Administrator
its "out-of-pocket" expenses, plus a monthly multi-class fee of $3,000 per Fund,
plus a monthly  feeder fee of $2,000 per Feeder  Fund,  plus the  greater of the
following  monthly fee based on the average  daily net assets of the  Non-Feeder
Funds -- 0.10% (first $200 million),  0.06% (next $200  million),  0.0275% (next
$200  million),  0.02% (next $400  million)  and 0.01% (over $1 billion) -- or a
minimum monthly fee of $6,250 per Non-Feeder Fund. The  Administrator has agreed
to waive the above  monthly  multi-class  fee,  the  monthly  feeder fee and the
minimum  monthly  fee for the first two months of each  Fund's  operations,  and
thereafter will decrease such waiver by 10% increments for each of the remaining
ten months of the initial contract year.

             In  addition,  as  compensation  for the  services  and  facilities
provided  by the  Administrator  to the  Trust,  the Trust has agreed to pay the
Administrator its  "out-of-pocket"  expenses,  plus the greater of the following
monthly fee based on the  average  daily net assets of the  Portfolios  -- 0.12%
(first $200  million),  0.085% (next $200  million),  0.05% (next $200 million),
0.025% (next $400 million) and 0.02% ($1+  billion) -- or a minimum  monthly fee
of $8,333 per Portfolio. The Administrator has agreed to waive the above minimum
monthly  fee for the  first  two  months  of each  Portfolio's  operations,  and
thereafter will decrease such waiver by 10% increments for each of the remaining
ten months of the initial  contract  year.  For an additional  discussion of the
services provided by the Administrator under the Administration  Agreements, and
the  Administrator's  "out-of-pocket"  expenses,  see the  Company's  SAI  under
"Investment Advisory & Administration Services."

                             PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER:

             Each   Non-Feeder   Fund  and  Portfolio  may  sell  its  portfolio
securities,  regardless  of the length of time that they have been held,  if the
Sub-advisor  and/or the Investment Manager determines that such a disposition is
in the  Fund's  or  Portfolio's  best  interest.  Portfolio  turnover  rates may
increase as a result of the need for a Fund or Portfolio  to effect  significant
amounts of purchases or  redemptions  of portfolio  securities  due to economic,
market,  or other  factors that are not within the  Sub-advisor's  or Investment
Manager's  control.  Although  it is not  possible to predict  future  portfolio
turnover  rates  accurately,  and such  rates may vary from year to year,  it is
anticipated  that  annual  portfolio  turnover  rates for the ASMT T. Rowe Price
International  Equity  Portfolio,  ASAF T. Rowe Price Small  Company Value Fund,
ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund,  ASMT INVESCO  Equity Income  Portfolio
and ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund will not exceed 100% under normal market
conditions.   The  annual  portfolio   turnover  rates  for  the  ASAF  Founders
International Small  Capitalization  Fund, ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund, ASAF
Founders Small Capitalization Fund, ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund,
ASMT Janus Capital Growth Portfolio,  ASAF American Century  Strategic  Balanced
Fund and ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond  Portfolio are not  anticipated  to exceed
150%, 200%, 150%, 250%, 200%, 150% and 350%,  respectively,  under normal market
conditions.

             A 100% portfolio turnover rate would occur if all of the securities
in a portfolio of investments  were replaced during a given period.  A high rate
of portfolio  turnover  (generally in excess of 100%)  involves  correspondingly
higher brokerage  commission expenses and other transaction costs, which must be
ultimately borne by a Fund's  shareholders.  Trading in fixed income  securities
does not  generally  involve  the  payment of  brokerage  commissions,  but does
involve  indirect  transaction  costs.  High  portfolio  turnover rates may also
generate  larger taxable income and taxable capital gains than would result from
lower portfolio  turnover rates and may create higher tax liability for a Fund's
shareholders.  For  additional  information  regarding tax  liability,  see this
Prospectus  under  "Dividends,  Capital  Gains and Taxes" and the  Company's SAI
under  "Additional Tax  Considerations."  For additional  information  regarding
portfolio  turnover,   in  general,  see  the  Company's  SAI  under  "Portfolio
Transactions."

BROKERAGE ALLOCATION:

             Generally,   the  primary   consideration   in  placing   portfolio
securities  transactions  with  broker-dealers  for execution is to obtain,  and
maintain the  availability  of, execution at the best net price available and in
the most  effective  manner  possible.  The Company's and the Trust's  brokerage
allocation  policy  may  permit  a Fund  or  Portfolio,  respectively,  to pay a
broker-dealer  which furnishes  research  services a higher commission than that
which might be charged by another  broker-dealer which does not furnish research
services,  provided that such commission is deemed reasonable in relation to the
value of the services provided by such broker-dealer.  In addition,  each Fund's
or Portfolio's  Sub-advisor may consider the use of broker-dealers  that are, or
might be deemed to be, their affiliates,  and may consider sale of shares of the
Funds, or may consider or follow  recommendations of the Investment Manager that
take such sales into account,  as factors in the selection of  broker-dealers to
effect transactions, subject to the requirements of best net price available and
most favorable  execution.  In this regard,  the  Investment  Manager may direct
certain  of the  Sub-advisors  to try to  effect  a  portion  of  their  Fund or
Portfolio's  investment  transactions through broker-dealers that sell shares of
the Fund (or corresponding  Fund, in the case of the Portfolios),  to the extent
consistent  with best net price available and most favorable  execution.  For an
additional discussion of portfolio  transactions and brokerage  allocation,  see
the Company's SAI under "Portfolio Transactions."

                       DIVIDENDS, CAPITAL GAINS AND TAXES

DIVIDENDS:

             Each Fund intends to distribute substantially all of its net income
and capital gains to shareholders no less frequently than once a year. Normally,
dividends from net investment  income of the ASAF Founders  International  Small
Capitalization  Fund, ASAF T. Rowe Price  International  Equity Fund, ASAF Janus
Overseas  Growth Fund,  ASAF Founders Small  Capitalization  Fund,  ASAF T. Rowe
Price Small Company Value Fund, ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund, and
ASAF Janus  Capital  Growth Fund will be declared and paid  annually;  dividends
from the net  investment  income of the ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund,
ASAF INVESCO  Equity Income Fund and ASAF American  Century  Strategic  Balanced
Fund will be declared and paid semi-annually;  dividends from the net investment
income of the ASAF Total Return Bond Fund will be declared  and paid  quarterly;
and dividends from net  investment  income of the ASAF Federated High Yield Bond
Fund and ASAF JPM Money  Market  Fund will be declared  daily and paid  monthly.
Dividends  from the ASAF JPM Money  Market Fund are not paid on shares until the
day following the date on which the shares are issued.

DISTRIBUTION OPTIONS:

             When you open your  account,  specify on your  application  how you
want to receive your distributions.  Unless you specify otherwise, all dividends
and  distributions  will  be  automatically  reinvested  in  additional  full or
fractional  shares  of each  Fund.  You have  the  following  five  distribution
options:

             Reinvest All  Distributions  in the Fund. You can elect to reinvest
all dividends and long term capital gains  distributions in additional shares of
the applicable Fund.

     Reinvest Income Dividends Only. You can elect to reinvest investment income
dividends in a Fund while receiving capital gains distributions.

     Reinvest  Long-Term Capital Gains Only. You can elect to reinvest long-term
capital gains in the Fund while receiving dividends.

     Receive All Distributions in Cash. You can elect to receive a check for all
dividends and long-term capital gains distributions.

     Reinvest Distributions in Another Fund of the Company. You can reinvest all
distributions in another Fund of the Company.  For additional  information about
reinvesting your  distributions,  see this Prospectus under "Special  Investment
Programs and Privileges."

TAXES:

             Each Fund intends to qualify as a regulated  investment  company by
satisfying  the  requirements   under  Subchapter  M  of  the  Code,   including
requirements with respect to diversification  of assets,  distribution of income
and sources of income.  It is the Company's  policy to have each Fund distribute
to shareholders  all of its investment  income (net of expenses) and any capital
gains (net of capital losses) in accordance with the timing requirements imposed
by the  Code so that the Fund  will  satisfy  the  distribution  requirement  of
Subchapter M and not be subject to federal income taxes or the 4% excise tax.

             So long as a Fund qualifies as a regulated  investment  company for
federal  income tax  purposes,  the Fund,  in  computing  its income  subject to
federal   income  tax,  is   entitled  to  deduct  all   dividends   other  than
"preferential" dividends paid by it to its shareholders during the taxable year.
"Preferential"  dividends are  dividends  other than  dividends  which have been
distributed to shareholders pro rata without preference to any share of stock as
compared with other shares of the same class and without preference to one class
of stock as  compared  with  another,  except in  accordance  with the  former's
dividend  rights as a class.  The  Company  has  received  separate  opinions of
counsel (the "Opinions") from the law firms of Caplin & Drysdale,  Chartered and
Rogers & Wells  which,  collectively,  conclude  that the  multiple-class  share
structure of the Funds would not cause dividends  declared and paid by a Fund to
be treated as  "preferential"  dividends for this purpose.  The Opinions are not
binding  on the  Internal  Revenue  Service  (the  "IRS") and no ruling has been
obtained by the Company from the IRS on the matter. The Company does not believe
that a multiple-class structure having all of the features of the multiple-class
structure of each of the Funds,  including the bonus share feature applicable to
Class X shares of each of the  Funds,  has been  considered  by the IRS in other
rulings.  Furthermore,  the  Opinions  are based on the  application  of current
federal  income tax law and  relevant  authorities,  and  subsequent  changes in
federal tax law or judicial or administrative  decisions or  pronouncements  may
supersede or affect the conclusions in the Opinions.  If dividends  declared and
paid by a Fund on any  class of shares  were to be  treated  as  "preferential,"
dividends paid by the Fund to  shareholders  on all classes of shares during the
taxable year would become  non-deductible.  In this event, the Fund would not be
treated as a regulated investment company and the Fund would be taxed on its net
income,  without any  deductions  for dividends  paid to its  shareholders.  The
resulting  federal and state income tax liability,  and any related interest and
penalties, would be payable from and to the extent of such Fund's then available
assets and ultimately would be borne by all current shareholders.  The treatment
of dividends declared and paid during the taxable year on any class of shares as
preferential,  and the resulting  failure of a Fund to be treated as a regulated
investment  company,  could have additional personal income tax consequences for
shareholders of the Fund,  including the taxation of  distributions  as ordinary
income that otherwise would have been classified as net capital gains.

             Upward  adjustments  in the  principal  value of  inflation-indexed
bonds will be includable currently in a Fund's gross income  notwithstanding the
absence of a  corresponding  cash payment.  The Fund's need to  distribute  such
income   may   compel   liquidation   of   investments   under   disadvantageous
circumstances.

             Distributions  by each Fund of its net  investment  income  and the
excess,  if any,  of its net  short-term  capital  gain  over its net  long-term
capital loss are taxable to shareholders as ordinary income. These distributions
are treated as dividends for federal  income tax purposes,  but will qualify for
the 70%  dividends-received  deduction  for corporate  shareholders  only to the
extent  designated  in a  notice  from  the  Fund to its  shareholders  as being
attributable to dividends  received by the Fund.  Distributions by a Fund of the
excess,  if any,  of its net  long-term  capital  gain  over its net  short-term
capital loss will be  designated as capital gain  dividends  that are taxable to
shareholders as long-term capital gains, regardless of the length of time shares
are held by the shareholder.

             Portions  of  certain  Funds'  investment  income may be subject to
foreign  income taxes  withheld at source.  The Company may, but is not required
to, elect to  "pass-through" to the shareholders of any such Funds these foreign
taxes, in which event each  shareholder will be required to include his pro rata
portion  thereof in his gross income,  but will be able to deduct or (subject to
various limitations) claim a foreign tax credit for such amount.

             Distributions  to  shareholders  will be treated in the same manner
for  federal  income tax  purposes  whether  received in cash or  reinvested  in
additional shares of the Funds. In general, distributions by the Funds are taken
into account by the  shareholders  in the year in which they are made.  However,
certain distributions made during January will be treated as having been paid by
the Fund and received by the  shareholders on December 31 of the preceding year.
A statement  setting  forth the federal  income tax status of all  distributions
made or deemed  made  during the year,  including  any  amount of foreign  taxes
"passed  through," will be sent to  shareholders  promptly after the end of each
year.  Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  distributions  by the Funds to  certain
qualified retirement plans may be exempt from federal income tax.

             "Buying a Dividend."  When a Fund pays a dividend,  its share price
is  reduced  by the  amount of the  distribution.  If you buy  shares on or just
before the ex-dividend date (the date used for determining the record owners who
will  receive  the  dividend),  or just before a Fund  declares a capital  gains
distribution,  you will pay the full  price for the  shares  and then  receive a
portion of the price back as a taxable dividend or capital gain.

             Taxes on Transactions. Share redemptions, including redemptions for
exchanges,  are  subject  to capital  gains  tax. A capital  gain or loss is the
difference  between the price you paid for the shares and the price you received
when you sold them.

             Returns of Capital. In certain cases distributions made by the Fund
may be  considered  a  non-taxable  return of capital to  shareholders.  If that
occurs, it will be identified in notices to shareholders.  A non-taxable  return
of capital may reduce your tax basis in your Fund shares.

             The above federal  income tax  information is based on tax laws and
regulations  in  effect as of the date of this  Prospectus,  and is  subject  to
change by legislative or administrative  action.  Certain administrative actions
are  being  considered  by the IRS,  which  if  carried  out  could  affect  the
classification of certain distributions to Fund shareholders in a manner not yet
determinable.  As the foregoing  discussion is for general information only, you
should  also  review  the  more  detailed   discussion  of  federal  income  tax
considerations  relevant  to the  Funds  contained  in the  Company's  SAI under
"Additional Tax  Considerations." In addition,  you should consult with your own
tax adviser as to the effect of an investment in the Fund on your particular tax
situation,  including the  application of state and local taxes which may differ
from the federal income tax consequences described above.

                                OTHER INFORMATION

INVESTOR INFORMATION SERVICES:

             The Company provides 24-hour  information  services via a toll-free
number on Fund yields and prices,  dividends,  account balances, and your latest
transaction  as well as the  ability to request  prospectuses,  account  and tax
forms, and duplicate  statements.  In addition,  telephone  representatives  are
available  during normal  business hours to provide the information and services
you need.  Shareholder  inquiries should be made by calling 1-800-SKANDIA or, if
in writing,  to "American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc." at P.O. Box 8012, Boston,
Massachusetts 02266-8012.

             Statements   and  reports  sent  to  you  include  the   following:
confirmation   statements  (after  every  transaction,   except   reinvestments,
automatic  investments  and  systematic  withdrawals,  that affect your  account
balance  or  your  account   registration),   quarterly   consolidated   account
statements,  and financial reports (every six months).  Call the above number if
you  need  additional  copies  of  financial   reports  or  historical   account
information.  There may be a small charge for historical account information for
prior years.

DISTRIBUTOR:

             Shares of the  Company are  distributed  through  American  Skandia
Marketing,  Incorporated,  the principal  underwriter  and  distributor  for the
Company (the "Distributor," as previously defined). The Distributor,  located at
One  Corporate   Drive,   Shelton,   Connecticut   06484,  is  registered  as  a
broker-dealer  with the  Commission  and the National  Association of Securities
Dealers,  Inc. It is an "affiliated person" (within the meaning of the 1940 Act)
of the  Investment  Manager,  the Company,  the Trust,  American  Skandia Trust,
American  Skandia Life Assurance  Corporation and American  Skandia  Information
Services and Technology Corporation, being a wholly-owned subsidiary of American
Skandia Investment Holding Corporation.  The Distributor may offer shares of the
Funds directly to potential purchasers.

TRANSFER AGENT:

             Boston  Financial  Data Services,  Inc. (the  "Transfer  Agent," as
previously defined), located at Two Heritage Drive, Quincy, Massachusetts 02171,
serves as the transfer agent and dividend paying agent for the Company.

DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN CUSTODIANS:

   
             PNC Bank, located at Airport Business Center,  International  Court
2, 200 Stevens Drive, Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania 19113, serves as custodian for
all domestic cash and securities holdings of the Funds and Portfolios  investing
primarily in domestic securities.  Morgan Stanley Trust Company,  located at One
Pierrepont Plaza, Brooklyn, New York 11201, serves as custodian for all cash and
securities  holdings of the ASAF  Founders  International  Small  Capitalization
Fund,  the ASAF T. Rowe  Price  International  Equity  Fund  (and  corresponding
Portfolio),  and the ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund, and  co-custodian  for all
foreign  securities  holdings of the Funds and Portfolios which invest primarily
in domestic securities.
    



<PAGE>


LEGAL COUNSEL AND INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS:

             Werner & Kennedy,  located  at 1633  Broadway,  New York,  New York
10019,  serves as  counsel to the  Company.  Caplin &  Drysdale,  located at One
Thomas Circle, N.W., Washington,  D.C. 20005, and Rogers & Wells, located at 200
Park Avenue,  New York, New York 10166,  serve as special counsel to the Company
on certain tax matters.  Coopers & Lybrand  L.L.P.,  located at 2400 Eleven Penn
Center,  Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania 19103, has been selected as the independent
accountants of the Company.

REGISTRATION STATEMENT:

             This  Prospectus  omits  certain   information   contained  in  the
Registration  Statement  filed with the Commission.  Copies of the  Registration
Statement,  including  those items  omitted  herefrom,  may be obtained from the
Commission by paying the charges prescribed under its rules and regulations.

NO  PERSON  HAS  BEEN  AUTHORIZED  TO  GIVE  ANY  INFORMATION  OR  TO  MAKE  ANY
REPRESENTATIONS  OTHER THAN THOSE CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS,  AND INFORMATION
OR  REPRESENTATIONS  NOT HEREIN CONTAINED,  IF GIVEN OR MADE, MUST NOT BE RELIED
UPON AS HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED BY THE COMPANY OR THE TRUST. THIS PROSPECTUS DOES
NOT  CONSTITUTE  AN OFFER OR  SOLICITATION  IN ANY  JURISDICTION  IN WHICH  SUCH
OFFERING MAY NOT LAWFULLY BE MADE.

<PAGE>

                                                            



                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

   
                                December 31, 1997
    

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


                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.

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

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Table of Contents                                                                                                      Page

<S>                                                                                                                      <C>
   
General Information and History...........................................................................................2
Investment Programs of the Funds..........................................................................................2

         ASAF Founders International Small Capitalization Fund............................................................3
         ASAF T. Rowe Price International Equity Fund....................................................................10
         ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund.................................................................................19
         ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund.........................................................................22
         ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund.....................................................................30
         ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund.....................................................................40
         ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund..................................................................................48
         ASAF Lord Abbett Growth & Income Fund...........................................................................50
         ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund.................................................................................50
         ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund...................................................................52
         ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund.............................................................................59
         ASAF Total Return Bond Fund.....................................................................................61
         ASAF JPM Money Market Fund......................................................................................73

Fundamental Investment Restrictions......................................................................................74
Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods..............................................................................76
Additional Performance Information.......................................................................................92
Management of the Company................................................................................................95
Investment Advisory & Administration Services............................................................................98
Fund Expenses...........................................................................................................101
Distribution Arrangements...............................................................................................103
Determination of Net Asset Value........................................................................................104
Additional Information on the Purchase and Redemption of Shares.........................................................105
Portfolio Transactions..................................................................................................106
Additional Tax Considerations...........................................................................................107
Capital Stock of the Company & Principal Holders of Securities..........................................................110
Other Information.......................................................................................................118
Financial Statements....................................................................................................119
Appendix................................................................................................................172
</TABLE>
    

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

   
This Statement of Additional  Information ("SAI") is not a prospectus and should
be read in conjunction with the Company's current Prospectus, dated December 31,
1997. A copy of the Company's Prospectus may be obtained by writing to "American
Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc." at P.O. Box 8012, Boston,  Massachusetts 02266-8012
or by calling 1-800-SKANDIA.
    

                               GENERAL INFORMATION


   
     American  Skandia  Advisor  Funds,  Inc.  (the  "Company")  is an  open-end
management  investment  company  comprised  of thirteen  diversified  investment
portfolios (each a "Fund" and together the "Funds"). The Company was established
as a Maryland corporation on March 5, 1997, and had no business history prior to
the Fund's  commencement  of operations  on July 28, 1997.  Five of the Funds --
ASAF T. Rowe Price  International  Equity Fund,  ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund,
ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund,  ASAF Total Return Bond Fund and ASAF JPM Money
Market Fund (each a "Feeder Fund" and together the "Feeder Funds") -- invest all
of their investable assets in a corresponding  portfolio (each a "Portfolio" and
together the  "Portfolios") of American  Skandia Master Trust (the "Trust"),  an
open-end management investment company comprised of five diversified  investment
portfolios. Each Portfolio of the Trust invests in securities in accordance with
an investment objective,  investment policies and limitations identical to those
of its corresponding  Feeder Fund. This  "master/feeder"  fund structure differs
from that of the other Funds of the Company and many other investment  companies
which directly invest and manage their own portfolio of securities.  Those Funds
of the Company which  currently are not organized under a  "master/feeder"  fund
structure (the "Non-Feeder  Funds") retain the right to invest their assets in a
corresponding  Portfolio of the Trust in the future. For additional  information
regarding the "master/feeder" fund structure, see the Company's Prospectus under
"Special Information on the 'Master Feeder' Fund Structure."
    
     American  Skandia  Investment  Services,   Incorporated   ("ASISI"  or  the
"Investment  Manager")  acts as the  investment  manager for both the Non-Feeder
Funds and the Portfolios.  Currently,  ASISI engages the following  sub-advisors
("Sub-advisor(s)")  for the investment  management of each  Non-Feeder  Fund and
Portfolio:  (a) ASAF Founders  International Small Capitalization Fund: Founders
Asset Management,  Inc.; (b) ASMT T. Rowe Price International  Equity Portfolio:
Rowe  Price-Fleming  International,  Inc.; (c) ASAF Janus Overseas  Growth Fund:
Janus Capital Corporation; (d) ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund: Founders
Asset Management, Inc.; (e) ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund: T. Rowe
Price  Associates,  Inc.;  (f) ASAF  Robertson  Stephens  Value +  Growth  Fund:
Robertson,  Stephens  & Company  Investment  Management,  L.P.;  (g) ASMT  Janus
Capital Growth Portfolio: Janus Capital Corporation; (h) ASAF Lord Abbett Growth
& Income Fund:  Lord,  Abbett & Co.; (i) ASMT INVESCO  Equity Income  Portfolio:
INVESCO  Trust  Company;  (j) ASAF American  Century  Strategic  Balanced  Fund:
American Century Investment Management, Inc.; (k) ASAF Federated High Yield Bond
Fund:  Federated  Investment  Counseling;  (l)  ASMT  PIMCO  Total  Return  Bond
Portfolio:  Pacific Investment Management Company; and (m) ASMT JPM Money Market
Portfolio: J.P. Morgan Investment Management Inc.


                        INVESTMENT PROGRAMS OF THE FUNDS

     The following  information  supplements,  and should be read in conjunction
with, the discussion in the Prospectus of the investment  objective and policies
of each Fund and Portfolio.  The investment  objective of each Fund or Portfolio
and  supplemental  information  regarding its investment  policies are described
below separately for each Fund or Portfolio.

         The  investment   objective  and,  unless  otherwise   specified,   the
investment  policies  and  limitations  of  each  Fund  and  Portfolio  are  not
"fundamental" policies and may be changed by the Directors of the Company or the
Trustees of the Trust, where applicable,  without  shareholder  approval.  Those
investment  policies  specifically  labeled as  "fundamental,"  including  those
described in the "Fundamental Investment  Restrictions" section of this SAI, may
not be changed without shareholder approval.  Fundamental investment policies of
a Fund or Portfolio may be changed only with the approval of at least the lesser
of (1) 67% or more of the total units of beneficial  interest  ("shares") of the
Fund or  Portfolio  represented  at a  meeting  at  which  more  than 50% of the
outstanding  shares of the Fund or Portfolio are represented,  or (2) a majority
of the outstanding shares of the Fund or Portfolio.

     Notwithstanding any other investment policy of a Fund, each Fund may invest
all of its investable  assets (cash,  securities,  and  receivables  relating to
securities) in an open-end  management  investment company having  substantially
the same investment objective, policies and limitations as the Fund. Those Funds
which  currently  invest all of their  investable  assets in such a manner,  the
Feeder Funds, seek to meet their respective  investment  objectives by investing
all of their investable assets in a corresponding  Portfolio of the Trust, which
in turn invests  directly in a portfolio of securities  in  accordance  with the
investment  objective,   policies  and  limitations  of  its  Feeder  Fund.  The
investment objective, policies and limitations of each Feeder Fund are otherwise
identical  to those of its  corresponding  Portfolio.  As  such,  the  following
discussion  of the Feeder  Funds,  including  references to the Directors of the
Company,  apply equally to the Funds' corresponding  Portfolios and the Trustees
of the Trust, respectively.

ASAF FOUNDERS INTERNATIONAL SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
capital growth.

Investment Policies:

     Options On Stock Indices and Stocks.  An option is a right to buy or sell a
security  at a specified  price  within a limited  period of time.  The Fund may
write ("sell")  covered call options on any or all of its portfolio  securities.
In addition,  the Fund may  purchase  options on  securities.  The Fund may also
purchase put and call options on stock indices.

     The  Fund  may  write  ("sell")  options  on any  or  all of its  portfolio
securities  and at such  time and  from  time to time as the  Sub-advisor  shall
determine to be  appropriate.  No specified  percentage  of the Fund's assets is
invested in securities with respect to which options may be written.  The extent
of the Fund's option  writing  activities  will vary from time to time depending
upon the Sub-advisor's evaluation of market, economic and monetary conditions.

     When the Fund  purchases  a  security  with  respect to which it intends to
write an option, it is likely that the option will be written  concurrently with
or  shortly  after  purchase.  The Fund will  write an  option  on a  particular
security only if the Sub-advisor  believes that a liquid  secondary  market will
exist on an exchange for options of the same series,  which will permit the Fund
to enter into a closing purchase transaction and close out its position.  If the
Fund desires to sell a particular security on which it has written an option, it
will effect a closing  purchase  transaction  prior to or concurrently  with the
sale of the security.

     The Fund may  enter  into  closing  purchase  transactions  to  reduce  the
percentage of its assets against which options are written,  to realize a profit
on a previously  written option,  or to enable it to write another option on the
underlying security with either a different exercise price or expiration time or
both.

     Options  written by the Fund will  normally have  expiration  dates between
three and nine months from the date written.  The exercise prices of options may
be  below,  equal  to or above  the  current  market  values  of the  underlying
securities  at the times the options are written.  From time to time for tax and
other  reasons,  the Fund may  purchase an  underlying  security for delivery in
accordance  with an exercise  notice assigned to it, rather than delivering such
security from its portfolio.

     A stock  index  measures  the  movement  of a  certain  group of  stocks by
assigning  relative  values  to the  stocks  included  in the  index.  The  Fund
purchases put options on stock indices to protect the portfolio  against decline
in value.  The Fund  purchases  call  options on stock  indices to  establish  a
position in equities as a temporary substitute for purchasing  individual stocks
that  then may be  acquired  over the  option  period  in a manner  designed  to
minimize  adverse  price  movements.  Purchasing  put and call  options on stock
indices also permits  greater time for  evaluation of  investment  alternatives.
When the  Sub-advisor  believes  that the trend of stock prices may be downward,
particularly  for a short  period of time,  the purchase of put options on stock
indices  may  eliminate  the  need to  sell  less  liquid  stocks  and  possibly
repurchase  them  later.  The purpose of these  transactions  is not to generate
gain,  but to "hedge"  against  possible  loss.  Therefore,  successful  hedging
activity will not produce net gain to the Fund.  Any gain in the price of a call
option is likely  to be  offset  by  higher  prices  the Fund must pay in rising
markets,  as cash reserves are invested.  In declining markets,  any increase in
the price of a put option is likely to be offset by lower prices of stocks owned
by the Fund.

     The Fund may purchase  only those put and call options that are listed on a
domestic  exchange or quoted on the automatic  quotation  system of the National
Association  of Securities  Dealers,  Inc.  ("NASDAQ").  Options traded on stock
exchanges  are either  broadly  based,  such as the  Standard & Poor's 500 Stock
Index and 100 Stock Index,  or involve stocks in a designated  industry or group
of  industries.  The Fund may utilize  either  broadly  based or market  segment
indices in seeking a better correlation between the indices and the Fund.

     Transactions in options are subject to limitations,  established by each of
the  exchanges  upon which options are traded,  governing the maximum  number of
options which may be written or held by a single  investor or group of investors
acting in  concert,  regardless  of whether  the options are held in one or more
accounts.  Thus,  the number of  options  the Fund may hold may be  affected  by
options held by other  advisory  clients of the  Sub-advisor.  As of the date of
this SAI, the Sub-advisor  believes that these  limitations  will not affect the
purchase of stock index options by the Fund.

     One risk of  holding a put or a call  option  is that if the  option is not
sold or exercised prior to its expiration,  it becomes worthless.  However, this
risk is limited  to the  premium  paid by the Fund.  Other  risks of  purchasing
options include the possibility  that a liquid secondary market may not exist at
a time  when  the Fund may wish to  close  out an  option  position.  It is also
possible that trading in options on stock indices might be halted at a time when
the securities  markets generally were to remain open. In cases where the market
value of an issue supporting a covered call option exceeds the strike price plus
the  premium on the call,  the Fund will lose the right to  appreciation  of the
stock for the duration of the option. For an additional discussion of options on
stock indices and stocks and certain risks  involved  therein,  see this SAI and
the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     Futures  Contracts.  The Fund may enter into futures  contracts (or options
thereon) for hedging  purposes.  U.S. futures  contracts are traded on exchanges
which have been designated  "contract  markets" by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission and must be executed through a futures commission merchant (an "FCM")
or brokerage firm which is a member of the relevant  contract  market.  Although
futures  contracts  by their terms call for the delivery or  acquisition  of the
underlying  commodities  or a cash payment based on the value of the  underlying
commodities,  in most  cases the  contractual  obligation  is offset  before the
delivery date of the contract by buying, in the case of a contractual obligation
to  sell,  or  selling,  in the  case of a  contractual  obligation  to buy,  an
identical futures contract on a commodities exchange. Such a transaction cancels
the obligation to make or take delivery of the commodities.

     The acquisition or sale of a futures contract could occur, for example,  if
the Fund held or considered  purchasing  equity securities and sought to protect
itself from  fluctuations in prices without buying or selling those  securities.
For example,  if prices were  expected to  decrease,  the Fund could sell equity
index futures  contracts,  thereby  hoping to offset a potential  decline in the
value of equity  securities in the portfolio by a corresponding  increase in the
value of the futures contract  position held by the Fund and thereby prevent the
Fund's net asset value from  declining as much as it otherwise  would have.  The
Fund also could protect against  potential  price declines by selling  portfolio
securities and investing in money market instruments. However, since the futures
market is more liquid than the cash market,  the use of futures  contracts as an
investment  technique  would  allow the Fund to  maintain a  defensive  position
without having to sell portfolio securities.

     Similarly,  when prices of equity  securities  are  expected  to  increase,
futures contracts could be bought to attempt to hedge against the possibility of
having to buy equity  securities at higher  prices.  This technique is sometimes
known as an anticipatory  hedge.  Since the fluctuations in the value of futures
contracts should be similar to those of equity  securities,  the Fund could take
advantage of the potential rise in the value of equity securities without buying
them until the market had stabilized.  At that time, the futures contracts could
be liquidated and the Fund could buy equity securities on the cash market.

     The Fund may also enter into  interest  rate and foreign  currency  futures
contracts.  Interest rate futures contracts currently are traded on a variety of
fixed-income  securities,  including  long-term U.S.  Treasury  Bonds,  Treasury
Notes,   Government   National  Mortgage   Association   modified   pass-through
mortgage-backed  securities,  U.S.  Treasury Bills, bank certificates of deposit
and commercial paper. Foreign currency futures contracts currently are traded on
the British pound, Canadian dollar,  Japanese yen, Swiss franc, West German mark
and on Eurodollar deposits.

     The  Fund  will  not,  as  to  any  positions,  whether  long,  short  or a
combination  thereof,  enter into  futures  and  options  thereon  for which the
aggregate initial margins and premiums exceed 5% of the fair market value of its
total assets after taking into account  unrealized profits and losses on options
entered into. In the case of an option that is "in-the-money,"  the in-the-money
amount may be  excluded  in  computing  such 5%. In  general a call  option on a
future  is  "in-the-money"  if the  value of the  future  exceeds  the  exercise
("strike") price of the call; a put option on a future is  "in-the-money" if the
value of the future  which is the  subject of the put is  exceeded by the strike
price of the put. The Fund may use futures and options  thereon  solely for bona
fide hedging or for other  non-speculative  purposes. As to long positions which
are used as part of the Fund's  strategies  and are incidental to its activities
in the underlying cash market,  the "underlying  commodity  value" of the Fund's
futures and options  thereon must not exceed the sum of (i) cash set aside in an
identifiable   manner,   or   short-term   U.S.   debt   obligations   or  other
dollar-denominated high-quality, short-term money instruments so set aside, plus
sums deposited on margin; (ii) cash proceeds from existing investments due in 30
days; and (iii) accrued  profits held at the futures  commission  merchant.  The
"underlying  commodity value" of a future is computed by multiplying the size of
the  future  by the daily  settlement  price of the  future.  For an option on a
future,  that value is the underlying  commodity value of the future  underlying
the option.

     Unlike the  situation in which the Fund  purchases or sells a security,  no
price is paid or  received  by the Fund upon the  purchase  or sale of a futures
contract. Instead, the Fund is required to deposit in a segregated asset account
an amount of cash or qualifying  securities  (currently  U.S.  Treasury  bills),
currently in a minimum amount of $15,000.  This is called "initial margin." Such
initial  margin is in the nature of a performance  bond or good faith deposit on
the  contract.  However,  since  losses on open  contracts  are  required  to be
reflected  in cash in the form of  variation  margin  payments,  the Fund may be
required  to make  additional  payments  during  the term of a  contract  to its
broker. Such payments would be required, for example,  where, during the term of
an interest  rate futures  contract  purchased by the Fund,  there was a general
increase in interest rates,  thereby making the Fund's securities less valuable.
In all instances  involving the purchase of financial  futures  contracts by the
Fund,  an amount of cash  together  with such other  securities  as permitted by
applicable  regulatory  authorities  to be utilized for such  purpose,  at least
equal to the  market  value of the  future  contracts,  will be  deposited  in a
segregated  account with the Fund's custodian to collateralize the position.  At
any time prior to the  expiration of a futures  contract,  the Fund may elect to
close  its  position  by taking an  opposite  position  which  will  operate  to
terminate the Fund's position in the futures contract.

     Because futures  contracts are generally settled within a day from the date
they are closed out,  compared with a settlement  period of three  business days
for most types of securities, the futures markets can provide superior liquidity
to  the  securities  markets.  Nevertheless,  there  is no  assurance  a  liquid
secondary  market  will  exist  for  any  particular  futures  contract  at  any
particular  time.  In addition,  futures  exchanges  may  establish  daily price
fluctuation  limits for futures  contracts  and may halt trading if a contract's
price moves  upward or downward  more than the limit in a given day. On volatile
trading days when the price fluctuation limit is reached, it would be impossible
for the Fund to enter into new positions or close out existing positions. If the
secondary  market  for a  futures  contract  were not  liquid  because  of price
fluctuation  limits  or  otherwise,  the  Fund  would  not  promptly  be able to
liquidate  unfavorable  futures  positions and potentially  could be required to
continue to hold a futures  position  until the  delivery  date,  regardless  of
changes in its value.  As a result,  the Fund's  access to other  assets held to
cover its futures positions also could be impaired. For an additional discussion
of futures  contracts and certain risks involved  therein,  see this SAI and the
Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     Options on Futures Contracts. The Fund may purchase put and call options on
futures contracts.  An option on a futures contract provides the holder with the
right to enter into a "long" position in the underlying futures contract, in the
case of a call option, or a "short" position in the underlying futures contract,
in the case of a put option,  at a fixed exercise  price to a stated  expiration
date.  Upon  exercise of the option by the holder,  a contract  market  clearing
house  establishes a corresponding  short position for the writer of the option,
in the case of a call option, or a corresponding long position, in the case of a
put  option.  In the event  that an option is  exercised,  the  parties  will be
subject to all the risks associated with the trading of futures contracts,  such
as payment of variation margin deposits.

     A position  in an option on a futures  contract  may be  terminated  by the
purchaser or seller prior to expiration by effecting a closing  purchase or sale
transaction,  subject to the availability of a liquid secondary market, which is
the purchase or sale of an option of the same series  (i.e.,  the same  exercise
price and  expiration  date) as the option  previously  purchased  or sold.  The
difference between the premiums paid and received represents the trader's profit
or loss on the transaction.

     An  option,  whether  based  on a  futures  contract,  a stock  index  or a
security,  becomes worthless to the holder when it expires.  Upon exercise of an
option,  the exchange or contract market clearing house assigns exercise notices
on a random basis to those of its members which have written options of the same
series and with the same  expiration  date.  A  brokerage  firm  receiving  such
notices then assigns them on a random basis to those of its customers which have
written options of the same series and expiration  date. A writer  therefore has
no control  over  whether an option will be  exercised  against it, nor over the
time of such exercise.

     The  purchase  of a call  option on a futures  contract  is similar in some
respects  to the  purchase  of a call  option  on an  individual  security.  See
"Options on Foreign  Currencies"  below.  Depending on the pricing of the option
compared to either the price of the futures  contract  upon which it is based or
the price of the underlying  instrument,  ownership of the option may or may not
be  less  risky  than  ownership  of the  futures  contract  or  the  underlying
instrument.  As with the  purchase  of futures  contracts,  when the Fund is not
fully invested it could buy a call option on a futures contract to hedge against
a market advance.  The purchase of a put option on a futures contract is similar
in some  respects  to the  purchase  of  protective  put  options  on  portfolio
securities. For example, the Fund would be able to buy a put option on a futures
contract to hedge the Fund against the risk of falling prices. For an additional
discussion of options on futures  contracts and certain risks involved  therein,
see this SAI and the  Company's  Prospectus  under  "Certain  Risks  Factors and
Investment Methods."

     Options on Foreign Currencies. The Fund may buy and sell options on foreign
currencies for hedging  purposes in a manner similar to that in which futures on
foreign currencies would be utilized.  For example, a decline in the U.S. dollar
value of a foreign currency in which portfolio  securities are denominated would
reduce the U.S.  dollar  value of such  securities,  even if their  value in the
foreign currency remained constant. In order to protect against such diminutions
in the value of  portfolio  securities,  the Fund  could buy put  options on the
foreign currency. If the value of the currency declines, the Fund would have the
right to sell such currency for a fixed amount in U.S. dollars and would thereby
offset,  in whole or in part,  the  adverse  effect on the Fund which  otherwise
would have  resulted.  Conversely,  when a rise is projected in the U.S.  dollar
value of a currency in which securities to be acquired are denominated,  thereby
increasing the cost of such securities, the Fund could buy call options thereon.
The purchase of such options could offset,  at least  partially,  the effects of
the adverse movements in exchange rates.

     Options on foreign currencies traded on national  securities  exchanges are
within the jurisdiction of the Securities and Exchange Commission,  as are other
securities  traded  on such  exchanges.  As a  result,  many of the  protections
provided to traders on organized  exchanges  will be  available  with respect to
such transactions.  In particular, all foreign currency option positions entered
into on a national securities exchange are cleared and guaranteed by the Options
Clearing Corporation ("OCC"), thereby reducing the risk of counterparty default.
Further,  a liquid secondary  market in options traded on a national  securities
exchange  may be more readily  available  than in the  over-the-counter  market,
potentially permitting the Fund to liquidate open positions at a profit prior to
exercise  or  expiration,  or to limit  losses  in the event of  adverse  market
movements.

     The purchase and sale of exchange-traded foreign currency options, however,
is  subject  to the  risks  of the  availability  of a liquid  secondary  market
described  above,  as well as the  risks  regarding  adverse  market  movements,
margining  of  options  written,  the  nature of the  foreign  currency  market,
possible  intervention  by  governmental  authorities,  and the effects of other
political and economic events. In addition,  exchange-traded  options on foreign
currencies involve certain risks not presented by the  over-the-counter  market.
For example,  exercise and  settlement of such options must be made  exclusively
through the OCC,  which has  established  banking  relationships  in  applicable
foreign countries for this purpose.  As a result,  the OCC may, if it determines
that  foreign  governmental  restrictions  or taxes  would  prevent  the orderly
settlement  of  foreign  currency  option  exercises,  or would  result in undue
burdens on the OCC or its clearing member, impose special procedures on exercise
and  settlement,  such as  technical  changes in the  mechanics  of  delivery of
currency, the fixing of dollar settlement prices, or prohibitions on exercise.

     Risk Factors of Investing in Futures and Options. The successful use of the
investment practices described above with respect to futures contracts,  options
on futures contracts, and options on securities indices, securities, and foreign
currencies  draws upon  skills and  experience  which are  different  from those
needed  to select  the  other  instruments  in which  the Fund  invests.  Should
interest or exchange rates or the prices of securities or financial indices move
in an  unexpected  manner,  the Fund may not  achieve  the  desired  benefits of
futures and options or may realize  losses and thus be in a worse  position than
if such  strategies  had not been  used.  Unlike  many  exchange-traded  futures
contracts and options on futures contracts, there are no daily price fluctuation
limits with respect to options on currencies and negotiated or  over-the-counter
instruments,  and  adverse  market  movements  could  therefore  continue  to an
unlimited  extent over a period of time. In addition,  the  correlation  between
movements in the price of the securities and currencies hedged or used for cover
will not be perfect and could produce unanticipated losses.

     The Fund's ability to dispose of its positions in the foregoing instruments
will depend on the availability of liquid markets in the instruments. Markets in
a number of the  instruments  are relatively new and still  developing and it is
impossible  to predict  the amount of trading  interest  that may exist in those
instruments  in the future.  Particular  risks exist with  respect to the use of
each of the foregoing  instruments and could result in such adverse consequences
to the Fund as the possible loss of the entire premium paid for an option bought
by the Fund and the  possible  need to defer  closing out  positions  in certain
instruments to avoid adverse tax consequences.  As a result, no assurance can be
given that the Fund will be able to use those  instruments  effectively  for the
purposes set forth above.

     In addition,  options on U.S.  Government  securities,  futures  contracts,
options  on  futures  contracts,   forward  contracts  and  options  on  foreign
currencies may be traded on foreign  exchanges and  over-the-counter  in foreign
countries.  Such  transactions  are subject to the risk of governmental  actions
affecting  trading in or the prices of foreign  currencies  or  securities.  The
value of such  positions  also could be affected  adversely by (i) other complex
foreign  political and economic  factors,  (ii) lesser  availability than in the
United  States of data on which to make trading  decisions,  (iii) delays in the
Fund's ability to act upon economic  events  occurring in foreign markets during
nonbusiness  hours in the  United  States,  (iv)  the  imposition  of  different
exercise and settlement terms and procedures and margin requirements than in the
United  States,  and (v) low trading  volume.  For an  additional  discussion of
certain risks involved in investing in futures and options, see this SAI and the
Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     Foreign Securities.  Investments in foreign countries involve certain risks
which are not typically  associated with U.S.  investments.  For a discussion of
certain  risks  involved in foreign  investing,  see this SAI and the  Company's
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     Forward  Contracts  for  Purchase or Sale of Foreign  Currencies.  The Fund
generally  conducts its foreign currency exchange  transactions on a spot (i.e.,
cash) basis at the spot rate prevailing in the foreign exchange currency market.
When the Fund purchases or sells a security  denominated in a foreign  currency,
it may enter into a forward foreign currency contract  ("forward  contract") for
the purchase or sale,  for a fixed  amount of dollars,  of the amount of foreign
currency  involved in the underlying  security  transaction.  A forward contract
involves an obligation to purchase or sell a specific currency at a future date,
which may be any fixed number of days from the date of the contract  agreed upon
by the parties, at a price set at the time of the contract.  In this manner, the
Fund may obtain  protection  against a possible loss  resulting  from an adverse
change in the  relationship  between the U.S.  dollar and the  foreign  currency
during the period  between the date the  security is  purchased  or sold and the
date upon which  payment is made or received.  Although such  contracts  tend to
minimize  the  risk  of loss  due to the  decline  in the  value  of the  hedged
currency,  at the same time they tend to limit any  potential  gain which  might
result should the value of such currency  increase.  The Fund will not speculate
in forward contracts.

 ........Forward contracts are traded in the interbank market conducted directly
between currency  traders (usually large commercial  banks) and their customers.
Generally a forward contract has no deposit requirement,  and no commissions are
charged at any stage for trades. Although foreign exchange dealers do not charge
a fee for conversion,  they do realize a profit based on the difference  between
the prices at which they buy and sell various  currencies.  When the Sub-advisor
believes  that  the  currency  of a  particular  foreign  country  may  suffer a
substantial  decline  against  the U.S.  dollar (or  sometimes  against  another
currency),  the Fund may enter  into a  forward  contract  to sell,  for a fixed
dollar or other currency  amount,  foreign currency  approximating  the value of
some or all of the Fund's securities denominated in that currency. The Fund will
not enter  into such  forward  contracts  or  maintain  a net  exposure  to such
contracts  where the  fulfillment  of the  contracts  would  require the Fund to
deliver an amount of foreign  currency  in excess of the value of its  portfolio
securities or other assets denominated in that currency.  Forward contracts may,
from time to time, be considered  illiquid,  in which case they would be subject
to the Fund's limitation on investing in illiquid securities.

 .........At the consummation of a forward contract for delivery by the Fund of a
foreign  currency,  the Fund may either make delivery of the foreign currency or
terminate  its  contractual  obligation  to  deliver  the  foreign  currency  by
purchasing  an  offsetting  contract  obligating  it to  purchase,  at the  same
maturity date, the same amount of the foreign  currency.  If the Fund chooses to
make  delivery  of the  foreign  currency,  it may be  required  to obtain  such
currency through the sale of portfolio  securities  denominated in such currency
or through conversion of other Fund assets into such currency.

     Dealings  in  forward  contracts  by  the  Fund  will  be  limited  to  the
transactions  described above. Of course, the Fund is not required to enter into
such transactions with regard to its foreign currency-denominated securities and
will not do so unless deemed  appropriate by the Sub-advisor.  It also should be
realized  that this  method of  protecting  the value of the  Fund's  securities
against a decline in the value of a currency does not eliminate  fluctuations in
the  underlying  prices  of the  securities.  It  simply  establishes  a rate of
exchange  which can be  achieved  at some  future  point in time.  Additionally,
although such  contracts tend to minimize the risk of loss due to the decline in
the  value of the  hedged  currency,  at the same  time  they  tend to limit any
potential  gain which might result should the value of such  currency  increase.
For an additional  discussion of forward foreign currency  contracts and certain
risks involved therein, see this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     Illiquid Securities. As discussed in the Company's Prospectus, the Fund may
invest  up to 15% of the  value  of its  net  assets,  measured  at the  time of
investment,  in  investments  which  are  not  readily  marketable.   Restricted
securities  are  securities  that  may  not  be  resold  to the  public  without
registration  under the  Securities  Act of 1933 (the  "1933  Act").  Restricted
securities  (other  than Rule 144A  securities  deemed to be  liquid,  discussed
below) and securities  which, due to their market or the nature of the security,
have no readily available markets for their disposition are considered to be not
readily  marketable or "illiquid." These limitations on resale and marketability
may have the effect of preventing  the Fund from disposing of such a security at
the time desired or at a  reasonable  price.  In addition,  in order to resell a
restricted  security,  the Fund  might  have to bear the  expense  and incur the
delays   associated  with  effecting   registration.   In  purchasing   illiquid
securities,  the Fund does not  intend to  engage  in  underwriting  activities,
except to the extent the Fund may be deemed to be a statutory  underwriter under
the Securities Act in purchasing or selling such securities. Illiquid securities
will be  purchased  for  investment  purposes  only and not for the  purpose  of
exercising  control  or  management  of  other  companies.   For  an  additional
discussion  of illiquid or  restricted  securities  and certain  risks  involved
therein, see the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

     The Directors of the Company have  promulgated  guidelines  with respect to
illiquid securities.

     Rule 144A  Securities.  In recent years, a large  institutional  market has
developed for certain  securities  that are not  registered  under the 1933 Act.
Institutional investors generally will not seek to sell these instruments to the
general  public,  but instead will often  depend on an  efficient  institutional
market in which  such  unregistered  securities  can  readily be resold or on an
issuer's ability to honor a demand for repayment. Therefore, the fact that there
are contractual or legal restrictions on resale to the general public or certain
institutions is not dispositive of the liquidity of such investments.

     Rule  144A  under  the  1933  Act  establishes  a "safe  harbor"  from  the
registration  requirements of the 1933 Act for resales of certain  securities to
qualified  institutional  buyers.  The Fund may  invest in Rule 144A  securities
which, as disclosed in the Company's Prospectus, are restricted securities which
may  or may  not  be  readily  marketable.  Rule  144A  securities  are  readily
marketable if institutional  markets for the securities develop pursuant to Rule
144A which provide both readily  ascertainable values for the securities and the
ability to liquidate the  securities  when  liquidation  is deemed  necessary or
advisable.  However,  an insufficient number of qualified  institutional  buyers
interested  in  purchasing  a Rule 144A  security  held by the Fund could affect
adversely the marketability of the security. In such an instance, the Fund might
be unable to dispose of the security promptly or at reasonable prices.

     The  Sub-advisor  will determine that a liquid market exists for securities
eligible for resale  pursuant to Rule 144A under the 1933 Act, or any  successor
to such rule, and that such securities are not subject to the Fund's limitations
on investing in securities that are not readily marketable. The Sub-advisor will
consider the following factors, among others, in making this determination:  (1)
the unregistered nature of a Rule 144A security; (2) the frequency of trades and
quotes for the security;  (3) the number of dealers  willing to purchase or sell
the  security  and the number of  additional  potential  purchasers;  (4) dealer
undertakings  to make a  market  in the  security;  and (5)  the  nature  of the
security and the nature of market place trades (e.g., the time needed to dispose
of  the  security,  the  method  of  soliciting  offers  and  the  mechanics  of
transfers).

     Lower-Rated or Unrated Fixed-Income  Securities.  The Fund may invest up to
5% of its total assets in fixed-income securities which are unrated or are rated
below  investment  grade  either  at the  time of  purchase  or as a  result  of
reduction  in  rating  after  purchase.  (This  limitation  does  not  apply  to
convertible  securities  and preferred  stocks.)  Investments  in lower-rated or
unrated  securities  are  generally  considered  to be of high risk.  These debt
securities,  commonly  referred to as junk bonds,  are generally  subject to two
kinds of risk,  credit risk and market risk.  Credit risk relates to the ability
of the issuer to meet interest or principal payments, or both, as they come due.
The ratings given a security by Moody's Investors Service,  Inc. ("Moody's") and
Standard & Poor's  ("S&P")  provide a generally  useful  guide as to such credit
risk. For a description of securities ratings, see the Appendix to this SAI. The
lower the rating  given a security by a rating  service,  the greater the credit
risk such  rating  service  perceives  to exist with  respect  to the  security.
Increasing  the amount of the Fund's  assets  invested in unrated or lower grade
securities,  while intended to increase the yield produced by those assets, will
also increase the risk to which those assets are subject.

 .........Market  risk  relates  to the  fact  that  the  market  values  of debt
securities  in which the Fund invests  generally  will be affected by changes in
the level of interest  rates.  An increase in interest rates will tend to reduce
the market values of such  securities,  whereas a decline in interest rates will
tend to increase their values. Medium and lower-rated securities (Baa or BBB and
lower) and  non-rated  securities  of  comparable  quality tend to be subject to
wider  fluctuations in yields and market values than higher rated securities and
may have speculative characteristics. In order to decrease the risk in investing
in debt  securities,  in no event will the Fund ever  invest in a debt  security
rated  below B by  Moody's  or by S&P.  Of  course,  relying  in part on ratings
assigned by credit agencies in making investments will not protect the Fund from
the risk that the  securities in which they invest will decline in value,  since
credit ratings represent evaluations of the safety of principal,  dividend,  and
interest  payments  on  debt  securities,  and  not the  market  values  of such
securities,  and such  ratings  may not be changed on a timely  basis to reflect
subsequent events.

 .........Because  investment  in  medium  and  lower-rated  securities  involves
greater credit risk,  achievement of the Fund's investment objective may be more
dependent on the  Sub-advisor's  own credit  analysis than is the case for funds
that do not invest in such securities. In addition, the share price and yield of
the Fund may  fluctuate  more  than in the case of  funds  investing  in  higher
quality,  shorter term securities.  Moreover, a significant economic downturn or
major increase in interest rates may result in issuers of lower-rated securities
experiencing  increased  financial  stress,  which would adversely  affect their
ability to service their principal,  dividend,  and interest  obligations,  meet
projected  business goals, and obtain additional  financing.  In this regard, it
should be noted that while the market for high yield debt securities has been in
existence  for  many  years  and  from  time to time  has  experienced  economic
downturns in recent years,  this market has involved a  significant  increase in
the  use of high  yield  debt  securities  to fund  highly  leveraged  corporate
acquisitions and restructurings.  Past experience may not, therefore, provide an
accurate  indication  of future  performance  of the high yield debt  securities
market, particularly during periods of economic recession. Furthermore, expenses
incurred in  recovering  an  investment  in a defaulted  security may  adversely
affect the Fund's net asset value.  Finally,  while the Sub-advisor  attempts to
limit  purchases of medium and  lower-rated  securities to securities  having an
established  secondary  market,  the secondary market for such securities may be
less liquid than the market for higher quality securities. The reduced liquidity
of the secondary  market for such  securities  may  adversely  affect the market
price of, and  ability of the Fund to value,  particular  securities  at certain
times,  thereby making it difficult to make specific  valuation  determinations.
The Fund does not invest in any medium and lower-rated  securities which present
special tax consequences, such as zero-coupon bonds or pay-in-kind bonds. For an
additional discussion of certain risks involved in lower-rated  securities,  see
this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

     .........The  Sub-advisor seeks to reduce the overall risks associated with
the Fund's  investments  through  diversification  and  consideration of factors
affecting  the value of securities  it considers  relevant.  No assurance can be
given,  however,  regarding  the degree of success that will be achieved in this
regard or that the Fund will achieve its investment objective.

     .........Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated by the
Directors of the Company,  the Fund may enter into  repurchase  agreements  with
respect to money market  instruments  eligible for  investment  by the Fund with
member  banks of the Federal  Reserve  system,  registered  broker-dealers,  and
registered   government  securities  dealers.  A  repurchase  agreement  may  be
considered a loan collateralized by securities.  Repurchase  agreements maturing
in more than  seven  days are  considered  illiquid  and will be  subject to the
Fund's limitation with respect to illiquid securities.

     .........The  Fund has not  adopted  any limits on the amounts of its total
assets that may be invested in repurchase  agreements  which mature in less than
seven days. The Fund may invest up to 15% of the market value of its net assets,
measured  at  the  time  of  purchase,  in  securities  which  are  not  readily
marketable,  including  repurchase  agreements maturing in more than seven days.
For an additional discussion of repurchase agreements and certain risks involved
therein, see the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

     .........Convertible  Securities.  The Fund may buy securities  convertible
into common stock if, for example,  the  Sub-advisor  believes  that a company's
convertible  securities are  undervalued in the market.  Convertible  securities
eligible for purchase include convertible bonds,  convertible  preferred stocks,
and warrants. A warrant is an instrument issued by a corporation which gives the
holder the right to subscribe to a specific amount of the corporation's  capital
stock at a set price for a specified  period of time.  Warrants do not represent
ownership  of the  securities,  but only the  right to buy the  securities.  The
prices of warrants do not necessarily  move parallel to the prices of underlying
securities.  Warrants may be considered  speculative in that they have no voting
rights,  pay no  dividends,  and have no rights with  respect to the assets of a
corporation  issuing them.  Warrant  positions  will not be used to increase the
leverage of the Fund; consequently,  warrant positions are generally accompanied
by cash positions equivalent to the required exercise amount.

     .........Investment  Policies  Which  May Be  Changed  Without  Shareholder
Approval.  The following limitations are not "fundamental"  restrictions and may
be changed by the Directors of the Company  without  shareholder  approval.  The
Fund will not:

     .........1........Invest  more  than  15% of the  market  value  of its net
assets in  securities  which are not readily  marketable,  including  repurchase
agreements maturing in over seven days;

     .........2........Purchase  securities of other investment companies except
in compliance with the Investment Company Act of 1940;

     .........3........Purchase  any  securities on margin except to obtain such
short-term  credits as may be necessary for the clearance of transactions  (and,
provided that margin payments and other deposits in connection with transactions
in  options,  futures and forward  contracts  shall not be deemed to  constitute
purchasing securities on margin); or

 .........4........Sell securities short.

 .........In addition, in periods of uncertain market and economic conditions, as
determined  by the  Sub-advisor,  the Fund may depart from its basic  investment
objective  and  assume  a  defensive  position  with up to  100%  of its  assets
temporarily  invested in high quality  corporate  bonds or notes and  government
issues, or held in cash.

     .........If  a  percentage  restriction  is  adhered  to  at  the  time  of
investment,  a later  increase or decrease in  percentage  beyond the  specified
limit that results from a change in values or net assets will not be  considered
a violation.

ASAF T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL EQUITY FUND:

Investment  Objective:  The investment  objective of the Fund is to seek a total
return on its assets from  long-term  growth of capital  and income  principally
through  investments  in  common  stocks  of  established,  non-U.S.  companies.
Investments may be made solely for capital  appreciation or solely for income or
any combination of both for the purpose of achieving a higher overall return.

Investment Policies:

     .........The  Sub-advisor regularly analyzes a broad range of international
equity and fixed-income  markets in order to assess the degree of risk and level
of  return  that can be  expected  from  each  market.  Based  upon its  current
assessment, the Sub-advisor believes long-term growth of capital may be achieved
by investing  in  marketable  securities  of non-U.S.  companies  which have the
potential for growth of capital.  Of course,  there can be no assurance that the
Sub-advisor's  forecasts  of  expected  return will be  reflected  in the actual
returns achieved by the Fund.

     .........The  Fund's share price will fluctuate  with market,  economic and
foreign exchange conditions,  and your investment may be worth more or less when
redeemed than when  purchased.  The Fund should not be relied upon as a complete
investment  program,  nor used to play short-term swings in the stock or foreign
exchange  markets.  The  Fund  is  subject  to  risks  unique  to  international
investing.  Further,  there is no assurance that the favorable  trends discussed
below  will  continue,  and  the  Fund  cannot  guarantee  it will  achieve  its
objective.

     .........It  is the  present  intention  of the  Sub-advisor  to  invest in
companies  based in (or  governments  of or within)  the Far East (for  example,
Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Malaysia),  Western Europe (for example, United
Kingdom, Germany,  Netherlands,  France, Spain, and Switzerland),  South Africa,
Australia,  Canada,  and such other areas and countries as the  Sub-advisor  may
determine from time to time.

     .........In  determining the appropriate  distribution of investments among
various countries and geographic regions,  the Sub-advisor  ordinarily considers
the following  factors:  prospects for relative  economic growth between foreign
countries;  expected  levels  of  inflation;   government  policies  influencing
business conditions;  the outlook for currency  relationships;  and the range of
individual investment opportunities available to international investors.

 .........In analyzing companies for investment, the Sub-advisor ordinarily looks
for one or more of the  following  characteristics:  an  above-average  earnings
growth per share; high return on invested capital;  healthy balance sheet; sound
financial  and  accounting  policies  and  overall  financial  strength;  strong
competitive   advantages;   effective  research  and  product   development  and
marketing;  efficient service; pricing flexibility;  strength of management; and
general  operating  characteristics  which will enable the  companies to compete
successfully  in their market  place.  While  current  dividend  income is not a
prerequisite in the selection of portfolio companies, the companies in which the
Fund invests normally will have a record of paying dividends, and will generally
be  expected  to  increase  the  amounts of such  dividends  in future  years as
earnings increase.

     .........It  is expected  that the Fund's  investments  will  ordinarily be
traded on exchanges  located at least in the  respective  countries in which the
various issuers of such securities are principally based.

     .........The  Fund will  invest in  securities  denominated  in  currencies
specified elsewhere herein.

     .........It is contemplated that most foreign  securities will be purchased
in  over-the-counter  markets or on stock exchanges  located in the countries in
which the respective  principal offices of the issuers of the various securities
are located, if that is the best available market.

     .........The Fund may invest in investment funds which have been authorized
by  the  governments  of  certain  countries   specifically  to  permit  foreign
investment in securities of companies  listed and traded on the stock  exchanges
in these respective  countries.  The Fund's investment in these funds is subject
to the provisions of the Investment  Company Act of 1940 discussed below. If the
Fund invests in such investment  funds,  the Fund's  shareholders  will bear not
only their proportionate share of the expenses of the Fund (including  operating
expenses and the fees of the Investment Manager),  but also will bear indirectly
similar expenses of the underlying investment funds. In addition, the securities
of these investment funds may trade at a premium over their net asset value.

     .........Apart  from the matters described herein, the Fund is not aware at
this time of the  existence of any  investment or exchange  control  regulations
which might substantially  impair the operations of the Fund as described in the
Company's  Prospectus  and this SAI.  It should  be  noted,  however,  that this
situation could change at any time.

     .........The  Fund may invest in companies  located in Eastern Europe.  The
Fund will only  invest in a company  located  in, or a  government  of,  Eastern
Europe or Russia, if the Sub-advisor believes the potential return justifies the
risk.  To the extent any  securities  issued by companies in Eastern  Europe and
Russia are  considered  illiquid,  the Fund will be  required  to  include  such
securities within its 15% restriction on investing in illiquid securities.

     .........Risk  Factors of Foreign  Investing.  There are  special  risks in
investing in the Fund.  Certain of these risks are inherent in any international
mutual fund;  others relate more to the countries in which the Fund will invest.
Many of the risks are more  pronounced for investments in developing or emerging
countries.  Although there is no universally accepted  definition,  a developing
country is generally  considered to be a country which is in the initial  stages
of its industrialization  cycle with a per capita gross national product of less
than $8,000.

     .........Investors  should  understand  that  all  investments  have a risk
factor.  There can be no guarantee  against loss resulting from an investment in
the Fund, and there can be no assurance that the Fund's investment policies will
be successful,  or that its investment  objective will be attained.  The Fund is
designed for individual and institutional  investors seeking to diversify beyond
the United  States in an  actively  researched  and  managed  portfolio,  and is
intended for long-term investors who can accept the risks entailed in investment
in foreign  securities.  For a discussion of certain  risks  involved in foreign
investing see this SAI and the Company's  Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

     .........In  addition  to  the  investments   described  in  the  Company's
Prospectus, the Fund may invest in the following:

     .........Writing  Covered Call Options. The Fund may write (sell) "covered"
call options and purchase options to close out options previously written by the
Fund. In writing covered call options,  the Fund expects to generate  additional
premium  income which should serve to enhance the Fund's total return and reduce
the effect of any price  decline of the  security  or  currency  involved in the
option.  Covered  call  options  will  generally  be  written on  securities  or
currencies  which, in the  Sub-advisor's  opinion,  are not expected to have any
major price increases or moves in the near future but which, over the long term,
are deemed to be attractive investments for the Fund.

     .........The Fund will write only covered call options. This means that the
Fund will own the  security  or  currency  subject to the option or an option to
purchase  the same  underlying  security or currency,  having an exercise  price
equal  to or less  than the  exercise  price of the  "covered"  option,  or will
establish and maintain with its custodian for the term of the option, an account
consisting  of  cash  or  other  liquid  assets  having  a  value  equal  to the
fluctuating market value of the optioned securities or currencies.

 .........Portfolio securities or currencies on which call options may be written
will be purchased  solely on the basis of investment  considerations  consistent
with the Fund's investment  objective.  The writing of covered call options is a
conservative investment technique believed to involve relatively little risk (in
contrast to the writing of naked or uncovered  options,  which the Fund will not
do), but capable of enhancing  the Fund's total  return.  When writing a covered
call option,  the Fund, in return for the premium,  gives up the opportunity for
profit from a price  increase in the  underlying  security or currency above the
exercise price, but conversely, retains the risk of loss should the price of the
security or currency  decline.  Unlike one who owns securities or currencies not
subject to an option,  the Fund has no control  over when it may be  required to
sell the  underlying  securities  or  currencies,  since it may be  assigned  an
exercise  notice at any time prior to the  expiration  of its  obligations  as a
writer.  If a call  option  which the Fund has  written  expires,  the Fund will
realize a gain in the amount of the premium; however, such gain may be offset by
a decline in the market value of the underlying  security or currency during the
option period. If the call option is exercised,  the Fund will realize a gain or
loss from the sale of the  underlying  security or  currency.  The Fund does not
consider a security or currency covered by a call "pledged" as that term is used
in the Fund's policy which limits the pledging or mortgaging of its assets.

 .........The  premium received is the market value of an option. The premium the
Fund will receive from writing a call option will  reflect,  among other things,
the  current  market  price  of  the  underlying   security  or  currency,   the
relationship  of the exercise price to such market price,  the historical  price
volatility of the underlying security or currency,  and the length of the option
period. Once the decision to write a call option has been made, the Sub-advisor,
in  determining  whether  a  particular  call  option  should  be  written  on a
particular  security  or  currency,  will  consider  the  reasonableness  of the
anticipated premium and the likelihood that a liquid secondary market will exist
for those  options.  The premium  received by the Fund for writing  covered call
options  will be recorded as a liability  of the Fund.  This  liability  will be
adjusted daily to the option's  current  market value,  which will be the latest
sale  price at the time at which  the net  asset  value per share of the Fund is
computed  (close of the New York  Stock  Exchange),  or, in the  absence of such
sale,  the  average  of the  latest  bid and asked  price.  The  option  will be
terminated upon expiration of the option, the purchase of an identical option in
a closing  transaction,  or delivery of the underlying security or currency upon
the exercise of the option.

     .........Call  options  written by the Fund will normally  have  expiration
dates of less than nine months from the date written.  The exercise price of the
options  may be  below,  equal to, or above  the  current  market  values of the
underlying  securities or  currencies at the time the options are written.  From
time to time,  the Fund may  purchase an  underlying  security  or currency  for
delivery in accordance  with an exercise notice of a call option assigned to it,
rather than  delivering  such security or currency from its  portfolio.  In such
cases, additional costs may be incurred.

 .........The Fund will effect closing  transactions in order to realize a profit
on an  outstanding  call option,  to prevent an underlying  security or currency
from  being  called,  or,  to  permit  the sale of the  underlying  security  or
currency.  The Fund  will  realize  a profit  or loss  from a  closing  purchase
transaction  if the cost of the  transaction  is less or more  than the  premium
received from the writing of the option.  Because  increases in the market price
of a call option will  generally  reflect  increases  in the market price of the
underlying  security or currency,  any loss  resulting  from the repurchase of a
call  option is likely to be offset in whole or in part by  appreciation  of the
underlying security or currency owned by the Fund.

 .........The  Fund will not write a covered  call  option  if, as a result,  the
aggregate market value of all portfolio  securities or currencies  covering call
or put options  exceeds 25% of the market value of the Fund's total  assets.  In
calculating  the 25% limit,  the Fund will  offset,  against the value of assets
covering  written  calls and  puts,  the  value of  purchased  calls and puts on
identical securities or currencies with identical maturity dates.

     .........Writing  Covered  Put  Options.  Although  the Fund has no current
intention  in the  foreseeable  future of writing  American  or  European  style
covered put options and purchasing  put options to close out options  previously
written by the Fund, the Fund reserves the right to do so.

 .........The  Fund would write put options only on a covered basis,  which means
that the Fund would  maintain in a  segregated  account  cash,  U.S.  government
securities or other liquid  high-grade  debt  obligations  in an amount not less
than the  exercise  price or the Fund will own an option to sell the  underlying
security or currency  subject to the option having an exercise price equal to or
greater than the exercise price of the "covered"  options at all times while the
put  option is  outstanding.  (The  rules of a  clearing  corporation  currently
require  that such  assets be  deposited  in  escrow  to secure  payment  of the
exercise  price.)  The  Fund  would  generally  write  covered  put  options  in
circumstances  where the Sub-advisor wishes to purchase the underlying  security
or currency for the Fund's  portfolio  at a price lower than the current  market
price of the  security  or  currency.  In such event the Fund would  write a put
option at an  exercise  price  which,  reduced by the  premium  received  on the
option, reflects the lower price it is willing to pay. Since the Fund would also
receive  interest  on debt  securities  or  currencies  maintained  to cover the
exercise price of the option,  this technique  could be used to enhance  current
return  during  periods of market  uncertainty.  The risk in such a  transaction
would be that the market  price of the  underlying  security or  currency  would
decline  below the  exercise  price less the premiums  received.  Such a decline
could be substantial and result in a significant  loss to the Fund. In addition,
the Fund, because it does not own the specific securities or currencies which it
may be  required  to  purchase  in  exercise  of the put,  cannot  benefit  from
appreciation, if any, with respect to such specific securities or currencies.

 .........The  Fund will not  write a covered  put  option  if, as a result,  the
aggregate market value of all portfolio securities or currencies covering put or
call  options  exceeds 25% of the market value of the Fund's  total  assets.  In
calculating  the 25% limit,  the Fund will  offset,  against the value of assets
covering  written  puts and  calls,  the  value of  purchased  puts and calls on
identical securities or currencies with identical maturity dates.

     .........Purchasing Put Options. The Fund may purchase American or European
style put options. As the holder of a put option, the Fund has the right to sell
the underlying security or currency at the exercise price at any time during the
option period  (American  style) or at the  expiration  of the option  (European
style).  The Fund may enter into closing sale  transactions with respect to such
options,  exercise  them or permit  them to expire.  The Fund may  purchase  put
options  for  defensive  purposes  in order to protect  against  an  anticipated
decline in the value of its securities or currencies.  An example of such use of
put options is provided in this SAI under  "Certain Risk Factors and  Investment
Methods."

     .........The  premium paid by the Fund when purchasing a put option will be
recorded  as an asset of the Fund.  This  asset  will be  adjusted  daily to the
option's  current market value,  which will be the latest sale price at the time
at which the net asset  value  per share of the Fund is  computed  (close of New
York Stock  Exchange),  or, in the  absence of such sale,  the latest bid price.
This asset  will be  terminated  upon  expiration  of the  option,  the  selling
(writing) of an identical  option in a closing  transaction,  or the delivery of
the underlying security or currency upon the exercise of the option.

     .........Purchasing  Call  Options.  The  Fund  may  purchase  American  or
European  style call options.  As the holder of a call option,  the Fund has the
right to purchase the  underlying  security or currency at the exercise price at
any time during the option period  (American  style) or at the expiration of the
option (European style).  The Fund may enter into closing sale transactions with
respect to such options,  exercise  them or permit them to expire.  The Fund may
purchase  call  options for the  purpose of  increasing  its  current  return or
avoiding tax  consequences  which could reduce its current return.  The Fund may
also  purchase  call options in order to acquire the  underlying  securities  or
currencies. Examples of such uses of call options are provided in this SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     .........The  Fund may also purchase call options on underlying  securities
or  currencies  it owns in order to  protect  unrealized  gains on call  options
previously  written by it. A call option  would be  purchased  for this  purpose
where tax  considerations  make it  inadvisable  to realize such gains through a
closing  purchase  transaction.  Call  options may also be purchased at times to
avoid realizing losses.

     .........Dealer  Options.  The Fund may  engage in  transactions  involving
dealer  options.  Certain risks are specific to dealer  options.  While the Fund
would look to a clearing corporation to exercise exchange-traded options, if the
Fund were to purchase a dealer option,  it would rely on the dealer from whom it
purchased  the option to perform if the option  were  exercised.  While the Fund
will seek to enter into dealer  options  only with dealers who will agree to and
which are expected to be capable of entering into closing  transactions with the
Fund, there can be no assurance that the Fund will be able to liquidate a dealer
option at a  favorable  price at any time  prior to  expiration.  Failure by the
dealer to perform  would  result in the loss of the premium  paid by the Fund as
well as loss of the expected benefit of the transaction.

     .........Futures Contracts:

     ..................Transactions   in  Futures.   The  Fund  may  enter  into
financial futures contracts,  including stock index,  interest rate and currency
futures  ("futures  or  futures  contracts");  however,  the Fund has no current
intention of entering into interest rate futures.  The Fund,  however,  reserves
the right to trade in financial futures of any kind.

 ..................Stock  index  futures  contracts  may be  used to  attempt  to
provide a hedge for a portion of the Fund, as a cash  management  tool, or as an
efficient way for the Sub-advisor to implement either an increase or decrease in
portfolio market exposure in response to changing market conditions. Stock index
futures  contracts  are  currently  traded with respect to the S&P 500 Index and
other broad stock market indices,  such as the New York Stock Exchange Composite
Stock Index and the Value Line  Composite  Stock Index.  The Fund may,  however,
purchase  or sell  futures  contracts  with  respect  to any stock  index  whose
movements will, in its judgment,  have a significant  correlation with movements
in the prices of all or portions of the Fund's portfolio securities.

 ..................Interest  rate or currency  futures  contracts  may be used to
attempt to hedge  against  changes in  prevailing  levels of  interest  rates or
currency  exchange  rates in order to establish  more  definitely  the effective
return on securities or currencies  held or intended to be acquired by the Fund.
In this  regard,  the Fund could sell  interest  rate or currency  futures as an
offset  against the effect of expected  increases in interest  rates or currency
exchange  rates and  purchase  such  futures as an offset  against the effect of
expected declines in interest rates or currency exchange rates.

     ..................The  Fund will enter  into  futures  contracts  which are
traded on national  or foreign  futures  exchanges  and are  standardized  as to
maturity date and  underlying  financial  instrument.  The  principal  financial
futures  exchanges  in the  United  States are the Board of Trade of the City of
Chicago, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, the New York Futures Exchange, and the
Kansas City Board of Trade.  Futures  exchanges and trading in the United States
are regulated under the Commodity  Exchange Act by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission  ("CFTC").  Futures are traded in London at the London  International
Financial  Futures  Exchange,  in Paris at the  MATIF  and in Tokyo at the Tokyo
Stock Exchange.  Although techniques other than the sale and purchase of futures
contracts could be used for the  above-referenced  purposes,  futures  contracts
offer an effective  and  relatively  low cost means of  implementing  the Fund's
objectives in these areas. For a discussion of futures  transactions and certain
risks involved therein, see this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     ..................Regulatory   Limitations.   The  Fund   will   engage  in
transactions  in  futures  contracts  and  options  thereon  only for bona  fide
hedging,  yield  enhancement  and  risk  management  purposes,  in each  case in
accordance with the rules and regulations of the CFTC.

 ..................The  Fund may not enter  into  futures  contracts  or  options
thereon if, with respect to positions  which do not qualify as bona fide hedging
under  applicable CFTC rules,  the sum of the amounts of initial margin deposits
on the Fund's  existing  futures and premiums  paid for options on futures would
exceed  5% of the  net  asset  value  of the  Fund  after  taking  into  account
unrealized  profits and  unrealized  losses on any such contracts it has entered
into;  provided  however,  that in the case of an option that is in-the-money at
the time of purchase, the in-the-money amount may be excluded in calculating the
5% limitation.

     ..................The  Fund's use of futures  contracts  will not result in
leverage.  Therefore,  to the  extent  necessary,  in  instances  involving  the
purchase  of futures  contracts  or call  options  thereon or the writing of put
options thereon by the Fund, an amount of cash, or other liquid assets, equal to
the market value of the futures  contracts and options thereon (less any related
margin deposits),  will be identified in an account with the Fund's custodian to
cover the position, or alternative cover will be employed.

     ..................In  addition,  CFTC regulations may impose limitations on
the Fund's ability to engage in certain yield  enhancement  and risk  management
strategies.  If  the  CFTC  or  other  regulatory  authorities  adopt  different
(including  less  stringent) or additional  restrictions,  the Fund would comply
with such new restrictions.

     .........Options  on Futures  Contracts.  As an  alternative  to writing or
purchasing  call and put options on stock index  futures,  the Fund may write or
purchase call and put options on stock indices.  Such options would be used in a
manner similar to the use of options on futures contracts.  From time to time, a
single order to purchase or sell futures  contracts (or options  thereon) may be
made on behalf of the Fund and other mutual funds or  portfolios of mutual funds
managed by the  Sub-advisor or T. Rowe Price  Associates,  Inc. Such  aggregated
orders would be allocated among the Fund and such other portfolios in a fair and
non-discriminatory  manner.  See this  SAI and the  Company's  Prospectus  under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods" for a description of certain risks
involved in options and futures contracts.

     .........Additional Futures and Options Contracts. Although the Fund has no
current intention of engaging in financial futures or option  transactions other
than those  described  above,  it reserves  the right to do so. Such  futures or
options  trading  might  involve  risks which differ from those  involved in the
futures and options described above.

     .........Foreign  Futures and  Options.  The Fund is permitted to invest in
foreign  futures and options.  For a description of foreign  futures and options
and certain risks involved  therein as well as certain risks involved in foreign
investing, see this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

     .........Foreign Currency Transactions.  The Fund will generally enter into
forward foreign currency exchange contracts under two circumstances. First, when
the  Fund  enters  into a  contract  for the  purchase  or  sale  of a  security
denominated in a foreign  currency,  it may desire to "lock in" the U.S.  dollar
price of the security.  Second, when the Sub-advisor  believes that the currency
of a  particular  foreign  country  may suffer or enjoy a  substantial  movement
against another currency, including the U.S. dollar, it may enter into a forward
contract to sell or buy the amount of the former foreign currency, approximating
the value of some or all of the Fund's  securities  denominated  in such foreign
currency.  Alternatively,  where appropriate,  the Fund may hedge all or part of
its foreign  currency  exposure  through the use of a basket of  currencies or a
proxy currency  where such currency or currencies act as an effective  proxy for
other  currencies.  In such a case,  the Fund may enter into a forward  contract
where the amount of the  foreign  currency  to be sold  exceeds the value of the
securities  denominated  in  such  currency.  The  use of  this  basket  hedging
technique  may be more  efficient  and  economical  than  entering into separate
forward  contracts for each currency held in the Fund.  The precise  matching of
the forward contract  amounts and the value of the securities  involved will not
generally  be  possible  since the future  value of such  securities  in foreign
currencies  will change as a  consequence  of market  movements  in the value of
those  securities  between the date the forward contract is entered into and the
date it matures.  The  projection  of  short-term  currency  market  movement is
extremely  difficult,  and the  successful  execution  of a  short-term  hedging
strategy  is highly  uncertain.  Other than as set forth  above and  immediately
below,  the Fund will also not enter into such  forward  contracts or maintain a
net exposure to such contracts  where the  consummation  of the contracts  would
obligate  the Fund to  deliver an amount of  foreign  currency  in excess of the
value of the Fund's securities or other assets denominated in that currency. The
Fund,  however, in order to avoid excess transactions and transaction costs, may
maintain  a net  exposure  to  forward  contracts  in excess of the value of the
Fund's  securities  or  other  assets  to which  the  forward  contracts  relate
(including  accrued  interest to the maturity of the forward on such securities)
provided the excess amount is "covered" by liquid,  high-grade debt  securities,
denominated  in any currency,  at least equal at all times to the amount of such
excess.  For these purposes "the securities or other assets to which the forward
contracts relate" may be securities or assets  denominated in a single currency,
or where  proxy  forwards  are  used,  securities  denominated  in more than one
currency. Under normal circumstances, consideration of the prospect for currency
parities will be  incorporated  into the longer term  investment  decisions made
with regard to overall  diversification  strategies.  However,  the  Sub-advisor
believes that it is important to have the flexibility to enter into such forward
contracts when it determines that the best interests of the Fund will be served.

 .........At  the  maturity of a forward  contract,  the Fund may either sell the
portfolio  security and make delivery of the foreign currency,  or it may retain
the security and  terminate  its  contractual  obligation to deliver the foreign
currency by purchasing an "offsetting"  contract  obligating it to purchase,  on
the same maturity date, the same amount of the foreign currency.

 .........As  indicated  above,  it  is  impossible  to  forecast  with  absolute
precision  the market value of portfolio  securities  at the  expiration  of the
forward  contract.  Accordingly,  it may be  necessary  for the Fund to purchase
additional  foreign  currency  on the spot  market (and bear the expense of such
purchase) if the market value of the security is less than the amount of foreign
currency  the Fund is obligated to deliver and if a decision is made to sell the
security  and make  delivery  of the  foreign  currency.  Conversely,  it may be
necessary to sell on the spot market some of the foreign currency  received upon
the sale of the  portfolio  security if its market  value  exceeds the amount of
foreign currency the Fund is obligated to deliver.  However,  as noted, in order
to avoid excessive  transactions and transaction costs, the Fund may use liquid,
high-grade debt securities  denominated in any currency,  to cover the amount by
which the value of a forward  contract  exceeds the value of the  securities  to
which it relates.

 .........If the Fund retains the portfolio security and engages in an offsetting
transaction,  the Fund will incur a gain or a loss (as  described  below) to the
extent that there has been  movement  in forward  contract  prices.  If the Fund
engages  in an  offsetting  transaction,  it may  subsequently  enter into a new
forward  contract to sell the foreign  currency.  Should  forward prices decline
during the period  between the Fund's  entering into a forward  contract for the
sale of a foreign  currency and the date it enters into an  offsetting  contract
for the  purchase of the foreign  currency,  the Fund will realize a gain to the
extent the price of the  currency it has agreed to sell exceeds the price of the
currency it has agreed to purchase.  Should  forward prices  increase,  the Fund
will  suffer a loss to the extent of the price of the  currency it has agreed to
purchase exceeds the price of the currency it has agreed to sell.

     .........The  Fund's dealing in forward foreign currency exchange contracts
will generally be limited to the transactions described above. However, the Fund
reserves  the  right  to enter  into  forward  foreign  currency  contracts  for
different purposes and under different circumstances. Of course, the Fund is not
required  to  enter  into   forward   contracts   with  regard  to  its  foreign
currency-denominated  securities and will not do so unless deemed appropriate by
the Sub-advisor.  It also should be realized that this method of hedging against
a decline  in the value of a currency  does not  eliminate  fluctuations  in the
underlying prices of the securities. It simply establishes a rate of exchange at
a future date.  Additionally,  although such contracts tend to minimize the risk
of loss due to a decline in the value of the hedged currency,  at the same time,
they tend to limit any potential gain which might result from an increase in the
value of that currency.

     .........Although  the  Fund  values  its  assets  daily  in  terms of U.S.
dollars,  it does not intend to convert its holdings of foreign  currencies into
U.S.  dollars on a daily basis.  It will do so from time to time,  and investors
should be aware of the costs of currency  conversion.  Although foreign exchange
dealers do not charge a fee for  conversion,  they do realize a profit  based on
the difference  (the  "spread")  between the prices at which they are buying and
selling various currencies.  Thus, a dealer may offer to sell a foreign currency
to the Fund at one rate,  while  offering a lesser rate of  exchange  should the
Fund desire to resell that currency to the dealer. For an additional  discussion
of certain risks involved in foreign  investing,  see this SAI and the Company's
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     .........Federal  Tax Treatment of Options,  Futures  Contracts and Forward
Foreign Exchange Contracts. The Fund may enter into certain option, futures, and
forward foreign exchange contracts, including options and futures on currencies,
which will be treated as Section 1256 contracts or straddles.

 .........Transactions  which  are  considered  Section  1256  contracts  will be
considered  to have been  closed at the end of the  Fund's  fiscal  year and any
gains or losses will be recognized for tax purposes at that time.  Such gains or
losses  from the  normal  closing or  settlement  of such  transactions  will be
characterized as 60% long-term  capital gain or loss and 40% short-term  capital
gain or loss regardless of the holding period of the  instrument.  The Fund will
be required to distribute net gains on such  transactions to  shareholders  even
though it may not have  closed the  transaction  and  received  cash to pay such
distributions.

 .........Options,  futures and forward  foreign  exchange  contracts,  including
options and futures on  currencies,  which offset a foreign  dollar  denominated
bond or currency position may be considered  straddles for tax purposes in which
case a loss on any  position  in a straddle  will be subject to  deferral to the
extent of unrealized gain in an offsetting  position.  The holding period of the
securities  or  currencies  comprising  the straddle will be deemed not to begin
until the straddle is  terminated.  For  securities  offsetting a purchased put,
this  adjustment  of the  holding  period  may  increase  the gain from sales of
securities  held less than three  months.  The  holding  period of the  security
offsetting an "in-the-money qualified covered call" option on an equity security
will not include the period of time the option is outstanding.

 .........Losses  on written  covered  calls and  purchased  puts on  securities,
excluding certain "qualified covered call" options on equity securities,  may be
long-term  capital loss,  if the security  covering the option was held for more
than twelve months prior to the writing of the option.



<PAGE>


 .........In  order for the Fund to continue  to qualify  for federal  income tax
treatment as a regulated  investment  company,  at least 90% of its gross income
for a taxable  year must be derived from  qualifying  income,  i.e.,  dividends,
interest,  income derived from loans of  securities,  and gains from the sale of
securities or currencies.  Pending tax  regulations  could limit the extent that
net gain realized from option,  futures or foreign forward exchange contracts on
currencies  is  qualifying  income  for  purposes  of the  90%  requirement.  In
addition,  gains  realized  on the  sale or  other  disposition  of  securities,
including option, futures or foreign forward exchange contracts on securities or
securities  indices  and,  in some cases,  currencies,  held for less than three
months,  must be limited to less than 30% of the Fund's annual gross income.  In
order to avoid  realizing  excessive gains on securities or currencies held less
than three months,  the Fund may be required to defer the closing out of option,
futures  or foreign  forward  exchange  contracts  beyond the time when it would
otherwise be advantageous to do so. It is anticipated  that unrealized  gains on
Section 1256 option, futures and foreign forward exchange contracts,  which have
been open for less than three months as of the end of the Fund's fiscal year and
which  are  recognized  for  tax  purposes,  will  not be  considered  gains  on
securities  or  currencies  held less than three  months for purposes of the 30%
test.

     .........Hybrid  Commodity and Security Instruments.  Instruments have been
developed which combine the elements of futures  contracts or options with those
of debt,  preferred  equity  or a  depository  instrument  (hereinafter  "Hybrid
Instruments").  Often  these  hybrid  instruments  are indexed to the price of a
commodity  or  particular  currency  or a  domestic  or  foreign  debt or equity
securities index. Hybrid instruments may take a variety of forms, including, but
not  limited  to,  debt  instruments  with  interest  or  principal  payments or
redemption terms determined by reference to the value of a currency or commodity
at a future point in time,  preferred  stock with dividend  rates  determined by
reference  to the  value  of a  currency,  or  convertible  securities  with the
conversion terms related to a particular commodity.  For a discussion of certain
risks involved in hybrid  instruments,  see this SAI under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

     .........Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines  promulgated by the
Directors of the Company, the Fund may enter into repurchase  agreements through
which  an  investor  (such as the  Fund)  purchases  a  security  (known  as the
"underlying security") from a well-established  securities dealer or a bank that
is a member of the Federal Reserve System. Any such dealer or bank will be on T.
Rowe Price  Associates,  Inc. ("T. Rowe Price")  approved list and have a credit
rating with respect to its  short-term  debt of at least A1 by Standard & Poor's
Corporation,  P1 by Moody's Investors Service, Inc., or the equivalent rating by
T. Rowe Price. At that time, the bank or securities  dealer agrees to repurchase
the underlying security at the same price, plus specified  interest.  Repurchase
agreements  are  generally  for a short period of time,  often less than a week.
Repurchase agreements which do not provide for payment within seven days will be
treated  as  illiquid  securities.  The Fund will  only  enter  into  repurchase
agreements  where  (i) the  underlying  securities  are of the  type  (excluding
maturity  limitations) which the Fund's investment  guidelines would allow it to
purchase directly,  (ii) the market value of the underlying security,  including
interest  accrued,  will be at all  times  equal to or  exceed  the value of the
repurchase agreement, and (iii) payment for the underlying security is made only
upon physical delivery or evidence of book-entry  transfer to the account of the
custodian  or a bank  acting as agent.  In the  event of a  bankruptcy  or other
default of a seller of a repurchase  agreement,  the Fund could  experience both
delays in liquidating  the  underlying  securities  and losses,  including:  (a)
possible decline in the value of the underlying security during the period while
the Fund seeks to enforce its rights thereto;  (b) possible  subnormal levels of
income and lack of access to income  during  this  period;  and (c)  expenses of
enforcing its rights.

     .........Illiquid  and  Restricted  Securities.  The Fund may not invest in
illiquid  securities  including  repurchase  agreements which do not provide for
payment within seven days, if as a result,  they would comprise more than 15% of
the value of the Fund's net assets.

 .........Restricted   securities  may  be  sold  only  in  privately  negotiated
transactions  or in a public  offering  with  respect  to  which a  registration
statement is in effect under the Securities Act of 1933 (the "1933 Act").  Where
registration  is  required,  the Fund may be obligated to pay all or part of the
registration  expenses and a considerable  period may elapse between the time of
the  decision to sell and the time the Fund may be  permitted to sell a security
under an effective  registration  statement.  If, during such a period,  adverse
market conditions were to develop,  the 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  accordance  with  procedures  prescribed  by the
Directors of the Company.  If through the appreciation of illiquid securities or
the  depreciation of liquid  securities,  the Fund should be in a position where
more than 15% of the value of its net assets are  invested in  illiquid  assets,
including restricted securities, the Fund will take appropriate steps to protect
liquidity.



<PAGE>


 .........Notwithstanding the above, the Fund may purchase securities which while
privately  placed,  are eligible for purchase and sale under Rule 144A under the
1933 Act. This rule permits certain qualified  institutional buyers, such as the
Fund, to trade in privately  placed  securities  even though such securities are
not registered under the 1933 Act. The Sub-advisor, under the supervision of the
Directors of the Company,  will consider whether securities purchased under Rule
144A are  illiquid and thus  subject to the Fund's  restriction  of investing no
more than 15% of its assets in illiquid securities. A determination of whether a
Rule 144A  security  is  liquid or not is a  question  of fact.  In making  this
determination,  the  Sub-advisor  will  consider  the  trading  markets  for the
specific  security  taking into account the  unregistered  nature of a Rule 144A
security.  In addition,  the  Sub-advisor  could  consider the (1)  frequency of
trades and quotes,  (2) number of dealers and potential  purchasers,  (3) dealer
undertakings to make a market,  (4) and the nature of the security and of market
place trades (e.g.,  the time needed to dispose of the  security,  the method of
soliciting  offers and the  mechanics of  transfer).  The liquidity of Rule 144A
securities would be monitored and, if as a result of changed  conditions,  it is
determined that a Rule 144A security is no longer liquid, the Fund's holdings of
illiquid  securities  would be reviewed to  determine  what,  if any,  steps are
required  to assure that the Fund does not invest more than 15% of its assets in
illiquid securities.  Investing in Rule 144A securities could have the effect of
increasing  the amount of a Fund's  assets  invested in illiquid  securities  if
qualified institutional buyers are unwilling to purchase such securities.

     .........The  Directors of the Company  have  promulgated  guidelines  with
respect to illiquid securities.

     .........Lending  of  Portfolio  Securities.  For the purpose of  realizing
additional  income,  the Fund may make  secured  loans of  portfolio  securities
amounting  to not more than 33 1/3% of its total  assets.  Securities  loans are
made to broker-dealers,  institutional  investors,  or other persons pursuant to
agreements  requiring  that the loans be  continuously  secured by collateral at
least equal at all times to the value of the securities lent marked to market on
a daily basis.  The collateral  received will consist of cash,  U.S.  government
securities, letters of credit or such other collateral as may be permitted under
its  investment  program.  While the  securities  are being lent,  the Fund will
continue to receive the  equivalent  of the  interest or  dividends  paid by the
issuer  on  the  securities,  as  well  as  interest  on the  investment  of the
collateral  or a fee from the  borrower.  The Fund has a right to call each loan
and obtain the securities on five business  days' notice or, in connection  with
securities  trading on foreign markets,  within such longer period of time which
coincides  with the normal  settlement  period for  purchases  and sales of such
securities  in such  foreign  markets.  The Fund will not have the right to vote
securities while they are being lent, but it will call a loan in anticipation of
any important  vote. The risks in lending  portfolio  securities,  as with other
extensions of secured credit,  consist of possible delay in receiving additional
collateral  or in the recovery of the  securities  or possible loss of rights in
the collateral should the borrower fail financially.  Loans will only be made to
persons  deemed by the  Sub-advisor  to be of good standing and will not be made
unless, in the judgment of the Sub-advisor,  the consideration to be earned from
such loans would justify the risk.

     .........Other Lending/Borrowing. Subject to approval by the Securities and
Exchange  Commission,  the Fund may make loans to, or borrow  funds from,  other
mutual  funds  sponsored  or  advised  by  the  Sub-advisor  or  T.  Rowe  Price
Associates,  Inc.  The  Fund  has no  current  intention  of  engaging  in these
practices at this time.

         When-Issued  Securities and Forward Commitment Contracts.  The Fund may
purchase  securities  on a  "when-issued"  or  delayed  delivery  basis  and may
purchase  securities  on a forward  commitment  basis.  Any or all of the Fund's
investments in debt securities may be in the form of when-issueds  and forwards.
The price of such securities, which may be expressed in yield terms, is fixed at
the time the commitment to purchase is made, but delivery and payment take place
at a later date.  Normally,  the  settlement  date occurs  within 90 days of the
purchase for  when-issueds,  but may be substantially  longer for forwards.  The
Fund will cover its commitments  with respect to these securities by maintaining
cash and/or other liquid assets with its custodian  bank equal in value to these
commitments  during the time  between  the  purchase  and the  settlement.  Such
segregated securities either will mature or, if necessary,  be sold on or before
the settlement date. For a discussion of these securities and the risks involved
therein, see this SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     Investment Policies Which May Be Changed Without Shareholder Approval.  The
following  limitations are not "fundamental"  restrictions and may be changed by
the Directors of the Company without shareholder approval. The Fund will not:



<PAGE>


     1........Purchase  additional  securities when money borrowed exceeds 5% of
the Fund's total assets;

     2........Invest  in companies for the purpose of  exercising  management or
control;

         3........Purchase illiquid securities if, as a result, more than 15% of
its net assets  would be invested in such  securities.  Securities  eligible for
resale under Rule 144A of the  Securities Act of 1933 may be subject to this 15%
limitation;

     4........Purchase securities of open-end or closed-end investment companies
except in compliance with the Investment Company Act of 1940;

     5........Invest  in puts,  calls,  straddles,  spreads,  or any combination
thereof,  except to the extent  permitted by the Company's  Prospectus  and this
SAI;

         6........Purchase   securities  on  margin,   except  (i)  for  use  of
short-term  credit necessary for clearance of purchases of portfolio  securities
and (ii) the Fund may make margin deposits in connection with futures  contracts
and other permissible investments;

         7........Mortgage,  pledge, hypothecate or, in any manner, transfer any
security  owned by the Fund as a  security  for  indebtedness  except  as may be
necessary in connection with permissible borrowings or investments and then such
mortgaging,  pledging,  or  hypothecating  may not  exceed 33 1/3% of the Fund's
total assets at the time of borrowing or investment;

         8........Effect short sales of securities;

         9........Invest  in warrants if, as a result thereof,  more than 10% of
the value of the total  assets of the Fund would be invested in warrants  except
that this  restriction  does not apply to  warrants  acquired as a result of the
purchase of another security. For purposes of these percentage limitations,  the
warrants will be valued at the lower of cost or market; or

         10.......Purchase  a futures  contract  or an option  thereon  if, with
respect to  positions  in futures or options on futures  which do not  represent
bona fide hedging,  the aggregate  initial margin and premiums on such positions
would exceed 5% of the Fund's net assets.

         In addition to the restrictions described above, some foreign countries
limit,  or prohibit,  all direct  foreign  investment in the securities of their
companies.  However,  the  governments  of some  countries  have  authorized the
organization of investment  portfolios to permit indirect foreign  investment in
such  securities.  For tax  purposes  these  portfolios  may be known as Passive
Foreign  Investment  Companies.  The  Fund  is  subject  to  certain  percentage
limitations under the Investment Company Act of 1940 relating to the purchase of
securities of investment companies, and may be subject to the limitation that no
more than 10% of the value of the Fund's  total  assets may be  invested in such
securities.

ASAF JANUS OVERSEAS GROWTH FUND:


     Investment  Objective:  The investment objective of the ASAF Janus Overseas
Growth Fund is to seek long-term growth of capital.

Investment Policies:

         Futures,  Options and Other Derivative Instruments.  The Fund may enter
into futures contracts on securities,  financial indices, and foreign currencies
and  options  on such  contracts,  and may  invest  in  options  on  securities,
financial indices and foreign currencies,  forward contracts and swaps. The Fund
will not enter into any futures contracts or options on futures contracts if the
aggregate amount of the Fund's  commitments under outstanding  futures contracts
positions and options on futures  contracts written by the Fund would exceed the
market value of the total assets of the Fund (i.e., no leveraging). The Fund may
invest in forward  currency  contracts  with stated values of up to the value of
the Fund's assets.




<PAGE>



         The Fund may buy or write options in privately negotiated  transactions
on the types of securities and indices based on the types of securities in which
the Fund is permitted to invest directly. The Fund will effect such transactions
only  with  investment  dealers  and  other  financial   institutions  (such  as
commercial banks or savings and loan  institutions)  deemed  creditworthy by the
Sub-advisor,  and only pursuant to  procedures  adopted by the  Sub-advisor  for
monitoring the creditworthiness of those entities.  To the extent that an option
bought or written by the Fund in a negotiated transaction is illiquid, the value
of an option  bought or the  amount of the  Fund's  obligations  under an option
written  by the  Fund,  as the  case  may be,  will  be  subject  to the  Fund's
limitation on illiquid investments.  In the case of illiquid options, it may not
be possible for the Fund to effect an offsetting  transaction at a time when the
Sub-advisor  believes  it would  be  advantageous  for the Fund to do so.  For a
description  of these  strategies  and  instruments  and certain risks  involved
therein,  see this SAI and the Company's  Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

         Eurodollar  Instruments.  The Fund may make  investments  in Eurodollar
instruments.   Eurodollar  instruments  are  U.S.   dollar-denominated   futures
contracts or options  thereon which are linked to the London  Interbank  Offered
Rate ("LIBOR"), although foreign currency-denominated  instruments are available
from time to time.  Eurodollar  futures  contracts enable purchasers to obtain a
fixed  rate for the  lending  of funds and  sellers  to obtain a fixed  rate for
borrowings.  The Fund might use Eurodollar futures contracts and options thereon
to hedge  against  changes  in LIBOR,  to which  many  interest  rate  swaps and
fixed-income instruments are linked.

         Swaps and Swap-Related  Products. The Fund may enter into interest rate
swaps,  caps and  floors on  either an  asset-based  or  liability-based  basis,
depending  upon  whether it is hedging its assets or its  liabilities,  and will
usually  enter into  interest  rate swaps on a net basis (i.e.,  the two payment
streams are netted out, with the Fund  receiving or paying,  as the case may be,
only the net amount of the two payments).  The net amount of the excess, if any,
of the Fund's  obligations  over its  entitlement  with respect to each interest
rate swap  will be  calculated  on a daily  basis and an amount of cash or other
liquid  assets having an aggregate net asset value at least equal to the accrued
excess will be maintained in a segregated  account by the custodian of the Fund.
If the Fund  enters  into an  interest  rate swap on other than a net basis,  it
would maintain a segregated  account in the full amount accrued on a daily basis
of its  obligations  with respect to the swap.  The Fund will not enter into any
interest rate swap, cap or floor transaction unless the unsecured senior debt or
the  claims-paying  ability  of the other  party  thereto is rated in one of the
three  highest  rating   categories  of  at  least  one  nationally   recognized
statistical  rating  organization at the time of entering into such transaction.
The Sub-advisor will monitor the  creditworthiness  of all  counterparties on an
ongoing  basis.  If there is a default by the other party to such a transaction,
the Fund will have contractual  remedies  pursuant to the agreements  related to
the transaction.

         The swap market has grown  substantially  in recent  years with a large
number of banks and  investment  banking firms acting both as principals  and as
agents utilizing standardized swap documentation. The Sub-advisor has determined
that, as a result, the swap market has become relatively liquid. Caps and floors
are more recent  innovations for which  standardized  documentation  has not yet
been developed and, accordingly,  they are less liquid than swaps. To the extent
the Fund sells (i.e.,  writes) caps and floors,  it will segregate cash or other
liquid  assets  having an  aggregate  net asset value at least equal to the full
amount, accrued on a daily basis, of its obligations with respect to any caps or
floors.

         There is no limit on the amount of interest rate swap transactions that
may be  entered  into by the  Fund.  These  transactions  may in some  instances
involve the delivery of securities or other underlying assets by the Fund or its
counterparty   to   collateralize   obligations   under  the  swap.   Under  the
documentation  currently used in those markets, the risk of loss with respect to
interest  rate swaps is limited to the net amount of the payments  that the Fund
is contractually  obligated to make. If the other party to an interest rate swap
that is not  collateralized  defaults,  the Fund  would risk the loss of the net
amount of the payments that it  contractually  is entitled to receive.  The Fund
may buy and sell (i.e.,  write) caps and floors without  limitation,  subject to
the segregation  requirement  described above.  For an additional  discussion of
these  strategies,  see this SAI under  "Certain  Risk  Factors  and  Investment
Methods."

         Illiquid  Investments.   Subject  to  guidelines   promulgated  by  the
Directors  of the  Company,  the Fund may  invest up to 15% of its net assets in
illiquid  investments (i.e.,  securities that are not readily  marketable).  The
Sub-advisor  will make  liquidity  determinations  with  respect  to the  Fund's
securities, including Rule 144A Securities, commercial paper and municipal lease
obligations.  Under the guidelines established by the Directors, the Sub-advisor
will consider, among others, the following factors in determining whether a Rule
144A  Security is liquid:  1) the  frequency of trades and quoted prices for the
obligation;  2) the number of dealers  willing to purchase or sell the  security
and the number of other potential  purchasers;  3) the willingness of dealers to
undertake  to make a market in the  security;  and 4) the nature of the security
and the nature of  marketplace  trades,  including the time needed to dispose of
the security, the method of soliciting offers and the mechanics of the transfer.
In the case of commercial  paper,  the  Sub-advisor  will consider,  among other
factors,  whether  the paper is traded  flat or in default as to  principal  and
interest and any ratings of the paper by an NRSRO.

         Zero-Coupon,  Pay-In-Kind  and  Step  Coupon  Securities.  The Fund may
invest  up to 10% of its  assets in  zero-coupon,  pay-in-kind  and step  coupon
securities.  For a  discussion  of  zero-coupon  debt  securities  and the risks
involved  therein,  see this SAI under  "Certain  Risk  Factors  and  Investment
Methods."

         Pass-Through  Securities.  The  Fund may  invest  in  various  types of
pass-through  securities,  such  as  mortgage-backed  securities,   asset-backed
securities and participation  interests.  A pass-through  security is a share or
certificate of interest in a pool of debt  obligations that have been repackaged
by an  intermediary,  such  as a  bank  or  broker-dealer.  The  purchaser  of a
pass-through  security receives an undivided  interest in the underlying pool of
securities. The issuers of the underlying securities make interest and principal
payments to the intermediary which are passed through to purchasers, such as the
Fund. For an additional discussion of pass-through  securities and certain risks
involved therein,  see this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment Methods."

         Depositary  Receipts.  The Fund may invest in sponsored and unsponsored
American Depositary Receipts ("ADRs"),  which are receipts issued by an American
bank or trust company evidencing ownership of underlying  securities issued by a
foreign  issuer.  ADRs,  in  registered  form,  are  designed  for  use in  U.S.
securities markets. Unsponsored ADRs may be created without the participation of
the foreign  issuer.  Holders of these ADRs  generally bear all the costs of the
ADR  facility,  whereas  foreign  issuers  typically  bear  certain  costs  in a
sponsored ADR. The bank or trust company depositary of an unsponsored ADR may be
under no obligation to distribute shareholder  communications  received from the
foreign  issuer or to pass through  voting  rights.  The Fund may also invest in
European Depositary  Receipts ("EDRs"),  receipts issued by a European financial
institution evidencing an arrangement similar to that of ADRs, Global Depositary
Receipts ("GDRs") and in other similar  instruments  representing  securities of
foreign  companies.  EDRs,  in bearer  form,  are  designed  for use in European
securities  markets.  GDRs are securities  convertible into equity securities of
foreign issuers.

     Other  Income-Producing   Securities.   Other  types  of  income  producing
securities  that the Fund may  purchase  include,  but are not  limited  to, the
following types of securities:

     .........Variable and Floating Rate Obligations.  These types of securities
are relatively long-term instruments that often carry demand features permitting
the holder to demand payment of principal at any time or at specified  intervals
prior to maturity.

     .........Standby  Commitments.  These  instruments,  which are similar to a
put, give the Fund the option to obligate a broker, dealer or bank to repurchase
a security held by that Fund at a specified price.

     .........Tender  Option Bonds. Tender option bonds are relatively long-term
bonds that are coupled  with the  agreement  of a third party (such as a broker,
dealer or bank) to grant the holders of such securities the option to tender the
securities to the institution at periodic intervals.

     .........Inverse  Floaters.  Inverse  floaters are debt  instruments  whose
interest bears an inverse relationship to the interest rate on another security.
The Fund will not invest  more than 5% of its assets in  inverse  floaters.  The
Fund will purchase standby commitments, tender option bonds and instruments with
demand  features  primarily for the purpose of  increasing  the liquidity of the
Fund.

         Investment Policies Which May be Changed Without Shareholder  Approval.
The following limitations are not "fundamental"  restrictions and may be changed
by the Directors of the Company without shareholder approval:

         1........The  Fund will not (i) enter into any  futures  contracts  and
related  options for purposes other than bona fide hedging  transactions  within
the meaning of Commodity Futures Trading Commission ("CFTC")  regulations if the
aggregate initial margin and premiums required to establish positions in futures
contracts  and related  options that do not fall within the  definition  of bona
fide hedging  transactions will exceed 5% of the fair market value of the Fund's
net assets,  after taking into account  unrealized profits and unrealized losses
on any such  contracts  it has  entered  into;  and (ii) enter into any  futures
contracts if the aggregate amount of the Fund's  commitments  under  outstanding
futures contracts positions would exceed the market value of its total assets.

         2........The  Fund does not currently intend to sell securities  short,
unless  it owns or has the  right to obtain  securities  equivalent  in kind and
amount to the  securities  sold short  without  the  payment  of any  additional
consideration  therefor,  and provided that  transactions  in futures,  options,
swaps and forward  contracts  are not deemed to  constitute  selling  securities
short.

         3........The  Fund does not currently intend to purchase  securities on
margin, except that the Fund may obtain such short-term credits as are necessary
for the clearance of  transactions,  and provided that margin payments and other
deposits in connection with transactions in futures,  options, swaps and forward
contracts shall not be deemed to constitute purchasing securities on margin.

     4........The Fund does not currently intend to purchase securities of other
investment companies, except in compliance with the 1940 Act.

         5........The  Fund may not mortgage or pledge any  securities  owned or
held by the Fund in amounts that exceed, in the aggregate, 15% of the Fund's net
asset value,  provided that this limitation does not apply to reverse repurchase
agreements,  deposits  of assets to  margin,  guarantee  positions  in  futures,
options, swaps or forward contracts,  or the segregation of assets in connection
with such contracts.

         6........The Fund does not currently intend to purchase any security or
enter  into a  repurchase  agreement  if, as a result,  more than 15% of its net
assets would be invested in  repurchase  agreements  not entitling the holder to
payment of principal and interest  within seven days and in securities  that are
illiquid by virtue of legal or contractual restrictions on resale or the absence
of a readily available market.  The Directors of the Company,  or the Investment
Manager acting pursuant to authority  delegated by the Directors of the Company,
may determine that a readily available market exists for securities eligible for
resale  pursuant  to Rule 144A  under the  Securities  Act of 1933  ("Rule  144A
Securities"),  or any successor to such rule, and Section 4(2) commercial paper.
Accordingly, such securities may not be subject to the foregoing limitation.

     7........The Fund may not invest in companies for the purpose of exercising
control of management.


ASAF FOUNDERS SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
capital growth.

Investment Policies:

         Options On Stock  Indices  and  Stocks.  An option is a right to buy or
sell a security at a specified  price within a limited  period of time. The Fund
may  write  ("sell")  covered  call  options  on any  or  all  of its  portfolio
securities.  In addition, the Fund may purchase options on securities.  The Fund
may also purchase put and call options on stock indices.

         The Fund may  write  ("sell")  options  on any or all of its  portfolio
securities  and at such  time and  from  time to time as the  Sub-advisor  shall
determine to be  appropriate.  No specified  percentage  of the Fund's assets is
invested in securities with respect to which options may be written.  The extent
of the Fund's option  writing  activities  will vary from time to time depending
upon the Sub-advisor's evaluation of market, economic and monetary conditions.

         When the Fund  purchases a security with respect to which it intends to
write an option, it is likely that the option will be written  concurrently with
or  shortly  after  purchase.  The Fund will  write an  option  on a  particular
security only if the Sub-advisor  believes that a liquid  secondary  market will
exist on an exchange for options of the same series,  which will permit the Fund
to enter into a closing purchase transaction and close out its position.  If the
Fund desires to sell a particular security on which it has written an option, it
will effect a closing  purchase  transaction  prior to or concurrently  with the
sale of the security.

         The Fund may enter into  closing  purchase  transactions  to reduce the
percentage of its assets against which options are written,  to realize a profit
on a previously  written option,  or to enable it to write another option on the
underlying security with either a different exercise price or expiration time or
both.

         Options written by the Fund will normally have expiration dates between
three and nine months from the date written.  The exercise prices of options may
be  below,  equal  to or above  the  current  market  values  of the  underlying
securities  at the times the options are written.  From time to time for tax and
other  reasons,  the Fund may  purchase an  underlying  security for delivery in
accordance  with an exercise  notice assigned to it, rather than delivering such
security from its portfolio.

         A stock index  measures  the  movement of a certain  group of stocks by
assigning  relative  values  to the  stocks  included  in the  index.  The  Fund
purchases put options on stock indices to protect the portfolio  against decline
in value.  The Fund  purchases  call  options on stock  indices to  establish  a
position in equities as a temporary substitute for purchasing  individual stocks
that  then may be  acquired  over the  option  period  in a manner  designed  to
minimize  adverse  price  movements.  Purchasing  put and call  options on stock
indices also permits  greater time for  evaluation of  investment  alternatives.
When the  Sub-advisor  believes  that the trend of stock prices may be downward,
particularly  for a short  period of time,  the purchase of put options on stock
indices  may  eliminate  the  need to  sell  less  liquid  stocks  and  possibly
repurchase  them  later.  The purpose of these  transactions  is not to generate
gain,  but to "hedge"  against  possible  loss.  Therefore,  successful  hedging
activity will not produce net gain to the Fund.  Any gain in the price of a call
option is likely  to be  offset  by  higher  prices  the Fund must pay in rising
markets,  as cash reserves are invested.  In declining markets,  any increase in
the price of a put option is likely to be offset by lower prices of stocks owned
by the Fund.

         The Fund may  purchase  only those put and call options that are listed
on a  domestic  exchange  or quoted  on the  automatic  quotation  system of the
National Association of Securities Dealers,  Inc. ("NASDAQ").  Options traded on
stock  exchanges  are either  broadly  based,  such as the Standard & Poor's 500
Stock Index and 100 Stock Index,  or involve stocks in a designated  industry or
group of industries. The Fund may utilize either broadly based or market segment
indices in seeking a better correlation between the indices and the Fund.

         Transactions in options are subject to limitations, established by each
of the exchanges upon which options are traded,  governing the maximum number of
options which may be written or held by a single  investor or group of investors
acting in  concert,  regardless  of whether  the options are held in one or more
accounts.  Thus,  the number of  options  the Fund may hold may be  affected  by
options held by other  advisory  clients of the  Sub-advisor.  As of the date of
this SAI, the Sub-advisor  believes that these  limitations  will not affect the
purchase of stock index options by the Fund.

         One risk of holding a put or a call option is that if the option is not
sold or exercised prior to its expiration,  it becomes worthless.  However, this
risk is limited  to the  premium  paid by the Fund.  Other  risks of  purchasing
options include the possibility  that a liquid secondary market may not exist at
a time  when  the Fund may wish to  close  out an  option  position.  It is also
possible that trading in options on stock indices might be halted at a time when
the securities  markets generally were to remain open. In cases where the market
value of an issue supporting a covered call option exceeds the strike price plus
the  premium on the call,  the Fund will lose the right to  appreciation  of the
stock for the duration of the option. For an additional discussion of options on
stock indices and stocks and certain risks  involved  therein,  see this SAI and
the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Futures  Contracts.  The Fund may  enter  into  futures  contracts  (or
options  thereon) for hedging  purposes.  U.S.  futures  contracts are traded on
exchanges which have been designated "contract markets" by the Commodity Futures
Trading  Commission and must be executed through a futures  commission  merchant
(an "FCM") or brokerage firm which is a member of the relevant  contract market.
Although  futures  contracts by their terms call for the delivery or acquisition
of the  underlying  commodities  or a cash  payment  based  on the  value of the
underlying  commodities,  in most  cases the  contractual  obligation  is offset
before the delivery date of the contract by buying, in the case of a contractual
obligation to sell, or selling, in the case of a contractual  obligation to buy,
an identical  futures  contract on a  commodities  exchange.  Such a transaction
cancels the obligation to make or take delivery of the commodities.

         The acquisition or sale of a futures contract could occur, for example,
if the Fund  held or  considered  purchasing  equity  securities  and  sought to
protect  itself from  fluctuations  in prices  without  buying or selling  those
securities.  For example,  if prices were  expected to decrease,  the Fund could
sell  equity  index  futures  contracts,  thereby  hoping to offset a  potential
decline in the value of equity  securities in the  portfolio by a  corresponding
increase  in the value of the  futures  contract  position  held by the Fund and
thereby  prevent  the  Fund's  net  asset  value  from  declining  as much as it
otherwise  would  have.  The Fund also could  protect  against  potential  price
declines  by  selling  portfolio   securities  and  investing  in  money  market
instruments.  However,  since the  futures  market is more  liquid than the cash
market, the use of futures contracts as an investment  technique would allow the
Fund  to  maintain  a  defensive  position  without  having  to  sell  portfolio
securities.

         Similarly,  when prices of equity  securities are expected to increase,
futures contracts could be bought to attempt to hedge against the possibility of
having to buy equity  securities at higher  prices.  This technique is sometimes
known as an anticipatory  hedge.  Since the fluctuations in the value of futures
contracts should be similar to those of equity  securities,  the Fund could take
advantage of the potential rise in the value of equity securities without buying
them until the market had stabilized.  At that time, the futures contracts could
be liquidated and the Fund could buy equity securities on the cash market.

         The Fund may also enter into interest rate and foreign currency futures
contracts.  Interest rate futures contracts currently are traded on a variety of
fixed-income  securities,  including  long-term U.S.  Treasury  Bonds,  Treasury
Notes,   Government   National  Mortgage   Association   modified   pass-through
mortgage-backed  securities,  U.S.  Treasury Bills, bank certificates of deposit
and commercial paper. Foreign currency futures contracts currently are traded on
the British pound, Canadian dollar,  Japanese yen, Swiss franc, West German mark
and on Eurodollar deposits.

         The Fund  will  not,  as to any  positions,  whether  long,  short or a
combination  thereof,  enter into  futures  and  options  thereon  for which the
aggregate initial margins and premiums exceed 5% of the fair market value of its
total assets after taking into account  unrealized profits and losses on options
entered into. In the case of an option that is "in-the-money,"  the in-the-money
amount may be  excluded  in  computing  such 5%. In  general a call  option on a
future  is  "in-the-money"  if the  value of the  future  exceeds  the  exercise
("strike") price of the call; a put option on a future is  "in-the-money" if the
value of the future  which is the  subject of the put is  exceeded by the strike
price of the put. The Fund may use futures and options  thereon  solely for bona
fide hedging or for other  non-speculative  purposes. As to long positions which
are used as part of the Fund's  strategies  and are incidental to its activities
in the underlying cash market,  the "underlying  commodity  value" of the Fund's
futures and options  thereon must not exceed the sum of (i) cash set aside in an
identifiable   manner,   or   short-term   U.S.   debt   obligations   or  other
dollar-denominated high-quality, short-term money instruments so set aside, plus
sums deposited on margin; (ii) cash proceeds from existing investments due in 30
days; and (iii) accrued  profits held at the futures  commission  merchant.  The
"underlying  commodity value" of a future is computed by multiplying the size of
the  future  by the daily  settlement  price of the  future.  For an option on a
future,  that value is the underlying  commodity value of the future  underlying
the option.

         Unlike the  situation in which the Fund  purchases or sells a security,
no price is paid or received by the Fund upon the  purchase or sale of a futures
contract. Instead, the Fund is required to deposit in a segregated asset account
an amount of cash or qualifying  securities  (currently  U.S.  Treasury  bills),
currently in a minimum amount of $15,000.  This is called "initial margin." Such
initial  margin is in the nature of a performance  bond or good faith deposit on
the  contract.  However,  since  losses on open  contracts  are  required  to be
reflected  in cash in the form of  variation  margin  payments,  the Fund may be
required  to make  additional  payments  during  the term of a  contract  to its
broker. Such payments would be required, for example,  where, during the term of
an interest  rate futures  contract  purchased by the Fund,  there was a general
increase in interest rates,  thereby making the Fund's securities less valuable.
In all instances  involving the purchase of financial  futures  contracts by the
Fund,  an amount of cash  together  with such other  securities  as permitted by
applicable  regulatory  authorities  to be utilized for such  purpose,  at least
equal to the  market  value of the  future  contracts,  will be  deposited  in a
segregated  account with the Fund's custodian to collateralize the position.  At
any time prior to the  expiration of a futures  contract,  the Fund may elect to
close  its  position  by taking an  opposite  position  which  will  operate  to
terminate the Fund's position in the futures contract.

         Because futures  contracts are generally  settled within a day from the
date they are closed out,  compared with a settlement  period of three  business
days for most types of  securities,  the futures  markets  can provide  superior
liquidity  to the  securities  markets.  Nevertheless,  there is no  assurance a
liquid  secondary  market will exist for any particular  futures contract at any
particular  time.  In addition,  futures  exchanges  may  establish  daily price
fluctuation  limits for futures  contracts  and may halt trading if a contract's
price moves  upward or downward  more than the limit in a given day. On volatile
trading days when the price fluctuation limit is reached, it would be impossible
for the Fund to enter into new positions or close out existing positions. If the
secondary  market  for a  futures  contract  were not  liquid  because  of price
fluctuation  limits  or  otherwise,  the  Fund  would  not  promptly  be able to
liquidate  unfavorable  futures  positions and potentially  could be required to
continue to hold a futures  position  until the  delivery  date,  regardless  of
changes in its value.  As a result,  the Fund's  access to other  assets held to
cover its futures positions also could be impaired. For an additional discussion
of futures  contracts and certain risks involved  therein,  see this SAI and the
Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Options  on  Futures  Contracts.  The  Fund may  purchase  put and call
options on  futures  contracts.  An option on a futures  contract  provides  the
holder with the right to enter into a "long" position in the underlying  futures
contract,  in the case of a call option, or a "short" position in the underlying
futures  contract,  in the case of a put option,  at a fixed exercise price to a
stated  expiration  date. Upon exercise of the option by the holder,  a contract
market clearing house establishes a corresponding  short position for the writer
of the option, in the case of a call option,  or a corresponding  long position,
in the case of a put  option.  In the event  that an option  is  exercised,  the
parties will be subject to all the risks  associated with the trading of futures
contracts, such as payment of variation margin deposits.

         A position in an option on a futures  contract may be terminated by the
purchaser or seller prior to expiration by effecting a closing  purchase or sale
transaction,  subject to the availability of a liquid secondary market, which is
the purchase or sale of an option of the same series  (i.e.,  the same  exercise
price and  expiration  date) as the option  previously  purchased  or sold.  The
difference between the premiums paid and received represents the trader's profit
or loss on the transaction.

         An option,  whether  based on a futures  contract,  a stock  index or a
security,  becomes worthless to the holder when it expires.  Upon exercise of an
option,  the exchange or contract market clearing house assigns exercise notices
on a random basis to those of its members which have written options of the same
series and with the same  expiration  date.  A  brokerage  firm  receiving  such
notices then assigns them on a random basis to those of its customers which have
written options of the same series and expiration  date. A writer  therefore has
no control  over  whether an option will be  exercised  against it, nor over the
time of such exercise.

         The purchase of a call option on a futures  contract is similar in some
respects  to the  purchase  of a call  option  on an  individual  security.  See
"Options on Foreign  Currencies"  below.  Depending on the pricing of the option
compared to either the price of the futures  contract  upon which it is based or
the price of the underlying  instrument,  ownership of the option may or may not
be  less  risky  than  ownership  of the  futures  contract  or  the  underlying
instrument.  As with the  purchase  of futures  contracts,  when the Fund is not
fully invested it could buy a call option on a futures contract to hedge against
a market advance.  The purchase of a put option on a futures contract is similar
in some  respects  to the  purchase  of  protective  put  options  on  portfolio
securities. For example, the Fund would be able to buy a put option on a futures
contract  to hedge its  portfolio  against  the risk of falling  prices.  For an
additional discussion of options on futures contracts and certain risks involved
therein,  see this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risks Factors
and Investment Methods."

         Options on  Foreign  Currencies.  The Fund may buy and sell  options on
foreign  currencies  for hedging  purposes in a manner  similar to that in which
futures on foreign  currencies would be utilized.  For example, a decline in the
U.S.  dollar  value of a foreign  currency  in which  portfolio  securities  are
denominated would reduce the U.S. dollar value of such securities, even if their
value in the foreign  currency  remained  constant.  In order to protect against
such  diminutions in the value of portfolio  securities,  the Fund could buy put
options on the foreign currency. If the value of the currency declines, the Fund
would have the right to sell such  currency for a fixed  amount in U.S.  dollars
and would thereby  offset,  in whole or in part,  the adverse effect on the Fund
which otherwise would have resulted. Conversely, when a rise is projected in the
U.S.  dollar  value  of a  currency  in  which  securities  to be  acquired  are
denominated,  thereby increasing the cost of such securities, the Fund could buy
call  options  thereon.  The  purchase of such options  could  offset,  at least
partially, the effects of the adverse movements in exchange rates.

         Options on foreign currencies traded on national  securities  exchanges
are within the  jurisdiction of the Securities and Exchange  Commission,  as are
other securities traded on such exchanges.  As a result, many of the protections
provided to traders on organized  exchanges  will be  available  with respect to
such transactions.  In particular, all foreign currency option positions entered
into on a national securities exchange are cleared and guaranteed by the Options
Clearing Corporation ("OCC"), thereby reducing the risk of counterparty default.
Further,  a liquid secondary  market in options traded on a national  securities
exchange  may be more readily  available  than in the  over-the-counter  market,
potentially permitting the Fund to liquidate open positions at a profit prior to
exercise  or  expiration,  or to limit  losses  in the event of  adverse  market
movements.

         The  purchase and sale of  exchange-traded  foreign  currency  options,
however,  is  subject  to the risks of the  availability  of a liquid  secondary
market described above, as well as the risks regarding adverse market movements,
margining  of  options  written,  the  nature of the  foreign  currency  market,
possible  intervention  by  governmental  authorities,  and the effects of other
political and economic events. In addition,  exchange-traded  options on foreign
currencies involve certain risks not presented by the  over-the-counter  market.
For example,  exercise and  settlement of such options must be made  exclusively
through the OCC,  which has  established  banking  relationships  in  applicable
foreign countries for this purpose.  As a result,  the OCC may, if it determines
that  foreign  governmental  restrictions  or taxes  would  prevent  the orderly
settlement  of  foreign  currency  option  exercises,  or would  result in undue
burdens on the OCC or its clearing member, impose special procedures on exercise
and  settlement,  such as  technical  changes in the  mechanics  of  delivery of
currency, the fixing of dollar settlement prices, or prohibitions on exercise.

         Risk Factors of Investing in Futures and Options. The successful use of
the  investment  practices  described  above with respect to futures  contracts,
options on futures contracts, and options on securities indices, securities, and
foreign  currencies  draws upon skills and  experience  which are different from
those needed to select the other  instruments in which the Fund invests.  Should
interest or exchange rates or the prices of securities or financial indices move
in an  unexpected  manner,  the Fund may not  achieve  the  desired  benefits of
futures and options or may realize  losses and thus be in a worse  position than
if such  strategies  had not been  used.  Unlike  many  exchange-traded  futures
contracts and options on futures contracts, there are no daily price fluctuation
limits with respect to options on currencies and negotiated or  over-the-counter
instruments,  and  adverse  market  movements  could  therefore  continue  to an
unlimited  extent over a period of time. In addition,  the  correlation  between
movements in the price of the securities and currencies hedged or used for cover
will not be perfect and could produce unanticipated losses.

         The  Fund's  ability  to  dispose  of its  positions  in the  foregoing
instruments   will  depend  on  the   availability  of  liquid  markets  in  the
instruments. Markets in a number of the instruments are relatively new and still
developing  and it is impossible to predict the amount of trading  interest that
may exist in those  instruments  in the  future.  Particular  risks  exist  with
respect to the use of each of the foregoing instruments and could result in such
adverse consequences to the Fund as the possible loss of the entire premium paid
for an option  bought by the Fund and the  possible  need to defer  closing  out
positions in certain instruments to avoid adverse tax consequences. As a result,
no  assurance  can be given that the Fund will be able to use those  instruments
effectively for the purposes set forth above.

         In addition, options on U.S. Government securities,  futures contracts,
options  on  futures  contracts,   forward  contracts  and  options  on  foreign
currencies may be traded on foreign  exchanges and  over-the-counter  in foreign
countries.  Such  transactions  are subject to the risk of governmental  actions
affecting  trading in or the prices of foreign  currencies  or  securities.  The
value of such  positions  also could be affected  adversely by (i) other complex
foreign  political and economic  factors,  (ii) lesser  availability than in the
United  States of data on which to make trading  decisions,  (iii) delays in the
Fund's ability to act upon economic  events  occurring in foreign markets during
nonbusiness  hours in the  United  States,  (iv)  the  imposition  of  different
exercise and settlement terms and procedures and margin requirements than in the
United  States,  and (v) low trading  volume.  For an  additional  discussion of
certain risks involved in investing in futures and options, see this SAI and the
Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     Foreign Securities.  Investments in foreign countries involve certain risks
which are not typically  associated with U.S.  investments.  For a discussion of
certain  risks  involved in foreign  investing,  see this SAI and the  Company's
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Forward Contracts for Purchase or Sale of Foreign Currencies.  The Fund
generally  conducts its foreign currency exchange  transactions on a spot (i.e.,
cash) basis at the spot rate prevailing in the foreign exchange currency market.
When the Fund purchases or sells a security  denominated in a foreign  currency,
it may enter into a forward foreign currency contract  ("forward  contract") for
the purchase or sale,  for a fixed  amount of dollars,  of the amount of foreign
currency  involved in the underlying  security  transaction.  A forward contract
involves an obligation to purchase or sell a specific currency at a future date,
which may be any fixed number of days from the date of the contract  agreed upon
by the parties, at a price set at the time of the contract.  In this manner, the
Fund may obtain  protection  against a possible loss  resulting  from an adverse
change in the  relationship  between the U.S.  dollar and the  foreign  currency
during the period  between the date the  security is  purchased  or sold and the
date upon which  payment is made or received.  Although such  contracts  tend to
minimize  the  risk  of loss  due to the  decline  in the  value  of the  hedged
currency,  at the same time they tend to limit any  potential  gain which  might
result should the value of such currency  increase.  The Fund will not speculate
in forward contracts.

         Forward contracts are traded in the interbank market conducted directly
between currency  traders (usually large commercial  banks) and their customers.
Generally a forward contract has no deposit requirement,  and no commissions are
charged at any stage for trades. Although foreign exchange dealers do not charge
a fee for conversion,  they do realize a profit based on the difference  between
the prices at which they buy and sell various  currencies.  When the Sub-advisor
believes  that  the  currency  of a  particular  foreign  country  may  suffer a
substantial  decline  against  the U.S.  dollar (or  sometimes  against  another
currency),  the Fund may enter  into a  forward  contract  to sell,  for a fixed
dollar or other currency  amount,  foreign currency  approximating  the value of
some or all of the Fund's securities denominated in that currency. The Fund will
not enter  into such  forward  contracts  or  maintain  a net  exposure  to such
contracts  where the  fulfillment  of the  contracts  would  require the Fund to
deliver an amount of foreign  currency  in excess of the value of its  portfolio
securities or other assets denominated in that currency.  Forward contracts may,
from time to time, be considered  illiquid,  in which case they would be subject
to the Fund's limitation on investing in illiquid securities.

         At the consummation of a forward contract for delivery by the Fund of a
foreign  currency,  the Fund may either make delivery of the foreign currency or
terminate  its  contractual  obligation  to  deliver  the  foreign  currency  by
purchasing  an  offsetting  contract  obligating  it to  purchase,  at the  same
maturity date, the same amount of the foreign  currency.  If the Fund chooses to
make  delivery  of the  foreign  currency,  it may be  required  to obtain  such
currency through the sale of portfolio  securities  denominated in such currency
or through conversion of other Fund assets into such currency.

         Dealings  in  forward  contracts  by the Fund  will be  limited  to the
transactions  described above. Of course, the Fund is not required to enter into
such transactions with regard to its foreign currency-denominated securities and
will not do so unless deemed  appropriate by the Sub-advisor.  It also should be
realized  that this  method of  protecting  the value of the  Fund's  securities
against a decline in the value of a currency does not eliminate  fluctuations in
the  underlying  prices  of the  securities.  It  simply  establishes  a rate of
exchange  which can be  achieved  at some  future  point in time.  Additionally,
although such  contracts tend to minimize the risk of loss due to the decline in
the  value of the  hedged  currency,  at the same  time  they  tend to limit any
potential  gain which might result should the value of such  currency  increase.
For an additional  discussion of forward foreign currency  contracts and certain
risks involved therein, see this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Illiquid Securities. As discussed in the Company's Prospectus, the Fund
may  invest up to 15% of the value of its net  assets,  measured  at the time of
investment,  in  investments  which  are  not  readily  marketable.   Restricted
securities  are  securities  that  may  not  be  resold  to the  public  without
registration  under the  Securities  Act of 1933 (the  "1933  Act").  Restricted
securities  (other  than Rule 144A  securities  deemed to be  liquid,  discussed
below) and securities  which, due to their market or the nature of the security,
have no readily available markets for their disposition are considered to be not
readily  marketable or "illiquid." These limitations on resale and marketability
may have the effect of preventing  the Fund from disposing of such a security at
the time desired or at a  reasonable  price.  In addition,  in order to resell a
restricted  security,  the Fund  might  have to bear the  expense  and incur the
delays   associated  with  effecting   registration.   In  purchasing   illiquid
securities,  the Fund does not  intend to  engage  in  underwriting  activities,
except to the extent the Fund may be deemed to be a statutory  underwriter under
the Securities Act in purchasing or selling such securities. Illiquid securities
will be  purchased  for  investment  purposes  only and not for the  purpose  of
exercising  control  or  management  of  other  companies.   For  an  additional
discussion  of illiquid or  restricted  securities  and certain  risks  involved
therein, see the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

         The Directors of the Company have  promulgated  guidelines with respect
to illiquid securities.

         Rule 144A Securities. In recent years, a large institutional market has
developed for certain  securities  that are not  registered  under the 1933 Act.
Institutional investors generally will not seek to sell these instruments to the
general  public,  but instead will often  depend on an  efficient  institutional
market in which  such  unregistered  securities  can  readily be resold or on an
issuer's ability to honor a demand for repayment. Therefore, the fact that there
are contractual or legal restrictions on resale to the general public or certain
institutions is not dispositive of the liquidity of such investments.



<PAGE>


         Rule  144A  under the 1933 Act  establishes  a "safe  harbor"  from the
registration  requirements of the 1933 Act for resales of certain  securities to
qualified  institutional  buyers.  The Fund may  invest in Rule 144A  securities
which, as disclosed in the Company's Prospectus, are restricted securities which
may  or may  not  be  readily  marketable.  Rule  144A  securities  are  readily
marketable if institutional  markets for the securities develop pursuant to Rule
144A which provide both readily  ascertainable values for the securities and the
ability to liquidate the  securities  when  liquidation  is deemed  necessary or
advisable.  However,  an insufficient number of qualified  institutional  buyers
interested  in  purchasing  a Rule 144A  security  held by the Fund could affect
adversely the marketability of the security. In such an instance, the Fund might
be unable to dispose of the security promptly or at reasonable prices.

         The  Sub-advisor  will  determine  that  a  liquid  market  exists  for
securities  eligible for resale pursuant to Rule 144A under the 1933 Act, or any
successor to such rule,  and that such  securities are not subject to the Fund's
limitations  on investing in  securities  that are not readily  marketable.  The
Sub-advisor will consider the following  factors,  among others,  in making this
determination:  (1) the  unregistered  nature of a Rule 144A  security;  (2) the
frequency  of trades  and  quotes  for the  security;  (3) the number of dealers
willing to purchase or sell the security and the number of additional  potential
purchasers;  (4) dealer  undertakings to make a market in the security;  and (5)
the nature of the security and the nature of market place trades (e.g., the time
needed to  dispose of the  security,  the  method of  soliciting  offers and the
mechanics of transfers).

         Lower-Rated or Unrated Fixed-Income Securities.  The Fund may invest up
to 5% of its total assets in  fixed-income  securities  which are unrated or are
rated below  investment  grade  either at the time of purchase or as a result of
reduction  in  rating  after  purchase.  (This  limitation  does  not  apply  to
convertible  securities  and preferred  stocks.)  Investments  in lower-rated or
unrated  securities  are  generally  considered  to be of high risk.  These debt
securities,  commonly  referred to as junk bonds,  are generally  subject to two
kinds of risk,  credit risk and market risk.  Credit risk relates to the ability
of the issuer to meet interest or principal payments, or both, as they come due.
The ratings given a security by Moody's Investors Service,  Inc. ("Moody's") and
Standard & Poor's  ("S&P")  provide a generally  useful  guide as to such credit
risk. For a description of securities ratings, see the Appendix to this SAI. The
lower the rating  given a security by a rating  service,  the greater the credit
risk such  rating  service  perceives  to exist with  respect  to the  security.
Increasing  the amount of the Fund's  assets  invested in unrated or lower grade
securities,  while intended to increase the yield produced by those assets, will
also increase the risk to which those assets are subject.

         Market  risk  relates  to the  fact  that  the  market  values  of debt
securities  in which the Fund invests  generally  will be affected by changes in
the level of interest  rates.  An increase in interest rates will tend to reduce
the market values of such  securities,  whereas a decline in interest rates will
tend to increase their values. Medium and lower-rated securities (Baa or BBB and
lower) and  non-rated  securities  of  comparable  quality tend to be subject to
wider  fluctuations in yields and market values than higher rated securities and
may have speculative characteristics. In order to decrease the risk in investing
in debt  securities,  in no event will the Fund ever  invest in a debt  security
rated  below B by  Moody's  or by S&P.  Of  course,  relying  in part on ratings
assigned by credit agencies in making investments will not protect the Fund from
the risk that the  securities in which they invest will decline in value,  since
credit ratings represent evaluations of the safety of principal,  dividend,  and
interest  payments  on  debt  securities,  and  not the  market  values  of such
securities,  and such  ratings  may not be changed on a timely  basis to reflect
subsequent events.

         Because  investment  in  medium  and  lower-rated  securities  involves
greater credit risk,  achievement of the Fund's investment objective may be more
dependent on the  Sub-advisor's  own credit  analysis than is the case for funds
that do not invest in such securities. In addition, the share price and yield of
the Fund may  fluctuate  more  than in the case of  funds  investing  in  higher
quality,  shorter term securities.  Moreover, a significant economic downturn or
major increase in interest rates may result in issuers of lower-rated securities
experiencing  increased  financial  stress,  which would adversely  affect their
ability to service their principal,  dividend,  and interest  obligations,  meet
projected  business goals, and obtain additional  financing.  In this regard, it
should be noted that while the market for high yield debt securities has been in
existence  for  many  years  and  from  time to time  has  experienced  economic
downturns in recent years,  this market has involved a  significant  increase in
the  use of high  yield  debt  securities  to fund  highly  leveraged  corporate
acquisitions and restructurings.  Past experience may not, therefore, provide an
accurate  indication  of future  performance  of the high yield debt  securities
market, particularly during periods of economic recession. Furthermore, expenses
incurred in  recovering  an  investment  in a defaulted  security may  adversely
affect the Fund's net asset value.  Finally,  while the Sub-advisor  attempts to
limit  purchases of medium and  lower-rated  securities to securities  having an
established  secondary  market,  the secondary market for such securities may be
less liquid than the market for higher quality securities. The reduced liquidity
of the secondary  market for such  securities  may  adversely  affect the market
price of, and  ability of the Fund to value,  particular  securities  at certain
times,  thereby making it difficult to make specific  valuation  determinations.
The Fund does not invest in any medium and lower-rated  securities which present
special tax consequences, such as zero-coupon bonds or pay-in-kind bonds. For an
additional discussion of certain risks involved in lower-rated  securities,  see
this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

         The Sub-advisor  seeks to reduce the overall risks  associated with the
Fund's  investments   through   diversification  and  consideration  of  factors
affecting  the value of securities  it considers  relevant.  No assurance can be
given,  however,  regarding  the degree of success that will be achieved in this
regard or that the Fund will achieve its investment objective.

         Repurchase  Agreements.   Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by  the
Directors of the Company,  the Fund may enter into  repurchase  agreements  with
respect to money market  instruments  eligible for  investment  by the Fund with
member  banks of the Federal  Reserve  system,  registered  broker-dealers,  and
registered   government  securities  dealers.  A  repurchase  agreement  may  be
considered a loan collateralized by securities.  Repurchase  agreements maturing
in more than  seven  days are  considered  illiquid  and will be  subject to the
Fund's limitation with respect to illiquid securities.

         The Fund has not adopted any limits on the amounts of its total  assets
that may be invested in  repurchase  agreements  which mature in less than seven
days.  The Fund may  invest  up to 15% of the  market  value of its net  assets,
measured  at  the  time  of  purchase,  in  securities  which  are  not  readily
marketable,  including  repurchase  agreements maturing in more than seven days.
For an additional discussion of repurchase agreements and certain risks involved
therein, see the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

         Convertible  Securities.  The Fund may buy securities  convertible into
common  stock  if,  for  example,  the  Sub-advisor  believes  that a  company's
convertible  securities are  undervalued in the market.  Convertible  securities
eligible for purchase include convertible bonds,  convertible  preferred stocks,
and warrants. A warrant is an instrument issued by a corporation which gives the
holder the right to subscribe to a specific amount of the corporation's  capital
stock at a set price for a specified  period of time.  Warrants do not represent
ownership  of the  securities,  but only the  right to buy the  securities.  The
prices of warrants do not necessarily  move parallel to the prices of underlying
securities.  Warrants may be considered  speculative in that they have no voting
rights,  pay no  dividends,  and have no rights with  respect to the assets of a
corporation  issuing them.  Warrant  positions  will not be used to increase the
leverage of the Fund; consequently,  warrant positions are generally accompanied
by cash positions equivalent to the required exercise amount.

     Investment Policies Which May Be Changed Without Shareholder Approval.  The
following  limitations are not "fundamental"  restrictions and may be changed by
the Directors of the Company without shareholder approval. The Fund will not:

         1........Invest  more than 15% of the market value of its net assets in
securities which are not readily  marketable,  including  repurchase  agreements
maturing in over seven days;

     2........Purchase  securities  of  other  investment  companies  except  in
compliance with the Investment Company Act of 1940;

         3........Purchase  any  securities  on margin  except  to  obtain  such
short-term  credits as may be necessary for the clearance of transactions  (and,
provided that margin payments and other deposits in connection with transactions
in  options,  futures and forward  contracts  shall not be deemed to  constitute
purchasing securities on margin); or

         4........Sell securities short.

         In addition, in periods of uncertain market and economic conditions, as
determined  by the  Sub-advisor,  the Fund may depart from its basic  investment
objective  and  assume  a  defensive  position  with up to  100%  of its  assets
temporarily  invested in high quality  corporate  bonds or notes and  government
issues, or held in cash.

         If a percentage restriction is adhered to at the time of investment,  a
later increase or decrease in percentage beyond the specified limit that results
from a change in values or net assets will not be considered a violation.

ASAF T. ROWE PRICE SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The investment  objective of the Fund is to provide
long-term capital growth by investing primarily in  small-capitalization  stocks
that appear to be undervalued.

Investment Policies:

         Although  primarily  all of the Fund's  assets are  invested  in common
stocks, the Fund may invest in convertible securities, corporate debt securities
and preferred stocks.  The fixed-income  securities in which the Fund may invest
include,  but are not  limited to,  those  described  below.  See this SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment  Methods," for an additional  discussion of
debt obligations.

     U.S. Government Obligations.  Bills, notes, bonds and other debt securities
issued by the U.S. Treasury. These are direct obligations of the U.S. Government
and differ mainly in the length of their maturities.

         U.S.  Government  Agency  Securities.  Issued  or  guaranteed  by  U.S.
Government sponsored enterprises and federal agencies.  These include securities
issued  by  the  Federal  National  Mortgage  Association,  Government  National
Mortgage  Association,  Federal Home Loan Bank, Federal Land Banks, Farmers Home
Administration,  Banks for  Cooperatives,  Federal  Intermediate  Credit  Banks,
Federal Financing Bank, Farm Credit Banks, the Small Business  Association,  and
the Tennessee  Valley  Authority.  Some of these securities are supported by the
full faith and credit of the U.S. Treasury; and the remainder are supported only
by the credit of the instrumentality,  which may or may not include the right of
the issuer to borrow from the Treasury.

     Bank Obligations.  Certificates of deposit, bankers' acceptances, and other
short-term debt obligations.  Certificates of deposit are short-term obligations
of commercial banks. A bankers' acceptance is a time draft drawn on a commercial
bank  by  a  borrower,  usually  in  connection  with  international  commercial
transactions. Certificates of deposit may have fixed or variable rates. The Fund
may invest in U.S.  banks,  foreign  branches of U.S.  banks,  U.S.  branches of
foreign banks, and foreign branches of foreign banks.

         Short-Term  Corporate  Debt  Securities.   Outstanding   nonconvertible
corporate debt securities  (e.g.,  bonds and debentures)  which have one year or
less  remaining  to  maturity.  Corporate  notes may have  fixed,  variable,  or
floating rates.

     Commercial  Paper.  Short-term  promissory  notes  issued  by  corporations
primarily to finance short-term credit needs. Certain notes may have floating or
variable rates.

     Foreign   Government   Securities.   Issued  or  guaranteed  by  a  foreign
government,  province,  instrumentality,  political  subdivision or similar unit
thereof.

     Savings and Loan Obligations.  Negotiable certificates of deposit and other
short-term debt obligations of savings and loan associations.

     Supranational  Entities.  The Fund may also  invest  in the  securities  of
certain supranational entities, such as the International Development Bank.

         Lower-Rated Debt Securities.  The Fund's investment  program permits it
to purchase below investment  grade  securities,  commonly  referred to as "junk
bonds."  Since  investors  generally  perceive  that  there  are  greater  risks
associated  with  investment in lower quality  securities,  the yields from such
securities  normally  exceed those  obtainable  from higher quality  securities.
However, the principal value of lower-rated  securities generally will fluctuate
more widely than higher quality  securities.  Lower quality investments entail a
higher risk of default -- that is, the  nonpayment  of interest and principal by
the issuer than higher quality investments.  Such securities are also subject to
special  risks,  discussed  below.  Although  the Fund  seeks to reduce  risk by
portfolio  diversification,  credit  analysis,  and  attention  to trends in the
economy,  industries and financial markets,  such efforts will not eliminate all
risk.  There can,  of course,  be no  assurance  that the Fund will  achieve its
investment objective.



<PAGE>


         After  purchase by the Fund,  a debt  security may cease to be rated or
its rating may be reduced  below the minimum  required for purchase by the Fund.
Neither  event will require a sale of such  security by the Fund.  However,  the
Sub-advisor  will consider such event in its  determination  of whether the Fund
should  continue to hold the  security.  To the extent that the ratings given by
Moody's or S&P may change as a result of changes in such  organizations or their
rating systems, the Fund will attempt to use comparable ratings as standards for
investments  in  accordance  with  the  investment  policies  contained  in  the
Company's Prospectus.

         Junk bonds are regarded as  predominantly  speculative  with respect to
the issuer's continuing ability to meet principal and interest payments. Because
investment in low and  lower-medium  quality bonds involves  greater  investment
risk,  to the  extent  the  Fund  invests  in  such  bonds,  achievement  of its
investment objective will be more dependent on the Sub-advisor's credit analysis
than would be the case if the Fund was investing in higher quality bonds.  For a
discussion of the special risks  involved in low-rated  bonds,  see this SAI and
the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Mortgage-Backed  Securities.  Mortgage-backed securities are securities
representing  interests in a pool of  mortgages.  After  purchase by the Fund, a
security  may cease to be rated or its rating may be reduced  below the  minimum
required  for  purchase by the Fund.  Neither  event will require a sale of such
security by the Fund.  However,  the Sub-advisor will consider such event in its
determination  of whether the Fund should continue to hold the security.  To the
extent  that the  ratings  given by  Moody's  or S&P may  change  as a result of
changes in such organizations or their rating systems,  the Fund will attempt to
use  comparable  ratings as standards for  investments  in  accordance  with the
investment policies contained in the Company's  Prospectus.  For a discussion of
mortgage-backed  securities and certain risks involved therein, see this SAI and
the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Collateralized  Mortgage Obligations (CMOs). CMOs are obligations fully
collateralized  by a portfolio  of  mortgages  or  mortgage-related  securities.
Payments of principal and interest on the  mortgages  are passed  through to the
holders of the CMOs on the same schedule as they are received,  although certain
classes  of CMOs have  priority  over  others  with  respect  to the  receipt of
prepayments on the mortgages.  Therefore, depending on the type of CMOs in which
a fund  invests,  the  investment  may be subject to a greater or lesser risk of
prepayment than other types of  mortgage-related  securities.  For an additional
discussion  of CMOs  and  certain  risks  involved  therein,  see the  Company's
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Stripped   Agency   Mortgage-Backed    Securities.    Stripped   Agency
Mortgage-Backed  securities represent interests in a pool of mortgages, the cash
flow of which has been  separated  into its interest and  principal  components.
"IOs" (interest only  securities)  receive the interest portion of the cash flow
while "POs" (principal only securities) receive the principal portion.  Stripped
Agency  Mortgage-Backed  Securities may be issued by U.S. Government Agencies or
by private  issuers  similar to those  described  above with respect to CMOs and
privately-issued  mortgage-backed certificates. As interest rates rise and fall,
the value of IOs tends to move in the same  direction  as  interest  rates.  The
value of the other mortgage-backed  securities described herein, like other debt
instruments,  will tend to move in the opposite  direction  compared to interest
rates. Under the Internal Revenue Code, POs may generate taxable income from the
current accrual of original issue discount, without a corresponding distribution
of cash to the Fund.

         The cash flows and yields on IO and PO classes are extremely  sensitive
to the  rate  of  principal  payments  (including  prepayments)  on the  related
underlying  mortgage  assets.  For  example,  a rapid or slow rate of  principal
payments  may  have a  material  adverse  effect  on the  prices  of IOs or POs,
respectively.   If  the  underlying  mortgage  assets  experience  greater  than
anticipated  prepayments of principal,  an investor may fail to recoup fully its
initial investment in an IO class of a stripped  mortgage-backed  security, even
if the IO class is rated AAA or Aaa or is  derived  from a full faith and credit
obligation. Conversely, if the underlying mortgage assets experience slower than
anticipated  prepayments of principal,  the price on a PO class will be affected
more  severely  than  would  be  the  case  with a  traditional  mortgage-backed
security.

         The Fund will treat IOs and POs,  other than  government-issued  IOs or
POs backed by fixed rate mortgages,  as illiquid  securities  and,  accordingly,
limit its  investments  in such  securities,  together  with all other  illiquid
securities,  to 15% of the Fund's net assets. The Sub-advisor will determine the
liquidity of these  investments based on the following  guidelines:  the type of
issuer; type of collateral,  including age and prepayment characteristics;  rate
of interest on coupon  relative  to current  market  rates and the effect of the
rate on the potential  for  prepayments;  complexity  of the issue's  structure,
including the number of tranches;  size of the issue;  and the number of dealers
who make a market in the IO or PO. The Fund will treat non-government-issued IOs
and POs not backed by fixed or adjustable  rate mortgages as illiquid unless and
until the Securities and Exchange Commission modifies its position.

         Asset-Backed Securities. The Fund may invest a portion of its assets in
debt obligations  known as asset-backed  securities.  The credit quality of most
asset-backed  securities  depends  primarily on the credit quality of the assets
underlying  such  securities,  how well  the  entity  issuing  the  security  is
insulated  from  the  credit  risk of the  originator  or any  other  affiliated
entities  and the amount  and  quality of any  credit  support  provided  to the
securities.  The rate of principal payment on asset-backed  securities generally
depends on the rate of  principal  payments  received on the  underlying  assets
which in turn may be affected by a variety of economic and other  factors.  As a
result,  the yield on any  asset-backed  security is  difficult  to predict with
precision and actual yield to maturity may be more or less than the  anticipated
yield to maturity.

     .........Automobile   Receivable   Securities.   The  Fund  may  invest  in
asset-backed  securities  which are backed by  receivables  from  motor  vehicle
installment  sales  contracts or  installment  loans  secured by motor  vehicles
("Automobile Receivable Securities").

     .........Credit  Card  Receivable  Securities.   The  Fund  may  invest  in
asset-backed  securities  backed  by  receivables  from  revolving  credit  card
agreements ("Credit Card Receivable Securities").

     .........Other  Assets.  The  Sub-advisor   anticipates  that  asset-backed
securities  backed by assets other than those  described above will be issued in
the  future.  The Fund may  invest  in such  securities  in the  future  if such
investment is otherwise  consistent with its investment  objective and policies.
For a discussion of these securities,  see this SAI and the Company's Prospectus
under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Writing  Covered Call  Options.  The Fund may write (sell)  American or
European style "covered" call options and purchase  options to close out options
previously  written  by the Fund.  In writing  covered  call  options,  the Fund
expects to generate  additional premium income which should serve to enhance the
Fund's total  return and reduce the effect of any price  decline of the security
or currency  involved in the option.  Covered  call  options  will  generally be
written on securities or currencies which, in the Sub-advisor's opinion, are not
expected  to have any major  price  increases  or moves in the near  future  but
which, over the long term, are deemed to be attractive investments for the Fund.

         The Fund will write only covered call options. This means that the Fund
will own the security or currency subject to the option or an option to purchase
the same underlying  security or currency,  having an exercise price equal to or
less than the exercise  price of the  "covered"  option,  or will  establish and
maintain with its custodian for the term of the option, an account consisting of
cash or other liquid assets having a value equal to the fluctuating market value
of the optioned securities or currencies.

         Portfolio securities or currencies on which call options may be written
will be purchased  solely on the basis of investment  considerations  consistent
with the Fund's investment  objective.  The writing of covered call options is a
conservative investment technique believed to involve relatively little risk (in
contrast to the writing of naked or uncovered  options,  which the Fund will not
do), but capable of enhancing  the Fund's total  return.  When writing a covered
call option,  a fund, in return for the premium,  gives up the  opportunity  for
profit from a price  increase in the  underlying  security or currency above the
exercise price, but conversely  retains the risk of loss should the price of the
security or currency  decline.  Unlike one who owns securities or currencies not
subject to an option,  the Fund has no control  over when it may be  required to
sell the  underlying  securities  or  currencies,  since it may be  assigned  an
exercise  notice at any time  prior to the  expiration  of its  obligation  as a
writer.  If a call  option  which the Fund has  written  expires,  the Fund will
realize a gain in the amount of the premium; however, such gain may be offset by
a decline in the market value of the underlying  security or currency during the
option period. If the call option is exercised,  the Fund will realize a gain or
loss from the sale of the  underlying  security or  currency.  The Fund does not
consider a security or currency  covered by a call to be  "pledged" as that term
is used in the Fund's  policy  which limits the  pledging or  mortgaging  of its
assets.

         Call options written by the Fund will normally have expiration dates of
less than nine months from the date written.  The exercise  price of the options
may be below,  equal to, or above the current  market  values of the  underlying
securities or currencies at the time the options are written. From time to time,
the Fund may  purchase  an  underlying  security  or  currency  for  delivery in
accordance  with an exercise notice of a call option assigned to it, rather than
delivering  such  security  or  currency  from  its  portfolio.  In such  cases,
additional costs may be incurred.

         The premium received is the market value of an option.  The premium the
Fund will receive from writing a call option will  reflect,  among other things,
the  current  market  price  of  the  underlying   security  or  currency,   the
relationship  of the exercise price to such market price,  the historical  price
volatility of the underlying security or currency,  and the length of the option
period. Once the decision to write a call option has been made, the Sub-advisor,
in  determining  whether  a  particular  call  option  should  be  written  on a
particular  security  or  currency,  will  consider  the  reasonableness  of the
anticipated premium and the likelihood that a liquid secondary market will exist
for those  options.  The premium  received by the Fund for writing  covered call
options  will be recorded as a liability  of the Fund.  This  liability  will be
adjusted daily to the option's  current  market value,  which will be the latest
sale  price at the time at which  the net  asset  value per share of the Fund is
computed  (close of the New York  Stock  Exchange),  or, in the  absence of such
sale, the latest asked price.  The option will be terminated  upon expiration of
the option,  the purchase of an identical  option in a closing  transaction,  or
delivery of the underlying security or currency upon the exercise of the option.

         The  Fund  will  realize  a  profit  or loss  from a  closing  purchase
transaction  if the cost of the  transaction  is less or more  than the  premium
received from the writing of the option.  Because  increases in the market price
of a call option will  generally  reflect  increases  in the market price of the
underlying  security or currency,  any loss  resulting  from the repurchase of a
call  option is likely to be offset in whole or in part by  appreciation  of the
underlying security or currency owned by the Fund.

         The Fund will not  write a covered  call  option  if, as a result,  the
aggregate market value of all portfolio  securities or currencies  covering call
or put options  exceeds 25% of the market value of the Fund's total  assets.  In
calculating  the 25% limit,  the Fund will  offset,  against the value of assets
covering  written  calls and  puts,  the  value of  purchased  calls and puts on
identical securities or currencies with identical maturity dates.

         Writing  Covered Put Options.  The Fund may write  American or European
style covered put options and purchase  options to close out options  previously
written by the Fund.

         The Fund would write put options only on a covered  basis,  which means
that the Fund would  maintain in a  segregated  account  cash,  U.S.  government
securities or other liquid  high-grade  debt  obligations  in an amount not less
than the  exercise  price or the Fund will own an option to sell the  underlying
security or currency  subject to the option having an exercise price equal to or
greater than the exercise  price of the "covered"  option at all times while the
put  option is  outstanding.  (The  rules of a  clearing  corporation  currently
require  that such  assets be  deposited  in  escrow  to secure  payment  of the
exercise  price.)  The  Fund  would  generally  write  covered  put  options  in
circumstances  where the Sub-advisor wishes to purchase the underlying  security
or currency  for the Fund at a price lower than the current  market price of the
security  or  currency.  In such event the Fund  would  write a put option at an
exercise price which,  reduced by the premium  received on the option,  reflects
the lower price it is willing to pay. Since the Fund would also receive interest
on debt  securities or currencies  maintained to cover the exercise price of the
option, this technique could be used to enhance current return during periods of
market  uncertainty.  The risk in such a  transaction  would be that the  market
price of the  underlying  security or currency  would decline below the exercise
price less the premiums received. Such a decline could be substantial and result
in a significant  loss to the Fund. In addition,  the Fund,  because it does not
own the specific  securities or currencies  which it may be required to purchase
in exercise of the put, cannot benefit from  appreciation,  if any, with respect
to such specific securities or currencies.

         The Fund will not  write a  covered  put  option  if, as a result,  the
aggregate market value of all portfolio securities or currencies covering put or
call  options  exceeds 25% of the market value of the Fund's  total  assets.  In
calculating  the 25% limit,  the Fund will  offset,  against the value of assets
covering  written  puts and  calls,  the  value of  purchased  puts and calls on
identical securities or currencies with identical maturity dates.

         Purchasing  Put  Options.  The Fund may  purchase  American or European
style put options. As the holder of a put option, the Fund has the right to sell
the underlying security or currency at the exercise price at any time during the
option period  (American  style) or at the  expiration  of the option  (European
style).  The Fund may enter into closing sale  transactions with respect to such
options,  exercise  them or permit  them to expire.  The Fund may  purchase  put
options  for  defensive  purposes  in order to protect  against  an  anticipated
decline in the value of its securities or currencies.  An example of such use of
put options is provided in this SAI under  "Certain Risk Factors and  Investment
Methods."

         The  premium  paid by the Fund when  purchasing  a put  option  will be
recorded  as an asset of the Fund.  This  asset  will be  adjusted  daily to the
option's  current market value,  which will be the latest sale price at the time
at which the net asset  value  per share of the Fund is  computed  (close of New
York Stock  Exchange),  or, in the  absence of such sale,  the latest bid price.
This asset  will be  terminated  upon  expiration  of the  option,  the  selling
(writing) of an identical  option in a closing  transaction,  or the delivery of
the underlying security or currency upon the exercise of the option.

         Purchasing  Call  Options.  The Fund may purchase  American or European
style call  options.  As the holder of a call option,  the Fund has the right to
purchase the  underlying  security or currency at the exercise price at any time
during the option  period  (American  style) or at the  expiration of the option
(European style). The Fund may enter into closing sale transactions with respect
to such options,  exercise them or permit them to expire.  The Fund may purchase
call options for the purpose of  increasing  its current  return or avoiding tax
consequences  which could reduce its current return.  The Fund may also purchase
call  options in order to  acquire  the  underlying  securities  or  currencies.
Examples of such uses of call  options are  provided in this SAI under  "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         The Fund may also  purchase  call options on  underlying  securities or
currencies  it owns  in  order  to  protect  unrealized  gains  on call  options
previously  written by it. A call option  would be  purchased  for this  purpose
where tax  considerations  make it  inadvisable  to realize such gains through a
closing  purchase  transaction.  Call  options may also be purchased at times to
avoid realizing losses.

         Dealer (Over-the-Counter)  Options. The Fund may engage in transactions
involving  dealer options.  Certain risks are specific to dealer options.  While
the Fund  would  look to a  clearing  corporation  to  exercise  exchange-traded
options,  if the Fund were to  purchase  a dealer  option,  it would rely on the
dealer  from  whom it  purchased  the  option  to  perform  if the  option  were
exercised.  Failure  by the  dealer  to do so  would  result  in the loss of the
premium  paid  by the  Fund as well  as  loss  of the  expected  benefit  of the
transaction.  For a discussion of dealer  options,  see this SAI under  "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Futures Contracts:

     .........Transactions   in  Futures.   The  Fund  may  enter  into  futures
contracts,  including stock index,  interest rate and currency futures ("futures
or futures  contracts").  The Fund may also enter  into  futures on  commodities
related  to the types of  companies  in which it  invests,  such as oil and gold
futures. Otherwise the nature of such futures and the regulatory limitations and
risks to which they are subject are the same as those described below.

     .........Stock  index  futures  contracts may be used to attempt to hedge a
portion of the Fund, as a cash  management  tool, or as an efficient way for the
Sub-advisor  to  implement  either an increase or decrease in  portfolio  market
exposure in response to changing  market  conditions.  The Fund may  purchase or
sell futures contracts with respect to any stock index.  Nevertheless,  to hedge
the Fund  successfully,  the Fund must sell  futures  contacts  with  respect to
indices or subindices  whose movements will have a significant  correlation with
movements in the prices of the Fund's securities.

         .........Interest  rate or currency  futures  contracts  may be used to
attempt to hedge  against  changes in  prevailing  levels of  interest  rates or
currency  exchange  rates in order to establish  more  definitely  the effective
return on securities or currencies  held or intended to be acquired by the Fund.
In this  regard,  the Fund could sell  interest  rate or currency  futures as an
offset  against the effect of expected  increases in interest  rates or currency
exchange  rates and  purchase  such  futures as an offset  against the effect of
expected declines in interest rates or currency exchange rates.

     .........The  Fund will enter into  futures  contracts  which are traded on
national or foreign futures exchanges,  and are standardized as to maturity date
and underlying financial instrument. Futures exchanges and trading in the United
States are regulated under the Commodity  Exchange Act by the CFTC.  Futures are
traded in London, at the London  International  Financial  Futures Exchange,  in
Paris,  at the  MATIF,  and in Tokyo,  at the  Tokyo  Stock  Exchange.  Although
techniques  other than the sale and purchase of futures  contracts could be used
for the  above-referenced  purposes,  futures  contracts  offer an effective and
relatively low cost means of implementing the Fund's objectives in these areas.

     .........Regulatory  Limitations. The Fund will engage in futures contracts
and options  thereon only for bona fide  hedging,  yield  enhancement,  and risk
management  purposes,  in each case in accordance  with rules and regulations of
the CFTC.

         .........The Fund may not purchase or sell futures contracts or related
options if, with respect to positions  which do not qualify as bona fide hedging
under  applicable CFTC rules,  the sum of the amounts of initial margin deposits
and premiums paid on those  positions  would exceed 5% of the net asset value of
the Fund after taking into account  unrealized  profits and unrealized losses on
any such contracts it has entered into; provided,  however,  that in the case of
an option that is in-the-money at the time of purchase,  the in-the-money amount
may be excluded in calculating  the 5%  limitation.  For purposes of this policy
options  on  futures   contracts  and  foreign  currency  options  traded  on  a
commodities  exchange will be considered  "related  options." This policy may be
modified by the Directors of the Company without a shareholder vote and does not
limit the percentage of the Fund's assets at risk to 5%.

     .........The  Fund's use of futures  contracts will not result in leverage.
Therefore,  to the extent  necessary,  in  instances  involving  the purchase of
futures  contracts or the writing of call or put options thereon by the Fund, an
amount of cash or other  liquid  assets equal to the market value of the futures
contracts  and options  thereon  (less any  related  margin  deposits),  will be
identified  in an account with the Fund's  custodian to cover the  position,  or
alternative  cover (such as owning an  offsetting  position)  will be  employed.
Assets used as cover or held in an identified  account  cannot be sold while the
position in the corresponding option or future is open, unless they are replaced
with similar  assets.  As a result,  the  commitment  of a large  portion of the
Fund's assets to cover or identified accounts could impede portfolio  management
or the Fund's ability to meet redemption requests or other current obligations.

     .........If  the  CFTC or  other  regulatory  authorities  adopt  different
(including  less  stringent) or additional  restrictions,  the Fund would comply
with such new restrictions.

         Options on Futures Contracts. The Fund may purchase and sell options on
the same types of futures in which it may invest.  As an  alternative to writing
or purchasing call and put options on stock index futures, the Fund may write or
purchase call and put options on stock indices.  Such options would be used in a
manner similar to the use of options on futures contracts.  From time to time, a
single order to purchase or sell futures  contracts (or options  thereon) may be
made on behalf of the Fund and other mutual funds or  portfolios of mutual funds
managed  by the  Sub-advisor  or Rowe  Price-Fleming  International,  Inc.  Such
aggregated  orders would be allocated  among the Fund and such other  portfolios
managed by the Sub-advisor in a fair and non-discriminatory manner. See this SAI
and Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods" for
a description of certain risks in options and future contracts.

         Additional  Futures and  Options  Contracts.  Although  the Fund has no
current  intention  of  engaging in futures or options  transactions  other than
those described  above, it reserves the right to do so. Such futures and options
trading might involve risks which differ from those  involved in the futures and
options described above.

         Foreign Futures and Options. The Fund is permitted to invest in foreign
futures  and  options.  For a  description  of foreign  futures  and options and
certain  risks  involved  therein as well as certain  risks  involved in foreign
investing, see this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

         Foreign Securities. The Fund may invest in U.S.  dollar-denominated and
non-U.S.  dollar-denominated  securities of foreign  issuers.  There are special
risks  in  foreign  investing.  Certain  of  these  risks  are  inherent  in any
international mutual fund while others relate more to the countries in which the
Fund will  invest.  Many of the risks are more  pronounced  for  investments  in
developing  or emerging  countries,  such as many of the  countries of Southeast
Asia,  Latin  America,  Eastern  Europe and the Middle East.  For an  additional
discussion of certain  risks  involved in investing in foreign  securities,  see
this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

         Foreign  Currency  Transactions.  A forward foreign  currency  exchange
contract  involves an  obligation  to purchase or sell a specific  currency at a
future date, which may be any fixed number of days from the date of the contract
agreed upon by the parties,  at a price set at the time of the  contract.  These
contracts are  principally  traded in the interbank  market  conducted  directly
between currency traders (usually large,  commercial banks) and their customers.
A forward contract generally has no deposit requirement,  and no commissions are
charged at any stage for trades.

         The Fund may enter into forward  contracts for a variety of purposes in
connection  with  the  management  of  the  foreign  securities  portion  of its
portfolio.  The Fund's use of such contracts  would include,  but not be limited
to, the following:  First, when the Fund enters into a contract for the purchase
or sale of a security denominated in a foreign currency,  it may desire to "lock
in" the U.S. dollar price of the security. Second, when the Sub-advisor believes
that  one  currency  may  experience  a  substantial  movement  against  another
currency,  including the U.S.  dollar,  it may enter into a forward  contract to
sell or buy the amount of the former foreign  currency,  approximating the value
of some or all of the Fund's  securities  denominated in such foreign  currency.
Alternatively,  where appropriate, the Fund may hedge all or part of its foreign
currency  exposure through the use of a basket of currencies or a proxy currency
where  such  currency  or  currencies  act  as  an  effective  proxy  for  other
currencies. In such a case, the Fund may enter into a forward contract where the
amount of the foreign  currency to be sold  exceeds the value of the  securities
denominated  in such currency.  The use of this basket hedging  technique may be
more efficient and economical than entering into separate forward  contracts for
each currency  held in the Fund.  The precise  matching of the forward  contract
amounts and the value of the securities  involved will not generally be possible
since the future value of such securities in foreign currencies will change as a
consequence  of market  movements in the value of those  securities  between the
date  the  forward  contract  is  entered  into  and the  date it  matures.  The
projection of short-term  currency market movement is extremely  difficult,  and
the successful  execution of a short-term  hedging strategy is highly uncertain.
Under normal circumstances,  consideration of the prospect for currency parities
will be incorporated into the longer term investment  decisions made with regard
to overall diversification strategies. However, the Sub-advisor believes that it
is important to have the  flexibility to enter into such forward  contracts when
it determines that the best interests of the Fund will be served.

         The Fund  may  enter  into  forward  contracts  for any  other  purpose
consistent with the Fund's investment objective and policies.  However, the Fund
will not  enter  into a  forward  contract,  or  maintain  exposure  to any such
contract(s),  if  the  amount  of  foreign  currency  required  to be  delivered
thereunder  would  exceed  the Fund's  holdings  of liquid  assets and  currency
available for cover of the forward contract(s).  In determining the amount to be
delivered under a contract, the Fund may net offsetting positions.

         At the maturity of a forward contract,  the Fund may sell the portfolio
security  and make  delivery  of the  foreign  currency,  or it may  retain  the
security and either  extend the maturity of the forward  contract (by  "rolling"
that contract forward) or may initiate a new forward contract.

         If the Fund retains the portfolio security and engages in an offsetting
transaction,  the Fund will incur a gain or a loss (as  described  below) to the
extent that there has been  movement  in forward  contract  prices.  If the Fund
engages  in an  offsetting  transaction,  it may  subsequently  enter into a new
forward  contract to sell the foreign  currency.  Should  forward prices decline
during the period  between the Fund's  entering into a forward  contract for the
sale of a foreign  currency and the date it enters into an  offsetting  contract
for the  purchase of the foreign  currency,  the Fund will realize a gain to the
extent the price of the  currency it has agreed to sell exceeds the price of the
currency it has agreed to purchase.  Should  forward prices  increase,  the Fund
will  suffer a loss to the extent of the price of the  currency it has agreed to
purchase exceeds the price of the currency it has agreed to sell.

         The Fund's dealing in forward foreign currency exchange  contracts will
generally be limited to the  transactions  described  above.  However,  the Fund
reserves  the  right  to enter  into  forward  foreign  currency  contracts  for
different purposes and under different circumstances. Of course, the Fund is not
required  to  enter  into   forward   contracts   with  regard  to  its  foreign
currency-denominated  securities and will not do so unless deemed appropriate by
the Sub-advisor.  It also should be realized that this method of hedging against
a decline  in the value of a currency  does not  eliminate  fluctuations  in the
underlying prices of the securities. It simply establishes a rate of exchange at
a future date.  Additionally,  although such contracts tend to minimize the risk
of loss due to a decline in the value of the hedged currency,  at the same time,
they tend to limit any potential gain which might result from an increase in the
value of that currency.

         Although the Fund values its assets daily in terms of U.S. dollars,  it
does not intend to convert its holdings of foreign  currencies into U.S. dollars
on a daily basis. It will do so from time to time, and investors should be aware
of the costs of currency  conversion.  Although  foreign exchange dealers do not
charge a fee for  conversion,  they do realize a profit based on the  difference
(the "spread")  between the prices at which they are buying and selling  various
currencies.  Thus, a dealer may offer to sell a foreign  currency to the Fund at
one rate,  while  offering a lesser rate of  exchange  should the Fund desire to
resell that  currency to the dealer.  For a  discussion  of certain risk factors
involved  in  foreign  currency  transactions,  see this  SAI and the  Company's
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."



<PAGE>


         Federal Tax Treatment of Options, Futures Contracts and Forward Foreign
Exchange Contracts. The Fund may enter into certain option, futures, and forward
foreign exchange contracts,  including options and futures on currencies,  which
will be treated as Section 1256 contracts or straddles.

         Transactions  which  are  considered  Section  1256  contracts  will be
considered  to have been  closed at the end of the  Fund's  fiscal  year and any
gains or losses will be recognized for tax purposes at that time.  Such gains or
losses  from the  normal  closing or  settlement  of such  transactions  will be
characterized as 60% long-term  capital gain or loss and 40% short-term  capital
gain or loss regardless of the holding period of the  instrument.  The Fund will
be required to distribute net gains on such  transactions to  shareholders  even
though it may not have  closed the  transaction  and  received  cash to pay such
distributions.

         Options,  futures and forward  foreign  exchange  contracts,  including
options and futures on  currencies,  which offset a foreign  dollar  denominated
bond or currency position may be considered straddles for tax purposes, in which
case a loss on any  position  in a straddle  will be subject to  deferral to the
extent of unrealized gain in an offsetting  position.  The holding period of the
securities  or  currencies  comprising  the straddle will be deemed not to begin
until the straddle is  terminated.  For  securities  offsetting a purchased put,
this  adjustment  of the  holding  period  may  increase  the gain from sales of
securities  held less than three  months.  The  holding  period of the  security
offsetting an "in-the-money qualified covered call" option on an equity security
will not include the period of time the option is outstanding.

         Losses on  written  covered  calls and  purchased  puts on  securities,
excluding certain "qualified covered call" options on equity securities,  may be
long-term  capital loss,  if the security  covering the option was held for more
than twelve months prior to the writing of the option.

         In order for the Fund to continue  to qualify  for  federal  income tax
treatment as a regulated  investment  company,  at least 90% of its gross income
for a taxable  year must be derived from  qualifying  income,  i.e.,  dividends,
interest,  income derived from loans of  securities,  and gains from the sale of
securities or currencies.  Pending tax  regulations  could limit the extent that
net gain realized from option,  futures or foreign forward exchange contracts on
currencies  is  qualifying  income  for  purposes  of the  90%  requirement.  In
addition,  gains  realized  on the  sale or  other  disposition  of  securities,
including option, futures or foreign forward exchange contracts on securities or
securities  indices  and,  in some cases,  currencies,  held for less than three
months,  must be limited to less than 30% of the Fund's annual gross income.  In
order to avoid  realizing  excessive gains on securities or currencies held less
than three months,  the Fund may be required to defer the closing out of option,
futures or foreign  forward  exchange  contracts)  beyond the time when it would
otherwise be advantageous to do so. It is anticipated  that unrealized  gains on
Section 1256 option, futures and foreign forward exchange contracts,  which have
been open for less than three months as of the end of the Fund's fiscal year and
which  are  recognized  for  tax  purposes,  will  not be  considered  gains  on
securities  or  currencies  held less than three  months for purposes of the 30%
test.

         Illiquid and  Restricted  Securities.  If through the  appreciation  of
illiquid securities or the depreciation of liquid securities, the Fund should be
in a position  where more than 15% of the value of its net assets is invested in
illiquid assets, including restricted securities, the Fund will take appropriate
steps to protect liquidity.

         Notwithstanding  the above,  the Fund may  purchase  securities  which,
while privately placed, are eligible for purchase and sale under Rule 144A under
the Securities Act of 1933 (the "1933 Act"). This rule permits certain qualified
institutional  buyers, such as the Fund, to trade in privately placed securities
even  though  such  securities  are not  registered  under  the  1933  Act.  The
Sub-advisor,  under  the  supervision  of the  Directors  of the  Company,  will
consider  whether  securities  purchased  under Rule 144A are  illiquid and thus
subject  to the  Fund's  restriction  of  investing  no more than 15% of its net
assets in illiquid  securities.  A determination of whether a Rule 144A security
is liquid  or not is a  question  of fact.  In making  this  determination,  the
Sub-advisor  will consider the trading markets for the specific  security taking
into account the unregistered nature of a Rule 144A security.  In addition,  the
Sub-advisor could consider the (1) frequency of trades and quotes, (2) number of
dealers and potential purchasers,  (3) dealer undertakings to make a market, and
(4) the nature of the security and of marketplace  trades (e.g., the time needed
to dispose of the security, the method of soliciting offers and the mechanics of
transfer). The liquidity of Rule 144A securities would be monitored, and if as a
result of changed  conditions it is  determined  that a Rule 144A security is no
longer liquid,  the Fund's holdings of illiquid  securities would be reviewed to
determine  what,  if any,  steps are  required  to assure that the Fund does not
invest more than 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities. Investing in Rule
144A  securities  could have the effect of  increasing  the amount of the Fund's
assets  invested in illiquid  securities if qualified  institutional  buyers are
unwilling to purchase such securities.

         The Directors of the Company have  promulgated  guidelines with respect
to illiquid securities.

         Hybrid Instruments.  Hybrid Instruments have been developed and combine
the elements of futures contracts,  options or other financial  instruments with
those of debt, preferred equity or a depository instrument  (hereinafter "Hybrid
Instruments). Hybrid Instruments may take a variety of forms, including, but not
limited to, debt instruments  with interest or principal  payments or redemption
terms  determined  by  reference  to the value of a  currency  or  commodity  or
securities index at a future point in time,  preferred stock with dividend rates
determined by reference to the value of a currency,  or  convertible  securities
with the conversion terms related to a particular commodity. For a discussion of
certain  risks  involved in investing in hybrid  instruments  see this SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to guidelines adopted by the Directors
of the Company,  the Fund may enter into a repurchase agreement through which an
investor  (such as the Fund)  purchases  a  security  (known as the  "underlying
security") from a well-established  securities dealer or a bank that is a member
of  the  Federal  Reserve  System.  Any  such  dealer  or  bank  will  be on the
Sub-advisor's  approved  list and  have a  credit  rating  with  respect  to its
short-term debt of at least A1 by Standard & Poor's  Corporation,  P1 by Moody's
Investors  Service,  Inc., or the equivalent rating by the Sub-advisor.  At that
time, the bank or securities dealer agrees to repurchase the underlying security
at the same price, plus specified interest.  Repurchase agreements are generally
for a short period of time, often less than a week.  Repurchase agreements which
do not  provide  for  payment  within  seven days will be  treated  as  illiquid
securities.  The Fund will only enter into repurchase  agreements  where (i) the
underlying securities are of the type (excluding maturity limitations) which the
Fund's  investment  guidelines  would  allow it to purchase  directly,  (ii) the
market value of the underlying security,  including interest accrued, will be at
all times equal to or exceed the value of the  repurchase  agreement,  and (iii)
payment  for the  underlying  security  is made only upon  physical  delivery or
evidence of book-  entry  transfer  to the  account of the  custodian  or a bank
acting as agent.  In the event of a bankruptcy or other default of a seller of a
repurchase  agreement,  the Fund could experience both delays in liquidating the
underlying security and losses,  including: (a) possible decline in the value of
the  underlying  security  during the period while the Fund seeks to enforce its
rights thereto;  (b) possible  subnormal  levels of income and lack of access to
income during this period; and (c) expenses of enforcing its rights.

         Reverse  Repurchase  Agreements.  Although  the  Fund  has  no  current
intention,  in  the  foreseeable  future,  of  engaging  in  reverse  repurchase
agreements,  the Fund reserves the right to do so. Reverse repurchase agreements
are ordinary repurchase agreements in which a fund is the seller of, rather than
the investor in,  securities,  and agrees to  repurchase  them at an agreed upon
time and price.  Use of a reverse  repurchase  agreement  may be preferable to a
regular sale and later  repurchase of the  securities  because it avoids certain
market risks and transaction costs. A reverse repurchase agreement may be viewed
as a type of borrowing by the Fund.

     Warrants.  The Fund may acquire warrants. For a discussion of certain risks
involved  therein,  see this SAI  under  "Certain  Risk  Factor  and  Investment
Methods."

         Lending  of  Portfolio   Securities.   Securities  loans  are  made  to
broker-dealers  or  institutional  investors  or  other  persons,   pursuant  to
agreements  requiring  that the loans be  continuously  secured by collateral at
least equal at all times to the value of the securities lent marked to market on
a daily basis.  The collateral  received will consist of cash,  U.S.  government
securities, letters of credit or such other collateral as may be permitted under
its  investment  program.  While the  securities  are being lent,  the Fund will
continue to receive the  equivalent  of the  interest or  dividends  paid by the
issuer  on  the  securities,  as  well  as  interest  on the  investment  of the
collateral  or a fee from the  borrower.  The Fund has a right to call each loan
and obtain the securities on five business  days' notice or, in connection  with
securities  trading on foreign markets,  within such longer period of time which
coincides  with the normal  settlement  period for  purchases  and sales of such
securities  in such  foreign  markets.  The Fund will not have the right to vote
securities while they are being lent, but it will call a loan in anticipation of
any important  vote. The risks in lending  portfolio  securities,  as with other
extensions of secured credit,  consist of possible delay in receiving additional
collateral  or in the recovery of the  securities  or possible loss of rights in
the collateral should the borrower fail financially.  Loans will only be made to
firms  deemed by the  Sub-advisor  to be of good  standing  and will not be made
unless, in the judgment of the Sub-advisor,  the consideration to be earned from
such loans would justify the risk.



<PAGE>


         Other  Lending/Borrowing.  Subject to  approval by the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission,  the Fund may make loans to, or borrow  funds from,  other
mutual  funds  sponsored  or advised by the  Sub-advisor  or Rowe  Price-Fleming
International,  Inc.  The Fund has no current  intention  of  engaging  in these
practices at this time.

         When-Issued  Securities and Forward Commitment Contracts.  The Fund may
purchase  securities  on a  "when-issued"  or  delayed  delivery  basis  and may
purchase  securities  on a forward  commitment  basis.  Any or all of the Fund's
investments in debt securities may be in the form of when-issueds  and forwards.
The price of such securities, which may be expressed in yield terms, is fixed at
the time the commitment to purchase is made, but delivery and payment take place
at a later date.  Normally,  the  settlement  date occurs  within 90 days of the
purchase for  when-issueds,  but may be substantially  longer for forwards.  The
Fund will cover its commitments  with respect to these securities by maintaining
cash and/or other liquid assets with its custodian  bank equal in value to these
commitments  during the time  between  the  purchase  and the  settlement.  Such
segregated securities either will mature or, if necessary,  be sold on or before
the settlement date. For a discussion of these securities and the risks involved
therein, see this SAI under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     Investment Policies Which May Be Changed Without Shareholder Approval.  The
following  limitations are not "fundamental"  restrictions and may be changed by
the Directors of the Company without shareholder approval. The Fund will not:

     1........Purchase  additional  securities when money borrowed exceeds 5% of
its total assets;

     2........Invest  in companies for the purpose of  exercising  management or
control;

         3........Purchase  a futures  contract  or an option  thereon  if, with
respect to  positions  in futures or options on futures  which do not  represent
bona fide  hedging,  the aggregate  initial  margin and premiums on such options
would exceed 5% of the Fund's net asset value;

         4........Purchase illiquid securities if, as a result, more than 15% of
its net assets  would be invested in such  securities.  Securities  eligible for
resale under Rule 144A of the 1933 Act may be subject to this 15% limitation;

     5........Purchase securities of open-end or closed-end investment companies
except in compliance with the Investment Company Act of 1940;

         6........Purchase   securities  on  margin,   except  (i)  for  use  of
short-term  credit necessary for clearance of purchases of portfolio  securities
and (ii) the Fund may make margin deposits in connection with futures  contracts
or other permissible investments;

         7........Mortgage,  pledge, hypothecate or, in any manner, transfer any
security  owned  by the  Fund as  security  for  indebtedness  except  as may be
necessary in connection with permissible borrowings or investments and then such
mortgaging, pledging or hypothecating may not exceed 33 1/3% of the Fund's total
assets at the time of borrowing or investment;

     8........Invest  in puts,  calls,  straddles,  spreads,  or any combination
thereof,  except to the extent  permitted by the Company's  Prospectus  and this
SAI;

         9........Effect short sales of securities; or

         10.......Invest  in warrants if, as a result thereof,  more than 10% of
the value of the net assets of the Fund would be  invested in  warrants,  except
that this  restriction  does not apply to  warrants  acquired as a result of the
purchase of another security. For purposes of these percentage limitations,  the
warrants will be valued at the lower of cost or market.



<PAGE>


ASAF ROBERTSON STEPHENS VALUE + GROWTH FUND:


     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
capital appreciation.

Investment Policies:

         Options.  The Fund may  purchase  and sell put and call  options on its
securities  to  enhance  performance  and to protect  against  changes in market
prices.  There is no assurance  that the Fund's use of put and call options will
achieve  its  desired  objective,  and the Fund's  use of options  may result in
losses to the Fund.

     .........Writing  Covered  Call  Options.  The Fund may write  covered call
options  on its  securities  to realize a greater  current  return  through  the
receipt of premiums than it would realize on its securities  alone.  Such option
transactions  may also be used as a limited form of hedging against a decline in
the price of securities owned by the Fund.

         A call option gives the holder the right to purchase, and obligates the
writer  to sell,  a  security  at the  exercise  price at any  time  before  the
expiration  date. A call option is  "covered" if the writer,  at all times while
obligated as a writer,  either owns the  underlying  securities  (or  comparable
securities  satisfying the cover requirements of the securities  exchanges),  or
has the  right to  acquire  such  securities  through  immediate  conversion  of
securities.

         In return  for the  premium  received  when it  writes a  covered  call
option,  the Fund  gives up some or all of the  opportunity  to  profit  from an
increase in the market price of the  securities  covering the call option during
the life of the  option.  The Fund  retains the risk of loss should the price of
such securities decline. If the option expires unexercised,  the Fund realizes a
gain  equal to the  premium,  which may be  offset by a decline  in price of the
underlying  security.  If the option is  exercised,  the Fund realizes a gain or
loss equal to the difference between the Fund's cost for the underlying security
and the proceeds of sale (exercise price minus  commissions)  plus the amount of
the premium.

         The Fund may  terminate a call  option  that it has  written  before it
expires by entering into a closing purchase transaction. The Fund may enter into
closing  purchase  transactions  in order to free itself to sell the  underlying
security  or to write  another  call on the  security,  realize  a  profit  on a
previously  written call option,  or protect a security  from being called in an
unexpected  market rise. Any profits from a closing purchase  transaction may be
offset by a decline in the value of the underlying security. Conversely, because
increases in the market price of a call option will generally  reflect increases
in the  market  price of the  underlying  security,  any loss  resulting  from a
closing  purchase  transaction  is  likely  to be  offset in whole or in part by
unrealized appreciation of the underlying security owned by the Fund.

     .........Writing  Covered  Put  Options.  The Fund may  write  covered  put
options in order to enhance its current return.  Such options  transactions  may
also be used as a limited  form of hedging  against an  increase in the price of
securities  that the Fund plans to  purchase.  A put option gives the holder the
right to sell, and obligates the writer to buy, a security at the exercise price
at any time before the expiration  date. A put option is "covered" if the writer
segregates  cash or other  liquid  assets  equal to the  price to be paid if the
option is exercised.

         In addition to the receipt of  premiums  and the  potential  gains from
terminating  such  options  in  closing  purchase  transactions,  the Fund  also
receives  interest  on the cash  and debt  securities  maintained  to cover  the
exercise price of the option. By writing a put option, the Fund assumes the risk
that it may be required  to purchase  the  underlying  security  for an exercise
price  higher  than its then  current  market  value,  resulting  in a potential
capital loss unless the security later appreciates in value.

         The Fund may  terminate  a put  option  that it has  written  before it
expires by a closing purchase transaction. Any loss from this transaction may be
partially or entirely offset by the premium received on the terminated option.

     .........Purchasing  Put and Call  Options.  The Fund may also purchase put
options to protect  portfolio  holdings against a decline in market value.  This
protection lasts for the life of the put option because the Fund, as a holder of
the option, may sell the underlying security at the exercise price regardless of
any decline in its market price. In order for a put option to be profitable, the
market price of the  underlying  security  must decline  sufficiently  below the
exercise  price to cover the  premium and  transaction  costs that the Fund must
pay. These costs will reduce any profit the Fund might have realized had it sold
the underlying security instead of buying the put option.

         The Fund may purchase  call options to hedge against an increase in the
price of securities that the Fund wants ultimately to buy. Such hedge protection
is provided  during the life of the call option since the Fund, as holder of the
call  option,  is able to buy the  underlying  security  at the  exercise  price
regardless of any increase in the underlying  security's  market price. In order
for a call option to be profitable,  the market price of the underlying security
must  rise  sufficiently  above the  exercise  price to cover  the  premium  and
transaction  costs.  These  costs  will  reduce  any  profit the Fund might have
realized had it bought the underlying security at the time it purchased the call
option.

         The Fund may also  purchase  put and call options to attempt to enhance
its current return.

     .........Options  on Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may  purchase  and sell
options on foreign  securities if the  Sub-advisor  believes that the investment
characteristics  of such  options,  including  the  risks of  investing  in such
options,  are consistent with the Fund's investment  objectives.  It is expected
that risks related to such options will not differ materially from risks related
to options  on U.S.  securities.  However,  position  limits and other  rules of
foreign exchanges may differ from those in the U.S. In addition, options markets
in some  countries,  many of which are  relatively  new, may be less liquid than
comparable markets in the U.S.

         For an  additional  discussion  of options  transactions  and the risks
involved therein,  see this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment Methods."

         Special    Expiration   Price   Options.    The   Fund   may   purchase
over-the-counter  ("OTC") puts and calls with  respect to  specified  securities
("special  expiration  price options")  pursuant to which the Fund in effect may
create a custom  index  relating  to a  particular  industry  or sector that the
Sub-advisor believes will increase or decrease in value generally as a group. In
exchange for a premium,  the counterparty,  whose performance is guaranteed by a
broker-dealer,  agrees to purchase  (or sell) a specified  number of shares of a
particular stock at a specified price and further agrees to cancel the option at
a  specified  price that  decreases  straight  line over the term of the option.
Thus,  the value of the special  expiration  price  option is  comprised  of the
market  value of the  applicable  underlying  security  relative  to the  option
exercise price and the value of the remaining premium.  However, if the value of
the underlying security increases (or decreases) by a prenegotiated  amount, the
special expiration price option is canceled and becomes worthless.  A portion of
the  dividends  during the term of the option are applied to reduce the exercise
price if the options are exercised.  Brokerage commissions and other transaction
costs will reduce the Fund's profits if the special expiration price options are
exercised.  The Fund will not purchase  special  expiration  price  options with
respect to more than 25% of the value of its net assets.

         LEAPs   and   BOUNDs.   The  Fund  may   purchase   certain   long-term
exchange-traded  equity options called Long-Term Equity Anticipation  Securities
("LEAPs") and Buy-Right Options Unitary Derivatives ("BOUNDs").  LEAPs provide a
holder the opportunity to participate in the underlying securities' appreciation
in excess of a fixed dollar amount.  BOUNDs provide a holder the  opportunity to
retain dividends on the underlying  security while potentially  participating in
the underlying securities' capital appreciation up to a fixed dollar amount. The
Fund will not purchase  these options with respect to more than 25% of the value
of its net assets.

         LEAPs are long-term call options that allow holders the  opportunity to
participate in the underlying securities'  appreciation in excess of a specified
strike  price,  without  receiving  payments  equivalent  to any cash  dividends
declared on the underlying securities. A LEAP holder will be entitled to receive
a  specified  number of shares  of the  underlying  stock  upon  payment  of the
exercise price, and therefore the LEAP will be exercisable at any time the price
of the underlying stock is above the strike price. However, if at expiration the
price of the  underlying  stock is at or below the strike  price,  the LEAP will
expire worthless.

         BOUNDs  are  long-term  options  which  are  expected  to have the same
economic  characteristics as covered call options, [with the added benefits that
BOUNDs  can be  traded  in a single  transaction  and are not  subject  to early
exercise].  Covered call writing is a strategy by which an investor sells a call
option while simultaneously  owning the number of shares of the stock underlying
the call. BOUND holders are able to participate in a stock's price  appreciation
up to but not  exceeding  a specified  strike  price  while  receiving  payments
equivalent  to  any  cash  dividends   declared  on  the  underlying  stock.  At
expiration,  a BOUND  holder will  receive a  specified  number of shares of the
underlying  stock  for each  BOUND  held if,  on the  last day of  trading,  the
underlying stock closes at or below the strike price.  However, if at expiration
the  underlying  stock  closes  above the strike  price,  the BOUND  holder will
receive a payment equal to a multiple of the BOUND's strike price for each BOUND
held. The terms of a BOUND are not adjusted because of cash distributions to the
shareholders  of the  underlying  security.  BOUNDs are subject to the  position
limits for equity options imposed by the exchanges on which they are traded.

         The settlement  mechanism for BOUNDs operates in conjunction  with that
of the corresponding  LEAPs. For example,  if at expiration the underlying stock
closes at or below the strike  price,  the LEAP will expire  worthless,  and the
holder of a  corresponding  BOUND will  receive a specified  number of shares of
stock from the writer of the BOUND.  If, on the other hand,  the LEAP is "in the
money" at expiration,  the holder of the LEAP is entitled to receive a specified
number of shares of the  underlying  stock from the LEAP writer upon  payment of
the strike  price,  and the holder of a BOUND on such stock is  entitled  to the
cash  equivalent of a multiple of the strike price from the writer of the BOUND.
An investor holding both a LEAP and a corresponding  BOUND, where the underlying
stock closes above the strike price at expiration,  would be entitled to receive
a multiple of the strike price from the writer of the BOUND and,  upon  exercise
of the LEAP,  would be obligated to pay the same amount to receive shares of the
underlying  stock.  LEAPs are  American-style  options  (exercisable at any time
prior to expiration),  whereas BOUNDs are  European-style  options  (exercisable
only on the expiration date).

         Futures Contracts.

     .........Index  Futures  Contracts  and Options.  The Fund may buy and sell
futures  contracts  and related  options  for hedging  purposes or to attempt to
increase  investment  return.  The  Fund  currently  expects  that it will  only
purchase and sell stock index  futures  contracts and related  options.  A stock
index futures  contract is a contract to buy or sell units of a stock index at a
specified  future date at a price  agreed upon when the contract is made. A unit
is the current  value of the stock index.  The Fund may purchase or sell futures
contracts with respect to any securities indices.

         The following example  illustrates  generally the manner in which index
futures contracts  operate.  The Standard & Poor's 100 Stock Index (the "S&P 100
Index") is composed of 100 selected  common stocks,  most of which are listed on
the New York Stock Exchange.  The S&P 100 Index assigns  relative  weightings to
the common stocks included in the Index,  and the Index  fluctuates with changes
in the market values of those common  stocks.  In the case of the S&P 100 Index,
contracts are to buy or sell 100 units.  Thus, if the value of the S&P 100 Index
were $180,  one contract  would be worth  $18,000 (100 units x $180).  The stock
index futures contract specifies that no delivery of the actual stocks making up
the index  will take  place.  Instead,  settlement  in cash must  occur upon the
termination of the contract,  with the settlement  being the difference  between
the contract  price and the actual level of the stock index at the expiration of
the contract. For example, if the Fund enters into a futures contract to buy 100
units of the S&P 100 Index at a  specified  future  date at a contract  price of
$180 and the S&P 100 Index is at $184 on that  future  date,  the Fund will gain
$400 (100 units x gain of $4).  If the Fund  enters  into a futures  contract to
sell 100 units of the stock index at a specified future date at a contract price
of $180 and the S&P 100 Index is at $182 on that future date, the Fund will lose
$200 (100 units x loss of $2).

         In order to hedge its investments  successfully using futures contracts
and related options,  the Fund must invest in futures  contracts with respect to
indices or  sub-indices  the movements of which will,  in its  judgment,  have a
significant correlation with movements in the prices of the Fund's securities.

         Options on index futures  contracts  give the  purchaser the right,  in
return for the premium paid,  to assume a position in an index futures  contract
(a long position if the option is a call and a short position if the option is a
put) at a specified  exercise price at any time during the period of the option.
Upon  exercise of the option,  the holder  would assume the  underlying  futures
position  and would  receive a variation  margin  payment of cash or  securities
approximating  the increase in the value of the holder's option position.  If an
option is exercised on the last trading day prior to the expiration  date of the
option,  the  settlement  will be made entirely in cash based on the  difference
between the exercise  price of the option and the closing  level of the index on
which the  futures  contract  is based on the  expiration  date.  Purchasers  of
options who fail to exercise  their  options prior to the exercise date suffer a
loss of the premium paid.

         As an  alternative  to  purchasing  and selling call and put options on
index futures contracts,  the Fund may purchase and sell call and put options on
the underlying  indices themselves to the extent that such options are traded on
national  securities  exchanges.   Index  options  are  similar  to  options  on
individual  securities  in that the  purchaser of an index  option  acquires the
right to buy (in the  case of a call)  or sell  (in the case of a put),  and the
writer  undertakes  the obligation to sell or buy (as the case may be), units of
an index at a stated  exercise  price during the term of the option.  Instead of
giving the right to take or make actual delivery of securities, the holder of an
index option has the right to receive a cash "exercise  settlement amount." This
amount is equal to the  amount by which the fixed  exercise  price of the option
exceeds  (in the  case of a put) or is less  than  (in the  case of a call)  the
closing value of the underlying index on the date of the exercise, multiplied by
a fixed "index multiplier."

         The Fund may  purchase  or sell  options  on stock  indices in order to
close out its  outstanding  positions in options on stock  indices  which it has
purchased. The Fund may also allow such options to expire unexercised.

         Compared to the purchase or sale of futures contracts,  the purchase of
call or put options on an index involves less potential risk to the Fund because
the maximum amount at risk is the premium paid for the options plus  transaction
costs. The writing of a put or call option on an index involves risks similar to
those risks relating to the purchase or sale of index futures contracts.

     .........Margin  Payments.  When the  Fund  purchases  or  sells a  futures
contract,  it is required to deposit with its custodian an amount of cash,  U.S.
Treasury bills, or other  permissible  collateral equal to a small percentage of
the amount of the futures  contract.  This amount is known as "initial  margin."
The  nature of  initial  margin  is  different  from that of margin in  security
transactions   in  that  it  does  not  involve   borrowing   money  to  finance
transactions.  Rather,  initial margin is similar to a performance  bond or good
faith  deposit that is returned to the Fund upon  termination  of the  contract,
assuming the Fund satisfies its contractual obligations.

         Subsequent  payments to and from the broker occur on a daily basis in a
process  known as "marking  to market."  These  payments  are called  "variation
margin" and are made as the value of the underlying futures contract fluctuates.
For  example,  when the  Fund  sells a  futures  contract  and the  price of the
underlying index rises above the delivery price, the Fund's position declines in
value.  The Fund then pays the broker a variation  margin  payment  equal to the
difference  between the delivery price of the futures  contract and the value of
the index  underlying  the  futures  contract.  Conversely,  if the price of the
underlying  index falls below the  delivery  price of the  contract,  the Fund's
futures  position  increases  in value.  The broker  then must make a  variation
margin payment equal to the difference between the delivery price of the futures
contract and the value of the index underlying the futures contract.

         When the Fund  terminates  a position  in a futures  contract,  a final
determination of variation margin is made,  additional cash is paid by or to the
Fund, and the Fund realizes a loss or a gain. Such closing  transactions involve
additional commission costs.

         For an additional  discussion of futures  contracts and related options
and the risks involved therein,  see the Company's Prospectus and this SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Indexed  Securities.  The Fund may purchase securities whose prices are
indexed  to the  prices of other  securities,  securities  indices,  currencies,
precious metals or other  commodities,  or other financial  indicators.  Indexed
securities  typically,  but not always,  are debt  securities or deposits  whose
value at  maturity  or coupon  rate is  determined  by  reference  to a specific
instrument or statistic. Gold-indexed securities, for example, typically provide
for a maturity value that depends on the price of gold,  resulting in a security
whose price tends to rise and fall together  with gold prices.  Currency-indexed
securities typically are short-term to  intermediate-term  debt securities whose
maturity  values or interest  rates are determined by reference to the values of
one or more specified foreign currencies,  and may offer higher yields than U.S.
dollar-denominated securities of equivalent issuers. Currency-indexed securities
may be positively  or  negatively  indexed;  that is, their  maturity  value may
increase when the specified  currency value  increases,  resulting in a security
whose  price  characteristics  are  similar  to a put  option on the  underlying
currency.  Currency-indexed  securities  also may have prices that depend on the
values of a number of different foreign currencies relative to each other.

         The performance of indexed  securities depends to a great extent on the
performance of the security,  currency,  commodity or other  instrument to which
they are indexed,  and also may be  influenced  by interest  rate changes in the
U.S. and abroad. At the same time,  indexed securities are subject to the credit
risks  associated with the issuer of the security,  and their values may decline
substantially if the issuer's creditworthiness  deteriorates.  Recent issuers of
indexed  securities  have  included  banks,   corporations,   and  certain  U.S.
Government agencies.

<PAGE>



         Repurchase Agreements. The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements. A
repurchase  agreement is a contract under which the Fund acquires a security for
a  relatively  short  period  (usually  not more than one week)  subject  to the
obligation of the seller to repurchase and the Fund to resell such security at a
fixed  time and  price  (representing  the  Fund's  cost plus  interest).  Under
guidelines  established  by the Board of Directors of the Company,  the Fund may
enter into repurchase  agreements only with banks and securities dealers meeting
certain  criteria as to  credit-worthiness  and financial  condition.  It is the
Sub-advisor's  present intention that the Fund enter into repurchase  agreements
only with  respect to  obligations  of the U.S.  government  or its  agencies or
instrumentalities or other high-quality, short-term debt obligations. Repurchase
agreements may be viewed as loans made by the Fund which are  collateralized  by
the  securities  subject  to  repurchase.  The  Sub-advisor  will  monitor  such
transactions  to ensure that the value of the underlying  securities  will be at
least  equal at all times to the  total  amount  of the  repurchase  obligation,
including the interest factor. For a discussion of repurchase agreements and the
risks involved therein, see the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

         Securities Lending. The Fund may lend its securities, provided: (1) the
loan is  secured  continuously  by  collateral  consisting  of  U.S.  Government
securities,  cash, or cash  equivalents  adjusted  daily to have market value at
least equal to the current market value of the securities  loaned;  (2) the Fund
may at any time call the loan and regain  the  securities  loaned;  (3) the Fund
will receive any interest or dividends  paid on the loaned  securities;  and (4)
the  aggregate  market  value of  securities  loaned will not at any time exceed
one-third (or such other limit as the Directors of the Company may establish) of
the total assets of the Fund. In addition,  it is anticipated  that the Fund may
share with the borrower some of the income  received on the  collateral  for the
loan or that it will be paid a premium for the loan.

         Before the Fund  enters  into a loan,  the  Sub-advisor  considers  all
relevant  facts  and  circumstances,   including  the  creditworthiness  of  the
borrower. The risks in lending portfolio securities, as with other extensions of
credit, consist of possible delay in recovery of the securities or possible loss
of rights in the  collateral  should the  borrower  fail  financially.  Although
voting rights or rights to consent with respect to the loaned securities pass to
the  borrower,  the Fund  retains  the  right  to call the  loans at any time on
reasonable  notice,  and it will do so in order that the securities may be voted
by the Fund if the holders of such  securities are asked to vote upon or consent
to matters materially affecting the investment. The Fund will not lend portfolio
securities to borrowers affiliated with the Fund.

         Short  Sales.  The  Fund  may  seek to  hedge  investments  or  realize
additional gains through short sales.  Short sales are transactions in which the
Fund  sells a  security  it does not own,  in  anticipation  of a decline in the
market value of that  security.  To complete such a  transaction,  the Fund must
borrow the security to make delivery to the buyer. The Fund then is obligated to
replace the security  borrowed by  purchasing it at the market price at or prior
to the time of replacement.  The price at such time may be more or less than the
price at which  the  security  was  sold by the  Fund.  Until  the  security  is
replaced,  the Fund is  required to repay the lender any  dividends  or interest
that accrue during the period of the loan. To borrow the security, the Fund also
may be required to pay a premium,  which would increase the cost of the security
sold.  The net  proceeds of the short sale will be retained by the broker (or by
the Fund's custodian in a special custody  account),  to the extent necessary to
meet margin requirements,  until the short position is closed out. The Fund also
will incur transaction costs in effecting short sales.

         The Fund will  incur a loss as a result of the short  sale if the price
of the  security  increases  between  the date of the short sale and the date on
which the Fund replaces the borrowed  security.  The Fund will realize a gain if
the security  declines in price between those dates. The amount of any gain will
be  decreased,  and the  amount  of any loss  increased,  by the  amount  of the
premium,  dividends,  interest  or  expenses  the Fund may be required to pay in
connection with a short sale.

         Foreign  Investments.  The  Fund  may  invest  in  foreign  securities,
securities denominated in or indexed to foreign currencies,  and certificates of
deposit issued by United States  branches of foreign banks and foreign  branches
of United  States  banks.  For a  discussion  of the risks  involved  in foreign
currency  fluctuations and investing in foreign securities in general,  see this
SAI and the Company's  Prospectus  under  "Certain  Risk Factors and  Investment
Methods."

         The considerations  associated with foreign  investments  generally are
intensified  for  investments in developing  countries.  For a discussion of the
risks involved therein, see this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain
Risk Factors and Investment Methods."




<PAGE>



         Foreign Currency Transactions. The Fund may engage in currency exchange
transactions  to  protect  against  uncertainty  in the level of future  foreign
currency  exchange rates and to increase current return.  The Fund may engage in
both "transaction hedging" and "position hedging".

         When it engages in  transaction  hedging,  the Fund enters into foreign
currency  transactions  with respect to specific  receivables or payables of the
Fund generally  arising in connection with the purchase or sale of its portfolio
securities. The Fund will engage in transaction hedging when it desires to "lock
in" the U.S.  dollar  price of a security it has agreed to purchase or sell,  or
the U.S.  dollar  equivalent  of a  dividend  or  interest  payment in a foreign
currency.  By transaction  hedging,  the Fund will attempt to protect  against a
possible loss resulting from an adverse change in the  relationship  between the
U.S.  dollar and the applicable  foreign  currency during the period between the
date on which the  security  is  purchased  or sold or on which the  dividend or
interest  payment is declared,  and the date on which such  payments are made or
received.

         The Fund may purchase or sell a foreign currency on a spot (i.e., cash)
basis at the prevailing spot rate in connection with  transaction  hedging.  The
Fund may also enter into  contracts to purchase or sell foreign  currencies at a
future date ("forward contracts") and purchase and sell foreign currency futures
contracts.

         For  transaction   hedging   purposes,   the  Fund  may  also  purchase
exchange-listed  and  over-the-counter  call and put options on foreign currency
futures contracts and on foreign currencies.  A put option on a futures contract
gives the Fund the  right to assume a short  position  in the  futures  contract
until  expiration  of the option.  A put option on  currency  gives the Fund the
right to sell a currency at a specified  exercise  price until the expiration of
the  option.  A call  option on a futures  contract  gives the Fund the right to
assume a long  position  in the futures  contract  until the  expiration  of the
option.  A call  option  on  currency  gives the Fund the  right to  purchase  a
currency at the exercise price until the expiration of the option. The Fund will
engage in  over-the-counter  transactions only when appropriate  exchange-traded
transactions  are unavailable and when, in the opinion of the  Sub-advisor,  the
pricing  mechanism and  liquidity  are  satisfactory  and the  participants  are
responsible parties likely to meet their contractual obligations.

         When it engages in  position  hedging,  the Fund  enters  into  foreign
currency exchange transactions to protect against a decline in the values of the
foreign  currencies in which  securities held by the Fund are denominated or are
quoted  in their  principle  trading  markets  or an  increase  in the  value of
currency for securities  which the Fund expects to purchase.  In connection with
position hedging,  the Fund may purchase put or call options on foreign currency
and foreign  currency  futures  contracts and buy or sell forward  contracts and
foreign currency futures  contracts.  The Fund may also purchase or sell foreign
currency on a spot basis.

         The  precise  matching  of the  amounts  of foreign  currency  exchange
transactions  and the  value  of the  portfolio  securities  involved  will  not
generally  be  possible  since the future  value of such  securities  in foreign
currencies  will change as a  consequence  of market  movements in the values of
those  securities  between  the dates the  currency  exchange  transactions  are
entered into and the dates they mature.

         It is  impossible  to forecast  with  precision the market value of the
Fund's  securities  at the  expiration  or  maturity  of a  forward  or  futures
contract.  Accordingly,  it may be necessary for the Fund to purchase additional
foreign  currency on the spot market (and bear the expense of such  purchase) if
the market  value of the  security or  securities  being hedged is less than the
amount of foreign currency the Fund is obligated to deliver and if a decision is
made to sell the  security  or  securities  and  make  delivery  of the  foreign
currency. Conversely, it may be necessary to sell on the spot market some of the
foreign currency received upon the sale of the portfolio  security or securities
of the Fund if the market  value of such  security  or  securities  exceeds  the
amount of foreign currency the Fund is obligated to deliver.

         To offset some of the costs to the Fund of hedging against fluctuations
in currency  exchange  rates,  the Fund may write  covered call options on those
currencies.

         Transaction and position  hedging do not eliminate  fluctuations in the
underlying  prices of the securities  which the Fund owns or intends to purchase
or sell. They simply  establish a rate of exchange which one can achieve at some
future point in time.  Additionally,  although these techniques tend to minimize
the risk of loss due to a decline in the value of the hedged currency, they tend
to limit any potential gain which might result from the increase in the value of
such currency.

         The Fund may also seek to increase its current return by purchasing and
selling  foreign  currency on a spot basis, by purchasing and selling options on
foreign currencies and on foreign currency futures contracts,  and by purchasing
and selling foreign currency forward contracts.

         Currency  Forward and Futures  Contracts.  A forward  foreign  currency
exchange contract involves an obligation to purchase or sell a specific currency
at a future  date,  which may be any  fixed  number of days from the date of the
contract as agreed by the parties,  at a price set at the time of the  contract.
In the case of a  cancelable  forward  contract,  the holder has the  unilateral
right to cancel  the  contract  at  maturity  by  paying a  specified  fee.  The
contracts are traded in the interbank market conducted directly between currency
traders (usually large commercial banks) and their customers. A forward contract
generally  has no deposit  requirement,  and no  commissions  are charged at any
stage for trades. A foreign currency futures contract is a standardized contract
for the future delivery of a specified  amount of a foreign currency at a future
date at a  price  set at the  time of the  contract.  Foreign  currency  futures
contracts  traded in the United  States are  designed by and traded on exchanges
regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the "CFTC"),  such as the
New York Mercantile Exchange.

         Forward  foreign  currency  exchange   contracts  differ  from  foreign
currency futures contracts in certain respects.  For example,  the maturity date
of a  forward  contract  may be any  fixed  number  of days from the date of the
contract agreed upon by the parties, rather than a predetermined date in a given
month. Forward contracts may be in any amounts agreed upon by the parties rather
than predetermined  amounts. Also, forward foreign exchange contracts are traded
directly between currency traders so that no intermediary is required. A forward
contract generally requires no margin or other deposit.

         At the maturity of a forward or futures  contract,  the Fund may either
accept or make  delivery of the  currency  specified in the  contract,  or at or
prior to maturity  enter into a closing  transaction  involving  the purchase or
sale of an offsetting  contract.  Closing  transactions  with respect to forward
contracts are usually  effected  with the currency  trader who is a party to the
original  forward  contract.   Closing  transactions  with  respect  to  futures
contracts  are  effected  on a  commodities  exchange;  a  clearing  corporation
associated  with  the  exchange  assumes  responsibility  for  closing  out such
contracts.

         Positions in foreign currency futures contracts and related options may
be closed out only on an exchange  or board of trade which  provides a secondary
market in such contracts or options. Although the Fund will normally purchase or
sell foreign currency futures contracts and related options only on exchanges or
boards of trade where there appears to be an active secondary  market,  there is
no assurance that a secondary market on an exchange or board of trade will exist
for any particular  contract or option or at any particular time. In such event,
it may not be possible to close a futures or related option position and, in the
event of adverse price movements, the Fund would continue to be required to make
daily cash payments of variation margin on its futures positions.

         Foreign  Currency  Options.   Options  on  foreign  currencies  operate
similarly  to  options  on   securities,   and  are  traded   primarily  in  the
over-the-counter  market,  although options on foreign  currencies have recently
been listed on several exchanges. Such options will be purchased or written only
when the  Sub-advisor  believes that a liquid  secondary  market exists for such
options. There can be no assurance that a liquid secondary market will exist for
a particular  option at any specific  time.  Options on foreign  currencies  are
affected by all of those factors which influence  exchange rates and investments
generally.

         The value of a foreign  currency  option is dependent upon the value of
the foreign  currency and the U.S.  dollar,  and may have no relationship to the
investment merits of a foreign security.  Because foreign currency  transactions
occurring in the interbank  market  involve  substantially  larger  amounts than
those that may be involved in the use of foreign currency options, investors may
be disadvantaged by having to deal in an odd lot market (generally consisting of
transactions of less than $1 million) for the underlying  foreign  currencies at
prices that are less favorable than for round lots.

         There is no systematic  reporting of last-sale  information for foreign
currencies  and there is no regulatory  requirement  that  quotations  available
through  dealers or other market  sources be firm or revised on a timely  basis.
Available  quotation  information  is  generally  representative  of very  large
transactions in the interbank market and thus may not reflect relatively smaller
transactions  (less than $1  million)  where  rates may be less  favorable.  The
interbank market in foreign currencies is a global,  around-the-clock market. To
the extent that the U.S.  options  markets are closed  while the markets for the
underlying currencies remain open, significant price and rate movements may take
place in the  underlying  markets that cannot be  reflected in the U.S.  options
markets.

         Foreign Currency  Conversion.  Although foreign exchange dealers do not
charge a fee for  currency  conversion,  they do  realize a profit  based on the
difference  (the  "spread")  between  prices at which they buy and sell  various
currencies.  Thus, a dealer may offer to sell a foreign  currency to the Fund at
one rate,  while  offering a lesser rate of  exchange  should the Fund desire to
resell that currency to the dealer.

         Zero-Coupon  Debt Securities and Pay-in-Kind  Securities.  The Fund may
invest in zero-coupon  securities.  Zero-coupon  securities are debt obligations
which are  generally  issued at a discount  from their value at maturity and are
payable in full at  maturity,  and which do not provide for current  payments of
interest prior to maturity.  Zero-coupon securities allow an issuer to avoid the
need to generate  cash to meet current  interest  payments.  For a discussion of
zero-coupon debt securities and the risks involved  therein,  see this SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Even though zero-coupon securities do not pay current interest in cash,
the Fund is  nonetheless  required  to  accrue  interest  income  on them and to
distribute the amount of that interest at least annually to shareholders.  Thus,
the Fund could be required at times to liquidate  other  investments in order to
satisfy its distribution requirement.


         The  Fund  also  may  purchase  pay-in-kind   securities.   Pay-in-kind
securities  pay all or a portion of their  interest or  dividends in the form of
additional securities.

     Investment Policies Which May Be Changed Without Shareholder Approval.  The
following  limitations are not "fundamental"  restrictions and may be changed by
the Directors of the Company without shareholder approval. The Fund will not:

         1........Invest  in (a) securities which at the time of such investment
are not readily  marketable,  (b)  securities  restricted as to resale,  and (c)
repurchase  agreements  maturing in more than seven days, if, as a result,  more
than 15% of the  Fund's  net  assets  (taken at  current  value)  would  then be
invested in the aggregate in securities described in (a), (b), and (c) above;

         2........Purchase  or sell commodities or commodity  contracts,  except
that the Fund may  purchase  or sell  financial  futures  contracts,  options on
financial futures  contracts,  and futures  contracts,  forward  contracts,  and
options   with  respect  to  foreign   currencies,   and  may  enter  into  swap
transactions;

     3........Invest  in securities  of other  investment  companies,  except in
compliance with the 1940 Act;

         4........Invest in real estate limited partnerships;

         5........Acquire more than 10% of the voting securities of any issuer;

         6........Purchase  or sell real  estate or  interests  in real  estate,
including  real  estate  mortgage  loans,  although  it may  purchase  and  sell
securities  which are  secured  by real  estate  and  securities  of  companies,
including limited partnership interests,  that invest or deal in real estate and
it may purchase  interests in real estate  investment  trusts.  (For purposes of
this  restriction,  investments  by the Fund in  mortgage-backed  securities and
other securities  representing  interests in mortgage pools shall not constitute
the  purchase or sale of real estate or  interests in real estate or real estate
mortgage loans.);

     7........Make   investments  for  the  purpose  of  exercising  control  or
management;

     8........Invest  in interests in oil, gas or other mineral  exploration  or
development  programs or leases,  although it may invest in the common stocks of
companies that invest in or sponsor such programs.

         In addition,  the Fund will only sell short  securities that are traded
on  a  national   securities  exchange  in  the  U.S.  (including  the  National
Association of Securities  Dealers' Automated  Quotation National Market System)
or in the  country  where the  principal  trading  market in the  securities  is
located. (This limitation does not apply to short sales against the box).

         All percentage  limitations  on  investments  will apply at the time of
investment and shall not be considered  violated  unless an excess or deficiency
occurs or exists immediately after and as a result of such investment.

ASAF JANUS CAPITAL GROWTH FUND:

Investment Objective:  The investment objective of the Fund is to seek growth of
capital. Realization of income is not a significant investment consideration and
any income realized on the Fund's investments,  therefore, will be incidental to
the Fund's objective.

Investment Policies:

         Futures,  Options and Other Derivative Instruments.  The Fund may enter
into futures contracts on securities,  financial indices, and foreign currencies
and  options  on such  contracts,  and may  invest  in  options  on  securities,
financial indices and foreign currencies,  forward contracts and swaps. The Fund
will not enter into any futures contracts or options on futures contracts if the
aggregate amount of the Fund's  commitments under  outstanding  futures contract
positions and options on futures  contracts written by the Fund would exceed the
market value of the total assets of the Fund (i.e., no leveraging). The Fund may
invest in forward  currency  contracts  with stated values of up to the value of
the Fund's assets.

         The Fund may buy or write options in privately negotiated  transactions
on the types of securities and indices based on the types of securities in which
the Fund is permitted to invest directly. The Fund will effect such transactions
only  with  investment  dealers  and  other  financial   institutions  (such  as
commercial banks or savings and loan  institutions)  deemed  creditworthy by the
Sub-advisor,  and only pursuant to  procedures  adopted by the  Sub-advisor  for
monitoring the creditworthiness of those entities.  To the extent that an option
bought or written by the Fund in a negotiated transaction is illiquid, the value
of an option  bought or the  amount of the  Fund's  obligations  under an option
written  by the  Fund,  as the  case  may be,  will  be  subject  to the  Fund's
limitation on illiquid investments.  In the case of illiquid options, it may not
be possible for the Fund to effect an offsetting  transaction at a time when the
Sub-advisor  believes  it would  be  advantageous  for the Fund to do so.  For a
description  of these  strategies  and  instruments  and certain risks  involved
therein,  see this SAI and the Company's  Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

         Interest Rate Swaps and Purchasing  and Selling  Interest Rate Caps and
Floors. In addition to the strategies noted above, the Fund, in order to attempt
to protect the value of its investments from interest rate or currency  exchange
rate  fluctuations,  may  enter  into  interest  rate  swaps and may buy or sell
interest rate caps and floors. The Fund expects to enter into these transactions
primarily to preserve a return or spread on a particular  investment  or portion
of its investments.  The Fund also may enter into these  transactions to protect
against any increase in the price of securities the Fund may consider  buying at
a  later  date.  The  Fund  does  not  intend  to use  these  transactions  as a
speculative  investments.  Interest  rate swaps involve the exchange by the Fund
with another party of their respective  commitments to pay or receive  interest,
e.g.,  an  exchange of  floating  rate  payments  for fixed rate  payments.  The
exchange  commitments can involve payments to be made in the same currency or in
different  currencies.  The  purchase  of an  interest  rate  cap  entitles  the
purchaser, to the extent that a specified index exceeds a predetermined interest
rate, to receive payments of interest on a contractually  based principal amount
from the party  selling the interest  rate cap. The purchase of an interest rate
floor entitles the purchaser, to the extent that a specified index falls below a
predetermined  interest rate, to receive payments of interest on a contractually
based principal amount from the party selling the interest rate floor.

         The Fund may enter into interest rate swaps,  caps and floors on either
an asset-based or  liability-based  basis,  depending upon whether it is hedging
its assets or its  liabilities,  and will usually enter into interest rate swaps
on a net basis,  i.e.,  the two payment  streams  are netted out,  with the Fund
receiving  or  paying,  as the  case  may be,  only  the net  amount  of the two
payments.  The net amount of the excess, if any, of the Fund's  obligations over
its entitlements with respect to each interest rate swap will be calculated on a
daily basis and an amount of cash or other liquid assets having an aggregate net
asset  value at least  equal  to the  accrued  excess  will be  maintained  in a
segregated account by the Fund's custodian.  If the Fund enters into an interest
rate swap on other  than a net  basis,  the Fund  would  maintain  a  segregated
account in the full amount  accrued on a daily  basis of the Fund's  obligations
with respect to the swap.  The Fund will not enter into any interest  rate swap,
cap or floor  transaction  unless the unsecured senior debt or the claims-paying
ability of the other party thereto is rated in one of the three  highest  rating
categories of at least one nationally recognized statistical rating organization
at the time of entering into such transaction.  The Sub-advisor will monitor the
creditworthiness  of all  counterparties  on an  ongoing  basis.  If  there is a
default by the other party to such a transaction, the Fund will have contractual
remedies pursuant to the agreements related to the transaction.

         The swap market has grown  substantially  in recent  years with a large
number of banks and  investment  banking firms acting both as principals  and as
agents utilizing standardized swap documentation. The Sub-advisor has determined
that, as a result, the swap market has become relatively liquid. Caps and floors
are more recent  innovations for which  standardized  documentation  has not yet
been developed and, accordingly,  they are less liquid than swaps. To the extent
the Fund sells (i.e.,  writes) caps and floors, it will maintain in a segregated
account cash or other liquid assets having an aggregate net asset value at least
equal to the full amount,  accrued on a daily basis,  of the Fund's  obligations
with respect to any caps or floors.

         There is no limit on the amount of interest rate swap transactions that
may be  entered  into by the  Fund.  These  transactions  may in some  instances
involve the delivery of securities or other underlying assets by the Fund or its
counterparty   to   collateralize   obligations   under  the  swap.   Under  the
documentation  currently used in those markets, the risk of loss with respect to
interest  rate swaps is limited to the net amount of the payments  that the Fund
is contractually  obligated to make. If the other party to an interest rate swap
that is not  collateralized  defaults,  the Fund  would risk the loss of the net
amount of the payments that the Fund  contractually is entitled to receive.  The
Fund may buy and sell (i.e., write) caps and floors without limitation,  subject
to the  segregated  account  requirement  described  above.  For  an  additional
discussion  of these  strategies,  see this SAI under  "Certain Risk Factors and
Investment Methods."

         Repurchase  Agreements and Reverse  Repurchase  Agreements.  Subject to
guidelines  promulgated by the Directors of the Company, the Fund may enter into
repurchase  agreements.   The  Fund  may  also  enter  into  reverse  repurchase
agreements.  For a description of these investment techniques, see the Company's
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Investment Policies Which May Be Changed Without Shareholder  Approval.
The following limitations are not "fundamental"  investment restrictions and may
be changed by the Directors of the Company without shareholder approval.
The Fund will not:

         1........Purchase  a security if as a result,  more than 15% of its net
assets in the aggregate,  at market value, would be invested in securities which
cannot be readily resold because of legal or contractual  restrictions on resale
or for which there is no readily  available  market,  or  repurchase  agreements
maturing  in more than  seven  days or  securities  used as a cover for  written
over-the-counter  options, if any. The Directors of the Company,  the Investment
Manager  or the  Sub-advisor  acting  pursuant  to  authority  delegated  by the
Directors,  may determine that a readily  available market exists for securities
eligible for resale  pursuant to Rule 144A under the  Securities Act of 1933, or
any successor to such rule, and therefore  that such  securities are not subject
to the foregoing limitation;

         2........Enter  into  any  futures  contracts  or  options  on  futures
contracts for purposes other than bona fide hedging  transactions (as defined by
the CFTC) if as a result the sum of the  initial  margin  deposits  and  premium
required to establish positions in futures contracts and related options that do
not fall within the definition of bona fide hedging transactions would exceed 5%
of the fair market value of the Fund's net assets;

         3........Enter  into any futures  contracts if the aggregate  amount of
the Fund's commitments under outstanding futures contracts positions of the Fund
would exceed the market value of the total assets of the Fund;

         4........Sell  securities  short,  unless  it owns or has the  right to
obtain  securities  equivalent in kind and amount to the securities  sold short,
and provided that  transactions in options,  swaps and forward futures contracts
are not deemed to constitute selling securities short;

         5........Mortgage or pledge any securities owned or held by the Fund in
amounts  that  exceed,  in the  aggregate,  15% of the Fund's  net asset  value,
provided that this limitation does not apply to reverse repurchase agreements or
in the case of assets  deposited  to margin or  guarantee  positions in futures,
options,  swaps or  forward  contracts  or placed  in a  segregated  account  in
connection with such contracts;

     6........Invest  in companies for the purpose of  exercising  management or
control;

     7........Purchase securities of open-end or closed-end investment companies
except in compliance with the Investment Company Act of 1940; or

         8........Purchase   securities  on  margin,   except  (i)  for  use  of
short-term  credit necessary for clearance of purchases of portfolio  securities
and (ii) the Fund may make margin deposits in connection with futures  contracts
or other permissible investments.

ASAF LORD ABBETT GROWTH AND INCOME FUND:


     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective of the Fund is long-term
growth of capital and income while attempting to avoid excessive fluctuations in
market value.

Investment Policies:

         Covered Call Options. The Fund may write covered call options which are
traded on a national  securities  exchange with respect to its  securities in an
attempt to increase income and to provide greater flexibility in the disposition
of  securities.  A "call option" is a contract sold for a price (the  "premium")
giving its  holder  the right to buy a  specific  number of shares of stock at a
specific  price prior to a specified  date.  A "covered  call  option" is a call
option issued on  securities  already owned by the writer of the call option for
delivery to the holder upon the exercise of the option. During the period of the
option,  the Fund  forgoes the  opportunity  to profit from any  increase in the
market price of the  underlying  security above the exercise price of the option
(to the extent that the  increase  exceeds the net  premium).  The Fund may also
enter into "closing purchase  transactions" in order to terminate its obligation
to deliver the  underlying  security  (this may result in a  short-term  gain or
loss).  A closing  purchase  transaction  is the purchase of a call option (at a
cost  which  may be more or less  than the  premium  received  for  writing  the
original call option) on the same security with the same exercise price and call
period as the option previously  written.  If the Fund is unable to enter into a
closing  purchase  transaction,  it may be required  to hold a security  that it
might otherwise have sold to protect against depreciation.  The Sub-advisor does
not  intend  to have the  Fund  write  covered  call  options  with  respect  to
securities  with an aggregate  market value of more than 10% of the Fund's gross
assets at the time an option is written.  For an  additional  discussion of call
options,  see this SAI and the Company's  Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

     Lending  Portfolio  Securities.  The Fund may engage in the  lending of its
securities.  It is expected that no more that 5% of the Fund's gross assets will
be committed to securities  lending.  For a discussion of the Fund's limitations
on lending, see this SAI under "Fundamental Investment Restrictions."

         Illiquid Securities. Subject to guidelines promulgated by the Directors
of the  Company,  the Fund may invest in  illiquid  securities.  Investments  in
illiquid securities are limited to a maximum of 15% of Fund net assets. Illiquid
securities  for  the  purposes  of this  limitation  do not  include  securities
eligible for resale  pursuant to Rule 144A of the  Securities  Act of 1933 which
have been  determined to be liquid by the  Sub-advisor  under the supervision of
the Directors of the Company. Examples of factors which the Sub-advisor may take
into  account  with  respect to a Rule 144A  security  include the  frequency of
trades and quotes for the security, the number of dealers willing to purchase or
sell  the  security  and  the  number  of  other  potential  purchasers,  dealer
undertakings  to make a market in the  security,  and the nature of the security
and the nature of the  marketplace  (e.g.,  the time period needed to dispose of
the security,  the method of soliciting  offers, and the mechanics of transfer).
For a  discussion  of illiquid  and  restricted  securities  and  certain  risks
involved  therein see the Company's  Prospectus  under "Certain Risk Factors and
Investment Methods."


ASAF INVESCO EQUITY INCOME FUND:

     Investment Objective:  The investment objective of the Fund is to seek high
current income while following sound investment practices.

Investment Policies:

         The  Fund  will  pursue  its  objective  by  investing  its  assets  in
securities  which will provide a  relatively  high-yield  and stable  return and
which,  over a period of years, may also provide capital  appreciation.  Capital
growth  potential is an additional  consideration  in the selection of portfolio
securities.  The Fund invests in common stocks, as well as convertible bonds and
preferred stocks.

         In pursuing its  investment  objective,  the Fund  normally  invests at
least 65% of its total assets in dividend paying common stocks. Up to 10% of the
Fund's  assets may be  invested  in equity  securities  that do not pay  regular
dividends.   The  remaining  assets  are  invested  in  other  income  producing
securities,  such as corporate  bonds.  Sometimes  warrants  are  acquired  when
offered with  income-producing  securities,  but the warrants are disposed of at
the first favorable  opportunity.  Acquiring  warrants  involves a risk that the
Fund will lose the  premium  it pays to  acquire  warrants  if the Fund does not
exercise  a warrant  before it  expires.  The major  portion  of the  investment
portfolio normally consists of common stocks,  convertible bonds and debentures,
and preferred stocks;  however,  there may also be substantial  holdings of debt
securities, including non-investment grade and unrated debt securities.

         Debt  Securities.  The debt  securities  in which the Fund  invests are
generally subject to two kinds of risk, credit risk and market risk. The ratings
given a debt  security  by  Moody's  and  Standard  & Poor's  ("S&P")  provide a
generally useful guide as to such credit risk. The lower the rating given a debt
security by such rating service, the greater the credit risk such rating service
perceives to exist with respect to such security.  Increasing the amount of Fund
assets invested in unrated or lower grade (Ba or less by Moody's,  BB or less by
S&P) debt  securities,  while  intended  to increase  the yield  produced by the
Fund's debt  securities,  will also increase the credit risk to which those debt
securities are subject.

         Lower-rated  debt  securities  and  non-rated  securities of comparable
quality  tend to be subject to wider  fluctuations  in yields and market  values
than higher  rated debt  securities  and may have  speculative  characteristics.
Although the Fund may invest in debt securities  assigned lower grade ratings by
S&P or Moody's,  the Fund's  investments  have  generally  been  limited to debt
securities  rated B or higher by either S&P or Moody's.  Debt  securities  rated
lower than B by either S&P or Moody's may be highly speculative. The Sub-advisor
intends to limit such  portfolio  investments to debt  securities  which are not
believed  by the  Sub-advisor  to be highly  speculative  and which are rated at
least CCC or Caa,  respectively,  by S&P or Moody's. In addition,  a significant
economic downturn or major increase in interest rates may well result in issuers
of lower-rated  debt securities  experiencing  increased  financial stress which
would  adversely  affect their ability to service  their  principal and interest
obligations,  to  meet  projected  business  goals,  and  to  obtain  additional
financing. While the Sub-advisor attempts to limit purchases of lower-rated debt
securities to securities  having an established  retail  secondary  market,  the
market for such  securities  may not be as liquid as the market for higher rated
debt  securities.  For an additional  discussion  of certain  risks  involved in
lower-rated  or unrated  securities,  see this SAI and the Company's  Prospectus
under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Repurchase  Agreements.  As discussed in the Company's Prospectus,  the
Fund may enter into  repurchase  agreements  with  respect  to debt  instruments
eligible for  investment by the Fund,  with member banks of the Federal  Reserve
System, registered broker-dealers, and registered government securities dealers.
A repurchase  agreement may be considered a loan  collateralized  by securities.
The resale price  reflects an agreed upon interest rate effective for the period
the  instrument is held by the Fund and is unrelated to the interest rate on the
underlying  instrument.  In these  transactions,  the securities acquired by the
Fund  (including  accrued  interest  earned  thereon) must have a total value in
excess  of the value of the  repurchase  agreement,  and are held by the  Fund's
Custodian  Bank until  repurchased.  For an additional  discussion of repurchase
agreements and certain risks involved therein,  see this SAI under "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment Methods."

         The Directors of the Company have  promulgated  guidelines with respect
to repurchase agreements.

         Lending  Portfolio  Securities.  The Fund may  lend its  securities  to
qualified brokers, dealers, banks, or other financial institutions. While voting
rights may pass with the loaned securities,  if a material event (e.g., proposed
merger,  sale of assets,  or liquidation) is to occur affecting an investment on
loan, the loan must be called and the securities voted. Loans of securities made
by the Fund will  comply  with all  other  applicable  regulatory  requirements,
including the rules of the New York Stock Exchange and the  requirements  of the
Investment  Company  Act of 1940 and the Rules of the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission thereunder.

     Investment Policies Which May Be Changed Without Shareholder Approval.  The
following  limitations are not "fundamental"  restrictions and may be changed by
the Directors of the Company without shareholder approval. The Fund will not:

     1........Invest  in companies for the purpose of  exercising  management or
control;

     2........Purchase securities of open-end or closed-end investment companies
except in compliance with the Investment Company Act of 1940;

         3........Purchase   securities  on  margin,   except  (i)  for  use  of
short-term  credit necessary for clearance of purchases of portfolio  securities
and (ii) the Fund may make margin deposits in connection with futures  contracts
or other permissible investments;

         4........Effect short sales of securities; or

         5........Purchase any security or enter into a repurchase agreement, if
as a result,  more than 15% of its net assets  would be invested  in  repurchase
agreements not entitling the holder to payment of principal and interest  within
seven days and in securities that are illiquid by virtue of legal or contractual
restrictions  on  resale  or the  absence  of a readily  available  market.  The
Directors of the Company,  or the Investment  Manager or the Sub-advisor  acting
pursuant to authority  delegated by the Directors,  may determine that a readily
available market exists for securities eligible for resale pursuant to Rule 144A
under the  Securities  Act of 1933, or any successor to that rule, and therefore
that such securities are not subject to the foregoing limitation.

ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND:

     Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund is to seek
capital growth and current income.

Investment Policies:

         In general,  within the restrictions  outlined herein,  the Sub-advisor
has broad  powers with respect to  investing  funds or holding them  uninvested.
Investments are varied according to what is judged  advantageous  under changing
economic conditions.  It will be the policy of the Sub-advisor to retain maximum
flexibility in management without restrictive provisions as to the proportion of
one or another  class of securities  that may be held subject to the  investment
restrictions  described below. However, the Sub-advisor may invest the assets of
the Fund in varying amounts in other instruments and in senior securities,  such
as bonds,  debentures,  preferred  stocks and  convertible  issues,  when such a
course  is deemed  appropriate  in order to  attempt  to  attain  its  financial
objectives.  Senior  securities  that,  in the opinion of the  Sub-advisor,  are
high-grade issues may also be purchased for defensive purposes.

         The  above  statement  of  investment   policy  gives  the  Sub-advisor
authority to invest in securities  other than common stocks and traditional debt
and   convertible   issues.   The  Sub-advisor  may  invest  in  master  limited
partnerships (other than real estate  partnerships) and royalty trusts which are
traded on domestic stock exchanges when such investments are deemed  appropriate
for the attainment of the Fund's investment objectives.

         The  Sub-advisor  will invest  approximately  60% of the Fund in common
stocks and the balance in fixed income securities.  Common stock investments are
described  above.  The  fixed  income  assets  will  be  invested  primarily  in
investment  grade  securities.  The Fund may invest in  securities of the United
States government and its agencies and instrumentalities,  corporate,  sovereign
government,  municipal,  mortgage-backed,  and other asset-backed securities. It
can be expected that the Sub-advisor  will invest from time to time in bonds and
preferred stock convertible into common stock.

         Forward  Currency  Exchange  Contracts.  The Fund  conducts its foreign
currency exchange  transactions  either on a spot (i.e., cash) basis at the spot
rate prevailing in the foreign  currency  exchange  market,  or through entering
into forward  foreign  currency  exchange  contracts to purchase or sell foreign
currencies.

         The Fund expects to use forward contracts under two circumstances:  (1)
when the  Sub-advisor  wishes to "lock in" the U.S.  dollar  price of a security
when the Fund is  purchasing  or  selling a  security  denominated  in a foreign
currency,  the Fund would be able to enter into a forward contract to do so; (2)
when the Sub-advisor  believes that the currency of a particular foreign country
may suffer a substantial decline against the U.S. dollar, the Fund would be able
to enter  into a forward  contract  to sell  foreign  currency  for a fixed U.S.
dollar amount  approximating  the value of some or all of the Fund's  securities
either denominated in, or whose value is tied to, such foreign currency.

         As to the first circumstance, when the Fund enters into a trade for the
purchase  or sale of a security  denominated  in a foreign  currency,  it may be
desirable to establish (lock in) the U.S.  dollar cost or proceeds.  By entering
into  forward  contracts  in U.S.  dollars for the purchase or sale of a foreign
currency involved in an underlying security  transaction,  the Fund will be able
to protect  itself  against a possible loss between trade and  settlement  dates
resulting from the adverse change in the relationship between the U.S. dollar at
the subject foreign currency.

         Under the second  circumstance,  when the Sub-advisor believes that the
currency of a particular  country may suffer a substantial  decline  relative to
the U.S.  dollar,  the Fund could  enter into a foreign  contract  to sell for a
fixed dollar amount the amount in foreign currencies  approximating the value of
some or all of its portfolio securities either denominated in, or whose value is
tied to, such foreign  currency.  The Fund will place cash or high-grade  liquid
securities in a separate  account with its custodian in an amount  sufficient to
cover its obligation under the contract.  If the value of the securities  placed
in the separate account  declines,  additional cash or securities will be placed
in the  account  on a daily  basis so that the value of the  account  equals the
amount of the Fund's commitments with respect to such contracts.

         The precise matching of forward  contracts in the amounts and values of
securities  involved  would not generally be possible since the future values of
such foreign  currencies will change as a consequence of market movements in the
values of those securities between the date the forward contract is entered into
and the date it matures.  Predicting  short-term  currency  market  movements is
extremely difficult, and the successful execution of short-term hedging strategy
is  highly  uncertain.  The  Sub-advisor  does not  intend  to enter  into  such
contracts  on a regular  basis.  Normally,  consideration  of the  prospect  for
currency parities will be incorporated into the long-term  investment  decisions
made  with  respect  to  overall   diversification   strategies.   However,  the
Sub-advisor believes that it is important to have flexibility to enter into such
forward  contracts  when it  determines  that the Fund 's best  interests may be
served.

         Generally,  the Fund will not enter into a forward contract with a term
of greater than one year. At the maturity of the forward contract,  the Fund may
either sell the portfolio security and make delivery of the foreign currency, or
it may retain the security and terminate  the  obligation to deliver the foreign
currency by purchasing an "offsetting"  forward  contract with the same currency
trader  obligating  the Fund to purchase,  on the same maturity  date,  the same
amount of the foreign currency.

         It is impossible  to forecast with absolute  precision the market value
of the Fund's securities at the expiration of the forward contract. Accordingly,
it may be necessary for the Fund to purchase  additional foreign currency on the
spot market (and bear the expense of such  purchase)  if the market value of the
security is less than the amount of foreign  currency  the Fund is  obligated to
deliver and if a decision is made to sell the security and make  delivery of the
foreign currency the Fund is obligated to deliver. For an additional  discussion
of forward currency exchange  contracts and certain risks involved therein,  see
this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment
Methods."

         Futures Contracts.  As described in the Company's Prospectus,  the Fund
may enter into futures contracts.  Unlike when the Fund purchases securities, no
purchase price for the underlying  securities is paid by the Fund at the time it
purchases a futures contract.  When a futures contract is entered into, both the
buyer  and  seller  of the  contract  are  required  to  deposit  with a futures
commission  merchant  ("FCM") cash or  high-grade  debt  securities in an amount
equal to a percentage of the contract's  value,  as set by the exchange on which
the contract is traded.  This amount is known as "initial margin" and is held by
the Fund's  custodian  for the benefit of the FCM in the event of any default by
the Fund in the payment of any future obligations.

         The  value of a futures  contract  is  adjusted  daily to  reflect  the
fluctuation of the value of the underlying  securities.  This is a process known
as marking the contract to market. If the value of a party's position  declines,
that party is required to make additional "variation margin" payments to the FCM
to settle the change in value.  The party that has a gain is generally  entitled
to receive all or a portion of this amount.

         The Fund maintains from time to time a percentage of its assets in cash
or high-grade liquid securities to provide for redemptions or to hold for future
investment in securities consistent with the Fund's investment  objectives.  The
Fund may enter into index futures  contracts as an efficient means to expose the
Fund's cash position to the domestic  equity market.  The  Sub-advisor  believes
that the purchase of futures  contracts is an efficient  means to effectively be
fully invested in equity securities.

         The  principal  risks  generally  associated  with  the use of  futures
include:  (i)  the  possible  absence  of a  liquid  secondary  market  for  any
particular  instrument  may make it  difficult  or  impossible  to  close  out a
position when desired  (liquidity risk); (ii) the risk that the counter party to
the contract may fail to perform its  obligations  or the risk of  bankruptcy of
the FCM holding margin deposits  (counter-party  risk);  (iii) the risk that the
securities  to which the futures  contract  relates may go down in value (market
risk); and (iv) adverse price movements in the underlying  securities can result
in losses substantially  greater than the value of the Fund's investment in that
instrument  because  only a fraction  of a  contract's  value is  required to be
deposited as initial margin (leverage risk);  provided,  however,  that the Fund
may not purchase leveraged futures, so there is no leverage risk involved in the
Fund's use of futures.

         A liquid  secondary  market is necessary  to close out a contract.  The
Fund may seek to manage liquidity risk by investing in exchange-traded  futures.
Exchange-traded futures pose less risk that there will not be a liquid secondary
market  than   privately   negotiated   instruments.   Through  their   clearing
corporations, the futures exchanges guarantee the performance of the contracts.

         Futures contracts are generally settled within a day from the date they
are closed out,  as compared to three days for most types of equity  securities.
As a result,  futures contracts can provide more liquidity than an investment in
the actual  underlying  securities.  Nevertheless,  there is no assurance that a
liquid  secondary  market will exist for any particular  futures contract at any
particular time.  Liquidity may also be influenced by an exchange-imposed  daily
price fluctuation  limit,  which halts trading if a contract's price moves up or
down more than the established  limit on any given day. On volatile trading days
when the price fluctuation  limit is reached,  it may be impossible for the Fund
to enter into new  positions or close out existing  positions.  If the secondary
market for a futures contract is not liquid because of price fluctuation  limits
or otherwise, the Fund may not be able to promptly liquidate unfavorable futures
positions  and  potentially  could be  required  to  continue  to hold a futures
position  until  liquidity  in the market is  re-established.  As a result,  the
Fund's access to other assets held to cover its futures  positions also could be
impaired until liquidity in the market is re-established.

         The Fund manages  counter-party  risk by  investing in  exchange-traded
index  futures.  In the event of the  bankruptcy of the FCM that holds margin on
behalf of the Fund, the Fund may be entitled to the return of margin owed to the
Fund only in proportion to the amount received by the FCM's other customers. The
Sub-advisor will attempt to minimize the risk by monitoring the creditworthiness
of the FCMs with which the Fund does business.

         Portfolio  Securities  Lending.  In order to realize additional income,
the Fund may lend its portfolio securities to persons not affiliated with it and
who are deemed to be creditworthy by the Sub-advisor. Such loans must be secured
continuously  by cash  collateral  maintained on a current basis in an amount at
least equal to the market  value of the  securities  loaned,  or by  irrevocable
letters of credit.  During the existence of the loan,  the Fund must continue to
receive the  equivalent of the interest and dividends  paid by the issuer on the
securities  loaned and interest on the  investment of the  collateral.  The Fund
must have the right to call the loan and  obtain  the  securities  loaned at any
time on three days'  notice,  including the right to call the loan to enable the
Fund to vote the securities.  Such loans may not exceed  one-third of the Fund's
total assets taken at market.  Interest on loaned  securities may not exceed 10%
of the annual gross  income of the Fund  (without  offset for  realized  capital
gains).

         Short Sales.  The Fund may engage in short sales if, at the time of the
short  sale,  the Fund owns or has the right to acquire  an equal  amount of the
security being sold short at no additional cost.

         In a short sale, the seller does not immediately deliver the securities
sold and is said to have a short  position in those  securities  until  delivery
occurs.  To make delivery to the  purchaser,  the executing  broker  borrows the
securities being sold short on behalf of the seller. While the short position is
maintained,  the seller  collateralizes its obligation to deliver the securities
sold  short in an  amount  equal  to the  proceeds  of the  short  sale  plus an
additional  margin amount  established  by the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve.  If the Fund engages in a short sale,  the  collateral  account will be
maintained by the Fund's custodian.  While the short sale is open, the Fund will
maintain in a segregated  custodial account an amount of securities  convertible
into, or  exchangeable  for, such equivalent  securities at no additional  cost.
These securities would constitute the Fund's long position.



<PAGE>


         The Fund may make a short sale,  as described  above,  when it wants to
sell the  security  it owns at a current  attractive  price,  but also wishes to
defer  recognition  of gain or loss for  federal  income  tax  purposes  and for
purposes  of  satisfying  certain  tests  applicable  to  regulated   investment
companies under the Internal  Revenue Code. In such a case, any future losses in
the Fund's long position should be reduced by a gain in the short position.  The
extent to which such gains or losses are reduced would depend upon the amount of
the  security  sold short  relative  to the amount the Fund owns.  There will be
certain  additional  transaction costs associated with short sales, but the Fund
will endeavor to offset these costs with income from the  investment of the cash
proceeds of short sales.

         Portfolio  Turnover.  The Sub-advisor will purchase and sell securities
without  regard  to  the  length  of  time  the  security  has  been  held  and,
accordingly,  it can be  expected  that the rate of  portfolio  turnover  may be
substantial.

         The  Sub-advisor  intends to  purchase a given  security  whenever  the
Sub-advisor  believes it will  contribute  to the stated  objective of the Fund,
even if the same  security  has only  recently  been sold.  The Fund will sell a
given  security,  no  matter  for how long or for how short a period it has been
held,  and no  matter  whether  the  sale  is at a  gain  or at a  loss,  if the
Sub-advisor  believes that it is not  fulfilling  its purpose,  either  because,
among other things,  it did not live up to the  Sub-advisor's  expectations,  or
because it may be replaced with another  security  holding greater  promise,  or
because it has  reached  its  optimum  potential,  or because of a change in the
circumstances  of a  particular  company  or  industry  or in  general  economic
conditions, or because of some combination of such reasons.

         When a general decline in security  prices is  anticipated,  the equity
portion of the Fund may decrease or eliminate  entirely its equity  position and
increase its cash position,  and when a rise in price levels is anticipated,  it
may increase its equity  position and decrease its cash  position.  However,  it
should be expected that the Fund will, under most circumstances,  be essentially
fully invested in equity securities.

         Since investment decisions are based on the anticipated contribution of
the  security  in  question  to the  Fund's  objectives,  the rate of  portfolio
turnover is  irrelevant  when the  Sub-advisor  believes a change is in order to
achieve those objectives,  and the Fund's annual portfolio  turnover rate cannot
be anticipated and may be  comparatively  high.  Since the Sub-advisor  does not
take portfolio  turnover rate into account in making investment  decisions,  (1)
the  Sub-advisor  has no  intention  of  accomplishing  any  particular  rate of
portfolio turnover, whether high or low, and (2) the portfolio turnover rates in
the past should not be considered as a representation of the rates which will be
attained in the future. For an additional discussion of portfolio turnover,  see
this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Portfolio Transactions."

         Interest Rate Futures  Contracts and Related Options.  The Fund may buy
and sell  interest rate futures  contracts  relating to debt  securities  ("debt
futures," i.e.,  futures relating to debt securities,  and "bond index futures,"
i.e., futures relating to indices on types or groups of bonds) and write and buy
put and call options relating to interest rate futures contracts.

         The Fund  will not  purchase  or sell  futures  contracts  and  options
thereon  for  speculative  purposes  but rather  only for the purpose of hedging
against  changes in the market value of its  portfolio  securities or changes in
the market value of securities that the  Sub-advisor  anticipates it may wish to
include  in the Fund.  The Fund may sell a future or write a call or  purchase a
put on a future if the Sub-advisor  anticipates  that a general market or market
sector decline may adversely affect the market value of any or all of the Fund's
holdings. The Fund may buy a future or purchase a call or sell a put on a future
if the  Sub-advisor  anticipates  a  significant  market  advance in the type of
securities  it intends to  purchase  for the Fund at a time when the Fund is not
invested in debt securities to the extent permitted by its investment  policies.
The  Fund  may  purchase  a  future  or a call  option  thereon  as a  temporary
substitute for the purchase of individual securities which may then be purchased
in an orderly  fashion.  As  securities  are  purchased,  corresponding  futures
positions would be terminated by offsetting sales.

         The "sale" of a debt  future  means the  acquisition  by the Fund of an
obligation to deliver the related debt securities (i.e., those called for by the
contract) at a specified  price on a specified  date.  The  "purchase" of a debt
future means the acquisition by the Fund of an obligation to acquire the related
debt  securities at a specified  time on a specified  date. The "sale" of a bond
index future means the  acquisition  by the Fund of an  obligation to deliver an
amount of cash equal to a specified  dollar amount times the difference  between
the index value at the close of the last trading day of the future and the price
at which the future is  originally  struck.  No  physical  delivery of the bonds
making up the index is  expected  to be made.  The  "purchase"  of a bond  index
future means the  acquisition  by the Fund of an  obligation to take delivery of
such an amount of cash.

         Unlike  when the Fund  purchases  or sells a bond,  no price is paid or
received by the Fund upon the  purchase or sale of the  future.  Initially,  the
Fund will be  required  to  deposit an amount of cash or  securities  equal to a
varying  specified  percentage of the contract  amount.  This amount is known as
initial  margin.  Cash  held in the  margin  account  is not  income  producing.
Subsequent  payments,  called variation margin, to and from the broker,  will be
made on a daily basis as the price of the  underlying  debt  securities or index
fluctuates,  making the future more or less valuable, a process known as mark to
the market.  Changes in variation  margin are recorded by the Fund as unrealized
gains or losses.  At any time prior to  expiration  of the future,  the Fund may
elect to close the position by taking an opposite  position that will operate to
terminate its position in the future. A final  determination of variation margin
is then made;  additional cash is required to be paid by or released to the Fund
and the Fund realizes a loss or a gain.

         When the Fund  writes  an  option  on a  futures  contract  it  becomes
obligated,  in return for the  premium  paid,  to assume a position in a futures
contract  at a  specified  exercise  price  at any time  during  the term of the
option.  If the Fund has written a call, it becomes obligated to assume a "long"
position in a futures contract, which means that it is required to take delivery
of the underlying securities. If it has written a put, it is obligated to assume
a "short"  position  in a futures  contract,  which means that it is required to
deliver  the  underlying  securities.  When the Fund  purchases  an  option on a
futures contract it acquires a right in return for the premium it pays to assume
a position in a futures contract.

         If the Fund writes an option on a futures  contract it will be required
to deposit  initial and variation  margin  pursuant to  requirements  similar to
those applicable to futures contracts.  Premiums received from the writing of an
option on a future are included in the initial margin deposit. For options sold,
the Fund will segregate cash or high-quality  debt securities equal to the value
of securities  underlying the option unless the option is otherwise covered. The
Fund will deposit in a segregated  account with its custodian bank cash or other
liquid  assets,  in an  amount  equal to the  fluctuating  market  value of long
futures  contracts  it has  purchased  less  any  margin  deposited  on its long
position.  It may hold cash or  acquire  such other  assets  for the  purpose of
making these deposits.

         Changes in  variation  margin are  recorded  by the Fund as  unrealized
gains or  losses.  Initial  margin  payments  will be  deposited  in the  Fund's
custodian  bank in an account  registered  in the broker's  name;  access to the
assets  in  that  account  may  be  made  by the  broker  only  under  specified
conditions.  At any time prior to expiration of a futures  contract or an option
thereon, the Fund may elect to close the position by taking an opposite position
that will operate to terminate its position in the futures contract or option. A
final determination of variation margin is made at that time; additional cash is
required to be paid by or released to it and it realizes a loss or gain.

         Although futures  contracts by their terms call for the actual delivery
or  acquisition  of the  underlying  securities  or  cash,  in  most  cases  the
contractual  obligation is so fulfilled without having to make or take delivery.
The  Sub-advisor  does not  intend to make or take  delivery  of the  underlying
obligation.  All transactions in futures contracts and options thereon are made,
offset or  fulfilled  through a  clearinghouse  associated  with the exchange on
which the  instruments are traded.  Although the Sub-advisor  intends to buy and
sell futures  contracts  only on exchanges  where there  appears to be an active
secondary  market,  there is no assurance  that a liquid  secondary  market will
exist for any particular  future at any particular  time. In such event,  it may
not be possible to close a futures contract position.
Similar market liquidity risks occur with respect to options.

         The use of futures  contracts and options thereon to attempt to protect
against the market  risk of a decline in the value of  portfolio  securities  is
referred to as having a "short futures  position." The use of futures  contracts
and options  thereon to attempt to protect against the market risk that the Fund
might not be fully  invested at a time when the value of the securities in which
it invests is increasing is referred to as having a "long futures position." The
Fund must operate within certain  restrictions as to long and short positions in
futures  contracts  and options  thereon under a rule (CFTC Rule) adopted by the
CFTC under the  Commodity  Exchange Act (CEA) to be eligible  for the  exclusion
provided  by the CFTC  Rule  from  registration  by the Fund  with the CFTC as a
"commodity  pool operator" (as defined under the CEA), and must represent to the
CFTC that it will operate within such restrictions. Under these restrictions the
Fund will not, as to any  positions  that do not qualify as "bona fide  hedging"
under the CFTC Rule,  whether long, short or a combination  thereof,  enter into
futures  contracts and options  thereon for which the aggregate  initial margins
and  premiums  exceed 5% of the fair  market  value of the Fund's  assets  after
taking  into  account  unrealized  profits  and losses on  options  the Fund has
entered into; in the case of an option that is "in-the-money"  (as defined under
the CEA),  the  in-the-money  amount may be excluded in  computing  such 5%. (In
general, a call option on a futures contract is in-the-money if the value of the
future exceeds the strike, i.e., exercise,  price of the call; a put option on a
futures  contract is in-the-money  if the value of the futures  contract that is
the subject of the put is  exceeded  by the strike  price of the put.) As to its
long positions  that are used as part of the Fund's  strategy and are incidental
to the  Fund's  activities  in  the  underlying  cash  market,  the  "underlying
commodity  value" (see below) of the Fund's futures contract and options thereon
must not  exceed  the sum of (i) cash set aside in an  identifiable  manner,  or
short-term U.S. debt obligations or other U.S. dollar-denominated, high-quality,
short-term  money market  instruments so set aside,  plus any funds deposited as
margin;  (ii) cash proceeds from existing  investments due in 30 days; and (iii)
accrued profits held at the futures commission merchant.

         There are described  above the  segregated  accounts that the Fund must
maintain  with  its  custodian  bank as to its  options  and  futures  contracts
activities  due to Securities  and Exchange  Commission  requirements.  The Fund
will, as to its long positions,  be required to abide by the more restrictive of
these SEC and CFTC  requirements.  The underlying  commodity  value of a futures
contract is  computed by  multiplying  the size  (dollar  amount) of the futures
contract by the daily settlement price of the futures contract. For an option on
a futures contract,  that value is the underlying  commodity value of the future
underlying the option.

         Since futures contracts and options thereon can replicate  movements in
the cash markets for the securities in which the Fund invests  without the large
cash investments required for dealing in such markets, they may subject the Fund
to  greater  and more  volatile  risks  than might  otherwise  be the case.  The
principal  risks related to the use of such  instruments  are (i) the offsetting
correlation  between movements in the market price of the portfolio  investments
(held or  intended)  being  hedged and in the price of the  futures  contract or
option may be imperfect;  (ii) possible  lack of a liquid  secondary  market for
closing  out  futures  or  options  positions;  (iii)  the need  for  additional
portfolio  management  skills and techniques;  (iv) losses due to  unanticipated
market  price  movements;  and  (v)  the  bankruptcy  or  failure  of a  futures
commission  merchant  holding  margin  deposits  made by the Fund and the Fund's
inability to obtain repayment of all or part of such deposits. For a hedge to be
completely  effective,  the price change of the hedging  instrument should equal
the price change of the security being hedged.  Such equal price changes are not
always possible because the investment underlying the hedging instrument may not
be the same  investment that is being hedged.  The  Sub-advisor  will attempt to
create a closely  correlated  hedge,  but hedging activity may not be completely
successful in eliminating market value fluctuation. The ordinary spreads between
prices in the cash and futures markets, due to the differences in the natures of
those  markets,   are  subject  to  the  following   factors  which  may  create
distortions. First, all participants in the futures market are subject to margin
deposit and  maintenance  requirements.  Rather than meeting  additional  margin
deposit  requirements,  investors may close futures contracts through offsetting
transactions  which could distort the normal  relationship  between the cash and
futures  markets.  Second,  the  liquidity  of the  futures  market  depends  on
participants entering into off-setting transactions rather than making or taking
delivery. To the extent participants decide to make or take delivery,  liquidity
in the futures market could be reduced, thus producing  distortion.  Third, from
the point of view of speculators, the deposit requirements in the futures market
are less onerous than margin  requirements in the securities market.  Therefore,
increased participation by speculators in the futures market may cause temporary
price distortions.  Due to the possibility of distortion,  a correct forecast of
general  interest trends by the Sub-advisor may still not result in a successful
transaction.  The  Sub-advisor  may be incorrect in its  expectations  as to the
extent of various  interest  rate  movements  or the time span within  which the
movements take place.

         The risk of imperfect  correlation  between movements in the price of a
bond index  future and  movements  in the price of the  securities  that are the
subject of the hedge  increases as the composition of the Fund diverges from the
securities  included in the applicable index. The price of the bond index future
may move more than or less than the price of the securities being hedged. If the
price of the bond index future moves less than the price of the securities  that
are the subject of the hedge, the hedge will not be fully effective,  but if the
price of the securities being hedged has moved in an unfavorable direction,  the
Fund  would be in a better  position  than if it had not  hedged at all.  If the
price of the securities  being hedged has moved in a favorable  direction,  this
advantage will be partially offset by the futures contract.  If the price of the
futures  contract  moves  more  than the  price of the  security,  the Fund will
experience  either a loss or a gain on the  futures  contract  that  will not be
completely  offset  by  movements  in the price of the  securities  that are the
subject of the hedge.  To compensate for the imperfect  correlation of movements
in the price of the  securities  being hedged and  movements in the price of the
bond index  futures,  the Fund may buy or sell bond  index  futures in a greater
dollar  amount  than  the  dollar  amount  of  securities  being  hedged  if the
historical volatility of the prices of such securities being hedged is less than
the historical volatility of the bond index. It is also possible that, where the
Fund has sold futures contracts to hedge its securities against a decline in the
market,  the market may advance and the value of securities held in the Fund may
decline. If this occurred, the Fund would lose money on the futures contract and
also experience a decline in value in its portfolio securities.  However,  while
this could  occur for a brief  period or to a very small  degree,  over time the
value of a portfolio of debt  securities will tend to move in the same direction
as the market indices upon which the futures contracts are based.

         Where bond index  futures  are  purchased  to hedge  against a possible
increase in the price of bonds  before the Fund is able to invest in  securities
in an orderly fashion,  it is possible that the market may decline  instead;  if
the Fund then  concludes  not to invest in  securities  at that time  because of
concern as to possible  further  market  decline or for other  reasons,  it will
realize a loss on the futures  contract that is not offset by a reduction in the
price of the securities it had anticipated purchasing.

         The risks of  investment in options on bond indices may be greater than
options on  securities.  Because  exercises of bond index options are settled in
cash,  when the Fund writes a call on a bond index it cannot  provide in advance
for its potential settlement obligations by acquiring and holding the underlying
securities.  The Fund can offset  some of the risk of its  writing  position  by
holding a portfolio of bonds similar to those on which the  underlying  index is
based.  However,  the Fund  cannot,  as a practical  matter,  acquire and hold a
portfolio containing exactly the same securities as the underlying index and, as
a result,  bears a risk that the value of the securities held will vary from the
value of the index.  Even if the Fund could  assemble a portfolio  that  exactly
reproduced the composition of the underlying  index, it still would not be fully
covered from a risk standpoint  because of the "timing risk" inherent in writing
index  options.  When an index option is exercised,  the amount of cash that the
holder is  entitled  to receive is  determined  by the  difference  between  the
exercise  price  and the  closing  index  level on the date  when the  option is
exercised.  As with other kinds of options,  the Fund, as the call writer,  will
not learn that it has been assigned until the next business day at the earliest.
The time lag between  exercise  and notice of  assignment  poses no risk for the
writer of a covered call on a specific  underlying  security  because there, the
writer's obligation is to deliver the underlying security,  not to pay its value
as of a  fixed  time  in the  past.  So  long as the  writer  already  owns  the
underlying  security,  it can  satisfy  its  settlement  obligations  by  simply
delivering  it, and the risk that its value may have declined since the exercise
date is borne by the exercising  holder.  In contrast,  even if the writer of an
index call holds securities that exactly match the composition of the underlying
index,  it will not be able to satisfy its assignment  obligations by delivering
those  securities  against  payment of the exercise price.  Instead,  it will be
required  to pay cash in an  amount  based  on the  closing  index  value of the
exercise date;  and by the time it learns that it has been  assigned,  the index
may have declined with a  corresponding  decline in the value of its  portfolio.
This  "timing  risk" is an  inherent  limitation  on the  ability  of index call
writers to cover their risk exposure by holding securities positions.

         If the Fund has  purchased an index option and  exercises it before the
closing index value for that day is  available,  it runs the risk that the level
of the underlying  index may  subsequently  change.  If such a change causes the
exercised  option to fall  out-of-the-money,  the Fund  must pay the  difference
between the closing index value and the exercise  price of the option (times the
applicable multiplier) to the assigned writer.

     Investment Policies Which May Be Changed Without Shareholder Approval.  The
following  limitations are not "fundamental"  restrictions and may be changed by
the Directors of the Company without shareholder approval. The Fund will not:

         1........Invest more than 15% of its assets in illiquid investments; or

         2.  .....Buy  securities on margin or sell short (unless it owns, or by
virtue of its ownership of, other securities has the right to obtain  securities
equivalent in kind and amount to the  securities  sold);  however,  the Fund may
make margin deposits in connection  with the use of any financial  instrument or
any transaction in securities permitted under its investment policies;

         3.  .....Invest for control or for management; or

     4.  .....Invest in the securities of other  investment  companies except in
compliance  with the Investment  Company Act of 1940.  Duplicate fees may result
from such purchases.



<PAGE>


ASAF FEDERATED HIGH YIELD BOND FUND:

Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the Fund is to seek  high
current  income by investing  primarily in fixed  income  securities.  The fixed
income securities in which the Fund intends to invest are lower-rated  corporate
debt obligations.

Investment Policies:

         Corporate Debt Securities. The Fund invests primarily in corporate debt
securities.  The corporate debt  obligations in which the Fund intends to invest
are expected to be lower-rated. For a discussion of the special risks associated
with  lower-rated  securities,  see the Company's  Prospectus and this SAI under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment  Methods."  Corporate  debt  obligations in
which the Fund invests may bear fixed,  floating,  floating and  contingent,  or
increasing  rates  of  interest.  They  may  involve  equity  features  such  as
conversion or exchange  rights,  warrants for the acquisition of common stock of
the same or a  different  issuer,  participations  based on  revenues,  sales or
profits,  or the purchase of common stock in a unit transaction (where corporate
debt securities and common stock are offered as a unit).

     U.S. Government  Obligations.  The types of U.S. government  obligations in
which the Fund may invest include, but are not limited to, direct obligations of
the  U.S.  Treasury  (such  as  U.S.  Treasury  bills,  notes,  and  bonds)  and
obligations   issued   or   guaranteed   by   U.S.    government   agencies   or
instrumentalities.  These securities may be backed by: the full faith and credit
of the U.S. Treasury;  the issuer's right to borrow from the U.S. Treasury;  the
discretionary  authority of the U.S.  government to purchase certain obligations
of agencies or instrumentalities; or the credit of the agency or instrumentality
issuing  the  obligations.  For an  additional  discussion  of the types of U.S.
government  obligations  in  which  the  Fund  may  invest,  see  the  Company's
Prospectus under "Investment Objectives and Policies."

         Restricted Securities.  The Fund expects that any restricted securities
would be acquired either from  institutional  investors who originally  acquired
the  securities  in  private  placements  or  directly  from the  issuers of the
securities in private placements. Restricted securities are generally subject to
legal or contractual delays on resale. Restricted securities and securities that
are not  readily  marketable  may sell at a  discount  from the price they would
bring  if  freely  marketable.  For a  discussion  of  illiquid  and  restricted
securities  and certain risks  involved  therein,  see the Company's  Prospectus
under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         The Directors of the Company have  promulgated  guidelines with respect
to illiquid securities.

         When-Issued and Delayed  Delivery  Transactions.  The Fund may purchase
fixed-income securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis. The Fund may
engage in when-issued and delayed delivery  transactions only for the purpose of
acquiring portfolio  securities  consistent with the Fund's investment objective
and policies,  not for investment leverage.  These transactions are arrangements
in which the Fund purchases securities with payment and delivery scheduled for a
future time.  Settlement  dates may be a month or more after entering into these
transactions,  and the market values of the  securities  purchased may vary from
the purchase prices. These transactions are made to secure what is considered to
be an advantageous price and yield for the Fund.

         No fees or other expenses,  other than normal  transaction  costs,  are
incurred.  However, liquid assets of the Fund sufficient to make payment for the
securities to be purchased are  segregated at the trade date.  These  securities
are marked to market daily and will maintain  until the  transaction is settled.
For an  additional  discussion  of  when-issued  securities  and  certain  risks
involved  therein,  see this SAI under  "Certain  Risk  Factors  and  Investment
Methods."

         Repurchase  Agreements.  The Fund will  require its  custodian  to take
possession  of the  securities  subject  to  repurchase  agreements,  and  these
securities  will be marked to market  daily.  To the  extent  that the  original
seller does not repurchase the securities  from the Fund, the Fund could receive
less than the repurchase price on any sale of such securities. In the event that
such a defaulting seller filed for bankruptcy or became  insolvent,  disposition
of such securities by the Fund might be delayed  pending court action.  The Fund
believes that under the regular procedures normally in effect for custody of the
Fund's  portfolio  securities  subject  to  repurchase  agreements,  a court  of
competent  jurisdiction  would rule in favor of the Fund and allow  retention or
disposition  of such  securities.  The Fund  will  only  enter  into  repurchase
agreements  with  banks  and other  recognized  financial  institutions  such as
broker/dealers which are deemed by the Sub-advisor to be creditworthy,  pursuant
to guidelines  established  by the  Directors of the Company.  For an additional
discussion of repurchase  agreements and certain risks involved therein, see the
Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Lending Portfolio  Securities.  In order to generate additional income,
the  Fund  may  lend  its  securities  to   brokers/dealers,   banks,  or  other
institutional  borrowers  of  securities.  The Fund  will only  enter  into loan
arrangements  with  broker/dealers,  banks,  or  other  institutions  which  the
Sub-advisor has determined are  creditworthy.  The collateral  received when the
Fund lends  portfolio  securities  must be valued  daily and,  should the market
value of the loaned securities  increase,  the borrower must furnish  additional
collateral to the Fund.  During the time  portfolio  securities are on loan, the
borrower pays the Fund any dividends or interest paid on such securities.  Loans
are subject to termination  at the option of the Fund or the borrower.  The Fund
may pay reasonable  administrative  and custodial fees in connection with a loan
and may pay a  negotiated  portion  of the  interest  earned on the cash or cash
equivalent  collateral to the borrower or placing broker. The Fund does not have
the right to vote  securities on loan,  but would  terminate the loan and regain
the  right  to  vote if that  were  considered  important  with  respect  to the
investment.

         Reverse  Repurchase  Agreements.  The Fund may also enter into  reverse
repurchase  agreements.  When effecting reverse  repurchase  agreements,  liquid
assets  of the Fund,  in a dollar  amount  sufficient  to make  payment  for the
obligations to be purchased,  are segregated at the trade date. These securities
are marked to market daily and are maintained  until the transaction is settled.
During the period any reverse repurchase agreements are outstanding, but only to
the extent necessary to ensure completion of the reverse repurchase  agreements,
the Fund will  restrict the purchase of  portfolio  instruments  to money market
instruments  maturing on or before the expiration date of the reverse repurchase
agreements.  For a discussion of reverse repurchase agreements and certain risks
involved therein,  see the Company's  Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and
Investment Methods."

     Portfolio Turnover. The Fund may experience greater portfolio turnover than
would be expected with a portfolio of higher-rated securities. For an additional
discussion  of portfolio  turnover,  see this SAI and the  Company's  Prospectus
under "Portfolio Transactions."

         Adverse  Legislation.  In 1989,  legislation  was enacted that required
federally  insured  savings and loan  associations  to divest their  holdings of
lower-rated  bonds by 1994. This  legislation  also created the Resolution Trust
Corporation (the "RTC"),  which disposed of a substantial portion of lower-rated
bonds held by failed savings and loan associations.  The reduction of the number
of  institutions  empowered  to purchase  and hold  lower-rated  bonds,  and the
divestiture  of bonds by these  institutions  and the RTC,  have had an  adverse
impact on the overall liquidity of the market for such bonds.  Federal and state
legislatures  and  regulators  have and may  continue  to  propose  new laws and
regulations  designed  to limit  the  number  or type of  institutions  that may
purchase lower-rated bonds, reduce the tax benefits to issuers of such bonds, or
otherwise  adversely impact the liquidity of such bonds. The Fund cannot predict
the likelihood that any of these  proposals will be adopted,  or their potential
impact on the liquidity of lower-rated bonds.

     Foreign  Securities.  For a  discussion  of  certain  risks  involved  with
investing in foreign securities,  including currency risks, see this SAI and the
Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     Investment Policies Which May Be Changed Without Shareholder Approval.  The
following  limitations are not  "fundamental"  restriction and may be changed by
the Directors of the Company without shareholder approval. The Fund will not:

         1........Invest  more  than  15% of the  value  of its  net  assets  in
securities  that are not readily  marketable,  including  repurchase  agreements
providing for settlement in more than seven days after notice.  The Directors of
the Company,  or the Investment  Manager or the  Sub-advisor  acting pursuant to
authority  delegated by the Directors,  may determine  that a readily  available
market exists for certain  securities  eligible for resale pursuant to Rule 144A
under the  Securities  Act of 1933, or any successor to such rule, and therefore
that such securities are not subject to the foregoing limitation;

     2........Purchase securities of open-end or closed-end investment companies
except in compliance with the Investment Company Act of 1940;

     3........Purchase  any securities on margin but may obtain such  short-term
credits as may be necessary for the clearance of transactions;

     4........Invest  more than 10% of the value of its total  assets in foreign
securities which are not publicly traded in the United States;

         5........Make  short sales of securities or maintain  short  positions,
unless:  during the time the short  position is open, it owns an equal amount of
the  securities  sold or  securities  readily  and  freely  convertible  into or
exchangeable, without payment of additional consideration, for securities of the
same issue as, and equal in amount to, the securities  sold short;  and not more
than 10% of the Fund's net assets (taken at current value) is held as collateral
for such sales at any one time; or

         6. ......Purchase securities of a company for the purpose of exercising
control or management.  However,  the Fund may invest in up to 10% of the voting
securities of any one issuer and may exercise its voting powers  consistent with
the best interests of the Fund. From time to time, the Fund, together with other
investment  companies  advised by subsidiaries or affiliates of the Sub-advisor,
may together buy and hold  substantial  amounts of a company's voting stock. All
such stock may be voted  together.  In some such  cases,  the Fund and the other
investment  companies  might  collectively be considered to be in control of the
company  in  which  they  have  invested.  In  some  cases,  directors,  agents,
employees,  officers,  or others  affiliated  with or acting  for the Fund,  the
Sub-advisor,   or  affiliated  companies  might  possibly  become  directors  of
companies in which the Fund holds stock.

ASAF TOTAL RETURN BOND FUND:

Investment  Objective:  The  investment  objective  of the  Fund  is to  seek to
maximize total return,  consistent with preservation of capital. The Sub-advisor
will seek to employ  prudent  investment  management  techniques,  especially in
light of the broad range of investment instruments in which the Fund may invest.

Investment Policies:

         Borrowing.  The Fund may borrow for temporary  administrative purposes.
This borrowing may be unsecured. The Investment Company Act of 1940 requires the
Fund to maintain  continuous  asset  coverage  (that is, total assets  including
borrowings,  less  liabilities  exclusive of  borrowings)  of 300% of the amount
borrowed.  If the 300%  asset  coverage  should  decline  as a result  of market
fluctuations  or other  reasons,  the Fund may be  required  to sell some of its
holdings  within  three  days to  reduce  the debt and  restore  the 300%  asset
coverage, even though it may be disadvantageous from an investment standpoint to
sell  securities at that time.  Borrowing  will tend to exaggerate the effect on
net asset value of any  increase  or  decrease in the market  value of the Fund.
Money  borrowed  will be  subject  to  interest  costs  which  may or may not be
recovered by  appreciation  of the  securities  purchased.  The Fund also may be
required to maintain  minimum average balances in connection with such borrowing
or to pay a  commitment  or other fee to  maintain a line of  credit;  either of
these requirements would increase the cost of borrowing over the stated interest
rate.

         In addition to the above,  the Fund may enter into  reverse  repurchase
agreements and mortgage dollar rolls. A reverse  repurchase  agreement  involves
the  sale  of a  portfolio-eligible  security  by the  Fund,  coupled  with  its
agreement to  repurchase  the  instrument  at a specified  time and price.  In a
"dollar roll" transaction the Fund sells a mortgage-related  security (such as a
GNMA  security) to a dealer and  simultaneously  agrees to  repurchase a similar
security (but not the same security) in the future at a pre-determined  price. A
"dollar  roll"  can  be  viewed,  like  a  reverse  repurchase  agreement,  as a
collateralized  borrowing in which the Fund pledges a mortgage-related  security
to a dealer to obtain cash. Unlike in the case of reverse repurchase agreements,
the dealer  with which the Fund enters  into a dollar  roll  transaction  is not
obligated to return the same  securities as those  originally  sold by the Fund,
but only  securities  which  are  "substantially  identical."  To be  considered
"substantially  identical," the securities  returned to the Fund generally must:
(1) be collateralized by the same types of underlying  mortgages;  (2) be issued
by the same agency and be part of the same program;  (3) have a similar original
stated maturity; (4) have identical net coupon rates; (5) have similar maturity:
(4) have  identical  net coupon  rates;  (5) have  similar  market  yields  (and
therefore price); and (6) satisfy "good delivery" requirements, meaning that the
aggregate  principal amounts of the securities  delivered and received back must
be within 2.5% of the initial amount delivered.  The Fund's  obligations under a
dollar roll  agreement  must be covered by cash or other liquid  assets equal in
value to the  securities  subject to  repurchase  by the Fund,  maintained  in a
segregated account.

         Both dollar roll and reverse  repurchase  agreements will be subject to
the Fund's limitations on borrowings,  which will restrict the aggregate of such
transactions  (plus any other borrowings) to 33 1/3% of the Fund's total assets.
Furthermore,  because dollar roll  transactions may be for terms ranging between
one and six  months,  dollar  roll  transactions  may be deemed  "illiquid"  and
subject to the Fund's overall limitations on investments in illiquid securities.

         Corporate Debt  Securities.  The Fund's  investments in U.S. dollar- or
foreign  currency-denominated  corporate debt  securities of domestic or foreign
issuers are limited to corporate debt securities  (corporate bonds,  debentures,
notes  and other  similar  corporate  debt  instruments,  including  convertible
securities)  which meet the minimum ratings criteria set forth for the Fund, or,
if unrated, are in the Sub-advisor's  opinion comparable in quality to corporate
debt  securities  in which the Fund may invest.  The rate of return or return of
principal  on some debt  obligations  may be linked or  indexed  to the level of
exchange rates between the U.S. dollar and a foreign currency or currencies.

         Among the corporate  bonds in which the Fund may invest are convertible
securities. A convertible security is a bond, debenture, note, or other security
that entitles the holder to acquire  common stock or other equity  securities of
the same or a different issuer. A convertible  security  generally  entitles the
holder to  receive  interest  paid or  accrued  until the  convertible  security
matures or is redeemed,  converted or exchanged. Before conversion,  convertible
securities  have  characteristics  similar to  nonconvertible  debt  securities.
Convertible  securities rank senior to common stock in a  corporation's  capital
structure  and,  therefore,  generally  entail less risk than the  corporation's
common stock, although the extent to which such risk is reduced depends in large
measure upon the degree to which the convertible  security sells above its value
as a fixed-income security.

         A  convertible  security may be subject to  redemption at the option of
the issuer at a predetermined  price. If a convertible security held by the Fund
is called  for  redemption,  the Fund will be  required  to permit the issuer to
redeem the security and convert it to underlying  common stock, or will sell the
convertible  security  to a third  party.  The Fund  generally  would  invest in
convertible  securities  for their  favorable  price  characteristics  and total
return potential and would normally not exercise an option to convert.

         Investments  in  securities  rated  below  investment  grade  that  are
eligible  for  purchase by the Fund (i.e.,  rated B or better by Moody's or S&P)
are  described  as  "speculative"  by  both  Moody's  and  S&P.   Investment  in
lower-rated  corporate  debt  securities  ("high  yield  securities")  generally
provides greater income and increased  opportunity for capital appreciation than
investments in higher quality securities, but they also typically entail greater
price  volatility and principal and income risk. These high yield securities are
regarded as high risk and predominantly speculative with respect to the issuer's
continuing ability to meet principal and interest payments. The market for these
securities is relatively new, and many of the outstanding  high yield securities
have not endured a major business recession. A long-term track record on default
rates,  such as that for investment  grade corporate  bonds,  does not exist for
this market. Analysis of the creditworthiness of issuers of debt securities that
are high  yield may be more  complex  than for  issuers of higher  quality  debt
securities.

         High yield,  high risk  securities  may be more  susceptible to real or
perceived adverse economic and competitive  industry  conditions than investment
grade securities.  The price of high yield securities have been found to be less
sensitive to interest-rate  adverse economic  downturns or individual  corporate
developments.  A  projection  of an  economic  downturn or of a period of rising
interest rates, for example, could cause a decline in high yield security prices
because the advent of a recession could lessen the ability of a highly leveraged
company to make principal and interest  payments on its debt  securities.  If an
issuer of high yield securities defaults,  in addition to risking payment of all
or a portion of interest and principal,  the Fund may incur additional  expenses
to seek recovery. In the case of high yield securities structured as zero-coupon
or pay-in-kind securities,  their market prices are affected to a greater extent
by interest rate changes, and therefore tend to be more volatile than securities
which pay interest periodically and in cash.

         The  secondary  market on which high yield,  high risk  securities  are
traded may be less  liquid  than the market for higher  grade  securities.  Less
liquidity in the secondary  trading market could  adversely  affect the price at
which the Fund could sell a high yield security,  and could adversely affect the
daily net asset value of the shares. Adverse publicity and investor perceptions,
whether  or not based on  fundamental  analysis,  may  decrease  the  values and
liquidity of high yield securities  especially in a thinly-traded  market.  When
secondary  markets for high yield securities are less liquid than the market for
higher  grade  securities,  it may be more  difficult  to value  the  securities
because such valuation may require more  research,  and elements of judgment may
play a greater role in the valuation  because there is less reliable,  objective
data available.  The Sub-advisor seeks to minimize the risks of investing in all
securities  through  diversification,  in-depth credit analysis and attention to
current developments in interest rates and market conditions.  For an additional
discussion of certain risks involved in lower-rated  debt  securities,  see this
SAI and the Company's  Prospectus  under  "Certain  Risk Factors and  Investment
Objectives."

         Participation on Creditors  Committees.  The Fund may from time to time
participate  on committees  formed by creditors to negotiate with the management
of  financially   troubled   issuers  of  securities  held  by  the  Fund.  Such
participation  may subject the Fund to expenses  such as legal fees and may make
the Fund an "insider" of the issuer for purposes of the federal securities laws,
and therefore may restrict the Fund's ability to trade in or acquire  additional
positions  in a particular  security  when it might  otherwise  desire to do so.
Participation  by the  Fund on such  committees  also  may  expose  the  Fund to
potential  liabilities under the federal bankruptcy laws or other laws governing
the  rights  of  creditors  and  debtors.  The  Fund  will  participate  on such
committees  only  when the  Sub-advisor  believes  that  such  participation  is
necessary or desirable to enforce the Fund's  rights as a creditor or to protect
the value of securities held by the Fund.

         Mortgage-Related  Securities.  The Fund may  invest in  mortgage-backed
securities. Mortgage-related securities are interests in pools of mortgage loans
made to residential  home buyers,  including  mortgage loans made by savings and
loan  institutions,  mortgage  bankers,  commercial  banks and others.  Pools of
mortgage  loans are  assembled  as  securities  for sale to investors by various
governmental,   government-related  and  private  organizations  (see  "Mortgage
Pass-Through Securities"). The Fund may also invest in debt securities which are
secured  with  collateral   consisting  of   mortgage-related   securities  (see
"Collateralized  Mortgage Obligations"),  and in other types of mortgage-related
securities.

         Interests  in pools of  mortgage-related  securities  differ from other
forms of debt  securities,  which  normally  provide  for  periodic  payment  of
interest in fixed amounts with principal  payments at maturity or specified call
dates.  Instead,  these  securities  provide a monthly payment which consists of
both  interest  and  principal  payments.   In  effect,  these  payments  are  a
"pass-through" of the monthly payments made by the individual borrowers on their
residential or commercial  mortgage loans, net of any fees paid to the issuer or
guarantor of such  securities.  Additional  payments are caused by repayments of
principal  resulting  from the sale of the underlying  property,  refinancing or
foreclosure,  net of fees or costs which may be incurred.  Some mortgage-related
securities  (such as  securities  issued  by the  Government  National  Mortgage
Association) are described as "modified  pass-through." These securities entitle
the holder to receive all interest and principal  payments owned on the mortgage
pool, net of certain fees, at the scheduled  payment dates regardless of whether
or not the mortgagor actually makes the payment.

         The principal governmental guarantor of mortgage-related  securities is
the Government National Mortgage  Association  ("GNMA").  GNMA is a wholly owned
United States Government  corporation within the Department of Housing and Urban
Development.  GNMA is authorized to guarantee, with the full faith and credit of
the United States  Government,  the timely  payment of principal and interest on
securities  issued by  institutions  approved  by GNMA (such as savings and loan
institutions,  commercial  banks and  mortgage  bankers)  and backed by pools of
FHA-insured or VA-guaranteed mortgages.

         Government-related  guarantors  (i.e., not backed by the full faith and
credit of the United States  Government)  include the Federal National  Mortgage
Association ("FNMA") and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage  Corporation  ("FHLMC").
FNMA  is  a   government-sponsored   corporation   owned   entirely  by  private
stockholders.  It is subject to general  regulation  by the Secretary of Housing
and Urban  Development.  FNMA  purchases  conventional  (i.e.,  not  insured  or
guaranteed  by any  government  agency)  residential  mortgages  from a list  of
approved  seller/servicers  which include state and federally  chartered savings
and loan associations,  mutual savings banks, commercial banks and credit unions
and mortgage bankers. Pass-though securities issued by FNMA are guaranteed as to
timely  payment of principal and interest by FNMA but are not backed by the full
faith and credit of the United States Government.

         FHLMC was created by Congress in 1970 for the purpose of increasing the
availability   of   mortgage   credit   for   residential   housing.   It  is  a
government-sponsored  corporation formerly owned by the twelve Federal Home Loan
Banks and now owned entirely by private stockholders. FHLMC issues Participation
Certificates  ("PC's") which represent interests in conventional  mortgages from
FHLMC's national portfolio.  FHLMC guarantees the timely payment of interest and
ultimate  collection of principal,  but PCs are not backed by the full faith and
credit of the United States Government.

         Commercial  banks,  savings  and loan  institutions,  private  mortgage
insurance  companies,  mortgage  bankers and other secondary market issuers also
create  pass-though  pools of  conventional  residential  mortgage  loans.  Such
issuers may, in addition,  be the originators and/or servicers of the underlying
mortgage  loans as well as the  guarantors of the  mortgage-related  securities.
Pools created by such  nongovernmental  issuers generally offer a higher rate of
interest  than  government  and  government-related  pools  because there are no
direct or indirect  government  or agency  guarantees  of payments in the former
pools.  However,  timely payment of interest and principal of these pools may be
supported  by various  forms of insurance or  guarantees,  including  individual
loan, title, pool and hazard insurance and letters of credit.  The insurance and
guarantees  are  issued  by  governmental  entities,  private  insurers  and the
mortgage poolers.  Such insurance and guarantees and the creditworthiness of the
issuers  thereof will be considered in  determining  whether a  mortgage-related
security meets the Company's and the Trust's investment quality standards. There
can be no  assurance  that the  private  insurers or  guarantors  can meet their
obligations under the insurance policies or guarantee arrangements. The Fund may
buy  mortgage-related  securities without insurance or guarantees if, through an
examination of the loan experience and practices of the originator/servicers and
poolers,  the Sub-advisor  determines that the securities meet the Company's and
the  Trust's  quality  standards.  Although  the market for such  securities  is
becoming increasingly liquid, securities issued by certain private organizations
may not be  readily  marketable.  The Fund  will not  purchase  mortgage-related
securities or any other assets which in the  Sub-advisor's  opinion are illiquid
if, as a result,  more than 15% of the value of the Fund's  total assets will be
illiquid.

         Mortgage-backed  securities  that are issued or  guaranteed by the U.S.
Government,  its  agencies or  instrumentalities,  are not subject to the Fund's
industry  concentration  restrictions,  set forth in this SAI under "Fundamental
Investment Restrictions," by virtue of the exclusion from that test available to
all U.S. Government securities. In the case of privately issued mortgage-related
securities, the Fund takes the position that mortgage-related  securities do not
represent  interests in any particular  "industry" or group of  industries.  The
assets  underlying  such  securities  may be represented by a portfolio of first
lien  residential  mortgages  (including  both whole mortgage loans and mortgage
participation  interests)  or  portfolios  of mortgage  pass-through  securities
issued  or  guaranteed  by GNMA,  FNMA or FHLMC.  Mortgage  loans  underlying  a
mortgage-related  security may in turn be insured or  guaranteed  by the Federal
Housing  Administration  or the Department of Veterans  Affairs.  In the case of
private issue  mortgage-related  securities whose underlying  assets are neither
U.S. Government securities nor U.S. Government-insured  mortgages, to the extent
that  real  properties   securing  such  assets  may  be  located  in  the  same
geographical  region,  the  security may be subject to a greater risk of default
that other comparable securities in the event of adverse economic,  political or
business developments that may affect such region and ultimately, the ability of
residential  homeowners  to make  payments  of  principal  and  interest  on the
underlying mortgages.

     .........Collateralized  Mortgage  Obligations  (CMOs).  A CMO is a  hybrid
between a mortgage-backed bond and a mortgage pass-through security.  Similar to
a bond,  interest and prepaid  principal is paid,  in most cases,  semiannually.
CMOs may be  collateralized  by whole  mortgage  loans,  but are more  typically
collateralized by portfolios of mortgage  pass-through  securities guaranteed by
GNMA, FHLMC, or FNMA, and their income streams.

     .........CMOs  are  structured  into  multiple  classes,   each  bearing  a
different stated maturity. Actual maturity and average life will depend upon the
prepayment  experience  of the  collateral.  CMOs provide for a modified form of
call protection through a de facto breakdown of the underlying pool of mortgages
according  to how  quickly the loans are repaid.  Monthly  payment of  principal
received from the pool of underlying mortgages,  including prepayments, is first
returned to investors holding the shortest maturity class. Investors holding the
longer maturity  classes  receive  principal only after the first class has been
retired.  An investor is partially  guarded against a sooner than desired return
or principal because of the sequential payments.

     .........In  a typical CMO  transaction,  a corporation  ("issuer")  issues
multiple series (e.g., A, B, C, Z) of the CMO bonds  ("Bonds").  Proceeds of the
Bond  offering  are  used  to  purchase   mortgages  or  mortgage   pass-through
certificates ("Collateral").  The Collateral is pledged to a third party trustee
as security for the Bonds.  Principal and interest  payments from the Collateral
are used to pay principal on the Bonds in the order A, B, C, Z. The Series A, B,
and C Bonds all bear current interest.  Interest on the Series Z Bond is accrued
and added to  principal  and a like amount is paid as principal on the Series A,
B, or C Bond  currently  being  paid off.  When the Series A, B, and C Bonds are
paid in full,  interest  and  principal  on the Series Z Bond  begins to be paid
currently.  With  some  CMOs,  the  issuer  serves as a  conduit  to allow  loan
originators  (primarily  builders  or savings and loan  associations)  to borrow
against their loan portfolios.

     .........FHLMC  Collateralized  Mortgage  Obligations.  FHLMC CMOs are debt
obligations of FHLMC issued in multiple classes having different  maturity dates
which  are  secured  by the  pledge  of a pool of  conventional  mortgage  loans
purchased by FHLMC.  Unlike FHLMC PCs, payments of principal and interest on the
CMOs are made  semiannually,  as opposed  to  monthly.  The amount of  principal
payable on each semiannual payment date is determined in accordance with FHLMC's
mandatory sinking fund schedule,  which, in turn, is equal to approximately 100%
of FHA  prepayment  experience  applied to the  mortgage  collateral  pool.  All
sinking  fund  payments  in the  CMOs are  allocated  to the  retirement  of the
individual classes of bonds in the order of their stated maturities.  Payment of
principal on the mortgage loans in the  collateral  pool in excess of the amount
of FHLMC's  minimum sinking fund obligation for any payment date are paid to the
holders  of the  CMOs  as  additional  sinking  fund  payments.  Because  of the
"pass-through"  nature of all principal payments received on the collateral pool
in  excess  of  FHLMC's  minimum  sinking  fund  requirement,  the rate at which
principal of the CMOs is actually repaid is likely to be such that each class of
bonds will be retired in advance of its scheduled maturity date.

         .........If  collection  of principal  (including  prepayments)  on the
mortgage  loans during any  semiannual  payment period is not sufficient to meet
FHLMC's  minimum  sinking fund obligation on the next sinking fund payment date,
FHLMC agrees to make up the deficiency from its general funds.

     .........Criteria for the mortgage loans in the pool backing the FHLMC CMOs
are  identical  to  those of  FHLMC  PCs.  FHLMC  has the  right  to  substitute
collateral in the event of delinquencies and/or defaults.

     ..................For   an   additional   discussion   of   mortgage-backed
securities  and certain risks involved  therein,  see this SAI and the Company's
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

     .........Other    Mortgage-Related   Securities.   Other   mortgage-related
securities  include securities other than those described above that directly or
indirectly  represent a  participation  in, or are secured by and payable  from,
mortgage   loans  on  real   property,   including  CMO  residuals  or  stripped
mortgage-backed  securities.  Other mortgage-related securities may be equity or
debt securities issued by agencies or  instrumentalities  of the U.S. Government
or by private originators of, or investors in, mortgage loans, including savings
and  loan  associations,   homebuilders,   mortgage  banks,   commercial  banks,
investment  banks,  partnerships,  trusts and  special  purpose  entities of the
foregoing.

     .........CMO  Residuals.  CMO residuals are derivative  mortgage securities
issued by agencies or  instrumentalities  of the U.S.  Government  or by private
originators  of, or investors in,  mortgage  loans,  including  savings and loan
associations,  homebuilders,  mortgage banks, commercial banks, investment banks
and special purpose entities of the foregoing.

         .........The  cash flow generated by the mortgage  assets  underlying a
series of CMOs is applied  first to make  required  payments  of  principal  and
interest  on the CMOs and second to pay the related  administrative  expenses of
the issuer. The residual in a CMO structure generally represents the interest in
any excess cash flow remaining after making the foregoing payments. Each payment
of such  excess cash flow to a holder of the  related  CMO  residual  represents
income and/or a return of capital.  The amount of residual  cash flow  resulting
from a CMO will  depend on,  among  other  things,  the  characteristics  of the
mortgage  assets,  the  coupon  rate of each class of CMO,  prevailing  interest
rates, the amount of  administrative  expenses and the prepayment  experience on
the mortgage  assets.  In particular,  the yield to maturity on CMO residuals is
extremely sensitive to prepayments on the related underlying mortgage assets, in
the same manner as an  interest-only  ("IO")  class of stripped  mortgage-backed
securities.  See "Other Mortgage-Related  Securities -- Stripped Mortgage-Backed
Securities."  In  addition,  if a series of a CMO  includes  a class  that bears
interest  at an  adjustable  rate,  the yield to  maturity  on the  related  CMO
residual  will also be extremely  sensitive to changes in the level of the index
upon which interest rate  adjustments are based. As described below with respect
to stripped  mortgage-backed  securities,  in certain circumstances the Fund may
fail to recoup fully its initial investment in a CMO residual.

     .........CMO  residuals are generally  purchased and sold by  institutional
investors through several investment banking firms acting as brokers or dealers.
The CMO  residual  market has only very  recently  developed  and CMO  residuals
currently  may not  have the  liquidity  of other  more  established  securities
trading in other markets.  Transactions in CMO residuals are generally completed
only after careful review of the  characteristics of the securities in question.
In addition,  CMO residuals may or, pursuant to an exemption therefrom,  may not
have  been  registered  under  the  Securities  Act of  1933,  as  amended.  CMO
residuals,  whether or not registered  under such Act, may be subject to certain
restrictions on transferability, and may be deemed "illiquid" and subject to the
Fund's limitations on investment in illiquid securities.



<PAGE>


     .........Stripped   Mortgage-Backed  Securities.  Stripped  mortgage-backed
securities ("SMBS") are derivative multi-class mortgage securities.  SMBS may be
issued by agencies or instrumentalities  of the U.S.  Government,  or by private
originators  of, or investors in,  mortgage  loans,  including  savings and loan
associations,  mortgage banks,  commercial  banks,  investment banks and special
purpose entities of the foregoing.

         .........SMBS  are usually  structured  with two classes  that  receive
different  proportions of the interest and principal  distributions on a pool of
mortgage assets. A common type of SMBS will have one class receiving some of the
interest and most of the  principal  from the mortgage  assets,  which the other
class will receive most of the interest and the remainder of the  principal.  In
the most  extreme  case,  one class will  receive  all of the  interest  (the IO
class),   while  the  other  class  will  receive  all  of  the  principal  (the
principal-only or "PO" class). The yield to maturity on an IO class is extremely
sensitive  to the rate of  principal  payments  (including  prepayments)  on the
related  underlying  mortgage assets, and a rapid rate of principal payments may
have a  material  adverse  effect on the  Fund's  yield to  maturity  from these
securities.   If  the  underlying   mortgage  assets  experience   greater  than
anticipated  prepayments  of  principal,  the Fund may fail to fully  recoup its
initial  investment  in these  securities  even if the security is in one of the
highest rating categories.

     .........Although  SMBS are purchased and sold by  institutional  investors
through  several  investment  banking firms acting as brokers or dealers,  these
securities  were  only  recently  developed.  As a result,  established  trading
markets have not yet developed and, accordingly,  these securities may be deemed
"illiquid"  and  subject to the Fund's  limitations  on  investment  in illiquid
securities.

     .........Other Asset-Backed Securities.  Similarly, the Sub-advisor expects
that other asset-backed securities (unrelated to mortgage loans) will be offered
to investors in the future.  Several  types of  asset-backed  securities  may be
offered to investors,  including Certificates for Automobile Receivables.  For a
discussion of automobile  receivables,  see this SAI under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment  Methods."  Consistent with the Fund's investment  objectives and
policies,  the  Sub-advisor  also  may  invest  in other  types of  asset-backed
securities.

         Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may  invest in U.S.  dollar-  or foreign
currency-denominated  corporate debt  securities of foreign  issuers  (including
preferred or preference  stock),  certain  foreign bank  obligations  (see "Bank
Obligations")  and U.S. dollar- or foreign  currency-denominated  obligations of
foreign  governments  or their  subdivisions,  agencies  and  instrumentalities,
international agencies and supranational entities. The Fund may invest up to 20%
of its assets in securities  denominated in foreign  currencies,  and may invest
beyond this limit in U.S. dollar-denominated  securities of foreign issuers. The
Fund may  invest  up to 10% of its  assets in  securities  of  issuers  based in
emerging  market  countries.  Investing  in the  securities  of foreign  issuers
involves  special  risks  and  considerations  not  typically   associated  with
investing in U.S.  companies.  For a  discussion  of certain  risks  involved in
foreign investments in general, and the special risks of investing in developing
countries, see this SAI and the Company's Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors
and Investment Methods."

         The Fund  also may  purchase  and sell  foreign  currency  options  and
foreign  currency  futures  contracts  and  related  options  (see  ""Derivative
Instruments"),  and enter into forward foreign  currency  exchange  contracts in
order to protect  against  uncertainty in the level of future  foreign  exchange
rates in the purchase and sale of securities.

         A forward foreign currency  contract involves an obligation to purchase
or sell a specific  currency at a future date,  which may be any fixed number of
days from the date of the contract agreed upon by the parties, at a price set at
the tine of the contract.  These  contracts may be bought or sold to protect the
Fund  against  a  possible  loss   resulting  from  an  adverse  change  in  the
relationship  between  foreign  currencies  and the U.S.  dollar or, to increase
exposure to a particular  foreign currency.  Open positions in forward contracts
are  covered  by the  segregation  with the Fund's  custodian  of cash or liquid
assets and are marked to market daily.  Although such  contracts are intended to
minimize  the  risk  of  loss  due to a  decline  on  the  value  of the  hedged
currencies,  at the same time, they tend to limit any potential gain which might
result should the value of such currencies increase.

         Brady  Bonds.  The Fund may  invest  in Brady  Bonds.  Brady  Bonds are
securities  created  through the exchange of existing  commercial  bank loans to
sovereign  entities for new obligations in connection  with debt  restructurings
under a debt  restructuring  plan  introduced  by former U.S.  Secretary  of the
Treasury,  Nicholas F. Brady (the "Brady Plan").  Brady Plan debt restructurings
have been implemented in a number of countries, including in Argentina, Bolivia,
Bulgaria,  Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic,  Ecuador,  Jordan, Mexico, Niger,
Nigeria, the Philippines,  Poland, Uruguay, and Venezuela.  In addition,  Brazil
has  concluded a  Brady-like  plan.  It is expected  that other  countries  will
undertake a Brady Plan in the future.

         Brady Bonds have been issued only recently, and accordingly do not have
a long payment history.  Brady Bonds may be collateralized or  uncollateralized,
are issued in various  currencies  (primarily the U.S.  dollar) and are actively
traded  in  the  over-the-counter  secondary  market.  U.S.  dollar-denominated,
collateralized  Brady Bonds,  which may be fixed rate par bonds or floating rate
discount  bonds,  are generally  collateralized  in full as to principal by U.S.
Treasury zero-coupon bonds having the same maturity as the Brady Bonds. Interest
payments on these  Brady Bonds  generally  are  collateralized  on a one-year or
longer  rolling-forward  basis by cash or  securities  in an amount that, in the
case of fixed rate bonds, is equal to at least one year of interest payments or,
in the case of floating  rate bonds,  initially  is equal to at least one year's
interest  payments  based on the  applicable  interest  rate at that time and is
adjusted at regular  intervals  thereafter.  Certain Brady Bonds are entitled to
"value recovery payments" in certain  circumstances,  which in effect constitute
supplemental interest payments but generally are not collateralized. Brady Bonds
are  often  viewed  as  having  three  or  four  valuation  components:  (i) the
collateralized repayment of principal at final maturity; (ii) the collateralized
interest payments;  (iii) the uncollateralized  interest payments;  and (iv) any
uncollateralized  repayment  of principal  at maturity  (these  uncollateralized
amounts constitute the "residual risk").

         Most Mexican  Brady Bonds issued to date have  principal  repayments at
final maturity  fully  collateralized  by U.S.  Treasury  zero-coupon  bonds (or
comparable  collateral  denominated  in other  currencies)  and interest  coupon
payments  collateralized on an 18-month  rolling-forward  basis by funds held in
escrow by an agent for the bondholders.  A significant portion of the Venezuelan
Brady  Bonds  and the  Argentine  Brady  Bonds  issued  to date  have  principal
repayments at final maturity  collateralized by U.S. Treasury  zero-coupon bonds
(or comparable  collateral  denominated  in other  currencies)  and/or  interest
coupon  payments  collateralized  on a 14-month (for Venezuela) or 12-month (for
Argentina)  rolling-forward basis by securities held by the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York as collateral agent.

         Brady Bonds involve  various risk factors  including  residual risk and
the  history of defaults  with  respect to  commercial  bank loans by public and
private  entities of countries  issuing  Brady Bonds.  There can be no assurance
that  Brady  Bonds  in  which  the  Fund  may  invest  will  not be  subject  to
restructuring  arrangements  or to requests for new credit,  which may cause the
Fund to suffer a loss of interest or principal on any of its holdings.

         Bank  Obligations.  Bank  obligations in which the Funds invest include
certificates  of  deposit,  bankers'  acceptances,   and  fixed  time  deposits.
Certificates  of  deposit  are  negotiable  certificates  issued  against  funds
deposited  in a  commercial  bank for a  definite  period of time and  earning a
specified  return.  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 be subject to early  withdrawal  penalties  which 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. The Fund will not invest in fixed time deposits which (1) are
not  subject  to  prepayment  or  (2)  provide  for  withdrawal  penalties  upon
prepayment (other than overnight  deposits) if, in the aggregate,  more than 15%
of its assets would be invested in such deposits, repurchase agreements maturing
in more than seven days and other illiquid assets.

         The Fund will limit its  investments in United States bank  obligations
to obligations of United States bank  (including  foreign  branches)  which have
more than $1 billion in total assets at the time of investment and are member of
the Federal Reserve  System,  are examined by the Comptroller of the Currency or
whose deposits are insured by the Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation.  The
Fund also may invest in certificates of deposit of savings and loan associations
(federally  or state  chartered and  federally  insured)  having total assets in
excess $1 billion.

         The Fund will limit its  investments  in foreign  bank  obligations  to
United States  dollar- or foreign  currency-denominated  obligations  of foreign
banks  (including  United States branches of foreign banks) which at the time of
investment  (i)  have  more  than  $10  billion,  or  the  equivalent  in  other
currencies,  in total  assets;  (ii) in terms of assets are among the 75 largest
foreign  banks in the world;  (iii) have branches or agencies  (limited  purpose
offices which do not offer all banking services) in the United States;  and (iv)
in the opinion of the Sub-advisor,  are of an investment  quality  comparable to
obligations of United States banks in which the Fund may invest.  Subject to the
Fund's  limitation  on  concentration  of no more than 25% of its  assets in the
securities  of issuers in  particular  industry,  there is no  limitation on the
amount of the Fund's  assets  which may be  invested in  obligations  of foreign
banks which meet the conditions set forth herein.

         Obligations  of foreign banks  involve  somewhat  different  investment
risks than those  affecting  obligations  of United States banks,  including the
possibilities that their liquidity could be impaired because of future political
and economic  developments,  that their  obligations may be less marketable than
comparable obligations of United States banks, that a foreign jurisdiction might
impose withholding taxes on interest income payable on those  obligations,  that
foreign  deposits  may be  seized or  nationalized,  that  foreign  governmental
restrictions  such as exchange  controls  may be adopted  which might  adversely
affect the payment of principal and interest on those  obligations  and that the
selection of those  obligations may be more difficult  because there may be less
publicly  available  information  concerning  foreign  banks or the  accounting,
auditing  and  financial   reporting   standards,   practices  and  requirements
applicable  to foreign  banks may differ from those  applicable to United States
banks.  Foreign banks are not  generally  subject to  examination  by any United
States Government agency or instrumentality.

         Derivative Instruments.  In pursuing its individual objective, the Fund
may, as described in the  Company's  Prospectus,  purchase and sell (write) both
put options and call  options on  securities,  securities  indices,  and foreign
currencies,  and enter into interest  rate,  foreign  currency and index futures
contracts  and  purchase and sell  options on such  futures  contracts  ("future
options")  for hedging  purposes.  The Fund also may enter into swap  agreements
with respect to foreign currencies, interest rates and indices of securities. If
other types of financial instruments,  including other types of options, futures
contracts,  or futures  options are traded in the future,  the Fund may also use
those  instruments,  provided that the Directors of the Company  determine  that
their use is consistent with the Fund's investment objective,  and provided that
their use is  consistent  with  restrictions  applicable  to options and futures
contracts  currently  eligible for use by the Trust (i.e.,  that written call or
put options will be "covered" or "secured" and that futures and futures  options
will be used only for hedging purposes).

         Options on Securities and Indices.  The Fund may purchase and sell both
put and call  options on debt or other  securities  or  indices in  standardized
contracts traded on foreign or national securities  exchanges,  boards of trade,
or  similar   entities,   or  quoted  on  NASDAQ  or  on  a  regulated   foreign
over-the-counter  market,  and agreements  sometimes called cash puts, which may
accompany the purchase of a new issue of bonds from a dealer.

         The Fund will  write  call  options  and put  options  only if they are
"covered."  In the case of a call option on a security,  the option is "covered"
if the Fund  owns  the  security  underlying  the  call or has an  absolute  and
immediate right to acquire that security without  additional cash  consideration
(or, if additional cash  consideration is required,  cash or cash equivalents in
such amount are placed in a segregated account by its custodian) upon conversion
or exchange of other securities held by the Fund. For a call option on an index,
the option is  covered if the Fund  maintains  with its  custodian  cash or cash
equivalents  equal to the contract  value.  A call option is also covered if the
Fund holds a call on the same  security or index as the call  written  where the
exercise  price of the call held is (i) equal to or less than the exercise price
of the  call  written,  or (ii)  greater  than  the  exercise  price of the call
written,  provided  the  difference  is  maintained  by the Fund in cash or cash
equivalents  in a  segregated  account  with its  custodian.  A put  option on a
security or an index is "covered" if the Fund maintains cash or cash equivalents
equal to the exercise price in a segregated  account with its  custodian.  A put
option is also covered if the Fund holds a put on the same  security or index as
the put  written  where  the  exercise  price of the put held is (i) equal to or
greater  than the  exercise  price of the put  written,  or (ii)  less  than the
exercise price of the put written,  provided the difference is maintained by the
Fund in cash or cash equivalents in a segregated account with its custodian.

         If an option  written by the Fund expires,  the Fund realizes a capital
gain equal to the  premium  received at the time the option was  written.  If an
option  purchased by the Fund expires  unexercised,  the Fund realizes a capital
loss equal to the premium paid.

         Prior to the earlier of exercise or expiration, an option may be closed
out by an  offsetting  purchase or sale of an option of the same  series  (type,
exchange,  underlying security or index, exercise price, and expiration).  There
can be no assurance, however, that a closing purchase or sale transaction can be
effected when the Fund desires.



<PAGE>


         The  Fund  will  realize  a  capital  gain  from  a  closing   purchase
transaction if the cost of the closing option is less than the premium  received
from writing the option, or if it is more, the Fund will realize a capital loss.
If the premium received from a closing sale transaction is more than the premium
paid to purchase  the option,  the Fund will realize a capital gain or, if it is
less, the Fund will realize a capital loss. The principal  factors affecting the
market  value of a put or a call  option  include  supply and  demand,  interest
rates, the current market price of the underlying  security or index in relation
to the exercise price of the option,  the volatility of the underlying  security
or index, and the time remaining until the expiration date.

         The premium  paid for a put or call option  purchased by the Fund is an
asset of the Fund.  The  premium  received  for a option  written by the Fund is
recorded as a deferred  credit.  The value of an option  purchased or written is
marked to market  daily and is valued at the  closing  price on the  exchange on
which it is traded  or, if not  traded on an  exchange  or no  closing  price is
available,  at the mean between the last bid and asked prices.  For a discussion
of certain risks involved in options,  see this SAI and the Company's Prospectus
under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Foreign Currency Options. The Fund may buy or sell put and call options
on foreign currencies either on exchanges or in the  over-the-counter  market. A
put option on a foreign  currency gives the purchaser of the option the right to
sell a foreign currency at the exercise price until the option expires. Currency
options  traded on U.S. or other  exchanges  may be subject to  position  limits
which may limit the ability of the Fund to reduce  foreign  currency  risk using
such options.  Over-the-counter  options differ from traded options in that they
are two-party  contracts with price and other terms negotiated between buyer and
seller,  and generally do not have as much market  liquidity as  exchange-traded
options.

         Futures  Contracts and Options on Futures  Contracts.  The Fund may use
interest rate, foreign currency or index futures contracts,  as specified in the
Company's  Prospectus.  An interest  rate,  foreign  currency  or index  futures
contract provides for the future sale by one party and purchase by another party
of a specified quantity of a financial instrument,  foreign currency or the cash
value of an index at a specified price and time. A futures  contract on an index
is an agreement  pursuant to which two parties agree to take or make delivery of
an amount of cash equal to the difference  between the value of the index at the
close of the last  trading day of the  contract and the price at which the index
contract  was  originally  written.  Although  the value of an index  might be a
function of the value of certain specified  securities,  no physical delivery of
these securities is made.

         The Fund may purchase and write call and put futures  options.  Futures
options  possess many of the same  characteristics  as options on securities and
indices  (discussed  above).  A futures  option  gives the holder the right,  in
return for the premium paid, to assume a long position  (call) or short position
(put) in a futures contract at a specified exercise price at any time during the
period of the option. Upon exercise of a call option, the holder acquires a long
position in the futures  contract and the writer is assigned the opposite  short
position. In the case of a put option, the opposite is true.

         To  comply  with  applicable  rules of the  Commodity  Futures  Trading
Commission  under which the Company and the Fund avoid being deemed a "commodity
pool" or a "commodity  pool  operator," the Fund intends  generally to limit its
use  of  futures   contracts   and  futures   options  to  "bona  fide  hedging"
transactions, as such term is defined in applicable regulations, interpretations
and practice. For example, the Fund might use futures contracts to hedge against
anticipated  changes in interest  rates that might  adversely  affect either the
value of the Fund's  securities  or the price of the  securities  which the Fund
intends to purchase.  The Fund's hedging activities may include sales of futures
contracts  as an offset  against  the effect or expected  increases  in interest
rates,  and  purchases of futures  contracts as an offset  against the effect of
expected declines in interest rates.  Although other techniques could be used to
reduce the Fund's exposure to interest rate  fluctuations,  the Fund may be able
to hedge its  exposure  more  effectively  and  perhaps at a lower cost by using
futures contracts and futures options.

         The Fund will only enter into  futures  contracts  and futures  options
which are standardized and traded on a U.S. or foreign exchange, board of trade,
or similar entity, or quoted on an automated quotation system.

         When a purchase or sale of a futures  contract is made by the Fund, the
Fund is required to deposit with its custodian (or broker, if legally permitted)
a specified amount of cash or U.S. Government securities ("initial margin"). The
margin  required  for a futures  contract  is set by the  exchange  on which the
contract  is traded and may be  modified  during the term of the  contract.  The
initial  margin is in the nature of a performance  bond or good faith deposit on
the  futures  contract  which is returned  to the Fund upon  termination  of the
contract,  assuming all contractual  obligations  have been satisfied.  The Fund
expects  to earn  interest  income on its  initial  margin  deposits.  A futures
contract  held by the Fund is valued daily at the official  settlement  price of
the  exchange on which it is traded.  Each day the Fund pays or  receives  cash,
called  "variation  margin,"  equal to the daily  change in value of the futures
contract.  This process is known as "marking to market."  Variation  margin does
not  represent  a  borrowing  or loan by the Fund but is  instead  a  settlement
between  the Fund and the  broker of the  amount  one would owe the other if the
futures contract expired. In computing daily net asset value, the Fund will mark
to market its open futures positions.

         The Fund is also  required to deposit and maintain  margin with respect
to put and call options on futures contracts written by it. Such margin deposits
will vary  depending on the nature of the underlying  futures  contract (and the
related  initial margin  requirements),  the current market value of the option,
and other futures positions held by the Fund.

         Although some futures  contracts call for making or taking  delivery of
the underlying  securities,  generally these obligations are closed out prior to
delivery by offsetting  purchases or sales of matching  futures  contracts (same
exchange,  underlying  security or index, and delivery month).  If an offsetting
purchase price is less than the original sale price, the Fund realizes a capital
gain,  or if it is more,  the Fund realizes a capital  loss.  Conversely,  if an
offsetting  sale  price  is more  than the  original  purchase  price,  the Fund
realizes a capital gain, or if it is less, the Fund realizes a capital loss. The
transaction costs must also be included in these calculations.

         Limitations  on Use of Futures and  Futures  Options.  In general,  the
Funds intend to enter into  positions in futures  contracts and related  options
only for "bona fide hedging" purposes.  With respect to positions in futures and
related  options that do not constitute  bona fide hedging  positions,  the Fund
will  not  enter  into  a  futures  contract  or  futures  option  contract  if,
immediately  thereafter,  the aggregate initial margin deposits relating to such
positions plus premiums paid by it for open futures option  positions,  less the
amount by which any such  options  are  "in-the-money,"  would  exceed 5% of the
Fund's total assets. A call option is "in-the-money" if the value of the futures
contract  that is the subject of the option  exceeds the exercise  price.  A put
option is  "in-the-money" if the exercise price exceeds the value of the futures
contract that is the subject of the option.

         When  purchasing a futures  contract,  the Fund will  maintain with its
custodian  (and  mark-to-market  on a daily basis) cash or other  liquid  assets
that, when added to the amounts deposited with a futures commission  merchant as
margin,  are equal to the market value of the futures  contract.  Alternatively,
the Fund may "cover" its position by purchasing a put option on the same futures
contract  with a strike  price as high or higher than the price of the  contract
held by the Fund.

         When  selling  a futures  contract,  the Fund  will  maintain  with its
custodian (and  mark-to-market  on a daily basis) liquid assets that, when added
to the amount deposited with a futures commission  merchant as margin, are equal
to the market value of the instruments  underlying the contract.  Alternatively,
the Fund may  "cover"  its  position by owning the  instruments  underlying  the
contract  (or, in the case of an index  futures  contract,  a  portfolio  with a
volatility  substantially  similar  to that of the  index on which  the  futures
contract is based),  or by holding a call option permitting the Fund to purchase
the same  futures  contract at a price no higher than the price of the  contract
written by the Fund (or at a higher price if the  difference  is  maintained  in
liquid assets with the Fund's custodian).

         When  selling  a call  option  on a  futures  contract,  the Fund  will
maintain with its custodian (and  mark-to-market on a daily basis) cash or other
liquid  assets  that,  when  added  to the  amounts  deposited  with  a  futures
commission  merchant  as margin,  equal the total  market  value of the  futures
contract  underlying  the call  option.  Alternatively,  the Fund may  cover its
position by entering  into a long  position  in the same  futures  contract at a
price  no  higher  than the  strike  price of the call  option,  by  owning  the
instruments  underlying  the  futures  contract,  or by holding a separate  call
option  permitting the Fund to purchase the same futures contract at a price not
higher than the strike price of the call option sold by the Fund.

         When selling a put option on a futures contract, the Fund will maintain
with its  custodian  (and mark-to  market on a daily basis) cash or other liquid
assets that equal the purchase price of the futures contract, less any margin on
deposit. Alternatively,  the Fund may cover the position either by entering into
a short  position  in the same  futures  contract,  or by owning a separate  put
option  permitting  it to sell the same  futures  contract so long as the strike
price of the purchased put option is the same or higher than the strike price of
the put option sold by the Fund.



<PAGE>


         Swap  Agreements.  The Fund may enter  into  interest  rate,  index and
currency  exchange rate swap  agreements  for purposes of attempting to obtain a
particular  desired  return  at a lower  cost to the  Fund  than if the Fund had
invested  directly in an  instrument  that yielded that  desired  return.  For a
discussion of swap agreements,  see the Company's  Prospectus under  "Investment
Objectives and Policies." The Fund's  obligations under a swap agreement will be
accrued daily (offset against any amounts owing to the Fund) and any accrued but
unpaid  net  amounts  owed  to a  swap  counterparty  will  be  covered  by  the
maintenance of a segregated account consisting of cash or other liquid assets to
avoid any potential leveraging of the Fund's portfolio.  The Fund will not enter
into a swap  agreement  with any single  party if the net amount  owned or to be
received under existing  contracts with that party would exceed 5% of the Fund's
assets.

         Whether  the  Fund's  use of  swap  agreements  will be  successful  in
furthering  its  investment  objective  of  total  return  will  depend  on  the
Sub-advisor's  ability correctly to predict whether certain types of investments
are likely to produce greater returns than other  investments.  Because they are
two party  contracts  and because they may have terms of longer than seven days,
swap agreements may be considered to be illiquid.  Moreover,  the Fund bears the
risk of loss of the amount expected to be received under a swap agreement in the
event  of the  default  or  bankruptcy  of a swap  agreement  counterparty.  The
Sub-advisor  will  cause  the Fund to  enter  into  swap  agreements  only  with
counterparties that would be eligible for consideration as repurchase  agreement
counterparties  under  the  Fund's  repurchase  agreement  guidelines.   Certain
restrictions  imposed on the Funds by the  Internal  Revenue  Code may limit the
Funds'  ability to use swap  agreements.  The swaps market is a  relatively  new
market and is largely unregulated. It is possible that developments in the swaps
market,  including potential government  regulation,  could adversely affect the
Fund's ability to terminate existing swap agreements or to realize amounts to be
received under such agreements.

         Certain  swap  agreements  are  exempt  from  most  provisions  of  the
Commodity Exchange Act ("CEA") and,  therefore,  are not regulated as futures or
commodity option transactions under the CEA, pursuant to regulations approved by
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.  To qualify for this exemption, a swap
agreement  must be entered  into by  "eligible  participants."  To be  eligible,
natural  persons and most other  entities  must have total assets  exceeding $10
million;  commodity pools and employee  benefit plans must have assets exceeding
$5  million.  In  addition,   an  eligible  swap  transaction  must  meet  three
conditions.  First,  the swap  agreement may not be part of a fungible  class of
agreements that are  standardized as to their material  economic terms.  Second,
the  creditworthiness of parties with actual or potential  obligations under the
swap agreement must be a material  consideration in entering into or determining
the terms of the swap agreement,  including pricing,  cost or credit enhancement
terms. Third, swap agreements may not be entered into and traded on or through a
multilateral transaction execution facility.

         This exemption is not exclusive,  and partnerships may continue to rely
on existing  exclusions for swaps,  such as the Policy  Statement issued in July
1989 which  recognized a safe harbor for swap  transactions  from  regulation as
futures or commodity option  transactions under the CEA or its regulations.  The
Policy  Statement  applies  to swap  transactions  settled in cash that (1) have
individual  tailored  terms,  (2) lack  exchange-style  offset  and the use of a
clearing organization or margin system, (3) are undertaken in conjunction with a
line of business, and (4) are not marketed to the public.

         Structured Notes. Structured notes are derivative debt securities,  the
interest rate or principal of which is related to another economic  indicator or
financial market index.  Indexed  securities include structured notes as well as
securities other than debt  securities,  the interest rate or principal of which
is determined by such an unrelated  indicator.  Indexed securities may include a
multiplier  that  multiplies  the  indexed  element by a  specified  factor and,
therefore,  the value of such securities may be very volatile. To the extent the
Fund  invests in these  securities,  however,  the  Sub-advisor  analyzes  these
securities in its overall  assessment  of the  effective  duration of the Fund's
portfolio in an effort to monitor the Fund's interest rate risk.

         Foreign Currency  Exchange-Related  Securities.  The Fund may invest in
foreign  currency  warrants,  principal  exchange  rate  linked  securities  and
performance indexed paper. For a description of these instruments,  see this SAI
under "Certain Risk Factor and Investment Methods."

         Warrants  to  Purchase  Securities.  The Fund may  invest in or acquire
warrants to purchase  equity or  fixed-income  securities.  Bonds with  warrants
attached to purchase equity securities have many  characteristics of convertible
bonds and their  prices may, to some  degree,  reflect  the  performance  of the
underlying  stock.  Bonds also may be issued with warrants  attached to purchase
additional  fixed-income  securities  at the same  coupon  rate.  A  decline  in
interest  rates would permit the Fund to buy  additional  bonds at the favorable
rate or to sell the warrants at a profit.  If interest  rates rise, the warrants
would generally expire with no value.

         Lending Portfolio Securities.  For the purpose of achieving income, the
Fund  may lend  its  portfolio  securities,  provided  (1) the  loan is  secured
continuously by collateral  consisting of U.S. Government  securities or cash or
cash equivalents (cash, U.S. Government securities,  negotiable  certificates of
deposit,  bankers'  acceptances  or  letters of  credit)  maintained  on a daily
mark-to-market  basis in an amount at least equal to the current market value of
the securities loaned, (2) the Fund may at any time call the loan and obtain the
return of securities loaned, (3) the Fund will receive any interest or dividends
received on the loaned securities, and (4) the aggregate value of the securities
loaned will not at any time exceed one-third of the total assets of the Fund.

     Investment Policies Which May Be Changed Without Shareholder Approval.  The
following  limitations are not "fundamental"  restrictions and may be changed by
the Directors of the Company without shareholder approval. The Fund will not:

         1........Invest  more  than 15% of the  assets  of the Fund  (taken  at
market value at the time of the investment) in "illiquid  securities;"  illiquid
securities being defined to include  securities  subject to legal or contractual
restrictions  on resale  (which  may  include  private  placements),  repurchase
agreements  maturing in more than seven days,  certain  options  traded over the
counter that the Fund has purchased,  securities being used to cover options the
Fund has  written,  securities  for  which  market  quotations  are not  readily
available,  or other securities which legally or in the Sub-advisor's option may
be deemed illiquid;

         2........Purchase  securities  for the  Fund  from,  or sell  portfolio
securities to, any of the officers and directors or trustees of the Company, the
Trust, the Investment Manager or the Sub-advisor;

     3........Invest  more than 5% of the  assets  of the Fund  (taken at market
value at the time of investment) in any combination of interest only,  principal
only, or inverse floating rate securities;

     4........Invest  in companies for the purpose of  exercising  management or
control;

     5........Purchase securities of open-end or closed-end investment companies
except in compliance with the Investment Company Act of 1940;

         6........Purchase   securities  on  margin,   except  (i)  for  use  of
short-term  credit necessary for clearance of purchases of portfolio  securities
and (ii) the Fund may make margin deposits in connection with futures  contracts
or other permissible investments;

         7........Purchase or sell oil, gas or other mineral programs;

         8........Maintain  a short position,  or purchase,  write or sell puts,
calls,  straddles,  spreads or combinations thereof,  except as set forth in the
Company's  Prospectus and this SAI for  transactions  in options,  futures,  and
options  on  futures   transactions  arising  under  swap  agreements  or  other
derivative instruments; or

         9........Pledge,  mortgage or hypothecate its assets,  except as may be
necessary in connection with  permissible  borrowings or  investments;  and then
such pledging,  mortgaging or hypothecating may not exceed 33 1/3% of the Fund's
total assets at the time of borrowing  or  investment.  The deposit of assets in
escrow in  connection  with the writing of covered put and call  options and the
purchase of securities on a when-issued or delayed  delivery  basis,  collateral
arrangements  with  respect to initial or variation  margin  deposits for future
contracts and commitments entered into under swap agreements or other derivative
instruments, will not be deemed to be pledges of the Portfolio's assets.



<PAGE>


ASAF JPM MONEY MARKET FUND:

     Investment Objective:  The investment objective of the Fund is to seek high
current income and maintain high levels of liquidity.

Investment Policies:

     Bank  Obligations.  The Fund will not invest in bank  obligations for which
any affiliate of the Sub-advisor is the ultimate obligor or accepting bank.

         Asset-Backed Securities.  The asset-backed securities in which the Fund
may invest  are  subject to the Fund's  overall  credit  requirements.  However,
asset-backed securities, in general, are subject to certain risks. Most of these
risks are related to limited  interests in applicable  collateral.  For example,
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 give such debtors the right to set off certain amounts on credit card debt
thereby  reducing  the  balance  due.  Additionally,  if the letter of credit is
exhausted,  holders of  asset-backed  securities may also  experience  delays in
payments or losses if the full amounts due on underlying sales contracts are not
realized.  Because  asset-backed  securities  are  relatively  new,  the  market
experience in these  securities  is limited and the market's  ability to sustain
liquidity  through  all phases of the market  cycle has not been  tested.  For a
discussion of  asset-backed  securities and the risks  involved  therein see the
Company's  Prospectus  and this SAI under  "Certain Risk Factors and  Investment
Methods."

         Synthetic  Instruments.  As  may  be  permitted  by  current  laws  and
regulations and if expressly permitted by the Directors of the Company, the Fund
may invest in certain synthetic instruments.  Such instruments generally involve
the deposit of asset-backed  securities in a trust  arrangement and the issuance
of  certificates  evidencing  interests  in  the  trust.  The  certificates  are
generally sold in private  placements in reliance on Rule 144A of the Securities
Act of 1933 (without registering the certificates under such Act).

         Repurchase  Agreements.   Subject  to  guidelines  promulgated  by  the
Directors of the Company,  the Fund may enter into  repurchase  agreements.  The
repurchase  agreements into which the Fund may enter will usually be short, from
overnight  to one  week,  and at no time  will the  Fund  invest  in  repurchase
agreements for more than thirteen  months.  The securities  which are subject to
repurchase  agreements,  however,  may have maturity dates in excess of thirteen
months from the effective date of the repurchase agreement.  For a discussion of
repurchase  agreements  and certain risks  involved  therein,  see the Company's
Prospectus under "Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Reverse  Repurchase  Agreements.  The  Fund  invests  the  proceeds  of
borrowings  under  reverse  repurchase  agreements.  The Fund will  enter into a
reverse repurchase agreement only when the interest income to be earned from the
investment  of  the  proceeds  is  greater  than  the  interest  expense  of the
transaction.  The Fund will not  invest  the  proceeds  of a reverse  repurchase
agreement  for a period  which  exceeds the  duration of the reverse  repurchase
agreement.  The Fund may not enter into reverse repurchase  agreements exceeding
in the  aggregate  one-third  of the  market  value of its  total  assets,  less
liabilities other than the obligations created by reverse repurchase agreements.
The Fund will establish and maintain with its custodian a separate  account with
a segregated portfolio of securities in an amount at least equal to its purchase
obligations  under its reverse  repurchase  agreements.  If interest  rates rise
during  the term of a reverse  repurchase  agreement,  such  reverse  repurchase
agreement  may have a negative  impact on the Fund's  ability to  maintain a net
asset value of $1.00 per share.

         Foreign  Securities.  The Fund may  invest  in U.S.  dollar-denominated
foreign securities.  Any foreign commercial paper must not be subject to foreign
withholding  tax at the  time  of  purchase.  Foreign  investments  may be  made
directly in securities of foreign issuers or in the form of American  Depositary
Receipts ("ADRs") and European Depositary Receipts ("EDRs"). Generally, ADRs and
EDRs are receipts  issued by a bank or trust company that evidence  ownership of
underlying  securities issued by a foreign corporation and that are designed for
use in the  domestic,  in the case of ADRs,  or  European,  in the case of EDRs,
securities  markets.  For a  discussion  of  depositary  receipts  and the risks
involved in investing in foreign securities,  see the Company's Prospectus under
"Certain Risk Factors and Investment Methods."

         Lending  Portfolio  Securities.  Subject to the Fund's  restrictions on
lending,  loans  will be  subject  to  termination  by the  Fund  in the  normal
settlement time,  generally three business days after notice, or by the borrower
on one day's  notice.  Borrowed  securities  must be  returned  when the loan is
terminated.  The  Fund  may  pay  reasonable  finders'  and  custodial  fees  in
connection  with a loan. In making a loan,  the Fund will consider all facts and
circumstances surrounding the making of the loan, including the creditworthiness
of the  borrowing  financial  institution.  The Fund  will not make any loans in
excess  of one  year.  The Fund  will not lend its  securities  to any  officer,
employee, Director or Trustee of the Company, the Trust, the Investment Manager,
any  Sub-advisor  of the  Company  or the  Trust,  or the  Administrator  unless
otherwise permitted by applicable law.

     Investment Policies Which May Be Changed Without Shareholder Approval.  The
following  limitations are not "fundamental"  restrictions and may be changed by
the Directors of the Company without shareholder approval. The Fund will not:

     1........Invest  in companies for the purpose of  exercising  management or
control;

     2........Purchase securities of open-end or closed-end investment companies
except in compliance with the Investment Company Act of 1940;

         3........Purchase securities on margin, make short sales of securities,
or maintain a short position, provided that this restriction shall not be deemed
to be  applicable  to the  purchase  or sale  of  when-issued  securities  or of
securities for delivery at a future date;

         4........Acquire any illiquid securities, such as repurchase agreements
with more than seven days to maturity or fixed time  deposits with a duration of
over seven  calendar days, if as a result  thereof,  more than 10% of the market
value of the Fund's total assets would be in investments which are illiquid;

         5........Mortgage,  pledge or hypothecate any assets,  except as may be
necessary in connection with  permissible  borrowings or  investments;  and then
such mortgaging,  pledging or hypothecating may not exceed 33 1/3% of the Fund's
total assets at the time of borrowing or investment;

     6........Purchase  or  sell  puts,  calls,   straddles,   spreads,  or  any
combination thereof,  except to the extent permitted by the Company's Prospectus
and this SAI; or

     7........Purchase   or  sell   interests  in  oil,  gas  or  other  mineral
exploration or development programs.

                       FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

     Investment Restrictions.  Each Fund and Portfolio has adopted the following
fundamental investment restrictions which may not be changed without shareholder
approval.

         1. Senior Securities. No Fund or Portfolio may issue senior securities,
except as permitted under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act").

         2. Borrowing. No Fund or Portfolio may borrow money, except that a Fund
or  Portfolio  may (i) borrow money for  non-leveraging,  temporary or emergency
purposes,  and (ii)  engage in  reverse  repurchase  agreements  and make  other
investments or engage in other transactions, which may involve a borrowing, in a
manner  consistent  with  the  Fund  or  Portfolio's  investment  objective  and
policies; provided that the combination of (i) and (ii) shall not exceed 33 1/3%
of the value of the Fund or Portfolio's  assets  (including the amount borrowed)
less liabilities  (other than borrowings) or such other percentage  permitted by
law.  Any  borrowings  which  come to exceed  this  amount  will be  reduced  in
accordance with applicable law. Subject to the above limitations,  the Funds and
Portfolios  may borrow from banks or other  persons to the extent  permitted  by
applicable law.

         3. Underwriting.  No Fund or Portfolio may underwrite securities issued
by other persons,  except to the extent that the Fund or Portfolio may be deemed
to be an  underwriter  (within  the  meaning of the  Securities  Act of 1933) in
connection with the purchase and sale of portfolio securities.

         4. Real Estate.  No Fund or Portfolio  may purchase or sell real estate
unless acquired as a result of the ownership of securities or other instruments;
provided  that this  restriction  shall not  prohibit a Fund or  Portfolio  from
investing  in  securities  or other  instruments  backed  by real  estate  or in
securities of companies engaged in the real estate business.

         5.  Commodities.  No Fund or Portfolio  may  purchase or sell  physical
commodities  unless  acquired  as a result of the  ownership  of  securities  or
instruments;  provided  that  this  restriction  shall  not  prohibit  a Fund or
Portfolio from (i) engaging in permissible options and futures  transactions and
forward foreign currency  contracts in accordance with the Fund's or Portfolio's
investment policies, or (ii) investing in securities of any kind.

         6. Lending.  No Fund or Portfolio may make loans, except that a Fund or
Portfolio  may (i) lend  portfolio  securities  in  accordance  with the Fund or
Portfolio's  investment policies in amounts up to 33 1/3% of the total assets of
the  Fund or  Portfolio  taken at  market  value,  (ii)  purchase  money  market
securities  and enter into  repurchase  agreements,  and (iii) acquire  publicly
distributed or privately placed debt securities and purchase debt.

         7.  Industry  Concentration.  No Fund or  Portfolio  may  purchase  any
security if, as a result,  more than 25% of the value of the Fund or Portfolio's
assets would be invested in the  securities  of issuers  having their  principal
business  activities in the same industry;  provided that this  restriction does
not  apply to  investments  in  obligations  issued  or  guaranteed  by the U.S.
Government or any of its agencies or instrumentalities (or repurchase agreements
with respect thereto).

         8.  Diversification.  No Fund or Portfolio  may, with respect to 75% of
the value of its total assets, purchase the securities of any issuer (other than
securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or any of its agencies or
instrumentalities)  if, as a result, (i) more than 5% of the value of the Fund's
or Portfolio's  total assets would be invested in the securities of such issuer,
or (ii) more than 10% of the outstanding  voting securities of such issuer would
be held by the Fund or Portfolio.

         Notes to Investment Restrictions. The following notes should be read in
conjunction with the above fundamental investment restrictions.  These notes are
not fundamental policies and may be changed without shareholder approval.

         o Applicable to All Funds and Portfolios:  If a restriction on a Fund's
or  Portfolio's  investments  is adhered to at the time an investment is made, a
subsequent  change in the  percentage  of Fund or Portfolio  assets  invested in
certain  securities or other  instruments,  or change in average duration of the
Fund's or Portfolio's investment portfolio,  resulting from changes in the value
of the Fund's or Portfolio's total assets, will not be considered a violation of
the  restriction;   provided,  however,  that  the  asset  coverage  requirement
applicable to  borrowings  shall be  maintained  in the manner  contemplated  by
applicable law.

         o Applicable  to All Funds and  Portfolios:  With respect to investment
restrictions  (2) and (6),  a Fund or  Portfolio  will not borrow or lend to any
other fund  unless it  applies  for and  receives  an  exemptive  order from the
Securities and Exchange  Commission (the "Commission"),  if so required,  or the
Commission issues rules permitting such transactions.  There is no assurance the
Commission  would  grant  any  order  requested  by the  Fund  or  Portfolio  or
promulgate any rules allowing the transactions.

         o   Applicable   Only  to  the  ASAF   Founders   International   Small
Capitalization  Fund and the  ASAF  Founders  Small  Capitalization  Fund:  With
respect to investment  restriction  (7), the Funds use industry  classifications
based, where applicable,  on Bridge Information Systems,  Reuters, the S&P Stock
Guide published by Standard & Poor's,  information  obtained from Bloomberg L.P.
and  Moody's  International,  and/or  the  prospectus  of the  issuing  company.
Selection of an appropriate industry classification resource will be made by the
Sub-advisor in the exercise of its reasonable discretion.

         o Applicable Only to the ASAF T. Rowe Price  International  Equity Fund
(and  corresponding  Portfolio)  and the ASAF T. Rowe Price Small  Company Value
Fund:  With  respect  to  investment  restrictions  (2) and  (6),  the  Fund and
Portfolio  have no current  intention of borrowing or lending to any other fund.
For purposes of investment restriction (6), the Fund and Portfolio will consider
the  acquisition  of a debt security to include the execution of a note or other
evidence of an extension of credit with a term of more than nine months.



<PAGE>


                   CERTAIN RISK FACTORS AND INVESTMENT METHODS

         Some of the investment instruments, techniques and methods which may be
used by one or more of the Funds and the risks  attendant  thereto are described
below.  Other risk  factors  and  investment  methods  may be  described  in the
Company's  Prospectus under "Investment Programs of the Funds" and "Certain Risk
Factors and Investment  Methods," and in this SAI under  "Investment  Objectives
and  Policies."  The risk factors and investment  methods  described  below only
apply to those Funds or  Portfolios  that may invest in such  securities  or use
such investment methods.  The below references to the investment methods used by
the Feeder Funds apply equally to the Funds' corresponding Portfolios.

         Debt  Obligations.   Yields  on  short,  intermediate,   and  long-term
securities  are  dependent  on a variety  of  factors,  including,  the  general
conditions of the money and bond markets, the size of a particular offering, the
maturity of the  obligation,  and the rating of the issue.  Debt securities with
longer  maturities  tend to produce  higher yields and are generally  subject to
potentially greater capital  appreciation and depreciation than obligations with
shorter  maturities  and lower  yields.  The  market  prices of debt  securities
usually  vary,  depending  upon  available  yields.  An increase  in  prevailing
interest  rates  will  generally  reduce  the value of debt  investments,  and a
decline in interest rates will generally increase the value of debt investments.
The ability of a Fund to achieve its  investment  objective is also dependent on
the  continuing  ability of the issuers of the debt  securities  in which a Fund
invests to meet their obligations for the payment of interest and principal when
due.

         Special  Risks   Associated  with  Low-Rated  and  Comparable   Unrated
Securities.   Low-rated  and  comparable  unrated  securities,  while  generally
offering higher yields than investment-grade securities with similar maturities,
involve greater risks, including the possibility of default or bankruptcy.  They
are regarded as predominantly  speculative with respect to the issuer's capacity
to pay  interest  and  repay  principal.  The  special  risk  considerations  in
connection with such  investments are discussed  below. See the Appendix of this
Statement for a discussion of securities ratings.

                  Effect of Interest Rates and Economic  Changes.  The low-rated
and  comparable  unrated  securities  market is  relatively  new, and its growth
paralleled  a long  economic  expansion.  As a result,  it is not clear how this
market  may  withstand  a  prolonged  recession  or  economic  downturn.  Such a
prolonged  economic downturn could severely disrupt the market for and adversely
affect the value of such securities.

                  All    interest-bearing    securities   typically   experience
appreciation  when interest rates decline and  depreciation  when interest rates
rise. The market values of low-rated and comparable  unrated  securities tend to
reflect  individual   corporate   developments  to  a  greater  extent  than  do
higher-rated  securities,  which react  primarily to fluctuations in the general
level of interest rates.  Low-rated and comparable  unrated securities also tend
to be more sensitive to economic  conditions than are  higher-rated  securities.
During an  economic  downturn or a sustained  period of rising  interest  rates,
highly  leveraged  issuers of low-rated and  comparable  unrated  securities may
experience  financial stress and may not have sufficient  revenues to meet their
payment  obligations.  The issuer's  ability to service its debt obligations may
also be  adversely  affected by specific  corporate  developments,  the issuer's
inability to meet specific projected business  forecasts,  or the unavailability
of  additional  financing.  The  risk of loss due to  default  by an  issuer  of
low-rated  and  comparable  unrated  securities  is  significantly  greater than
issuers  of  higher-rated  securities  because  such  securities  are  generally
unsecured and are often subordinated to other creditors.  Further, if the issuer
of a low-rated and comparable  unrated  security  defaulted,  a Fund might incur
additional  expenses  to seek  recovery.  Periods of  economic  uncertainty  and
changes  would also  generally  result in  increased  fluctuation  in the market
prices of low-rated and comparable  unrated  securities and thus in a Fund's net
asset value.

                  As  previously  stated,  the  value  of such a  security  will
decrease in a rising interest rate market and accordingly,  so will a Fund's net
asset value. If a Fund experiences  unexpected net redemptions in such a market,
it may be forced to  liquidate  a portion of its  portfolio  securities  without
regard  to  their  investment  merits.  Due to the  limited  liquidity  of  some
high-yield securities (discussed below), a Fund may be forced to liquidate these
securities at a substantial discount. Any such liquidation would reduce a Fund's
asset base over which  expenses could be allocated and could result in a reduced
rate of return for a Fund.

                  Payment   Expectations.   Low-rated  and  comparable   unrated
securities  typically contain redemption,  call, or prepayment  provisions which
permit  the  issuer  of  securities  containing  such  provisions  to,  at their
discretion,  redeem the  securities.  During periods of falling  interest rates,
issuers of high-yield  securities  are likely to redeem or prepay the securities
and  refinance  them with debt  securities  with a lower  interest  rate. To the
extent an issuer is able to refinance the securities,  or otherwise redeem them,
a Fund may have to replace the securities with a lower-yielding  security, which
would result in a lower return for a Fund.

                  Issuers of lower-rated  securities are often highly leveraged,
so that their  ability to service  their  debt  obligations  during an  economic
downturn or during  sustained  periods of rising interest rates may be impaired.
Such issuers may not have more  traditional  methods of  financing  available to
them  and  may be  unable  to  repay  outstanding  obligations  at  maturity  by
refinancing. The risk of loss due to default in payment of interest or repayment
of principal by such issuers is  significantly  greater  because such securities
frequently  are  unsecured  and  subordinated  to the  prior  payment  of senior
indebtedness.

                  Credit  Ratings.   Credit  ratings  issued  by   credit-rating
agencies  attempt to evaluate the safety of principal  and interest  payments of
rated  securities.  They do not,  however,  evaluate  the  market  value risk of
low-rated  and  comparable  unrated  securities  and,  therefore,  may not fully
reflect the true risks of an investment. In addition, credit-rating agencies may
or may not make timely changes in a rating to reflect  changes in the economy or
in the  condition  of the issuer that affect the market  value of the  security.
Consequently,  credit  ratings may be used only as a  preliminary  indicator  of
investment  quality.  Investments in low-rated and comparable unrated securities
will be more  dependent on the  applicable  Sub-advisor's  credit  analysis than
would be the case with investments in  investment-grade  debt  securities.  Such
Sub-advisor may employ its own credit research and analysis, which could include
a study of existing debt, capital structure,  ability to service debt and to pay
dividends,  the  issuer's  sensitivity  to economic  conditions,  its  operating
history, and the current trend of earnings. The Sub-advisor continually monitors
the  investments  in a Fund and  evaluates  whether  to  dispose of or to retain
low-rated  and  comparable  unrated  securities  whose credit  ratings or credit
quality may have changed.

                  Liquidity and Valuation.  A Fund may have difficulty disposing
of certain low-rated and comparable  unrated  securities  because there may be a
thin  trading  market  for  such  securities.  There  is no  established  retail
secondary  market for many of these  securities.  A Fund  anticipates  that such
securities  could be sold only to a limited  number of dealers or  institutional
investors.  To the extent a secondary trading market does exist, it is generally
not as liquid as the secondary market for higher-rated securities. The lack of a
liquid  secondary  market may have an adverse  impact on the market price of the
security.  As a result,  a Fund's asset value and a Fund's ability to dispose of
particular  securities,  when necessary to meet a Fund's  liquidity  needs or in
response to a specific  economic  event,  may be impacted.  The lack of a liquid
secondary  market for certain  securities  may also make it more difficult for a
Fund to obtain accurate  market  quotations for purposes of valuing a portfolio.
Market  quotations  are generally  available on many  low-rated  and  comparable
unrated  issues only from a limited  number of dealers  and may not  necessarily
represent  firm bids of such dealers or prices for actual sales.  During periods
of thin trading,  the spread  between bid and asked prices is likely to increase
significantly. In addition, adverse publicity and investor perceptions,  whether
or not based on fundamental  analysis,  may decrease the values and liquidity of
low-rated and  comparable  unrated  securities,  especially  in a  thinly-traded
market.

         Put and Call Options:

                  Writing (Selling) Call Options. A call option gives the holder
(buyer) the "right to purchase" a security or currency at a specified price (the
exercise  price),  at expiration of the option  (European  style) or at any time
until a certain date (the  expiration  date)  (American  style).  So long as the
obligation  of the writer of a call  option  continues,  he may be  assigned  an
exercise  notice  by the  broker-dealer  through  whom  such  option  was  sold,
requiring him to deliver the underlying  security or currency against payment of
the exercise price.  This obligation  terminates upon the expiration of the call
option,  or such  earlier  time at which the writer  effects a closing  purchase
transaction by purchasing an option identical to that previously sold.

                  When writing a call option, a Fund, in return for the premium,
gives up the  opportunity  for profit from a price  increase  in the  underlying
security or currency above the exercise price,  but conversely  retains the risk
of loss should the price of the  security or  currency  decline.  Unlike one who
owns  securities or currencies  not subject to an option,  a Fund has no control
over when it may be required to sell the  underlying  securities or  currencies,
since it may be assigned an exercise  notice at any time prior to the expiration
of its  obligation  as a  writer.  If a call  option  which a Fund  has  written
expires,  the Fund will  realize a gain in the amount of the  premium;  however,
such  gain may be  offset by a decline  in the  market  value of the  underlying
security or currency during the option period.  If the call option is exercised,
a Fund will realize a gain or loss from the sale of the  underlying  security or
currency.

                  Writing  (Selling)  Put  Options.   A  put  option  gives  the
purchaser  of the option  the right to sell,  and the  writer  (seller)  has the
obligation  to buy, the  underlying  security or currency at the exercise  price
during the option  period  (American  style) or at the  expiration of the option
(European style).  So long as the obligation of the writer continues,  he may be
assigned an exercise  notice by the  broker-dealer  through whom such option was
sold,  requiring him to make payment of the exercise  price against  delivery of
the  underlying  security or  currency.  The  operation  of put options in other
respects,  including their related risks and rewards, is substantially identical
to that of call options.

                  Premium Received from Writing Call or Put Options. A Fund will
receive a premium from writing a put or call option, which increases such Fund's
return in the event the option expires unexercised or is closed out at a profit.
The amount of the premium will reflect,  among other things, the relationship of
the market price of the underlying security to the exercise price of the option,
the term of the option and the  volatility of the market price of the underlying
security. By writing a call option, a Fund limits its opportunity to profit from
any increase in the market value of the  underlying  security above the exercise
price of the option.  By writing a put option,  a Fund  assumes the risk that it
may be required to purchase the underlying security for an exercise price higher
than its then current market value, resulting in a potential capital loss if the
purchase price exceeds the market value plus the amount of the premium received,
unless the security subsequently appreciates in value.

                  Closing  Transactions.  A Fund may terminate an option that it
has  written  prior  to its  expiration  by  entering  into a  closing  purchase
transaction  in which it purchases an option having the same terms as the option
written. Closing transactions may be effected in order to realize a profit on an
outstanding  call option,  to prevent an  underlying  security or currency  from
being called, or, to permit the sale of the underlying  security or currency.  A
Fund will  realize a profit  or loss from such  transaction  if the cost of such
transaction  is less or more than the premium  received  from the writing of the
option.  In the case of a put option,  any loss so incurred  may be partially or
entirely  offset by the premium  received from a simultaneous or subsequent sale
of a  different  put option.  Because  increases  in the market  price of a call
option will  generally  reflect  increases in the market price of the underlying
security,  any loss  resulting from the repurchase of a call option is likely to
be  offset  in whole or in part by  unrealized  appreciation  of the  underlying
security owned by such Fund.

                  Furthermore,  effecting  a closing  transaction  will permit a
Fund to write  another call option on the  underlying  security or currency with
either a different  exercise price or expiration date or both. If a Fund desires
to sell a  particular  security or currency  from its  portfolio on which it has
written a call  option,  or  purchased  a put  option,  it will seek to effect a
closing  transaction prior to, or concurrently with, the sale of the security or
currency.  There is, of course,  no assurance that a Fund will be able to effect
such closing transactions at a favorable price. If a Fund cannot enter into such
a  transaction,  it may be required to hold a security or currency that it might
otherwise have sold. When a Fund writes a covered call option,  it runs the risk
of not  being  able  to  participate  in  the  appreciation  of  the  underlying
securities or currencies  above the exercise price, as well as the risk of being
required to hold on to securities or currencies that are  depreciating in value.
This could result in higher transaction costs. A Fund will pay transaction costs
in  connection  with the  writing  of options  to close out  previously  written
options.  Such  transaction  costs are normally higher than those  applicable to
purchases and sales of portfolio securities.

                  Purchasing  Call  Options.  Call options may be purchased by a
Fund for the purpose of acquiring the  underlying  securities or currencies  for
its portfolio.  Utilized in this fashion, the purchase of call options enables a
Fund to acquire the  securities or currencies at the exercise  price of the call
option plus the premium paid.  At times the net cost of acquiring  securities or
currencies in this manner may be less than the cost of acquiring the  securities
or  currencies  directly.  This  technique  may  also  be  useful  to a Fund  in
purchasing  a large  block  of  securities  or  currencies  that  would  be more
difficult to acquire by direct market purchases. So long as it holds such a call
option  rather  than the  underlying  security  or  currency  itself,  a Fund is
partially  protected  from any  unexpected  decline in the  market  price of the
underlying security or currency and in such event could allow the call option to
expire, incurring a loss only to the extent of the premium paid for the option.



<PAGE>


                  Purchasing Put Options. A Fund may purchase a put option on an
underlying  security or  currency  owned by the Fund (a  "protective  put") as a
defensive  technique in order to protect  against an anticipated  decline in the
value of the security or currency. Such hedge protection is provided only during
the life of the put option when the Fund,  as the holder of the put  option,  is
able to sell the  underlying  security  or currency  at the put  exercise  price
regardless  of  any  decline  in  the  underlying  security's  market  price  or
currency's  exchange value. For example,  a put option may be purchased in order
to protect unrealized appreciation of a security or currency where a Sub-advisor
deems it desirable  to continue to hold the security or currency  because of tax
considerations.  The premium paid for the put option and any  transaction  costs
would reduce any capital gain  otherwise  available  for  distribution  when the
security or currency is eventually sold.

                  If a Fund  purchases  put options at a time when the Fund does
not own the  underlying  security or currency,  the Fund seeks to benefit from a
decline in the market price of the underlying  security or currency.  If the put
option is not sold when it has remaining  value,  and if the market price of the
underlying  security or currency  remains  equal to or greater than the exercise
price during the life of the put option, a Fund will lose its entire  investment
in the put option.  In order for the purchase of a put option to be  profitable,
the  market  price  of  the   underlying   security  or  currency  must  decline
sufficiently  below the  exercise  price to cover the  premium  and  transaction
costs.

                  Dealer  Options.  Exchange-traded  options  generally  have  a
continuous  liquid market while dealer options have none.  Consequently,  a Fund
will  generally be able to realize the value of a dealer option it has purchased
only by  exercising  it or reselling it to the dealer who issued it.  Similarly,
when a Fund writes a dealer  option,  it generally will be able to close out the
option  prior  to its  expiration  only  by  entering  into a  closing  purchase
transaction with the dealer to which the Fund originally wrote the option. While
a Fund will seek to enter into dealer  options  only with dealers who will agree
to and which are expected to be capable of entering  into  closing  transactions
with the Fund, there can be no assurance that the Fund will be able to liquidate
a dealer option at a favorable  price at any time prior to  expiration.  Until a
Fund,  as a  covered  dealer  call  option  writer,  is able to effect a closing
purchase  transaction,  it will not be able to  liquidate  securities  (or other
assets) used as cover until the option expires or is exercised.  In the event of
insolvency  of the  other  party,  a Fund may be unable  to  liquidate  a dealer
option. With respect to options written by a Fund, the inability to enter into a
closing transaction may result in material losses to a Fund. For example,  since
a Fund must  maintain a secured  position  with  respect to any call option on a
security it writes,  a Fund may not sell the assets which it has  segregated  to
secure the position while it is obligated under the option. This requirement may
impair a Fund's  ability to sell  portfolio  securities at a time when such sale
might be advantageous.

                  The  Staff of the  Commission  has  taken  the  position  that
purchased  dealer  options  and the  assets  used to secure the  written  dealer
options are illiquid securities. A Fund may treat the cover used for written OTC
options  as liquid if the dealer  agrees  that the Fund may  repurchase  the OTC
option it has written for a maximum price to be  calculated  by a  predetermined
formula.  In such cases, the OTC option would be considered illiquid only to the
extent the maximum  repurchase  price under the  formula  exceeds the  intrinsic
value of the option. To this extent, a Fund will treat dealer options as subject
to a Fund's limitation on unmarketable or illiquid securities. If the Commission
changes its position on the liquidity of dealer options,  a Fund will change its
treatment of such instrument accordingly.

         Certain Risk Factors in Writing Call Options and in Purchasing Call and
Put Options.  During the option period,  a Fund, as writer of a call option has,
in return for the premium  received on the option,  given up the opportunity for
capital  appreciation  above the  exercise  price should the market price of the
underlying security increase, but has retained the risk of loss should the price
of the underlying security decline. The writer has no control over the time when
it may be required to fulfill its obligation as a writer of the option. The risk
of  purchasing  a call or put option is that a Fund may lose the premium it paid
plus transaction  costs. If a Fund does not exercise the option and is unable to
close out the  position  prior to  expiration  of the  option,  it will lose its
entire investment.

         An  exchange-traded  option  position  may be  closed  out  only  on an
exchange  which  provides a secondary  market.  There can be no assurance that a
liquid secondary market will exist for a particular  option at a particular time
and that a Fund can close out its position by  effecting a closing  transaction.
If a Fund is unable to effect a closing purchase transaction, it cannot sell the
underlying  security  until the  option  expires  or the  option  is  exercised.
Accordingly,  a Fund may not be able to sell the  underlying  security at a time
when it might  otherwise  be  advantageous  to do so.  Possible  reasons for the
absence of a liquid  secondary  market include the following:  (i)  insufficient
trading interest in certain options;  (ii) restrictions on transactions  imposed
by an exchange;  (iii) trading halts,  suspensions or other restrictions imposed
with  respect  to  particular   classes  or  series  of  options  or  underlying
securities;  (iv)  inadequacy  of the  facilities of an exchange or the clearing
corporation  to  handle  trading  volume;  and  (v) a  decision  by one or  more
exchanges  to  discontinue  the  trading of options  or impose  restrictions  on
orders.  In  addition,  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.

         Each exchange has established  limitations governing the maximum number
of call  options,  whether  or not  covered,  which may be  written  by a single
investor  acting  alone or in concert  with others  (regardless  of whether such
options are written on the same or different exchanges or are held or written on
one or more accounts or through one or more brokers).  An exchange may order the
liquidation  of  positions  found to be in  violation of these limits and it may
impose other sanctions or restrictions.

         Options on Stock  Indices.  Options  on stock  indices  are  similar to
options on specific  securities  except  that,  rather than the right to take or
make delivery of the specific security at a specific price, an option on a stock
index gives the holder the right to  receive,  upon  exercise of the option,  an
amount of cash if the closing  level of that stock index is greater than, in the
case of a call,  or less than,  in the case of a put, the exercise  price of the
option.  This  amount of cash is equal to such  difference  between  the closing
price of the index and the  exercise  price of the option  expressed  in dollars
multiplied by a specified  multiple.  The writer of the option is obligated,  in
return for the premium received, to make delivery of this amount. Unlike options
on specific securities,  all settlements of options on stock indices are in cash
and gain or loss  depends on general  movements  in the stocks  included  in the
index rather than price movements in particular stocks.

         Risk  Factors  of  Options on  Indices.  Because  the value of an index
option  depends  upon the  movements  in the level of the index rather than upon
movements in the price of a particular  security,  whether a Fund will realize a
gain or a loss on the purchase or sale of an option on an index depends upon the
movements  in the level of prices in the market  generally  or in an industry or
market  segment  rather  than  upon  movements  in the  price of the  individual
security.   Accordingly,   successful  use  of  positions  will  depend  upon  a
Sub-advisor's  ability to predict  correctly  movements in the  direction of the
market  generally or in the  direction of a particular  industry.  This requires
different  skills  and  techniques  than  predicting  changes  in the  prices of
individual securities.

         Index prices may be distorted if trading of securities  included in the
index is  interrupted.  Trading  in index  options  also may be  interrupted  in
certain circumstances, such as if trading were halted in a substantial number of
securities in the index. If this occurred, a Fund would not be able to close out
options which it had written or purchased and, if  restrictions on exercise were
imposed, might be unable to exercise an option it purchased,  which would result
in substantial losses.

         Price movements in portfolio  securities  will not correlate  perfectly
with  movements in the level of the index and  therefore,  a Fund bears the risk
that the price of the  securities  may not  increase as much as the level of the
index. In this event,  the Fund would bear a loss on the call which would not be
completely  offset by  movements  in the  prices of the  securities.  It is also
possible that the index may rise when the value of a Fund's securities does not.
If this occurred,  a Fund would experience a loss on the call which would not be
offset by an increase in the value of its securities and might also experience a
loss in the market value of its securities.

         Unless a Fund has other liquid  assets which are  sufficient to satisfy
the  exercise of a call on the index,  the Fund will be  required  to  liquidate
securities in order to satisfy the  exercise.  When a Fund has written a call on
an index,  there is also the risk that the market may  decline  between the time
the Fund has the call exercised  against it, at a price which is fixed as of the
closing  level of the  index on the date of  exercise,  and the time the Fund is
able to sell securities. As with options on securities, the Sub-advisor will not
learn that a call has been exercised  until the day following the exercise date,
but,  unlike a call on  securities  where a Fund  would be able to  deliver  the
underlying  security  in  settlement,  a Fund  may  have  to  sell  part  of its
securities in order to make settlement in cash, and the price of such securities
might decline before they could be sold.

         If a Fund  exercises  a put option on an index  which it has  purchased
before final  determination  of the closing index value for the day, it runs the
risk that the level of the underlying  index may change before closing.  If this
change causes the exercised option to fall  "out-of-the-money," the Fund will be
required to pay the difference  between the closing index value and the exercise
price of the option  (multiplied by the  applicable  multiplier) to the assigned
writer.  Although  a Fund  may be  able to  minimize  this  risk by  withholding
exercise  instructions  until just  before the daily  cutoff  time or by selling
rather than  exercising  an option when the index level is close to the exercise
price, it may not be possible to eliminate this risk entirely because the cutoff
time for index  options  may be  earlier  than  those  fixed for other  types of
options and may occur before definitive closing index values are announced.

         Trading in Futures.  A futures contract provides for the future sale by
one party and  purchase  by another  party of a  specified  amount of a specific
financial  instrument (e.g., units of a stock index) at a specified price, date,
time and place  designated at the time the contract is made.  Brokerage fees are
incurred when a futures  contract is bought or sold and margin  deposits must be
maintained. Entering into a contract to buy is commonly referred to as buying or
purchasing a contract or holding a long  position.  Entering  into a contract to
sell is commonly referred to as selling a contract or holding a short position.

         Unlike when a Fund  purchases  or sells a  security,  no price would be
paid or received by a Fund upon the purchase or sale of a futures contract. Upon
entering  into a futures  contract,  and to maintain a Fund's open  positions in
futures  contracts,  a Fund would be required to deposit with its custodian in a
segregated  account in the name of the  futures  broker an amount of cash,  U.S.
government  securities,  suitable  money  market  instruments,  or other  liquid
securities,  known as "initial margin." A margin deposit is intended to ensure a
Fund's  performance of the futures  contract.  The initial margin required for a
particular  futures  contract is set by the  exchange  on which the  contract is
traded,  and may be  significantly  modified  from time to time by the  exchange
during the term of the contract. Futures contracts are customarily purchased and
sold on  margins  that may  range  upward  from less than 5% of the value of the
contract being traded.

         If the price of an open  futures  contract  changes (by increase in the
case of a sale or by decrease in the case of a purchase) so that the loss on the
futures contract reaches a point at which the margin on deposit does not satisfy
margin requirements, the broker will require an increase in the margin. However,
if the value of a position  increases  because of favorable price changes in the
futures  contract so that the margin deposit  exceeds the required  margin,  the
broker will pay the excess to a Fund.

         These subsequent  payments,  called "variation margin," to and from the
futures broker are made on a daily basis as the price of the  underlying  assets
fluctuate  making the long and short  positions in the futures  contract more or
less  valuable,  a process  known as "marking to the  market." A Fund expects to
earn interest income on its margin deposits. Although certain futures contracts,
by their terms, require actual future delivery of and payment for the underlying
instruments,  in practice most futures  contracts are usually  closed out before
the  delivery  date.  Closing out an open futures  contract  purchase or sale is
effected by  entering  into an  offsetting  futures  contract  purchase or sale,
respectively,  for the same aggregate amount of the identical securities and the
same delivery date. If the  offsetting  purchase price is less than the original
sale  price,  a Fund  realizes a gain;  if it is more,  a Fund  realizes a loss.
Conversely,  if the  offsetting  sale price is more than the  original  purchase
price,  a Fund  realizes a gain;  if it is less,  a Fund  realizes  a loss.  The
transaction costs must also be included in these  calculations.  There can be no
assurance,  however,  that a Fund  will  be  able to  enter  into an  offsetting
transaction with respect to a particular  futures contract at a particular time.
If a Fund is not able to  enter  into an  offsetting  transaction,  a Fund  will
continue to be required to maintain the margin deposits on the futures contract.

         A stock  index  futures  contract  is an  agreement  in which one party
agrees to  deliver  to the other an amount of cash  equal to a  specific  amount
multiplied by the difference  between the value of a specific stock index at the
close  of the last  trading  day of the  contract  and the  price  at which  the
agreement is made. No physical delivery of securities is made. For example,  one
contract in the Financial Times Stock Exchange 100 Index future is a contract to
buy 25 pounds  sterling  multiplied  by the level of the UK Financial  Times 100
Share Index on a given future date. Settlement of a stock index futures contract
may or may not be in the underlying security. If not in the underlying security,
then  settlement  will be made in cash,  equivalent  over time to the difference
between the contract price and the actual price of the  underlying  asset at the
time the stock index futures contract expires.

         Options on futures  are  similar to options on  underlying  instruments
except that options on futures give the purchaser  the right,  in return for the
premium paid, to assume a position in a futures contract (a long position if the
option is a call and a short  position  if the option is a put),  rather than to
purchase or sell the futures contract, at a specified exercise price at any time
during the period of the option.  Upon  exercise of the option,  the delivery of
the  futures  position  by the  writer of the option to the holder of the option
will be accompanied by the delivery of the  accumulated  balance in the writer's
futures margin account which  represents the amount by which the market price of
the futures  contract,  at exercise,  exceeds (in the case of a call) or is less
than (in the case of a put) the  exercise  price of the  option  on the  futures
contract.  Alternatively,  settlement may be made totally in cash. Purchasers of
options who fail to exercise  their  options prior to the exercise date suffer a
loss of the premium paid.

         The writer of an option on a futures  contract  is  required to deposit
margin  pursuant  to  requirements   similar  to  those  applicable  to  futures
contracts. Upon exercise of an option on a futures contract, the delivery of the
futures position by the writer of the option to the holder of the option will be
accompanied  by  delivery  of the  accumulated  balance in the  writer's  margin
account.  This amount  will be equal to the amount by which the market  price of
the futures contract at the time of exercise exceeds,  in the case of a call, or
is less  than,  in the case of a put,  the  exercise  price of the option on the
futures contract.

         Although  financial  futures  contracts  by their terms call for actual
delivery or acceptance of securities, in most cases the contracts are closed out
before the settlement date without the making or taking of delivery. Closing out
is accomplished by effecting an offsetting transaction.  A futures contract sale
is closed out by effecting a futures  contract  purchase for the same  aggregate
amount of securities  and the same delivery  date. If the sale price exceeds the
offsetting  purchase price, the seller  immediately would be paid the difference
and would  realize a gain.  If the  offsetting  purchase  price exceeds the sale
price, the seller would immediately pay the difference and would realize a loss.
Similarly,  a futures  contract  purchase  is closed out by  effecting a futures
contract  sale  for the  same  securities  and the same  delivery  date.  If the
offsetting sale price exceeds the purchase price,  the purchaser would realize a
gain,  whereas if the purchase  price  exceeds the  offsetting  sale price,  the
purchaser would realize a loss.  Commissions on financial  futures contracts and
related  options  transactions  may be higher  than those  which  would apply to
purchases and sales of securities directly.

         A public  market  exists in interest  rate futures  contracts  covering
primarily  the  following  financial  instruments:  U.S.  Treasury  bonds;  U.S.
Treasury notes;  Government  National  Mortgage  Association  ("GNMA")  modified
pass-through mortgage-backed securities; three-month U.S. Treasury bills; 90-day
commercial paper; bank certificates of deposit;  and Eurodollar  certificates of
deposit.  It is expected that futures contracts trading in additional  financial
instruments will be authorized. The standard contract size is generally $100,000
for futures  contracts in U.S.  Treasury bonds,  U.S.  Treasury notes,  and GNMA
pass-through   securities  and  $1,000,000  for  the  other  designated  futures
contracts.  A public  market  exists in futures  contracts  covering a number of
indices,  including,  but not limited to, the  Standard & Poor's 500 Index,  the
Standard  & Poor's 100 Index,  the  NASDAQ 100 Index,  the Value Line  Composite
Index and the New York Stock Exchange Composite Index.

         Regulatory  Matters Relating to Futures  Contracts and Related Options.
The Staff of the Commission has taken the position that the purchase and sale of
futures  contracts  and the writing of related  options may give rise to "senior
securities" for the purposes of the restrictions  contained in Section 18 of the
1940 Act on investment companies' issuing senior securities.  However, the Staff
has taken  the  position  that no  senior  security  will be  created  if a Fund
maintains  in a segregated  account an amount of cash or other liquid  assets at
least equal to the amount of the Fund's obligation under the futures contract or
option.  Each Fund will conduct its purchases and sales of any futures contracts
and writing of related options transactions in accordance with this requirement.

     Certain Risks Relating to Futures Contracts and Related Options.  There are
special risks involved in futures transactions.

                  Volatility and Leverage.  The prices of futures  contracts are
volatile  and are  influenced,  among other  things,  by actual and  anticipated
changes in the market and interest  rates,  which in turn are affected by fiscal
and  monetary  policies and  national  and  international  policies and economic
events.

                  Most  United  States  futures  exchanges  limit the  amount of
fluctuation  permitted in futures  contract  prices during a single trading day.
The daily  limit  establishes  the  maximum  amount  that the price of a futures
contract may vary either up or down from the previous day's  settlement price at
the end of a  trading  session.  Once the  daily  limit  has been  reached  in a
particular  type of  futures  contract,  no trades  may be made on that day at a
price beyond that limit.  The daily limit governs only price  movement  during a
particular  trading day and therefore does not limit potential  losses,  because
the limit may prevent the liquidation of unfavorable positions. Futures contract
prices  have  occasionally  moved to the  daily  limit for  several  consecutive
trading days with little or no trading, thereby preventing prompt liquidation of
futures positions and subjecting some futures traders to substantial losses.

                  Because of the low margin deposits  required,  futures trading
involves an extremely high degree of leverage.  As a result,  a relatively small
price  movement in a futures  contract may result in immediate  and  substantial
loss, as well as gain, to the investor. For example, if at the time of purchase,
10% of the value of the futures  contract is deposited  as margin,  a subsequent
10% decrease in the value of the futures  contract  would result in a total loss
of the margin deposit,  before any deduction for the  transaction  costs, if the
account  were then closed out. A 15%  decrease  would  result in a loss equal to
150% of the original  margin  deposit,  if the contract were closed out. Thus, a
purchase  or sale of a futures  contract  may  result in losses in excess of the
amount invested in the futures contract.  However,  a Fund would presumably have
sustained comparable losses if, instead of the futures contract, it had invested
in the underlying instrument and sold it after the decline.  Furthermore, in the
case of a futures  contract  purchase,  in order to be  certain  that a Fund has
sufficient assets to satisfy its obligations  under a futures  contract,  a Fund
earmarks to the futures  contract  liquid  assets  equal in value to the current
value of the underlying instrument less the margin deposit.

                  Liquidity.  A Fund  may  elect  to  close  some  or all of its
futures positions at any time prior to their  expiration.  A Fund would do so to
reduce  exposure  represented  by long futures  positions  or increase  exposure
represented by short futures positions. A Fund may close its positions by taking
opposite  positions  which would operate to terminate the Fund's position in the
futures contracts.  Final determinations of variation margin would then be made,
additional  cash would be required to be paid by or released to a Fund, and such
Fund would realize a loss or a gain.

                  Futures  contracts  may be closed out only on the  exchange or
board of trade where the contracts  were initially  traded.  Although a Fund may
intend to purchase or sell  futures  contracts  only on  exchanges  or boards of
trade where there appears to be an active  market,  there is no assurance that a
liquid  market on an  exchange  or board of trade will exist for any  particular
contract at any  particular  time.  In such  event,  it might not be possible to
close a futures  contract,  and in the event of adverse price movements,  a Fund
would  continue to be required to make daily cash payments of variation  margin.
However,  in the event futures  contracts have been used to hedge the underlying
instruments, a Fund would continue to hold the underlying instruments subject to
the  hedge  until  the  futures   contracts   could  be   terminated.   In  such
circumstances,  an increase in the price of the underlying instruments,  if any,
might partially or completely offset losses on the futures contract. However, as
described  below,  there  is no  guarantee  that  the  price  of the  underlying
instruments  will, in fact,  correlate  with the price  movements in the futures
contract and thus provide an offset to losses on a futures contract.

                  Hedging  Risk. A decision of whether,  when,  and how to hedge
involves skill and judgment, and even a well-conceived hedge may be unsuccessful
to some degree because of unexpected  market  behavior,  market or interest rate
trends.  There are several risks in connection with the use by a Fund of futures
contracts  as a  hedging  device.  One  risk  arises  because  of the  imperfect
correlation  between  movements  in the  prices  of the  futures  contracts  and
movements in the prices of the underlying  instruments  which are the subject of
the  hedge.  The  Sub-advisor  will,  however,  attempt  to reduce  this risk by
entering into futures  contracts whose movements,  in its judgment,  will have a
significant  correlation  with  movements  in the prices of a Fund's  underlying
instruments sought to be hedged.

                  Successful  use of  futures  contracts  by a Fund for  hedging
purposes  is also  subject  to a  Sub-advisor's  ability  to  correctly  predict
movements in the direction of the market.  It is possible that,  when a Fund has
sold futures to hedge its portfolio against a decline in the market,  the index,
indices,  or  underlying  instruments  on which the futures  are  written  might
advance and the value of the underlying instruments held in the Fund's portfolio
might decline. If this were to occur, a Fund would lose money on the futures and
also would experience a decline in value in its underlying instruments. However,
while this might occur to a certain  degree,  the  Sub-advisor  may believe that
over  time  the  value  of a  Fund's  portfolio  will  tend to move in the  same
direction  as the market  indices  which are  intended to correlate to the price
movements of the underlying instruments sought to be hedged. It is also possible
that if a Fund were to hedge against the  possibility of a decline in the market
(adversely  affecting the  underlying  instruments  held in its  portfolio)  and
prices  instead  increased,  the Fund would  lose part or all of the  benefit of
increased value of those underlying  instruments that it has hedged,  because it
would have  offsetting  losses in its futures  positions.  In addition,  in such
situations,  if a Fund had  insufficient  cash, it might have to sell underlying
instruments  to  meet  daily  variation  margin  requirements.   Such  sales  of
underlying  instruments  might be, but would not  necessarily  be, at  increased
prices  (which  would  reflect  the  rising  market).  A Fund might have to sell
underlying instruments at a time when it would be disadvantageous to do so.



<PAGE>


                  In  addition  to  the  possibility  that  there  might  be  an
imperfect correlation,  or no correlation at all, between price movements in the
futures  contracts  and the portion of the  portfolio  being  hedged,  the price
movements  of  futures  contracts  might  not  correlate  perfectly  with  price
movements  in the  underlying  instruments  due to certain  market  distortions.
First,  all participants in the futures market are subject to margin deposit and
maintenance   requirements.   Rather  than  meeting  additional  margin  deposit
requirements,   investors  might  close  futures  contracts  through  offsetting
transactions which could distort the normal relationship  between the underlying
instruments and futures markets.  Second, the margin requirements in the futures
market are less onerous than margin requirements in the securities markets,  and
as a  result  the  futures  market  might  attract  more  speculators  than  the
securities  markets do.  Increased  participation  by speculators in the futures
market might also cause temporary price  distortions.  Due to the possibility of
price  distortion  in the  futures  market  and also  because  of the  imperfect
correlation between price movements in the underlying  instruments and movements
in the prices of futures  contracts,  even a correct  forecast of general market
trends by the Sub-advisor might not result in a successful  hedging  transaction
over a very short time period.

         Certain Risks of Options on Futures Contracts. A Fund may seek to close
out an option  position by writing or buying an offsetting  option  covering the
same index,  underlying  instruments,  or contract and having the same  exercise
price and  expiration  date. The ability to establish and close out positions on
such options will be subject to the  maintenance of a liquid  secondary  market.
Reasons for the absence of a liquid  secondary market on an exchange include the
following:  (i) there may be insufficient  trading  interest in certain options;
(ii)  restrictions  may be imposed by an  exchange  on opening  transactions  or
closing  transactions  or  both;  (iii)  trading  halts,  suspensions  or  other
restrictions  may be imposed  with  respect to  particular  classes or series of
options, or underlying instruments; (iv) unusual or unforeseen circumstances may
interrupt normal operations on an exchange; (v) the facilities of an exchange or
a  clearing  corporation  may not at all times be  adequate  to  handle  current
trading  volume;  or (vi) one or more  exchanges  could,  for  economic or other
reasons,  decide or be compelled at some future date to discontinue  the trading
of options  (or a  particular  class or series of  options),  in which event the
secondary  market on that exchange (or in the class or series of options)  would
cease to exist,  although  outstanding  options  on the  exchange  that had been
issued by a clearing  corporation  as a result of trades on that exchange  would
continue to be exercisable in accordance with their terms. There is no assurance
that higher than anticipated  trading activity or other unforeseen  events might
not,  at  times,  render  certain  of the  facilities  of  any  of the  clearing
corporations inadequate, and thereby result in the institution by an exchange of
special  procedures  which may interfere with the timely execution of customers'
orders.

         Foreign  Futures  and  Options.  Participation  in foreign  futures and
foreign options transactions involves the execution and clearing of trades on or
subject to the rules of a foreign board of trade.  Neither the National  Futures
Association nor any domestic exchange regulates activities of any foreign boards
of trade, including the execution, delivery and clearing of transactions, or has
the power to compel  enforcement of the rules of a foreign board of trade or any
applicable  foreign law. This is true even if the exchange is formally linked to
a domestic  market so that a position taken on the market may be liquidated by a
transaction on another  market.  Moreover,  such laws or  regulations  will vary
depending on the foreign country in which the foreign futures or foreign options
transaction  occurs.  For these reasons,  customers who trade foreign futures or
foreign options contracts may not be afforded certain of the protective measures
provided  by  the  Commodity   Exchange  Act,  the  Commodity   Futures  Trading
Commission's  ("CFTC")  regulations  and  the  rules  of  the  National  Futures
Association  and any domestic  exchange,  including the right to use reparations
proceedings  before the Commission and arbitration  proceedings  provided by the
National Futures  Association or any domestic futures  exchange.  In particular,
funds   received  from  customers  for  foreign   futures  or  foreign   options
transactions  may not be  provided  the same  protections  as funds  received in
respect of transactions  on United States futures  exchanges.  In addition,  the
price of any foreign futures or foreign  options  contract and,  therefore,  the
potential profit and loss thereon may be affected by any variance in the foreign
exchange rate between the time an order is placed and the time it is liquidated,
offset or exercised.

         Foreign  Currency  Futures  Contracts  and Related  Options.  A forward
foreign currency  exchange contract involves an obligation to purchase or sell a
specific  currency at a future date,  which may be any fixed number of days from
the date of the contract agreed upon by the parties,  at a price set at the time
of the contract.  These contracts are principally traded in the interbank market
conducted  directly between currency traders (usually large,  commercial  banks)
and their customers.  A forward contract  generally has no deposit  requirement,
and no commissions are charged at any stage for trades.

         Depending  on  the  applicable  investment  policies  and  restrictions
applicable to a Fund, a Fund may generally enter into forward  foreign  currency
exchange  contracts under two  circumstances.  First,  when a Fund enters into a
contract  for the  purchase  or  sale of a  security  denominated  in a  foreign
currency,  it may desire to "lock in" the U.S. dollar price of the security.  By
entering into a forward contract for the purchase or sale, for a fixed amount of
dollars,  of the amount of foreign currency involved in the underlying  security
transactions,  the Fund may be able to protect  itself  against a possible  loss
resulting from an adverse change in the relationship between the U.S. dollar and
the subject foreign  currency during the period between the date the security is
purchased or sold and the date on which payment is made or received.

         Second,  when a Sub-advisor  believes that the currency of a particular
foreign  country  may suffer or enjoy a  substantial  movement  against  another
currency,  including the U.S.  dollar,  it may enter into a forward  contract to
sell or buy the amount of the former foreign  currency,  approximating the value
of some or all of a Fund's  securities  denominated  in such  foreign  currency.
Alternatively,  where  appropriate,  a Fund may hedge all or part of its foreign
currency  exposure through the use of a basket of currencies or a proxy currency
where  such  currencies  or  currency  act  as  an  effective  proxy  for  other
currencies.  In such a case, a Fund may enter into a forward  contract where the
amount of the  foreign  currency  to be sold  exceeds  the  value of the  Fund's
securities  denominated  in  such  currency.  The  use of  this  basket  hedging
technique  may be more  efficient  and  economical  than  entering into separate
forward  contracts for each currency held in a Fund. The precise matching of the
forward  contract  amounts  and the value of the  securities  involved  will not
generally  be  possible  since the future  value of such  securities  in foreign
currencies  will change as a  consequence  of market  movements  in the value of
those  securities  between the date the forward contract is entered into and the
date it matures.  The  projection  of  short-term  currency  market  movement is
extremely  difficult,  and the  successful  execution  of a  short-term  hedging
strategy is highly uncertain.

         As  indicated  above,  it  is  impossible  to  forecast  with  absolute
precision  the market value of portfolio  securities  at the  expiration  of the
forward  contract.  Accordingly,  it may be  necessary  for a Fund  to  purchase
additional  foreign  currency  on the spot  market (and bear the expense of such
purchase) if the market value of the security is less than the amount of foreign
currency a Fund is  obligated  to deliver  and if a decision is made to sell the
security  and make  delivery  of the  foreign  currency.  Conversely,  it may be
necessary to sell on the spot market some of the foreign currency  received upon
the sale of the  portfolio  security if its market  value  exceeds the amount of
foreign currency a Fund is obligated to deliver.  However, as noted, in order to
avoid excessive transactions and transaction costs, a Fund may use liquid assets
denominated  in any currency to cover the amount by which the value of a forward
contract exceeds the value of the securities to which it relates.

         If a Fund retains the portfolio  security to which the foreign currency
hedging  transaction  related  and  engages in an  offsetting  forward  contract
transaction,  the Fund will incur a gain or a loss (as  described  below) to the
extent that there has been  movement  in forward  contract  prices.  If the Fund
engages  in an  offsetting  transaction,  it may  subsequently  enter into a new
forward  contract to sell the foreign  currency.  Should  forward prices decline
during the period between a Fund's entering into a forward contract for the sale
of a foreign currency and the date it enters into an offsetting contract for the
purchase of the foreign currency, the Fund will realize a gain to the extent the
price of the currency it has agreed to sell exceeds the price of the currency it
has agreed to purchase.  Should  forward prices  increase,  a Fund will suffer a
loss to the  extent  of the price of the  currency  it has  agreed  to  purchase
exceeds the price of the currency it has agreed to sell.

         As noted above, a currency  futures contract sale creates an obligation
by a Fund,  as seller,  to  deliver  the  amount of  currency  called for in the
contract at a  specified  future time for a special  price.  A currency  futures
contract  purchase  creates  an  obligation  by a Fund,  as  purchaser,  to take
delivery  of an amount of  currency  at a  specified  future time at a specified
price.  Although the terms of currency futures contracts specify actual delivery
or receipt, in most instances the contracts are closed out before the settlement
date without the making or taking of delivery of the currency.  Closing out of a
currency futures contract is effected by entering into an offsetting purchase or
sale transaction. Unlike a currency futures contract, which requires the parties
to buy and sell currency on a set date, an option on a currency futures contract
entitles  its holder to decide on or before a future date  whether to enter into
such a  contract.  If the holder  decides  not to enter into the  contract,  the
premium paid for the option is fixed at the point of sale.

         Interest  Rate Swaps and Interest  Rate Caps and Floors.  Interest rate
swaps  involve the exchange by the Fund with another  party of their  respective
commitments  to pay or receive  interest,  e.g.,  an exchange  of floating  rate
payments for fixed rate payments.  The exchange commitments can involve payments
to be made in the same currency or in different  currencies.  The purchase of an
interest rate cap entitles the purchaser,  to the extent that a specified  index
exceeds a  predetermined  interest  rate,  to receive  payments of interest on a
contractually  based  principal  amount from the party selling the interest rate
cap.  The purchase of an interest  rate floor  entitles  the  purchaser,  to the
extent that a specified  index falls below a  predetermined  interest  rate,  to
receive payments of interest on a contractually  based principal amount from the
party selling the interest rate floor.

         Hybrid Instruments.  Hybrid instruments combine the elements of futures
contracts  or  options  with  those of debt,  preferred  equity or a  depository
instrument.  The risks of investing in hybrid instruments  reflect a combination
of the risks from investing in  securities,  futures and  currencies,  including
volatility and lack of liquidity. Reference is made to the discussion of futures
and  forward  contracts  in this  Statement  for a  discussion  of these  risks.
Further,  the prices of the  hybrid  instrument  and the  related  commodity  or
currency  may  not  move in the  same  direction  or at the  same  time.  Hybrid
instruments  may bear  interest or pay  preferred  dividends at below market (or
even relatively  nominal)  rates. In addition,  because the purchase and sale of
hybrid  instruments  could  take  place in an  over-the-counter  market  or in a
private transaction between a Fund and the seller of the hybrid instrument,  the
creditworthiness  of the other party to the  transaction  would be a risk factor
which a Fund would have to consider.  Hybrid instruments also may not be subject
to the  regulation  of the  CFTC,  which  generally  regulates  the  trading  of
commodity futures by U.S. persons, the Commission, which regulates the offer and
sale of securities by and to U.S. persons, or any other governmental  regulatory
authority.

         Foreign Currency Exchange-Related Securities.  Certain Funds may invest
in foreign  currency  warrants,  principal  exchange rate linked  securities and
performance indexed paper.

                  Foreign  Currency  Warrants.  Foreign  currency  warrants  are
warrants which entitle the holder to receive from their issuer an amount of cash
(generally,  for warrants issued in the United States, in U.S. dollars) which is
calculated  pursuant to a  predetermined  formula and based on the exchange rate
between a specified foreign currency and the U.S. dollar as of the exercise date
of the warrant.  Foreign currency warrants  generally are exercisable upon their
issuance and expire as of a specified date and time.  Foreign currency  warrants
have been issued in connection  with U.S.  dollar-denominated  debt offerings by
major corporate  issuers in an attempt to reduce the foreign  currency  exchange
risk which, from the point of view of prospective  purchasers of the securities,
is inherent in the  international  fixed-income  marketplace.  Foreign  currency
warrants may attempt to reduce the foreign  exchange  risk assumed by purchasers
of a security by, for example, providing for a supplemental payment in the event
that the U.S. dollar  depreciates  against the value of a major foreign currency
such as the  Japanese Yen or German  Deutschmark.  The formula used to determine
the amount  payable  upon  exercise of a foreign  currency  warrant may make the
warrant worthless unless the applicable  foreign currency exchange rate moves in
a particular  direction (e.g., unless the U.S. dollar appreciates or depreciates
against  the  particular  foreign  currency  to which the  warrant  is linked or
indexed). Foreign currency warrants are severable from the debt obligations with
which they may be  offered,  and may be listed on  exchanges.  Foreign  currency
warrants may be exercisable  only in certain  minimum  amounts,  and an investor
wishing to exercise warrants who possesses less than the minimum number required
for  exercise  may be  required  either  to sell  the  warrants  or to  purchase
additional warrants, thereby incurring additional transaction costs. In the case
of any exercise of warrants, there may be a time delay between the time a holder
of warrants  gives  instructions  to  exercise  and the time the  exchange  rate
relating to exercise is  determined,  during which time the exchange  rate could
change  significantly,  thereby  affecting  both the market and cash  settlement
values of the warrants being exercised.  The expiration date of the warrants may
be accelerated  if the warrants  should be delisted from an exchange or if their
trading should be suspended  permanently,  which would result in the loss of any
remaining "time value" of the warrants (i.e., the difference between the current
market  value and the  exercise  value of the  warrants),  and,  in the case the
warrants were  "out-of-the-money,"  in a total loss of the purchase price of the
warrants.  Warrants are generally unsecured obligations of their issuers and are
not  standardized  foreign  currency  options  issued  by the  Options  Clearing
Corporation ("OCC"). Unlike foreign currency options issued by OCC, the terms of
foreign  exchange  warrants  generally  will  not be  amended  in the  event  of
governmental or regulatory  actions affecting  exchange rates or in the event of
the imposition of other regulatory controls affecting the international currency
markets.  The initial  public  offering  price of foreign  currency  warrants is
generally  considerably in excess of the price that a commercial user of foreign
currencies might pay in the interbank  market for a comparable  option involving
significantly  larger amounts of foreign  currencies.  Foreign currency warrants
are subject to significant  foreign exchange risk,  including risks arising from
complex political or economic factors.

                  Principal Exchange Rate Linked Securities.  Principal exchange
rate linked securities are debt obligations the principal on which is payable at
maturity in an amount that may vary based on the exchange  rate between the U.S.
dollar and a particular  foreign  currency at or about that time.  The return on
"standard"  principal exchange rate linked securities is enhanced if the foreign
currency to which the security is linked  appreciates  against the U.S.  dollar,
and is adversely affected by increases in the foreign exchange value of the U.S.
dollar.  "Reverse"  principal  exchange  rate  linked  securities  are  like the
"standard" securities,  except that their return is enhanced by increases in the
value of the U.S.  dollar and  adversely  impacted by  increases in the value of
foreign currency. Interest payments on the securities are generally made in U.S.
dollars at rates that  reflect the degree of foreign  currency  risk  assumed or
given up by the  purchaser of the notes (i.e.,  at  relatively  higher  interest
rates if the  purchaser  has  assumed  some of the  foreign  exchange  risk,  or
relatively  lower  interest  rates if the issuer has assumed some of the foreign
exchange  risk,  based on the  expectations  of the current  market).  Principal
exchange rate linked  securities may in limited cases be subject to acceleration
of  maturity  (generally,  not  without  the  consent  of  the  holders  of  the
securities),  which may have an  adverse  impact  on the value of the  principal
payment to be made at maturity.

                  Performance  Indexed Paper.  Performance indexed paper is U.S.
dollar-denominated  commercial  paper the  yield of which is  linked to  certain
foreign  exchange  rate  movements.  The yield to the  investor  on  performance
indexed paper is  established  at maturity as a function of spot exchange  rates
between  the U.S.  dollar  and a  designated  currency  as of or about that time
(generally, the spot exchange rate two days prior to maturity). The yield to the
investor  will be  within  a range  stipulated  at the time of  purchase  of the
obligation,  generally  with a guaranteed  minimum rate of return that is below,
and a  potential  maximum  rate of return that is above,  market  yields on U.S.
dollar-denominated  commercial paper, with both the minimum and maximum rates of
return on the investment  corresponding to the minimum and maximum values of the
spot exchange rate two business days prior to maturity.

         Zero-Coupon  Securities.  Zero-coupon securities pay no cash income and
are sold at  substantial  discounts  from their value at maturity.  When held to
maturity,  their entire income,  which consists of accretion of discount,  comes
from the  difference  between  the  issue  price and  their  value at  maturity.
Zero-coupon  securities  are subject to greater market value  fluctuations  from
changing  interest rates than debt  obligations of comparable  maturities  which
make current distributions of interest (cash).  Zero-coupon securities which are
convertible into common stock offer the opportunity for capital  appreciation as
increases (or decreases) in market value of such securities  closely follows the
movements  in the  market  value of the  underlying  common  stock.  Zero-coupon
convertible  securities  generally  are  expected to be less  volatile  than the
underlying common stocks, as they usually are issued with maturities of 15 years
or less and are issued with options and/or  redemption  features  exercisable by
the holder of the  obligation  entitling the holder to redeem the obligation and
receive a defined cash payment.

         Zero-coupon  securities  include securities issued directly by the U.S.
Treasury,  and U.S. Treasury bonds or notes and their unmatured interest coupons
and  receipts  for  their  underlying  principal  ("coupons")  which  have  been
separated by their holder,  typically a custodian  bank or investment  brokerage
firm. A holder will separate the interest coupons from the underlying  principal
(the "corpus") of the U.S. Treasury  security.  A number of securities firms and
banks have  stripped the  interest  coupons and receipts and then resold them in
custodial receipt programs with a number of different names,  including Treasury
Income Growth  Receipts  ("TIGRSTM")  and  Certificate  of Accrual on Treasuries
("CATSTM").  The underlying U.S. Treasury bonds and notes themselves are held in
book-entry form at the Federal Reserve Bank or, in the case of bearer securities
(i.e.,  unregistered  securities  which are owned  ostensibly  by the  bearer or
holder  thereof),  in trust on  behalf of the  owners  thereof.  Counsel  to the
underwriters  of these  certificates or other evidences of ownership of the U.S.
Treasury  securities have stated that, for federal tax and securities  purposes,
in their opinion  purchasers of such  certificates,  such as a Fund, most likely
will  be  deemed  the  beneficial  holder  of  the  underlying  U.S.  Government
securities.

         The U.S. Treasury has facilitated transfers of ownership of zero-coupon
securities by accounting  separately for the beneficial  ownership of particular
interest coupon and corpus payments on Treasury  securities  through the Federal
Reserve  book-entry  record  keeping  system.  The  Federal  Reserve  program as
established by the Treasury Department is known as "STRIPS" or "Separate Trading
of Registered Interest and Principal of Securities." Under the STRIPS program, a
Fund will be able to have its  beneficial  ownership of  zero-coupon  securities
recorded directly in the book-entry  record-keeping  system in lieu of having to
hold certificates or other evidences of ownership of the underlying U.S.
Treasury securities.

         When U.S.  Treasury  obligations  have been stripped of their unmatured
interest  coupons  by the  holder,  the  principal  or  corpus is sold at a deep
discount  because the buyer  receives  only the right to receive a future  fixed
payment on the  security  and does not receive  any rights to periodic  interest
(cash) payments. Once stripped or separated,  the corpus and coupons may be sold
separately.  Typically,  the coupons are sold  separately  or grouped with other
coupons with like  maturity  dates and sold bundled in such form.  Purchasers of
stripped  obligations   acquire,  in  effect,   discount  obligations  that  are
economically  identical to the  zero-coupon  securities  that the Treasury sells
itself.

         When-Issued Securities. The price of when-issued securities,  which may
be expressed in yield terms,  is fixed at the time the commitment to purchase is
made, but delivery and payment for the  when-issued  securities  take place at a
later date. Normally, the settlement date occurs within 90 days of the purchase.
During the period between purchase and settlement,  no payment is made by a Fund
to the issuer and no interest accrues to such Fund. Forward  commitments involve
a risk of loss if the value of the  security to be purchased  declines  prior to
the settlement  date,  which risk is in addition to the risk of decline in value
of a Fund's other assets. While when-issued  securities may be sold prior to the
settlement  date, a Fund intends to purchase such securities with the purpose of
actually acquiring them unless a sale appears desirable for investment reasons.

         Mortgage-Backed Securities. Principal and interest payments made on the
mortgages  in  an  underlying  mortgage  pool  are  passed  through  to a  Fund.
Unscheduled  prepayments of principal  shorten the securities'  weighted average
life and may lower  their  total  return.  (When a  mortgage  in the  underlying
mortgage pool is prepaid, an unscheduled  principal prepayment is passed through
to a Fund.  This  principal  is  returned  to a Fund at par.  As a result,  if a
mortgage  security were trading at a premium,  its total return would be lowered
by prepayments, and if a mortgage security were trading at a discount, its total
return would be increased by  prepayments.)  The value of these  securities also
may change because of changes in the market's perception of the creditworthiness
of the federal  agency that issued them.  In addition,  the mortgage  securities
market  in  general  may  be  adversely  affected  by  changes  in  governmental
regulation or tax policies.

         Asset-Backed Securities. Asset-backed securities directly or indirectly
represent a  participation  interest  in, or are secured by and payable  from, a
stream of payments  generated  by  particular  assets  such as motor  vehicle or
credit card receivables. Payments of principal and interest may be guaranteed up
to certain amounts and for a certain time period by a letter of credit issued by
a financial  institution  unaffiliated with the entities issuing the securities.
Asset-backed  securities  may be  classified  as  pass-through  certificates  or
collateralized obligations.

         Pass-through  certificates are asset-backed  securities which represent
an undivided  fractional  ownership  interest in an  underlying  pool of assets.
Pass-through certificates usually provide for payments of principal and interest
received to be passed  through to their  holders,  usually  after  deduction for
certain  costs  and  expenses  incurred  in  administering  the  pool.   Because
pass-through  certificates  represent  an ownership  interest in the  underlying
assets,  the  holders  thereof  bear  directly  the risk of any  defaults by the
obligors on the underlying assets not covered by any credit support.  See "Types
of Credit Support" below.

         Asset-backed  securities issued in the form of debt  instruments,  also
known as  collateralized  obligations,  are  generally  issued  as the debt of a
special  purpose entity  organized  solely for the purpose of owning such assets
and  issuing  such  debt.  Such  assets  are most often  trade,  credit  card or
automobile receivables.  The assets collateralizing such asset-backed securities
are pledged to a trustee or  custodian  for the benefit of the holders  thereof.
Such  issuers   generally  hold  no  assets  other  than  those  underlying  the
asset-backed  securities and any credit support provided. As a result,  although
payments on such asset-backed  securities are obligations of the issuers, in the
event of defaults  on the  underlying  assets not covered by any credit  support
(see "Types of Credit  Support"),  the  issuing  entities  are  unlikely to have
sufficient  assets to satisfy  their  obligations  on the  related  asset-backed
securities.

                  Methods of  Allocating  Cash  Flows.  While many  asset-backed
securities  are  issued  with  only one  class of  security,  many  asset-backed
securities are issued in more than one class, each with different payment terms.
Multiple class asset-backed  securities are issued for two main reasons.  First,
multiple  classes may be used as a method of providing  credit support.  This is
accomplished  typically  through  creation of one or more classes whose right to
payments on the  asset-backed  security is made subordinate to the right to such
payments  of the  remaining  class or  classes.  See "Types of Credit  Support."
Second,  multiple  classes may permit the  issuance of  securities  with payment
terms, interest rates or other characteristics differing both from those of each
other  and from  those of the  underlying  assets.  Examples  include  so-called
"strips"  (asset-backed  securities  entitling  the  holder to  disproportionate
interests with respect to the allocation of interest and principal of the assets
backing  the  security),   and  securities   with  a  class  or  classes  having
characteristics which mimic the characteristics of non-asset-backed  securities,
such as  floating  interest  rates  (i.e.,  interest  rates  which  adjust  as a
specified benchmark changes) or scheduled amortization of principal.

                  Asset-backed  securities  in which the payment  streams on the
underlying assets are allocated in a manner different than those described above
may be issued in the future. A Fund may invest in such  asset-backed  securities
if such investment is otherwise  consistent  with its investment  objectives and
policies and with the investment restrictions of the Fund.

                  Types of Credit  Support.  Asset-backed  securities  are often
backed by a pool of assets representing the obligations of a number of different
parties.  To lessen the effect of failures by obligors on  underlying  assets to
make payments,  such  securities may contain  elements of credit  support.  Such
credit  support  falls into two classes:  liquidity  protection  and  protection
against  ultimate  default  by an obligor on the  underlying  assets.  Liquidity
protection  refers  to the  provision  of  advances,  generally  by  the  entity
administering  the pool of assets,  to ensure  that  scheduled  payments  on the
underlying  pool are  made in a  timely  fashion.  Protection  against  ultimate
default ensures ultimate payment of the obligations on at least a portion of the
assets  in the  pool.  Such  protection  may  be  provided  through  guarantees,
insurance  policies or letters of credit  obtained from third  parties,  through
various means of  structuring  the  transaction or through a combination of such
approaches.  Examples of asset-backed securities with credit support arising out
of the structure of the  transaction  include  "senior-subordinated  securities"
(multiple class  asset-backed  securities  with certain  classes  subordinate to
other  classes as to the  payment of  principal  thereon,  with the result  that
defaults  on the  underlying  assets  are  borne  first  by the  holders  of the
subordinated class) and asset-backed securities that have "reserve funds" (where
cash or investments,  sometimes funded from a portion of the initial payments on
the underlying  assets,  are held in reserve against future losses) or that have
been "over  collateralized"  (where the scheduled  payments on, or the principal
amount of, the  underlying  assets  substantially  exceeds that required to make
payment of the asset-backed securities and pay any servicing or other fees). The
degree of credit support provided on each issue is based generally on historical
information  respecting the level of credit risk  associated with such payments.
Delinquency or loss in excess of that  anticipated  could  adversely  affect the
return on an investment in an asset-backed security.  Additionally,  if a letter
of credit is exhausted,  holders of asset-backed  securities may also experience
delays in  payments  or  losses  if the full  amounts  due on  underlying  sales
contracts are not realized.

                  Automobile Receivable Securities.  Asset-backed securities may
be backed by  receivables  from motor  vehicle  installment  sales  contracts or
installment   loans   secured   by  motor   vehicles   ("Automobile   Receivable
Securities").   Since   installment   sales  contracts  for  motor  vehicles  or
installment  loans  related  thereto  ("Automobile  Contracts")  typically  have
shorter  durations and lower  incidences of  prepayment,  Automobile  Receivable
Securities   generally  will  exhibit  a  shorter  average  life  and  are  less
susceptible to prepayment risk.

                  Most  entities  that issue  Automobile  Receivable  Securities
create an enforceable interest in their respective  Automobile Contracts only by
filing a  financing  statement  and by having  the  servicer  of the  Automobile
Contracts,  which is usually the  originator of the Automobile  Contracts,  take
custody  thereof.  In such  circumstances,  if the  servicer  of the  Automobile
Contracts  were to sell the same  Automobile  Contracts  to  another  party,  in
violation of its  obligation not to do so, there is a risk that such party could
acquire an interest in the Automobile  Contracts superior to that of the holders
of Automobile  Receivable  Securities.  Also although most Automobile  Contracts
grant a security  interest in the motor vehicle being  financed,  in most states
the security  interest in a motor  vehicle must be noted on the  certificate  of
title to create an enforceable  security  interest  against  competing claims of
other  parties.  Due to the large  number of  vehicles  involved,  however,  the
certificate  of title  to each  vehicle  financed,  pursuant  to the  Automobile
Contracts underlying the Automobile Receivable Security,  usually is not amended
to reflect the assignment of the seller's  security  interest for the benefit of
the holders of the Automobile  Receivable  Securities.  Therefore,  there is the
possibility that recoveries on repossessed collateral may not, in some cases, be
available to support payments on the securities. In addition,  various state and
federal securities laws give the motor vehicle owner the right to assert against
the holder of the owner's Automobile  Contract certain defenses such owner would
have against the seller of the motor  vehicle.  The  assertion of such  defenses
could reduce payments on the Automobile Receivable Securities.

                  Credit Card Receivable Securities. Asset-backed securities may
be backed by receivables  from revolving  credit card  agreements  ("Credit Card
Receivable  Securities").  Credit  balances on revolving  credit card agreements
("Accounts") are generally paid down more rapidly than are Automobile Contracts.
Most of the Credit Card Receivable  Securities issued publicly to date have been
Pass-Through  Certificates.  In order to  lengthen  the  maturity of Credit Card
Receivable  Securities,  most such securities  provide for a fixed period during
which only interest  payments on the  underlying  Accounts are passed through to
the security holder and principal payments received on such Accounts are used to
fund the  transfer  to the pool of assets  supporting  the  related  Credit Card
Receivable  Securities of additional credit card charges made on an Account. The
initial fixed period  usually may be shortened  upon the occurrence of specified
events  which  signal a  potential  deterioration  in the  quality of the assets
backing the security,  such as the  imposition of a cap on interest  rates.  The
ability of the issuer to extend the life of an issue of Credit  Card  Receivable
Securities  thus depends upon the continued  generation of additional  principal
amounts  in  the  underlying   accounts   during  the  initial  period  and  the
non-occurrence  of specified  events.  An acceleration  in cardholders'  payment
rates or any other event  which  shortens  the period  during  which  additional
credit  card  charges on an  Account  may be  transferred  to the pool of assets
supporting  the  related  Credit  Card  Receivable  Security  could  shorten the
weighted  average  life and  reduce  the  yield of the  Credit  Card  Receivable
Security.

                  Credit card holders are entitled to the protection of a number
of state and federal  consumer  credit laws,  many of which give such holder the
right to set off  certain  amounts  against  balances  owed on the credit  card,
thereby  reducing  amounts  paid on  Accounts.  In  addition,  unlike most other
asset-backed securities, Accounts are unsecured obligations of the cardholder.

         Warrants.  Warrants basically are options to purchase equity securities
at a specific price valid for a specific  period of time.  They do not represent
ownership  of the  securities  but only the  right to buy them.  Investments  in
warrants  are  speculative  in that  warrants  have  no  voting  rights,  pay no
dividends,  and have no rights  with  respect to the  assets of the  corporation
issuing them.  Warrants  differ from call options in that warrants are issued by
the issuer of the security  which may be purchased  on their  exercise,  whereas
call  options may be written or issued by anyone.  The prices of warrants do not
necessarily move parallel to the prices of the underlying securities.

         Certain Risks of Foreign Investing:

                  Currency Fluctuations. Investment in securities denominated in
foreign  currencies  involves  certain  risks. A change in the value of any such
currency  against the U.S. dollar will result in a  corresponding  change in the
U.S. dollar value of a Fund's assets denominated in that currency.  Such changes
will also affect a Fund's income.  Generally,  when a given currency appreciates
against  the  dollar  (the  dollar  weakens)  the  value of a Fund's  securities
denominated  in that  currency  will  rise.  When a given  currency  depreciates
against the dollar (the dollar  strengthens),  the value of a Fund's  securities
denominated in that currency would be expected to decline.

                  Investment and Repatriation  Restrictions.  Foreign investment
in the  securities  markets  of  certain  foreign  countries  is  restricted  or
controlled in varying degrees. These restrictions may at times limit or preclude
investment  in certain of such  countries and may increase the cost and expenses
of a Fund.  Investments  by  foreign  investors  are  subject  to a  variety  of
restrictions in many developing countries.  These restrictions may take the form
of prior governmental approval,  limits on the amount or type of securities held
by  foreigners,  and limits on the types of  companies in which  foreigners  may
invest. Additional or different restrictions may be imposed at any time by these
or other  countries in which a Fund invests.  In addition,  the  repatriation of
both investment  income and capital from several foreign countries is restricted
and controlled under certain  regulations,  including in some cases the need for
certain government consents.

                  Market Characteristics. Foreign securities may be purchased in
over-the-counter markets or on stock exchanges located in the countries in which
the respective  principal  offices of the issuers of the various  securities are
located,  if that is the  best  available  market.  Foreign  stock  markets  are
generally not as developed or efficient as, and may be more volatile than, those
in the United States.  While growing in volume,  they usually have substantially
less volume than U.S.  markets  and a Fund's  securities  may be less liquid and
more volatile than securities of comparable U.S.  companies.  Equity  securities
may trade at price/earnings multiples higher than comparable U.S. securities and
such levels may not be  sustainable.  Commissions  on foreign  stock  exchanges,
which may be fixed, may generally be higher than negotiated  commissions on U.S.
exchanges,  although a Fund will  endeavor  to achieve  the most  favorable  net
results  on its  portfolio  transactions.  There is  generally  less  government
supervision  and  regulation  of foreign  stock  exchanges,  brokers  and listed
companies  than  in  the  United  States.  Moreover,  settlement  practices  for
transactions in foreign markets may differ from those in U.S.  markets,  and may
include delays beyond periods customary in the United States.

                  Political and Economic Factors.  Individual  foreign economies
of certain countries may differ favorably or unfavorably from the United States'
economy in such respects as growth of gross national product, rate of inflation,
capital  reinvestment,   resource   self-sufficiency  and  balance  of  payments
position.  The internal  politics of certain foreign countries are not as stable
as in the United States.

                  Governments   in  certain   foreign   countries   continue  to
participate to a significant  degree,  through ownership interest or regulation,
in  their  respective  economies.  Action  by  these  governments  could  have a
significant effect on market prices of securities and payment of dividends.  The
economies of many foreign  countries are heavily  dependent  upon  international
trade and are  accordingly  affected by protective  trade  barriers and economic
conditions of their trading partners. The enactment by these trading partners of
protectionist trade legislation could have a significant adverse effect upon the
securities markets of such countries.



<PAGE>


                  Information and Supervision.  There is generally less publicly
available  information about foreign companies comparable to reports and ratings
that are published about companies in the United States.  Foreign  companies are
also  generally  not  subject  to uniform  accounting,  auditing  and  financial
reporting standards,  practices and requirements  comparable to those applicable
to U.S. companies.

                  Taxes.  The  dividends  and  interest  payable on certain of a
Fund's foreign  securities  may be subject to foreign  withholding  taxes,  thus
reducing  the net  amount of income  available  for  distribution  to the Fund's
shareholders.  A shareholder otherwise subject to U.S. federal income taxes may,
subject to certain  limitations,  be entitled to claim a credit or deduction for
U.S.  federal  income tax  purposes for his or her  proportionate  share of such
foreign taxes paid by the Fund.

                  Costs. Investors should understand that the expense ratio of a
Fund investing primarily in foreign securities can be expected to be higher than
investment  companies  investing  in  domestic  securities  since  the  cost  of
maintaining the custody of foreign securities and the rate of advisory fees paid
by a Fund are higher.

                  Other. With respect to certain foreign  countries,  especially
developing and emerging  ones,  there is the  possibility of adverse  changes in
investment  or  exchange  control  regulations,  expropriation  or  confiscatory
taxation,  limitations  on the  removal  of  funds or  other  assets  of a Fund,
political or social instability,  or diplomatic  developments which could affect
investments by U.S. persons in those countries.

                  Eastern Europe. Changes occurring in Eastern Europe and Russia
today could have long-term  potential  consequences.  As restrictions fall, this
could result in rising standards of living,  lower manufacturing  costs, growing
consumer spending, and substantial economic growth.  However,  investment in the
countries  of  Eastern  Europe and  Russia is highly  speculative  at this time.
Political and economic reforms are too recent to establish a definite trend away
from  centrally-planned  economies  and state owned  industries.  In many of the
countries  of Eastern  Europe and Russia,  there is no stock  exchange or formal
market  for  securities.  Such  countries  may  also  have  government  exchange
controls,   currencies  with  no  recognizable  market  value  relative  to  the
established  currencies of western market economies,  little or no experience in
trading in securities, no financial reporting standards, a lack of a banking and
securities  infrastructure  to handle such trading,  and a legal tradition which
does not recognize rights in private property. In addition,  these countries may
have national policies which restrict  investments in companies deemed sensitive
to the country's national interest.  Further,  the governments in such countries
may require governmental or  quasi-governmental  authorities to act as custodian
of a Fund's  assets  invested in such  countries and these  authorities  may not
qualify as a foreign custodian under the 1940 Act and exemptive relief from such
Act may be required.  All of these  considerations  are among the factors  which
could cause  significant risks and uncertainties to investment in Eastern Europe
and Russia.

                  Latin America. The political history of certain Latin American
countries has been characterized by political  uncertainty,  intervention by the
military in civilian  and  economic  spheres,  and  political  corruption.  Such
developments,  if they were to reoccur,  could reverse  favorable  trends toward
market and  economic  reform,  privatization  and removal of trade  barriers and
result in significant  disruption in securities  markets.  Persistent  levels of
inflation or in some cases,  hyperinflation,  have led to high  interest  rates,
extreme  measures  by  governments  to keep  inflation  in check and a generally
debilitating effect on economic growth. Although inflation in many countries has
lessened,  there is no guarantee it will remain at lower levels. In addition, of
developing  countries,  a number of Latin American  countries are also among the
largest debtors.  There have been moratoria on, and  reschedulings of, repayment
with respect to these debts.  Such events can restrict the  flexibility of these
debtor  nations in the  international  markets and result in the  imposition  of
onerous conditions on their economies.

                  Certain Latin American  countries may have managed  currencies
which are  maintained  at  artificial  levels to the U.S.  dollar rather than at
levels  determined  by the  market.  This type of system  can lead to sudden and
large  adjustments  in the currency  which,  in turn,  can have a disruptive and
negative effect on foreign investors.  Certain Latin American countries also may
restrict  the  free  conversion  of  their  currency  into  foreign  currencies,
including the U.S. dollar.  There is no significant  foreign exchange market for
certain  currencies and it would, as a result, be difficult for a Fund to engage
in foreign  currency  transactions  designed  to protect the value of the Fund's
interests in securities denominated in such currencies.



<PAGE>


                       ADDITIONAL PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

ASAF JPM MONEY MARKET FUND (the "Money Market Fund"):

         In  accordance  with  regulations  prescribed  by the  Commission,  the
Company is required to compute the Money Market Fund's current  annualized yield
for a seven-day  period in accordance with a specified  formula,  which does not
take  into  consideration  any  realized  or  unrealized  gains or losses on its
portfolio  securities.  This current annualized yield is computed by determining
the net change (exclusive of realized gains and losses on the sale of securities
and unrealized  appreciation  and  depreciation)  in the value of a hypothetical
account  having a balance of one share of the Money Market Fund at the beginning
of such seven-day period, dividing such net change in account value by the value
of the  account at the  beginning  of the period to  determine  the base  period
return and annualizing this quotient on a 365-day basis.

         The Commission also permits the Company to disclose the effective yield
of the Money  Market  Fund for the same  seven-day  period,  which is the Fund's
yield  determined on a compounded  basis.  The effective  yield is calculated by
compounding the unannualized base period return by adding one to the base period
return,  raising the sum to a power  equal to 365 divided by 7, and  subtracting
one from the result.

         The  yield on  amounts  held in the Money  Market  Fund  normally  will
fluctuate on a daily basis.  Therefore,  the disclosed  yield for any given past
period is not an  indication  or  representation  of  future  yields or rates of
return.  The Money Market Fund's actual yield is affected by changes in interest
rates  on  money  market  securities,  the  average  portfolio  maturity  of the
corresponding  Portfolio in which the Money Market Fund  invests,  the types and
quality  of  portfolio  securities  held by such  Portfolio,  and the Fund's and
Portfolio's operating expenses.

         The current yield and effective  yield  calculations  for each class of
shares  of the ASAF JPM  Money  Market  Fund are  shown  below for the seven day
period ended October 31, 1997:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     Class A      Class B      Class C      Class X

                           <S>                       <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>  

   
                           Current Yield             3.19%        2.69%        2.69%        2.69%
                          Effective Yield            3.24%        2.72%        2.72%        2.72%
</TABLE>
    


ALL OTHER FUNDS:

         Standardized Average Annual Total Return Quotations.  "Total return" is
one of the  primary  methods  used to measure  performance  and  represents  the
percentage change in value of a class of a Fund, or of a hypothetical investment
in a class of a Fund,  over any period up to the lifetime of the class.  Average
annual  total return  quotations  for Class A, B, C and X shares are computed by
finding  the  average  annual  compounded  rates of return  that  would  cause a
hypothetical  investment  made on the first day of a designated  period to equal
the ending redeemable value of such  hypothetical  investment on the last day of
the designated period in accordance with the following formula:

                                                           P(1+T)n = ERV

         Where:     P      =   a hypothetical initial payment of $1,000

                    T      =   average annual total return

                    n      =   number of years

                    ERV = ending  redeemable  value of the  hypothetical  $1,000
initial  payment made at the beginning of the  designated  period (or fractional
portion thereof)

         The computation  above assumes that the maximum sales charge applicable
to a class of Fund shares is deducted from the initial $1,000 payment,  and that
all dividends and distributions made by a Fund are reinvested at net asset value
("NAV") during the designated  period. The average annual total return quotation
is determined to the nearest 1/100 of 1%.

         Total return  percentages for periods longer than one year will usually
be  accompanied  by total  return  percentages  for each year  within the period
and/or by the average annual compounded total return for the period.  The income
and capital  components  of a given return may be separated  and  portrayed in a
variety of ways in order to illustrate their relative significance.  Performance
may  also  be  portrayed  in  terms  of  cash  or  investment  values,   without
percentages.  Past performance cannot guarantee any particular future result. In
determining  the average  annual total return  (calculated  as provided  above),
recurring fees, if any, that are charged to all  shareholder  accounts are taken
into consideration. For any account fees that vary with the size of the account,
the account fee used for purposes of the above  computation is assumed to be the
fee that would be charged to the mean account size of a class of the Fund.

         In addition,  with respect to the Class X shares, a standardized return
will reflect the impact of the 2.5% bonus shares. The impact of the bonus shares
on total return is  particularly  pronounced for shorter periods for which total
return is  measured,  such as one and three  years.  You  should  take this into
consideration  in any  comparison  of total  return  between the Funds and other
mutual funds.  For a discussion  of the Class X bonus shares,  see the Company's
Prospectus under "How to Buy Shares."

         The total  return of each  class of shares of each Fund  other than the
JPM Money  Market  Fund,  computed as of October 31,  1997,  that had  commenced
operations prior to that date is shown below:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          Total  Return (for the
                                                          period  from  July 28,
                                                          1997,  commencement of
                                                          operations,      until
                                                          October   31,    1997,
                                                          without annualization)

                                                           Class A         Class B       Class C      Class X
<S>                                                            <C>          <C>          <C>            <C>    
   
ASAF Founders International Small Capitalization Fund          (6.27%)      (7.41%)      (2.39%)        (5.14%)
ASAF T. Rowe Price  International Equity Fund                (12.88%)     (13.90%)       (9.32%)      (11.55%)
ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund                        (5.60%)      (6.66%)      (1.59%)        (4.22%)
ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund                    (0.66%)      (1.60%)         3.50%         1.01%
ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund                                 (3.14%)      (4.10%)         0.90%       (1.45%)
ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund                                (0.57%)      (1.50%)         3.60%         1.11%
ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund                  (5.13%)      (6.38%)      (1.20%)        (3.91%)
ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund                            (4.44%)      (6.29%)      (1.35%)        (3.76%)
ASAF Total Return Bond Fund                                    (1.99%)      (4.10%)         0.93%       (1.51%)
</TABLE>
    


         Standardized  Yield Quotations.  The yield of a class of Fund shares is
computed by dividing the class's net  investment  income per share during a base
period of 30 days, or one month, by the maximum  offering price per share of the
class on the last day of such  base  period  in  accordance  with the  following
formula:

                                            YIELD = 2 [ (a - b + 1)6 - 1 ]
                                                                     cd

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
         <S>        <C>  <C> <C>
         Where:     a    =   net investment income earned during the period attributable to the subject class

                    b    =   net expenses accrued for the period attributable to the subject class

                    c    =   the average  daily number of shares of the subject  class  outstanding  during the period that
were                                entitled to receive dividends

                    d = the  maximum  offering  price per  share of the  subject
class
</TABLE>

         Net  investment  income will be  determined  in  accordance  with rules
established  by the  Commission.  The  price  per  share of Class A shares  will
include the maximum  sales  charge  imposed on purchases of Class A shares which
decreases with the amount of shares purchased.

         The yield for each  class of shares of the ASAF  Federated  High  Yield
Fund and ASAF Total  Return  Bond Fund for the 30 day period  ended  October 31,
1997 is shown below:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            Class A      Class B      Class C      Class X

                 <S>                                                 <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>  
   
                 ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund              4.37%        4.05%        3.41%        3.58%
                 ASAF Total Return Bond Fund                       4.92%        5.25%        4.70%        4.63%
</TABLE>
    

         Non-Standardized  Performance.  In order to more completely represent a
Fund's performance or more accurately compare such performance to other measures
of  investment  return,  a  Fund  also  may  include  in  advertisements,  sales
literature  and  shareholder   reports  other  total  return   performance  data
("Non-Standardized Return").  Non-Standardized Return may be quoted for the same
or different  periods as those for which  standardized  return is quoted; it may
consist of an  aggregate or average  annual  percentage  rate of return,  actual
year-by-year rates or any combination  thereof.  Non-Standardized  Return may or
may not take sales charges into account;  performance  data  calculated  without
taking  the  effect of sales  charges  into  account  will be  higher  than data
including  the  effect of such  charges.  Non-standardized  performance  will be
advertised only if the standard performance data for the same period, as well as
for the required periods, is also presented.

         Each Fund may also publish its  distribution  rate and/or its effective
distribution  rate. A Fund's  distribution rate is computed by dividing the most
recent monthly distribution per share annualized,  by the current NAV per share.
A Fund's  effective  distribution  rate is computed by dividing the distribution
rate by the ratio used to annualize  the most recent  monthly  distribution  and
reinvesting the resulting amount for a full year on the basis of such ratio. The
effective distribution rate will be higher than the distribution rate because of
the compounding effect of the assumed reinvestment. Unlike a Fund's yield, which
is  computed  from the yields to maturity  of all debt  obligations  held by the
Fund, the distribution  rate is based on a Fund's last monthly  distribution.  A
Fund's  monthly  distribution  tends to be relatively  stable and may be more or
less than the  amount of net  investment  income  and  short-term  capital  gain
actually earned by the Fund during the month (see the Company's Prospectus under
"Dividends, Capital Gains and Taxes").

         Other data that may be advertised or published  about each Fund include
the average portfolio  quality,  the average portfolio  maturity and the average
portfolio duration.

         Comparative  Information.  From time to time,  the Funds may  advertise
their  performance  compared to similar funds using certain  unmanaged  indices,
reporting  services and publications.  Descriptions of some of the indices which
may be used are listed below:

         o  The  Standard  &  Poor's  500  Composite  Stock  Price  Index  is  a
well-diversified  list of 500 large  capitalization  companies  representing the
U.S. Stock Market.

         o The  Standard and Poor's Small Cap 600 index is designed to represent
price  movements  in the small cap U.S.  equity  market.  It contains  companies
chosen  by the  Standard  & Poor's  Index  Committee  for their  size,  industry
characteristics,  and  liquidity.  None of the  companies in the S&P 600 overlap
with  the S&P 500 or the S&P 400  (MidCap  Index).  The S&P 600 is  weighted  by
market capitalization.

         o The NASDAQ Composite OTC Price Index is a market  value-weighted  and
unmanaged   index  showing  the  changes  in  the  aggregate   market  value  of
approximately 3,500 stocks.

         o The Lehman  Government Bond Index is a measure of the market value of
all public  obligations of the U.S.  Treasury;  all publicly  issued debt of all
agencies of the U.S.  Government  and all  quasi-federal  corporations;  and all
corporate debt guaranteed by the U.S.  Government.  Mortgage backed  securities,
bonds and foreign  targeted  issues are not  included  in the Lehman  Government
Index.

         o The Lehman Government/Corporate Bond Index is a measure of the market
value of approximately 5,300 bonds with a face value currently in excess of $1.3
trillion. To be included in the Lehman Government/Corporate Index, an issue must
have  amounts  outstanding  in excess of $1  million,  have at least one year to
maturity and be rated "Baa" or its equivalent or higher ("investment  grade") by
a nationally recognized rating agency.

         o The  Russell  2000  Index  represents  the  bottom  two thirds of the
largest 3000 publicly traded companies  domiciled in the U.S. Russell uses total
market capitalization to determine the companies that are included in the Index.
Only common stocks are included in the Index.

         o The Russell 2500 Index is a market  value-weighted,  unmanaged  index
showing  total return  (i.e.,  principal  changes with income) in the  aggregate
market  value of 2,500  stocks of publicly  traded  companies  domiciled  in the
United States.  The Index includes  stocks traded on the New York Stock Exchange
and the American Stock Exchange as well as in the over-the-counter market.

         o The  Morgan  Stanley  Capital  International  EAFE  Index  (the "EAFE
Index") is an unmanaged index, which includes over 1,000 companies  representing
the stock markets of Europe,  Australia,  New Zealand and the Far East. The EAFE
Index is typically shown weighted by the market capitalization. However, EAFE is
also available  weighted by Gross Domestic  Product  ("GDP").  These weights are
modified on July 1st of each year to reflect the prior year's GDP.

         o The  Lehman  Brothers  High Yield BB Index is a measure of the market
value of public debt  issues with a minimum par value of $100  million and rated
Ba1-Ba3 by  Moody's.  All bonds  within the index are U.S.  dollar  denominated,
non-convertible and have at least one year remaining to maturity.

         Each  Fund's  investment  performance  may  be  advertised  in  various
financial  publications,  newspapers,  magazines,  including:  Across the Board,
Advertising Age, Adviser's Magazine,  Adweek, Agent,  American Banker,  American
Agent and Broker, Associated Press, Barron's,  Best's Review, Bloomberg,  Broker
World, Business Daily, Business Insurance,  Business Marketing,  Business Month,
Business  News  Features,  Business  Week,  Business  Wire,  California  Broker,
Changing Times,  Consumer  Reports,  Consumer  Digest,  Crain's,  Dow Jones News
Service,  Economist,  Entrepreneur,  Entrepreneurial  Woman, Financial Planning,
Financial  Services Week,  Financial Times,  Financial World,  Forbes,  Fortune,
Hartford Courant, Inc., Independent Business,  Institutional Investor, Insurance
Forum,  Insurance Advocate Independent,  Insurance Review Investor's,  Insurance
Times,  Insurance Week,  Insurance  Product News,  Insurance  Sales,  Investment
Dealers Digest, Investment Advisor, Journal of Commerce, Journal of Accountancy,
Journal of the American  Society of CLU & ChFC,  Kiplinger's  Personal  Finance,
Knight-Ridder,  Life  Association  News,  Life  Insurance  Selling,  Life Times,
LIMRA's MarketFacts,  Lipper Analytical  Services,  Inc.,  MarketFacts,  Medical
Economics,  Money, Morningstar,  Inc., Nation's Business,  National Underwriter,
New Choices,  New England Business,  New York Times,  Pension World,  Pensions &
Investments,  Professional  Insurance  Agents,  Professional  Agent,  Registered
Representative,  Reuter's,  Rough Notes, Round the Table, Service,  Success, The
Standard, The Boston Globe, The Washington Post, Tillinghast,  Time, U.S. News &
World Report, U.S. Banker,  United Press  International,  USA Today, Value Line,
The Wall Street Journal, Wiesenberger Investment and Working Woman.

         From time to time the Company may publish the sales of shares of one or
more of the Funds on a gross or net basis and for various  periods of time,  and
compare such sales with sales similarly reported by other investment companies.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                            MANAGEMENT OF THE COMPANY

         The following table sets forth information  concerning the officers and
Directors of the Company,  including  their  addresses  and  principal  business
occupations for the last five years:

Name, Age and Address:(1)              Position Held with the Company:(2)            Principal Occupation:(3)

<S>               <C>                  <C>                                           <C>
Gordon C. Boronow (44)*                Vice President & Director                     President & Chief Operating Officer:
                                                                                     American Skandia Life Assurance
                                                                                     Corporation

Jan R. Carendi (52)*                   President, Principal Executive Officer        Senior Executive Vice President &
                                       and Director                                  Member of Corporate Management Group:
                                                                                     Skandia Insurance Company Ltd.

David E. A. Carson (63)                Director                                      Until January, 1998, President,
People's Bank                                                                        Chairman & Chief Executive Officer:
850 Main Street                                                                      People's Bank
Bridgeport, CT 06604
                                                                                     Commencing January, 1998, Chairman &
                                                                                     Chief Executive Officer: People's Bank

Richard G. Davy, Jr. (49)              Controller                                    Vice President, Operations: American
                                                                                     Skandia Investment Services,
                                                                                     Incorporated (January 1997 to present)

                                                                                     Controller:  American Skandia
                                                                                     Investment Services, Incorporated
                                                                                     (September 1994 to January 1997)

                                                                                     Self-employed Consultant (December 1991
                                                                                     to September 1994)

Eric C. Freed (34)                     Secretary                                     Securities Counsel: American Skandia
                                                                                     Investment Holding Corporation
                                                                                     (December 1996 to present)

                                                                                     Attorney, Senior Attorney and Special
                                                                                     Counsel: U.S. Securities and Exchange
                                                                                     Commission (March 1991 to November 1996)

Julian A. Lerner (73)                  Director                                      Semi-retired since 1995; Senior Vice
12850 Spurling Road                                                                  President & Portfolio Manager of AIM
Suite 208                                                                            Charter Fund and AIM Summit Fund from
Dallas, TX 75230                                                                     1986 to 1995

Thomas M. Mazzaferro (44)*             Treasurer and Director                        Executive Vice President & Chief
                                                                                     Financial Officer: American Skandia
                                                                                     Life Assurance Corporation

Thomas M. O'Brien (47)                 Director                                      Vice Chairman: North Fork Bank (January
North Fork Bank                                                                      1997 to present)
275 Broad Hollow Road
Melville, NY 11747                                                                   President & Chief Executive Officer:
                                                                                     North Side Savings Bank (December 1984
                                                                                     to December 1996)

F. Don Schwartz (62)                   Director                                      Management Consultant
1101 Penn Grant Road                                                                 (April 1985 to present)
Lancaster, PA 17602
</TABLE>

     * Indicates a Director of the Company who is an "interested  person" within
the meaning set forth in the 1940 Act.

(1) Unless otherwise indicated,  the address of each officer and director listed
above is One Corporate Drive, Shelton, Connecticut 06484.

(2) All of the  officers  and  Directors  of the Company  listed  above serve in
similar  capacities for the Trust and/or American  Skandia Trust,  both of which
are also investment companies managed by the Investment Manager.

(3) Unless otherwise indicated,  each officer and director listed above has held
his principal  occupation  for at least the last five years.  In addition to the
principal  occupations noted above, the following  officers and Directors of the
Company hold the  following  positions  with  American  Skandia  Life  Assurance
Corporation  ("ASLAC"),  American  Skandia  Investment  Services,   Incorporated
("ASISI"),  American Skandia Marketing,  Incorporated ("ASM"),  American Skandia
Information  Services and Technology  Corporation  ("ASIST") or American Skandia
Investment Holding Corporation  ("ASIHC"):  Mr. Boronow also serves as Executive
Vice President,  Chief Operating Officer and a Director of ASIHC, and a Director
of ASLAC, ASISI, ASM and ASIST; Mr. Carendi also serves as Chairman,  President,
Chief Executive Officer and a Director of ASIHC, and Chief Executive Officer and
a Director of ASLAC, ASISI, ASM and ASIST; Mr. Davy also serves as a Director of
ASISI; Mr.  Mazzaferro also serves as Executive Vice President,  Chief Financial
Officer and a Director of ASIHC, a Director of ASLAC, President, Chief Financial
Officer  and a  Director  of  ASISI,  and  Executive  Vice  President  and Chief
Financial Officer of ASM and ASIST.

         The Company's  Articles of  Incorporation  provides that the Directors,
officers and employees of the Company may be  indemnified  by the Company to the
fullest  extent  permitted  by federal and state law,  including  Maryland  law.
Neither the Articles of Incorporation  nor the By-laws of the Company  authorize
the Company to indemnify any director or officer  against any liability to which
he or she would  otherwise  be subject by reason of or for willful  misfeasance,
bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of such person's duties.

         The officers and Directors of the Company who are "interested  persons"
within the meaning of the 1940 Act do not receive compensation directly from the
Company  for serving in the  capacities  described  above.  Those  officers  and
Directors  of the  Company,  however,  who are  affiliated  with the  Investment
Manager  may receive  remuneration  indirectly  from the  Company  for  services
provided in their respective capacities with the Investment Manager. Each of the
non-interested  Directors is expected to receive for his service on the Board of
Directors an annual and  "per-meeting"  fee, plus  reimbursement  for reasonable
out-of-pocket expenses incurred in connection with attendance at Board meetings.
The  following  table  sets  forth   information   concerning  the  compensation
anticipated  to be paid by the Company to the  Directors  in the current  fiscal
year.  Neither the Company nor any investment company in the Fund Complex offers
any pension or retirement benefits to its directors or trustees.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                           Aggregate Compensation                       Total Compensation from the
Name of Director:                           from the Company:(1)                        Company and Fund Complex:(2)

<S>                                                  <C>                                            <C>
Gordon C. Boronow                                    $ 0                                            $ 0

Jan R. Carendi                                       $ 0                                            $ 0

   
David E.A. Carson                                  $20,000                                        $72,000

Julian A. Lerner                                   $20,000                                        $72,000
    

Thomas M. Mazzaferro                                 $ 0                                            $ 0

   
Thomas M. O'Brien                                  $20,000                                        $72,000
    

F. Don Schwartz                                    $20,000                                        $72,000
</TABLE>

(1) The amount indicated  estimates the  compensation  anticipated to be paid to
the  Directors of the Company for the Company's  fiscal year ending  October 31,
1998.

(2) As of the date of this SAI, the "Fund Complex" consisted of the Company, the
Trust  and  American  Skandia  Trust.   The  amount   indicated   estimates  the
compensation anticipated to be paid to the Directors by the Fund Complex for the
twelve month period ending October 31, 1998.

   
The Directors and Officers of the Company own, in the  aggregate,  the following
percentages of the shares of the following classes of the Company as of December
1, 1997: ASAF Founders  International Small Capitalization Fund, Class A Share -
3.4%; ASAF T. Rowe Price International  Equity Fund, Class A Shares - 1.4%; ASAF
T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund,  Class A Share - 2.5%; ASAF Total Return
Bond Fund,  Class A Share - 1.1%.  The  Directors  of the  Company  own,  in the
aggregate, less than 1% of the shares of each class not listed above.
    

                  INVESTMENT ADVISORY & ADMINISTRATION SERVICES

THE INVESTMENT MANAGER:

         American  Skandia  Investment  Services,   Incorporated   ("ASISI,"  as
previously  defined)  acts as  investment  manager to each  Non-Feeder  Fund and
Portfolio pursuant to separate investment management agreements with the Company
and the Trust, respectively (the "Management Agreements"). Unlike the Non-Feeder
Funds, each of the Feeder Funds invests all of its respective  investable assets
in a  corresponding  Portfolio  of the  Trust  and  thus  does  not  require  an
investment manager.

         ASISI, a Connecticut corporation organized in 1991, is registered as an
investment  adviser with the  Commission  and is a  wholly-owned  subsidiary  of
American  Skandia  Investment  Holding  Corporation,  whose  indirect  parent is
Skandia  Insurance Company Ltd.  ("Skandia").  Skandia is a Swedish company that
owns, directly or indirectly, a number of insurance companies in many countries.
The predecessor to Skandia commenced  operations in 1855. In addition to serving
as investment  manager to the Company and the Trust,  ASISI currently  serves as
the  investment  manager to  American  Skandia  Trust,  an  open-end  management
investment  company whose shares are made available to life insurance  companies
writing variable annuity contracts and variable life insurance policies.  Shares
of American Skandia Trust also may be offered directly to qualified  pension and
retirement  plans. For a list of those officers and Directors of the Company who
also serve in similar capacities for the Investment Manager,  see this SAI under
"Management of the Company."

         The Management  Agreements provide,  in substance,  that the Investment
Manager will furnish each Non-Feeder  Fund and Portfolio with investment  advice
and investment management and administrative services subject to the supervision
of the Directors of the Company or the Trustees of the Trust,  where applicable,
and in conformity with the stated investment objective, policies and limitations
of the applicable Fund or Portfolio.  The Investment  Manager is responsible for
providing, at its expense, such personnel as is required by each Non-Feeder Fund
or Portfolio for the proper  conduct of its affairs and may engage a sub-advisor
to conduct  the  investment  program of the Fund or  Portfolio  pursuant  to the
Investment Manager's obligations under the Management Agreements. The Investment
Manager,  not the  Funds or  Portfolios,  is  responsible  for the  expenses  of
conducting the investment programs of the Funds and Portfolios.

         The Management  Agreements  provide further that neither the Investment
Manager nor its personnel  shall be liable for any act or omission in the course
of, or connected  with,  rendering  services  under the  agreements,  or for any
losses that may be sustained in the purchase, holding or sale of any security on
behalf of the Funds or Portfolios,  except for willful misfeasance, bad faith or
gross  negligence  in the  performance  of its or their  duties  or by reason of
reckless  disregard of its or their obligations and duties under the agreements.
The Management  Agreements also permit the Investment Manager to render services
to others.

   
         Under the terms of the Management Agreements,  each Non-Feeder Fund and
Portfolio has agreed to pay ASISI an investment management fee, which is accrued
daily and paid monthly,  equal on an annual basis to a stated  percentage of the
respective Fund or Portfolio's  average daily NAV. The Investment  Manager,  not
any Fund or Portfolio,  is responsible for the payment of the sub-advisory  fees
to the  Sub-advisors.  For a discussion  of the fees  payable to the  Investment
Manager and the  Sub-advisors,  as well as any  applicable  voluntary fee waiver
arrangements,  see the Company's  Prospectus  under  "Expense  Information"  and
"Management of the Funds."
    



<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
   
         The investment  management fee paid for each Fund and Portfolio for the
fiscal  period from  commencement  of  operations  until October 31, 1997 was as
follows:


                                                                                   Investment
           Name of Fund                                                          Management Fee

           <S>                                                                       <C> 
           ASAF Founders International Small Capitalization Fund                     $520

           ASMT T. Rowe Price International Equity Portfolio                         $4,658

           ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund                                           $0

           ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund                                   $577

           ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund                               $1,530

           ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund                               $0

           ASMT Janus Capital Growth Portfolio                                       $10,500

           ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund                                   $0

           ASMT INVESCO Equity Income Portfolio                                      $4,791

           ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund                             $1,513

           ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund                                       $1,022

           ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond Portfolio                                    $4,456

           ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio                                           $1,134
</TABLE>
         Fees for the  Portfolios  are  based  upon  the  total  assets  of each
Portfolio,  which  include  assets  other than those of the  Feeder  Funds.  The
Portfolios  commenced  operations  in June  1997,  while  the  Non-Feeder  Funds
commenced  operations  on July 28,  1997.  As  discussed in this SAI under "Fund
Expenses" and in the  Company's  Prospectus  under  "Expense  Information,"  the
Investment  Manager has  voluntarily  agreed to reimburse the other  expenses of
each Fund so that each Fund's  total  expenses do not exceed  specified  levels.
During the fiscal  period,  the  amounts of these  reimbursements  exceeded  the
investment management fees included in the above table.
    

         Each  Management  Agreement  will continue in effect from year to year,
provided  it is  approved  at least  annually  by a vote of the  majority of the
Directors or Trustees, where applicable, who are not parties to the agreement or
interested  persons of any such party, cast in person at a meeting  specifically
called for the purpose of voting on such approval. Each Management Agreement may
be terminated  without  penalty on 60 days' written notice by vote of a majority
of the Directors or Trustees, where applicable, or by the Investment Manager, or
by holders of a  majority  of the  applicable  Fund or  Portfolio's  outstanding
shares,  and will  automatically  terminate in the event of its "assignment" (as
that term is defined in the 1940 Act).

THE SUB-ADVISORS:


     ASISI  currently   engages  the  following   Sub-advisors  to  conduct  the
investment  programs of each Non-Feeder Fund and Portfolio  pursuant to separate
sub-advisory   agreements  with  the  Investment   Manager  (the   "Sub-Advisory
Agreements"):  (a)  Founders  Asset  Management,  Inc.  for  the  ASAF  Founders
International   Small   Capitalization   Fund  and  the  ASAF   Founders   Small
Capitalization Fund; (b) Rowe Price-Fleming International,  Inc. for the ASMT T.
Rowe Price International Equity Portfolio; (c) Janus Capital Corporation for the
ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund and the ASMT Janus Capital Growth Portfolio; (d)
T. Rowe Price  Associates,  Inc. for the ASAF T. Rowe Price Small  Company Value
Fund; (e) Robertson, Stephens & Company Investment Management, L.P. for the ASAF
Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund; (f) Lord, Abbett & Co. for the ASAF Lord
Abbett  Growth and Income Fund;  (g) INVESCO  Trust Company for the ASMT INVESCO
Equity  Income  Portfolio;  (h) American  Century  Investment  Management,  Inc.
(formerly  known as,  "Investors  Research  Corporation")  for the ASAF American
Century  Strategic  Balanced Fund; (i) Federated  Investment  Counseling for the
ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund; (j) Pacific  Investment  Management Company
for the ASMT PIMCO  Total  Return Bond  Portfolio;  (k) J.P.  Morgan  Investment
Management Inc. for the ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio.


         The  Sub-Advisory   Agreements   provide  that  the  Sub-advisors  will
formulate and implement a continuous investment program for each Non-Feeder Fund
or Portfolio in accordance  with the Fund or Portfolio's  investment  objective,
policies  and  limitations  and any  investment  guidelines  established  by the
Investment  Manager.  Each  Sub-advisor  will,  subject to the  supervision  and
control of the Investment Manager, determine in its discretion which issuers and
securities will be purchased,  held, sold or exchanged by the Fund or Portfolio,
and will place orders with and give instructions to brokers and dealers to cause
the execution of such transactions. The Sub-advisors are required to furnish the
Investment  Manager  with  periodic  reports  concerning  the  transactions  and
performance of the Fund or Portfolio. Each Sub-advisor is required to furnish at
its own expense all investment  facilities  necessary to perform its obligations
under  the  Sub-Advisory  Agreement.  Nothing  in  the  Sub-advisory  Agreements
prevents the  Investment  Manager from engaging  other  sub-advisors  to provide
investment  advice and other services to a Fund or Portfolio,  or from providing
such services itself.

   
         The sub-advisory  fee paid by the Investment  Manager for each Fund and
Portfolio for the fiscal period from  commencement  of operations  until October
31, 1997 was as follows:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
           Name of Fund                                                         Sub-advisory Fee

           <S>                                                                       <C> 
           ASAF Founders International Small Capitalization Fund                     $284

           ASMT T. Rowe Price International Equity Portfolio                         $2,329

           ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund                                           $0

           ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund                                   $320

           ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund                               $917

           ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund                               $0

           ASMT Janus Capital Growth Portfolio                                       $4,725

           ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund                                   $0

           ASMT INVESCO Equity Income Portfolio                                      $2,235

           ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund                             $839

           ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund                                       $365

           ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond Portfolio                                    $1,714

           ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio                                           $204
</TABLE>

         Fees for the  Portfolios  are  based  upon  the  total  assets  of each
Portfolio,  which  include  assets  other than those of the  Feeder  Funds.  The
Portfolios  commenced  operations  in June  1997,  while  the  Non-Feeder  Funds
commenced operations on July 28, 1997.
    


<PAGE>


         Each Sub-Advisory  Agreement will continue in effect from year to year,
provided  it is  approved  at least  annually  by a vote of the  majority of the
Directors or Trustees, where applicable, who are not parties to the agreement or
interested  persons of any such party, cast in person at a meeting  specifically
called for the purpose of voting on such approval.  Each Sub-Advisory  Agreement
may be terminated  without penalty at any time by the Investment  Manager or the
Sub-advisor upon 60 days' written notice,  and will  automatically  terminate in
the event of its  "assignment" (as that term is defined in the 1940 Act) or upon
termination of the Management  Agreement with respect to that particular Fund or
Portfolio   (provided  that  the   Sub-advisor   has  received  notice  of  such
termination).

THE ADMINISTRATOR:

         PFPC Inc.  (the  "Administrator"),  103 Bellevue  Parkway,  Wilmington,
Delaware  19809,  a  Delaware  corporation  which  is an  indirect  wholly-owned
subsidiary  of PNC Financial  Corp.,  serves as the  administrator  for both the
Company  and the  Trust.  Pursuant  to  administration  agreements  between  the
Administrator and the Company and the Trust,  respectively (the  "Administration
Agreements"),  the  Administrator  has agreed to provide certain fund accounting
and administrative services to the Company and the Trust, including, among other
services,  accounting  relating to the Company and the Trust and the  investment
transactions of the foregoing;  computing daily NAVs; monitoring the investments
and income of the Company and the Trust for compliance with applicable tax laws;
preparing for execution and filing federal and state tax returns, and annual and
semi-annual   shareholder   reports;   preparing  monthly  financial  statements
including  a  schedule  of   investments;   assisting  in  the   preparation  of
registration statements and other filings related to the registration of shares;
coordinating contractual relationships and communications between the Investment
Manager and the Company's and the Trust's custodians;  preparing and maintaining
the  Company's  and  the  Trust's  books  of  account,   records  of  securities
transactions,  and all other books and  records in  accordance  with  applicable
laws,  rules and  regulations  (including,  but not  limited to,  those  records
required to be kept pursuant to the 1940 Act); and performing  such other duties
related to the administration of the Company and the Trust as may be agreed upon
in writing by the parties to the respective Administration Agreements.

         Under the terms of the  Administration  Agreements,  the  Administrator
shall be obligated to exercise  care and  diligence  in the  performance  of its
duties,  to act in good  faith and to use its best  efforts,  within  reasonable
limits,  in  performing  services to be provided for under the  agreements.  The
Administrator  shall be liable for any  damages  arising  out of its  failure to
perform  its duties  under the  Administration  Agreements  to the  extent  such
damages arise out of its willful  misfeasance,  bad faith,  gross  negligence or
reckless  disregard  of such  duties.  Any person,  even though also an officer,
director, partner, employee or agent of the Administrator,  who may be or become
an officer,  director,  trustee,  employee or agent of the Company or the Trust,
shall be deemed when rendering services to the Company or the Trust or acting on
any  business  of the Company or the Trust  (other than  services or business in
connection with the Administrator's duties under the Administration  Agreements)
to be rendering  such  services to or acting solely for the Company or the Trust
and not as an  officer,  director,  partner,  employee or agent or one under the
control  or  direction  of the  Administrator  even  though  paid by  them.  The
Administration  Agreements shall continue until terminated by either party on 60
days' prior written notice to the other party.

   
         Compensation   for  the  services  and   facilities   provided  by  the
Administrator  under  the  Administration  Agreements  includes  payment  of the
Administrator's  "out-of-pocket"  expenses.  Such  reimbursable  "out-of-pocket"
expenses include, but are not limited to, postage and mailing, telephone, telex,
Federal  Express,   outside  independent  pricing  service  charges  and  record
retention/storage.  For the period from commencement of operations until October
31, 1997,  the Company paid the  Administrator  $16,898,  and the Trust paid the
Administrator $25,353.
    

                                  FUND EXPENSES

         Each  Non-Feeder  Fund and Portfolio  pays its own expenses  including,
without  limitation:  (i)  expenses of  maintaining  the Fund or  Portfolio  and
continuing its existence;  (ii)  registration of the Fund or Portfolio under the
1940  Act;  (iii)  auditing,  accounting  and  legal  expenses;  (iv)  taxes and
interest;  (v) governmental fees; (vi) expenses of issue,  sale,  repurchase and
redemption of Fund shares; (vii) expenses of registering and qualifying the Fund
or  Portfolio  and its shares  under  federal and state  securities  laws and of
preparing and printing  prospectuses  for such purposes and for distributing the
same to shareholders and investors;  (viii) fees and expenses of registering and
maintaining  registrations  of the Fund or Portfolio and of the Fund's principal
underwriter  as a  broker-dealer  or agent under  state  securities  laws;  (ix)
expenses of reports and notices to shareholders  and of meetings of shareholders
and proxy  solicitations  therefor;  (x)  expenses  of reports  to  governmental
officers and commissions;  (xi) insurance expenses; (xii) association membership
dues; (xiii) fees,  expenses and disbursements of custodians for all services to
the Fund or  Portfolio;  (xiv)  fees,  expenses  and  disbursements  of transfer
agents, dividend disbursing agents,  shareholder servicing agents and registrars
for  all  services  to the  Fund  or  Portfolio;  (xv)  expenses  for  servicing
shareholder  accounts;  (xvi) any direct charges to shareholders approved by the
Directors of the Company or the Trustees of the Trust, where applicable;  (xvii)
compensation  and  expenses of  Directors  of the Company or the Trustees of the
Trust,  where  applicable,  who  are not  "interested  persons"  of the  Fund or
Portfolio,  respectively;  and  (xviii)  such  nonrecurring  items as may arise,
including  expenses  incurred in connection  with  litigation,  proceedings  and
claims  and the  obligation  of the  Company  and the  Trust  to  indemnify  its
directors,  trustees and officers with respect thereto. Expenses incurred by the
Company or the Trust not directly  attributable to any specific  Non-Feeder Fund
or  Portfolio  are  allocated  on the basis of the net assets of the  respective
Non-Feeder Funds and Portfolios.

         The Investment  Manager has voluntarily  agreed until February 28, 1999
to reimburse each Fund for its respective  operating  expenses (and, in the case
of the Feeder Funds,  the Feeder Fund's pro rata share of operating  expenses of
the Fund's corresponding  Portfolio),  exclusive of taxes,  interest,  brokerage
commissions,  distribution fees and extraordinary expenses, but inclusive of the
management  fee,  which in the aggregate  exceed  specified  percentages  of the
Fund's average net assets as follows:

         ASAF Founders International Small Capitalization Fund: 1.60%

         ASAF T. Rowe Price International Equity Fund: 1.60%

   
         ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund: 1.60%
    

         ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund: 1.20%

         ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund: 1.25%

   
         ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund: 1.30%
    

         ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund: 1.20%

   
         ASAF Lord Abbett Growth & Income Fund: 1.10%
    

         ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund: 1.05%

         ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund: 1.10%

         ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund: 1.00%

         ASAF Total Return Bond Fund: 0.90%

         ASAF JPM Money Market Fund: 1.00%

         The Investment Manager may terminate the above voluntary  agreements at
any time after  October 31,  1998.  Voluntary  payments of Fund  expenses by the
Investment  Manager may be made  subject to  reimbursement  by the Fund,  at the
Investment  Manager's  discretion,  within the two year  period  following  such
payment to the extent  permissible  under  applicable  law and provided that the
Fund is able  to  effect  such  reimbursement  and  remain  in  compliance  with
applicable expense limitations.



<PAGE>


                            DISTRIBUTION ARRANGEMENTS

THE DISTRIBUTOR:

         American Skandia Marketing,  Incorporated ("ASM" or the "Distributor"),
located  at One  Corporate  Drive,  Shelton,  Connecticut  06484,  serves as the
principal  underwriter and distributor for each Fund pursuant to an underwriting
agreement  initially approved by the Directors of the Company (the "Underwriting
Agreement").  The  Distributor is a registered  broker-dealer  and member of the
National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD"). The Distributor is an
"affiliated  person"  (within the meaning of the 1940 Act) of the  Company,  the
Trust and the Investment  Manager,  being a wholly-owned  subsidiary of American
Skandia Investment Holding Corporation.

         Shares of each Fund will be  continuously  offered  and will be sold by
selected   broker-dealers   who  have  executed  selling   agreements  with  the
Distributor.  The  Distributor  bears all the  expenses  of  providing  services
pursuant  to the  Underwriting  Agreement.  Each  Fund  bears  the  expenses  of
registering its shares with the Commission and with applicable  state regulatory
authorities.  The Underwriting  Agreement continues in effect for two years from
initial approval and for successive one-year periods  thereafter,  provided that
each such continuance is specifically  approved (i) by the vote of a majority of
the Directors of the Company,  including a majority of the Directors who are not
parties to the Underwriting  Agreement or "interested persons" of any such party
(as  defined  in the  1940  Act);  or (ii) by the  vote  of a  "majority  of the
outstanding  voting  securities"  of a Fund (as defined in the 1940 Act). In the
event  that  the  Underwriting  Agreement  terminates,  all  obligations  of the
Distributor thereunder shall cease,  including the Distributor's  undertaking to
purchase Class X Bonus Shares.  For  information  regarding Class X Bonus Shares
and the Distributor's  undertaking,  see the Company's  Prospectus under "How to
Buy Shares:  Purchase of Class X Shares." The  Distributor  is not  obligated to
sell any specific amount of shares of any Fund.

THE DISTRIBUTION PLANS:

         The  Company  has  adopted  separate  Distribution  and  Service  plans
(commonly  referred to as "12b-1  Plans") for Class A, B, C and X shares of each
Fund (the  "Class A Plan,"  "Class B Plan,"  "Class C Plan" and  "Class X Plan,"
individually, and collectively, the "Plans") pursuant to appropriate resolutions
of the Directors of the Company and in accordance with the  requirements of Rule
12b-1 under the 1940 Act and the  requirements  of the  applicable  rules of the
NASD  regarding  asset  based  sales  charges.  The Plans  permit the payment of
certain fees to the Distributor for its services and costs in distributing  Fund
shares and providing for services to shareholder  accounts.  The Distributor has
assigned its right to receive any  distribution and service fees under the Class
B Plan and the Class X Plan, as well as any contingent deferred sales charge for
Class B and Class X shares,  to an  unaffiliated  third party that  finances the
sale  of  Class B and  Class  X  shares.  Under  the  terms  of the  Plans,  the
Distributor provides to each Fund, for review by the Directors of the Company, a
quarterly  written report of the amounts expended under the respective Plans and
the purpose for which such  expenditures were made. The Directors of the Company
will review such levels of  compensation  the Plans provide in  considering  the
continued appropriateness of the Plans.

         The Plans  were  adopted  by a majority  vote of the  Directors  of the
Company,  including  at least a majority of  Directors  who are not  "interested
persons"  of the  Funds  (as  defined  in the 1940  Act) and who do not have any
direct or indirect  financial  interest in the  operation of the Plans,  cast in
person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on the Plans.  In approving
the Plans,  the Directors of the Company  identified  and considered a number of
potential benefits which the Plans may provide,  including,  but not limited to,
the adequate  provision  for the costs of  implementing  effective  distribution
activities in the competitive  environment and the  availability to shareholders
of services provided by representatives  who have knowledge of the shareholders'
particular  circumstances  and  goals.  With  respect  to the Class X Plan,  the
Directors  considered the possible  increase in investor interest and consequent
increase in portfolio  assets  resulting  from the use of the fees payable under
such plan,  in part,  to  facilitate  the  Distributor's  purchase of additional
shares for Class X investors as a bonus.  The  Directors of the Company  believe
that there is a reasonable  likelihood that the Plans will benefit each Fund and
its current and future shareholders in the manner contemplated.

         The Plans,  pursuant to their terms, remain in effect from year to year
provided such  continuance is approved  annually by vote of the Directors in the
manner described above. The Plans may not be amended to increase  materially the
amount to be spent for distribution without approval of the shareholders of each
class of a Fund  affected  thereby  entitled to vote thereon under the 1940 Act,
and material  amendments  to the Plans must also be approved by the Directors of
the Company in the manner described above. A Plan may be terminated at any time,
without  payment of a penalty,  by vote of the majority of the  Directors of the
Company  who are not  interested  persons  of the  Fund and  have no  direct  or
indirect  financial  interest in the  operations  of the Plan, or by a vote of a
"majority of the outstanding  voting securities" (as defined in the 1940 Act) of
each class of a Fund  affected  thereby  entitled to vote thereon under the 1940
Act. A Plan will  automatically  terminate in the event of its  "assignment" (as
defined in the 1940 Act).

       

                        DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE

         The net asset value ("NAV") per share of each Fund is determined in the
manner described in the Company's  Prospectus.  Each Fund will determine the NAV
of its shares on each day that the New York Stock  Exchange (the "NYSE") is open
for  business.  The  Directors of the Company and the Trustees of the Trust have
each established  procedures for valuing the assets of the Funds and Portfolios,
respectively.  In  general,  these  valuations  are based on market  value  with
special  provisions  for:  securities  not listed on an exchange  or  securities
market; securities for which recent market quotations are not readily available;
short-term  obligations;  and  open  short  positions  and  options  written  on
securities.

         Securities held by each  Non-Feeder Fund and Portfolio,  other than the
ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio (the "Money Market  Portfolio"),  will be valued
as follows:  portfolio securities which are traded on stock exchanges are valued
at the last sale price on the principal  exchange as of the close of business on
the day the securities  are being valued,  or, lacking any sales on that day, at
the  mean  between  the  bid  and  asked  prices.   Securities   traded  in  the
over-the-counter  market that are  included in the  National  Market  System are
valued  at the mean  between  the bid and  asked  prices  which  may be based on
valuations  furnished  by a  pricing  service  or  from  independent  securities
dealers.  Otherwise,  over-the-counter securities are valued at the mean between
the bid and  asked  prices  or yield  equivalent  as  obtained  from one or more
dealers  that make markets in the  securities.  Portfolio  securities  which are
traded  both  in the  over-the-counter  market  and on an  exchange  are  valued
according  to the broadest and most  representative  market,  and it is expected
that for debt securities this  ordinarily will be the  over-the-counter  market.
Securities and assets for which market  quotations are not readily available are
valued at fair  value as  determined  in good  faith by or under  procedures  or
guidelines  established  by the Directors of the Company and the Trustees of the
Trust, where applicable.

         The NAV per share of the Money Market  Portfolio is determined by using
the amortized cost method of valuing portfolio instruments.  Under the amortized
cost  method of  valuation,  an  instrument  is valued at cost and the  interest
payable at maturity upon the instrument is accrued as income,  on a daily basis,
over the remaining  life of the  instrument.  Neither the amount of daily income
nor the NAV is  affected  by  unrealized  appreciation  or  depreciation  of the
Portfolio's  investments assuming the instrument's obligation is paid in full on
maturity.  In periods of declining  interest rates, the indicated daily yield on
shares of the Portfolio computed using amortized cost may tend to be higher than
a similar  computation made using a method of valuation based upon market prices
and estimates. In periods of rising interest rates, the indicated daily yield on
shares of the Portfolio  computed using amortized cost may tend to be lower than
a similar  computation made using a method of valuation based upon market prices
and estimates. In addition,  short-term obligations with remaining maturities of
less than 60 days that are held by any Fund or Portfolio are valued at amortized
cost.

         The  amortized  method of  valuation  is  intended  to permit the Money
Market  Portfolio to maintain a constant NAV per share of $1.00.  No  assurances
can be given that this can be  attained.  The  Directors  of the Company and the
Trustees of the Trust, where applicable,  periodically  review the extent of any
deviation  from the  $1.00  per  share  value  that  would  occur if a method of
valuation  based on market prices and  estimates  were used. In the event such a
deviation would exceed one-half of one percent, the Directors of the Company and
the Trustees of the Trust,  where applicable,  will promptly consider any action
that reasonably  should be initiated to eliminate or reduce material dilution or
other unfair results to shareholders.  Such action may include selling portfolio
securities  prior to maturity,  not declaring earned income  dividends,  valuing
portfolio securities on the basis of current market prices, if available, or, if
not available, at fair market value as determined in good faith by the Directors
of the Company or the Trustees of the Trust,  where applicable,  and (considered
highly unlikely by management of the Company and the Trust) redemption of shares
in kind (i.e., with portfolio securities).

         A Fund's  maximum  offering  price per Class A share is  determined  by
adding the maximum  sales  charge to the NAV per share.  Class B, C and X shares
are offered at NAV without the imposition of an initial sales charge.

                          ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON THE
                        PURCHASE AND REDEMPTION OF SHARES

RIGHTS OF ACCUMULATION:

         Each  Fund  offers  to all  qualifying  investors  certain  "rights  of
accumulation"  under which investors are permitted to purchase Class A shares of
any Fund at the price  applicable to the total of (a) the then current  purchase
amount  plus (b) an  amount  equal to the then  current  NAV of the  purchaser's
holdings of all shares of any Fund of the  Company.  Acceptance  of the purchase
order is subject to  confirmation  of  qualification.  A  qualifying  investor's
rights of accumulation may be amended or terminated at any time as to subsequent
purchases.

LETTER OF INTENT:

         Any person may qualify for a reduced sales charge on purchases of Class
A shares  made  within a  thirteen-month  period  pursuant to a Letter of Intent
("LOI"). In computing the total amount purchased for purposes of determining the
applicable sales commission,  the offering price of shares currently held in the
Funds which were purchased within 90 days from the date of acceptance of the LOI
may be used as a credit toward Fund shares to be purchased  under the LOI. Class
A, B, C and X shares acquired  through the  reinvestment of distributions do not
constitute  purchases for purposes of the LOI. During the term of an LOI, Boston
Financial  Data  Services,  Inc.,  the Company's  transfer  agent (the "Transfer
Agent"), will hold shares in escrow to secure payment of the higher sales charge
applicable for shares actually  purchased if the amount  indicated on the LOI is
not purchased.  Dividends and capital gains will be paid on all escrowed  shares
and these shares will be released when the amount  indicated on the LOI has been
purchased.  An LOI does not obligate the investor to buy or the Fund to sell the
indicated  amount  of  the  LOI.  If the  specified  amount  of  the  LOI is not
purchased,  the shareholder shall remit to the Transfer Agent an amount equal to
the  difference  between the sales  charge paid and the sales  charge that would
have been paid had the  aggregate  purchases  been made at a single time. If the
Class A shareholder  does (not within twenty days after a written request by the
Transfer  Agent) pay such  difference in sales charge,  the Transfer  Agent will
redeem  an  appropriate  number of  escrowed  shares  in order to  realize  such
difference. Additional information about the terms of the LOI are available from
your registered representative.

SPECIAL REDEMPTIONS:

         Although  it would not  normally  do so, each Fund has the right to pay
the  redemption  price of  shares  of the Fund in whole or in part in  portfolio
securities as prescribed by the Directors of the Company.  When the  shareholder
sells portfolio  securities received in this fashion, he would incur a brokerage
charge.  Any such  securities  would be valued for the  purposes  of making such
payment at the same value as used in determining  NAV. The Funds have elected to
be  governed  by Rule 18f-1  under the 1940 Act,  pursuant to which each Fund is
obligated to redeem shares solely in cash from any one account during any 90-day
period up to the lesser of $250,000 or 1% of the NAV of the  applicable  Fund or
Portfolio at the beginning of such period.

SUSPENSION OF REDEMPTIONS:

         A Fund may not suspend a shareholder's  right of redemption or postpone
payment for a  redemption  for more than seven  days,  unless the New York Stock
Exchange  ("NYSE") is closed for other than customary  weekends or holidays,  or
trading on the NYSE is  restricted,  or for any period during which an emergency
exists as a result of which (1) disposal by a Fund or  Portfolio  of  securities
owned  by it is  not  reasonably  practicable,  or  (2)  it  is  not  reasonably
practicable for a Fund to fairly determine the value of its assets,  or for such
other periods as the Commission may permit for the protection of investors.

         For further  information  regarding the purchase and redemption of Fund
shares, see "How to Buy Shares" and "How to Redeem Shares," respectively, in the
Company's Prospectus.



<PAGE>


                             PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

BROKERAGE ALLOCATION:

         Subject to the  supervision  of the  Directors  of the  Company and the
Trustees of the Trust,  where  applicable,  decisions to buy and sell securities
for the Company and the Trust are made for each Non-Feeder Fund and Portfolio by
its  respective  Sub-advisor.  Each  Sub-advisor  is  authorized to allocate the
orders placed by it on behalf of the applicable Fund or Portfolio to brokers who
also  provide  research  or  statistical  material  or  other  services  to  the
Sub-advisor  or the  Fund or  Portfolio  for the use of the  applicable  Fund or
Portfolio and other accounts as to which the  Sub-advisor  exercises  investment
discretion.  Such  allocation  shall be in such amounts and  proportions  as the
Sub-advisor  shall  determine.  The  Sub-advisor  will report on  allocations of
brokerage  either  to  the  Investment  Manager,   which  will  report  on  such
allocations to the Directors of the Company or the Trustees of the Trust,  where
applicable,  or, if  requested,  directly to the  Directors or  Trustees.  These
reports will  indicate the brokers to whom such  allocations  have been made and
the basis therefor. The Sub-advisor may consider sale of shares of the Funds, or
may consider or follow  recommendations of the Investment Manager that take such
sales into account,  as factors in the selection of brokers to effect  portfolio
transactions  for a Fund or Portfolio,  subject to the  requirements of best net
price  available and most favorable  execution.  In this regard,  the Investment
Manager  may direct  certain of the  Sub-advisors  to try to effect a portion of
their Fund or Portfolio's  investment  transactions through  broker-dealers that
sell shares of the Fund (or corresponding  Fund, in the case of the Portfolios),
to the  extent  consistent  with best net  price  available  and most  favorable
execution.

         Subject to the rules  promulgated by the  Commission,  as well as other
regulatory  requirements,  a Sub-advisor  also may allocate orders to brokers or
dealers  affiliated  with  the  Sub-advisor  or  the  Investment  Manager.  Such
allocation  shall  be in  amounts  and  proportions  as  the  Sub-advisor  shall
determine.  The Sub-advisor will report on these allocations of brokerage either
to the  Investment  Manager,  which  will  report  on  such  allocations  to the
Directors of the Company or the Trustees of the Trust, where applicable,  or, if
requested, directly to the Directors or Trustees.

   
     In  selecting  a  broker  to  effect  each  particular  transaction,   each
Sub-advisor  will  take the  following  into  consideration:  the best net price
available; the reliability, integrity and financial condition of the broker; the
size and  difficulty  in  executing  the  order;  and the value of the  expected
contribution  of the  broker  to the  investment  performance  of the  Fund on a
continuing  basis.  Subject to such policies and  procedures as the Directors of
the Company and the Trustees of the Trust may determine, a Sub-advisor shall not
be deemed to have acted unlawfully or to have breached any duty solely by reason
of its having caused a Fund or Portfolio to pay a broker that provides  research
services to the  Sub-advisor an amount of commission for effecting an investment
transaction  in excess of the amount of  commission  another  broker  would have
charged for effecting that  transaction,  if the Sub-advisor  determines in good
faith that such amount of commission  was reasonable in relation to the value of
the  research  service  provided by such  broker  viewed in terms of either that
particular  transaction  or  the  Sub-advisor's  ongoing  responsibilities  with
respect to the Fund or Portfolio and other accounts as to which the  Sub-advisor
exercises  investment  discretion.  Accordingly,  the  amount  of the  brokerage
commission  in any  transaction  may be greater than that  available  from other
brokers  if the  difference  is  reasonably  justified  by other  aspects of the
services  offered.  For the period from commencement of operations until October
31, 1997,  aggregate  brokerage  commissions  of $3,500 and $17,817 were paid in
relation to brokerage transactions of the Company and the Trust, respectively.

     During the period ending October 31, 1997, brokerage  commissions were paid
to certain affiliates of Rowe Price-Fleming  International,  Inc. by the ASMT T.
Rowe Price International Equity Portfolio in the amount of $54. For that period,
0.8% of the total brokerage  commissions paid by this Portfolio were paid to the
affiliated  brokers,  with  respect  to  transactions  representing  1.1% of the
Portfolio's  total  dollar  amount of  transactions  involving  the  payment  of
commissions.
    

ALLOCATION OF INVESTMENTS:

         The  Sub-advisors  of the Non-Feeder  Funds and  Portfolios  have other
advisory  clients,  some of which have similar  investment  objectives to one or
more of the Funds or Portfolios for which advisory  services are being provided.
In addition,  a Sub-advisor may be engaged to provide advisory services for more
than one Fund or Portfolio. There will be times when a Sub-advisor may recommend
purchases  and/or sales of the same  securities  for a Fund or Portfolio and the
Sub-advisor's  other clients.  In such  circumstances,  it will be the policy of
each  Sub-advisor to allocate  purchases and sales among a Fund or Portfolio and
its other clients, including other Funds or Portfolios for which the Sub-advisor
provides advisory  services,  in a manner which the Sub-advisor deems equitable,
taking into  consideration  such  factors as size of account,  concentration  of
holdings, investment objectives, tax status, cash availability,  purchase costs,
holding period and other pertinent factors relative to each account.

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER:

         Each Non-Feeder  Fund and Portfolio may sell its portfolio  securities,
regardless  of the length of time that they have been held,  if the  Sub-advisor
and/or the  Investment  Manager  determines  that such a  disposition  is in the
Fund's or Portfolio's best interest.  Portfolio turnover rates may increase as a
result of the need for a Fund or  Portfolio  to effect  significant  amounts  of
purchases or redemptions of portfolio  securities  due to economic,  market,  or
other  factors that are not within the  Sub-advisor's  or  Investment  Manager's
control.  A high  rate of  portfolio  turnover  (generally  in  excess  of 100%)
involves   correspondingly   higher  brokerage  commission  expenses  and  other
transaction  costs,  which must be  ultimately  borne by a Fund's  shareholders.
Trading in fixed income  securities  does not  generally  involve the payment of
brokerage  commissions,  but  does  involve  indirect  transaction  costs.  High
portfolio  turnover  rates may also generate  larger  taxable income and taxable
capital  gains than would  result from lower  portfolio  turnover  rates and may
create  higher  tax  liability  for a Fund's  shareholders.  Although  it is not
possible to predict future portfolio  turnover rates accurately,  and such rates
may vary from year to year, it is anticipated that portfolio  turnover rates for
the ASMT T. Rowe Price International Equity Portfolio,  ASAF T. Rowe Price Small
Company Value Fund, ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund, ASMT INVESCO Equity
Income  Portfolio  and the ASAF  Federated  High Yield Bond Fund will not exceed
100% under normal market  conditions.  The portfolio turnover rates for the ASAF
Founders  International  Small  Capitalization  Fund, ASAF Janus Overseas Growth
Fund, ASAF Founders Small  Capitalization  Fund, ASAF Robertson Stephens Value +
Growth  Fund,  ASMT  Janus  Capital  Growth  Portfolio,  ASAF  American  Century
Strategic  Balanced  Fund and ASMT PIMCO  Total  Return Bond  Portfolio  are not
anticipated to exceed 150%, 200%, 150%, 250%, 200%, 150% and 350%, respectively,
under normal market  conditions.  A 100% portfolio  turnover rate would occur if
all of the securities in a portfolio of investments were replaced during a given
period.  For  additional  information  regarding  portfolio  turnover,  see  the
Company's Prospectus under "Portfolio Transactions."

                          ADDITIONAL TAX CONSIDERATIONS

         Federal  Income  Tax  Consequences.  Each Fund is treated as a separate
entity for federal  income tax purposes.  Each Fund has qualified and elected or
intends to qualify and elect to be treated as a "regulated  investment  company"
under  Subchapter  M of the  Internal  Revenue  Code of 1986,  as  amended  (the
"Code"),  and intends to  continue  to so qualify in the future.  As a regulated
investment  company, a Fund must, among other things, (a) derive at least 90% of
its gross income from  dividends,  interest,  payments  with respect to loans of
stock  and  securities,  gains  from  the sale or other  disposition  of  stock,
securities or foreign  currency and other income  (including  but not limited to
gains from options,  futures, and forward contracts) derived with respect to its
business of investing in such stock, securities or foreign currency; (b) for its
taxable year ending  October 31, 1997,  derive less than 30% of its gross income
from the sale or other  disposition of stock,  securities,  options,  futures or
forward  contracts (other than options,  futures or forward contracts on foreign
currencies)  held less than three  months,  or foreign  currencies  (or options,
futures or forward contracts on foreign currencies), but only if such currencies
(or  options,  futures  or forward  contracts  on  foreign  currencies)  are not
directly  related  to a Fund's  principal  business  of  investing  in stocks or
securities  (or options and futures with respect to stocks or  securities);  and
(c)  diversify  its holdings so that,  at the end of each quarter of its taxable
year, (i) at least 50% of the value of the Fund's total assets is represented by
cash,  cash items,  U.S.  Government  securities,  securities of other regulated
investment  companies,  and other  securities  limited,  in  respect  of any one
issuer, to an amount not greater than 5% of the Fund's total assets,  and 10% of
the outstanding  voting securities of such issuer, and (ii) not more than 25% of
the value of its total  assets is invested in the  securities  of any one issuer
(other  than  U.S.  Government  securities  or  securities  of  other  regulated
investment companies).  As a regulated investment company, a Fund (as opposed to
its  shareholders)  will  not be  subject  to  federal  income  taxes on the net
investment  income and capital  gain that it  distributes  to its  shareholders,
provided  that at  least  90% of its net  investment  income  and  realized  net
short-term  capital gain in excess of net long-term capital loss for the taxable
year is  distributed  in  accordance  with the Code's timing  requirements  (the
"Distribution  Requirement").  For additional  information  regarding the Funds'
treatment  as  regulated  investment  companies  under  the  Code,  and  certain
consequences  if such  treatment  is not accorded  any Fund,  see the  Company's
Prospectus under "Dividends, Capital Gains and Taxes."



<PAGE>


         Each Fund will be subject to a 4% non-deductible  federal excise tax on
a portion of its  undistributed  taxable income and capital gains if it fails to
meet certain  distribution  requirements  by the end of the calendar year.  Each
Fund intends to avoid  liability  for such tax by satisfying  such  distribution
requirements.

         Each of the Feeder Funds will invest all of its investable  assets in a
corresponding  Portfolio  of the  Trust.  Each such Fund will be deemed to own a
proportionate  share of its corresponding  Portfolio's assets and income for the
purpose of  determining  whether the Fund  qualifies  as a regulated  investment
company.  Accordingly,  each Portfolio intends to conduct its operations so that
its corresponding Fund will be able to satisfy applicable tax requirements.

         If a Fund or Portfolio acquires stock in certain non-U.S.  corporations
("passive foreign investment companies" or "PFICs") that receive at least 75% of
their annual gross income from  passive  sources  (such as interest,  dividends,
rents,  royalties  or  capital  gains) or at least 50% of whose  average  assets
produce or are held for the production of such passive income, that Fund (or, in
the case of a Portfolio,  its corresponding Fund indirectly through its interest
in the Portfolio) could be subject to federal income tax and additional interest
charges on "excess distributions"  received from such companies or gain from the
sale of stock in such companies,  even if the Fund  distributes its share of the
PFIC  income as a  taxable  dividend  to its  shareholders.  A certain  election
(treating the PFIC as a "qualified electing fund") filed with the Fund's federal
income tax return may, if available,  ameliorate these adverse tax consequences,
but any such election  would require the applicable  Fund to recognize  ordinary
taxable  income  and net  capital  gain of the PFIC  without  the  corresponding
receipt of cash  which may need to be  distributed  by the Fund to  satisfy  the
Distribution Requirement.

         Pursuant  to  proposed   regulations,   open-end  regulated  investment
companies  such as the Funds  would be  entitled  to avoid the tax  consequences
described in the previous paragraph by electing to mark-to-market their stock in
certain PFICs.  Marking to market in this context means  recognizing as gain for
each  taxable  year the excess,  as of the end of that year,  of the fair market
value  of each  PFIC's  stock  over the  owner's  adjusted  basis in that  stock
(including  mark to market  gains of a prior year for which an  election  was in
effect).

         Gains and losses realized by a Fund (directly,  or through its interest
in a Portfolio)  in  connection  with  certain  transactions  involving  foreign
currency-denominated  debt  securities,  certain  foreign  currency  futures and
options, foreign currency forward contracts,  foreign currencies themselves,  or
payables or receivables  denominated in a foreign currency are generally treated
as ordinary income and loss.

         Some Funds,  or, in certain  cases,  the  Portfolio in which a Fund may
invest its assets,  may be subject to  withholding  and other  taxes  imposed by
foreign countries with respect to their investments in foreign  securities.  Tax
conventions  between certain countries and the U.S. may reduce or eliminate such
taxes. A Fund,  more than 50% of the value of whose total assets at the close of
a taxable year (held directly or indirectly  through a corresponding  Portfolio)
consists  of  stock  or  securities  in  foreign  corporations,   may  elect  to
"pass-through"  these  foreign  taxes to its  shareholders,  in which  case each
shareholder  will be  required to include  its pro rata  portion  thereof in its
gross income but, if it itemizes deductions,  will be able to deduct or (subject
to various  limitations)  will be able to claim a credit for its portion of such
taxes, in computing its federal income tax liability.

         Each Fund or  Portfolio  that invests in zero coupon  securities  or in
other  securities  with  original  issue  discount  (or  securities  with market
discount,  if the Fund or Portfolio  elects to include market discount in income
currently) must accrue such discount income  currently even if no  corresponding
payment is received.  However,  because income subject to a Fund's  Distribution
Requirement includes such accrued discount, to satisfy that requirement,  a Fund
may  have  to  dispose  of its  (or,  as the  case  may  be,  its  corresponding
Portfolio's)  securities  under  disadvantageous  circumstances,  or borrow,  to
generate the needed cash.

         Forward currency contracts,  options and futures contracts entered into
by a Fund or Portfolio may create  "straddles"  for federal  income tax purposes
with other such contracts or with securities positions,  and this may affect the
character and timing of gains or losses realized by the Fund (or, in the case of
a  Portfolio,  by  its  corresponding  Fund)  on  such  contracts,   options  or
securities.  Certain  straddles treated as short sales for tax purposes may also
result in the loss of the holding period of securities included in the straddles
for purposes of the 30% of gross income test described above,  and therefore,  a
Fund's or Portfolio's ability to enter into forward currency contracts,  options
and futures contracts may be limited.

         Certain options,  futures and foreign currency contracts held by a Fund
or  Portfolio  at  the  end  of  each  taxable  year  will  be  required  to  be
"marked-to-market"  for federal  income tax purposes -- i.e.,  treated as having
been sold at market value. For options and futures contracts, 60% of any gain or
loss recognized on these deemed sales and on actual dispositions will be treated
as  long-term  capital  gain or  loss,  and the  remainder  will be  treated  as
short-term capital gain or loss regardless of how long the Fund or Portfolio has
held such  options  or  futures.  However,  gain or loss  recognized  on certain
foreign currency contracts will be treated as ordinary income or loss.

         If a Fund or Portfolio satisfies certain requirements,  any increase in
value of a position that is part of a  "designated  hedge" will be offset by any
decrease in value (whether  realized or not) of the offsetting  hedging position
during the period of the hedge for purposes of determining whether the Fund (or,
in the case of a Portfolio,  its  corresponding  Fund)  satisfies  the 30% gross
income test above.  Thus,  only the net gain (if any) from the designated  hedge
will be included in gross income for purposes of that  limitation.  Each Fund or
Portfolio will consider whether it should seek to satisfy those  requirements to
enable the Fund (or,  in the case of a  Portfolio,  its  corresponding  Fund) to
qualify for this treatment for hedging transactions.

         To maintain a constant  $1.00 per share NAV, the  Directors of the ASAF
JPM Money  Market Fund (the "Money  Market  Fund") may direct that the number of
outstanding  shares be reduced pro rata.  If this  adjustment  is made,  it will
reflect the lower market value of portfolio  securities and not realized losses.
The adjustment may result in a shareholder  having more dividend income than net
income in his account for a period. When the number of outstanding shares of the
Money Market Fund is reduced,  the shareholder's basis in the shares of the Fund
may be  adjusted  to  reflect  the  difference  between  taxable  income and net
dividends  actually  distributed.  This  difference may be realized as a capital
loss when the shares are liquidated.

         Distributions from a Fund's current or accumulated earnings and profits
("E&P"),  as  computed  for  federal  income  tax  purposes,  will be taxable as
described in the Company's  Prospectus whether taken in shares or in cash. These
distributions  will be  treated  as  dividends,  but  will  qualify  for the 70%
dividends-received  deduction for the Fund's corporate  shareholders only to the
extent designated in a notice to the Fund's  shareholders as being  attributable
to dividends received by the Fund. Distributions,  if any, in excess of E&P will
constitute a return of capital,  which will first reduce an investor's tax basis
in a Fund's  shares and  thereafter  (after  such basis is reduced to zero) will
generally  give  rise  to  capital  gains.   Shareholders  electing  to  receive
distributions  in the form of  additional  shares  will  have a cost  basis  for
federal  income tax  purposes in each share so  received  equal to the amount of
cash they would have received had they elected to receive the  distributions  in
cash, divided by the number of shares received.

         At the time of an  investor's  purchase of shares of a Fund (other than
the Money Market Fund), a portion of the purchase price is often attributable to
realized or unrealized  appreciation  in the Fund's  portfolio or  undistributed
taxable income of the Fund.  Consequently,  subsequent  distributions  from such
appreciation  or income may be taxable to such  investor  even if the NAV of the
investor's  shares  is,  as a result  of the  distributions,  reduced  below the
investor's cost for such shares,  and the  distributions in reality  represent a
return of a portion of the purchase price.

         Upon a redemption of shares of a Fund, other than the Money Market Fund
(including  an exchange  for other Fund  shares),  a  shareholder  may realize a
taxable  gain or loss.  Such  gain or loss will be  capital  if the  shares  are
capital  assets in the  shareholder's  hands and will be long-term or short-term
capital gain or loss,  depending upon the  shareholder's  holding period for the
shares.  A sales  charge paid in  purchasing  shares of a Fund  ("load  charge")
cannot be taken into  account for  purposes of  determining  gain or loss on the
redemption or exchange of such shares within 90 days after their purchase to the
extent  shares of the same or another  Fund are  subsequently  acquired  without
payment of a load charge pursuant to a reinvestment or exchange privilege.  Such
disregarded  load charge will  result in an  increase in the  shareholder's  tax
basis in the Fund shares  subsequently  acquired.  Also,  any loss realized on a
redemption  or exchange of shares of a Fund will be disallowed to the extent the
shares  disposed of are replaced with shares of the same Fund within a period of
61 days beginning 30 days before and ending 30 days after such  disposition.  In
such a case,  the basis of the shares  acquired  will be adjusted to reflect the
disallowed  loss. If Fund shares are redeemed or exchanged at a loss after being
held for six  months or less,  the loss will  treated as  long-term,  instead of
short-term,  capital  loss to the  extent  of any  capital  gains  distributions
received on those shares.

         Each  shareholder  will be required  to furnish its social  security or
taxpayer  identification number and certify that such number is correct and that
the  shareholder  is not  subject to back-up  withholding  for failure to report
income  to  the  Internal  Revenue  Service  ("IRS").  Failure  to  comply  with
applicable IRS regulations,  including the  certification  procedures  described
above, may result in the Fund being required to collect back-up withholding at a
31% rate on taxable distributions and redemptions to the shareholder.

         Different  tax  treatment,   including   penalties  on  certain  excess
contributions  and  deferrals,   certain   pre-retirement  and   post-retirement
distributions and certain  prohibited  transactions,  is accorded to shareholder
accounts maintained as qualified  retirement plans.  Shareholders should consult
their tax advisers for more information.

         The foregoing  discussion  relates  solely to federal income tax law as
applicable to U.S. persons (i.e.,  U.S.  citizens or residents and U.S. domestic
corporations,  partnerships,  trusts or estates) generally.  The discussion does
not address special tax rules  applicable to certain classes of investors,  such
as tax-exempt entities, insurance companies, and financial institutions.

         A foreign  shareholder  (i.e., a nonresident alien individual,  foreign
trust or estate,  foreign  corporation or foreign  partnership) not engaged in a
U.S.  trade or  business  with  which its  investment  in a Fund is  effectively
connected will be subject to federal income tax treatment that is different from
that described above. These investors may be subject to U.S.  withholding tax at
the rate of 30% (or a lower  rate  under an  applicable  tax  treaty) on amounts
treated as ordinary  dividends from a Fund and, unless an effective IRS Form W-8
or authorized substitute is on file, to backup withholding at the rate of 31% on
certain other payments from the Fund. Distributions treated as long term capital
gains to foreign  shareholders  will not be subject to federal income tax unless
the distributions are effectively connected with the shareholder's U.S. trade or
business or, in the case of a non-resident alien individual,  the shareholder is
present in the U.S.  for more than 182 days during the taxable  year and certain
other conditions are met.  Non-U.S.  investors should consult their tax advisers
regarding such  treatment and the  application of foreign taxes to an investment
in any Fund.

         State and Local Tax Consequences.  Each Fund may be subject to state or
local  taxes in  jurisdictions  in which  such  Fund may be  deemed  to be doing
business. In addition, in those states or localities which have income tax laws,
the treatment of such Fund and its shareholders  under such laws may differ from
their  treatment  under federal income tax laws, and investment in such Fund may
have different tax consequences for shareholders than would direct investment in
such Fund's (or, in the case of a Feeder Fund,  its  corresponding  Portfolio's)
portfolio  securities.  Shareholders  should consult their own tax advisers with
respect to any state or local taxes.

                         CAPITAL STOCK OF THE COMPANY &
                         PRINCIPAL HOLDERS OF SECURITIES

         The  Company is an open-end  management  investment  company  organized
under the laws of Maryland on March 5, 1997. The Company  currently has thirteen
separate series of shares of beneficial interest,  each of which is divided into
Class A, B, C and X shares.  The  Directors  of the  Company are  authorized  to
establish, from time to time and without shareholder approval, additional series
or classes of shares.

         The  shares of the Funds are  entitled  to vote  separately  to approve
investment  advisory  agreements  or changes  in  investment  restrictions,  but
shareholders  of all series  vote  together in the  election  and  selection  of
directors.  Shares of a Fund vote together as a class on matters that affect the
Fund in substantially  the same manner.  Matters  pertaining only to one or more
Funds will be voted upon only by those Funds.  As to matters  affecting a single
class,  shares of such  class will vote  separately.  Shares of the Funds do not
have cumulative  voting rights.  The Company and the Funds do not intend to hold
annual meetings of shareholders  unless required to do so by the 1940 Act or the
Maryland statutes under which the Company is organized.  Although  Directors are
not  elected  annually  by the  shareholders,  shareholders  have under  certain
circumstances  the  right  to  remove  one or more  Directors.  If  required  by
applicable  law, a meeting  will be held to vote on the removal of a Director or
Directors of the Company if requested in writing by the holders of not less than
10% of the  Company's  outstanding  shares.  Each Fund's  shares when issued are
fully paid,  non-assessable  and freely  transferable,  and have no  preference,
preemptive or similar rights.



<PAGE>


     The following  table lists persons  owning more than 5% of any class of the
Fund's outstanding shares as of October 9, 1997.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc., - Report of 5% or Greater Owners

                              As of October 8, 1997

          Fund and Share Class                      Owner Name                         Address                 Percent
                                                                                                              Ownership

<S>                                       <C>                              <C>                                     <C>  
   
ASAF Founders International Small         State Street Bank & Trust Co.    1824 Oak Road                           8.88%
Capitalization Fund Class A               Cust for the IRA Rollover of     North Brunswick, NJ 08902-2535
                                          Edythe J. Doerr


                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    41 Sandown Road                         6.83%
                                          Cust for the IRA of Myron E.     Audubon, PA 19403-1982
                                          Jennings

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    110 Race Hill Road                      8.18%
                                          Cust for the IRA of Berthann     Guilford, CT 06437-1011
                                          Jones


ASAF Founders International Small Cap     Vernice B. Ruiz                  6722 Casa Blanca                       14.11%
Fund Class B                                                               Houston, TX 77088-2139
                                          Nell T. Haddock                  10645 No. Tatum Blvd.                   5.54%
                                                                           Suite 200
                                                                           Box 288
                                                                           Phoenix, AZ 85001-0288

                                          Linda Tomkiewicz                 314 Arch Street                         6.73%
                                                                           Delran, NJ 08075-1108
                                          Donaldson Lufkin Jenrette        P.O. Box 2052                     8.34%
                                          Securities Corporation Inc.      Jersey City, NJ 07303-2052


ASAF Founders International Small Cap     State Street Bank & Trust Co.    437 Benjamins Road                5.70%
Fund Class C                              Cust for the IRA of William E.   Santa Rosa, CA 95409-3115
                                          Dean

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    437 Benjamin Road                   11.82%
                                          Cust. For the IRA of Deloris     Santa Rosa, CA 95409-3115
                                          D. Dean

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    3770 Black Creek Drive                  8.93%
                                          Cust. For the IRA Rollover of    Hudsonville, MI  49426-9036
                                          Eugene D. Vander Ark

                                          Tawny J. Pace                    869 Lucas Lane                          8.94%
                                                                           Oldsmar, FL 34677-4222

                                          Craig B. Satterlee               181 Blue Sky Drive                      8.09%
                                                                           Marietta, GA 30068-3812
                                          Antonio Narvaez Jr TTEE          868 N. Sacremento Avenue                7.04%
                                          Antonio Narvaez Jr Char          Chicago, IL 60622-4363
                                          Remainder Annuity Trust DTD
                                          7-22-97

ASAF Founders International Small Cap     State Street Bank & Trust Co.    3936 Cloverfield Circle                 9.77%
Fund Class X                              Cust for the IRA Rollover of     Liverpool, NY 13090-3104
                                          James J. Layhew


ASAF T. Rowe Price International Equity   Jeanne L. Odell TTEE             2249 Country Club Loop                 16.92%
Fund Class A                              Country Hills Investments        Westminster, CO 80234-2637

                                          Ann W. Greenfield                7277 NW 64TH Terrace                    6.28%
                                                                           Parkland, FL 33067-4751


ASAF T. Rowe Price International Equity   N/A                              N/A                                       N/A
Fund Class B

ASAF T. Rowe Price International Equity   Craig B. Satterlee               181 Blue Sky Drive                      9.80%
Fund Class C                                                               Marietta, GA 30068-3812

                                          Donaldson Lufkin Jenrette        P.O. Box 2052                           7.37%
                                          Securities Corporation Inc.      Jersey City, NJ 07303-2052


ASAF T. Rowe Price International Equity   N/A                              N/A                                       N/A
Fund Class X

ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund           N/A                              N/A                                       N/A
Class A, B, C and X

ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund   State Street Bank & Trust Co.    2534 W. Avenue J                        6.69%
Class A                                   Cust for the IRA Rollover of     San Angelo, TX 76901-3745
                                          Frank C. Gould

                                          Wedbush Morgan Securities Inc.   P.O. Box 30014                          6.33%
                                          FBO A/C 8501-2423                Los Angeles, CA 90030-0014

                                          Jeanne L. Odell TTEE             2249 Country Club Loop                 21.46%
                                          Country Hills Investments        Westminster, CO 80234-2637

                                          Wedbush Morgan Securities        1000 Wilshire Boulevard                 8.27%
                                          A/C 3735-1153                    Los Angeles, CA 90017-2457


ASAF Founders Small Cap Fund              Brian J. Doering                 3868 39th Street                        5.42%
Class B                                                                    San Diego, CA 92105-2420
                                          Terrell Phillips                 1044 SW 44th, Suite 505                 6.05%
                                          Delaware Charter IRA SEP         Oklahoma City, OK 73109-3609

                                          Marvin P. Burnett &              6250 S. Elmire Circle E.                7.96%
                                          Alison G. Burnett ATIC           Englewood, CO 80111-5606


ASAF Founders Small Cap Fund              State Street Bank & Trust Co.    437 Benjamins Road                      5.05%
Class C                                   Cust for the IRA of William E.   Santa Rosa, CA 95409-3115
                                          Dean

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    437 Benjamins Road                     10.37%
                                          Cust for the IRA of Deloris D.   Santa Rosa, CA 95409-3115
                                          Dean
                                          Bill Bellis                      RR 4 Box 243-E                          7.89%
                                          Betty Bellis JT WROS             Savannah, TN 38372-9804
                                          Craig B. Satterlee               181 Blue Sky Drive                      7.15%
                                                                           Marietta, GA 30068-3812
                                          Raymond James & Assoc. Inc.      880 Carillon Parkway                    8.55%
                                          CSDN Donald A. Worley IRA        P.O. Box 12749
                                          Acct#71390924                    St. Petersburg, FL 33733-2749


ASAF Founders Small Cap Fund              State Street Bank & Trust Co.    3936 Cloverfield Circle                 7.41%
Class X                                   Cust. For the IRA of             Liverpool, NY 13090-3104
                                          Rollover of James J. Layhew


ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Co. Value Fund   Jeanne L. Odell TTEE             2249 Country Club Loop
Class A                                   Country Hills Investments        Westminster, CO 80234-2637

ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Co. Value Fund   N/A                              N/A                                       N/A
Class B

ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Co. Value Fund   State Street Bank & Trust Co.    3770 Black Creek Drive                  6.75%
Class C                                   Cust for the IRA Rollover of     Hudsonville, MI 49426-9036
                                          Eugene D. Vander Ark

                                          Curtis B. Bruce                  11276 Meadow Glen Way E                 6.00%
                                          Catherine Bruce JT WROS          Escondido, CA 92026-7009

ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Co. Value Fund   State Street Bank & Trust Co.    P.O. Box 27                             6.00%
Class X                                   Cust for the IRA of Kenneth L.   Thomas, OK 73669-0027
                                          Ballard


ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth
Fund Class A, B, C, & X                   N/A                              N/A                                       N/A

ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund            State Street Bank & Trust Co.    2534 W. Avenue J                        5.83%
Class A                                   Cust for the IRA Rollover of     San Angelo, TX 76901-3745
                                          Frank C. Gould

                                          Jeanne L. Odell TTEE             2249 Country Club Loop                  5.06%
                                          Country Hills Investments        Westminster, CO 80234-2637

ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund            N/A                              N/A                                       N/A
Class B

ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund            N/A                              N/A                                       N/A
Class C

ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund            N/A                              N/A                                       N/A
Class X


ASAF  Lord Abbett Growth and Income
Fund Class A, B, C & X                    N/A                              N/A                                       N/A

ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund           Jeanne L. Odell TTEE             2249 Country Club Loop                  7.75%
Class A                                   Country Hills Investments        Westminster, CO 80234-2637

ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund           Eva G. Seltzer                   114 Hayes Mill Road, Apt. D105          5.55%
Class B                                                                    Atco, NJ 08004-2464

                                          Margaret B. Davis                705 West Lee                            5.15%
                                                                           Weatherford, TX 76086-4121

ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund           State Street Bank & Trust Co.    3770 Black Creek Drive                  5.70%
Class C                                   Cust. For the IRA Rollover of    Hudsonville, MI 49426-9036
                                          Eugene D. Vander Ark

                                          Craig B. Satterlee               181 Blue Sky Drive                      7.78%
                                                                           Marietta, GA 30068-3812

ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund           State Street Bank & Trust Co.    P.O. Box 27                             6.54%
Class X                                   Cust for the IRA Rollover of     Shaver Lake, CA 93664-0027
                                          Stanley E. Daniels

ASAF American Century Strategic           Jeanne L. Odell TTEE             2249 Country Club Loop                 37.49%
Balanced Fund Class A                     Country Hills Investments        Westminster, CO 80234-2637

                                          Michael E. English               2637 Eudora Street                     11.30%
                                                                           Denver, CO 80207-3216

ASAF American Century Strategic           Jane F. Barry                    149 E. Side Drive. #229                 5.97%
Balanced Fund Class B                                                      Concord, NH 03301-5465

ASAF American Century Strategic           State Street Bank & Trust Co.    437 Benjamins Road                      7.39%
Balanced Fund Class C                     Cust. For the IRA of             Santa Rosa, CA 95409-3115
                                          Deloris D. Dean

                                          Tawny J. Pace                    869 Lucas Lane                          8.50%
                                                                           Oldsmar, FL 34677-4222
                                          Michael Thomas O'Cal             4742 Santa Rosita Court                 5.79%
                                                                           Santa Rosa, CA 95405-8203
                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    20 Mayfair Court                        5.06%
                                          Cust for the IRA of Helen B.     Little Silver, NJ 07739-1237
                                          Mosolgo

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    424 Washington Avenue                   9.31%
                                          Cust for the IRA of Julia A.     Wilmette, IL 60091-1966
                                          Mayes

                                          Raymond James & Assoc Inc CSDN   880 Carillon Parkway                    5.62%
                                          Gerald Sparer IRA                P.O. Box 12749
                                          Acct# 88372328                   St. Petersburg, FL 33733-2749
                                          Donaldson Lufkin Jenrette        P.O. Box 2052                           9.77%
                                          Securities Corporation Inc.      Jersey City, NJ 07303-2052

ASAF American Century Strategic           State Street Bank & Trust Co.    9 Oyster Bateau Court                   9.07%
Balanced Fund Class X                     Cust for the IRA of David W.     Hilton Head, SC 29926-2683
                                          Hodges

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    83 Bond Street                          5.45%
                                          Cust. for the IRA of             Norwood, MA 02062-2063
                                          George M. Donelan

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    7088 Anderson Road                      9.60%
                                          Cust for the IRA of Betty L.     Montague, MI 49437-9787
                                          Johnson

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    1620 Ridgeview Circle                   8.19%
                                          Cust for the IRA of Bonnie C.    Monument, CO 80132-9533
                                          Wendelburg

ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund       State Street Bank & Trust Co.    5644 Edgewater Boulevard                5.33%
Class A                                   Cust for the IRA Rollover of     Minneapolis, MN 55417-2627
                                          Bonnie J. Daly

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    2534 W. Avenue J                        6.90%
                                          Cust for the IRA Rollover of     San Angelo, TX 76901-3745
                                          Frank C. Gould

                                          Ethelann G. Stillinger TTEE      P.O. Box 142                            9.89%
                                          Robert H. Stillinger Rev Liv     Table Rock, NE 68447-0142
                                          Trust
                                          FBO Robert H. Stillinger
                                          U/A DTD 10/13/93

                                          Gary W. Brown                    710 N. Railroad Street                  5.27%
                                                                           Palmyra, PA 17078-1128
                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    19240 Starrwood Drive                   6.00%
                                          Cust for the IRA of Ruby E.      Monument, CO 80132-9711
                                          Hamilton
                                          Dain Bosworth Custodian          371 South 20TH                          6.52%
                                          Leonard H. McCain                Brighton, CO 80601-2521
                                          A/C #5468-5662
                                          Individual Retirement Account

                                          Wedbush Morgan Securities        1000 Wilshire Boulevard                 6.22%
                                          A/C 3559-8655                    Los Angeles, CA 90017-2457

ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund       Marlys A. Brinklow               6 Taos Circle                           5.19%
Class B                                                                    Fountain, CO 80817-2104
                                          John R. Owen                     113 Stagecoach Drive                    6.17%
                                          Angela Tyler-Owen JT WROS        Madison, AL 35757-8817

                                          Hyman Novarr                     1250 Farmington Avenue                  6.41%
                                                                           W. Hartford, CT 06107-2608

ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund       INDE & Co CUST                   4401 Rockside Road                      5.19%
Class C                                   FBO EBIRA # 17-119-5             Independence, OH 44131-2144
                                          c/o Independence Bank

                                          INDE & Co. CUST                  4401 Rockside Road                     10.38%
                                          FBO BWIRA # 17-123-9             Independence, OH 44131-2144
                                          c/o Independence Bank

                                          INDE & Co. CUST                  4401 Rockside Road                      5.05%
                                          FBO JCKIRA # 17-031-3            Independence, OH 44131-2144
                                          c/o Independence Bank

                                          INDE & Co. CUST                  4401 Rockside Road                      5.54%
                                          FBO BCLPSP # 15-020-1            Independence, OH 44131-2144
                                          c/o Independence Bank

                                          INDE & Co. CUST                  4401 Rockside Road                      6.09%
                                          FBO JSTIRA # 17-091-8            Independence, OH 44131-2144
                                          c/o Independence Bank

                                          INDE & Co. CUST                  4401 Rockside Road                     16.96%
                                          FBO BNRIRA # 17-083-1            Independence, OH 44131-2144
                                          c/o Independence Bank

                                          INDE & Co. CUST                  4401 Rockside Road                      7.20%
                                          FBO TFERPT # 15-035-6            Independence, OH 44131-2144
                                          c/o Independence Bank

ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund       State Street Bank & Trust Co.    221 Hager Road                          8.84%
Class X                                   Cust for the 403B of Joan        Rochester, NY 14616-3137
                                          Nageldinger

                                          Everen Clearing Corp Cust        7943 W. Friend Drive                   13.50%
                                          FBO John S. Wells IRA            Littleton, CO 80128-5544
                                          A/C 8205-9670

ASAF Total Return Bond Fund               State Street Bank & Trust Co.    5644 Edgewater Boulevard               12.76%
Class A                                   Cust for the IRA Rollover of     Minneapolis, MN 55417-2627
                                          Bonnie J. Daly

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    2534 W. Avenue J                       16.52%
                                          Cust for the IRA Rollover of     San Angelo, TX 76901-3745
                                          Frank C. Gould

                                          Joseph Jacuzzo                   18 Main Street                          6.13%
                                          Phyllis Mary Jacuzzo JT WROS     Perry, NY 14530-1311

                                          Donaldson Lufkin Jenrette        P.O. Box 2052                           9.42%
                                          Securities Corporation Inc       Jersey City, NJ 07303-2052


ASAF Total Return Bond Fund               Joseph & Pauline Grosso TTEE     2555 PGA Blvd. Lot 142                  7.42%
Class B                                   Joseph & Pauline Grosso          Palm Beach Gardens, FL
                                          Living Trust DTD                 33410-2945
                                          Lorraine Taylor                  4739 W 149th Street                    5.68%%
                                          Ann Irmer TTEES                  Midlothian, IL 60445-3183
                                          The Irmer Family Revoc Living
                                          Trust DTD 2/3/97

                                          Harriet Hinckley Eliason &       2558 S 900 E                           10.57%
                                          King Hinckley TTEES              Salt Lake City, UT 84106-2235
                                          Parnell Hinckley Trust
                                          U/A DTD 10-18-73

                                          So Yee Chu Fong                  151 Tremont Street Unit 9E             10.52%
                                          Flora Man Yee Wong TTEES         Boston, MA 02111-1145
                                          Shok Wan Cheng Trust
                                          U/A DTD 7-8-97

                                          Martha Messina                   2890 Montessouri Street                 6.25%
                                          Marie Maiorca JT WROS            Las Vegas, NV 89117-3052
                                          Angela Desmoni

                                          Donaldson Lufkin Jenrette        P.O. Box 2052                           5.21%
                                          Securities Corporation Inc.      Jersey City, NJ 07303-2052

ASAF Total Return Bond Fund               State Street Bank & Trust Co.    3770 Black Creek Drive                  9.90%
Class C                                   Cust. For the IRA Rollover of    Hudsonville, MI 49426-9036
                                          Eugene D. Vander Ark


                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    82 Wood Creek Drive                    11.76%
                                          Cust for the 403-B of            Pittsford, NY 14534-4416
                                          Pamela A. Fogarty

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    380 W. Sicamore Lane                   16.48%
                                          Cust for the IRA of              Louisville, CO 80027-2238
                                          Andrea M. Aschoff

                                          Craig B. Satterlee               181 Blue Sky Drive                      8.65%
                                                                           Marietta, GA 30068-3812

ASAF Total Return Bond Fund               Jesse T. Espinola TTEE           127 Belvidere Avenue                    6.99%
Class X                                   Warren OB-GYN Associates MPPP    Washington, NJ 07882-1402
                                          DTD 1-1-87
                                          FBO Jesse T. Espinola


                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    7088 Anderson Road                      8.89%
                                          Cust for the IRA of              Montague, MI 49437-9787
                                          Betty L. Johnson

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    51 Shoshoni Drive                      10.35%
                                          Cust for the IRA Rollover of     Sherwood, AR 72120-2538
                                          Jayanna McCulloch

ASAF JPM Money Market Fund                Carole D. Haupert                225 Ashwood Lane NW                     5.36%
Class A                                                                    New Philadelphia, OH 44663-3743
                                          Margaret W. Burdick              34 Bloomer Road                         5.54%
                                          Thomas W. Burdick JT WROS        Ridgefield, CT 06877-6006


                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    5658 Swaying Palm Lane                 32.07%
                                          Cust. For the IRA Rollover of    Boynton Beach, FL 33437-4224
                                          Edward Gerard


                                          Michael Wanas & Mark Fellanto    10 Peach Street                         6.43%
                                          TTEES                            Paterson, NJ 07503-3010
                                          Promar Precision Engine
                                          Rebuilders Inc 401K Profit
                                          SHAR PL

                                          Patricia A. Scheib               315 A Queensdale Drive                  5.04%
                                                                           York, PA 17403-4368
                                          Peter T. Russo                   11 Jerome Avenue                        6.30%
                                                                           W. Newton, MA 02165-1108
                                          Donaldson Lufkin Jenrette        P.O. Box 2052                           6.18%
                                          Securities Corporation Inc.      Jersey City, NJ 07303-2052


ASAF JPM Money Market Fund                Elba R. Bishop                   749 Roosevelt Street                   14.86%
Class B                                   June Bishop JT WROS              Springfield, CO 81073-1436

                                          Karen S. Cusick                  400 Chesterfield Ctr., Ste. 305        11.12%
                                          c/o Clark Financial Servs Group  Chesterfield, MO 63017-4800

                                          Marilyn A. Scannell              9 Evergreen Avenue                      8.27%
                                          Roger V. Scannell JT WROS        Kennebunk, ME 04043-2504

                                          Kenneth M. Walker                7201 Archibald Ave., Ste. 4-286        12.34%
                                                                           Alta Loma, CA 91701-6403

ASAF JPM Money Market Fund                Lynn Harris                      6417 High Country Trail                18.82%
Class C                                   Lavern Harris JT WROS            Arlington, TX 76016-5519

                                          Harold Delmastro                 11 Munster Place                        6.73%
                                          Angela Delmastro JT WROS         Wayne, NJ 07470-4126

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    P.O. Box 1005                          10.54%
                                          Cust for the IRA Rollover of     Chesapeake Beach, MD 20732-1005
                                          Phillip Constantino

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    1021 Devon Drive                       11.33%
                                          Cust for the IRA Rollover of     Exton, PA 19341
                                          Nicholas G. Spyropoulos

                                          Bill Bellis                      RR 4 Box 243-E                         11.56%
                                          Betty Bellis JT WROS             Savannah, TN 38372-9804

                                          William L. Robinson              5458 Wagon Master Drive                 8.66%
                                          Grace C. Robinson TEN COMM       Colorado Springs, CO 80917-2235

                                          Antonio Narvaez Jr TTEE          868 N. Sacremento Avenue                5.98%
                                          Antonio Narvaez Jr Char          Chicago, IL 60622-4363
                                          Remainder Annuity Trust
                                          DTD 7-22-97

ASAF JPM Money Market Fund                State Street Bank & Trust Co.    124 Franklin Street                    21.96%
Class X                                   Cust for the IRA Rollover of     Melrose, MA 02176-1821
                                          Robert L. Goodwin Jr.

                                          State Street Bank & Trust Co.    1620 Ridgeview Circle                   9.55%
                                          Cust for the IRA of Bonnie C.    Monument, CO 80132-9533
                                          Wendelburg

                                          Martin D. Desousa &              502 Delaware Avenue                    22.56%
                                          Timothy J. Desousa TTEES         Palmerton, PA 18071-1917
                                          Desousa's Oil & Service Corp.
                                          Pension Plan Dated 12-12-97
</TABLE>
    

                                OTHER INFORMATION

REPORTS TO SHAREHOLDERS:

         Shareholders of each Fund are provided unaudited  semi-annual financial
statements,  as well as year-end  financial  statements audited by the Company's
independent  public  accountants.  Each  Fund's  financial  statements  show the
investments owned by the Fund or its corresponding Portfolio,  where applicable,
and the market values thereof.  Additionally,  each Fund's financial  statements
provide other  information  about the Fund and its operations,  including in the
case of the Feeder Funds, the Fund's  beneficial  interest in its  corresponding
Portfolio.

DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN CUSTODIANS:


   
         PNC Bank,  located at Airport Business Center,  International  Court 2,
200 Stevens Drive, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19113, serves as custodian for all
domestic  cash and  securities  holdings of the Funds and  Portfolios  investing
primarily in domestic securities.  Morgan Stanley Trust Company,  located at One
Pierrepont Plaza, Brooklyn, New York 11201, serves as custodian for all cash and
securities  holdings of the ASAF  Founders  International  Small  Capitalization
Fund,  the ASAF T. Rowe  Price  International  Equity  Fund  (and  corresponding
Portfolio) and the ASAF Janus Overseas  Growth Fund,  and  co-custodian  for all
foreign  securities  holdings of the Funds and Portfolios which invest primarily
in domestic securities.
    


TRANSFER AGENT:

     Boston Financial Data Services,  Inc. (the "Transfer  Agent," as previously
defined), located at Two Heritage Drive, Quincy,  Massachusetts 02171, serves as
the transfer agent for the Company.

INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS:

         Coopers  &  Lybrand  L.L.P.,   located  at  2400  Eleven  Penn  Center,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103, has been selected as the independent certified
public  accountants of the Company,  providing audit services and assistance and
consultation with respect to the preparation of filings with the Commission.

REGISTRATION STATEMENT:

         This  SAI  and  the  Company's   Prospectus  do  not  contain  all  the
information  included in the  Company's  Registration  Statement  filed with the
Commission  under the  Securities  Act of 1933 with  respect  to the  securities
offered by the Prospectus.  The Registration  Statement,  including the exhibits
filed therewith, may be examined at the Commission's offices in Washington, D.C.
The Commission  maintains a Website  (http: / / www.sec.gov)  that contains this
SAI, material  incorporated by reference,  and other  information  regarding the
Funds and Portfolios.

                              FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

         An audited  statement of assets and  liabilities of each Fund as of the
date of initial  capital  contribution,  together with the notes thereto and the
report of Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P., are attached to this SAI.



<PAGE>

 
                       REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
To the Shareholders and Board of Directors of
American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.:
 
     We have audited the accompanying statements of assets and liabilities,
including the schedules of investments, of the American Skandia Advisor Funds,
Inc. (the "Company"), comprising, respectively, ASAF T. Rowe Price International
Equity Fund, ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund, ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund,
ASAF Total Return Bond Fund, ASAF JPM Money Market Fund, ASAF Founders
International Small Capitalization Fund, ASAF Founders Small Capitalization
Fund, ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund, ASAF American Century
Strategic Balanced Fund, and ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund as of October
31, 1997, and their related statements of operations, changes in net assets and
financial highlights for each of the periods presented. These financial
statements and financial highlights are the responsibility of the Company's
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial
statements and the financial highlights based on our audits.
 
     We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements and financial
highlights are free of material misstatements. An audit includes examining, on a
test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial
statements. Our procedures included confirmation of investments owned as of
October 31, 1997, by correspondence with custodians and brokers. An audit also
includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made
by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement
presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our
opinion.
 
     In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights referred
to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of
each of the aforementioned funds of the American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc. as
of October 31, 1997, and the results of their operations, the changes in their
net assets and their financial highlights for each of the periods presented, in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
 
COOPERS & LYBRAND L.L.P.
 
2400 Eleven Penn Center
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
December 12, 1997

<PAGE>
 
                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
                            SCHEDULES OF INVESTMENTS
                                OCTOBER 31, 1997
 
             ASAF FOUNDERS INTERNATIONAL SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND
                    ASAF FOUNDERS SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND
                  ASAF T. ROWE PRICE SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND
                 ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND
                      ASAF FEDERATED HIGH YIELD BOND FUND

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASAF FOUNDERS INTERNATIONAL
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
FOREIGN STOCK -- 54.2%
  CANADA -- 5.8%
    Cinar Films, Inc. Cl-B*      500       $ 19,438
    Gulf Canada Resources
      Ltd.*                    2,000         16,750
                                           --------
                                             36,188
                                           --------
  CHILE -- 2.9%
    Compania Cervecerias
      Unidas SA [ADR]            750         18,281
                                           --------
  FINLAND -- 2.6%
    Raision Tehtaat Oy*          150         16,256
                                           --------
  FRANCE -- 2.6%
    Coflexip SA [ADR]            300         16,500
                                           --------
  GERMANY -- 2.4%
    Porsche AG Pfd.               10         14,787
                                           --------
  HONG KONG -- 2.9%
    Asia Satellite
      Telecommunications
      Holdings Ltd. [ADR]        775         18,116
                                           --------
  INDONESIA -- 3.0%
    Gulf Indonesia
      Resources Ltd.             900         18,900
                                           --------
  IRELAND -- 2.8%
    Ryanair Holdings PLC SP
      [ADR]*                     700         17,500
                                           --------
  ITALY -- 2.9%
    Industrie Natuzzi SPA
      [ADR]                      800         17,900
                                           --------
  MEXICO -- 2.9%
    Grupo Iusacell [ADR]*      1,000         18,000
                                           --------
  NETHERLANDS -- 2.7%
    Hunter Douglas NV            400         16,489
                                           --------
  NEW ZEALAND -- 2.8%
    Tranz Rail Holdings
      [ADR]                    1,250         16,875
                                           --------
  NORWAY -- 2.8%
    Petroleum Geo Services
      [ADR]                      250         17,312
                                           --------
  PANAMA -- 2.9%
    Banco Latinoamericano
      de Exportaciones SA
      Cl-E                       450         17,888
                                           --------
 
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
  SINGAPORE -- 2.9%
    Creative Technology
      Ltd.                       700       $ 17,806
                                           --------
  SPAIN -- 2.8%
    Tele Pizza SA*               250         17,181
                                           --------
  UNITED KINGDOM -- 6.5%
    J.D. Wetherspoon PLC         750         20,311
    JBA Holdings PLC           1,250         20,070
                                           --------
                                             40,381
                                           --------
TOTAL FOREIGN STOCK
  (Cost $345,159)                           336,360
                                           --------
COMMON STOCK -- 5.7%
  APPAREL MANUFACTURERS -- 2.8%
    Tefron Ltd.*                 900         17,269
                                           --------
 TELECOMMUNICATIONS -- 2.9%
    Cellular Communications
      International, Inc.*       450         18,000
                                           --------
TOTAL COMMON STOCK
  (Cost $36,552)                             35,269
                                           --------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS -- 59.9%
  (Cost $381,711)                           371,629
OTHER ASSETS LESS
  LIABILITIES -- 40.1%                      249,177
                                           --------
NET ASSETS -- 100.0%                       $620,806
                                           ========
</TABLE>
 
Foreign currency exchange contracts outstanding at October 31, 1997:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
SETTLEMENT              CONTRACTS TO     IN EXCHANGE     CONTRACTS      UNREALIZED
  MONTH        TYPE       RECEIVE            FOR         AT VALUE      APPRECIATION
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>            <C>      <C>              <C>             <C>           <C>
11/97          Buy       GBP 12,273        $20,367        $20,580          $213
11/97          Buy       GBP 11,858         19,676         19,883           207
                                           -------        -------          ----
                                           $40,043        $40,463          $420
                                           =======        =======          ====
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
Unless otherwise noted, all foreign stocks are common stock.
Definitions of abbreviations are included following the Schedules of
Investments.
* Non-income producing securities.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 

<PAGE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASAF FOUNDERS
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
COMMON STOCK -- 20.1%
  BEVERAGES -- 0.3%
    Beringer Wine Estates
      Holdings, Inc.*             75       $  2,325
                                           --------
  BUSINESS SERVICES -- 1.0%
    Pre-Paid Legal
      Services, Inc.             300          9,075
                                           --------
  COMPUTER SERVICES & SOFTWARE -- 7.8%
    Aspen Technology, Inc.       300         11,287
    Avant Corp.*                 300          7,875
    CDW Computers Centers,
      Inc.*                      200         12,400
    Checkfree Corp.*             250          6,750
    Documentum, Inc.*            325          9,709
    Electronic Arts, Inc.*       200          6,775
    HNC Software, Inc.*          300         11,100
    Transaction Systems
      Architects, Inc.*          100          3,913
                                           --------
                                             69,809
                                           --------
  CONSUMER PRODUCTS & SERVICES -- 0.1%
    Vestcom International,
      Inc.                        50            906
                                           --------
  ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS & EQUIPMENT -- 1.8%
    Concord EFS, Inc.*           300          8,906
    Sanmina Corp.*               100          7,475
                                           --------
                                             16,381
                                           --------
  FOOD -- 1.1%
    JP Foodservice, Inc.*        300          9,581
                                           --------
  HEALTHCARE
    SERVICES -- 1.7%
    Capital Senior Living
      Corp.                      475          7,956
    FPA Medical Management,
      Inc.*                      300          7,238
                                           --------
                                             15,194
                                           --------
  HOTELS & MOTELS -- 1.2%
    Capstar Hotel Co.            300         10,631
                                           --------
 
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
  MEDICAL SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT -- 1.6%
    Henry Schein, Inc.*          300       $  9,863
    Transition Systems,
      Inc.                       200          4,050
                                           --------
                                             13,913
                                           --------
  PHARMACEUTICALS -- 0.7%
    R.P. Scherer Corp.*          100          5,888
                                           --------
  RESTAURANTS -- 0.9%
    CKE Restaurants, Inc.        200          7,988
                                           --------
  RETAIL & MERCHANDISING -- 1.2%
    Stage Stores, Inc.*          300         10,950
                                           --------
 TELECOMMUNICATIONS -- 0.7%
    Echostar Communications
      Corp.                      150          2,850
    REMEC, Inc.*                  25            634
    Smartalk Teleservices,
      Inc.*                      125          2,695
                                           --------
                                              6,179
                                           --------
TOTAL COMMON STOCK
  (Cost $180,836)                           178,820
                                           --------
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS -- 8.2%
    Temporary Investment
      Cash Fund               36,602         36,602
    Temporary Investment
      Fund                    36,603         36,603
                                           --------
  (Cost $73,205)                             73,205
                                           --------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS -- 28.3%
  (Cost $254,041)                           252,025
OTHER ASSETS LESS
  LIABILITIES -- 71.7%                      637,058
                                           --------
NET ASSETS -- 100.0%                       $889,083
                                           ========
</TABLE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
* Non-income producing securities.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
COMMON STOCK -- 83.2%
  AIRLINES -- 1.1%
    Midwest Express
      Holdings, Inc.*            900      $   28,912
                                            --------
  AUTOMOTIVE PARTS -- 2.3%
    Modine Manufacturing
      Co.                        900          30,656
    TBC Corp.*                 2,600          26,650
                                            --------
                                              57,306
                                            --------
  BUILDING MATERIALS -- 7.1%
    Giant Cement Holding,
      Inc.*                      900          21,825
    Gibraltar Steel Corp.*       900          21,262
    Holophane Corp.*           1,200          27,300
    Juno Lighting, Inc.        1,300          23,400
    Lone Star Technologies,
      Inc.*                      500          19,094
    Republic Group, Inc.       1,000          18,750
    Skyline Corp.                700          20,300
    Thomas Industries, Inc.      900          27,000
                                            --------
                                             178,931
                                            --------
  BUSINESS SERVICES -- 1.0%
    Grey Advertising, Inc.        70          24,045
                                            --------
  CHEMICALS -- 2.3%
    Furon Co.                    900          34,312
    Schulman (A.), Inc.        1,000          22,500
                                            --------
                                              56,812
                                            --------
  CLOTHING & APPAREL -- 0.9%
    Unitog Co.                   900          22,275
                                            --------
  COMPUTER HARDWARE -- 1.2%
    Analogic Corp.               800          29,600
                                            --------
  COMPUTER SERVICES & SOFTWARE -- 1.9%
    Analysts International
      Corp.                      700          31,587
    Pioneer Standard
      Electronics, Inc.        1,000          16,375
                                            --------
                                              47,962
                                            --------
 
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
  CONSUMER PRODUCTS & SERVICES -- 1.1%
    American Safety Razor
      Co.                        700      $   11,550
    Culp, Inc.                   900          17,100
                                            --------
                                              28,650
                                            --------
  CONTAINERS & PACKAGING -- 2.1%
    Aptargroup, Inc.             400          21,975
    First Brands Corp.         1,200          30,600
                                            --------
                                              52,575
                                            --------
  ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS & EQUIPMENT -- 5.7%
    Electro Rental Corp.*      1,500          54,562
    Landauer, Inc.               600          15,150
    Littelfuse, Inc.*          1,000          30,625
    Nichols Research Corp.*    1,200          29,400
    Scotsman Industries,
      Inc.                       500          13,219
                                            --------
                                             142,956
                                            --------
  ENTERTAINMENT & LEISURE -- 0.6%
    Carmike Cinemas, Inc.*       500          16,250
                                            --------
  ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES -- 0.2%
    International
      Technology Corp.           600           5,475
                                            --------
  EQUIPMENT
    SERVICES -- 4.2%
    Cort Business Services
      Corp.*                     600          21,825
    Rival Co.                  1,300          20,150
    Unifirst Corp.             1,200          30,150
    VWR Scientific
      Products, Inc.*          1,500          33,000
                                            --------
                                             105,125
                                            --------
  FINANCIAL -- BANK & TRUST -- 4.6%
    Commercial Federal
      Savings & Loan Corp.       300          14,550
    Community First Bank
      Corp.                      700          33,425
    First Republic Bank          900          25,425
    Silicon Valley
      Bancshares*                400          21,850
    Sirrom Capital Corp.         400          20,150
                                            --------
                                             115,400
                                            --------
</TABLE>
 

<PAGE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
  FINANCIAL
    SERVICES -- 4.2%
    Amresco, Inc.*               800     $    25,100
    First Financial Fund,
      Inc.                     1,000          22,062
    McGrath Rentcorp           1,500          36,562
    Medallion Financial
      Corp.                    1,000          21,000
                                            --------
                                             104,724
                                            --------
  FOOD -- 0.2%
    Suiza Foods Corp.*           100           5,037
                                            --------
  INSURANCE -- 5.2%
    FBL Financial Group,
      Inc. Cl-A                  900          35,663
    Harleysville Group,
      Inc.                       700          17,850
    Phoenix Resources Corp.
      Cl-A                       700          21,350
    Poe & Brown, Inc.          1,000          41,250
    Presidential Life Corp.      700          13,913
                                            --------
                                             130,026
                                            --------
  LUMBER & WOOD PRODUCTS -- 0.8%
    Deltic Timber Corp.          700          19,731
                                            --------
  MACHINERY & EQUIPMENT -- 4.9%
    Alamo Group, Inc.            700          14,700
    Carbo Ceramics, Inc.         900          29,813
    Greenfield Industries,
      Inc.                       400          15,150
    Smith (A.O.) Corp.           700          29,006
    Woodward Governor Co.      1,000          34,250
                                            --------
                                             122,919
                                            --------
  MEDICAL SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT -- 1.8%
    Lunar Corp.                1,600          30,500
    Owens & Minor, Inc.        1,000          14,000
                                            --------
                                              44,500
                                            --------
  METALS & MINING -- 5.6%
    Cambior, Inc.              1,200           9,450
    Dayton Mining Corp.*       2,100           5,250
    Golden Star Resources
      Ltd.*                    1,500           6,750
    Layne Christensen, Inc.      900          17,888
    Material Sciences
      Corp.*                   1,400          20,825
    Myers Industries, Inc.     1,200          21,075
    Penn Virginia Corp.          900          25,650
    Prime Resources Group,
      Inc.                     2,600          17,225
    TriMas Corp.                 600          17,550
                                            --------
                                             141,663
                                            --------
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
  OFFICE EQUIPMENT -- 1.7%
    Aaron Rents, Inc. Cl-A*      500     $     8,687
    Aaron Rents, Inc. Cl-B*      900          15,188
    IDEX Corp.*                  600          20,175
                                            --------
                                              44,050
                                            --------
  OIL & GAS -- 3.2%
    Cross Timbers Oil Co.      1,500          40,031
    Devon Energy Corp.           300          13,425
    Rutherford-Moran Oil
      Corp.*                   1,100          26,950
                                            --------
                                              80,406
                                            --------
  PAPER & FOREST PRODUCTS -- 1.8%
    CSS Industries, Inc.*        800          28,300
    Mosinee Paper                600          16,950
                                            --------
                                              45,250
                                            --------
  PERSONAL SERVICES -- 1.0%
    Matthews International
      Corp.                      600          25,500
                                            --------
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
  REAL ESTATE -- 6.3%
    Allied Capital
      Commercial Corp.
      [REIT]                   1,000     $    27,875
    Apartment Investment &
      Management Co. Cl-A
      [REIT]                     700          24,806
    CCA Prison Realty Trust
      [REIT]                     500          17,250
    Glenborough Realty
      Trust, Inc. [REIT]         400          10,250
    Innkeepers USA Trust
      [REIT]                   1,200          20,025
    National Health
      Investors, Inc.
      [REIT]                     600          23,513
    Post Properties, Inc
      [REIT]                     400          14,475
    Sun Communities, Inc.
      [REIT]                     600          20,925
                                         ------------
                                             159,119
                                         ------------
  RESTAURANTS -- 3.0%
    Consolidated Products,
      Inc.*                    1,300          25,025
    Ruby Tuesday, Inc.         1,300          35,344
    Sbarro, Inc.                 600          15,863
                                         ------------
                                              76,232
                                         ------------
  RETAIL & MERCHANDISING -- 5.0%
    Carson Pirie Scott &
      Co.                        400          19,275
    Casey's General Stores,
      Inc.                       900          21,712
    Compucom Systems, Inc.*    2,200          20,763
    Fabri-Centers of
      America, Inc. Cl-B*      1,500          30,469
    Hancock Fabrics, Inc.      1,200          16,275
    Stein Mart, Inc.*            600          17,550
                                         ------------
                                             126,044
                                         ------------
  TELECOMMUNICATIONS -- 1.5%
    Aliant Communications,
      Inc.                     1,000          25,625
    Mosiax, Inc.               1,200          11,100
                                         ------------
                                              36,725
                                         ------------
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
  UTILITIES -- 0.7%
    United Water
      Resources, Inc.          1,000     $    16,563
                                         ------------
TOTAL COMMON STOCK
  (Cost $2,122,380)                        2,090,763
                                         ------------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  PAR
                                (000)
                               ------
<S>                            <C>        <C>
U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY OBLIGATIONS -- 20.3%
    Federal Home Loan
      Mortgage Corp.
      5.41%, 11/12/97           $ 50       $   49,917
      5.41%, 11/13/97             76           75,863
      5.51%, 11/13/97            191          190,649
      5.40%, 11/28/97             88           87,644
      5.42%, 11/28/97             60           59,756
                                          ------------
                                              463,829
                                          ------------
    Federal National Mortgage
      Association
      5.47%, 11/06/97             46           45,965
                                          ------------
TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY OBLIGATIONS
  (Cost $509,794)                             509,794
                                          ------------
U.S. TREASURY OBLIGATIONS -- 1.6%
    U.S. Treasury Bills
      4.30%, 11/06/97             27           26,984
      4.87%, 12/18/97             13           12,917
                                          ------------
  (Cost $39,901)                               39,901
                                          ------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS -- 105.1%
  (Cost $2,672,075)                         2,640,458
LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF OTHER
  ASSETS -- (5.1%)                           (127,352)
                                          ------------
NET ASSETS -- 100.0%                       $2,513,106
                                          ============
</TABLE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
Definitions of abbreviations are included following the Schedules of
Investments.
* Non-income producing securities.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.

<PAGE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY
STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- ------------------------------------------------------
                               SHARES            VALUE
- ------------------------------------------------------
<S>                            <C>        <C>
COMMON STOCK -- 48.4%
  ADVERTISING -- 1.7%
    Outdoor Systems, Inc.        700       $   21,525
                                             --------
  AEROSPACE -- 0.5%
    BE Aerospace, Inc.           200            5,625
                                             --------
  BROADCASTING -- 1.6%
    Clear Channel
      Communications, Inc.       300           19,800
                                             --------
  COMPUTER HARDWARE -- 2.6%
    Compaq Computer Corp.        200           12,750
    International Business
      Machines Corp.             200           19,612
                                             --------
                                               32,362
                                             --------
  COMPUTER SERVICES & SOFTWARE -- 4.7%
    BMC Software, Inc.*          200           12,075
    Cisco Systems, Inc.*         200           16,406
    Compuware Corp.              300           19,837
    Oracle Corp.                 100            3,578
    Sun Microsystems, Inc.       200            6,850
                                             --------
                                               58,746
                                             --------
  CONGLOMERATES -- 3.3%
    Philip Morris Companies,
      Inc.                       100            3,962
    Tyco International Ltd.    1,000           37,750
                                             --------
                                               41,712
                                             --------
  CONSUMER PRODUCTS & SERVICES -- 5.3%
    Avon Products, Inc.          200           13,100
    Gillette Co.                 100            8,906
    Procter & Gamble Co.         200           13,600
    Samsonite Corp.              400           18,550
    Sunbeam Oster Corp.          100            4,531
    U.S. Industries, Inc.        300            8,063
                                             --------
                                               66,750
                                             --------
  ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS & EQUIPMENT -- 6.1%
    Altera Corp.                 200            8,875
    Electronics for Imaging,
      Inc.*                      200            9,350
 
<CAPTION>
- ------------------------------------------------------
                               SHARES            VALUE
- ------------------------------------------------------
<S>                            <C>        <C>
    General Electric Co.         400       $   25,825
    KLA Instruments Corp.        200            8,788
    Philips Electronics NV
      [ADR]                      300           23,513
                                             --------
                                               76,351
                                             --------
  ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES -- 0.9%
    USA Waste Services, Inc.     300           11,100
                                             --------
  FINANCIAL -- BANK & TRUST -- 2.6%
    BankAmerica Corp.            200           14,300
    Charter One Financial,
      Inc.                       105            6,103
    Citicorp                     100           12,506
                                             --------
                                               32,909
                                             --------
  FINANCIAL SERVICES -- 0.4%
    Fannie Mae                   100            4,844
                                             --------
  HEALTHCARE SERVICES -- 0.2%
    Oxford Health Plans, Inc.    100            2,581
                                             --------
  INSURANCE -- 2.4%
    Conseco, Inc.                400           17,450
    SunAmerica, Inc.             350           12,578
                                             --------
                                               30,028
                                             --------
  OIL & GAS -- 5.6%
    Diamond Offshore
      Drilling, Inc.             200           12,450
    Evi, Inc.                    200           12,838
    Falcon Drilling Co., Inc.    600           21,825
    Global Marine, Inc.          200            6,225
    Input-Output, Inc.           600           16,088
                                             --------
                                               69,426
                                             --------
  PHARMACEUTICALS -- 8.8%
    Bristol-Meyers Squibb Co.    200           17,550
    Cardinal Health, Inc.        100            7,425
    Lilly (Eli) & Co.            400           26,750
    Merck & Co., Inc.            100            8,925
    Pfizer, Inc.                 300           21,225
    Warner-Lambert Co.           200           28,638
                                             --------
                                              110,513
                                             --------
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
=======================================================
ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY            
STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND          
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- ------------------------------------------------------
                               SHARES            VALUE
- ------------------------------------------------------
<S>                            <C>        <C>
  SEMI-CONDUCTORS -- 1.7%
    Intel Corp.                  200      $    15,400
    Motorola, Inc.               100            6,175
                                             --------
                                               21,575
                                             --------
TOTAL COMMON STOCK
  (Cost $614,751)                             605,847
                                             --------
FOREIGN STOCK -- 0.8%
  BEVERAGES
    Panamerican Beverages,
      Inc. Cl-A -- (MXP)
  (Cost $10,780)                 300            9,356
                                             --------
                                PAR
                               (000)
                               ------
U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY OBLIGATIONS -- 16.0%
    Federal Home Loan Bank
      5.50%, 11/03/97
  (Cost $199,939)               $200          199,939
                                             --------
U.S. TREASURY OBLIGATIONS -- 24.1%
    U.S. Treasury Notes
      6.00%, 07/31/02            100          100,890
      5.875%, 09/30/02           200          200,874
                                             --------
  (Cost $298,652)                             301,764
                                             --------
                               SHARES
                               ------
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS -- 2.5%
    Temporary Investment Cash
      Fund                     15,716          15,716
    Temporary Investment Fund  15,717          15,717
                                             --------
  (Cost $31,433)                               31,433
                                             --------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS -- 91.8%
  (Cost $1,155,555)                         1,148,339
OTHER ASSETS LESS LIABILITIES -- 8.2%         102,989
                                             --------
NET ASSETS -- 100.0%                      $ 1,251,328
                                             ========
</TABLE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
Unless otherwise noted, all foreign stocks are common stock.
Definitions of abbreviations are included following the Schedules of
Investments.
* Non-income producing securities.
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 

ASAP FEDERATED
HIGH YIELD BOND FUND

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                                 PAR
                               (000)            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                           <C>        <C>
CORPORATE OBLIGATIONS -- 80.8%
  AUTOMOTIVE PARTS -- 1.4%
    Lear Corp. Sub. Notes
      9.50%, 07/15/06         $   50      $   54,750
                                          ----------
  BROADCASTING -- 8.0%
    Chancellor Media Corp.
      Sr. Sub. Notes 144A
      8.75%, 06/15/07             50          50,375
    Fox Liberty Networks
      LLC, Sr. Notes [STEP]
      144A
      9.553%, 08/15/07            75          47,625
    Frontiervision Holdings
      [STEP] 144A
      11.005%, 09/15/07           75          51,375
    Outdoor Systems, Inc.
      Sr. Sub. Notes
      8.875%, 06/15/07            50          51,750
    SFX Broadcasting, Inc.
      Sr. Sub. Notes
      10.75%, 05/15/06            50          54,500
    Sinclair Broadcasting
      Group Sr. Sub. Notes
      10.00%, 09/30/05            50          52,625
                                          ----------
                                             308,250
                                          ----------
  BUILDING MATERIALS -- 1.4%
    American Builders Sr.
      Sub. Notes 144A
      10.625%, 05/15/07           50          52,250
                                          ----------
  CHEMICALS -- 2.7%
    ISP Holdings, Inc. Sr.
      Notes Cl-B
      9.00%, 10/15/03             50          52,125
    Polymer Group Holdings
      Sr. Sub. Notes 144A
      9.00%, 07/01/07             50          50,250
                                          ----------
                                             102,375
                                          ----------
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASAF FEDERATED
HIGH YIELD BOND FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                                 PAR
                               (000)            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                           <C>        <C>
CLOTHING & APPAREL -- 2.7%
    Dyersburg Corp. Sr. Sub.
      Notes 144A
      9.75%, 09/01/07         $   50     $    51,750
    Pillowtex Corp. Sr. Sub.
      Notes
      10.00%, 11/15/06            50          52,875
                                          ----------
                                             104,625
                                          ----------
  CONSUMER PRODUCTS & SERVICES -- 2.6%
    NBTY, Inc. Sr. Sub.
      Notes 144A
      8.625%, 09/15/07            50          49,250
    Simmons Co. Sr. Sub.
      Notes 10.75%, 04/15/06      50          51,750
                                          ----------
                                             101,000
                                          ----------
  COMPUTER SERVICES & SOFTWARE -- 1.4%
    DecisionOne Corp. Sr.
      Sub. Notes
      9.75%, 08/01/07             50          51,750
                                          ----------
  ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS & EQUIPMENT -- 2.8%
    Amphenol Corp. Sr. Sub.
      Notes
      9.875%, 05/15/07            50          52,750
    Fairchild Semiconductor
      Sr. Sub. Notes 144A
      10.125%, 03/15/07           50          53,000
                                          ----------
                                             105,750
                                          ----------
  ENTERTAINMENT & LEISURE -- 2.7%
    Livent, Inc.
      Sr. Notes 144A
      9.375%, 10/15/04            50          50,625
    Six Flags Theme Parks
      Sr. Sub. Notes Cl-A
      [STEP]
      9.746%, 06/15/05            50          53,000
                                          ----------
                                             103,625
                                          ----------
  ENVIROMENTAL SERVICES -- 1.3%
    Allied Waste Industries
      Sr. Disc. Notes Cl-A
      [STEP]
      9.753%, 06/01/07            75          51,375
                                          ----------

<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                                 PAR
                               (000)            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                           <C>        <C>
  FARMING & AGRICULTURE -- 1.4%
    Dimon, Inc. Sr. Notes
      8.875%, 06/01/06        $   50     $    53,625
                                          ----------
  FINANCIAL -- BANK & TRUST -- 1.4%
    First Nationwide
      Holdings Sr. Notes
      12.25%, 05/15/01            50          55,000
                                          ----------
  FOOD -- 6.7%
    Ameriserve Food
      Distributor Sr. Notes
      144A
      8.875%, 10/15/06            50          50,250
    Aurora Foods, Inc. Cl-B
      Sr. Sub. Notes
      9.875%, 02/15/07            50          51,750
    Community Distributors
      Sr. Notes 144A
      10.25%, 10/15/04            50          50,250
    Jitney-Jungle Stores Sr.
      Sub. Notes 144A
      10.375%, 09/15/07           50          52,250
    Stater Bros. Holdings
      Sr. Sub. Notes 144A
      9.00%, 07/01/04             50          51,125
                                          ----------
                                             255,625
                                          ----------
  FURNITURE -- 1.3%
    Falcon Building Products
      Sr. Sub. Notes [STEP]
      10.077%, 06/15/07           75          48,375
                                          ----------
  HEALTHCARE SERVICES -- 1.3%
    Tenet Healthcare Corp.
      Sr. Sub. Notes
      8.00%, 01/15/05             50          50,750
                                          ----------
  INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS -- 2.7%
    MMI Products, Inc. Sr.
      Sub. Notes Cl-B
      11.25%, 04/15/07            50          54,750
    Playtex Products, Inc.
      Cl-B Sr. Notes
      8.875%, 07/15/04            50          50,125
                                          ----------
                                             104,875
                                          ----------
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                                 PAR
                               (000)            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                           <C>        <C>
MACHINERY & EQUIPMENT -- 1.4%
    Clark Materials Handling
      Sr. Notes
      10.75%, 11/15/06        $   50     $    52,750
                                          ----------
  METALS & MINING -- 1.4%
    Ryerson Tull, Inc. Notes
      8.50%, 07/15/01             50          51,875
                                          ----------
  OIL & GAS -- 2.7%
    Abraxas Petroleum Corp.
      Sr. Notes Cl-B
      11.50%, 11/01/04            50          55,000
    Forcenergy, Inc. Sr.
      Sub. Notes
      8.50%, 02/15/07             50          49,750
                                          ----------
                                             104,750
                                          ----------
  PAPER & FOREST PRODUCTS -- 1.3%
    Buckeye Cellulose Corp.
      Sr. Sub. Notes
      9.25%, 09/15/08             50          51,250
                                          ----------
  PRINTING & PUBLISHING -- 2.7%
    Garden State Newspaper
      Sr. Sub. Notes 144A
      8.75%, 10/01/09             50          49,750
    Hollinger International
      Publishing Co. Notes
      9.25%, 03/15/07             50          51,750
                                          ----------
                                             101,500
                                          ----------
  TELECOMMUNICATIONS -- 25.5%
    Cablevision Systems
      Corp. Sr. Sub. Debs.
      9.875%, 02/15/13            50          53,625
    Call-Net Enterprises,
      Inc. Sr. Disc. Notes
      [STEP]
      8.787%, 08/15/07            75          50,625
    Comcast Cellular Sr.
      Notes 144A
      9.50%, 05/01/07             50          52,000
    Echostar Satellite
      Broadcasting Co. Sr.
      Disc. Notes [STEP]
      11.520%, 03/15/04           75          60,375
    Hermes Europe Railtel
      Sr. Notes 144A
      11.50%, 08/15/07            50          54,750
    Intermedia
      Communications Sr.
      Notes 144A
      8.875%, 11/01/07            50          49,125
    International Cabletel,
      Inc. Sr. Notes [STEP]
      10.118%, 10/15/03           75          70,219
    McLeod, Inc. [STEP] 144A
      9.497%, 03/01/07            75          52,125
    Metronet Communications
      Sr. Disc. Notes [STEP]
      144A
      10.696%, 11/01/07           75          44,625
    Nextel Communications,
      Inc. Sr. Disc.
      Notes [STEP] 144A
      11.267%, 09/15/07           75          42,937
    Paging Network, Inc. Sr.
      Sub. Notes
      10.00%, 10/15/08            50          51,250
    Pegasus Communications
      Sr. Notes 144A
      9.625%, 10/15/05            50          50,375
    Qwest Communications
      International Sr.
      Disc. Notes [STEP]
      9.236%, 10/15/07            75          48,375
    Rogers Cablesystems Sr.
      Notes
      10.00%, 03/15/05            50          54,500
    Source Media, Inc. Sr.
      Secured Notes 144A
      12.00%, 11/01/04            50          50,250
    Teleport Communications
      Group, Inc. Sr. Disc.
      Notes [STEP]
      9.065%, 07/01/07            75          59,250
    Telesystem International
      Sr. Disc. Notes [STEP]
      11.831%, 11/01/07           50          26,750
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASAF FEDERATED
HIGH YIELD BOND FUND 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                                 PAR
                               (000)            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                           <C>        <C>
    Telewest PLC Debs.
      [STEP]
      10.583%, 10/01/07       $   75     $    56,625
    Viacom, Inc. Sub. Debs.
      8.00%, 07/07/06             50          49,500
                                          ----------
                                             977,281
                                          ----------
  TRANSPORTATION -- 4.0%
    Allied Holdings Sr.
      Notes 144A
      9.625%, 10/01/07            50          51,250
    Ameritruck Distribution
      Sr. Sub. Notes
      12.25%, 11/15/05            50          53,000
    Stena AB Sr. Notes
      8.75%, 06/15/07             50          50,375
                                          ----------
                                             154,625
                                          ----------
TOTAL CORPORATE OBLIGATIONS
  (Cost $3,122,878)                        3,098,031
                                          ----------
U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY OBLIGATIONS -- 33.7%
    Student Loan Marketing
      Association
      5.63%, 11/03/97
  (Cost $1,294,595)            1,295       1,294,595
                                          ----------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS -- 114.5%
  (Cost $4,417,473)                        4,392,626
LIABILITES IN EXCESS OF OTHER
  ASSETS -- (14.5%)                         (556,167) 
                                          ----------
NET ASSETS -- 100.0%                     $ 3,836,459
                                          ==========
</TABLE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
144A -- Security was purchased pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of
        1933 and may not be resold subject to that rule except to qualified
        institutional buyers. At the end of the period, these securities
        amounted to 30.2% of net assets.
 
Definitions of abbreviations are included following the Schedules of
Investments.

DEFINITION OF ABBREVIATIONS
- -------------------------------------------------------
THE FOLLOWING ABBREVIATIONS ARE USED THROUGHOUT THE SCHEDULES OF INVESTMENTS:
 
SECURITY DESCRIPTIONS:
 
<TABLE>
<S>   <C>  <C>
ADR   --   American Depositary Receipt
REIT  --   Real Estate Investment Trust
STEP  --   Stepped Coupon Bond (Rates shown are the
           effective yields at purchase date.)
COUNTRIES/CURRENCIES:
GBP   --   United Kingdom/British Pound
MXP   --   Mexico/Mexican Peso
</TABLE>
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
OCTOBER 31, 1997
STATEMENTS OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              ASAF T.
                                            ROWE PRICE                          ASAF INVESCO     ASAF TOTAL      ASAF JPM
                                           INTERNATIONAL       ASAF JANUS          EQUITY          RETURN         MONEY
                                              EQUITY         CAPITAL GROWTH        INCOME           BOND          MARKET
                                               FUND               FUND              FUND            FUND           FUND
                                              ==========         ==========       ==========     ==========     ==========
<S>                                        <C>               <C>                <C>              <C>            <C>
ASSETS:
  Investments in Corresponding
    Portfolios of American Skandia
    Master Trust                            $ 1,554,547        $4,341,577        $3,302,881      $1,180,008     $1,549,626
  Receivable for Fund Shares Sold                72,365           309,545           500,856          56,002        176,021
  Deferred Organization Costs                    62,074            62,074            62,074          62,074         62,074
  Prepaid Expenses                               16,861            16,862            16,861          16,862         16,861
                                             ----------        ----------        ----------      ----------     ----------
       Total Assets                           1,705,847         4,730,058         3,882,672       1,314,946      1,804,582
                                             ----------        ----------        ----------      ----------     ----------
LIABILITIES:
  Payable for Investments Purchased
    in Corresponding Portfolios of
    American Skandia Master Trust                72,365           309,545           500,856          56,002        176,021
  Payable to Investment Manager                  58,494            44,211            56,470          62,853         50,608
  Payable For:
    Distribution Fees                               708             2,015             1,342             495            917
    Accrued Expenses                             13,099            23,938            15,407          11,887         17,930
    Accrued Dividends                                --                --                --              32            575
                                             ----------        ----------        ----------      ----------     ----------
       Total Liabilities                        144,666           379,709           574,075         131,269        246,051
                                             ----------        ----------        ----------      ----------     ----------
NET ASSETS                                  $ 1,561,181        $4,350,349        $3,308,597      $1,183,677     $1,558,531
                                             ==========        ==========        ==========      ==========     ==========
COMPONENTS OF NET ASSETS
Capital Stock (40 Million Shares
  Authorized, $.001 Par Value Per Share)    $       171        $      419        $      317      $      116     $    1,558
Additional Paid-In Capital                    1,626,481         4,450,123         3,302,372       1,169,070      1,556,948
Undistributed Net Investment Income                  --             7,214             7,857           2,363             --
Accumulated Net Realized Gain
  (Loss) on Investments                              --           (38,807)          (13,204)            288             25
Net Unrealized Appreciation
  (Depreciation) on Investments                 (65,471)          (68,600)           11,255          11,840             --
                                             ----------        ----------        ----------      ----------     ----------
NET ASSETS                                  $ 1,561,181        $4,350,349        $3,308,597      $1,183,677     $1,558,531
                                             ==========        ==========        ==========      ==========     ==========
</TABLE>
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 

<PAGE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                ASAF T.
                                              ROWE PRICE                          ASAF INVESCO     ASAF TOTAL     ASAF JPM
                                             INTERNATIONAL       ASAF JANUS          EQUITY          RETURN        MONEY
                                                EQUITY         CAPITAL GROWTH        INCOME           BOND         MARKET
                                                 FUND               FUND              FUND            FUND          FUND
                                                ==========         ==========       ==========     ==========     ========
<S>                                          <C>               <C>                <C>              <C>            <C>
NET ASSET VALUE:
  Class A: Net Assets                          $ 217,613         $  706,248        $  471,489       $ 61,228      $307,020
                                                --------         ----------        ----------       --------      --------
          Shares Outstanding                      24,367             61,945            45,136          5,957       307,013
                                                --------         ----------        ----------       --------      --------
          Net Asset Value and Redemption
             Price Per Share                   $    8.93         $    11.40        $    10.45       $  10.28      $   1.00
                                                ========         ==========        ==========       ========      ========
              Divided by (1 - Maximum
                  Sales Charge)                       95%                95%               95%        95 3/4%           95%
                                                --------         ----------        ----------       --------      --------
          Offering Price Per Share*            $    9.40         $    12.00        $    11.00       $  10.74      $   1.05
                                                ========         ==========        ==========       ========      ========
  Class B: Net Assets                          $ 389,532         $1,718,239        $1,407,565       $547,245      $353,587
                                                --------         ----------        ----------       --------      --------
          Shares Outstanding                      42,527            168,580           134,663         53,862       353,584
                                                --------         ----------        ----------       --------      --------
          Net Asset Value, Offering and
             Redemption Price Per Share        $    9.16         $    10.19        $    10.45       $  10.16      $   1.00
                                                ========         ==========        ==========       ========      ========
  Class C: Net Assets                          $ 198,033         $  451,731        $  255,047       $164,940      $331,509
                                                --------         ----------        ----------       --------      --------
          Shares Outstanding                      21,624             44,352            24,377         16,234       331,503
                                                --------         ----------        ----------       --------      --------
          Net Asset Value, Offering and
             Redemption Price Per Share        $    9.16         $    10.19        $    10.46       $  10.16      $   1.00
                                                ========         ==========        ==========       ========      ========
  Class X: Net Assets                          $ 756,003         $1,474,131        $1,174,496       $410,264      $566,415
                                                --------         ----------        ----------       --------      --------
          Shares Outstanding                      82,390            144,484           112,383         40,334       566,406
                                                --------         ----------        ----------       --------      --------
          Net Asset Value, Offering and
             Redemption Price Per Share        $    9.18         $    10.20        $    10.45       $  10.17      $   1.00
                                                ========         ==========        ==========       ========      ========
</TABLE>
 
* On sales of $50,000 or more, the offering price of Class A shares is reduced.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
OCTOBER 31, 1997
STATEMENTS OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                   ASAF FOUNDERS
                                   INTERNATIONAL      ASAF FOUNDERS      ASAF T. ROWE        ASAF AMERICAN
                                       SMALL              SMALL           PRICE SMALL      CENTURY STRATEGIC     ASAF FEDERATED
                                   CAPITALIZATION     CAPITALIZATION     COMPANY VALUE         BALANCED          HIGH YIELD BOND
                                        FUND               FUND              FUND                FUND                 FUND
                                         ========         ==========        ==========            ==========          ==========
<S>                                <C>                <C>                <C>               <C>                   <C>
ASSETS:
  Investments in Securities
    at Value (A)                      $371,629          $  252,025        $ 2,640,458         $ 1,148,339          $ 4,392,626
  Cash                                 274,407             675,427              1,816                  --                   --
  Receivable For:
    Dividends and Interest                 440                 237                858               2,841               50,472
    Fund Shares Sold                    28,621              34,340            164,488              91,481              259,813
  Deferred Organization Costs           65,504              65,504             65,504              65,504               65,504
  Prepaid Expenses                      16,861              16,861             16,751              16,861               16,932
  Unrealized Appreciation
    on Foreign Currency
    Exchange Contracts                     420                  --                 --                  --                   --
                                      --------            --------         ----------          ----------           ----------
       Total Assets                    757,882           1,044,394          2,889,875           1,325,026            4,785,347
                                      --------            --------         ----------          ----------           ----------
LIABILITIES:
  Cash Overdraft                            --                  --                 --                  --               11,265
  Payable to Investment Manager         69,792              69,458             61,401              54,095               69,208
  Payable For:
    Securities Purchased                57,276              75,826            300,018                  --              856,379
    Distribution Fees                      315                 450              1,098                 725                1,000
    Accrued Expenses                     9,693               9,577             14,252              18,878               10,826
    Accrued Dividends                       --                  --                 --                  --                  210
                                      --------            --------         ----------          ----------           ----------
       Total Liabilities               137,076             155,311            376,769              73,698              948,888
                                      --------            --------         ----------          ----------           ----------
NET ASSETS                            $620,806          $  889,083        $ 2,513,106         $ 1,251,328          $ 3,836,459
                                      ========            ========         ==========          ==========           ==========
COMPONENTS OF NET ASSETS
Capital Stock
  (40 Million Shares Authorized,
  $.001 Par Value Per Share)          $     63          $       89        $       241         $       125          $       387
Additional Paid-In Capital             630,425             891,010          2,544,097           1,257,177            3,865,102
Undistributed Net
  Investment Income                        819                  --                422               2,252                   --
Accumulated Net Realized Loss
  on Investments                          (287)                 --                (37)             (1,010)              (4,183)
Net Unrealized Depreciation
  on Investments                       (10,214)             (2,016)           (31,617)             (7,216)             (24,847)
                                      --------            --------         ----------          ----------           ----------
NET ASSETS                            $620,806          $  889,083        $ 2,513,106         $ 1,251,328          $ 3,836,459
                                      ========            ========         ==========          ==========           ==========
(A) Investments at Cost               $381,711          $  254,041        $ 2,672,075         $ 1,155,555          $ 4,417,473
                                      ========            ========         ==========          ==========           ==========
</TABLE>
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 

<PAGE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                   ASAF FOUNDERS
                                   INTERNATIONAL      ASAF FOUNDERS      ASAF T. ROWE        ASAF AMERICAN
                                       SMALL              SMALL           PRICE SMALL      CENTURY STRATEGIC     ASAF FEDERATED
                                   CAPITALIZATION     CAPITALIZATION     COMPANY VALUE         BALANCED          HIGH YIELD BOND
                                        FUND               FUND              FUND                FUND                 FUND
                                         ========           ========        ==========              ========          ==========
<S>                                <C>                <C>                <C>               <C>                   <C>
NET ASSET VALUE:
  Class A: Net Assets                 $106,130           $192,625         $   383,129          $ 256,937           $ 2,154,283
                                    ----------           --------          ----------           --------            ----------
          Shares Outstanding            10,754             19,369              36,628             25,713               217,045
                                    ----------           --------          ----------           --------            ----------
          Net Asset Value and
             Redemption Price
             Per Share                $   9.87           $   9.94         $     10.46          $    9.99           $      9.93
                                    ==========           ========          ==========           ========            ==========
              Divided by
                  (1 - Maximum
                  Sales Charge)             95%                95%                 95%                95%               95 3/4%
                                    ----------           --------          ----------           --------            ----------
          Offering Price Per
    Share*                            $  10.39           $  10.46         $     11.01          $   10.52           $     10.37
                                    ==========           ========          ==========           ========            ==========
  Class B: Net Assets                 $229,911           $353,330         $ 1,154,678          $ 381,263           $   919,855
                                    ----------           --------          ----------           --------            ----------
          Shares Outstanding            23,338             35,569             110,634             38,280                92,647
                                    ----------           --------          ----------           --------            ----------
          Net Asset Value, Offering
           and Redemption Price
             Per Share                $   9.85           $   9.93         $     10.44          $    9.96           $      9.93
                                    ==========           ========          ==========           ========            ==========
  Class C: Net Assets                 $ 78,777           $ 73,511         $   335,291          $ 215,307           $   206,161
                                    ----------           --------          ----------           --------            ----------
          Shares Outstanding             7,992              7,397              32,093             21,576                20,764
                                    ----------           --------          ----------           --------            ----------
          Net Asset Value, Offering
           and Redemption Price
             Per Share                $   9.86           $   9.94         $     10.45          $    9.98           $      9.93
                                    ==========           ========          ==========           ========            ==========
  Class X: Net Assets                 $205,988           $269,617         $   640,008          $ 397,821           $   556,160
                                    ----------           --------          ----------           --------            ----------
          Shares Outstanding            20,943             27,154              61,282             39,956                56,021
                                    ----------           --------          ----------           --------            ----------
          Net Asset Value, Offering
           and Redemption Price
             Per Share                $   9.84           $   9.93         $     10.44          $    9.96           $      9.93
                                    ==========           ========          ==========           ========            ==========
</TABLE>
 
* On sales of $50,000 or more, the offering price of Class A shares is reduced.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
FOR THE PERIOD ENDED OCTOBER 31, 1997
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              ASAF
                                          T. ROWE PRICE                        ASAF INVESCO
                                          INTERNATIONAL       ASAF JANUS          EQUITY        ASAF TOTAL        ASAF JPM
                                             EQUITY         CAPITAL GROWTH        INCOME        RETURN BOND     MONEY MARKET
                                             FUND(1)           FUND(1)           FUND(2)          FUND(2)         FUND(3)
                                               ========           ========         ========        ========         ========
<S>                                       <C>               <C>                <C>              <C>             <C>
INVESTMENT INCOME:
  Investment Income from Corresponding
    Portfolios of American Skandia
    Master Trust
    Interest                                $   1,244         $    5,249         $  5,732        $   4,907        $  8,266
    Dividends                                   1,525              8,607            5,883               --              --
    Foreign Taxes Withheld                       (199)                --               --               --              --
                                             --------           --------          -------          -------         -------
       Total Investment Income                  2,570             13,856           11,615            4,907           8,266
       Expenses from Corresponding
         Portfolios of American Skandia
         Master Trust                          (4,835)            (5,702)          (3,680)          (1,812)         (6,082)
                                             --------           --------          -------          -------         -------
       Net Investment Income (Loss)
         from Corresponding Portfolios
         of American Skandia Master
         Trust                                 (2,265)             8,154            7,935            3,095           2,184
                                             --------           --------          -------          -------         -------
EXPENSES:
    Shareholder Servicing Fees                  3,517              3,017            3,297            3,557           3,418
    Administration and Accounting Fees          1,500              1,500            1,500            1,500           1,500
    Distribution Fees -- Class A                  118                357              199               46             195
    Distribution Fees -- Class B                  267              1,064              718              274             364
    Distribution Fees -- Class C                  122                273              136               74             319
    Distribution Fees -- Class X                  516              1,125              677              379             598
    Professional Fees                           3,109              7,212            3,735            2,445           4,771
    Organization Costs                          2,539              2,539            2,539            2,539           2,539
    Directors' Fees and Expenses                3,421              8,376            4,518            2,705           5,273
    Registration Fees                          25,943             25,611           25,912           25,970          25,873
    Printing Expenses                           4,110              9,738            5,200            3,200           6,218
    Miscellaneous Expenses                        831              2,000            1,061              631           1,262
                                             --------           --------          -------          -------         -------
       Total Expenses                          45,993             62,812           49,492           43,320          52,330
                                             --------           --------          -------          -------         -------
       Less: Reimbursement of Expenses
         by Investment Manager                (47,976)           (61,872)         (49,414)         (43,617)        (55,266)
                                             --------           --------          -------          -------         -------
  Net Investment Income (Loss)                   (282)             7,214            7,857            3,392           5,120
                                             --------           --------          -------          -------         -------
</TABLE>
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 

<PAGE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              ASAF
                                          T. ROWE PRICE                        ASAF INVESCO
                                          INTERNATIONAL       ASAF JANUS          EQUITY        ASAF TOTAL        ASAF JPM
                                             EQUITY         CAPITAL GROWTH        INCOME        RETURN BOND     MONEY MARKET
                                             FUND(1)           FUND(1)           FUND(2)          FUND(2)         FUND(3)
                                               ========           ========         ========        ========         ========
<S>                                       <C>               <C>                <C>              <C>             <C>
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS) ON
  INVESTMENTS FROM CORRESPONDING
  PORTFOLIOS OF AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER
  TRUST:
    Net Realized Gain (Loss) on:
       Securities                                   91            (38,807)         (13,204)            288               25
       Foreign Currency Transactions              (674)                --               --              --               --
                                              --------           --------          -------         -------          -------
    Net Realized Gain (Loss) on
       Investments                                (583)           (38,807)         (13,204)            288               25
                                              --------           --------          -------         -------          -------
    Net Change in Unrealized
       Appreciation (Depreciation) on:
       Securities                              (64,782)           (68,600)          11,255          11,840               --
       Translation of Assets and
         Liabilities Denominated in
         Foreign Currencies                       (689)                --               --              --               --
                                              --------           --------          -------         -------          -------
    Net Change in Unrealized
       Appreciation (Depreciation) on
       Investments                             (65,471)           (68,600)          11,255          11,840               --
                                              --------           --------          -------         -------          -------
    Net Gain (Loss) on Investments             (66,054)          (107,407)          (1,949)         12,128               25
                                              --------           --------          -------         -------          -------
    Net Increase (Decrease) in Net
       Assets Resulting from Operations   $    (66,336)     $    (100,193)     $     5,908      $   15,520      $     5,145
                                              ========           ========          =======         =======          =======
</TABLE>
 
(1) Commenced operations on June 10, 1997.
(2) Commenced operations on June 18, 1997.
(3) Commenced operations on June 19, 1997.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
FOR THE PERIOD ENDED OCTOBER 31, 1997 (1)
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                   ASAF FOUNDERS
                                   INTERNATIONAL     ASAF FOUNDERS     ASAF T. ROWE        ASAF AMERICAN
                                       SMALL             SMALL          PRICE SMALL      CENTURY STRATEGIC     ASAF FEDERATED
                                   CAPITALIZATION    CAPITALIZATION    COMPANY VALUE         BALANCED          HIGH YIELD BOND
                                       FUND              FUND              FUND                FUND                 FUND
                                        ========          ========          ========              ========            ========
<S>                                <C>               <C>               <C>               <C>                   <C>
INVESTMENT INCOME:
  Interest                           $   1,984         $     314         $   2,461           $   4,733            $   8,473
  Dividends                                 --                --             1,223                 477                   --
                                       -------           -------           -------             -------              -------
    Total Investment Income              1,984               314             3,684               5,210                8,473
                                       -------           -------           -------             -------              -------
EXPENSES:
  Advisory Fees                            520               577             1,530               1,513                1,022
  Shareholder Servicing Fees             3,580             3,546             3,331               3,465                3,158
  Administration and
    Accounting Fees                      1,878             1,878             1,881               1,885                1,876
  Custodian Fees                           628               338               916                 516                  660
  Distribution Fees -- Class A              63                78               179                 565                  353
  Distribution Fees -- Class B             161               312               659                 221                  408
  Distribution Fees -- Class C              55                47               214                 148                  134
  Distribution Fees -- Class X             131               127               298                 178                  210
  Professional Fees                      3,055             2,943             6,669               9,925                3,104
  Organization Costs                     2,702             2,702             2,702               2,702                2,702
  Directors' Fees and Expenses           1,300             1,459             3,551               5,052                2,097
  Registration Fees                     25,995            25,974            25,942              25,911               25,757
  Printing Expenses                      1,130             1,692             3,537               5,462                2,007
  Miscellaneous Expenses                   739               771             1,807               2,408                  917
                                       -------           -------           -------             -------              -------
    Total Expenses                      41,937            42,444            53,216              59,951               44,405
    Less: Reimbursement of
       Expenses by Investment
       Manager                         (40,772)          (41,113)          (49,954)            (56,993)             (41,843)
                                       -------           -------           -------             -------              -------
    Net Expenses                         1,165             1,331             3,262               2,958                2,562
                                       -------           -------           -------             -------              -------
  Net Investment Income (Loss)             819            (1,017)              422               2,252                5,911
                                       -------           -------           -------             -------              -------
</TABLE>
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 

<PAGE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                   ASAF FOUNDERS
                                   INTERNATIONAL     ASAF FOUNDERS     ASAF T. ROWE        ASAF AMERICAN
                                       SMALL             SMALL          PRICE SMALL      CENTURY STRATEGIC     ASAF FEDERATED
                                   CAPITALIZATION    CAPITALIZATION    COMPANY VALUE         BALANCED          HIGH YIELD BOND
                                       FUND              FUND              FUND                FUND                 FUND
                                        ========          ========          ========              ========            ========
<S>                                <C>               <C>               <C>               <C>                   <C>
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED LOSS ON
  INVESTMENTS:
  Net Realized Loss on:
    Securities                               --                --               (37)             (1,010)              (4,183)  
    Foreign Currency
       Transactions                        (287)               --                --                  --                   --
                                        -------           -------           -------             -------              -------
  Net Realized Loss                        (287)               --               (37)             (1,010)              (4,183)  
                                        -------           -------           -------             -------              -------
  Net Change in Unrealized
    Depreciation on:
    Securities                          (10,082)           (2,016)          (31,617)             (7,216)             (24,847)  
    Translation of Assets and
       Liabilities Denominated
       in Foreign Currencies               (132)               --                --                  --                   --
                                        -------           -------           -------             -------              -------
  Net Change in Unrealized
    Depreciation                        (10,214)           (2,016)          (31,617)             (7,216)             (24,847)  
                                        -------           -------           -------             -------              -------
  Net Loss on Investments               (10,501)           (2,016)          (31,654)             (8,226)             (29,030)  
                                        -------           -------           -------             -------              -------
  Net Decrease in Net Assets
    Resulting from Operations      $     (9,682)     $     (3,033)     $    (31,232)     $       (5,974)       $     (23,119)  
                                        =======           =======           =======             =======              =======
</TABLE>
 
(1) Commenced operations on July 28, 1997.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
FOR THE PERIOD ENDED OCTOBER 31, 1997
STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        ASAF T.
                                      ROWE PRICE                            ASAF INVESCO
                                     INTERNATIONAL        ASAF JANUS           EQUITY         ASAF TOTAL         ASAF JPM
                                        EQUITY          CAPITAL GROWTH         INCOME         RETURN BOND      MONEY MARKET
                                        FUND(1)            FUND(1)            FUND(2)           FUND(2)          FUND(3)
                                        ==========          ==========        ==========       ==========        ==========
<S>                                  <C>                <C>                 <C>               <C>              <C>
FROM OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Income (Loss)        $      (282)        $    7,214         $    7,857       $    3,392        $    5,120
  Net Realized Gain (Loss)
    on Investments                           (583)           (38,807)           (13,204)             288                25
  Net Change in Unrealized
    Appreciation (Depreciation)
    on Investments                        (65,471)           (68,600)            11,255           11,840                --
                                       ----------         ----------         ----------       ----------        ----------
Net Increase (Decrease) in
  Net Assets Resulting from
  Operations                              (66,336)          (100,193)             5,908           15,520             5,145
                                       ----------         ----------         ----------       ----------        ----------
DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS:
  From Net Investment Income:
    Class A                                    --                 --                 --             (136)           (1,356)
    Class B                                    --                 --                 --             (360)           (1,080)
    Class C                                    --                 --                 --             (103)             (908)
    Class X                                    --                 --                 --             (430)           (1,776)
                                       ----------         ----------         ----------       ----------        ----------
Total Distributions                            --                 --                 --           (1,029)           (5,120)
                                       ----------         ----------         ----------       ----------        ----------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (NOTE
  4):
  Net Increase in Net Assets from
    Capital Share Transactions          1,617,517          4,440,542          3,292,689        1,159,186         1,548,506
                                       ----------         ----------         ----------       ----------        ----------
Net Increase in Net Assets              1,551,181          4,340,349          3,298,597        1,173,677         1,548,531
NET ASSETS:
  Beginning of Period                      10,000             10,000             10,000           10,000            10,000
                                       ----------         ----------         ----------       ----------        ----------
  End of Period                       $ 1,561,181         $4,350,349         $3,308,597       $1,183,677        $1,558,531
                                       ==========         ==========         ==========       ==========        ==========
</TABLE>
 
(1) Commenced operations on June 10, 1997.
(2) Commenced operations on June 18, 1997.
(3) Commenced operations on June 19, 1997.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 

<PAGE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                    ASAF FOUNDERS
                                    INTERNATIONAL      ASAF FOUNDERS      ASAF T. ROWE        ASAF AMERICAN       ASAF FEDERATED
                                        SMALL              SMALL           PRICE SMALL      CENTURY STRATEGIC       HIGH YIELD
                                    CAPITALIZATION     CAPITALIZATION     COMPANY VALUE         BALANCED               BOND
                                       FUND(4)            FUND(4)            FUND(4)             FUND(4)             FUND(4)
                                          ========           ========        ==========            ==========         ==========
<S>                                 <C>                <C>                <C>               <C>                   <C>
FROM OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Income (Loss)         $    819           $ (1,017)        $       422         $     2,252          $    5,911
  Net Realized Loss on
    Investments                            (287)                --                 (37)             (1,010)             (4,183)
  Net Change in Unrealized
    Depreciation on Investments         (10,214)            (2,016)            (31,617)             (7,216)            (24,847)
                                       --------           --------          ----------          ----------          ----------
Net Decrease in Net Assets
  Resulting from Operations              (9,682)            (3,033)            (31,232)             (5,974)            (23,119)
                                       --------           --------          ----------          ----------          ----------
DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS:
  From Net Investment Income:
    Class A                                  --                 --                  --                  --              (3,360)
    Class B                                  --                 --                  --                  --              (1,321)
    Class C                                  --                 --                  --                  --                (470)
    Class X                                  --                 --                  --                  --                (760)
                                       --------           --------          ----------          ----------          ----------
Total Distributions                          --                 --                  --                  --              (5,911)
                                       --------           --------          ----------          ----------          ----------
CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS (NOTE
  4):
  Net Increase in Net Assets from
    Capital Share Transactions          620,488            882,116           2,534,338           1,247,302           3,855,489
                                       --------           --------          ----------          ----------          ----------
Net Increase in Net Assets              610,806            879,083           2,503,106           1,241,328           3,826,459
NET ASSETS:
  Beginning of Period                    10,000             10,000              10,000              10,000              10,000
                                       --------           --------          ----------          ----------          ----------
  End of Period                        $620,806           $889,083         $ 2,513,106         $ 1,251,328          $3,836,459
                                       ========           ========          ==========          ==========          ==========
</TABLE>
 
(4) Commenced operations on July 28, 1997.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Per Share Data (For a Share Outstanding from
July 28, 1997* through October 31, 1997)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          Increase (Decrease) from
                                            Net            Investment Operations
                                           Asset    ------------------------------------                       Net
                                           Value       Net          Net         Total                         Asset
                                         Beginning  Investment    Realized       from     Less Distributions  Value
                                            of        Income    & Unrealized  Investment       From Net       End of
                                          Period      (Loss)    Gain (Loss)   Operations  Investment Income   Period
                                         ---------  ----------  ------------  ----------  ------------------  ------
<S>                                      <C>        <C>         <C>           <C>         <C>                 <C>
ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
INTERNATIONAL EQUITY FUND:
===============================
 Class A                                  $  9.74     $ 0.01       $(0.82)     $  (0.81)       $     --       $ 8.93
 Class B                                    10.00      (0.01)       (0.83)        (0.84)             --         9.16
 Class C                                    10.00      (0.01)       (0.83)        (0.84)             --         9.16
 Class X                                    10.00      (0.01)       (0.81)        (0.82)             --         9.18
ASAF JANUS
CAPITAL GROWTH FUND:
===============================
 Class A                                  $ 11.18     $ 0.09       $ 0.13      $   0.22        $     --       $11.40
 Class B                                    10.00       0.06         0.13          0.19              --        10.19
 Class C                                    10.00       0.05         0.14          0.19              --        10.19
 Class X                                    10.00       0.05         0.15          0.20              --        10.20
ASAF INVESCO
EQUITY INCOME FUND:
===============================
 Class A                                  $  9.98     $ 0.14       $ 0.33      $   0.47        $     --       $10.45
 Class B                                    10.00       0.10         0.35          0.45              --        10.45
 Class C                                    10.00       0.10         0.36          0.46              --        10.46
 Class X                                    10.00       0.11         0.34          0.45              --        10.45
ASAF TOTAL
RETURN BOND FUND:
===============================
 Class A                                  $ 10.07     $ 0.15       $ 0.09      $   0.24        $  (0.03)      $10.28
 Class B                                    10.00       0.10         0.09          0.19           (0.03)       10.16
 Class C                                    10.00       0.10         0.09          0.19           (0.03)       10.16
 Class X                                    10.00       0.09         0.10          0.19           (0.02)       10.17
ASAF JPM
MONEY MARKET FUND:
===============================
 Class A                                  $  1.00     $0.009       $   --      $  0.009        $ (0.009)      $ 1.00
 Class B                                     1.00      0.007           --         0.007          (0.007)        1.00
 Class C                                     1.00      0.007           --         0.007          (0.007)        1.00
 Class X                                     1.00      0.008           --         0.008          (0.008)        1.00
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                  Ratio of
                                                                                                    Net
                                        Supplemental Data          Ratios of Expenses to         Investment
                                       --------------------         Average Net Assets**           Income
                                                 Net Assets  ----------------------------------  (Loss) to
                                                 at End of        After             Before        Average
                                       Total       Period        Expense           Expense          Net
                                       Return(2) (in 000's)  Reimbursement(1)  Reimbursement(1)  Assets(1)
                                       -----     ----------  ----------------  ----------------  ----------
<S>                                   <C>        <C>         <C>               <C>               <C>
ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
INTERNATIONAL EQUITY FUND:
===============================
 Class A                               (8.32)%     $  218          2.10%             51.87%          0.07%
 Class B                               (8.40)%        390          2.60%             38.12%         (0.51)%
 Class C                               (8.40)%        198          2.60%             33.95%         (0.53)%
 Class X                               (8.20)%        756          2.60%             46.77%         (0.28)%
ASAF JANUS
CAPITAL GROWTH FUND:
===============================
 Class A                               1.97%       $  706          1.70%             26.77%          2.72%
 Class B                               1.90%        1,718          2.20%             16.45%          2.27%
 Class C                               1.90%          452          2.20%             15.78%          1.95%
 Class X                               2.00%        1,474          2.20%             24.39%          2.05%
ASAF INVESCO
EQUITY INCOME FUND:
===============================
 Class A                               4.71%       $  471          1.55%             29.14%          4.81%
 Class B                               4.50%        1,408          2.05%             19.54%          3.68%
 Class C                               4.60%          255          2.05%             20.89%          3.82%
 Class X                               4.50%        1,174          2.05%             36.25%          4.05%
ASAF TOTAL
RETURN BOND FUND:
===============================
 Class A                               2.39%       $   61          1.40%             66.92%          4.42%
 Class B                               1.90%          547          1.90%             39.35%          4.13%
 Class C                               1.93%          165          1.90%             33.68%          4.32%
 Class X                               1.94%          410          1.90%             67.46%          3.94%
ASAF JPM
MONEY MARKET FUND:
===============================
 Class A                               0.92%       $  307          1.50%             31.53%          3.34%
 Class B                               0.75%          354          2.00%             37.83%          2.98%
 Class C                               0.71%          332          2.00%             24.34%          2.85%
 Class X                               0.77%          566          2.00%             39.71%          2.97%
</TABLE>
 
(1) Annualized
(2) Total return for Class X shares does not reflect the payment of bonus
    shares.
 *  Date of initial shares sold subsequent to the effective date of the Funds'
    registration statement under The Securities Act of 1933.
**  Represents the combined ratios for the respective fund and its respective
    pro rata share of its Master Portfolio.
Per share data has been calculated based on the average daily number of shares
outstanding throughout the period.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      Increase (Decrease) from
                                                       Investment Operations
                                        Net     ------------------------------------                         Net
                                       Asset       Net          Net         Total                           Asset
                                       Value    Investment    Realized       from     Less Distributions    Value
                                     Beginning    income    & Unrealized  Investment       From Net        End of
                                     of Period    (Loss)    Gain (Loss)   Operations  Investment Income    Period
                                     ---------  ----------  ------------  ----------  ------------------  ---------
<S>                                  <C>        <C>         <C>           <C>         <C>                 <C>
ASAF FOUNDERS INTERNATIONAL
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:
=========================
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $ 0.05       $(0.18)      $(0.13)         $   --         $  9.87
 Class B                                10.00       0.04        (0.19)       (0.15)             --            9.85
 Class C                                10.00       0.04        (0.18)       (0.14)             --            9.86
 Class X                                10.00       0.04        (0.20)       (0.16)             --            9.84
ASAF FOUNDERS
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:
=========================
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $(0.03)      $(0.03)      $(0.06)         $   --         $  9.94
 Class B                                10.00      (0.04)       (0.03)       (0.07)             --            9.93
 Class C                                10.00      (0.04)       (0.02)       (0.06)             --            9.94
 Class X                                10.00      (0.04)       (0.03)       (0.07)             --            9.93
ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND:
=========================
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $ 0.02       $ 0.44       $ 0.46          $   --         $ 10.46
 Class B                                10.00         --         0.44         0.44              --           10.44
 Class C                                10.00         --         0.45         0.45              --           10.45
 Class X                                10.00         --         0.44         0.44              --           10.44
ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY
STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND:
=========================
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $ 0.04       $(0.05)      $(0.01)         $   --         $  9.99
 Class B                                10.00       0.02        (0.06)       (0.04)             --            9.96
 Class C                                10.00       0.02        (0.04)       (0.02)             --            9.98
 Class X                                10.00       0.02        (0.06)       (0.04)             --            9.96
ASAF FEDERATED
HIGH YIELD BOND FUND:
=========================
 Class A                              $ 10.00     $ 0.05       $(0.07)      $(0.02)         $(0.05)        $  9.93
 Class B                                10.00       0.04        (0.07)       (0.03)          (0.04)           9.93
 Class C                                10.00       0.03        (0.07)       (0.04)          (0.03)           9.93
 Class X                                10.00       0.04        (0.07)       (0.03)          (0.04)           9.93
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                   Ratio of
 
                                                                                                                     Net
 
                                              Supplemental Data                     Ratios of Expenses to         Investment
 
                                  ------------------------------------------          Average Net Assets            Income
 
                                            Net Assets             Average    ----------------------------------  (Loss) to
 
                                            at End of   Portfolio Commission       After             Before        Average
 
                                  Total       Period    Turnover     Rate         Expense           Expense          Net
 
                                  Return(2) (in 000's)    Rate       Paid     Reimbursement(1)  Reimbursement(1)  Assets(1)
 
                                  -----     ----------  --------  ----------  ----------------  ----------------  ----------
 
<S>                              <C>        <C>         <C>       <C>         <C>               <C>               <C>
ASAF FOUNDERS INTERNATIONAL
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:
=========================
 Class A                          (1.30)%     $  106         --    $ 0.0590         2.10%            136.49%          2.03%
 
 Class B                          (1.50)%        230         --      0.0590         2.60%             90.64%          1.62%
 
 Class C                          (1.40)%         79         --      0.0590         2.60%             55.02%          1.72%
 
 Class X                          (1.60)%        206         --      0.0590         2.60%             54.45%          1.58%
 
ASAF FOUNDERS
SMALL CAPITALIZATION FUND:
=========================
 Class A                          (0.60)%     $  193         --    $ 0.0529         1.70%            105.48%         (1.16)%
 
 Class B                          (0.70)%        353         --      0.0529         2.20%             57.99%         (1.73)%
 
 Class C                          (0.60)%         74         --      0.0529         2.20%             42.48%         (1.73)%
 
 Class X                          (0.70)%        270         --      0.0529         2.20%             47.29%         (1.70)%
 
ASAF T. ROWE PRICE
SMALL COMPANY VALUE FUND:
=========================
 Class A                          4.60%       $  383         --    $ 0.0412         1.75%             54.47%          0.69%
 
 Class B                          4.40%        1,155         --      0.0412         2.25%             30.14%          0.17%
 
 Class C                          4.50%          335         --      0.0412         2.25%             33.60%          0.02%
 
 Class X                          4.40%          640         --      0.0412         2.25%             22.43%          0.19%
 
ASAF AMERICAN CENTURY
STRATEGIC BALANCED FUND:
=========================
 Class A                          (0.10)%     $  257          2%   $ 0.0186         1.60%             37.87%          1.56%
 
 Class B                          (0.40)%        381          2%     0.0186         2.10%             29.90%          0.79%
 
 Class C                          (0.20)%        215          2%     0.0186         2.10%             38.96%          0.78%
 
 Class X                          (0.40)%        398          2%     0.0186         2.10%             26.66%          1.07%
 
ASAF FEDERATED
HIGH YIELD BOND FUND:
=========================
 Class A                          (0.23)%     $2,154         11%   $    N/A         1.50%             30.49%          4.76%
 
 Class B                          (0.30)%        920         11%        N/A         2.00%             30.22%          3.15%
 
 Class C                          (0.36)%        206         11%        N/A         2.00%             29.26%          3.55%
 
 Class X                          (0.25)%        556         11%        N/A         2.00%             30.95%          3.65%
 
</TABLE>
 
(1) Annualized
(2) Total return for Class X shares does not reflect the payment of bonus
    shares.
Per share data has been calculated based on the average daily number of shares
outstanding throughout the period.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
OCTOBER 31, 1997
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
1. ORGANIZATION
================================================================================
 
     American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc. (the "Company") is an open-end
management investment company, registered under the Investment Company Act of
1940, as amended. The Company was organized on March 5, 1997 as a Maryland
Corporation. The Company operates as a series company and, at October 31, 1997,
consisted of ten diversified investment portfolios (each a "Fund" and
collectively the "Funds"). Five of the Funds -- ASAF T. Rowe Price International
Equity Fund ("International Equity"), ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund ("Capital
Growth"), ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund ("Equity Income"), ASAF Total Return
Bond Fund ("Total Return Bond"), and ASAF JPM Money Market Fund ("Money Market")
(each a "Feeder Fund" and collectively the "Feeder Funds") -- invest all of
their investable assets in a corresponding portfolio of American Skandia Master
Trust (each a "Portfolio" and collectively the "Portfolios"), an open-end
management investment company comprised of five diversified investment
portfolios. The value of each Feeder Fund's investment in each Portfolio,
included in the accompanying Statements of Assets and Liabilities, reflects each
Feeder Fund's beneficial interest in the net assets of that Portfolio. At
October 31, 1997, the Feeder Funds held the following percentage interests in
their corresponding Portfolios.
 
<TABLE>
                <S>                                                       <C>
                ASMT T. Rowe Price International Equity Portfolio         44.4%
                ASMT Janus Capital Growth Portfolio                       54.4%
                ASMT INVESCO Equity Income Portfolio                      50.8%
                ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond Portfolio                    23.5%
                ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio                           77.7%
</TABLE>
 
     The financial statements of each Portfolio, including the Schedules of
Investments, are included elsewhere within this report and should be read in
conjunction with each Feeder Fund's financial statements.
 
     The remaining five Funds of the Company -- ASAF Founders International
Small Capitalization Fund ("International Small Cap"), ASAF Founders Small
Capitalization Fund ("Small Cap"), ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund
("Small Company Value"), ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund
("Strategic Balanced"), and ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund ("High Yield
Bond") (each a "Non-Feeder Fund" and collectively the "Non-Feeder
Funds") -- directly invest and manage their own portfolio of securities.
 
2. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
================================================================================
 
     The following is a summary of significant accounting policies followed by
the Funds, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles, in the
preparation of their financial statements. The preparation of financial
statements requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the
reported amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Actual results
could differ from those estimates.
 
SECURITY VALUATION
 
FEEDER FUNDS -- The value of each Feeder Fund's beneficial interest in the
Portfolio in which it invests is determined by the Fund's percentage ownership
in the Portfolio, multiplied by the Portfolio's net assets.

<PAGE>
 
Valuation of securities held by the Portfolios is discussed in Note 2 to the
financial statements of American Skandia Master Trust.
 
NON-FEEDER FUNDS -- Securities are valued at the close of trading on the New
York Stock Exchange. Equity securities are valued at the last reported sales
price on the securities exchange on which they are primarily traded, or at the
last reported sales price on the NASDAQ National Securities Market. Securities
not listed on an exchange or securities market, or securities in which there
were no transactions, are valued at the average of the most recent bid and asked
prices.
 
     Debt securities are generally traded in the over-the-counter market and are
valued at a price deemed best to reflect fair value as quoted by dealers who
make markets in these securities or by an independent pricing service. Debt
securities which mature in 60 days or less are valued at cost (or market value
60 days prior to maturity), adjusted for amortization to maturity of any premium
or discount. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available
are valued at fair value as determined in good faith by, or at the direction of,
the Board of Directors. As of October 31, 1997, there were no securities valued
by the Board of Directors.
 
FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION
 
NON-FEEDER FUNDS -- Securities and other assets and liabilities denominated in
foreign currencies are converted each business day into U.S. dollars based on
the prevailing rates of exchange. Purchases and sales of portfolio securities
and income and expenses are converted into U.S. dollars on the respective dates
of such transactions.
 
     Gains and losses resulting from changes in exchange rates applicable to
foreign securities are not reported separately from gains and losses arising
from movements in securities prices.
 
     Net realized foreign exchange gains and losses include gains and losses
from sales and maturities of foreign currency exchange contracts, gains and
losses realized between the trade and settlement dates of foreign securities
transactions, and the difference between the amount of net investment income
accrued on foreign securities and the U.S. dollar amount actually received. Net
unrealized foreign exchange gains and losses include gains and losses from
changes in the value of assets and liabilities other than portfolio securities,
resulting from changes in exchange rates.
 
FOREIGN CURRENCY EXCHANGE CONTRACTS
 
NON-FEEDER FUNDS -- A foreign currency exchange contract ("FCEC") is a
commitment to purchase or sell a specified amount of a foreign currency at a
specified future date, in exchange for either a specified amount of another
foreign currency or U.S. dollars.
 
     FCECs are valued at the forward exchange rates applicable to the underlying
currencies, and changes in market value are recorded as unrealized gains and
losses until the contract settlement date.
 
     Risks could arise from entering into FCECs if the counterparties to the
contracts were unable to meet the terms of their contracts. In addition, the use
of FCECs may not only hedge against losses on securities denominated in foreign
currency, but may also reduce potential gains on securities from favorable
movements in exchange rates.

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS
 
NON-FEEDER FUNDS -- A repurchase agreement is a commitment to purchase
government securities from a seller who agrees to repurchase the securities at
an agreed on price and date. The excess of the resale price over the purchase
price determines the yield on the transaction. Under the terms of the agreement,
the market value, including accrued interest, of the government securities will
be at least equal to their repurchase price. Repurchase agreements are recorded
at cost, which, combined with accrued interest, approximates market value.
 
     Repurchase agreements entail a risk of loss in the event that the seller
defaults on its obligation to repurchase the securities. In such case, the Fund
may be delayed or prevented from exercising its right to dispose of the
securities.
 
DEFERRED ORGANIZATION COSTS
 
ALL FUNDS -- The Company bears all costs in connection with its organization.
All such costs are amortized on a straight-line basis over a five-year period
beginning on the date of the commencement of operations.
 
INVESTMENT TRANSACTIONS AND INVESTMENT INCOME
 
FEEDER FUNDS -- The Feeder Funds record their proportionate share of investment
operations, including net investment income and realized and unrealized gains
and losses, from the corresponding Portfolios in which they invest. The Feeder
Funds receive daily allocations of investment operations from their
corresponding Portfolios based on the value of their investments in their
respective Portfolios.
 
NON-FEEDER FUNDS -- Investment transactions are accounted for on the trade date.
Realized gains and losses from securities sold are recognized on the specific
identification basis. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date.
Corporate actions, including dividends, on foreign securities are recorded on
the ex-dividend date or, if such information is not available, as soon as
reliable information is available from the Funds' sources. Interest income is
recorded on the accrual basis and includes the accretion of discount and
amortization of premium.
 
MULTIPLE CLASSES OF SHARES
 
ALL FUNDS -- Each Fund is divided into Class A, B, C, and X shares. Each class
of shares is separately charged its respective distribution and service fees.
Income, expenses that are not specific to a particular class, and realized and
unrealized gains and losses are allocated to each class based on the daily value
of the shares of each class in relation to the total value of the Fund.
Dividends are declared separately for each class and the per-share amounts
reflect differences in class-specific expenses.
 
DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS
 
ALL FUNDS -- Dividends, if any, from net investment income are declared and paid
at least annually by the International Small Cap, International Equity, Small
Cap, Small Company Value, and Capital Growth Funds, semiannually by the Equity
Income and Strategic Balanced Funds, quarterly by the Total Return Bond Fund,
and declared daily and paid monthly by the High Yield Bond and Money Market
Funds. Net realized gains
 

<PAGE>
 
from investment transactions, if any, are distributed at least annually.
Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.
 
3. AGREEMENTS AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES
================================================================================
 
     The Non-Feeder Funds have entered into investment management agreements
with American Skandia Investment Services, Inc. ("Investment Manager") which
provide that the Investment Manager will furnish each Fund with investment
advice and investment management and administrative services. The Investment
Manager has engaged the following firms as Sub-advisors for their respective
Funds: Founders Asset Management, Inc. for International Small Cap and Small
Cap; T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. for Small Company Value; American Century
Investment Management, Inc. for Strategic Balanced; and Federated Investment
Counseling for High Yield Bond.
 
ADVISORY FEES
 
NON-FEEDER FUNDS -- The Investment Manager receives a fee, computed daily and
paid monthly, based on an annual rate of 1.10%, .90%, 1.00%, .90%, and .70% of
the average daily net assets of the International Small Cap, Small Cap, Small
Company Value, Strategic Balanced, and High Yield Bond Funds, respectively. The
fee for International Small Cap is reduced to 1.00% of the average daily net
assets in excess of $100 million.
 
SUB-ADVISORY FEES
 
NON-FEEDER FUNDS -- The Investment Manager pays each Sub-advisor a fee, computed
daily and paid monthly, based on an annual rate of .60%, .50%, .60%, .50%, and
 .25% of the average daily net assets of the International Small Cap, Small Cap,
Small Company Value, Strategic Balanced, and High Yield Bond Funds,
respectively. The annual rates of the fees payable to the Sub-advisors for
International Small Cap, Small Cap, Strategic Balanced, and High Yield Bond are
reduced for Fund net assets in excess of specified levels.
 
EXPENSE REIMBURSEMENTS
 
ALL FUNDS -- The Investment Manager has voluntarily agreed to reimburse each
Fund for operating expenses (exclusive of class-specific distribution fees) in
excess of 1.60%, 1.20%, 1.25%, 1.10%, 1.00%, 1.60%, 1.20%, 1.05%, .90%, and
1.00%, on an annualized basis, of the average daily net assets of the
International Small Cap, Small Cap, Small Company Value, Strategic Balanced,
High Yield Bond, International Equity, Capital Growth, Equity Income, Total
Return Bond, and Money Market Funds, respectively. All amounts paid or payable
to the Funds by the Investment Manager, under the agreement, are reflected in
the Statements of Operations.
 
MANAGEMENT OF THE COMPANY
 
NON-FEEDER FUNDS -- Certain officers and Directors of the Funds are officers or
directors of the Investment Manager. The Funds pay no compensation directly to
their officers or interested Directors.

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
DISTRIBUTOR
 
ALL FUNDS -- American Skandia Marketing, Incorporated ("ASMI") serves as the
principal underwriter and distributor for each Fund.
 
     The Company has adopted a separate Distribution and Service Plan (each a
"Plan" and collectively the "Plans") for Class A, B, C, and X shares of each
Fund in accordance with the requirements of Rule 12b-1 of the Investment Company
Act of 1940.
 
     Under the Class A Plan, the Funds will pay ASMI a distribution and service
fee of .50% of the average daily net assets attributable to Class A shares, half
of which is intended as a fee for services provided to existing shareholders.
ASMI uses distribution and service fees received under the Plan to compensate
qualified dealers, brokers, banks, and other financial institutions ("Dealers")
for services provided in connection with the sale of Class A shares and the
maintenance of shareholder accounts. Such compensation is paid by ASMI quarterly
at an annual rate not to exceed .50% of the Funds' average daily net assets
attributable to Class A shares. Fees incurred under the Plan during the period
ended October 31, 1997 were .50% of the average daily net assets of Class A
shares of the Funds.
 
     A portion of the sales charge on sales of Class A shares may be retained by
ASMI or allocated to Dealers attributable to the sale of those shares. For the
period ended October 31, 1997, ASMI retained no portion of the sales charge on
sales of Class A shares of the Funds.
 
     Under the Class B Plan, the Funds will pay ASMI a distribution and service
fee of 1.00% of the average daily net assets attributable to Class B shares, a
quarter of which is intended as a fee for services provided to existing
shareholders. ASMI uses distribution and service fees received under the Plan to
compensate Dealers for services provided in connection with the sale of Class B
shares and the maintenance of shareholder accounts. Such compensation is paid by
ASMI quarterly at an annual rate not to exceed .50% of the Funds' average daily
net assets attributable to Class B shares held for over seven years. Fees
incurred under the Plan during the period ended October 31, 1997 were 1.00% of
the average daily net assets of Class B shares of the Funds.
 
     Under the Class C Plan, the Funds will pay ASMI a distribution and service
fee of 1.00% of the average daily net assets attributable to Class C shares, a
quarter of which is intended as a fee for services provided to existing
shareholders. ASMI uses distribution and service fees received under the Plan to
compensate Dealers for services provided in connection with the sale of Class C
shares and the maintenance of shareholder accounts. ASMI currently pays a 1.00%
fee to Dealers, in advance, upon sale of Class C shares and retains the fee paid
by the Funds in the first year. After the shares have been held for a year, ASMI
pays such compensation on a quarterly basis. Fees incurred under the Plan during
the period ended October 31, 1997 were 1.00% of the average daily net assets of
Class C shares of the Funds.
 
     Under the Class X Plan, the Funds will pay ASMI a distribution and service
fee of 1.00% of the average daily net assets attributable to Class X shares that
are outstanding for eight years or less, a quarter of which is intended as a fee
for services provided to existing shareholders. ASMI uses distribution and
service fees received under the Plan as reimbursement for its purchases of Bonus
Shares, as well as to compensate Dealers for services provided in connection
with the sale of Class X shares and the maintenance of shareholder accounts.
Compensation to Dealers is paid by ASMI quarterly at an annual rate not to
exceed

<PAGE>
 
 .50% of the Funds' average daily net assets attributable to Class X shares held
for over seven years. Fees incurred under the Plan during the period ended
October 31, 1997 were 1.00% of the average daily net assets of Class X shares of
the Funds.
 
     Purchases of $1 million or more or purchases by certain retirement plans,
with respect to Class A shares, are subject to a contingent deferred sales
charge ("CDSC") if shares are redeemed within 12 months of their purchase. A
CDSC is imposed on Class B and Class X shares redeemed within eight years after
their purchase. A CDSC is imposed on Class C shares redeemed within 12 months of
their purchase. The maximum CDSC imposed is equal to 1%, 6%, 1%, and 6% of the
amount subject to the charge, for Class A, B, C, and X, respectively. CDSCs
collected by ASMI totaled $644, $100, and $385 for Class B, Class C, and Class
X, respectively.
 
RELATED-PARTY TRANSACTIONS
 
     At October 31, 1997, American Century Investment Management, Inc. owned
shares of ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund, which comprised
approximately 7% of the net assets of the Fund. In addition, the Investment
Manager owned shares of ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund, which comprised
approximately 52% of the net assets of the Fund.
 
4. SHARES OF CAPITAL STOCK
================================================================================
 
ALL FUNDS -- The authorized capital stock of the Funds is 40 million shares,
with a par value of $.001 per share. Transactions in shares of capital stock,
for the period from July 28, 1997 (commencement of operations) to October 31,
1997, were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            CLASS A                 CLASS B                CLASS C                 CLASS X
                                       ------------------    ---------------------    ------------------    ---------------------
                                       SHARES     AMOUNT     SHARES       AMOUNT      SHARES     AMOUNT     SHARES       AMOUNT
                                       =====     =======     ======      ========     =====     =======     ======      ========
<S>                                    <C>       <C>         <C>        <C>           <C>       <C>         <C>        <C>
INTERNATIONAL EQUITY:
  Sold                                 23,490    $220,217     42,608    $  405,136    21,627    $207,357     84,453    $  806,216
  Redeemed                              (123)      (1,174)       (81)         (797)      (3)         (25)    (2,063)      (19,413)
                                       ------    --------    -------    ----------    -------   --------    -------    ----------
    Net Increase                       23,367    $219,043     42,527    $  404,339    21,624    $207,332     82,390    $  786,803
                                       ======    ========    =======    ==========    =======   ========    =======    ==========
CAPITAL GROWTH:
  Sold                                 66,046    $768,680    168,878    $1,766,154    44,354    $465,523    144,494    $1,503,024
  Redeemed                             (5,101)    (59,528)      (298)       (3,181)      (3)         (25)       (10)         (105)
                                       ------    --------    -------    ----------    -------   --------    -------    ----------
    Net Increase                       60,945    $709,152    168,580    $1,762,973    44,351    $465,498    144,484    $1,502,919
                                       ======    ========    =======    ==========    =======   ========    =======    ==========
EQUITY INCOME:
  Sold                                 44,136    $459,412    134,825    $1,411,321    24,377    $255,486    112,415    $1,168,540
  Redeemed                                --           --       (162)       (1,731)      --           --        (32)         (339)
                                       ------    --------    -------    ----------    -------   --------    -------    ----------
    Net Increase                       44,136    $459,412    134,663    $1,409,590    24,377    $255,486    112,383    $1,168,201
                                       ======    ========    =======    ==========    =======   ========    =======    ==========
TOTAL RETURN BOND:
  Sold                                 5,693     $ 57,481     54,044    $  542,228    16,227    $163,314     40,314    $  405,133
  Reinvested                              10          103         20           202       10          103         43           430
  Redeemed                              (746)      (7,525)      (202)       (2,025)      (3)         (25)       (23)         (233)
                                       ------    --------    -------    ----------    -------   --------    -------    ----------
    Net Increase                       4,957     $ 50,059     53,862    $  540,405    16,234    $163,392     40,334    $  405,330
                                       ======    ========    =======    ==========    =======   ========    =======    ==========
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.

 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                       CLASS A                  CLASS B                   CLASS C                  CLASS X
                                ---------------------    ----------------------    ---------------------    ---------------------
                                SHARES       AMOUNT       SHARES       AMOUNT       SHARES      AMOUNT       SHARES      AMOUNT
                                ======      ========      ======      ========      ======      =======      ======      =======
<S>                             <C>        <C>           <C>         <C>           <C>         <C>          <C>         <C>
MONEY MARKET:
  Sold                          374,404    $  374,404     702,299    $  702,299     531,152    $ 531,152     874,395    $ 874,395
  Reinvested                      1,094         1,094       1,141         1,141         891          891         725          725
  Redeemed                      (78,485)      (78,485)   (349,856)     (349,856)   (200,540)    (200,540)   (308,714)    (308,714)
                                -------    ----------    --------    ----------    --------    ---------    --------    ---------
    Net Increase                297,013    $  297,013     353,584    $  353,584     331,503    $ 331,503     566,406    $ 566,406
                                =======    ==========    ========    ==========    ========    =========    ========    =========
INTERNATIONAL SMALL CAP:
  Sold                            9,754    $   97,828      23,340    $  233,440       7,998    $  80,146      20,945    $ 209,179
  Redeemed                           --            --          (2)          (25)         (6)         (55)         (2)         (25)
                                -------    ----------    --------    ----------    --------    ---------    --------    ---------
    Net Increase                  9,754    $   97,828      23,338    $  233,415       7,992    $  80,091      20,943    $ 209,154
                                =======    ==========    ========    ==========    ========    =========    ========    =========
SMALL CAP:
  Sold                           18,372    $  183,278      35,572    $  354,771       7,399    $  73,723      27,161    $ 270,490
  Redeemed                           (3)          (25)         (3)          (25)         (2)         (25)         (7)         (71)
                                -------    ----------    --------    ----------    --------    ---------    --------    ---------
    Net Increase                 18,369    $  183,253      35,569    $  354,746       7,397    $  73,698      27,154    $ 270,419
                                =======    ==========    ========    ==========    ========    =========    ========    =========
SMALL COMPANY VALUE:
  Sold                           35,645    $  375,919     110,704    $1,167,706      32,096    $ 342,052      61,311    $ 649,944
  Redeemed                          (17)         (181)        (70)         (760)         (3)         (25)        (29)        (317)
                                -------    ----------    --------    ----------    --------    ---------    --------    ---------
    Net Increase                 35,628    $  375,738     110,634    $1,166,946      32,093    $ 342,027      61,282    $ 649,627
                                =======    ==========    ========    ==========    ========    =========    ========    =========
STRATEGIC BALANCED:
  Sold                           83,398    $  838,987      38,292    $  388,813      21,579    $ 219,920      39,958    $ 399,935
  Redeemed                      (58,685)     (600,178)        (12)         (125)         (3)         (25)         (2)         (25)
                                -------    ----------    --------    ----------    --------    ---------    --------    ---------
    Net Increase                 24,713    $  238,809      38,280    $  388,688      21,576    $ 219,895      39,956    $ 399,910
                                =======    ==========    ========    ==========    ========    =========    ========    =========
HIGH YIELD BOND:
  Sold                          216,427    $2,168,207      92,594    $  924,866      21,719    $ 216,988      60,245    $ 600,477
  Reinvested                        336         3,338         106         1,056          47          469          82          811
  Redeemed                         (718)       (7,184)        (53)         (532)     (1,002)      (9,951)     (4,306)     (43,056)
                                -------    ----------    --------    ----------    --------    ---------    --------    ---------
    Net Increase                216,045    $2,164,361      92,647    $  925,390      20,764    $ 207,506      56,021    $ 558,232
                                =======    ==========    ========    ==========    ========    =========    ========    =========
</TABLE>
 
     The number of shareholders whose ownership is 5% or more of the net assets
of a fund, and their combined percentage ownership is as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      NUMBER OF       PERCENTAGE
                                                     SHAREHOLDERS     OWNERSHIP
                                                     ============     ==========
                <S>                                  <C>              <C>
                Equity Income                              1               6%
                Total Return Bond                          5              38
                Money Market                               6              47
                International Small Cap                    2              16
                Small Cap                                  3              17
                Small Company Value                        1               5
                Strategic Balanced                         4              24
                High Yield Bond                            1              52
</TABLE>
 

<PAGE>
 
5. TAX MATTERS
================================================================================
 
ALL FUNDS -- Each Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company
under the Internal Revenue Code and to distribute all of its taxable income,
including any net realized gains on investments, to shareholders. Accordingly,
no provision for federal income or excise tax has been made.
 
     Income and capital gains of the Funds are determined in accordance with
both tax regulations and generally accepted accounting principles. Such may
result in temporary and permanent differences between tax basis earnings and
earnings reported for financial statement purposes. Temporary differences that
result in over-distributions for financial statement purposes are classified as
distributions in excess of net investment income or accumulated net realized
gains. Permanent differences in the recognition of earnings are reclassified to
additional paid-in capital. Distributions in excess of tax-basis earnings are
recorded as a return of capital.
 
CAPITAL LOSS CARRYFORWARDS -- At October 31, 1997, the following Funds had, for
federal income tax purposes, capital loss carryforwards available to offset
future net realized capital gains.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                EXPIRING
                                                                IN 2005
                                                                ============
                        <S>                                     <C>
                        Capital Growth                          $38,807
                        Equity Income                            12,699
                        Small Company Value                          37
                        Strategic Balanced                        1,010
                        High Yield Bond                           4,183
</TABLE>
 
6. PORTFOLIO SECURITIES
================================================================================
 
NON-FEEDER FUNDS -- Purchases and sales of securities, other than U.S.
government securities, and short-term obligations, during the period ended
October 31, 1997, were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                PURCHASES       SALES
                                                                =============== ===========
            <S>                                                 <C>            <C>
            International Small Cap                             $ 381,711      $    --
            Small Cap                                             180,836           --
            Small Company Value                                 2,051,601           --
            Strategic Balanced                                    633,410        6,926
            High Yield Bond                                     3,214,715       88,250
</TABLE>
 
     Purchases and sales of U.S. government securities, during the period end
October 31, 1997, were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                PURCHASES      SALES
                                                                =============== ===========
            <S>                                                 <C>           <C>
            Strategic Balanced                                  $298,625      $    --
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
     At October 31, 1997, the cost and unrealized appreciation or depreciation
in value of the investments owned by the Non-Feeder Funds, for federal income
tax purposes, were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    GROSS            GROSS
                                  AGGREGATE       UNREALIZED       UNREALIZED      NET UNREALIZED
                                     COST        APPRECIATION     DEPRECIATION      DEPRECIATION
                                  =========      ============     ============     ==============
    <S>                           <C>            <C>              <C>              <C>
    International Small Cap       $ 381,711        $  1,437         $ 11,519          $ 10,082
    Small Cap                       254,041           4,229            6,245             2,016
    Small Company Value           2,672,075          30,907           62,524            31,617
    Strategic Balanced            1,155,555          32,835           40,051             7,216
    High Yield Bond               4,417,473           3,302           28,149            24,847
</TABLE>
 
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.

<PAGE>
 
                       REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
To the Investors and Board of Trustees of
American Skandia Master Trust:
 
     We have audited the accompanying statements of assets and liabilities,
including the schedules of investments, of the American Skandia Master Trust
(the "Trust"), comprising, respectively, ASMT T. Rowe Price International Equity
Portfolio, ASMT Janus Capital Growth Portfolio, ASMT INVESCO Equity Income
Portfolio, ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond Portfolio and ASMT JPM Money Market
Portfolio as of October 31, 1997, and their related statements of operations,
changes in net assets and supplementary data for each of the periods presented.
These financial statements and supplementary data are the responsibility of the
Trust's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these
financial statements and the supplementary data based on our audits.
 
     We conducted our audits in accordance with auditing standards generally
accepted in the United States of America. Those standards require that we plan
and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements and supplementary data are free of material misstatements. An audit
includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and
disclosures in the financial statements. Our procedures included confirmation of
investments owned as of October 31, 1997, by correspondence with custodians and
brokers. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and
significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall
financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a
reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
     In our opinion, the financial statements and supplementary data referred to
above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of each
of the aforementioned portfolios of the American Skandia Master Trust as of
October 31, 1997, and the results of their operations, the changes in their net
assets and their supplementary data for each of the periods presented, in
conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of
America.
 
COOPERS & LYBRAND
 
Chartered Accountants and Registered Auditors
Dublin, Republic of Ireland
December 12, 1997

<PAGE>
 
                         AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER TRUST
                            SCHEDULES OF INVESTMENTS
                                OCTOBER 31, 1997
 
               ASMT T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL EQUITY PORTFOLIO
                      ASMT JANUS CAPITAL GROWTH PORTFOLIO
                      ASMT INVESCO EQUITY INCOME PORTFOLIO
                     ASMT PIMCO TOTAL RETURN BOND PORTFOLIO
                        ASMT JPM MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASMT T. ROWE PRICE
INTERNATIONAL EQUITY PORTFOLIO
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
FOREIGN STOCK -- 63.8%
  ARGENTINA -- 1.3%
    Banco de Galicia y
      Buenos Aires SA de CV
      [ADR]                      370      $    8,967
    Perez Companc SA C1-B      1,840          11,488
    Telefonica de Argentina
      SA                         490          13,781
    YPF SA [ADR]                 340          10,880
                                            --------
                                              45,116
                                            --------
  AUSTRALIA -- 1.5%
    Australian Gas Light
      Co. Ltd.                 2,000          13,393
    Broken Hill Proprietary
      Co. Ltd.                 1,000           9,939
    News Corp. Ltd.            2,005           9,624
    St. George Bank Ltd.       2,000          12,144
    Woodside Petroleum Ltd.    1,000           8,466
                                            --------
                                              53,566
                                            --------
  BELGIUM -- 1.1%
    Generale de Banque SA         30          12,272
    Kredietbank NV                60          25,178
                                            --------
                                              37,450
                                            --------
  BRAZIL -- 1.0%
    Lojas Americanas SA
      [ADR]                    1,000           8,164
    Pao de Acucar [ADR]        1,000          18,500
    Usinas Siderurgicas de
      Minas Gerais SA [ADR]    1,000           7,483
                                            --------
                                              34,147
                                            --------
  CANADA -- 0.3%
    Alcan Aluminium Ltd.         320           9,085
                                            --------
  CHILE -- 0.6%
    Chilgener SA [ADR]           338           9,210
    Compania Cervecerias
      Unidas SA [ADR]            430          10,481
                                            --------
                                              19,691
                                            --------
  FINLAND -- 0.3%
    Nokia AB Cl-A                120          10,497
                                            --------
  FRANCE -- 5.4%
    Alcatel Alsthom              100          12,092
    AXA-UAP                      180          12,352
    Carrefour Supermarche
      SA                          20          10,459
    Compagnie de Saint-
      Gobain                      90          12,946
    Compagnie Generale des
      Eaux                       230          26,892
    Legrand SA                    50           9,329
 
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
    Louis Vuitton Moet
      Hennessy                    40      $    6,810
    Pinault-Printemps
      Redoute SA                  40          18,332
    Sanofi SA                    130          12,377
    Schneider SA                 240          12,842
    Societe Generale              70           9,607
    Societe Nationale Elf
      Aquitaine SA               100          12,404
    Sodexho SA                    20           9,996
    Total SA Cl-B                190          21,126
                                            --------
                                             187,564
                                            --------
  GERMANY -- 4.1%
    Allianz AG                    60          13,561
    Bayer AG                     250           9,006
    Bayerische Bank AG           240          10,123
    Deutsche Bank AG             270          17,868
    Deutsche Telekom AG          520           9,759
    Gehe AG                      320          16,826
    Mannesmann AG                 10           4,241
    Rhoen-Klinikum AG             50           4,997
    SAP AG                        50          14,307
    SAP AG Pfd.                   40          11,957
    Siemens AG                   180          11,190
    Veba AG                      320          18,034
                                            --------
                                             141,869
                                            --------
  HONG KONG -- 1.5%
    Dao Heng Bank Group
      Ltd.                     3,000           6,909
    Henderson Land
      Development Co. Ltd.     1,000           5,537
    Hong Kong Land Holdings
      Ltd.                     4,000           9,120
    Hutchison Whampoa Ltd.     2,000          13,843
    New World Development
      Co. Ltd.                 2,000           7,038
</TABLE>
 

<PAGE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASMT T. ROWE PRICE
INTERNATIONAL EQUITY PORTFOLIO
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
    Swire Pacific Ltd. Cl-A    1,000     $     5,343
    Wharf Holdings Ltd.        3,000           6,132
                                            --------
                                              53,922
                                            --------
  ITALY -- 2.1%
    Credito Italiano SPA       4,000          10,685
    Ente Nazionale
      Idrocarburi SPA          2,000          11,265
    Istituto Mobiliare
      Italiano SPA             1,000           8,958
    Mediolanum SPA             1,000          16,803
    Telecom Italia Mobile
      SPA                      4,000          14,863
    Telecom Italia SPA         2,000          12,555
                                            --------
                                              75,129
                                            --------
  JAPAN -- 13.8%
    Canon, Inc.                1,000          24,279
    Dainippon Screen
      Manufacturing Co.
      Ltd.                     1,000           8,115
    Daiichi Pharmaceutical
      Co. Ltd.                 1,000          14,218
    Daiwa House Industry
      Co. Ltd.                 1,000           9,645
    DDI Corp.                      3          10,027
    Denso Corp.                1,000          21,618
    East Japan Railway Co.
      Ltd.                         2           9,728
    Fanuc Ltd.                   400          16,164
    Hitachi Ltd.               1,000           7,691
    Kao Corp.                  1,000          13,969
    Komatsu Ltd.               2,000          10,693
    Komori Corp.               1,000          18,292
    Kuraray Co. Ltd.           2,000          17,960
    Makita Corp.               1,000          14,052
    Matsushita Electric
      Industrial Co.           1,000          16,795
    Marui Co. Ltd.             1,000          16,879
    Mitsubishi Corp.           2,000          17,128
    Mitsubishi Heavy
      Industries Ltd.          3,000          14,742
    Mitsui Fudosan Co. Ltd.    1,000          11,308
    NEC Corp.                  1,000          10,975
    Nippon Steel Co.           5,000          10,310
    Nippon Telegraph &
      Telephone Corp.             10           8,481
    Nomura Securities Co.
      Ltd.                     1,000          11,640
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
    Pioneer Electronic
      Corp.                    1,000     $    16,463
    Sankyo Co. Ltd.            1,000          33,009
    Sekisui Chemical Co.
      Ltd.                     1,000           7,874
    Sekisui House Ltd.         1,000           8,564
    Sharp Corp.                1,000           7,774
    Shin-Etsu Chemical Co.     1,000          24,445
    Sony Corp.                   200          16,613
    Sumitomo Corp.             1,000           7,151
    Sumitomo Electric
      Industries               1,000          13,220
    Teijin Ltd.                4,000          13,137
    Tokio Marine & Fire
      Insurance Co.            1,000           9,978
    Toppan Printing Co.
      Ltd.                     1,000          12,555
                                            --------
                                             485,492
                                            --------
  MALAYSIA -- 0.1%
    United Engineers Ltd.      2,000           4,716
                                            --------
  MEXICO -- 1.6%
    Cementos de Mexico SA
      de CV [ADS]*             2,000          15,606
    Cifra SA de CV Cl-B
      [ADR]                    5,560          10,831
    Fomento Economico
      Mexicano SA de CV        2,000          14,038
    Gruma SA [ADR] 144A*         516           8,040
    Grupo Modelo SA de CV      1,000           7,470
                                            --------
                                              55,985
                                            --------
  NETHERLANDS -- 7.1%
    ABN Amro Bank NV             730          14,707
    Baan Co. NV                  160          11,336
    CSM NV                       260          11,870
    Elsevier NV                1,700          26,717
    Fortis Amev NV               240           9,436
    ING Groep NV                 640          26,877
    Koninklijke Nutricia
      Verenigde Bedrijven
      NV                         370          10,581
    Polygram NV                  200          11,377
    Royal Dutch Petroleum
      NV                       1,080          57,152
    Unilever NV                  390          20,739
    Wolters Kluwer NV            380          46,680
                                            --------
                                             247,472
                                            --------
  NEW ZEALAND -- 0.2%
    Air New Zealand Ltd.
      C1-B                     4,000           8,483
                                            --------
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
  NORWAY -- 1.1%
    Norsk Hydro AS               350     $    19,273
    Orkla AS Cl-A                120          11,022
    Saga Petroleum ASA           520           9,211
                                            --------
                                              39,506
                                            --------
  SINGAPORE -- 0.9%
    Overseas Union Bank
      Ltd. Cl-F                2,000           6,675
    Singapore Land Ltd.        2,000           5,696
    Singapore Press
      Holdings Ltd.            1,000          13,795
    United Overseas Bank
      Ltd.                     1,000           5,531
                                            --------
                                              31,697
                                            --------
  SPAIN -- 1.4%
    Banco Santander SA           360          10,092
    Empresa Nacional de
      Electricidad SA            510           9,613
    Iberdrola SA                 950          11,372
    Repsol SA                    220           9,232
    Telefonica de Espana SA      370          10,105
                                            --------
                                              50,414
                                            --------
  SWEDEN -- 2.0%
    Astra AB Cl-B              1,300          20,149
    Atlas Copco AB Cl-B          320           9,513
    Electrolux AB Cl-B           170          14,083
    Hennes & Mauritz AB
      Cl-B                       390          15,972
    Sandvik AB Cl-B              320           9,748
                                            --------
                                              69,465
                                            --------
  SWITZERLAND -- 4.0%
    ABB AG                        20          26,139
    Adecco SA                     40          12,747
    Credit Suisse Group           80          11,301
    Nestle SA                     20          28,259
    Novartis AG                   30          47,114
    Swiss Bank Corp.              50          13,481
                                            --------
                                             139,041
                                            --------
  UNITED KINGDOM -- 12.4%
    Abbey National PLC         1,000          15,897
    Argos PLC                  1,000          10,590
    Asda Group PLC             4,000          10,397
    British Petroleum Co.
      PLC                      1,000          14,690
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
    Cable & Wireless PLC       1,000     $     7,982
    Cadbury Schweppes PLC      1,000          10,061
    Glaxo Wellcome PLC         1,000          21,431
    Grand Metropolitan PLC     2,000          18,043
    Guinness PLC               2,000          17,876
    Kingfisher PLC             2,000          28,775
    Ladbroke Group PLC         3,000          13,432
    National Westminster
      Bank PLC                 5,000          71,855
    Rank Group PLC             2,000          11,168
    Reed International PLC     4,000          39,541
    RTZ Corp. PLC              1,000          12,879
    Safeway PLC                2,000          13,021
    Shell Transport &
      Trading Co. PLC          4,000          28,356
    Smithkline Beecham PLC     4,000          37,898
    Tesco PLC                  1,000           8,003
    Tomkins PLC                3,000          15,394
    United News & Media PLC    2,000          25,153
                                            --------
                                             432,442
                                            --------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS -- 63.8%
  (Cost $2,426,017)                        2,232,749
OTHER ASSETS LESS
  LIABILITIES -- 36.2%                     1,264,622
                                            --------
NET ASSETS -- 100.0%                     $ 3,497,371
                                            ========
</TABLE>
 
Foreign currency exchange contracts outstanding at October 31, 1997:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          UNREALIZED
SETTLEMENT              CONTRACTS TO      IN EXCHANGE     CONTRACTS      APPRECIATION
  MONTH        TYPE        RECEIVE            FOR         AT VALUE      (DEPRECIATION)
               -----------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>            <C>      <C>               <C>             <C>           <C>
11/97          Buy      CHF     17,751      $  12,688      $ 12,698          $   10
11/97          Buy      DEM     58,911         34,290        34,208             (82)
11/97          Buy      ESP  1,325,280          9,139         9,118             (21)
11/97          Buy      NLG     96,533         49,913        49,708            (205)
11/97          Buy      NOK     60,482          8,612         8,629              17
11/97          Buy      SEK     66,562          8,876         8,901              25
                                            ---------      --------          ------
                                            $ 123,518      $123,262          $ (256)
                                            =========      ========          ======
</TABLE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
Unless otherwise noted, all foreign stocks are common stock.
Definitions of abbreviations are included following the Schedules of
Investments.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 

<PAGE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASMT JANUS CAPITAL
GROWTH PORTFOLIO
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
COMMON STOCK -- 56.2%
  AIRLINES -- 1.8%
    UAL Corp.*                 1,625      $  142,391
                                            --------
  BEVERAGES -- 1.4%
    Coca-Cola Enterprises,
      Inc.                     4,081         114,778
                                            --------
  CHEMICALS -- 2.9%
    Cytec Industries, Inc.*    1,630          79,462
    Dupont (E.I.) de
      Nemours & Co.            1,359          77,293
    Monsanto Co.               1,590          67,972
    Solutia, Inc.*               318           7,036
                                            --------
                                             231,763
                                            --------
  CLOTHING & APPAREL -- 0.0%
    Polo Ralph Lauren
      Corp.*                      75           1,950
                                            --------
  COMPUTER HARDWARE -- 6.4%
    Compaq Computer Corp.*     4,050         258,187
    Dell Computer Corp.*       2,100         168,262
    Veritas Software Corp.*    2,000          83,250
                                            --------
                                             509,699
                                            --------
  COMPUTER SERVICES & SOFTWARE -- 7.4%
    Edwards (J.D.) & Co.*      2,325          79,050
    First Data Corp.           1,995          57,980
    Microsoft Corp.*           2,550         331,500
    Saville Systems Ireland
      PLC [ADR]*               2,000         119,500
                                            --------
                                             588,030
                                            --------
  ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS & EQUIPMENT -- 5.0%
    AES Corp.*                 1,150          45,569
    Applied Materials,
      Inc.*                    2,300          76,762
    Electronics for
      Imaging, Inc.*             408          19,074
    General Electric Co.       2,000         129,125
    Philips Electronics NV
      [ADR]                       25           1,959
    Teradyne, Inc.*            2,000          74,875
    Texas Instruments, Inc.      525          56,011
                                            --------
                                             403,375
                                            --------
  ENTERTAINMENT & LEISURE -- 1.9%
    Travel Services
      International, Inc.*     6,850         153,269
                                            --------
  FARMING & AGRICULTURE -- 0.7%
    Delta & Pine Land Co.      1,475          54,944
                                            --------
 
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
  FINANCIAL -- BANK & TRUST -- 2.8%
    Banc One Corp.               600      $   31,275
    Citicorp                   1,200         150,075
    GSB Financial Corp.*         200           3,012
    Mercantile
      Bancorporation, Inc.       852          41,375
                                            --------
                                             225,737
                                            --------
  FINANCIAL SERVICES -- 4.0%
    FirstSpartan Financial
      Corp.                      125           4,563
    Merrill Lynch & Co.,
      Inc.                     2,768         187,186
    SLM Holding Corp.            890         124,934
                                            --------
                                             316,683
                                            --------
  FOOD -- 1.5%
    Sara Lee Corp.             2,400         122,700
                                            --------
  HEALTHCARE SERVICES -- 0.5%
    United Healthcare Corp.      775          35,892
                                            --------
  OIL & GAS -- 11.1%
    Diamond Offshore
      Drilling, Inc.           4,692         292,077
    Exxon Corp.                  560          34,405
    Santa Fe International
      Corp.                      125           6,148
    Schlumberger Ltd.          2,450         214,375
    TransCoastal Marine
      Services, Inc.*         12,300         305,963
    Transocean Offshore,
      Inc.                       596          32,184
                                            --------
                                             885,152
                                            --------
  PHARMACEUTICALS -- 6.5%
    Kos Pharmaceuticals,
      Inc.*                    1,725          61,669
    Lilly (Eli) & Co.            436          29,158
    Pfizer, Inc.               2,528         178,856
    Warner-Lambert Co.         1,766         252,869
                                            --------
                                             522,552
                                            --------
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
                                                   AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER TRUST
 
=======================================================
ASMT JANUS CAPITAL                 
GROWTH PORTFOLIO                   
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
 TELECOMMUNICATIONS -- 1.6%
    Lucent Technologies,
      Inc.                     1,000     $    82,438
    Qwest Communication
      International, Inc.*       750          46,313
                                            --------
                                             128,751
                                            --------
  TRANSPORTATION -- 0.6%
    Federal Express Corp.*       700          46,725
                                            --------
TOTAL COMMON STOCK
  (Cost $4,477,702)                        4,484,391
                                            --------
FOREIGN STOCK -- 0.1%
  ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS & EQUIPMENT
    Philips Electronics NV
  (Cost $3,913)                                4,151
                                            --------
                               PAR
                              (000)
                             ------
U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY OBLIGATIONS -- 42.6%
    Federal Home Loan
      Mortgage Corp.
      5.65%, 11/03/97
  (Cost $3,398,933)          $ 3,400       3,398,933
                                            --------
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS -- 0.4%
    Temporary Investment
      Cash Fund               16,849          16,849
    Temporary Investment
      Fund                    16,849          16,849
                                            --------
  (Cost $33,698)                              33,698
                                            --------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS -- 99.2%
  (Cost $7,914,248)                        7,921,173
OTHER ASSETS LESS
  LIABILITIES -- 0.8%                         61,604
                                            --------
NET ASSETS -- 100.0%                     $ 7,982,777
                                            ========
</TABLE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
Definitions of abbreviations are included following the Schedules of
Investments.
* Non-income producing securities.

ASMT INVESCO EQUITY
INCOME PORTFOLIO
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- ------------------------------------------------------
                               SHARES            VALUE
- ------------------------------------------------------
<S>                            <C>        <C>
COMMON STOCK -- 64.5%
  AEROSPACE -- 1.1%
    AlliedSignal, Inc.         2,000       $   72,000

  AUTOMOBILE MANUFACTURERS -- 1.9%
    Ford Motor Co.             2,000       $   87,375
    General Motors Corp.         500           32,094
                                           ----------
                                              119,469
                                           ----------
  BEVERAGES -- 1.1%
    Anheuser-Busch Companies,
      Inc.                     1,800           71,887
                                           ----------
  CHEMICALS -- 1.3%
    Dow Chemical Co.             900           81,675
                                           ----------
  COMPUTER HARDWARE -- 1.5%
    International Business
      Machines Corp.           1,000           98,062
                                           ----------
  COMPUTER SERVICES & SOFTWARE -- 2.8%
    Edwards (J.D.) & Co.*      3,500          119,000
    CompUSA, Inc.*             2,000           65,500
                                           ----------
                                              184,500
                                           ----------
  ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS & EQUIPMENT -- 6.5%
    Emerson Electric Co.       1,200           62,925
    General Electric Co.       1,600          103,300
    Northern States Power Co.
      of Minnesota             1,300           65,488
    Tandy Corp.                2,800           96,250
    Texas Instruments, Inc.      900           96,021
                                           ----------
                                              423,984
                                           ----------
  FINANCIAL -- BANK & TRUST -- 3.7%
    Bank of New York Co.,
      Inc.                     2,100           98,831
    Charter One Financial,
      Inc.                       900           52,312
    Mellon Bank Corp.          1,700           87,656
                                           ----------
                                              238,799
                                           ----------
  FINANCIAL SERVICES -- 3.1%
    Ahmanson (H.F.) & Co.      1,700          100,300
    Beneficial Corp.           1,300           99,694
                                           ----------
                                              199,994
                                           ----------
  FOOD -- 3.0%
    General Mills, Inc.        1,550          102,300
    Kellogg Co.                2,200           94,737
                                           ----------
                                              197,037
                                           ----------
</TABLE>
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 

<PAGE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASMT INVESCO EQUITY
INCOME PORTFOLIO
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- ------------------------------------------------------
                               SHARES            VALUE
- ------------------------------------------------------
<S>                            <C>        <C>
HEALTHCARE SERVICES -- 1.6%
    Tenet Healthcare Corp.*    3,400      $   103,912
                                           ----------
  INSURANCE -- 2.4%
    C.H. Robinson Worldwide,
      Inc.*                    2,000           44,000
    Ohio Casualty Corp.        2,500          110,625
                                           ----------
                                              154,625
                                           ----------
  OIL & GAS -- 9.6%
    Apache Corp.               2,400          100,800
    Baker Hughes Inc.          1,400           64,312
    Chevron Corp.              1,200           99,525
    Exxon Corp.                1,600           98,300
    National Fuel Gas Co.      1,500           66,187
    Phillips Petroleum Co.     2,100          101,587
    Schlumberger Ltd.          1,100           96,250
                                           ----------
                                              626,961
                                           ----------
  PAPER & FOREST PRODUCTS -- 1.5%
    Fort James Corp.           2,500           99,219
                                           ----------
  PHARMACEUTICALS -- 4.0%
    American Home Products
      Corp.                    1,100           81,538
    Merck & Co., Inc.            800           71,400
    Smithkline Beecham PLC
      [ADR]                    2,200          104,775
                                           ----------
                                              257,713
                                           ----------
  RAILROADS -- 2.6%
    Burlington Northern Santa
      Fe Corp.                   800           76,000
    Kansas City Southern
      Industries, Inc.         3,000           91,500
                                           ----------
                                              167,500
                                           ----------
  REAL ESTATE -- 2.1%
    Health and Retirement
      Property Trust [REIT]    3,600           67,500
    Kilroy Realty Corp.
      [REIT]                   2,600           68,900
                                           ----------
                                              136,400
                                           ----------
  RETAIL & MERCHANDISING -- 2.7%
    Penney (J.C.) Co., Inc.    1,400           82,163
    Williams-Sonoma, Inc.*     2,400           96,300
                                           ----------
                                              178,463
                                           ----------
  SEMI-CONDUCTORS -- 1.6%
    Analog Devices, Inc.*      3,300          100,856
                                           ----------
- ------------------------------------------------------
                               SHARES            VALUE
- ------------------------------------------------------
  TELECOMMUNICATIONS -- 7.8%
    Ameritech Corp.            1,000      $    65,000
    Bell Atlantic Corp.        1,000           79,875
    France Telecom SA [ADR]*   3,000          113,625
    GTE Corp.                  1,600           67,900
    SBC Communications, Inc.   1,300           82,713
    U.S. West Communications
      Group                    2,500           99,531
                                           ----------
                                              508,644
                                           ----------
  UTILITIES -- ELECTRIC -- 2.6%
    Endesa [ADR]               5,000           93,125
    Unicom Corp.               2,800           78,400
                                           ----------
                                              171,525
                                           ----------
TOTAL COMMON STOCK
  (Cost $4,138,511)                         4,193,225
                                           ----------
PREFERRED STOCK -- 0.4%
  PRINTING & PUBLISHING
    K-III Communications
      Corp.
  (Cost $26,500)               1,000           26,450
                                           ----------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                PAR
                               (000)
                               ------
<S>                            <C>        <C>
CORPORATE OBLIGATIONS -- 17.0%
  BROADCASTING -- 1.8%
    Allbritton Communications
      Co. Sr. Sub. Debs.
      11.50%, 08/15/04         $  50           52,563
    SFX Broadcasting, Inc.
      Sr. Sub. Notes
      10.75%, 05/15/06            25           27,312
    Teleport Communications
      Group, Inc. Sr. Disc.
      Notes [STEP] 9.186%,
      07/01/07                    50           39,124
                                          ------------
                                              118,999
                                          ------------
  COMPUTER HARDWARE -- 0.8%
    International Business
      Machines Corp. Debs.
      6.22%, 08/01/27             50           50,500
                                          ------------
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
                                                   AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER TRUST
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- ------------------------------------------------------
                                  PAR
                                (000)            VALUE
- ------------------------------------------------------
<S>                            <C>        <C>
ENERGY SERVICES -- 1.9%
    Tuscon Electric Power Co.
      Notes
      7.65%, 05/01/03          $  45      $    44,325
    Metropolitan Edison Co.
      Notes
      8.15%, 01/30/23             75           80,510
                                          ------------
                                              124,835
                                          ------------
  ENTERTAINMENT & LEISURE -- 1.6%
    Time Warner Entertainment
      Debs.
      7.25%, 09/01/08            100          104,000
                                          ------------
  FINANCIAL SERVICES -- 0.5%
    Lehman Brothers Holdings,
      Inc. Sr. Notes
      8.80%, 03/01/15             25           29,438
                                          ------------
  HEALTHCARE SERVICES -- 0.8%
    FHP International Corp.
      Sr. Notes
      7.00%, 09/15/03             50           50,313
                                          ------------
  INSURANCE -- 0.9%
    Equitable Companies, Inc.
      Sr. Notes
      9.00%, 12/15/04             50           56,875
                                          ------------
  OIL & GAS -- 1.5%
    Noram Energy Corp. Sub.
      Deb. [CVT] 6.00%,
      03/15/12                    50           45,500
    Pacific Gas & Electric
      First Ref. Mtge.
      8.00%, 10/01/25             50           52,438
                                          ------------
                                               97,938
                                          ------------
  PAPER & FOREST PRODUCTS -- 1.5%
    Champion International
      Corp. Debs.
      6.40%, 02/15/06            100           98,601
                                          ------------
- ------------------------------------------------------
                                  PAR
                                (000)            VALUE
- ------------------------------------------------------
  PHARMACEUTICALS -- 0.4%
    McKesson Corp. Sub. Debs.
      4.50%, 03/01/04          $  25      $    22,375
                                          ------------
  TELECOMMUNICATIONS -- 3.4%
    Frontier Corp.
      7.25%, 05/15/04            100          103,875
    Mcleod USA, Inc. Sr.
      Disc. Notes
      [STEP] 144A
      9.587%, 03/01/07           100           69,000
    Nextlink Communications
      Sr. Notes
      9.625%, 10/01/07            50           50,500
                                          ------------
                                              223,375
                                          ------------
  UTILITIES -- 1.9%
    Boston Edison Co. Debs.
      7.80%, 03/15/23             25           25,750
    Potomac Electric Power
      First Mtge.
      6.25%, 10/15/04            100          100,625
                                          ------------
                                              126,375
                                          ------------
TOTAL CORPORATE OBLIGATIONS
  (Cost $1,101,884)                         1,103,624
                                          ------------
U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY OBLIGATIONS -- 21.5%
    Federal Home Loan Mtge.
      Corp.
      5.46%, 11/03/97            300          299,909
      5.48%, 11/04/97          1,100        1,099,497
                                          ------------
  (Cost $1,399,406)                         1,399,406
                                          ------------
COMMERCIAL PAPER -- 3.8%
    Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.
      5.56%, 11/03/97
  (Cost $249,923)                250          249,923
                                          ------------
</TABLE>
 

<PAGE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                          <C>         <C>
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS -- 2.3%
    Temporary Investment
      Cash Fund               74,877      $   74,877
    Temporary Investment
      Fund                    74,876          74,876
                                         ------------
  (Cost $149,753)                            149,753
                                         ------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS -- 109.5%
  (Cost $7,065,977)                       $7,122,381
LIABILITES IN EXCESS OF OTHER
  ASSETS -- (9.5%)                          (619,700)
                                         ------------
NET ASSETS -- 100.0%                      $6,502,681
                                         ============
</TABLE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
144A -- Security was purchased pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of
        1933 and may not be resold subject to that rule except to qualified
        institutional buyers. At the end of the period, these securities
        amounted to 1.1% of net assets.
 
Definitions of abbreviations are included following the Schedules of
Investments.
* Non-income producing securities.
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASMT PIMCO TOTAL RETURN
BOND PORTFOLIO

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                                 PAR
                               (000)            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                           <C>        <C>
U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY OBLIGATIONS -- 19.9%
    Federal Home Loan
      Mortgage Corp.
      5.48%, 11/28/97         $  200      $  199,178
      5.48%, 12/15/97            200         198,661
                                          ----------
                                             397,839
                                          ----------
    Federal National
      Mortgage Association
      5.47%, 01/15/98            100          98,895
                                          ----------
    Government National
      Mortgage Association
      [TBA]
      7.00%, 11/19/27            500         502,815
                                          ----------
TOTAL U.S. GOVERNMENT AGENCY OBLIGATIONS
  (Cost $996,699)                            999,549
                                          ----------
U.S. TREASURY OBLIGATIONS -- 38.0%
    U.S. Treasury Bonds
      6.25%, 08/15/23            250         250,608
      6.75%, 08/15/26          1,010       1,084,013
                                          ----------
                                           1,334,621
                                          ----------
    U.S. Treasury Notes
      7.00%, 07/15/06            536         574,479
                                          ----------
TOTAL U.S. TREASURY OBLIGATIONS
  (Cost $1,851,502)                        1,909,100
                                          ----------
COMMERCIAL PAPER -- 45.6%
    Ameritech Corp.
      5.49%, 12/04/97            100          99,490
    BellSouth Telecom, Inc.
      5.52%, 11/12/97            100          99,831
    Caisse D'Amortissement
      de la Dette Sociale
      5.49%, 12/12/97            100          99,368
    Canadian Treasury Bills
      5.49%, 11/21/97            100          99,695
    Canadian Wheat Board
      5.50%, 11/12/97            100          99,832
    Du Pont (E.I.) de
      Nemours & Co.
      5.50%, 11/24/97            200         199,297
    Emerson Electric Corp.
      5.50%, 11/20/97            100          99,710
    Florida Power Corp.
      5.50%, 11/04/97            100          99,954
</TABLE>
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>
                                                   AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER TRUST
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASMT PIMCO TOTAL RETURN
BOND PORTFOLIO
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                                 PAR
                               (000)            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                           <C>        <C>
    Ford Motor Credit Co.
      5.58%, 01/14/98         $  100     $    98,886
    General Electric Capital
      Corp.
      5.51%, 11/20/97            100          99,704
    General Motors
      Acceptance Corp.
      5.54%, 11/25/97            100          99,624
    IBM Credit Corp.
      5.52%, 12/10/97            100          99,402
    KFW International
      Financial
      5.49%, 11/13/97            100          99,817
    National Rural Utility
      Corp.
      5.49%, 11/18/97            100          99,736
    New Center Asset Trust
      5.56%, 01/21/98            100          98,778
    Procter & Gamble Corp.
      5.47%, 12/08/97            100          99,438
    Sara Lee Corp.
      5.48%, 12/22/97            100          99,211
    United Parcel Service
      Co.
      5.50%, 11/05/97            100          99,939
    Wal Mart Stores, Inc.
      5.50%, 12/01/97            200         199,083
    Western Australia
      Treasury Corp.
      5.50%, 12/18/97            100          99,270
    Wisconsin Electric &
      Power Co.
      5.52%, 11/06/97            100          99,923
                                          ----------
TOTAL COMMERCIAL PAPER
  (Cost $2,289,981)                      $ 2,289,988
                                          ----------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------
                              SHARES            VALUE
- -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                           <C>        <C>
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS -- 4.8%
    Temporary Investment
      Cash Fund               120,102     $  120,102
    Temporary Investment
      Fund                    120,105        120,105
                                         ------------
  (Cost $240,207)                            240,207
                                         ------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS -- 108.3%
  (Cost $5,378,389)                        5,438,844
LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF OTHER
  ASSETS -- (8.3%)                          (414,301)
                                         ------------
NET ASSETS -- 100.0%                      $5,024,543
                                         ============
</TABLE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
Definitions of abbreviations are included following the Schedules of
Investments.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
ASMT JPM MONEY
 
MARKET PORTFOLIO
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- ------------------------------------------------------
                                  PAR
                                (000)            VALUE
- ------------------------------------------------------
<S>                            <C>        <C>
U.S. TREASURY OBLIGATIONS -- 91.4%
    U.S. Treasury Bills
      4.55%, 11/13/97           $ 37       $   36,944
      4.60%, 11/13/97             34           33,948
      4.65%, 11/13/97            308          307,523
      4.67%, 11/13/97            280          279,564
      4.69%, 11/13/97            125          124,805
      4.70%, 11/13/97             21           20,967
      4.715%, 11/13/97            45           44,929
      4.74%, 11/13/97            111          110,825
      4.83%, 11/13/97             16           15,974
      4.85%, 11/13/97            157          156,746
      4.855%, 11/13/97            56           55,909
      4.87%, 11/13/97             21           20,966
      4.90%, 11/13/97            343          342,440
      4.935%, 11/13/97            41           40,932
      5.10%, 01/22/98             25           24,709
      5.13%, 01/22/98             32           31,626
      5.135%, 01/22/98           177          174,930
                                           ----------
  (Cost $1,823,737)                         1,823,737
                                           ----------
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                              SHARES
                              ------
<S>                           <C>        <C>
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS -- 8.9%
    Temporary Investment
      Cash Fund               88,941          88,941
    Temporary Investment
      Fund                    88,941          88,941
                                         ------------
  (Cost $177,882)                            177,882
                                         ------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS -- 100.3%
  (Cost $2,001,619)                        2,001,619
LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF OTHER
  ASSETS -- (0.3%)                            (6,724)
                                         ------------
NET ASSETS -- 100.0%                      $1,994,895
                                         ============
</TABLE>

DEFINITION OF ABBREVIATIONS 
- -------------------------------------------------------
THE FOLLOWING ABBREVIATIONS ARE USED THROUGHOUT THE SCHEDULES OF INVESTMENTS:
 
SECURITY DESCRIPTIONS:
 
<TABLE>
<S>   <C>  <C>
ADR   --   American Depositary Receipt
ADS   --   American Depositary Shares
CVT   --   Convertible Security
REIT  --   Real Estate Investment Trust
STEP  --   Stepped Coupon Bond (Rates shown are the
           effective yields at purchase date.)
TBA   --   To be Announced Security
COUNTRIES/CURRENCIES:
CHF   --   Switzerland/Swiss Franc
DEM   --   Germany/German Deutschemark
ESP   --   Spain/Spanish Peseta
NLG   --   Netherlands/Netherland Guilder
NOK   --   Norway/Norwegian Krone
SEK   --   Sweden/Swedish Krona
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
                                                   AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER TRUST

 
OCTOBER 31, 1997
STATEMENTS OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            ASMT T.                                            ASMT PIMCO
                                          ROWE PRICE                          ASMT INVESCO       TOTAL
                                         INTERNATIONAL       ASMT JANUS          EQUITY          RETURN         ASMT JPM
                                            EQUITY         CAPITAL GROWTH        INCOME           BOND        MONEY MARKET
                                           PORTFOLIO         PORTFOLIO         PORTFOLIO       PORTFOLIO       PORTFOLIO
                                          ===========      =============       ==========      ==========     ===========
<S>                                      <C>               <C>                <C>              <C>            <C>
ASSETS:
  Investments in Securities at Value
    (A)                                   $ 2,232,749        $7,921,173        $7,122,381      $5,438,844      $2,001,619
  Cash                                      1,569,633                --                --              --              --
  Receivable For:
    Securities Sold                                --                --            22,621              --              --
    Dividends and Interest                      4,551             3,519            29,256          29,953              69
    Contributions                              74,343           314,067           507,906          69,125         178,619
  Deferred Organization Costs                  23,608            23,608            23,694          23,694          23,705
  Unrealized Appreciation on Foreign
    Currency Exchange Contracts                    52                --                --              --              --
                                           ----------        ----------        ----------      ----------      ----------
       Total Assets                         3,904,936         8,262,367         7,705,858       5,561,616       2,204,012
                                           ----------        ----------        ----------      ----------      ----------
LIABILITIES:
  Cash Overdraft                                   --             9,012                --              --         176,840
  Payable to Investment Manager                28,480            33,122            28,835          28,742          26,200
  Payable For:
    Securities Purchased                      358,011           221,400         1,162,497         500,000              --
    Accrued Expenses                           20,766            16,056            11,845           8,331           6,077
  Unrealized Depreciation on Foreign
    Currency Exchange Contracts                   308                --                --              --              --
                                           ----------        ----------        ----------      ----------      ----------
       Total Liabilities                      407,565           279,590         1,203,177         537,073         209,117
                                           ----------        ----------        ----------      ----------      ----------
NET ASSETS                                $ 3,497,371        $7,982,777        $6,502,681      $5,024,543      $1,994,895
                                           ==========        ==========        ==========      ==========      ==========
(A) Investments at Cost                   $ 2,426,017        $7,914,248        $7,065,977      $5,378,389      $2,001,619
                                           ==========        ==========        ==========      ==========      ==========
</TABLE>
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 

<PAGE>
 
FOR THE PERIOD ENDED OCTOBER 31, 1997
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                       ASMT
                                   T. ROWE PRICE                                                 ASMT PIMCO
                                   INTERNATIONAL        ASMT JANUS           ASMT INVESCO       TOTAL RETURN     ASMT JPM MONEY
                                      EQUITY          CAPITAL GROWTH        EQUITY INCOME           BOND             MARKET
                                   PORTFOLIO(1)        PORTFOLIO(1)          PORTFOLIO(2)       PORTFOLIO(2)      PORTFOLIO(3)
                                    ===========       ==============        =============        ==========      =============
<S>                                <C>               <C>                   <C>                  <C>              <C>
INVESTMENT INCOME:
  Interest                           $   6,642            $17,736              $ 19,153           $ 39,783          $ 11,400
  Dividends                              5,831             23,504                16,622                 --                --
  Foreign Taxes Withheld                  (904)            (4,643)               (3,513)              (472)              (26)
                                     ---------            -------              --------            -------           -------
    Total Investment Income             11,569             36,597                32,262             39,311            11,374
                                     ---------            -------              --------            -------           -------
EXPENSES:
  Advisory Fees                          4,658             10,500                 4,791              4,456             1,134
  Shareholder Servicing Fees               300                300                   300                300               300
  Administration and Accounting
    Fees                                 5,075              5,150                 5,089              5,034             5,005
  Custodian Fees                        10,233                750                   852                474               661
  Professional Fees                      6,087              8,905                 3,436              2,564               205
  Organization Costs                     1,537              1,537                 1,451              1,451             1,441
  Trustees' Fees and Expenses              968              1,564                   695                574               165
  Insurance Fees                           307                637                   352                392               138
                                     ---------            -------              --------            -------           -------
    Total Expenses                      29,165             29,343                16,966             15,245             9,049
                                     ---------            -------              --------            -------           -------
NET INVESTMENT INCOME (LOSS)           (17,596)             7,254                15,296             24,066             2,325
                                     ---------            -------              --------            -------           -------
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN
(LOSS) ON INVESTMENTS:
  Net Realized Gain (Loss) on:
    Securities                             629             10,688               (18,651)             6,883                32
    Foreign Currency
       Transactions                       (111)                 5                    --                 --                --
                                     ---------            -------              --------            -------           -------
  Net Realized Gain (Loss)                 518             10,693               (18,651)             6,883                32
                                     ---------            -------              --------            -------           -------
  Net Change in Unrealized
    Appreciation (Depreciation)
    on:
    Securities                        (193,268)             6,925                56,404             60,455                --
    Translation of Assets and
       Liabilities Denominated
       in Foreign Currencies            (1,636)                --                    --                 --                --
                                     ---------            -------              --------            -------           -------
  Net Change in Unrealized
    Appreciation (Depreciation)       (194,904)             6,925                56,404             60,455                --
                                     ---------            -------              --------            -------           -------
  Net Gain (Loss) on Investments      (194,386)            17,618                37,753             67,338                32
                                     ---------            -------              --------            -------           -------
  Net Increase (Decrease) in Net
    Assets Resulting from
    Operations                       $(211,982)           $24,872              $ 53,049           $ 91,404          $  2,357
                                     =========            =======              ========            =======           =======
</TABLE>
 
(1) Commenced operations on June 10, 1997.
(2) Commenced operations on June 18, 1997.
(3) Commenced operations on June 19, 1997.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>
                                                   AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER TRUST

FOR THE PERIOD ENDED OCTOBER 31, 1997
STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              ASMT
                                          T. ROWE PRICE     ASMT JANUS      ASMT INVESCO      ASMT PIMCO       ASMT JPM
                                          INTERNATIONAL       CAPITAL          EQUITY        TOTAL RETURN        MONEY
                                             EQUITY           GROWTH           INCOME            BOND           MARKET
                                          PORTFOLIO(1)      PORTFOLIO(1)    PORTFOLIO(2)     PORTFOLIO(2)     PORTFOLIO(3)
                                           ===========      ===========      ==========      ===========      ===========
<S>                                       <C>               <C>             <C>              <C>              <C>
FROM OPERATIONS:
  Net Investment Income (Loss)             $   (17,596)     $     7,254      $   15,296      $     24,066     $     2,325
  Net Realized Gain (Loss) on
    Investments                                    518           10,693         (18,651)            6,883              32
  Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation
    (Depreciation) on Investments             (194,904)           6,925          56,404            60,455              --
                                            ----------      -----------      ----------       -----------     -----------
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets
  Resulting from Operations                   (211,982)          24,872          53,049            91,404           2,357
                                            ----------      -----------      ----------       -----------     -----------
CAPITAL TRANSACTIONS:
  Contributions by Partners                  4,291,113        9,561,074       6,911,291         6,540,625       3,320,611
  Withdrawals by Partners                     (601,760)      (1,623,169)       (481,659)       (1,627,486)     (1,348,073)
                                            ----------      -----------      ----------       -----------     -----------
Net Increase in Net Assets from Capital
  Transactions                               3,689,353        7,937,905       6,429,632         4,913,139       1,972,538
                                            ----------      -----------      ----------       -----------     -----------
Net Increase in Net Assets                   3,477,371        7,962,777       6,482,681         5,004,543       1,974,895
NET ASSETS:
  Beginning of Period                           20,000           20,000          20,000            20,000          20,000
                                            ----------      -----------      ----------       -----------     -----------
  End of Period                            $ 3,497,371      $ 7,982,777      $6,502,681      $  5,024,543     $ 1,994,895
                                            ==========      ===========      ==========       ===========     ===========
</TABLE>
 
(1) Commenced operations on June 10, 1997.
(2) Commenced operations on June 18, 1997.
(3) Commenced operations on June 19, 1997.
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.
 

<PAGE>
 
FOR THE PERIOD ENDED OCTOBER 31, 1997
SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                    NET ASSETS
                                    AT END OF      PORTFOLIO     AVERAGE                                 RATIO OF NET INVESTMENT
                                      PERIOD       TURNOVER     COMMISSION     RATIO OF EXPENSES TO         INCOME (LOSS) TO
                                    (IN 000'S)       RATE       RATE PAID      AVERAGE NET ASSETS(4)      AVERAGE NET ASSETS(4)
                                    ----------     --------     ----------     ---------------------     -----------------------
<S>                                 <C>            <C>          <C>            <C>                       <C>
ASMT T. Rowe Price
  International Equity Portfolio
  (1)                                 $3,497           1%        $ 0.0486               6.26%                    (3.78)%
ASMT Janus
  Capital Growth Portfolio (1)        $7,983          83%        $ 0.0325               2.79%                      0.69%
ASMT INVESCO
  Equity Income Portfolio (2)         $6,503          46%        $ 0.0581               2.66%                      2.39%
ASMT PIMCO Total
  Return Bond Portfolio (2)           $5,025          93%             N/A               2.22%                      3.51%
ASMT JPM
  Money Market Portfolio (3)          $1,995          N/A             N/A               3.91%                      1.00%
</TABLE>
 
(1) Commenced operations on June 10, 1997.
(2) Commenced operations on June 18, 1997.
(3) Commenced operations on June 19, 1997.
(4) Annualized
 
See Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>
                                                   AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER TRUST
 
OCTOBER 31, 1997
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
1. ORGANIZATION
================================================================================
 
     American Skandia Master Trust (the "Trust") is an open-end management
investment company, registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended. The Trust was organized on March 6, 1997 as a business trust under the
laws of the State of Delaware. The Trust operates as a series company and, at
October 31, 1997, consisted of five diversified portfolios: ASMT T. Rowe Price
International Equity Portfolio ("International Equity"), ASMT Janus Capital
Growth Portfolio ("Capital Growth"), ASMT INVESCO Equity Income Portfolio
("Equity Income"), ASMT PIMCO Total Return Bond Portfolio ("Total Return Bond"),
and ASMT JPM Money Market Portfolio ("Money Market") (each a "Portfolio" and
collectively the "Portfolios").
 
2. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
================================================================================
 
     The following is a summary of significant accounting policies followed by
the Trust, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles, in the
preparation of its financial statements. The preparation of financial statements
requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported
amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Actual results could differ
from those estimates.
 
SECURITY VALUATION -- Securities are valued at the close of trading on the New
York Stock Exchange. Equity securities are valued at the last reported sales
price on the securities exchange on which they are primarily traded, or at the
last reported sales price on the NASDAQ National Securities Market. Securities
not listed on an exchange or securities market, or securities in which there
were no transactions, are valued at the average of the most recent bid and asked
prices.
 
     Debt securities are generally traded in the over-the-counter market and are
valued at a price deemed best to reflect fair value as quoted by dealers who
make markets in these securities or by an independent pricing service. Debt
securities of Money Market are valued at amortized cost, which approximates
market value. For Portfolios other than Money Market, debt securities which
mature in 60 days or less are valued at cost (or market value 60 days prior to
maturity), adjusted for amortization to maturity of any premium or discount.
Securities for which market quotations are not readily available are valued at
fair value as determined in good faith by, or at the direction of, the Board of
Trustees. As of October 31, 1997, there were no securities valued by the Board
of Trustees.
 
FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION -- Securities and other assets and liabilities
denominated in foreign currencies are converted each business day into U.S.
dollars based on the prevailing rates of exchange. Purchases and sales of
portfolio securities and income and expenses are converted into U.S. dollars on
the respective dates of such transactions.
 
     Gains and losses resulting from changes in exchange rates applicable to
foreign securities are not reported separately from gains and losses arising
from movements in securities prices.
 
     Net realized foreign exchange gains and losses include gains and losses
from sales and maturities of foreign currency exchange contracts, gains and
losses realized between the trade and settlement dates of foreign securities
transactions, and the difference between the amount of net investment income
accrued on

<PAGE>
 
foreign securities and the U.S. dollar amount actually received. Net unrealized
foreign exchange gains and losses include gains and losses from changes in the
value of assets and liabilities other than portfolio securities, resulting from
changes in exchange rates.
 
FOREIGN CURRENCY EXCHANGE CONTRACTS -- A foreign currency exchange contract
("FCEC") is a commitment to purchase or sell a specified amount of a foreign
currency at a specified future date, in exchange for either a specified amount
of another foreign currency or U.S. dollars.
 
     FCECs are valued at the forward exchange rates applicable to the underlying
currencies, and changes in market value are recorded as unrealized gains and
losses until the contract settlement date.
 
     Risks could arise from entering into FCECs if the counter-parties to the
contracts were unable to meet the terms of their contracts. In addition, the use
of FCECs may not only hedge against losses on securities denominated in foreign
currency, but may also reduce potential gains on securities from favorable
movements in exchange rates.
 
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS -- A repurchase agreement is a commitment to purchase
government securities from a seller who agrees to repurchase the securities at
an agreed on price and date. The excess of the resale price over the purchase
price determines the yield on the transaction. Under the terms of the agreement,
the market value, including accrued interest, of the government securities will
be at least equal to their repurchase price. Repurchase agreements are recorded
at cost, which, combined with accrued interest, approximates market value.
 
     Repurchase agreements entail a risk of loss in the event that the seller
defaults on its obligation to repurchase the securities. In such case, the
Portfolio may be delayed or prevented from exercising its right to dispose of
the securities.
 
DEFERRED ORGANIZATION COSTS -- The Trust bears all costs in connection with its
organization. All such costs are amortized on a straight-line basis over a
five-year period beginning on the date of the commencement of operations.
 
INVESTMENT TRANSACTIONS AND INVESTMENT INCOME -- Securities transactions are
accounted for on the trade date. Realized gains and losses from securities sold
are recognized on the specific identification basis. Dividend income is recorded
on the ex-dividend date. Corporate actions, including dividends, on foreign
securities are recorded on the ex-dividend date or, if such information is not
available, as soon as reliable information is available from the Trust's
sources. Interest income is recorded on the accrual basis and includes the
accretion of discount and amortization of premium.
 
3. AGREEMENTS AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES
================================================================================
 
     The Portfolios have entered into investment management agreements with
American Skandia Investment Services, Inc. ("Investment Manager") which provide
that the Investment Manager will furnish each Portfolio with investment advice
and investment management and administrative services. The Investment Manager
has engaged the following firms as Sub-advisors for their respective Portfolios:
Rowe Price-Fleming International, Inc., a United Kingdom Corporation, for
International Equity; Janus Capital

<PAGE>
                                                   AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER TRUST
 
Corporation for Capital Growth; INVESCO Trust Co. for Equity Income; Pacific
Investment Management Co. for Total Return Bond; and J. P. Morgan Investment
Management Inc. for Money Market.
 
     The Investment Manager receives a fee, computed daily and paid monthly,
based on an annual rate of 1.00%, 1.00%, .75%, .65%, and .50% of the average
daily net assets of the International Equity, Capital Growth, Equity Income,
Total Return Bond, and Money Market Portfolios, respectively. The Investment
Manager pays each Sub-advisor a fee, computed daily and paid monthly, based on
an annual rate of .75%, .45%, .35%, .25%, and .15% of the average daily net
assets of the International Equity, Capital Growth, Equity Income, Total Return
Bond, and Money Market Portfolios, respectively. The Sub-advisors for
International Equity and Money Market are currently voluntarily waiving a
portion their fee payable by the Investment Manager. The annual rates of the
fees payable to the Sub-advisors for International Equity and Money Market are
reduced for Portfolio net assets in excess of specified levels.
 
     Certain officers and Trustees of the Trust are officers or directors of the
Investment Manager. The Trust pays no compensation directly to its officers or
interested Trustees.
 
4. TAX MATTERS
================================================================================
 
     The Portfolios will be treated as partnerships for federal income tax
purposes. Accordingly, each investor in the Portfolios will be allocated its
share of net investment income and realized and unrealized gains and losses from
investment transactions. It is intended that the Portfolios will be managed in
such a way that an investor will be able to satisfy the requirements of the
Internal Revenue Code applicable to regulated investment companies.
 
5. PORTFOLIO SECURITIES
================================================================================
 
     Purchases and sales of securities, other than U.S. government securities,
and short-term obligations, during the period ended October 31, 1997, were as
follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              PURCHASES        SALES
                                                              ==========     ==========
            <S>                                               <C>            <C>
            International Equity                              $4,366,469     $    8,880
            Capital Growth                                     5,972,039      1,501,112
            Equity Income                                      6,030,830        744,868
</TABLE>
 
     Purchases and sales of U.S. government securities, during the period end
October 31, 1997, were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              PURCHASES        SALES
                                                              =========      ==========
            <S>                                               <C>            <C>
            Total Return Bond                                 $3,340,178     $  995,352
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
 
     At October 31, 1997, the cost and unrealized appreciation or depreciation
in value of the investments owned by the Portfolios, for federal income tax
purposes, were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        GROSS          GROSS       NET UNREALIZED
                                        AGGREGATE     UNREALIZED     UNREALIZED     APPRECIATION
                                           COST      APPRECIATION   DEPRECIATION   (DEPRECIATION)
                                        ==========   ============   ============   ==============
    <S>                                 <C>          <C>            <C>            <C>
    International Equity                $2,426,017     $ 27,818       $221,086       $ (193,268)
    Capital Growth                      7,914,248       317,320        310,395            6,925
    Equity Income                       7,067,538       136,836         81,993           54,843
    Total Return Bond                   5,378,389        60,522             67           60,455
    Money Market                        2,001,619            --             --               --
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
AMERICAN SKANDIA
ADVISOR FUNDS








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


American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.         
ANNUAL REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS

October 31, 1997


                           ASAF Founders International Small Capitalization Fund
                              
                           ASAF T. Rowe Price International Equity Fund

                           ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund

                           ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund

                           ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund

                           ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund

                           ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund

                           ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund

                           ASAF Total Return Bond Fund

                           ASAF JPM Money Market Fund


                         

<PAGE>
Letter to Shareholders

Thank you for your confidence in the American Skandia Advisor Funds. This has
been a particularly robust year for the mutual fund industry and our program of
multi-manager funds under a single roof has fared well. Since the funds
commenced operation on July 28, 1997, assets at fiscal year end grew to more
than $20,000,000 with weekly asset growth currently exceeding the $3,000,000
mark. When we consider that the ASAF program represents an innovative concept in
management -- a multi-manager family of world-class managers provided by
financial professionals -- we are gratified with the success.

In October, the third full month of activity for the American Skandia Advisor
Funds, stock mutual fund net inflows were $14.8 billion. In light of the market
correction that occurred, this figure suggests that the confidence in our
economy is truly sustainable. We continue to experience an American-led growth
in stock market confidence with broad investor participation in large and small
capitalization companies.

It is our hope that we can offer investors a broad range of investment
participation opportunities. To date we have brought together ten world-class
money management products including large and small company stock funds,
international investment opportunities, and fixed income strategies. It is our
intention to increase the offerings and expand the range of investment
strategies.

We welcome your questions and your comments. You can reach our Shareholder
Services Desk at 1-888-386-3484 or speak with your financial advisor.

/s/ Wade A. Dokken
- -------------------------
Wade A. Dokken
Chairman
American Skandia Investment Services, Incorporated

<PAGE>
Board of Directors

Gordon C. Boronow
Jan R. Carendi
David E. A. Carson
Julian A. Lerner
Thomas M. Mazzaferro
Thomas M. O'Brien
F. Don Schwartz

                              Investment Manager
                         
                              American Skandia Investment Services, Incorporated
                              Shelton, CT 06484

                    
                              Distributor

                              American Skandia Marketing, Incorporated
                              Shelton, CT 06484


                              Transfer Agent

                              Boston Financial Data Services, Inc.
                              Quincy, MA 02171


                              Administrator
     
                              PFPC Inc.
                              Wilmington, DE 19809


                              Independent Accountants

                              Coopers & Lybrand, L.L.P.
                              Philadelphia, PA 19103


                              Custodian

                              For domestic securities of Funds and Portfolios
                              investing primarily in domestic securities:

                              PNC Bank
                              Philadelphia, PA 19113

                              Co-custodian for foreign securities of Funds and
                              Portfolios investing primarily in domestic
                              securities and custodian for Funds and Portfolios
                              investing primarily in foreign securities:

                              Morgan Stanley Trust Company
                              New York, NY 11201

     
                              Legal Counsel

                              Werner & Kennedy
                              New York, NY 10019


<PAGE>
                                                  AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS

Shares of the American Skandia Advisor Funds are:

- -  not deposits or obligations of, or guaranteed or endorsed by, any bank
   institution;

- -  not federally insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC),
   the Federal Reserve Board, or any other government agency;

- -  subject to investment risk, including the possible loss of the principal
   amount invested.

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

For more information, including a prospectus, contact American Skandia
Marketing, Incorporated.

One Corporate Drive
P.O. Box 883
Shelton, CT 06484
Telephone: 800-752-6342 (800-SKANDIA)
Website: www.americanskandia.com
(12/97)

ASAF
AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS

[LOGO]

Investment Tools for Tomorrow

American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
ANNUAL REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS

October 31, 1997

<PAGE>






                                    APPENDIX

         The rating  information which follows describes how the rating services
mentioned presently rate the described securities.  No reliance is made upon the
rating  firms as  "experts"  as that term is defined  for  securities  purposes.
Rather,  reliance on this  information  is on the basis that such  ratings  have
become generally accepted in the investment business.

                 DESCRIPTION OF CERTAIN DEBT SECURITIES RATINGS

MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC. ("MOODY'S"):

         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 edge."  Interest  payments are protected by a large,  or  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 the 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.

         Ba -- Bonds which are rated Ba are judged to have speculative elements;
their future  cannot be  considered  as well  assured.  Often the  protection of
interest  and  principal  payments  may be very  moderate  and  thereby not well
safeguarded  during  both good and bad times  over the  future.  Uncertainty  of
position characterizes bonds in this class.

         B -- Bonds  which  are  rated B  generally  lack  characteristics  of a
desirable  investment.  Assurance  of  interest  and  principal  payments  or of
maintenance  of other terms of the contract  over any long period of time may be
small.

         Caa -- Bonds which are rated Caa are of poor standing.  Such issues may
be in  default  or there may be  present  elements  of danger  with  respect  to
principal or interest.

         Ca --  Bonds  which  are  rated  Ca  represent  obligations  which  are
speculative  in a high  degree.  Such  issues are often in default or have other
marked shortcomings.

         C -- Bonds  which are rated C are the lowest  rated  class of bonds and
issues so rated can be  regarded  as having  extremely  poor  prospects  of ever
attaining any real investment standing.

STANDARD & POOR'S CORPORATION ("STANDARD & POOR'S"):

         AAA -- Debt rated AAA has the  highest  rating  assigned  by Standard &
Poor's. Capacity to pay interest and repay principal is extremely strong.

         AA -- Debt rated AA has a strong  capacity  to pay  interest  and repay
principal, and differs from the highest rated issues only in a 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 they normally exhibit 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.

         BB, B, CCC,  CC, C -- Debt rated BB, B, CCC,  CC and C is  regarded  as
having predominantly speculative characteristics with respect to capacity to pay
interest and repay principal. BB indicates the least degree of speculation and C
the  highest.  While such debt will  likely  have some  quality  and  protective
characteristics,  these are  outweighed  by large  uncertainties  of major  risk
exposures to adverse conditions.

         BB -- Debt rated BB has less  near-term  vulnerability  to default than
other  speculative  issues.  However,  it faces major ongoing  uncertainties  or
exposure to adverse business, financial, or economic conditions which could lead
to inadequate  capacity to meet timely interest and principal  payments.  The BB
rating is also used for debt  subordinated  to senior  debt that is  assigned an
actual or implied BBB rating.

         B -- Debt rated B has a greater  vulnerability to default but currently
has the capacity to meet  interest  payments and principal  repayments.  Adverse
business,  financial,  or economic  conditions  will likely  impair  capacity or
willingness to pay interest and repay  principal.  The B rating category is also
used for debt  subordinated to senior debt that is assigned an actual or implied
BB or BB-rating.

         CCC -- Debt rated CCC has a  currently  identifiable  vulnerability  to
default,  and is dependent  upon  favorable  business,  financial,  and economic
conditions to meet timely payment of interest and repayment of principal. In the
event of adverse business, economic or financial conditions, it is not likely to
have the capacity to pay interest and repay  principal.  The CCC rating category
is also used for debt  subordinated to senior debt that is assigned an actual or
implied B or B- rating.

         CC -- The rating CC typically is applied to debt subordinated to senior
debt that is assigned an actual or implied CCC rating.

         C -- The C rating may be used to cover a situation  where a  bankruptcy
petition has been filed, but debt service payments are continued.

         CI -- The rating CI is reserved  for income  bonds on which no interest
is being paid.

         D -- Debt rated D is in payment default.  The D rating category is used
when interest payments or principal  payments are not made on the date due, even
if the  applicable  grace  period  has not  expired,  unless  Standard  & Poor's
believes that such payments will be made during such grace period.  The D rating
also  will be used  upon the  filing  of  bankruptcy  petition  if debt  service
payments are jeopardized.

         Plus (+) or minus (-) -- Ratings  from AA to CCC may be modified by the
addition  of a plus of minus  sign to show  relative  standing  within the major
rating categories.

         c -- The  letter c  indicates  that the  holder's  option to tender the
security  for  purchase  may be  canceled  under  certain  prestated  conditions
enumerated in the tender option documents.

         L -- The letter L indicates  that the rating  pertains to the principal
amount of those bonds to the extent that the  underlying  deposit  collateral is
federally  insured and  interest is  adequately  collateralized.  In the case of
certificates of deposit, the letter L indicates that the deposit,  combined with
other  deposits being held in the same and right  capacity,  will be honored for
principal and accrued  predefault  interest up to the federal  insurance  limits
within 30 days after  closing of the insured  institution  or, in the event that
the deposit is assumed by a successor insured institution, upon maturity.

         p --  The  letter  p  indicates  that  the  rating  is  provisional.  A
provisional  rating  assumes the  successful  completion  of the  project  being
financed  by the debt being rated and  indicates  that  payment of debt  service
requirements  is largely or entirely  dependent  upon the  successful and timely
completion of the project. This rating, however, while addressing credit quality
subsequent to completion of the project,  makes no comment on the likelihood of,
or the risk of default upon  failure of, such  completion.  The investor  should
exercise his own judgment with respect to such likelihood and risk.

         * --  Continuance  of the rating is  contingent  upon Standard & Poor's
receipt of an executed  copy of the escrow  agreement  or closing  documentation
confirming investments and cash flows.

         r -- The r is attached to  highlight  derivative,  hybrid,  and certain
other obligations that Standard & Poor's believes may experience high volatility
or high variability in expected returns due to noncredit risks. Examples of such
obligations  are:  securities  whose  principal or interest return is indexed to
equities,   commodities,   or  currencies;   certain  swaps  and  options;   and
interest-only and principal-only mortgage securities.

                 DESCRIPTION OF CERTAIN COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS

MOODY'S:

         Prime-1 -- Issuers rated Prime-1 (or  supporting  institutions)  have a
superior ability for repayment of senior  short-term debt  obligations.  Prime-1
repayment   ability  will  often  be   evidenced   by  many  of  the   following
characteristics:  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 earnings
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 -- Issuers rated Prime-2 (or related  supporting  institutions)
have a strong ability for repayment of senior short-term debt 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,  may be more
subject to variation.  Capitalization characteristics,  while still appropriate,
may be more  affected by  external  conditions.  Ample  alternate  liquidity  is
maintained.

         Prime-3 -- Issuers rated Prime-3 (or related  supporting  institutions)
have an acceptable  ability for repayment of senior short-term debt obligations.
The  effect of  industry  characteristics  and market  compositions  may be more
pronounced.  Variability in earnings and  profitability may result in changes in
the  level of debt  protection  measurements  and may  require  relatively  high
financial leverage. Adequate alternate liquidity is maintained.

         Not Prime - Issuers rated Not Prime do not fall within any of the Prime
rating categories.

STANDARD & POOR'S:

         A-1 -- This  highest  category  indicates  that the  degree  of  safety
regarding time payment is strong.  Those issues  determined to possess extremely
strong safety characteristics are denoted with a plus sign designation.

         A-2 -- Capacity for timely  payment on issues with this  designation is
satisfactory.  However,  the  relative  degree  of  safety is not as high as for
issues designated "A-1".

         A-3 -- Issues  carrying this  designation  have  adequate  capacity for
timely payment. They are, however, more vulnerable to the adverse effects of the
changes in circumstances than obligations carrying the higher designations.

         B -- Issues  rated B are regarded as having only  speculative  capacity
for timely payment.

         C -- This rating is  assigned to  short-term  debt  obligations  with a
doubtful capacity for payment.

         D - Debt rated D is in payment  default.  The D rating category is used
when interest payments or principal  payments are not made on the date due, even
if the  applicable  grace  period  has not  expired,  unless  Standard  & Poor's
believes that such payments will be made during such grace period.


<PAGE>
                                                           
PART C:  OTHER INFORMATION

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
ITEM 24.          Financial Statements and Exhibits

<S>      <C>      <C>      <C>     <C>   
         (a)      Financial Statements contained in Part B:

                  1.  Statement  of  Assets  and  Liabilities  of  each  Fund of
Registrant,  as of May 28, 1997,  together with the notes thereto and the report
of Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P.

                  2.  Statement of Assets and  Liabilities  of each Portfolio of
American  Skandia  Master  Trust,  as of May 28, 1997,  together  with the notes
thereto and the report of Coopers & Lybrand.

         (b)      Exhibits:

         (i)      1.       (a)      Articles of Incorporation of Registrant.

         (iii)             (b)      Amendment to Articles of Incorporation of Registrant dated July 3, 1997.

         (iv)              (c)      Amendment to Articles of Incorporation of Registrant dated July 17, 1997.

         (i)      2.       By-laws of Registrant.

                  3.       None.

                  4.       None.

         (ii)     5.       (a)      Form of  Investment  Management  Agreement  between  Registrant  and  American  Skandia
                                    Investment   Services,   Incorporated  for  the  ASAF  Founders   International   Small
                                    Capitalization Fund.

   
                           (b)      Form  of  Investment   Management  Agreement
                                    between   Registrant  and  American  Skandia
                                    Investment  Services,  Incorporated  for the
                                    ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund.


         (ii)              (c)      Form of  Investment  Management  Agreement  between  Registrant  and  American  Skandia
                                    Investment Services, Incorporated for the ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund.

         (ii)              (d)      Form of  Investment  Management  Agreement  between  Registrant  and  American  Skandia
                                    Investment Services, Incorporated for the ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund.

                           (e)      Form  of  Investment   Management  Agreement
                                    between   Registrant  and  American  Skandia
                                    Investment  Services,  Incorporated  for the
                                    ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund.

                           (f)      Form  of  Investment   Management  Agreement
                                    between   Registrant  and  American  Skandia
                                    Investment  Services,  Incorporated  for the
                                    ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund.

         (ii)              (g)      Form of  Investment  Management  Agreement  between  Registrant  and  American  Skandia
                                    Investment  Services,  Incorporated  for the ASAF American Century  Strategic  Balanced
                                    Fund.

         (ii)              (h)      Form of  Investment  Management  Agreement  between  Registrant  and  American  Skandia
                                    Investment Services, Incorporated for the ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund.

         (ii)              (i)      Form  of  Sub-advisory   Agreement  between  American  Skandia   Investment   Services,
                                    Incorporated and Founders Asset  Management,  Inc. for the ASAF Founders  International
                                    Small Capitalization Fund.

                           (j)      Form  of  Sub-advisory   Agreement   between
                                    American   Skandia   Investment    Services,
                                    Incorporated  and Janus Capital  Corporation
                                    for the ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund.

         (ii)              (k)      Form  of  Sub-advisory   Agreement  between  American  Skandia   Investment   Services,
                                    Incorporated  and  Founders  Asset  Management,   Inc.  for  the  ASAF  Founders  Small
                                    Capitalization Fund.

         (ii)              (l)      Form  of  Sub-advisory   Agreement  between  American  Skandia   Investment   Services,
                                    Incorporated  and T. Rowe  Price  Associates,  Inc.  for the ASAF T. Rowe  Price  Small
                                    Company Value Fund.

                           (m)      Form  of  Sub-advisory   Agreement  between  American  Skandia   Investment   Services,
                                    Incorporated and Robertson  Stephens & Company Investment  Management,  LP for the ASAF
                                    Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund.

                           (n)      Form  of  Sub-advisory   Agreement  between  American  Skandia   Investment   Services,
                                    Incorporated and Lord, Abbett & Co. for the ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund.

         (iii)             (o)      Form  of  Sub-advisory   Agreement  between  American  Skandia   Investment   Services,
                                    Incorporated and American  Century  Investment  Management,  Inc. for the ASAF American
                                    Century Strategic Balanced Fund.

         (iii)             (p)      Form  of  Sub-advisory   Agreement  between  American  Skandia   Investment   Services,
                                    Incorporated  and Federated  Investment  Counseling  for the ASAF  Federated High Yield
                                    Bond Fund.
    
         (ii)     6.       (a)      Form of  Underwriting  and  Distribution  Agreement  between  Registrant  and  American
                                    Skandia Marketing, Incorporated.

         (iii)             (b)      Form of Sales Agreement with American Skandia Marketing, Incorporated.

                  7.       None.

         (ii)     8.       (a)      Form of Custody Agreement between Registrant and PNC Bank.

         (ii)              (b)      Form of Custody Agreement between Registrant and Morgan Stanley Trust Company.

         (ii)     9.       (a)      Form of Administration Agreement between Registrant and PFPC Inc.

         (ii)              (b)      Form of Transfer Agency and Service Agreement between  Registrant and State Street Bank
                                    and Trust Company.

                  10.      Opinion and Consent of Counsel to Registrant.

   
                  11.               (a)     Consent of Independent Public Accountants of Registrant


                                    (b)      Consent of Independent Public Accountants of American Skandia Master Trust

         (iii)                      (c)     Consent of Caplin & Drysdale.

                                    (d)     Opinion of Caplin & Drysdale

         (iii)                      (e)     Consent of Rogers & Wells.

                                    (f)     Opinion of Rogers & Wells.
    
                  12.      None.

         (ii)     13.      Form of Share Purchase Agreement.

                  14.      None.

         (ii)     15.      (a)      Form of Distribution and Service Plan for Class A Shares.

         (ii)              (b)      Form of Distribution and Service Plan for Class B Shares.

         (ii)              (c)      Form of Distribution and Service Plan for Class C Shares.

         (ii)              (d)      Form of Distribution and Service Plan for Class X Shares.

                  16.      None.

                  17.      Financial Data Schedules

         (ii)     18.      Form of Rule 18f-3 Plan.
</TABLE>

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

(i)      Incorporated   by  reference  to  Registrant's   Initial   Registration
         Statement  on Form  N-1A as filed  with  the  Securities  and  Exchange
         Commission (the "Commission") on March 10, 1997.

(ii)     Incorporated  by  reference  to   Pre-Effective   Amendment  No.  2  to
         Registrant's  Registration  Statement  on Form  N-1A as filed  with the
         Commission on June 4, 1997.

(iii)    Incorporated  by  reference  to   Pre-Effective   Amendment  No.  3  to
         Registrant's  Registration  Statement  on Form  N-1A as filed  with the
         Commission on July 9, 1997.

   
(iv)     Incorporated  by  reference  to  Post-Effective   Amendment  No.  1  to
         Registrant's  Registration  Statement  on Form  N-1A as filed  with the
         Commission on October 17, 1997.
    

ITEM 25. Persons Controlled By or Under Common Control with Registrant

         Five  series  of  the  Registrant   currently  are  organized  under  a
"master/feeder"   fund   structure   and  may  be   considered  to  control  the
corresponding  master  portfolios of American Skandia Master Trust in which they
invest.  Registrant  is not under common  control with any person  except to the
extent Registrant is deemed to be under the control of its Investment Manager.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
ITEM 26.          Number of Holders of Securities

   
                                                                         Number of Record Holders
                  Fund Name (All Four Classes)                             as of December 1, 1997
                  ----------------------------                             ----------------------
    

                  <S>      <C>                                                       <C>
   
                  ASAF Founders International Small Capitalization Fund
                           Class A                                                   145
                           Class B                                                    66
                           Class C                                                    47
                           Class X                                                    93
                  ASAF T. Rowe Price International Equity Fund
                           Class A                                                   213
                           Class B                                                   116
                           Class C                                                    84
                           Class X                                                   202 
                  ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund
                           Class A                                                     0
                           Class B                                                     0
                           Class C                                                     0
                           Class X                                                     0
                  ASAF Founders Small Capitalization Fund
                           Class A                                                   115 
                           Class B                                                    93
                           Class C                                                    54
                           Class X                                                   104
                  ASAF T. Rowe Price Small Company Value Fund
                           Class A                                                   294
                           Class B                                                   205
                           Class C                                                   128
                           Class X                                                   244
                  ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund
                           Class A                                                     0
                           Class B                                                     0
                           Class C                                                     0
                           Class X                                                     0
                  ASAF Janus Capital Growth Fund
                           Class A                                                   504
                           Class B                                                   294
                           Class C                                                   154
                           Class X                                                   306
                  ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund
                           Class A                                                     0
                           Class B                                                     0
                           Class C                                                     0
                           Class X                                                     0
                  ASAF INVESCO Equity Income Fund
                           Class A                                                   176
                           Class B                                                   162
                           Class C                                                   109
                           Class X                                                   224
                  ASAF American Century Strategic Balanced Fund
                           Class A                                                    79
                           Class B                                                    80
                           Class C                                                    49
                           Class X                                                    88
                  ASAF Federated High Yield Bond Fund
                           Class A                                                    89
                           Class B                                                   101
                           Class C                                                    62
                           Class X                                                   130
                  ASAF Total Return Bond Fund
                           Class A                                                    50
                           Class B                                                    62
                           Class C                                                    43
                           Class X                                                    92
                  ASAF JPM Money Market Fund
                           Class A                                                    51
                           Class B                                                    49
                           Class C                                                    57
                           Class X                                                    68
</TABLE>
    

ITEM 27. Indemnification

         Section 2-418 of the General  Corporation  Law of the State of Maryland
provides for indemnification of officers,  directors,  employees and agents of a
Maryland  corporation.  With  respect to  indemnification  of the  officers  and
directors of the Registrant, and of other employees and agents to such extent as
shall be authorized  by the Board of Directors or the By-laws of the  Registrant
and be permitted by law, reference is made to Article VIII,  Paragraph (a)(5) of
the  Registrant's  Articles of  Incorporation  and Article V of the Registrant's
By-laws, both filed herewith.

         With respect to liability of the Investment Manager to Registrant or to
shareholders of Registrant's Funds under the Investment  Management  Agreements,
reference is made to Section 13 of each form of Investment  Management Agreement
filed herewith.

         With   respect   to  the   Sub-Advisors'   indemnification   under  the
Sub-Advisory  Agreements of the Investment Manager, any affiliated person within
the meaning of Section 2(a)(3) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended
(the "ICA"), of the Investment Manager and each person, if any, who controls the
Investment  Manager within the meaning of Section 15 of the 1933 Act, as amended
(the "1933 Act"),  reference is made to Section 14 of each form of  Sub-Advisory
Agreement filed herewith.

         With  respect  to  Registrant's  indemnification  of  American  Skandia
Marketing, Incorporated (the "Distributor"),  its officers and directors and any
person who controls the Distributor within the meaning of Section 15 of the 1933
Act,  and the  Distributor's  indemnification  of  Registrant,  its officers and
directors and any person who controls Registrant,  if any, within the meaning of
the 1933 Act,  reference is made to Section 10 of the form of  Underwriting  and
Distribution Agreement filed herewith.

         Insofar as indemnification for liability arising under the 1933 Act may
be permitted to directors,  officers and  controlling  persons of the Registrant
pursuant to the foregoing  provisions,  or otherwise,  the  Registrant  has been
advised that in the opinion of the Commission  such  indemnification  is against
public policy as expressed in the 1933 Act and is, therefore,  unenforceable. In
the event that a claim for indemnification  against such liabilities (other than
the  payment by the  Registrant  or  expenses  incurred  or paid by a  director,
officer or controlling person of the Registrant in the successful defense of any
action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling
person in connection with the securities being registered,  the 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 1933 Act
and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.

ITEM 28.          Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser

         American  Skandia  Investment  Services,  Incorporated  ("ASISI"),  One
Corporate Drive, Shelton, Connecticut 06484, serves as the investment manager to
the  Registrant.  Information  as to the  officers  and  directors  of  ASISI is
included in ASISI's Form ADV (File No.  801-40532),  including the amendments to
such Form ADV filed with the  Commission  on August 13,  1997,  April 11,  1997,
October 22, 1996, March 22, 1996 and April 11, 1995, and is incorporated  herein
by reference.

   
         ASISI currently engages the following sub-advisors (the "Sub-advisors")
to conduct the investment  programs of the funds of the Registrant or the master
portfolios in which certain of  Registrant's  funds invest:  (a) Founders  Asset
Management,  Inc.,  Founders Financial Center,  2930 East Third Avenue,  Denver,
Colorado  80206;  (b) Rowe  Price-Fleming  International,  Inc.,  100 East Pratt
Street, Baltimore,  Maryland 21209; (c) Janus Capital Corporation,  100 Fillmore
Street,  Denver,  Colorado 80206-4923;  (d) T. Rowe Price Associates,  Inc., 100
East Pratt Street, Baltimore,  Maryland 21209; (e) Robertson, Stephens & Company
Investment Management, L.P., 555 California Street, San Francisco, CA 94014; (f)
Lord, Abbett & Co., The General Motors Building,  767 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY
10153;  (g) INVESCO  Trust  Company,  7800 East Union Avenue,  Denver,  Colorado
80217-3706;  (h) American Century Investment  Management,  Inc. (formally named,
"Investors  Research  Corporation"),  Twentieth Century Tower, 4500 Main Street,
Kansas City,  Missouri 64111;  (i) Federated  Investment  Counseling,  Federated
Investors Tower,  Pittsburgh,  Pennsylvania  15222-3779;  (j) Pacific Investment
Management  Company,  840  Newport  Center  Drive,  Suite  360,  Newport  Beach,
California  92660; and (k) J.P. Morgan  Investment  Management,  Inc., 522 Fifth
Avenue, New York, New York, 10036.  Information as to the officers and directors
of each of the Sub-advisors is included in each Sub-advisor's  current Form ADV,
as  amended  and  filed  with the  Commission,  and is  incorporated  herein  by
reference.
    

ITEM 29. Principal Underwriter

         American  Skandia  Marketing,   Incorporated  (the   "Distributor,"  as
previously defined), One Corporate Drive, Shelton,  Connecticut 06484, serves as
the principal underwriter and distributor for the Registrant. The Distributor is
a registered  broker-dealer and member of the National Association of Securities
Dealers,  Inc. The  Distributor is an "affiliated  person" (as defined under the
ICA) of the  Registrant and ASISI,  being a wholly-owned  subsidiary of American
Skandia Investment Holding Corporation.

         The following table sets forth  information on the current officers and
directors  of the  Distributor,  all of whom  have as their  principal  business
address, One Corporate Drive, Shelton, Connecticut 06484:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Name:                                Position Held with the Distributor:             Position Held with the Registrant:

<S>                                  <C>                                             <C>
Gordon C. Boronow                    Director                                        Vice President & Director

Kimberly A. Bradshaw                 Vice President & National                       None
                                     Accounts Manager

Jan R. Carendi                       Chief Executive Officer & Director              President, Principal Executive Officer
                                                                                     & Director

Daniel R. Darst                      Senior Vice President &                         None
                                     National Marketing Director

Paul DeSimone                        Vice President, Corporate                       None
                                     Controller & Director

Wade A. Dokken                       President, Chief Marketing                      None
                                     Officer & Director

Walter G. Kenyon                     Vice President &                                None
                                     National Accounts Manager

Lawrence Kudlow                      Senior Vice President &                         None
                                     Chief Economist

N. David Kuperstock                  Vice President & Director                       None

Daniel LaBonte                       Vice President & Associate Marketing            None
                                     Director

Thomas M. Mazzaferro                 Executive Vice President &                      Treasurer & Director
                                     Chief Financial Officer

Kristen E. Newall                    Assistant Corporate Secretary                   None

Brian O'Connor                       Vice President & National Sales                 None
                                     Manager (Internal Wholesaling)

M. Priscilla Pannell                 Corporate Secretary                             None

Don Thomas Peck                      Senior Vice President, National                 None
                                     Sales Manager & Director

Hayward Sawyer                       Senior Vice President, National                 None
                                     Sales Manager & Director

Christian Thwaites                   Vice President, Qualified Plans                 None

Bayard F. Tracy                      Senior Vice President, National                 None
                                     Sales Manager & Director
</TABLE>

ITEM 30. Location of Accounts and Records

         Records regarding the Registrant's  securities  holdings are maintained
at Registrant's  Custodians,  PNC Bank,  Airport Business Center,  International
Court 2, 200 Stevens Drive, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19113, and Morgan Stanley
Trust Company, One Pierrepont Plaza,  Brooklyn,  New York 11201. Certain records
with respect to the Registrant's  securities  transactions are maintained at the
offices  of  the  various  sub-advisors  to  the  Registrant.  The  Registrant's
corporate records are maintained at its offices at One Corporate Drive, Shelton,
Connecticut  06484. The  Registrant's  financial  ledgers and similar  financial
records are  maintained  at the  offices of its  Administrator,  PFPC Inc.,  103
Bellevue  Parkway,   Wilmington,   DE  19809.   Certain  records  regarding  the
shareholders of the Registrant are maintained at the offices of the Registrant's
transfer  agent,  Boston  Financial  Data Services,  Inc.,  Two Heritage  Drive,
Quincy, Massachusetts 02171.

         All accounts,  books and other  documents  required to be maintained by
Section 31(a) of the ICA, and the Rules  promulgated  thereunder with respect to
American  Skandia Master Trust (the "Master Trust") are maintained at the Master
Trust's  offices at One Corporate  Drive,  Shelton,  Connecticut  06484,  at the
offices of the various  sub-advisors,  and at the offices of the above-mentioned
Custodians and Administrator.

ITEM 31. Management Services

         None.

ITEM 32. Undertakings

         (a)      None.

   
     (b) This amendment is intended to comply with the Registrant's  undertaking
to  file  a  post-effective  amendment  to  its  Registration  Statement,  using
financial statements which need not be certified, within four to six months from
the effective date of the Registration Statement.
    

         (c)  The  Registrant  undertakes  to  furnish  each  person  to  whom a
prospectus  is delivered  with a copy of  Registrant's  latest  annual report to
shareholders  upon  request and without  charge if the  Registrant  includes the
information called for by Item 5A of Form N-1A in such annual report.



<PAGE>


                                   SIGNATURES


         Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant,  American Skandia Advisor Funds,
Inc., has duly caused this Registration  Statement to be signed on its behalf by
the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Shelton, and State of
Connecticut, on the 31st day of December, 1997.

                                            AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.


                                            By: /s/ Eric C. Freed
                                                Eric C. Freed
                                                Secretary

         Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act of  1933,  this
Registration  Statement  has been signed below by the  following  persons in the
capacities and on the dates indicated.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Signature                                            Title                                       Date


<S>                                                  <C>                                         <C>  
/s/ Gordon C. Boronow                                Vice President & Director                   12/31/97
Gordon C. Boronow


/s/ Jan R. Carendi*                                  President, Principal Executive              12/31/97
Jan R. Carendi                                       Officer & Director


/s/ David E.A. Carson*                               Director                                    12/31/97
David E.A. Carson


/s/ Richard G. Davy, Jr.*                            Controller                                  12/31/97
Richard G. Davy, Jr.


/s/ Julian A. Lerner*                                Director                                    12/31/97
Julian A. Lerner


/s/ Thomas M. Mazzaferro*                            Treasurer & Director                        12/31/97
Thomas M. Mazzaferro


/s/ Thomas M. O'Brien*                               Director                                    12/31/97
Thomas M. O'Brien


/s/ F. Don Schwartz*                                 Director                                    12/31/97
F. Don Schwartz
</TABLE>


                                           *By:   /s/ Eric C. Freed
                                                  Eric C. Freed

                *Pursuant to Powers of Attorney previously filed.


<PAGE>


                                   SIGNATURES


         Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act of 1933 and the
Investment  Company Act of 1940,  American  Skandia Master Trust has duly caused
this  Registration  Statement  to be  signed on its  behalf by the  undersigned,
thereunto duly authorized,  in the County of Dublin,  Country of Ireland, on the
31st day of December, 1997.

                                                 AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER TRUST


                                               By: /s/ J. Fergus McKeon
                                                  J. Fergus McKeon
                                                  Assistant Controller &
                                                  Assistant Corporate Secretary

         Pursuant  to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Act of  1933,  this
Registration  Statement  has been signed below by the  following  persons in the
capacities and on the dates indicated.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Signature                                            Title                                       Date


<S>                                                  <C>                                         <C> 
/s/ Gordon C. Boronow*                               Vice President & Trustee                    12/31/97
Gordon C. Boronow

/s/ Jan R. Carendi*                                  Trustee                                     12/31/97
Jan R. Carendi

/s/ David E.A. Carson*                               Trustee                                     12/31/97
David E.A. Carson

/s/ Richard G. Davy, Jr.*                            Controller                                  12/31/97
Richard G. Davy, Jr.

/s/ Julian A. Lerner*                                Trustee                                     12/31/97
Julian A. Lerner

/s/ Thomas M. Mazzaferro*                            President, Principal Executive              12/31/97
Thomas M. Mazzaferro                                 Officer & Trustee

/s/ Thomas M. O'Brien*                               Trustee                                     12/31/97
Thomas M. O'Brien

/s/ F. Don Schwartz*                                 Trustee                                     12/31/97
F. Don Schwartz

/s/ C. Ake Svensson*                                 Treasurer                                   12/31/97
C. Ake Svensson
</TABLE>


                                           *By:   /s/ J. Fergus McKeon
                                                  J. Fergus McKeon

                *Pursuant to Powers of Attorney previously filed.


<PAGE>




                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.

                          Registration Statement Under
                         The Securities Act of 1933 and
                       The Investment Company Act of 1940

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                INDEX TO EXHIBITS


          Exhibit Number                                                   Description

                  <S>                                 <C>                                                         
                  5(b)                               Form  of  Investment   Management  Agreement  between  Registrant  and
                                                     American Skandia Investment Services,  Incorporated for the ASAF Janus
                                                     Overseas Growth Fund.

                  5(e)                               Form     of      Investment
                                                     Management        Agreement
                                                     between    Registrant   and
                                                     American Skandia Investment
                                                     Services,  Incorporated for
                                                     the ASAF Robertson Stephens
                                                     Value + Growth Fund.

                  5(f)                               Form  of  Investment   Management  Agreement  between  Registrant  and
                                                     American Skandia Investment  Services,  Incorporated for the ASAF Lord
                                                     Abbett Growth and Income Fund.


                  5(j)                               Form of Sub-advisory  Agreement  between American  Skandia  Investment
                                                     Services,  Incorporated  and Janus  Capital  Corporation  for the ASAF
                                                     Janus Overseas Growth Fund.

                  5(m)                               Form    of     Sub-advisory
                                                     Agreement  between American
                                                     Skandia          Investment
                                                     Services,  Incorporated and
                                                     Robertson     Stephens    &
                                                     Company          Investment
                                                     Management, LP for the ASAF
                                                     Robertson  Stephens Value +
                                                     Growth Fund.

                  5(n)                               Form of Sub-advisory  Agreement  between American  Skandia  Investment
                                                     Services,  Incorporated  and  Lord,  Abbett & Co.  for the  ASAF  Lord
                                                     Abbett Growth and Income Fund.


                  10                                  Opinion and Consent of Counsel to Registrant.

                  11(a)                              Consent of Independent Public Accountants of Registrant

                  11(b)                              Consent  of   Independent   Public   Accountants  of  American
                                                     Skandia Master Trust
                    
                  11(d)                              Opinion of Caplin & Drysdale.

                  11(f)                              Opinion of Rogers & Wells.

                  17                                 Financial Data Schedules
</TABLE>






                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
                         INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT

THIS  AGREEMENT  is made this 2nd day of January,  1998 by and between  American
Skandia  Advisor  Funds,  Inc.,  a Maryland  corporation  (the  "Company"),  and
American Skandia Investment Services,  Incorporated,  a Connecticut  corporation
(the "Investment Manager").

                               W I T N E S S E T H

WHEREAS, the Company is registered as an open-end management  investment company
under the Investment  Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "ICA"), and the rules
and regulations promulgated thereunder; and

WHEREAS,  the Investment  Manager is an investment  adviser registered under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the "Advisers Act"); and

WHEREAS,  the  Company  and the  Investment  Manager  desire  to  enter  into an
agreement to provide for the management of the assets of the ASAF Janus Overseas
Growth Fund (the "Fund") on the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth.

NOW,  THEREFORE,  in  consideration of the mutual covenants herein contained and
other  good  and  valuable   consideration,   the  receipt   whereof  is  hereby
acknowledged, the parties hereto agree as follows:

1. Management.  The Investment  Manager shall act as investment  manager for the
Fund and shall, in such capacity,  manage the investment operations of the Fund,
including  the  purchase,  retention,  disposition  and  lending of  securities,
subject at all times to the  policies  and control of the Board of  Directors of
the Company (the  "Directors").  The Investment  Manager shall give the Fund the
benefit of its best judgments,  efforts and facilities in rendering its services
as investment manager.

     2. Duties of  Investment  Manager.  In carrying  out its  obligation  under
paragraph 1 hereof, the Investment Manager shall:

         (a)  supervise and manage all aspects of the Fund's operations:

         (b) provide the Fund or obtain for it, and thereafter  supervise,  such
executive,  administrative,  clerical and shareholder  servicing services as are
deemed advisable by the Directors;

         (c) arrange, but not pay for, the periodic updating of prospectuses and
supplements  thereto,  proxy  material,  tax  returns,  reports  to  the  Fund's
shareholders,   reports  to  and  filings  with  the   Securities  and  Exchange
Commission,   state  Blue  Sky  authorities  and  other  applicable   regulatory
authorities;

         (d) provide to the  Directors  on a regular  basis,  written  financial
reports and analyses on the Fund's securities transactions and the operations of
comparable investment companies;

         (e) determine what issuers and  securities  shall be represented in the
Fund's portfolio and regularly report them in writing to the Directors;

         (f) formulate and implement  continuing  programs for the purchases and
sales of the securities of such issuers and regularly  report in writing thereon
to the Directors; and

         (g)  take,  on  behalf of the Fund,  all  actions  which  appear to the
Company  necessary  to carry into effect such  purchase  and sale  programs  and
supervisory  functions  as  aforesaid,  including  the placing of orders for the
purchase and sale of portfolio securities.

3.  Broker-Dealer  Relationships.  The  Investment  Manager is  responsible  for
decisions to buy and sell securities for the Fund,  broker-dealer selection, and
negotiation of the Fund's brokerage  commission  rates.  The Investment  Manager
shall  determine the  securities to be purchased or sold by the Fund pursuant to
its  determinations  with or  through  such  persons,  brokers  or  dealers,  in
conformity  with the  policy  with  respect  to  brokerage  as set  forth in the
Company's  Prospectus and Statement of Additional  Information as in effect from
time to time (together, the "Registration  Statement"),  or as the Directors may
determine  from  time to  time.  Generally,  the  Investment  Manager's  primary
consideration in placing Fund securities  transactions with  broker-dealers  for
execution will be to obtain, and maintain the availability of, best execution at
the best available price. The Investment Manager may consider sale of the shares
of  the  Fund  in  allocating  Fund  securities  transactions,  subject  to  the
requirements of best net price available and most favorable execution.

         Consistent with this policy, the Investment Manager, in allocating Fund
securities  transactions,  will take all relevant  factors  into  consideration,
including,  but not  limited  to: the best  price  available;  the  reliability,
integrity  and  financial  condition  of  the  broker-dealer;  the  size  of and
difficulty in executing the order; and the value of the expected contribution of
the  broker-dealer  to the  investment  performance  of the Fund on a continuing
basis.  Subject to such policies and  procedures as the Directors may determine,
the Investment  Manager shall have discretion to effect investment  transactions
for the Fund through broker-dealers  (including, to the extent permissible under
applicable law, broker-dealers affiliated with the Investment Manager) qualified
to obtain best  execution  of such  transactions  who provide  brokerage  and/or
research  services,  as such  services  are  defined  in  section  28(e)  of the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "1934 Act"),  and to cause the
Fund to pay any such  broker-dealers  an amount of  commission  for  effecting a
portfolio  investment  transaction in excess of the amount of commission another
broker-dealer  would  have  charged  for  effecting  that  transaction,  if  the
Investment  Manager  determines  in good faith that such amount of commission is
reasonable  in  relation  to the value of the  brokerage  or  research  services
provided  by such  broker-dealer,  viewed  in terms of  either  that  particular
investment transaction or the Investment Manager's overall responsibilities with
respect  to the Fund and  other  accounts  as to which  the  Investment  Manager
exercises investment  discretion (as such term is defined in section 3(a)(35) of
the 1934 Act).  Allocation of orders placed by the Investment  Manager on behalf
of the Fund to such  broker-dealers  shall be in such amounts and proportions as
the  Investment  Manager shall  determine in good faith in  conformity  with its
responsibilities  under applicable  laws, rules and regulations.  The Investment
Manager will report on such allocations to the Directors  regularly as requested
by the Directors,  indicating the  broker-dealers  to whom such allocations have
been made and the basis therefor.

4. Control by the Directors. Any investment program undertaken by the Investment
Manager pursuant to this Agreement,  as well as any other activities  undertaken
by the Investment Manager on behalf of the Company pursuant hereto, shall at all
times be subject to any directives of the Directors.

     5. Compliance with Applicable Requirements. In carrying out its obligations
under this Agreement, the Investment Manager shall at all times conform to:

     (a) all applicable provisions of the ICA and the Advisers Act and any rules
and regulations adopted thereunder; and

     (b) the provisions of the Registration Statement,  including the investment
objectives,  policies and restrictions,  and permissible  investments  specified
therein; and

     (c) the  provisions  of the Articles of  Incorporation  of the Company,  as
amended; and

         (d)  the provisions of the By-laws of the Company, as amended; and

         (e) any other applicable provisions of state and federal law.

     6.  Expenses.  The expenses  connected  with the Company shall be allocable
between the Company and the Investment Manager as follows:

         (a) The Investment  Manager shall  furnish,  at its expense and without
cost to the Company,  the services of a  President,  Secretary,  and one or more
Vice Presidents of the Company,  to the extent that such additional officers may
be required by the Company for the proper conduct of its affairs.

         (b) The Investment  Manager shall further maintain,  at its expense and
without  cost to the  Company,  a  trading  function  in order to carry  out its
obligations under  subparagraphs (e), (f) and (g) of paragraph 2 hereof to place
orders for the purchase and sale of portfolio securities for the Fund.

         (c) Nothing in  subparagraph  (a) hereof  shall be construed to require
the Investment Manager to bear:

                  (i)  any of the  costs  (including  applicable  office  space,
                  facilities  and  equipment)  of the  services  of a  principal
                  financial  officer of the Company whose normal duties  consist
                  of maintaining the financial accounts and books and records of
                  the Company,  including the reviewing of  calculations  of net
                  asset value and preparing tax returns; or

                  (ii) any of the  costs  (including  applicable  office  space,
                  facilities  and  equipment)  of  the  services  of  any of the
                  personnel  operating  under the  direction  of such  principal
                  financial officer.

         Notwithstanding  the  obligation  of the Company to bear the expense of
the functions  referred to in clauses (i) and (ii) of this subparagraph (c), the
Investment Manager may pay the salaries,  including any applicable employment or
payroll taxes and other salary costs,  of the  principal  financial  officer and
other personnel carrying out such functions, and the Company shall reimburse the
Investment Manager therefor upon proper accounting.

         (d) All of the ordinary business expenses incurred in the operations of
the Company and the offering of its shares shall be borne by the Company  unless
specifically provided otherwise in this paragraph 6. These expenses include, but
are not  limited  to:  (i)  brokerage  commissions,  legal,  auditing,  taxes or
governmental  fees;  (ii)  the  cost  of  preparing  share  certificates;  (iii)
custodian,  depository,  transfer and  shareholder  service  agent  costs;  (iv)
expenses of issue,  sale,  redemption and repurchase of shares;  (v) expenses of
registering and qualifying shares for sale; (vi) insurance  premiums on property
or personnel  (including  officers and  directors if  available)  of the Company
which inure to the Company's  benefit;  (vii) expenses  relating to director and
shareholder meetings;  (viii) the cost of preparing and distributing reports and
notices  to  shareholders;  (ix) the fees and  other  expenses  incurred  by the
Company in connection with membership in investment company  organizations;  and
(x) and the cost of printing copies of prospectuses and statements of additional
information, as well as any supplements thereto, distributed to shareholders.

7.  Delegation  of  Responsibilities.  Upon the  request of the  Directors,  the
Investment  Manager may perform  services on behalf of the Company which are not
required by this  Agreement.  Such  services  will be performed on behalf of the
Company and the  Investment  Manager's  cost in rendering  such  services may be
billed  monthly  to  the  Company,  subject  to  examination  by  the  Company's
independent accountants.  Payment or assumption by the Investment Manager of any
Company  expense  that the  Investment  Manager is not required to pay or assume
under this  Agreement  shall not  relieve the  Investment  Manager of any of its
obligations to the Company nor obligate the Investment  Manager to pay or assume
any similar Company expense on any subsequent occasion.

8. Engagement of Sub-Advisers  and  Broker-Dealers.  The Investment  Manager may
engage,   subject  to  approval  of  the  Directors  and  where  required,   the
shareholders of the Fund, a sub-adviser to provide advisory services in relation
to the Fund.  Under such  sub-advisory  agreement,  the  Investment  Manager may
delegate to the sub-adviser the duties  outlined in  subparagraphs  (e), (f) and
(g) of paragraph 2 hereof.

9.  Compensation.   The  Company  shall  pay  the  Investment  Manager  in  full
compensation for services rendered hereunder an annual investment  advisory fee.
The fee shall be payable  monthly in  arrears,  based on the  average  daily net
assets of the Fund for each month,  at the annual rate set forth in Exhibit A to
this Agreement.

10. Non-Exclusivity.  The services of the Investment Manager to the Fund are not
to be deemed to be exclusive, and the Investment Manager shall be free to render
investment  advisory and corporate  administrative  or other  services to others
(including other investment companies) and to engage in other activities.  It is
understood and agreed that officers or directors of the  Investment  Manager may
serve as officers or directors of the Company, and that officers or directors of
the Company may serve as officers or directors of the Investment  Manager to the
extent  permitted by law; and that the officers and directors of the  Investment
Manager are not prohibited from engaging in any other business  activity or from
rendering services to any other person, or from serving as partners, officers or
directors  of  any  other  firm  or  corporation,   including  other  investment
companies.

11. Term and Approval.  This Agreement shall become effective on January 2, 1998
and by shall continue in force and effect from year to year,  provided that such
continuance is specifically approved at least annually by:

         (a) the  Directors or the vote of a majority of the Fund's  outstanding
voting securities (as defined in Section 2(a)(42) of the ICA); and

         (b) the  affirmative  vote of a majority of the  Directors  who are not
parties to this  Agreement or  interested  persons of a party to this  Agreement
(other  than as  Company  directors),  by  votes  cast in  person  at a  meeting
specifically called for such purpose.

12.  Termination.  This  Agreement  may be  terminated  at any time  without the
payment of any  penalty  or  prejudice  to the  completion  of any  transactions
already  initiated on behalf of the Fund, by vote of the Directors or by vote of
a majority of the Fund's  outstanding  voting  securities,  or by the Investment
Manager,  on sixty  (60) days'  written  notice to the other  party.  The notice
provided for herein may be waived by either party. This Agreement  automatically
terminates in the event of its "assignment," as such term is defined in the ICA.

13.  Liability  of  Investment  Manager and  Indemnification.  In the absence of
willful  misfeasance,  bad faith,  gross  negligence  or reckless  disregard  of
obligations or duties hereunder on the part of the Investment  Manager or any of
its officers,  directors or  employees,  it shall not be subject to liability to
the  Company or to any  shareholder  of the Fund for any act or  omission in the
course of, or connected  with,  rendering  services  hereunder or for any losses
that may be sustained in the purchase, holding or sale of any security.

14.  Liability  of the  Directors  and  Shareholders.  A copy of the Articles of
Incorporation  of the  Company  is on file  with the  Secretary  of the State of
Maryland,  and notice is hereby given that this instrument is executed on behalf
of the Directors as directors and not  individually  and that the obligations of
this  instrument  are not  binding  upon any of the  Directors  or  shareholders
individually  but are binding  only upon the assets and property of the Company.
Federal and state laws impose  responsibilities  under certain  circumstances on
persons who act in good faith,  and  therefore,  nothing herein shall in any way
constitute  a waiver  of  limitation  of any  rights  which the  Company  or the
Investment Manager may have under applicable law.

15. Notices. Any notices under this Agreement shall be in writing, addressed and
delivered  or mailed  postage  paid to the other  party at such  address as such
other party may designate for the receipt of such notice.  Until further notice,
it is agreed that the address of the Company and the Investment Manager shall be
One Corporate Drive, Shelton, Connecticut 06484.

16. Questions of  Interpretation.  Any question of interpretation of any term or
provision of this Agreement having a counterpart in or otherwise  derived from a
term or  provision  of the ICA,  shall be resolved by  reference to such term or
provision  of the ICA and to  interpretations  thereof,  if any,  by the  United
States courts or, in the absence of any controlling  decision of any such court,
by rules, regulations or orders of the Securities and Exchange Commission issued
pursuant to the ICA. In addition,  where the effect of a requirement of the ICA,
reflected in any provision of this Agreement,  is released by rules,  regulation
or order of the Securities  and Exchange  Commission,  such  provision  shall be
deemed to incorporate the effect of such rule, regulation or order.

         IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Agreement to be
executed in  duplicate  by their  respective  officers on the day and year first
above written.


                                   AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.


Attest:                            By: ________________________________________
                                        Gordon C. Boronow
___________________________________     Vice President



                                   AMERICAN SKANDIA INVESTMENT
                                   SERVICES, INCORPORATED


Attest:                            By: ________________________________________
                                        Thomas M. Mazzaferro
___________________________________     President & Chief Financial Officer


<PAGE>

                      American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
                         ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund
                         Investment Management Agreement

                                    EXHIBIT A




         An annual rate of 1.10% of the average daily net assets of the Fund.








                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
                         INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT

THIS  AGREEMENT  is made this 2nd day of January,  1998 by and between  American
Skandia  Advisor  Funds,  Inc.,  a Maryland  corporation  (the  "Company"),  and
American Skandia Investment Services,  Incorporated,  a Connecticut  corporation
(the "Investment Manager").

                               W I T N E S S E T H

WHEREAS, the Company is registered as an open-end management  investment company
under the Investment  Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "ICA"), and the rules
and regulations promulgated thereunder; and

WHEREAS,  the Investment  Manager is an investment  adviser registered under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the "Advisers Act"); and

WHEREAS,  the  Company  and the  Investment  Manager  desire  to  enter  into an
agreement  to provide  for the  management  of the assets of the ASAF  Robertson
Stephens  Value  &  Growth  Fund  (the  "Fund")  on  the  terms  and  conditions
hereinafter set forth.

NOW,  THEREFORE,  in  consideration of the mutual covenants herein contained and
other  good  and  valuable   consideration,   the  receipt   whereof  is  hereby
acknowledged, the parties hereto agree as follows:

1. Management.  The Investment  Manager shall act as investment  manager for the
Fund and shall, in such capacity,  manage the investment operations of the Fund,
including  the  purchase,  retention,  disposition  and  lending of  securities,
subject at all times to the  policies  and control of the Board of  Directors of
the Company (the  "Directors").  The Investment  Manager shall give the Fund the
benefit of its best judgments,  efforts and facilities in rendering its services
as investment manager.

     2. Duties of  Investment  Manager.  In carrying  out its  obligation  under
paragraph 1 hereof, the Investment Manager shall:

         (a)  supervise and manage all aspects of the Fund's operations:

         (b) provide the Fund or obtain for it, and thereafter  supervise,  such
executive,  administrative,  clerical and shareholder  servicing services as are
deemed advisable by the Directors;

         (c) arrange, but not pay for, the periodic updating of prospectuses and
supplements  thereto,  proxy  material,  tax  returns,  reports  to  the  Fund's
shareholders,   reports  to  and  filings  with  the   Securities  and  Exchange
Commission,   state  Blue  Sky  authorities  and  other  applicable   regulatory
authorities;

         (d) provide to the  Directors  on a regular  basis,  written  financial
reports and analyses on the Fund's securities transactions and the operations of
comparable investment companies;

         (e) determine what issuers and  securities  shall be represented in the
Fund's portfolio and regularly report them in writing to the Directors;

         (f) formulate and implement  continuing  programs for the purchases and
sales of the securities of such issuers and regularly  report in writing thereon
to the Directors; and

         (g)  take,  on  behalf of the Fund,  all  actions  which  appear to the
Company  necessary  to carry into effect such  purchase  and sale  programs  and
supervisory  functions  as  aforesaid,  including  the placing of orders for the
purchase and sale of portfolio securities.

3.  Broker-Dealer  Relationships.  The  Investment  Manager is  responsible  for
decisions to buy and sell securities for the Fund,  broker-dealer selection, and
negotiation of the Fund's brokerage  commission  rates.  The Investment  Manager
shall  determine the  securities to be purchased or sold by the Fund pursuant to
its  determinations  with or  through  such  persons,  brokers  or  dealers,  in
conformity  with the  policy  with  respect  to  brokerage  as set  forth in the
Company's  Prospectus and Statement of Additional  Information as in effect from
time to time (together, the "Registration  Statement"),  or as the Directors may
determine  from  time to  time.  Generally,  the  Investment  Manager's  primary
consideration in placing Fund securities  transactions with  broker-dealers  for
execution will be to obtain, and maintain the availability of, best execution at
the best available price. The Investment Manager may consider sale of the shares
of  the  Fund  in  allocating  Fund  securities  transactions,  subject  to  the
requirements of best net price available and most favorable execution.

         Consistent with this policy, the Investment Manager, in allocating Fund
securities  transactions,  will take all relevant  factors  into  consideration,
including,  but not  limited  to: the best  price  available;  the  reliability,
integrity  and  financial  condition  of  the  broker-dealer;  the  size  of and
difficulty in executing the order; and the value of the expected contribution of
the  broker-dealer  to the  investment  performance  of the Fund on a continuing
basis.  Subject to such policies and  procedures as the Directors may determine,
the Investment  Manager shall have discretion to effect investment  transactions
for the Fund through broker-dealers  (including, to the extent permissible under
applicable law, broker-dealers affiliated with the Investment Manager) qualified
to obtain best  execution  of such  transactions  who provide  brokerage  and/or
research  services,  as such  services  are  defined  in  section  28(e)  of the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "1934 Act"),  and to cause the
Fund to pay any such  broker-dealers  an amount of  commission  for  effecting a
portfolio  investment  transaction in excess of the amount of commission another
broker-dealer  would  have  charged  for  effecting  that  transaction,  if  the
Investment  Manager  determines  in good faith that such amount of commission is
reasonable  in  relation  to the value of the  brokerage  or  research  services
provided  by such  broker-dealer,  viewed  in terms of  either  that  particular
investment transaction or the Investment Manager's overall responsibilities with
respect  to the Fund and  other  accounts  as to which  the  Investment  Manager
exercises investment  discretion (as such term is defined in section 3(a)(35) of
the 1934 Act).  Allocation of orders placed by the Investment  Manager on behalf
of the Fund to such  broker-dealers  shall be in such amounts and proportions as
the  Investment  Manager shall  determine in good faith in  conformity  with its
responsibilities  under applicable  laws, rules and regulations.  The Investment
Manager will report on such allocations to the Directors  regularly as requested
by the Directors,  indicating the  broker-dealers  to whom such allocations have
been made and the basis therefor.

4. Control by the Directors. Any investment program undertaken by the Investment
Manager pursuant to this Agreement,  as well as any other activities  undertaken
by the Investment Manager on behalf of the Company pursuant hereto, shall at all
times be subject to any directives of the Directors.

     5. Compliance with Applicable Requirements. In carrying out its obligations
under this Agreement, the Investment Manager shall at all times conform to:

     (a) all applicable provisions of the ICA and the Advisers Act and any rules
and regulations adopted thereunder; and

         (b)  the  provisions  of  the  Registration  Statement,  including  the
investment objectives,  policies and restrictions,  and permissible  investments
specified therein; and

     (c) the  provisions  of the Articles of  Incorporation  of the Company,  as
amended; and

         (d)  the provisions of the By-laws of the Company, as amended; and

         (e) any other applicable provisions of state and federal law.

     6.  Expenses.  The expenses  connected  with the Company shall be allocable
between the Company and the Investment Manager as follows:

         (a) The Investment  Manager shall  furnish,  at its expense and without
cost to the Company,  the services of a  President,  Secretary,  and one or more
Vice Presidents of the Company,  to the extent that such additional officers may
be required by the Company for the proper conduct of its affairs.

         (b) The Investment  Manager shall further maintain,  at its expense and
without  cost to the  Company,  a  trading  function  in order to carry  out its
obligations under  subparagraphs (e), (f) and (g) of paragraph 2 hereof to place
orders for the purchase and sale of portfolio securities for the Fund.

         (c) Nothing in  subparagraph  (a) hereof  shall be construed to require
the Investment Manager to bear:

                  (i)  any of the  costs  (including  applicable  office  space,
                  facilities  and  equipment)  of the  services  of a  principal
                  financial  officer of the Company whose normal duties  consist
                  of maintaining the financial accounts and books and records of
                  the Company,  including the reviewing of  calculations  of net
                  asset value and preparing tax returns; or

                  (ii) any of the  costs  (including  applicable  office  space,
                  facilities  and  equipment)  of  the  services  of  any of the
                  personnel  operating  under the  direction  of such  principal
                  financial officer.

         Notwithstanding  the  obligation  of the Company to bear the expense of
the functions  referred to in clauses (i) and (ii) of this subparagraph (c), the
Investment Manager may pay the salaries,  including any applicable employment or
payroll taxes and other salary costs,  of the  principal  financial  officer and
other personnel carrying out such functions, and the Company shall reimburse the
Investment Manager therefor upon proper accounting.

         (d) All of the ordinary business expenses incurred in the operations of
the Company and the offering of its shares shall be borne by the Company  unless
specifically provided otherwise in this paragraph 6. These expenses include, but
are not  limited  to:  (i)  brokerage  commissions,  legal,  auditing,  taxes or
governmental  fees;  (ii)  the  cost  of  preparing  share  certificates;  (iii)
custodian,  depository,  transfer and  shareholder  service  agent  costs;  (iv)
expenses of issue,  sale,  redemption and repurchase of shares;  (v) expenses of
registering and qualifying shares for sale; (vi) insurance  premiums on property
or personnel  (including  officers and  directors if  available)  of the Company
which inure to the Company's  benefit;  (vii) expenses  relating to director and
shareholder meetings;  (viii) the cost of preparing and distributing reports and
notices  to  shareholders;  (ix) the fees and  other  expenses  incurred  by the
Company in connection with membership in investment company  organizations;  and
(x) and the cost of printing copies of prospectuses and statements of additional
information, as well as any supplements thereto, distributed to shareholders.

7.  Delegation  of  Responsibilities.  Upon the  request of the  Directors,  the
Investment  Manager may perform  services on behalf of the Company which are not
required by this  Agreement.  Such  services  will be performed on behalf of the
Company and the  Investment  Manager's  cost in rendering  such  services may be
billed  monthly  to  the  Company,  subject  to  examination  by  the  Company's
independent accountants.  Payment or assumption by the Investment Manager of any
Company  expense  that the  Investment  Manager is not required to pay or assume
under this  Agreement  shall not  relieve the  Investment  Manager of any of its
obligations to the Company nor obligate the Investment  Manager to pay or assume
any similar Company expense on any subsequent occasion.

8. Engagement of Sub-Advisers  and  Broker-Dealers.  The Investment  Manager may
engage,   subject  to  approval  of  the  Directors  and  where  required,   the
shareholders of the Fund, a sub-adviser to provide advisory services in relation
to the Fund.  Under such  sub-advisory  agreement,  the  Investment  Manager may
delegate to the sub-adviser the duties  outlined in  subparagraphs  (e), (f) and
(g) of paragraph 2 hereof.

9.  Compensation.   The  Company  shall  pay  the  Investment  Manager  in  full
compensation for services rendered hereunder an annual investment  advisory fee.
The fee shall be payable  monthly in  arrears,  based on the  average  daily net
assets of the Fund for each month,  at the annual rate set forth in Exhibit A to
this Agreement.

10. Non-Exclusivity.  The services of the Investment Manager to the Fund are not
to be deemed to be exclusive, and the Investment Manager shall be free to render
investment  advisory and corporate  administrative  or other  services to others
(including other investment companies) and to engage in other activities.  It is
understood and agreed that officers or directors of the  Investment  Manager may
serve as officers or directors of the Company, and that officers or directors of
the Company may serve as officers or directors of the Investment  Manager to the
extent  permitted by law; and that the officers and directors of the  Investment
Manager are not prohibited from engaging in any other business  activity or from
rendering services to any other person, or from serving as partners, officers or
directors  of  any  other  firm  or  corporation,   including  other  investment
companies.

11. Term and Approval.  This Agreement shall become effective on January 2, 1998
and by shall continue in force and effect from year to year,  provided that such
continuance is specifically approved at least annually by:

         (a) the  Directors or the vote of a majority of the Fund's  outstanding
voting securities (as defined in Section 2(a)(42) of the ICA); and

         (b) the  affirmative  vote of a majority of the  Directors  who are not
parties to this  Agreement or  interested  persons of a party to this  Agreement
(other  than as  Company  directors),  by  votes  cast in  person  at a  meeting
specifically called for such purpose.

12.  Termination.  This  Agreement  may be  terminated  at any time  without the
payment of any  penalty  or  prejudice  to the  completion  of any  transactions
already  initiated on behalf of the Fund, by vote of the Directors or by vote of
a majority of the Fund's  outstanding  voting  securities,  or by the Investment
Manager,  on sixty  (60) days'  written  notice to the other  party.  The notice
provided for herein may be waived by either party. This Agreement  automatically
terminates in the event of its "assignment," as such term is defined in the ICA.

13.  Liability  of  Investment  Manager and  Indemnification.  In the absence of
willful  misfeasance,  bad faith,  gross  negligence  or reckless  disregard  of
obligations or duties hereunder on the part of the Investment  Manager or any of
its officers,  directors or  employees,  it shall not be subject to liability to
the  Company or to any  shareholder  of the Fund for any act or  omission in the
course of, or connected  with,  rendering  services  hereunder or for any losses
that may be sustained in the purchase, holding or sale of any security.

14.  Liability  of the  Directors  and  Shareholders.  A copy of the Articles of
Incorporation  of the  Company  is on file  with the  Secretary  of the State of
Maryland,  and notice is hereby given that this instrument is executed on behalf
of the Directors as directors and not  individually  and that the obligations of
this  instrument  are not  binding  upon any of the  Directors  or  shareholders
individually  but are binding  only upon the assets and property of the Company.
Federal and state laws impose  responsibilities  under certain  circumstances on
persons who act in good faith,  and  therefore,  nothing herein shall in any way
constitute  a waiver  of  limitation  of any  rights  which the  Company  or the
Investment Manager may have under applicable law.

15. Notices. Any notices under this Agreement shall be in writing, addressed and
delivered  or mailed  postage  paid to the other  party at such  address as such
other party may designate for the receipt of such notice.  Until further notice,
it is agreed that the address of the Company and the Investment Manager shall be
One Corporate Drive, Shelton, Connecticut 06484.

16. Questions of  Interpretation.  Any question of interpretation of any term or
provision of this Agreement having a counterpart in or otherwise  derived from a
term or  provision  of the ICA,  shall be resolved by  reference to such term or
provision  of the ICA and to  interpretations  thereof,  if any,  by the  United
States courts or, in the absence of any controlling  decision of any such court,
by rules, regulations or orders of the Securities and Exchange Commission issued
pursuant to the ICA. In addition,  where the effect of a requirement of the ICA,
reflected in any provision of this Agreement,  is released by rules,  regulation
or order of the Securities  and Exchange  Commission,  such  provision  shall be
deemed to incorporate the effect of such rule, regulation or order.

         IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Agreement to be
executed in  duplicate  by their  respective  officers on the day and year first
above written.


                                     AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.


Attest:                              By: ______________________________________
                                         Gordon C. Boronow
___________________________________      Vice President



                                     AMERICAN SKANDIA INVESTMENT
                                     SERVICES, INCORPORATED


Attest:                              By:_______________________________________
                                        Thomas M. Mazzaferro
___________________________________     President & Chief Financial Officer

<PAGE>


                      American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
                   ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund
                         Investment Management Agreement

                                    EXHIBIT A




         An annual rate of 1.10% of the average daily net assets of the Fund.








                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
                         INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT

THIS  AGREEMENT  is made this 2nd day of January,  1998 by and between  American
Skandia  Advisor  Funds,  Inc.,  a Maryland  corporation  (the  "Company"),  and
American Skandia Investment Services,  Incorporated,  a Connecticut  corporation
(the "Investment Manager").

                               W I T N E S S E T H

WHEREAS, the Company is registered as an open-end management  investment company
under the Investment  Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "ICA"), and the rules
and regulations promulgated thereunder; and

WHEREAS,  the Investment  Manager is an investment  adviser registered under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the "Advisers Act"); and

WHEREAS,  the  Company  and the  Investment  Manager  desire  to  enter  into an
agreement to provide for the  management of the assets of the Lord Abbett Growth
and Income Fund (the "Fund") on the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth.

NOW,  THEREFORE,  in  consideration of the mutual covenants herein contained and
other  good  and  valuable   consideration,   the  receipt   whereof  is  hereby
acknowledged, the parties hereto agree as follows:

1. Management.  The Investment  Manager shall act as investment  manager for the
Fund and shall, in such capacity,  manage the investment operations of the Fund,
including  the  purchase,  retention,  disposition  and  lending of  securities,
subject at all times to the  policies  and control of the Board of  Directors of
the Company (the  "Directors").  The Investment  Manager shall give the Fund the
benefit of its best judgments,  efforts and facilities in rendering its services
as investment manager.

     2. Duties of  Investment  Manager.  In carrying  out its  obligation  under
paragraph 1 hereof, the Investment Manager shall:

         (a)  supervise and manage all aspects of the Fund's operations:

         (b) provide the Fund or obtain for it, and thereafter  supervise,  such
executive,  administrative,  clerical and shareholder  servicing services as are
deemed advisable by the Directors;

         (c) arrange, but not pay for, the periodic updating of prospectuses and
supplements  thereto,  proxy  material,  tax  returns,  reports  to  the  Fund's
shareholders,   reports  to  and  filings  with  the   Securities  and  Exchange
Commission,   state  Blue  Sky  authorities  and  other  applicable   regulatory
authorities;

         (d) provide to the  Directors  on a regular  basis,  written  financial
reports and analyses on the Fund's securities transactions and the operations of
comparable investment companies;

         (e) determine what issuers and  securities  shall be represented in the
Fund's portfolio and regularly report them in writing to the Directors;

         (f) formulate and implement  continuing  programs for the purchases and
sales of the securities of such issuers and regularly  report in writing thereon
to the Directors; and

         (g)  take,  on  behalf of the Fund,  all  actions  which  appear to the
Company  necessary  to carry into effect such  purchase  and sale  programs  and
supervisory  functions  as  aforesaid,  including  the placing of orders for the
purchase and sale of portfolio securities.

3.  Broker-Dealer  Relationships.  The  Investment  Manager is  responsible  for
decisions to buy and sell securities for the Fund,  broker-dealer selection, and
negotiation of the Fund's brokerage  commission  rates.  The Investment  Manager
shall  determine the  securities to be purchased or sold by the Fund pursuant to
its  determinations  with or  through  such  persons,  brokers  or  dealers,  in
conformity  with the  policy  with  respect  to  brokerage  as set  forth in the
Company's  Prospectus and Statement of Additional  Information as in effect from
time to time (together, the "Registration  Statement"),  or as the Directors may
determine  from  time to  time.  Generally,  the  Investment  Manager's  primary
consideration in placing Fund securities  transactions with  broker-dealers  for
execution will be to obtain, and maintain the availability of, best execution at
the best available price. The Investment Manager may consider sale of the shares
of  the  Fund  in  allocating  Fund  securities  transactions,  subject  to  the
requirements of best net price available and most favorable execution.

         Consistent with this policy, the Investment Manager, in allocating Fund
securities  transactions,  will take all relevant  factors  into  consideration,
including,  but not  limited  to: the best  price  available;  the  reliability,
integrity  and  financial  condition  of  the  broker-dealer;  the  size  of and
difficulty in executing the order; and the value of the expected contribution of
the  broker-dealer  to the  investment  performance  of the Fund on a continuing
basis.  Subject to such policies and  procedures as the Directors may determine,
the Investment  Manager shall have discretion to effect investment  transactions
for the Fund through broker-dealers  (including, to the extent permissible under
applicable law, broker-dealers affiliated with the Investment Manager) qualified
to obtain best  execution  of such  transactions  who provide  brokerage  and/or
research  services,  as such  services  are  defined  in  section  28(e)  of the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "1934 Act"),  and to cause the
Fund to pay any such  broker-dealers  an amount of  commission  for  effecting a
portfolio  investment  transaction in excess of the amount of commission another
broker-dealer  would  have  charged  for  effecting  that  transaction,  if  the
Investment  Manager  determines  in good faith that such amount of commission is
reasonable  in  relation  to the value of the  brokerage  or  research  services
provided  by such  broker-dealer,  viewed  in terms of  either  that  particular
investment transaction or the Investment Manager's overall responsibilities with
respect  to the Fund and  other  accounts  as to which  the  Investment  Manager
exercises investment  discretion (as such term is defined in section 3(a)(35) of
the 1934 Act).  Allocation of orders placed by the Investment  Manager on behalf
of the Fund to such  broker-dealers  shall be in such amounts and proportions as
the  Investment  Manager shall  determine in good faith in  conformity  with its
responsibilities  under applicable  laws, rules and regulations.  The Investment
Manager will report on such allocations to the Directors  regularly as requested
by the Directors,  indicating the  broker-dealers  to whom such allocations have
been made and the basis therefor.

4. Control by the Directors. Any investment program undertaken by the Investment
Manager pursuant to this Agreement,  as well as any other activities  undertaken
by the Investment Manager on behalf of the Company pursuant hereto, shall at all
times be subject to any directives of the Directors.

     5. Compliance with Applicable Requirements. In carrying out its obligations
under this Agreement, the Investment Manager shall at all times conform to:

     (a) all applicable provisions of the ICA and the Advisers Act and any rules
and regulations adopted thereunder; and

         (b)  the  provisions  of  the  Registration  Statement,  including  the
investment objectives,  policies and restrictions,  and permissible  investments
specified therein; and

     (c) the  provisions  of the Articles of  Incorporation  of the Company,  as
amended; and

         (d)  the provisions of the By-laws of the Company, as amended; and

         (e) any other applicable provisions of state and federal law.

     6.  Expenses.  The expenses  connected  with the Company shall be allocable
between the Company and the Investment Manager as follows:

         (a) The Investment  Manager shall  furnish,  at its expense and without
cost to the Company,  the services of a  President,  Secretary,  and one or more
Vice Presidents of the Company,  to the extent that such additional officers may
be required by the Company for the proper conduct of its affairs.

         (b) The Investment  Manager shall further maintain,  at its expense and
without  cost to the  Company,  a  trading  function  in order to carry  out its
obligations under  subparagraphs (e), (f) and (g) of paragraph 2 hereof to place
orders for the purchase and sale of portfolio securities for the Fund.

         (c) Nothing in  subparagraph  (a) hereof  shall be construed to require
the Investment Manager to bear:

                  (i)  any of the  costs  (including  applicable  office  space,
                  facilities  and  equipment)  of the  services  of a  principal
                  financial  officer of the Company whose normal duties  consist
                  of maintaining the financial accounts and books and records of
                  the Company,  including the reviewing of  calculations  of net
                  asset value and preparing tax returns; or

                  (ii) any of the  costs  (including  applicable  office  space,
                  facilities  and  equipment)  of  the  services  of  any of the
                  personnel  operating  under the  direction  of such  principal
                  financial officer.

         Notwithstanding  the  obligation  of the Company to bear the expense of
the functions  referred to in clauses (i) and (ii) of this subparagraph (c), the
Investment Manager may pay the salaries,  including any applicable employment or
payroll taxes and other salary costs,  of the  principal  financial  officer and
other personnel carrying out such functions, and the Company shall reimburse the
Investment Manager therefor upon proper accounting.

         (d) All of the ordinary business expenses incurred in the operations of
the Company and the offering of its shares shall be borne by the Company  unless
specifically provided otherwise in this paragraph 6. These expenses include, but
are not  limited  to:  (i)  brokerage  commissions,  legal,  auditing,  taxes or
governmental  fees;  (ii)  the  cost  of  preparing  share  certificates;  (iii)
custodian,  depository,  transfer and  shareholder  service  agent  costs;  (iv)
expenses of issue,  sale,  redemption and repurchase of shares;  (v) expenses of
registering and qualifying shares for sale; (vi) insurance  premiums on property
or personnel  (including  officers and  directors if  available)  of the Company
which inure to the Company's  benefit;  (vii) expenses  relating to director and
shareholder meetings;  (viii) the cost of preparing and distributing reports and
notices  to  shareholders;  (ix) the fees and  other  expenses  incurred  by the
Company in connection with membership in investment company  organizations;  and
(x) and the cost of printing copies of prospectuses and statements of additional
information, as well as any supplements thereto, distributed to shareholders.

7.  Delegation  of  Responsibilities.  Upon the  request of the  Directors,  the
Investment  Manager may perform  services on behalf of the Company which are not
required by this  Agreement.  Such  services  will be performed on behalf of the
Company and the  Investment  Manager's  cost in rendering  such  services may be
billed  monthly  to  the  Company,  subject  to  examination  by  the  Company's
independent accountants.  Payment or assumption by the Investment Manager of any
Company  expense  that the  Investment  Manager is not required to pay or assume
under this  Agreement  shall not  relieve the  Investment  Manager of any of its
obligations to the Company nor obligate the Investment  Manager to pay or assume
any similar Company expense on any subsequent occasion.

8. Engagement of Sub-Advisers  and  Broker-Dealers.  The Investment  Manager may
engage,   subject  to  approval  of  the  Directors  and  where  required,   the
shareholders of the Fund, a sub-adviser to provide advisory services in relation
to the Fund.  Under such  sub-advisory  agreement,  the  Investment  Manager may
delegate to the sub-adviser the duties  outlined in  subparagraphs  (e), (f) and
(g) of paragraph 2 hereof.

9.  Compensation.   The  Company  shall  pay  the  Investment  Manager  in  full
compensation for services rendered hereunder an annual investment  advisory fee.
The fee shall be payable  monthly in  arrears,  based on the  average  daily net
assets of the Fund for each month,  at the annual rate set forth in Exhibit A to
this Agreement.

10. Non-Exclusivity.  The services of the Investment Manager to the Fund are not
to be deemed to be exclusive, and the Investment Manager shall be free to render
investment  advisory and corporate  administrative  or other  services to others
(including other investment companies) and to engage in other activities.  It is
understood and agreed that officers or directors of the  Investment  Manager may
serve as officers or directors of the Company, and that officers or directors of
the Company may serve as officers or directors of the Investment  Manager to the
extent  permitted by law; and that the officers and directors of the  Investment
Manager are not prohibited from engaging in any other business  activity or from
rendering services to any other person, or from serving as partners, officers or
directors  of  any  other  firm  or  corporation,   including  other  investment
companies.

11. Term and Approval.  This Agreement shall become effective on January 2, 1998
and by shall continue in force and effect from year to year,  provided that such
continuance is specifically approved at least annually by:

         (a) the  Directors or the vote of a majority of the Fund's  outstanding
voting securities (as defined in Section 2(a)(42) of the ICA); and

         (b) the  affirmative  vote of a majority of the  Directors  who are not
parties to this  Agreement or  interested  persons of a party to this  Agreement
(other  than as  Company  directors),  by  votes  cast in  person  at a  meeting
specifically called for such purpose.

12.  Termination.  This  Agreement  may be  terminated  at any time  without the
payment of any  penalty  or  prejudice  to the  completion  of any  transactions
already  initiated on behalf of the Fund, by vote of the Directors or by vote of
a majority of the Fund's  outstanding  voting  securities,  or by the Investment
Manager,  on sixty  (60) days'  written  notice to the other  party.  The notice
provided for herein may be waived by either party. This Agreement  automatically
terminates in the event of its "assignment," as such term is defined in the ICA.

13.  Liability  of  Investment  Manager and  Indemnification.  In the absence of
willful  misfeasance,  bad faith,  gross  negligence  or reckless  disregard  of
obligations or duties hereunder on the part of the Investment  Manager or any of
its officers,  directors or  employees,  it shall not be subject to liability to
the  Company or to any  shareholder  of the Fund for any act or  omission in the
course of, or connected  with,  rendering  services  hereunder or for any losses
that may be sustained in the purchase, holding or sale of any security.

14.  Liability  of the  Directors  and  Shareholders.  A copy of the Articles of
Incorporation  of the  Company  is on file  with the  Secretary  of the State of
Maryland,  and notice is hereby given that this instrument is executed on behalf
of the Directors as directors and not  individually  and that the obligations of
this  instrument  are not  binding  upon any of the  Directors  or  shareholders
individually  but are binding  only upon the assets and property of the Company.
Federal and state laws impose  responsibilities  under certain  circumstances on
persons who act in good faith,  and  therefore,  nothing herein shall in any way
constitute  a waiver  of  limitation  of any  rights  which the  Company  or the
Investment Manager may have under applicable law.

15. Notices. Any notices under this Agreement shall be in writing, addressed and
delivered  or mailed  postage  paid to the other  party at such  address as such
other party may designate for the receipt of such notice.  Until further notice,
it is agreed that the address of the Company and the Investment Manager shall be
One Corporate Drive, Shelton, Connecticut 06484.

16. Questions of  Interpretation.  Any question of interpretation of any term or
provision of this Agreement having a counterpart in or otherwise  derived from a
term or  provision  of the ICA,  shall be resolved by  reference to such term or
provision  of the ICA and to  interpretations  thereof,  if any,  by the  United
States courts or, in the absence of any controlling  decision of any such court,
by rules, regulations or orders of the Securities and Exchange Commission issued
pursuant to the ICA. In addition,  where the effect of a requirement of the ICA,
reflected in any provision of this Agreement,  is released by rules,  regulation
or order of the Securities  and Exchange  Commission,  such  provision  shall be
deemed to incorporate the effect of such rule, regulation or order.

         IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Agreement to be
executed in  duplicate  by their  respective  officers on the day and year first
above written.


                                  AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.


Attest:                           By: ________________________________________
                                      Gordon C. Boronow
___________________________________   Vice President



                                   AMERICAN SKANDIA INVESTMENT
                                   SERVICES, INCORPORATED


Attest:                            By: ________________________________________
                                       Thomas M. Mazzaferro
___________________________________    President & Chief Financial Officer
<PAGE>

                      American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
                     ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund
                         Investment Management Agreement

                                    EXHIBIT A




         An annual rate of 1.00% of the average daily net assets of the Fund.






                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
                             SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENT


THIS AGREEMENT is between American  Skandia  Investment  Services,  Incorporated
(the "Investment Manager") and Janus Capital Corporation (the "Sub-Adviser").

                               W I T N E S S E T H

WHEREAS,  American  Skandia  Advisor Funds,  Inc. (the  "Company") is a Maryland
corporation  organized with one or more series of shares and is registered as an
open-end management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940,
as amended (the "ICA"); and

WHEREAS,  the  Investment  Manager  and the  Sub-Adviser  each is an  investment
adviser  registered  under the Investment  Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the
"Advisers Act"); and

WHEREAS,  the Board of Directors of the Company (the  "Directors")  have engaged
the Investment  Manager to act as investment manager for the ASAF Janus Overseas
Growth  Fund  (the  "Fund"),  one  series of the  Company,  under the terms of a
management  agreement,  dated January 2, 1998, with the Company (the "Management
Agreement"); and

WHEREAS,  the Investment Manager,  acting pursuant to the Management  Agreement,
wishes to engage the Sub-Adviser, and the Directors have approved the engagement
of the Sub-Adviser,  to provide investment advice and other investment  services
set forth below.

NOW, THEREFORE, the Investment Manager and the Sub-Adviser agree as follows:

1.  Investment  Services.   The  Sub-Adviser  will  formulate  and  implement  a
continuous  investment  program  for  the  Fund  conforming  to  the  investment
objective,  investment policies and restrictions of the Fund as set forth in the
Prospectus  and Statement of Additional  Information of the Company as in effect
from time to time  (together,  the  "Registration  Statement"),  the Articles of
Incorporation and By-laws of the Company, and any investment guidelines or other
instructions  received by the Sub-Adviser in writing from the Investment Manager
from time to time. Any amendments to the foregoing  documents will not be deemed
effective  with  respect  to the  Sub-Adviser  until the  Sub-Adviser's  receipt
thereof.  The  appropriate  officers and  employees of the  Sub-Adviser  will be
available to consult with the Investment Manager,  the Company and the Directors
at reasonable  times and upon reasonable  notice  concerning the business of the
Company,  including valuations of securities which are not registered for public
sale,  not traded on any securities  market or otherwise may be deemed  illiquid
for purposes of the ICA;  provided it is understood  that the Sub-Adviser is not
responsible for daily pricing of the Fund's assets.

         Subject to the supervision and control of the Investment Manager, which
in  turn is  subject  to the  supervision  and  control  of the  Directors,  the
Sub-Adviser in its discretion  will determine  which issuers and securities will
be purchased,  held,  sold or exchanged by the Fund or otherwise  represented in
the Fund's investment portfolio from time to time and, subject to the provisions
of paragraph 3 of this Agreement,  will place orders with and give  instructions
to  brokers,  dealers  and  others  for all such  transactions  and  cause  such
transactions  to be  executed.  Custody  of the  Fund  will be  maintained  by a
custodian bank (the  "Custodian") and the Investment  Manager will authorize the
Custodian to honor  orders and  instructions  by  employees  of the  Sub-Adviser
designated by the Sub-Adviser to settle  transactions in respect of the Fund. No
assets may be withdrawn from the Fund other than for settlement of  transactions
on behalf of the Fund  except  upon the  written  authorization  of  appropriate
officers  of the  Company  who  shall  have  been  certified  as such by  proper
authorities of the Company prior to the withdrawal.

         The   Sub-Adviser   will  not  be  responsible  for  the  provision  of
administrative,  bookkeeping  or  accounting  services  to the  Fund  except  as
specifically  provided herein,  as required by the ICA or the Advisers Act or as
may be necessary for the  Sub-Adviser to supply to the Investment  Manager,  the
Fund or the Fund's  shareholders the information  required to be provided by the
Sub-Adviser hereunder. Any records maintained hereunder shall be the property of
the Fund and surrendered promptly upon request.

         In furnishing the services under this Agreement,  the Sub-Adviser  will
comply  with and use its best  efforts  to  enable  the Fund to  conform  to the
requirements of: (i) the ICA and the regulations  promulgated  thereunder;  (ii)
Subchapter  M of the  Internal  Revenue  Code  and the  regulations  promulgated
thereunder;  (iii) other applicable provisions of state or federal law; (iv) the
Articles  of  Incorporation  and  By-laws  of  the  Company;  (v)  policies  and
determinations  of the  Company  and  the  Investment  Manager  provided  to the
Sub-Adviser in writing;  (vi) the  fundamental  and  non-fundamental  investment
policies and restrictions applicable to the Fund, as set out in the Registration
Statement  of  the  Company  in  effect,  or as  such  investment  policies  and
restrictions from time to time may be amended by the Fund's  shareholders or the
Directors and communicated to the Sub-Adviser in writing; (vii) the Registration
Statement;  and (viii) investment  guidelines or other instructions  received in
writing  from  the  Investment  Manager.   Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  the
Sub-Adviser shall have no responsibility to monitor  compliance with limitations
or  restrictions  for  which  information  from the  Investment  Manager  or its
authorized  agents is required to enable the  Sub-Adviser to monitor  compliance
with such limitations or restrictions unless such information is provided to the
Sub-adviser  in  writing.  The  Sub-Adviser  shall  supervise  and  monitor  the
activities of its  representatives,  personnel and agents in connection with the
investment program of the Fund.

         Nothing in this  Agreement  shall be implied to prevent the  Investment
Manager from engaging other  sub-advisers to provide investment advice and other
services  to the Fund or to series or  portfolios  of the  Company for which the
Sub-Adviser does not provide such services, or to prevent the Investment Manager
from providing such services itself in relation to the Fund or such other series
or portfolios.

         The Sub-Adviser  shall be responsible for the preparation and filing of
Schedule  13-G and Form 13-F  reflecting  the Fund's  securities  holdings.  The
Sub-Adviser  shall not be responsible for the preparation or filing of any other
reports required of the Fund by any governmental or regulatory agency, except as
expressly agreed to in writing.

2. Investment Advisory Facilities. The Sub-Adviser, at its expense, will furnish
all necessary investment facilities,  including salaries of personnel,  required
for it to execute its duties hereunder.

3.  Execution  of Fund  Transactions.  In  connection  with the  investment  and
reinvestment  of the assets of the Fund, the  Sub-Adviser is responsible for the
selection of  broker-dealers  to execute purchase and sale  transactions for the
Fund in  conformity  with the  policy  regarding  brokerage  as set forth in the
Registration  Statement, or as the Directors may determine from time to time, as
well as the  negotiation  of  brokerage  commission  rates  with such  executing
broker-dealers.  Generally,  the Sub-Adviser's  primary consideration in placing
Fund  investment  transactions  with  broker-dealers  for  execution  will be to
obtain,  and maintain the  availability of, best execution at the best available
price.

         Consistent   with  this   policy,   the   Sub-Adviser,   in   selecting
broker-dealers  and  negotiating  brokerage  commission  rates,  will  take  all
relevant  factors into  consideration,  including,  but not limited to: the best
price  available;  the  reliability,  integrity and  financial  condition of the
broker-dealer;  the size of and difficulty in executing the order; and the value
of the expected contribution of the broker-dealer to the investment  performance
of the Fund on a continuing  basis.  Subject to such policies and  procedures as
the Directors may determine,  the  Sub-Adviser  shall have  discretion to effect
investment transactions for the Fund through broker-dealers  (including,  to the
extent  permissible  under  applicable law,  broker-dealers  affiliated with the
Sub-Adviser) qualified to obtain best execution of such transactions who provide
brokerage  and/or  research  services,  as such  services are defined in section
28(e) of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "1934 Act"),  and
to cause the Fund to pay any such  broker-dealers  an amount of  commission  for
effecting  a  portfolio  investment  transaction  in  excess  of the  amount  of
commission  another   broker-dealer   would  have  charged  for  effecting  that
transaction,  if the  Sub-Adviser  determines  in good faith that such amount of
commission  is  reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage or research
services  provided  by such  broker-dealer,  viewed  in  terms  of  either  that
particular investment transaction or the Sub-Adviser's overall  responsibilities
with  respect  to the Fund  and  other  accounts  as to  which  the  Sub-Adviser
exercises investment  discretion (as such term is defined in section 3(a)(35) of
the 1934 Act).  Allocation of orders placed by the  Sub-Adviser on behalf of the
Fund to such  broker-dealers  shall be in such  amounts and  proportions  as the
Sub-Adviser   shall   determine   in  good   faith   in   conformity   with  its
responsibilities  under applicable laws, rules and regulations.  The Sub-Adviser
will submit reports on such allocations to the Investment  Manager  regularly as
requested by the Investment  Manager,  in such form as may be mutually agreed to
by the parties hereto,  indicating the  broker-dealers  to whom such allocations
have been made and the basis therefor.

4. Reports by the  Sub-Adviser.  The  Sub-Adviser  shall furnish the  Investment
Manager monthly,  quarterly and annual reports,  in such form as may be mutually
agreed to by the parties hereto,  concerning transactions and performance of the
Fund,  including   information   required  in  the  Registration   Statement  or
information  necessary for the Investment  Manager to review the Fund or discuss
the  management  of it.  The  Sub-Adviser  shall  permit  the books and  records
maintained  with respect to the Fund to be inspected and audited by the Company,
the Investment Manager or their respective agents at all reasonable times during
normal business hours upon reasonable  notice. The Sub-Adviser shall immediately
notify both the  Investment  Manager and the Company of any legal process served
upon it in connection with its activities hereunder, including any legal process
served upon it on behalf of the Investment Manager, the Fund or the Company. The
Sub-Adviser  shall promptly notify the Investment  Manager of any changes in any
information  regarding the Sub-Adviser or the investment program for the Fund as
described in Section 9 of this Agreement.

5.  Compensation  of the  Sub-Adviser.  The  amount of the  compensation  to the
Sub-Adviser is computed at an annual rate.  The fee shall be payable  monthly in
arrears,  based on the average  daily net assets of the Fund for each month,  at
the annual rate set forth in Exhibit A to this Agreement.

         In computing the fee to be paid to the Sub-Adviser, the net asset value
of the Fund shall be valued as set forth in the Registration  Statement. If this
Agreement is terminated,  the payment  described herein shall be prorated to the
date of termination.

         The Investment  Manager and the Sub-Adviser  shall not be considered as
partners or  participants in a joint venture.  The Sub-Adviser  will pay its own
expenses for the services to be provided pursuant to this Agreement and will not
be  obligated  to pay any expenses of the  Investment  Manager,  the Fund or the
Company.  Except as  otherwise  specifically  provided  herein,  the  Investment
Manager,  the Fund and the Company  will not be obligated to pay any expenses of
the Sub-Adviser.

6.  Delivery  of  Documents  to the  Sub-Adviser.  The  Investment  Manager  has
furnished the Sub-Adviser with true,  correct and complete copies of each of the
following documents:

     (a) The Articles of Incorporation of the Company,  as in effect on the date
hereof;

         (b)      The By-laws of the Company, as in effect on the date hereof;

         (c)      The  resolutions of the Directors  approving the engagement of
                  the Sub-Adviser as portfolio manager of the Fund and approving
                  the form of this Agreement;

         (d)      The  resolutions  of the Directors  selecting  the  Investment
                  Manager as  investment  manager to the Fund and  approving the
                  form of the Management Agreement;

         (e)      The Management Agreement;

         (f) The Code of Ethics of the Company and of the Investment Manager, as
in effect on the date hereof; and

         (g) A list of companies the securities of which are not to be bought or
sold for the Fund.

         The Investment  Manager will furnish the Sub-Adviser  from time to time
with copies, properly certified or otherwise authenticated, of all amendments of
or supplements to the  foregoing,  if any. Such  amendments or supplements as to
items (a)  through  (f) above will be  provided  within 30 days of the time such
materials  become  available  to the  Investment  Manager.  Such  amendments  or
supplements  as to item (g) above will be provided not later than the end of the
business day next following the date such amendments or supplements become known
to the Investment  Manager.  Any amendments or supplements to the foregoing will
not be deemed effective with respect to the Sub-Adviser  until the Sub-Adviser's
receipt thereof. The Investment Manager will provide such additional information
as the Sub-Adviser may reasonably  request in connection with the performance of
its duties hereunder.

7.  Delivery  of  Documents  to the  Investment  Manager.  The  Sub-Adviser  has
furnished the Investment  Manager with true, correct and complete copies of each
of the following documents:

     (a) The  Sub-Adviser's  Form ADV as filed with the  Securities and Exchange
Commission as of the date hereof;

         (b)      The Sub-Adviser's most recent balance sheet;

         (c)      Separate lists of persons who the  Sub-Adviser  wishes to have
                  authorized  to  give  written  and/or  oral   instructions  to
                  Custodians of Company assets for the Fund; and

         (d) The Code of  Ethics  of the  Sub-Adviser,  as in effect on the date
hereof.

         The Sub-Adviser  will furnish the Investment  Manager from time to time
with copies, properly certified or otherwise authenticated, of all amendments of
or supplements to the foregoing,  if any. Such amendments or supplements will be
provided  within  30 days of the time such  materials  become  available  to the
Sub-Adviser.  Any  amendments or supplements to the foregoing will not be deemed
effective with respect to the Investment Manager until the Investment  Manager's
receipt  thereof.  The Sub-Adviser  will provide  additional  information as the
Investment  Manager may reasonably  request in connection with the Sub-Adviser's
performance of its duties under this Agreement.

8. Confidential Treatment. The parties hereto understand that any information or
recommendation supplied by the Sub-Adviser in connection with the performance of
its obligations  hereunder is to be regarded as confidential and for use only by
the Investment  Manager,  the Company or such persons the Investment Manager may
designate in  connection  with the Fund.  The parties also  understand  that any
information  supplied to the  Sub-Adviser in connection  with the performance of
its  obligations  hereunder,  particularly,  but not  limited  to,  any  list of
securities  which may not be bought or sold for the Fund,  is to be  regarded as
confidential  and for  use  only  by the  Sub-Adviser  in  connection  with  its
obligation to provide investment advice and other services to the Fund.

9.  Representations of the Parties.  Each party hereto hereby further represents
and warrants to the other that:  (i) it is registered  as an investment  adviser
under the Advisers Act and is registered  or licensed as an  investment  adviser
under the laws of all jurisdictions in which its activities  require it to be so
registered  or  licensed;  and (ii) it will use its  reasonable  best efforts to
maintain  each such  registration  or license in effect at all times  during the
term of this Agreement; and (iii) it will promptly notify the other if it ceases
to be so registered,  if its registration is suspended for any reason,  or if it
is notified by any regulatory  organization  or court of competent  jurisdiction
that it should  show  cause why its  registration  should  not be  suspended  or
terminated;  and (iv) it is duly  authorized to enter into this Agreement and to
perform its obligations hereunder.

         The Sub-Adviser  further  represents that it has adopted a written Code
of Ethics in compliance with Rule 17j-1(b) of the ICA. The Sub-Adviser  shall be
subject  to such Code of Ethics  and shall not be  subject  to any other Code of
Ethics,  including the Investment Manager's Code of Ethics,  unless specifically
adopted by the  Sub-Adviser.  The  Investment  Manager  further  represents  and
warrants to the  Sub-Adviser  that (i) the appointment of the Sub-Adviser by the
Investment  Manager  has been  duly  authorized  and (ii) it has  acted and will
continue to act in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby, and the
transactions  contemplated hereby are, in conformity with the ICA, the Company's
governing documents and other applicable law.

10.  Liability.  In  the  absence  of  willful  misfeasance,  bad  faith,  gross
negligence or reckless disregard for its obligations hereunder,  the Sub-Adviser
shall not be liable to the Company,  the Fund,  the Fund's  shareholders  or the
Investment Manager for any act or omission resulting in any loss suffered by the
Company,  the  Fund,  the  Fund's  shareholders  or the  Investment  Manager  in
connection  with any service to be  provided  herein.  The  Federal  laws impose
responsibilities  under certain  circumstances on persons who act in good faith,
and therefore, nothing herein shall in any way constitute a waiver or limitation
of any rights which the  Company,  the Fund or the  Investment  Manager may have
under applicable law.

11. Other Activities of the Sub-Adviser.  The Investment Manager agrees that the
Sub-Adviser  and any of its partners or employees,  and persons  affiliated with
the  Sub-Adviser  or with any such  partner or employee,  may render  investment
management or advisory  services to other investors and  institutions,  and that
such investors and institutions may own,  purchase or sell,  securities or other
interests in property that are the same as,  similar to, or different from those
which are selected for purchase,  holding or sale for the Fund.  The  Investment
Manager further  acknowledges that the Sub-Adviser shall be in all respects free
to take action with respect to investments  in securities or other  interests in
property that are the same as,  similar to, or different from those selected for
purchase,  holding or sale for the Fund. The Investment Manager understands that
the Sub-Adviser shall not favor or disfavor any of the Sub-Adviser's  clients or
class of clients in the allocation of investment  opportunities,  so that to the
extent practical,  such  opportunities will be allocated among the Sub-Adviser's
clients  over a period of time on a fair and  equitable  basis.  Nothing in this
Agreement  shall impose upon the  Sub-Adviser  any obligation (i) to purchase or
sell,  or recommend  for purchase or sale,  for the Fund any security  which the
Sub-Adviser, its partners,  affiliates or employees may purchase or sell for the
Sub-Adviser or such partner's, affiliate's or employee's own accounts or for the
account of any other client of the Sub-Adviser,  advisory or otherwise,  or (ii)
to abstain from the purchase or sale of any security for the Sub-Adviser's other
clients,  advisory or otherwise,  which the Investment Manager has placed on the
list provided pursuant to paragraph 6(g) of this Agreement.

12.  Continuance and Termination.  This Agreement shall remain in full force and
effect for one year from the date hereof, and is renewable  annually  thereafter
by  specific  approval  of  the  Directors  or by  vote  of a  majority  of  the
outstanding voting securities of the Fund. Any such renewal shall be approved by
the vote of a majority of the Directors who are not interested persons under the
ICA,  cast in person  at a  meeting  called  for the  purpose  of voting on such
renewal.  This  Agreement may be terminated  without  penalty at any time by the
Investment  Manager or the  Sub-Adviser  upon 60 days written  notice,  and will
automatically  terminate in the event of (i) its "assignment" by either party to
this Agreement,  as such term is defined in the ICA,  subject to such exemptions
as may be granted by the Securities and Exchange Commission by rule,  regulation
or order,  or (ii) upon  termination of the Management  Agreement,  provided the
Sub-Adviser has received prior written notice thereof.

13.  Notification.  The Sub-Adviser will notify the Investment  Manager within a
reasonable  time  of  any  change  in the  personnel  of  the  Sub-Adviser  with
responsibility  for making  investment  decisions  in  relation to the Fund (the
"Portfolio  Manager(s)") or who have been authorized to give instructions to the
Custodian.  The Sub-adviser  shall be responsible  for reasonable  out-of-pocket
costs and expenses incurred by the Investment  Manager,  the Fund or the Company
to amend or supplement the Company's prospectus to reflect a change in Portfolio
Manager(s) or otherwise to comply with the ICA, the  Securities  Act of 1933, as
amended  (the  "1933  Act")  or any  other  applicable  statute,  law,  rule  or
regulation, as a result of such change; provided,  however, that the Sub-Adviser
shall not be  responsible  for such  costs  and  expenses  where  the  change in
Portfolio  Manager(s)  reflects the  termination  of employment of the Portfolio
Manager(s) with the Sub-Adviser and its affiliates or is the result of a request
by  the  Investment  Manager  or  is  due  to  other  circumstances  beyond  the
Sub-Adviser's control.

         Any notice, instruction or other communication required or contemplated
by this  Agreement  shall  be in  writing.  All  such  communications  shall  be
addressed to the recipient at the address set forth below,  provided that either
party may, by notice,  designate a different  recipient  and/or address for such
party.

Investment Manager:        American Skandia Investment Services, Incorporated
                           One Corporate Drive
                           Shelton, Connecticut 06484
                           Attention:  Thomas M. Mazzaferro
                           President & Chief Operating Officer

Sub-Adviser:               Janus Capital Corporation
                           100 Fillmore Street
                           Denver, CO 80206-4923
                           Attention: General Counsel

Company:          American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
                           One Corporate Drive
                           Shelton, Connecticut 06484
                           Attention: Eric C. Freed, Esq.

14.  Indemnification.  The Sub-Adviser agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the
Investment Manager,  any affiliated person within the meaning of Section 2(a)(3)
of the ICA ("affiliated  person") of the Investment  Manager and each person, if
any  who,  within  the  meaning  of  Section  15  of  the  1933  Act,   controls
("controlling  person")  the  Investment  Manager,  against  any and all losses,
claims, damages, liabilities or litigation (including reasonable legal and other
expenses),  to  which  the  Investment  Manager  or such  affiliated  person  or
controlling  person of the Investment  Manager may become subject under the 1933
Act, the ICA, the Advisers Act, under any other statute, law, rule or regulation
at common law or otherwise,  arising out of the  Sub-Adviser's  responsibilities
hereunder  (1) to the extent of and as a result of the willful  misconduct,  bad
faith,  or  gross  negligence  by the  Sub-Adviser,  any  of  the  Sub-Adviser's
employees or  representatives or any affiliate of or any person acting on behalf
of the Sub-Adviser, or (2) as a result of any untrue statement or alleged untrue
statement of a material fact contained in the Registration Statement,  including
any  amendment  thereof or any  supplement  thereto,  or the omission or alleged
omission  to state  therein a material  fact  required  to be stated  therein or
necessary to make the statement  therein not misleading,  if such a statement or
omission was made in reliance  upon and in conformity  with written  information
furnished by the Sub-Adviser to the Investment Manager, the Fund, the Company or
any affiliated person of the Investment Manager, the Fund or the Company or upon
verbal information confirmed by the Sub-Adviser in writing, or (3) to the extent
of, and as a result of, the failure of the  Sub-Adviser to execute,  or cause to
be executed,  portfolio investment transactions according to the requirements of
the ICA; provided,  however,  that in no case is the Sub-Adviser's  indemnity in
favor of the Investment  Manager or any affiliated person or controlling  person
of the Investment Manager deemed to protect such person against any liability to
which  any  such  person  would  otherwise  be  subject  by  reason  of  willful
misconduct, bad faith or gross negligence in the performance of its duties or by
reason of its  reckless  disregard  of its  obligations  and  duties  under this
Agreement.

         The  Investment  Manager  agrees to  indemnify  and hold  harmless  the
Sub-Adviser,  any  affiliated  person of the  Sub-Adviser  and each  controlling
person of the Sub-Adviser,  if any, against any and all losses, claims, damages,
liabilities or litigation  (including  reasonable legal and other expenses),  to
which the  Sub-Adviser or such  affiliated  person or controlling  person of the
Sub-Adviser  may become  subject  under the 1933 Act, the ICA, the Advisers Act,
under any other statute,  law, rule or  regulation,  at common law or otherwise,
arising out of the Investment  Manager's  responsibilities as investment manager
of the Fund (1) to the extent of and as a result of the willful misconduct,  bad
faith,  or gross  negligence by the  Investment  Manager,  any of the Investment
Manager's  employees or representatives or any affiliate of or any person acting
on behalf of the Investment  Manager, or (2) as a result of any untrue statement
or alleged  untrue  statement of a material fact  contained in the  Registration
Statement,  including any  amendment  thereof or any  supplement  thereto or the
omission or alleged  omission to state  therein a material  fact  required to be
stated  therein or necessary to make the statement  therein not  misleading,  if
such a  statement  or  omission  was made  other  than in  reliance  upon and in
conformity  with  written  information  furnished  by  the  Sub-Adviser,  or any
affiliated  person of the  Sub-Adviser  or other  than upon  verbal  information
confirmed by the Sub-Adviser in writing;  provided,  however, that in no case is
the Investment Manager's indemnity in favor of the Sub-Adviser or any affiliated
person or controlling  person of the  Sub-Adviser  deemed to protect such person
against any  liability  to which any such person  would  otherwise be subject by
reason of willful  misconduct,  bad faith or gross negligence in the performance
of its duties or by reason of its  reckless  disregard  of its  obligations  and
duties  under  this  Agreement.  It is  agreed  that  the  Investment  Manager's
indemnification  obligations  under this  Section 14 will extend to expenses and
costs  (including  reasonable  attorneys  fees) incurred by the Sub-Adviser as a
result  of  any  litigation  brought  by the  Investment  Manager  alleging  the
Sub-Adviser's  failure  to  perform  its  obligations  and  duties in the manner
required  under this  Agreement  unless  judgment is rendered for the Investment
Manager.

15.  Conflict of Laws. The provisions of this Agreement  shall be subject to all
applicable statutes, laws, rules and regulations, including, without limitation,
the  applicable  provisions  of the ICA and  rules and  regulations  promulgated
thereunder. To the extent that any provision contained herein conflicts with any
such applicable  provision of law or regulation,  the latter shall control.  The
terms and  provisions of this Agreement  shall be  interpreted  and defined in a
manner  consistent  with the  provisions  and  definitions  of the  ICA.  If any
provision of this Agreement  shall be held or made invalid by a court  decision,
statute,  rule or otherwise,  the remainder of this Agreement  shall continue in
full force and effect and shall not be affected by such invalidity.

16.  Amendments,  Waivers,  etc.  Provisions  of this  Agreement may be changed,
waived,  discharged or terminated only by an instrument in writing signed by the
party against which enforcement of the change, waiver,  discharge or termination
is sought.  This  Agreement  (including  Exhibit A hereto) may be amended at any
time by written mutual consent of the parties,  subject to the  requirements  of
the ICA and rules and regulations promulgated and orders granted thereunder.

     17.  Governing  State  Law.  This  Agreement  is made  under,  and shall be
governed  by and  construed  in  accordance  with,  the  laws  of the  State  of
Connecticut.

18. Severability.  Each provision of this Agreement is intended to be severable.
If any  provision  of this  Agreement  is held to be illegal or made  invalid by
court decision,  statute, rule or otherwise,  such illegality or invalidity will
not affect the validity or enforceability of the remainder of this Agreement.

The effective date of this agreement is January 2, 1998.

FOR THE INVESTMENT MANAGER:             FOR THE SUB-ADVISER:



                                        -----------------------------------
___________________________________     
Thomas M. Mazzaferro
President & Chief Financial Officer


Date:    ____________________________   Date:    ____________________________


Attest:  ____________________________   Attest:  ____________________________



<PAGE>


                      American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
                         ASAF Janus Overseas Growth Fund
                             Sub-Advisory Agreement

                                    EXHIBIT A




         An annual rate of .60% of the  portion of the average  daily net assets
of the Fund less than $100  million;  when the  average  daily net assets of the
Fund equal or exceed $100 million,  an annual rate of .50% of the entire average
daily net assets of the Fund.







                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
                             SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENT


THIS AGREEMENT is between American  Skandia  Investment  Services,  Incorporated
(the  "Investment  Manager")  and  Robertson,   Stephens  &  Company  Investment
Management, L.P. (the "Sub-Adviser").

                               W I T N E S S E T H

WHEREAS,  American  Skandia  Advisor Funds,  Inc. (the  "Company") is a Maryland
corporation  organized with one or more series of shares and is registered as an
open-end management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940,
as amended (the "ICA"); and

WHEREAS,  the  Investment  Manager  and the  Sub-Adviser  each is an  investment
adviser  registered  under the Investment  Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the
"Advisers Act"); and

WHEREAS,  the Board of Directors of the Company (the  "Directors")  have engaged
the  Investment  Manager to act as  investment  manager  for the ASAF  Robertson
Stephens Value + Growth Fund (the "Fund"), one series of the Company,  under the
terms of a management  agreement,  dated January 2, 1998,  with the Company (the
"Management Agreement"); and

WHEREAS,  the Investment Manager,  acting pursuant to the Management  Agreement,
wishes to engage the Sub-Adviser, and the Directors have approved the engagement
of the Sub-Adviser,  to provide investment advice and other investment  services
set forth below.

NOW, THEREFORE, the Investment Manager and the Sub-Adviser agree as follows:

1.  Investment  Services.   The  Sub-Adviser  will  formulate  and  implement  a
continuous  investment  program  for  the  Fund  conforming  to  the  investment
objective,  investment policies and restrictions of the Fund as set forth in the
Prospectus  and Statement of Additional  Information of the Company as in effect
from time to time  (together,  the  "Registration  Statement"),  the Articles of
Incorporation and By-laws of the Company, and any investment guidelines or other
instructions  received by the Sub-Adviser in writing from the Investment Manager
from time to time. Any amendments to the foregoing  documents will not be deemed
effective  with  respect  to the  Sub-Adviser  until the  Sub-Adviser's  receipt
thereof.  The  appropriate  officers and  employees of the  Sub-Adviser  will be
available to consult with the Investment Manager,  the Company and the Directors
at reasonable  times and upon reasonable  notice  concerning the business of the
Company,  including valuations of securities which are not registered for public
sale,  not traded on any securities  market or otherwise may be deemed  illiquid
for purposes of the ICA;  provided it is understood  that the Sub-Adviser is not
responsible for daily pricing of the Fund's assets.

         Subject to the supervision and control of the Investment Manager, which
in  turn is  subject  to the  supervision  and  control  of the  Directors,  the
Sub-Adviser in its discretion will determine which securities will be purchased,
held,  sold or  exchanged  by the Fund or  otherwise  represented  in the Fund's
investment  portfolio  from  time to time  and,  subject  to the  provisions  of
paragraph 3 of this Agreement,  will place orders with and give  instructions to
brokers,   dealers  and  others  for  all  such   transactions  and  cause  such
transactions  to be  executed.  Custody  of the  Fund  will be  maintained  by a
custodian bank (the  "Custodian") and the Investment  Manager will authorize the
Custodian to honor  orders and  instructions  by  employees  of the  Sub-Adviser
designated by the Sub-Adviser to settle  transactions in respect of the Fund. No
assets may be withdrawn from the Fund other than for settlement of  transactions
on behalf of the Fund  except  upon the  written  authorization  of  appropriate
officers  of the  Company  who  shall  have  been  certified  as such by  proper
authorities of the Company prior to the withdrawal.

         The   Sub-Adviser   will  not  be  responsible  for  the  provision  of
administrative,  bookkeeping  or  accounting  services  to the  Fund  except  as
specifically  provided herein,  as required by the ICA or the Advisers Act or as
may be necessary for the  Sub-Adviser to supply to the Investment  Manager,  the
Fund or the Fund's  shareholders the information  required to be provided by the
Sub-Adviser hereunder. Any records maintained hereunder shall be the property of
the Fund and surrendered promptly upon request.

         In furnishing the services under this Agreement,  the Sub-Adviser  will
comply  with and use its best  efforts  to  enable  the Fund to  conform  to the
requirements of: (i) the ICA and the regulations  promulgated  thereunder;  (ii)
Subchapter  M of the  Internal  Revenue  Code  and the  regulations  promulgated
thereunder;  (iii) other applicable provisions of state or federal law; (iv) the
Articles  of  Incorporation  and  By-laws  of  the  Company;  (v)  policies  and
determinations  of the  Company  and  the  Investment  Manager  provided  to the
Sub-Adviser in writing;  (vi) the  fundamental  and  non-fundamental  investment
policies and restrictions applicable to the Fund, as set out in the Registration
Statement  of  the  Company  in  effect,  or as  such  investment  policies  and
restrictions from time to time may be amended by the Fund's  shareholders or the
Directors and communicated to the Sub-Adviser in writing; (vii) the Registration
Statement;  and (viii) investment  guidelines or other instructions  received in
writing  from  the  Investment  Manager.   Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  the
Sub-Adviser shall have no responsibility to monitor  compliance with limitations
or  restrictions  for  which  information  from the  Investment  Manager  or its
authorized  agents is required to enable the  Sub-Adviser to monitor  compliance
with such limitations or restrictions unless such information is provided to the
Sub-adviser  in  writing.  The  Sub-Adviser  shall  supervise  and  monitor  the
activities of its  representatives,  personnel and agents in connection with the
investment program of the Fund.

         Nothing in this  Agreement  shall be implied to prevent the  Investment
Manager from engaging other  sub-advisers to provide investment advice and other
services  to the Fund or to series or  portfolios  of the  Company for which the
Sub-Adviser does not provide such services, or to prevent the Investment Manager
from providing such services itself in relation to the Fund or such other series
or  portfolios.  In the  event  that  the  Investment  Manager  engages  another
sub-adviser to provide  investment advice and/or other services to the Fund, the
Investment Manager agrees to provide the Sub-Adviser with written notice of such
engagement.

         The Sub-Adviser  shall be responsible for the preparation and filing of
Schedule  13-G and Form 13-F  reflecting  the Fund's  securities  holdings.  The
Sub-Adviser  shall not be responsible for the preparation or filing of any other
reports required of the Fund by any governmental or regulatory agency, except as
expressly agreed to in writing.

2. Investment Advisory Facilities. The Sub-Adviser, at its expense, will furnish
all necessary investment facilities,  including salaries of personnel,  required
for it to execute its duties hereunder.

3.  Execution  of Fund  Transactions.  In  connection  with the  investment  and
reinvestment  of the assets of the Fund, the  Sub-Adviser is responsible for the
selection of  broker-dealers  to execute purchase and sale  transactions for the
Fund in  conformity  with the  policy  regarding  brokerage  as set forth in the
Registration  Statement, or as the Directors may determine from time to time, as
well as the  negotiation  of  brokerage  commission  rates  with such  executing
broker-dealers.  Generally,  the Sub-Adviser's  primary consideration in placing
Fund  investment  transactions  with  broker-dealers  for  execution  will be to
obtain,  and maintain the  availability of, best execution at the best available
price.

         Consistent   with  this   policy,   the   Sub-Adviser,   in   selecting
broker-dealers  and  negotiating  brokerage  commission  rates,  will  take  all
relevant  factors into  consideration,  including,  but not limited to: the best
price  available;  the  reliability,  integrity and  financial  condition of the
broker-dealer;  the size of and difficulty in executing the order; and the value
of the expected contribution of the broker-dealer to the investment  performance
of the Fund on a continuing  basis.  Subject to such policies and  procedures as
the Directors may determine,  the  Sub-Adviser  shall have  discretion to effect
investment transactions for the Fund through broker-dealers  (including,  to the
extent  permissible  under  applicable law,  broker-dealers  affiliated with the
Sub-Adviser) qualified to obtain best execution of such transactions who provide
brokerage  and/or  research  services,  as such  services are defined in section
28(e) of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "1934 Act"),  and
to cause the Fund to pay any such  broker-dealers  an amount of  commission  for
effecting  a  portfolio  investment  transaction  in  excess  of the  amount  of
commission  another   broker-dealer   would  have  charged  for  effecting  that
transaction,  if the  Sub-Adviser  determines  in good faith that such amount of
commission  is  reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage or research
services  provided  by such  broker-dealer,  viewed  in  terms  of  either  that
particular investment transaction or the Sub-Adviser's overall  responsibilities
with  respect  to the Fund  and  other  accounts  as to  which  the  Sub-Adviser
exercises investment  discretion (as such term is defined in section 3(a)(35) of
the 1934 Act).  Allocation of orders placed by the  Sub-Adviser on behalf of the
Fund to such  broker-dealers  shall be in such  amounts and  proportions  as the
Sub-Adviser   shall   determine   in  good   faith   in   conformity   with  its
responsibilities  under applicable laws, rules and regulations.  The Sub-Adviser
will submit reports on such allocations to the Investment  Manager  regularly as
requested by the Investment  Manager,  in such form as may be mutually agreed to
by the parties hereto,  indicating the  broker-dealers  to whom such allocations
have been made and the basis therefor.

         Subject  to  the  foregoing   provisions  of  this   paragraph  3,  the
Sub-Adviser  may also  consider  sales of shares of the Fund, or may consider or
follow  recommendations  of the  Investment  Manager  that take such  sales into
account,  as factors in the  selection  of  broker-dealers  to effect the Fund's
investment  transactions.  Notwithstanding the above,  nothing shall require the
Sub-Adviser to use a broker-dealer  which provides research services or to use a
particular broker-dealer which the Investment Manager has recommended.

4. Reports by the  Sub-Adviser.  The  Sub-Adviser  shall furnish the  Investment
Manager monthly,  quarterly and annual reports,  in such form as may be mutually
agreed to by the parties hereto,  concerning transactions and performance of the
Fund,  including   information   required  in  the  Registration   Statement  or
information  necessary for the Investment  Manager to review the Fund or discuss
the  management  of it.  The  Sub-Adviser  shall  permit  the books and  records
maintained  with respect to the Fund to be inspected and audited by the Company,
the Investment Manager or their respective agents at all reasonable times during
normal business hours upon reasonable  notice. The Sub-Adviser shall immediately
notify both the  Investment  Manager and the Company of any legal process served
upon it in connection with its activities hereunder, including any legal process
served upon it on behalf of the Investment Manager, the Fund or the Company. The
Sub-Adviser  shall promptly notify the Investment  Manager of any changes in any
information  regarding the Sub-Adviser or the investment program for the Fund as
described in the Registration Statement.

5.  Compensation  of the  Sub-Adviser.  The  amount of the  compensation  to the
Sub-Adviser is computed at an annual rate.  The fee shall be payable  monthly in
arrears,  based on the average  daily net assets of the Fund for each month,  at
the annual rate set forth in Exhibit A to this Agreement.

         In computing the fee to be paid to the Sub-Adviser, the net asset value
of the Fund shall be valued as set forth in the Registration  Statement. If this
Agreement is terminated,  the payment  described herein shall be prorated to the
date of termination.

         The Investment  Manager and the Sub-Adviser  shall not be considered as
partners or  participants in a joint venture.  The Sub-Adviser  will pay its own
expenses for the services to be provided pursuant to this Agreement and will not
be  obligated  to pay any expenses of the  Investment  Manager,  the Fund or the
Company.  Except as  otherwise  specifically  provided  herein,  the  Investment
Manager,  the Fund and the Company  will not be obligated to pay any expenses of
the Sub-Adviser.

6.  Delivery  of  Documents  to the  Sub-Adviser.  The  Investment  Manager  has
furnished the Sub-Adviser with true,  correct and complete copies of each of the
following documents:

     (a) The Articles of Incorporation of the Company,  as in effect on the date
hereof;

         (b)      The By-laws of the Company, as in effect on the date hereof;

         (c)      The  resolutions of the Directors  approving the engagement of
                  the Sub-Adviser as portfolio manager of the Fund and approving
                  the form of this Agreement;

         (d)      The  resolutions  of the Directors  selecting  the  Investment
                  Manager as  investment  manager to the Fund and  approving the
                  form of the Management Agreement;

         (e)      The Management Agreement;

         (f) The Code of Ethics of the Company and of the Investment Manager, as
in effect on the date hereof; and

         (g) A list of companies the securities of which are not to be bought or
sold for the Fund.

         The Investment  Manager will furnish the Sub-Adviser  from time to time
with copies, properly certified or otherwise authenticated, of all amendments of
or supplements to the  foregoing,  if any. Such  amendments or supplements as to
items (a)  through  (f) above will be  provided  within 30 days of the time such
materials  become  available  to the  Investment  Manager.  Such  amendments  or
supplements  as to item (g) above will be provided not later than the end of the
business day next following the date such amendments or supplements become known
to the Investment  Manager.  Any amendments or supplements to the foregoing will
not be deemed effective with respect to the Sub-Adviser  until the Sub-Adviser's
receipt thereof. The Investment Manager will provide such additional information
as the Sub-Adviser may reasonably  request in connection with the performance of
its duties hereunder.

7.  Delivery  of  Documents  to the  Investment  Manager.  The  Sub-Adviser  has
furnished the Investment  Manager with true, correct and complete copies of each
of the following documents:

     (a) The  Sub-Adviser's  Form ADV as filed with the  Securities and Exchange
Commission as of the date hereof;

         (b)      The Sub-Adviser's most recent balance sheet;

         (c)      Separate lists of persons who the  Sub-Adviser  wishes to have
                  authorized  to  give  written  and/or  oral   instructions  to
                  Custodians of Company assets for the Fund; and

         (d) The Code of  Ethics  of the  Sub-Adviser,  as in effect on the date
hereof.

         The Sub-Adviser  will furnish the Investment  Manager from time to time
with copies, properly certified or otherwise authenticated, of all amendments of
or supplements to the foregoing,  if any. Material  amendments or supplements to
the  foregoing,  if any,  will be  provided  within  30  days of the  time  such
materials become available to the Sub-Adviser.  Any amendments or supplements to
the  foregoing  will not be deemed  effective  with  respect  to the  Investment
Manager until the Investment  Manager's  receipt  thereof.  The Sub-Adviser will
provide additional  information as the Investment Manager may reasonably request
in  connection  with the  Sub-Adviser's  performance  of its  duties  under this
Agreement.

8. Confidential Treatment. The parties hereto understand that any information or
recommendation supplied by the Sub-Adviser in connection with the performance of
its obligations  hereunder is to be regarded as confidential and for use only by
the Investment  Manager,  the Company or such persons the Investment Manager may
designate in  connection  with the Fund.  The parties also  understand  that any
information  supplied to the  Sub-Adviser in connection  with the performance of
its  obligations  hereunder,  particularly,  but not  limited  to,  any  list of
securities  which may not be bought or sold for the Fund,  is to be  regarded as
confidential  and for  use  only  by the  Sub-Adviser  in  connection  with  its
obligation to provide investment advice and other services to the Fund.

9.  Representations of the Parties.  Each party hereto hereby further represents
and warrants to the other that:  (i) it is registered  as an investment  adviser
under the Advisers Act and is registered  or licensed as an  investment  adviser
under the laws of all jurisdictions in which its activities  require it to be so
registered  or  licensed;  and (ii) it will use its  reasonable  best efforts to
maintain  each such  registration  or license in effect at all times  during the
term of this Agreement; and (iii) it will promptly notify the other if it ceases
to be so registered,  if its registration is suspended for any reason,  or if it
is notified by any regulatory  organization  or court of competent  jurisdiction
that it should  show  cause why its  registration  should  not be  suspended  or
terminated;  and (iv) it is duly  authorized to enter into this Agreement and to
perform its obligations hereunder.

         The Sub-Adviser  further  represents that it has adopted a written Code
of Ethics in compliance with Rule 17j-1(b) of the ICA. The Sub-Adviser  shall be
subject  to such Code of Ethics  and shall not be  subject  to any other Code of
Ethics,  including the Investment Manager's Code of Ethics,  unless specifically
adopted by the  Sub-Adviser.  The  Investment  Manager  further  represents  and
warrants to the  Sub-Adviser  that (i) the appointment of the Sub-Adviser by the
Investment  Manager  has been  duly  authorized  and (ii) it has  acted and will
continue to act in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby, and the
transactions  contemplated hereby are, in conformity with the ICA, the Company's
governing documents and other applicable law.

10.  Liability.  In  the  absence  of  willful  misfeasance,  bad  faith,  gross
negligence or reckless disregard for its obligations hereunder,  the Sub-Adviser
shall not be liable to the Company,  the Fund,  the Fund's  shareholders  or the
Investment Manager for any act or omission resulting in any loss suffered by the
Company,  the  Fund,  the  Fund's  shareholders  or the  Investment  Manager  in
connection  with any service to be  provided  herein.  The  Federal  laws impose
responsibilities  under certain  circumstances on persons who act in good faith,
and therefore, nothing herein shall in any way constitute a waiver or limitation
of any rights which the  Company,  the Fund or the  Investment  Manager may have
under applicable law.

11. Other Activities of the Sub-Adviser.  The Investment Manager agrees that the
Sub-Adviser  and any of its partners or employees,  and persons  affiliated with
the  Sub-Adviser  or with any such  partner or employee,  may render  investment
management or advisory  services to other investors and  institutions,  and that
such investors and institutions may own,  purchase or sell,  securities or other
interests in property that are the same as,  similar to, or different from those
which are selected for purchase,  holding or sale for the Fund.  The  Investment
Manager further  acknowledges that the Sub-Adviser shall be in all respects free
to take action with respect to investments  in securities or other  interests in
property that are the same as,  similar to, or different from those selected for
purchase,  holding or sale for the Fund. The Investment Manager understands that
the Sub-Adviser shall not favor or disfavor any of the Sub-Adviser's  clients or
class of clients in the allocation of investment  opportunities,  so that to the
extent practical,  such  opportunities will be allocated among the Sub-Adviser's
clients  over a period of time on a fair and  equitable  basis.  Nothing in this
Agreement  shall impose upon the  Sub-Adviser  any obligation (i) to purchase or
sell,  or recommend  for purchase or sale,  for the Fund any security  which the
Sub-Adviser, its partners,  affiliates or employees may purchase or sell for the
Sub-Adviser or such partner's, affiliate's or employee's own accounts or for the
account of any other client of the Sub-Adviser,  advisory or otherwise,  or (ii)
to abstain from the purchase or sale of any security for the Sub-Adviser's other
clients,  advisory or otherwise,  which the Investment Manager has placed on the
list provided pursuant to paragraph 6(g) of this Agreement.

12.  Continuance and Termination.  This Agreement shall remain in full force and
effect for one year from the date hereof, and is renewable  annually  thereafter
by  specific  approval  of  the  Directors  or by  vote  of a  majority  of  the
outstanding voting securities of the Fund. Any such renewal shall be approved by
the vote of a majority of the Directors who are not interested persons under the
ICA,  cast in person  at a  meeting  called  for the  purpose  of voting on such
renewal.  This  Agreement may be terminated  without  penalty at any time by the
Investment  Manager or the  Sub-Adviser  upon 60 days written  notice,  and will
automatically  terminate in the event of (i) its "assignment" by either party to
this Agreement,  as such term is defined in the ICA,  subject to such exemptions
as may be granted by the Securities and Exchange Commission by rule,  regulation
or order,  or (ii) upon  termination of the Management  Agreement,  provided the
Sub-Adviser has received prior written notice thereof.

13.  Notification.  The Sub-Adviser will notify the Investment  Manager within a
reasonable  time  of  any  change  in the  personnel  of  the  Sub-Adviser  with
responsibility  for making  investment  decisions  in  relation to the Fund (the
"Portfolio  Manager(s)") or who have been authorized to give instructions to the
Custodian.  The Sub-adviser  shall be responsible  for reasonable  out-of-pocket
costs and expenses incurred by the Investment  Manager,  the Fund or the Company
to amend or supplement the Company's prospectus to reflect a change in Portfolio
Manager(s) or otherwise to comply with the ICA, the  Securities  Act of 1933, as
amended  (the  "1933  Act")  or any  other  applicable  statute,  law,  rule  or
regulation, as a result of such change; provided,  however, that the Sub-Adviser
shall not be  responsible  for such  costs  and  expenses  where  the  change in
Portfolio  Manager(s)  reflects the  termination  of employment of the Portfolio
Manager(s) with the Sub-Adviser and its affiliates or is the result of a request
or action by the Investment Manager or is due to other circumstances  beyond the
Sub-Adviser's control.

         Any notice, instruction or other communication required or contemplated
by this  Agreement  shall  be in  writing.  All  such  communications  shall  be
addressed to the recipient at the address set forth below,  provided that either
party may, by notice,  designate a different  recipient  and/or address for such
party.

Investment Manager:        American Skandia Investment Services, Incorporated
                           One Corporate Drive
                           Shelton, Connecticut  06484
                           Attention:  Thomas M. Mazzaferro
                           President & Chief Operating Officer

Sub-Adviser:          Robertson, Stephens & Company Investment Management, L.P.
                           555 California Street, Suite 2600
                           San Francisco, California  94104
                           Attention:  Dana K. Welch

Company:          American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
                           One Corporate Drive
                           Shelton, Connecticut 06484
                           Attention: Eric C. Freed, Esq.

14.  Indemnification.  The Sub-Adviser agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the
Investment Manager,  any affiliated person within the meaning of Section 2(a)(3)
of the ICA ("affiliated  person") of the Investment  Manager and each person, if
any  who,  within  the  meaning  of  Section  15  of  the  1933  Act,   controls
("controlling  person")  the  Investment  Manager,  against  any and all losses,
claims, damages, liabilities or litigation (including reasonable legal and other
expenses),  to  which  the  Investment  Manager  or such  affiliated  person  or
controlling  person of the Investment  Manager may become subject under the 1933
Act, the ICA, the Advisers Act, under any other statute, law, rule or regulation
at common law or otherwise,  arising out of the  Sub-Adviser's  responsibilities
hereunder  (1) to the extent of and as a result of the willful  misconduct,  bad
faith,  or  gross  negligence  by the  Sub-Adviser,  any  of  the  Sub-Adviser's
employees or  representatives or any affiliate of or any person acting on behalf
of the Sub-Adviser, or (2) as a result of any untrue statement or alleged untrue
statement of a material fact contained in the Registration Statement,  including
any  amendment  thereof or any  supplement  thereto,  or the omission or alleged
omission  to state  therein a material  fact  required  to be stated  therein or
necessary to make the statement  therein not misleading,  if such a statement or
omission was made in reliance  upon and in conformity  with written  information
furnished by the Sub-Adviser to the Investment Manager, the Fund, the Company or
any affiliated person of the Investment Manager, the Fund or the Company or upon
verbal information confirmed by the Sub-Adviser in writing, or (3) to the extent
of, and as a result of, the failure of the  Sub-Adviser to execute,  or cause to
be executed,  portfolio investment transactions according to the requirements of
the ICA; provided,  however,  that in no case is the Sub-Adviser's  indemnity in
favor of the Investment  Manager or any affiliated person or controlling  person
of the Investment Manager deemed to protect such person against any liability to
which  any  such  person  would  otherwise  be  subject  by  reason  of  willful
misconduct, bad faith or gross negligence in the performance of its duties or by
reason of its  reckless  disregard  of its  obligations  and  duties  under this
Agreement.

         The  Investment  Manager  agrees to  indemnify  and hold  harmless  the
Sub-Adviser,  any  affiliated  person of the  Sub-Adviser  and each  controlling
person of the Sub-Adviser,  if any, against any and all losses, claims, damages,
liabilities or litigation  (including  reasonable legal and other expenses),  to
which the  Sub-Adviser or such  affiliated  person or controlling  person of the
Sub-Adviser  may become  subject  under the 1933 Act, the ICA, the Advisers Act,
under any other statute,  law, rule or  regulation,  at common law or otherwise,
arising out of the Investment  Manager's  responsibilities as investment manager
of the Fund (1) to the extent of and as a result of the willful misconduct,  bad
faith,  or gross  negligence by the  Investment  Manager,  any of the Investment
Manager's  employees or representatives or any affiliate of or any person acting
on behalf of the Investment  Manager, or (2) as a result of any untrue statement
or alleged  untrue  statement of a material fact  contained in the  Registration
Statement,  including any  amendment  thereof or any  supplement  thereto or the
omission or alleged  omission to state  therein a material  fact  required to be
stated  therein or necessary to make the statement  therein not  misleading,  if
such a  statement  or  omission  was made  other  than in  reliance  upon and in
conformity  with  written  information  furnished  by  the  Sub-Adviser,  or any
affiliated  person of the  Sub-Adviser  or other  than upon  verbal  information
confirmed by the Sub-Adviser in writing;  provided,  however, that in no case is
the Investment Manager's indemnity in favor of the Sub-Adviser or any affiliated
person or controlling  person of the  Sub-Adviser  deemed to protect such person
against any  liability  to which any such person  would  otherwise be subject by
reason of willful  misconduct,  bad faith or gross negligence in the performance
of its duties or by reason of its  reckless  disregard  of its  obligations  and
duties  under  this  Agreement.  It is  agreed  that  the  Investment  Manager's
indemnification  obligations  under this  Section 14 will extend to expenses and
costs  (including  reasonable  attorneys  fees) incurred by the Sub-Adviser as a
result  of  any  litigation  brought  by the  Investment  Manager  alleging  the
Sub-Adviser's  failure  to  perform  its  obligations  and  duties in the manner
required  under this  Agreement  unless  judgment is rendered for the Investment
Manager.

15.  Conflict of Laws. The provisions of this Agreement  shall be subject to all
applicable statutes, laws, rules and regulations, including, without limitation,
the  applicable  provisions  of the ICA and  rules and  regulations  promulgated
thereunder. To the extent that any provision contained herein conflicts with any
such applicable  provision of law or regulation,  the latter shall control.  The
terms and  provisions of this Agreement  shall be  interpreted  and defined in a
manner  consistent  with the  provisions  and  definitions  of the  ICA.  If any
provision of this Agreement  shall be held or made invalid by a court  decision,
statute,  rule or otherwise,  the remainder of this Agreement  shall continue in
full force and effect and shall not be affected by such invalidity.

16.  Amendments,  Waivers,  etc.  Provisions  of this  Agreement may be changed,
waived,  discharged or terminated only by an instrument in writing signed by the
party against which enforcement of the change, waiver,  discharge or termination
is sought.  This  Agreement  (including  Exhibit A hereto) may be amended at any
time by written mutual consent of the parties,  subject to the  requirements  of
the ICA and rules and regulations promulgated and orders granted thereunder.

     17.  Governing  State  Law.  This  Agreement  is made  under,  and shall be
governed  by and  construed  in  accordance  with,  the  laws  of the  State  of
Connecticut.

18. Severability.  Each provision of this Agreement is intended to be severable.
If any  provision  of this  Agreement  is held to be illegal or made  invalid by
court decision,  statute, rule or otherwise,  such illegality or invalidity will
not affect the validity or enforceability of the remainder of this Agreement.

The effective date of this agreement is January 2, 1998.

FOR THE INVESTMENT MANAGER:                 FOR THE SUB-ADVISER:



                                             -----------------------------------
___________________________________          
Thomas M. Mazzaferro
President & Chief Financial Officer


Date:    ____________________________        Date: ____________________________


Attest:  ____________________________        Attest:____________________________





<PAGE>



                      American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
                   ASAF Robertson Stephens Value + Growth Fund
                             Sub-Advisory Agreement

                                    EXHIBIT A




         An annual rate of .60% of the  portion of the average  daily net assets
of the Fund less than $200  million;  when the  average  daily net assets of the
Fund equal or exceed $200 million,  an annual rate of .50% of the entire average
daily net assets of the Fund.





                      AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
                             SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENT


     THIS   AGREEMENT  is  between   American   Skandia   Investment   Services,
Incorporated   (the   "Investment   Manager")  and  Lord,   Abbett  &  Co.  (the
"Sub-Adviser").

                               W I T N E S S E T H

WHEREAS,  American  Skandia  Advisor Funds,  Inc. (the  "Company") is a Maryland
corporation  organized with one or more series of shares and is registered as an
open-end management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940,
as amended (the "ICA"); and

WHEREAS,  the  Investment  Manager  and the  Sub-Adviser  each is an  investment
adviser  registered  under the Investment  Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the
"Advisers Act"); and

WHEREAS,  the Board of Directors of the Company (the  "Directors")  have engaged
the  Investment  Manager to act as  investment  manager for the ASAF Lord Abbett
Growth & Income Fund (the "Fund"), one series of the Company, under the terms of
a management agreement, dated January 2, 1998, with the Company (the "Management
Agreement"); and

WHEREAS,  the Investment Manager,  acting pursuant to the Management  Agreement,
wishes to engage the Sub-Adviser, and the Directors have approved the engagement
of the Sub-Adviser,  to provide investment advice and other investment  services
set forth below.

NOW, THEREFORE, the Investment Manager and the Sub-Adviser agree as follows:

1.  Investment  Services.   The  Sub-Adviser  will  formulate  and  implement  a
continuous  investment  program  for  the  Fund  conforming  to  the  investment
objective,  investment policies and restrictions of the Fund as set forth in the
Prospectus  and Statement of Additional  Information of the Company as in effect
from time to time  (together,  the  "Registration  Statement"),  the Articles of
Incorporation and By-laws of the Company, and any investment guidelines or other
instructions  received by the Sub-Adviser in writing from the Investment Manager
from time to time. Any amendments to the foregoing  documents will not be deemed
effective  with  respect  to the  Sub-Adviser  until the  Sub-Adviser's  receipt
thereof.  The  appropriate  officers and  employees of the  Sub-Adviser  will be
available to consult with the Investment Manager,  the Company and the Directors
at reasonable  times and upon reasonable  notice  concerning the business of the
Company,  including valuations of securities which are not registered for public
sale,  not traded on any securities  market or otherwise may be deemed  illiquid
for purposes of the ICA;  provided it is understood  that the Sub-Adviser is not
responsible for daily pricing of the Fund's assets.

         Subject to the supervision and control of the Investment Manager, which
in  turn is  subject  to the  supervision  and  control  of the  Directors,  the
Sub-Adviser in its discretion  will determine  which issuers and securities will
be purchased,  held,  sold or exchanged by the Fund or otherwise  represented in
the Fund's investment portfolio from time to time and, subject to the provisions
of paragraph 3 of this Agreement,  will place orders with and give  instructions
to  brokers,  dealers  and  others  for all such  transactions  and  cause  such
transactions  to be  executed.  Custody  of the  Fund  will be  maintained  by a
custodian bank (the  "Custodian") and the Investment  Manager will authorize the
Custodian to honor  orders and  instructions  by  employees  of the  Sub-Adviser
designated by the Sub-Adviser to settle  transactions in respect of the Fund. No
assets may be withdrawn from the Fund other than for settlement of  transactions
on behalf of the Fund  except  upon the  written  authorization  of  appropriate
officers  of the  Company  who  shall  have  been  certified  as such by  proper
authorities of the Company prior to the withdrawal.

         The   Sub-Adviser   will  not  be  responsible  for  the  provision  of
administrative,  bookkeeping  or  accounting  services  to the  Fund  except  as
specifically  provided herein,  as required by the ICA or the Advisers Act or as
may be necessary for the  Sub-Adviser to supply to the Investment  Manager,  the
Fund or the Fund's  shareholders the information  required to be provided by the
Sub-Adviser hereunder. Any records maintained hereunder shall be the property of
the Fund and surrendered promptly upon request.

         In furnishing the services under this Agreement,  the Sub-Adviser  will
comply  with and use its best  efforts  to  enable  the Fund to  conform  to the
requirements of: (i) the ICA and the regulations  promulgated  thereunder;  (ii)
Subchapter  M of the  Internal  Revenue  Code  and the  regulations  promulgated
thereunder;  (iii) other applicable provisions of state or federal law; (iv) the
Articles  of  Incorporation  and  By-laws  of  the  Company;  (v)  policies  and
determinations  of the  Company  and  the  Investment  Manager  provided  to the
Sub-Adviser in writing;  (vi) the  fundamental  and  non-fundamental  investment
policies and restrictions applicable to the Fund, as set out in the Registration
Statement  of  the  Company  in  effect,  or as  such  investment  policies  and
restrictions from time to time may be amended by the Fund's  shareholders or the
Directors and communicated to the Sub-Adviser in writing; (vii) the Registration
Statement;  and (viii) investment  guidelines or other instructions  received in
writing  from  the  Investment  Manager.   Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  the
Sub-Adviser shall have no responsibility to monitor  compliance with limitations
or  restrictions  for  which  information  from the  Investment  Manager  or its
authorized  agents is required to enable the  Sub-Adviser to monitor  compliance
with such limitations or restrictions unless such information is provided to the
Sub-adviser  in  writing.  The  Sub-Adviser  shall  supervise  and  monitor  the
activities of its  representatives,  personnel and agents in connection with the
investment program of the Fund.

         Nothing in this  Agreement  shall be implied to prevent the  Investment
Manager from engaging other  sub-advisers to provide investment advice and other
services  to the Fund or to series or  portfolios  of the  Company for which the
Sub-Adviser does not provide such services, or to prevent the Investment Manager
from providing such services itself in relation to the Fund or such other series
or portfolios.

         The Sub-Adviser  shall be responsible for the preparation and filing of
Schedule  13-G and Form 13-F  reflecting  the Fund's  securities  holdings.  The
Sub-Adviser  shall not be responsible for the preparation or filing of any other
reports required of the Fund by any governmental or regulatory agency, except as
expressly agreed to in writing.

2. Investment Advisory Facilities. The Sub-Adviser, at its expense, will furnish
all necessary investment facilities,  including salaries of personnel,  required
for it to execute its duties hereunder.

3.  Execution  of Fund  Transactions.  In  connection  with the  investment  and
reinvestment  of the assets of the Fund, the  Sub-Adviser is responsible for the
selection of  broker-dealers  to execute purchase and sale  transactions for the
Fund in  conformity  with the  policy  regarding  brokerage  as set forth in the
Registration  Statement, or as the Directors may determine from time to time, as
well as the  negotiation  of  brokerage  commission  rates  with such  executing
broker-dealers.  Generally,  the Sub-Adviser's  primary consideration in placing
Fund  investment  transactions  with  broker-dealers  for  execution  will be to
obtain,  and maintain the  availability of, best execution at the best available
price.

         Consistent   with  this   policy,   the   Sub-Adviser,   in   selecting
broker-dealers  and  negotiating  brokerage  commission  rates,  will  take  all
relevant  factors into  consideration,  including,  but not limited to: the best
price  available;  the  reliability,  integrity and  financial  condition of the
broker-dealer;  the size of and difficulty in executing the order; and the value
of the expected contribution of the broker-dealer to the investment  performance
of the Fund on a continuing  basis.  Subject to such policies and  procedures as
the Directors may determine,  the  Sub-Adviser  shall have  discretion to effect
investment transactions for the Fund through broker-dealers  (including,  to the
extent  permissible  under  applicable law,  broker-dealers  affiliated with the
Sub-Adviser) qualified to obtain best execution of such transactions who provide
brokerage  and/or  research  services,  as such  services are defined in section
28(e) of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "1934 Act"),  and
to cause the Fund to pay any such  broker-dealers  an amount of  commission  for
effecting  a  portfolio  investment  transaction  in  excess  of the  amount  of
commission  another   broker-dealer   would  have  charged  for  effecting  that
transaction,  if the  Sub-Adviser  determines  in good faith that such amount of
commission  is  reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage or research
services  provided  by such  broker-dealer,  viewed  in  terms  of  either  that
particular investment transaction or the Sub-Adviser's overall  responsibilities
with  respect  to the Fund  and  other  accounts  as to  which  the  Sub-Adviser
exercises investment  discretion (as such term is defined in section 3(a)(35) of
the 1934 Act).  Allocation of orders placed by the  Sub-Adviser on behalf of the
Fund to such  broker-dealers  shall be in such  amounts and  proportions  as the
Sub-Adviser   shall   determine   in  good   faith   in   conformity   with  its
responsibilities  under applicable laws, rules and regulations.  The Sub-Adviser
will submit reports on such allocations to the Investment  Manager  regularly as
requested by the Investment  Manager,  in such form as may be mutually agreed to
by the parties hereto,  indicating the  broker-dealers  to whom such allocations
have been made and the basis therefor.

         Subject  to  the  foregoing   provisions  of  this   paragraph  3,  the
Sub-Adviser  may also  consider  sales of shares of the Fund, or may consider or
follow  recommendations  of the  Investment  Manager  that take such  sales into
account,  as factors in the  selection  of  broker-dealers  to effect the Fund's
investment  transactions.  Notwithstanding the above,  nothing shall require the
Sub-Adviser to use a broker-dealer  which provides research services or to use a
particular broker-dealer which the Investment Manager has recommended.

4. Reports by the  Sub-Adviser.  The  Sub-Adviser  shall furnish the  Investment
Manager monthly,  quarterly and annual reports,  in such form as may be mutually
agreed to by the parties hereto,  concerning transactions and performance of the
Fund,  including   information   required  in  the  Registration   Statement  or
information  necessary for the Investment  Manager to review the Fund or discuss
the  management  of it.  The  Sub-Adviser  shall  permit  the books and  records
maintained  with respect to the Fund to be inspected and audited by the Company,
the Investment Manager or their respective agents at all reasonable times during
normal business hours upon reasonable  notice. The Sub-Adviser shall immediately
notify both the  Investment  Manager and the Company of any legal process served
upon it in connection with its activities hereunder, including any legal process
served upon it on behalf of the Investment Manager, the Fund or the Company. The
Sub-Adviser  shall promptly notify the Investment  Manager of any changes in any
information  regarding the Sub-Adviser or the investment program for the Fund as
described in the Registration Statement.

5.  Compensation  of the  Sub-Adviser.  The  amount of the  compensation  to the
Sub-Adviser is computed at an annual rate.  The fee shall be payable  monthly in
arrears,  based on the average  daily net assets of the Fund for each month,  at
the annual rate set forth in Exhibit A to this Agreement.

         In computing the fee to be paid to the Sub-Adviser, the net asset value
of the Fund shall be valued as set forth in the Registration  Statement. If this
Agreement is terminated,  the payment  described herein shall be prorated to the
date of termination.

         The Investment  Manager and the Sub-Adviser  shall not be considered as
partners or  participants in a joint venture.  The Sub-Adviser  will pay its own
expenses for the services to be provided pursuant to this Agreement and will not
be  obligated  to pay any expenses of the  Investment  Manager,  the Fund or the
Company.  Except as  otherwise  specifically  provided  herein,  the  Investment
Manager,  the Fund and the Company  will not be obligated to pay any expenses of
the Sub-Adviser.

6.  Delivery  of  Documents  to the  Sub-Adviser.  The  Investment  Manager  has
furnished the Sub-Adviser with true,  correct and complete copies of each of the
following documents:

     (a) The Articles of Incorporation of the Company,  as in effect on the date
hereof;

         (b)      The By-laws of the Company, as in effect on the date hereof;

         (c)      The  resolutions of the Directors  approving the engagement of
                  the Sub-Adviser as portfolio manager of the Fund and approving
                  the form of this Agreement;

         (d)      The  resolutions  of the Directors  selecting  the  Investment
                  Manager as  investment  manager to the Fund and  approving the
                  form of the Management Agreement;

         (e)      The Management Agreement;

         (f) The Code of Ethics of the Company and of the Investment Manager, as
in effect on the date hereof; and

         (g) A list of companies the securities of which are not to be bought or
sold for the Fund.

         The Investment  Manager will furnish the Sub-Adviser  from time to time
with copies, properly certified or otherwise authenticated, of all amendments of
or supplements to the  foregoing,  if any. Such  amendments or supplements as to
items (a)  through  (f) above will be  provided  within 30 days of the time such
materials  become  available  to the  Investment  Manager.  Such  amendments  or
supplements  as to item (g) above will be provided not later than the end of the
business day next following the date such amendments or supplements become known
to the Investment  Manager.  Any amendments or supplements to the foregoing will
not be deemed effective with respect to the Sub-Adviser  until the Sub-Adviser's
receipt thereof. The Investment Manager will provide such additional information
as the Sub-Adviser may reasonably  request in connection with the performance of
its duties hereunder.

7.  Delivery  of  Documents  to the  Investment  Manager.  The  Sub-Adviser  has
furnished the Investment  Manager with true, correct and complete copies of each
of the following documents:

     (a) The  Sub-Adviser's  Form ADV as filed with the  Securities and Exchange
Commission as of the date hereof;

         (b)      The Sub-Adviser's most recent balance sheet;

         (c)      Separate lists of persons who the  Sub-Adviser  wishes to have
                  authorized  to  give  written  and/or  oral   instructions  to
                  Custodians of Company assets for the Fund; and

         (d) The Code of  Ethics  of the  Sub-Adviser,  as in effect on the date
hereof.

         The Sub-Adviser  will furnish the Investment  Manager from time to time
with copies, properly certified or otherwise authenticated, of all amendments of
or supplements to the foregoing,  if any. Such amendments or supplements will be
provided  within  30 days of the time such  materials  become  available  to the
Sub-Adviser.  Any  amendments or supplements to the foregoing will not be deemed
effective with respect to the Investment Manager until the Investment  Manager's
receipt  thereof.  The Sub-Adviser  will provide  additional  information as the
Investment  Manager may reasonably  request in connection with the Sub-Adviser's
performance of its duties under this Agreement.

8. Confidential Treatment. The parties hereto understand that any information or
recommendation supplied by the Sub-Adviser in connection with the performance of
its obligations  hereunder is to be regarded as confidential and for use only by
the Investment  Manager,  the Company or such persons the Investment Manager may
designate in  connection  with the Fund.  The parties also  understand  that any
information  supplied to the  Sub-Adviser in connection  with the performance of
its  obligations  hereunder,  particularly,  but not  limited  to,  any  list of
securities  which may not be bought or sold for the Fund,  is to be  regarded as
confidential  and for  use  only  by the  Sub-Adviser  in  connection  with  its
obligation to provide investment advice and other services to the Fund.

9.  Representations of the Parties.  Each party hereto hereby further represents
and warrants to the other that:  (i) it is registered  as an investment  adviser
under the Advisers Act and is registered  or licensed as an  investment  adviser
under the laws of all jurisdictions in which its activities  require it to be so
registered  or  licensed;  and (ii) it will use its  reasonable  best efforts to
maintain  each such  registration  or license in effect at all times  during the
term of this Agreement; and (iii) it will promptly notify the other if it ceases
to be so registered,  if its registration is suspended for any reason,  or if it
is notified by any regulatory  organization  or court of competent  jurisdiction
that it should  show  cause why its  registration  should  not be  suspended  or
terminated;  and (iv) it is duly  authorized to enter into this Agreement and to
perform its obligations hereunder.

         The Sub-Adviser  further  represents that it has adopted a written Code
of Ethics in compliance with Rule 17j-1(b) of the ICA. The Sub-Adviser  shall be
subject  to such Code of Ethics  and shall not be  subject  to any other Code of
Ethics,  including the Investment Manager's Code of Ethics,  unless specifically
adopted by the  Sub-Adviser.  The  Investment  Manager  further  represents  and
warrants to the  Sub-Adviser  that (i) the appointment of the Sub-Adviser by the
Investment  Manager  has been  duly  authorized  and (ii) it has  acted and will
continue to act in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby, and the
transactions  contemplated hereby are, in conformity with the ICA, the Company's
governing documents and other applicable law.

10.  Liability.  In  the  absence  of  willful  misfeasance,  bad  faith,  gross
negligence or reckless disregard for its obligations hereunder,  the Sub-Adviser
shall not be liable to the Company,  the Fund,  the Fund's  shareholders  or the
Investment Manager for any act or omission resulting in any loss suffered by the
Company,  the  Fund,  the  Fund's  shareholders  or the  Investment  Manager  in
connection  with any service to be  provided  herein.  The  Federal  laws impose
responsibilities  under certain  circumstances on persons who act in good faith,
and therefore, nothing herein shall in any way constitute a waiver or limitation
of any rights which the  Company,  the Fund or the  Investment  Manager may have
under applicable law.

11. Other Activities of the Sub-Adviser.  The Investment Manager agrees that the
Sub-Adviser  and any of its partners or employees,  and persons  affiliated with
the  Sub-Adviser  or with any such  partner or employee,  may render  investment
management or advisory  services to other investors and  institutions,  and that
such investors and institutions may own,  purchase or sell,  securities or other
interests in property that are the same as,  similar to, or different from those
which are selected for purchase,  holding or sale for the Fund.  The  Investment
Manager further  acknowledges that the Sub-Adviser shall be in all respects free
to take action with respect to investments  in securities or other  interests in
property that are the same as,  similar to, or different from those selected for
purchase,  holding or sale for the Fund. The Investment Manager understands that
the Sub-Adviser shall not favor or disfavor any of the Sub-Adviser's  clients or
class of clients in the allocation of investment  opportunities,  so that to the
extent practical,  such  opportunities will be allocated among the Sub-Adviser's
clients  over a period of time on a fair and  equitable  basis.  Nothing in this
Agreement  shall impose upon the  Sub-Adviser  any obligation (i) to purchase or
sell,  or recommend  for purchase or sale,  for the Fund any security  which the
Sub-Adviser, its partners,  affiliates or employees may purchase or sell for the
Sub-Adviser or such partner's, affiliate's or employee's own accounts or for the
account of any other client of the Sub-Adviser,  advisory or otherwise,  or (ii)
to abstain from the purchase or sale of any security for the Sub-Adviser's other
clients,  advisory or otherwise,  which the Investment Manager has placed on the
list provided pursuant to paragraph 6(g) of this Agreement.

12.  Continuance and Termination.  This Agreement shall remain in full force and
effect for one year from the date hereof, and is renewable  annually  thereafter
by  specific  approval  of  the  Directors  or by  vote  of a  majority  of  the
outstanding voting securities of the Fund. Any such renewal shall be approved by
the vote of a majority of the Directors who are not interested persons under the
ICA,  cast in person  at a  meeting  called  for the  purpose  of voting on such
renewal.  This  Agreement may be terminated  without  penalty at any time by the
Investment  Manager or the  Sub-Adviser  upon 60 days written  notice,  and will
automatically  terminate in the event of (i) its "assignment" by either party to
this Agreement,  as such term is defined in the ICA,  subject to such exemptions
as may be granted by the Securities and Exchange Commission by rule,  regulation
or order,  or (ii) upon  termination of the Management  Agreement,  provided the
Sub-Adviser has received prior written notice thereof.

13.  Notification.  The Sub-Adviser will notify the Investment  Manager within a
reasonable  time  of  any  change  in the  personnel  of  the  Sub-Adviser  with
responsibility  for making  investment  decisions  in  relation to the Fund (the
"Portfolio  Manager(s)") or who have been authorized to give instructions to the
Custodian.  The Sub-adviser  shall be responsible  for reasonable  out-of-pocket
costs and expenses incurred by the Investment  Manager,  the Fund or the Company
to amend or supplement the Company's prospectus to reflect a change in Portfolio
Manager(s) or otherwise to comply with the ICA, the  Securities  Act of 1933, as
amended  (the  "1933  Act")  or any  other  applicable  statute,  law,  rule  or
regulation, as a result of such change; provided,  however, that the Sub-Adviser
shall not be  responsible  for such  costs  and  expenses  where  the  change in
Portfolio  Manager(s)  reflects the  termination  of employment of the Portfolio
Manager(s) with the Sub-Adviser and its affiliates or is the result of a request
by  the  Investment  Manager  or  is  due  to  other  circumstances  beyond  the
Sub-Adviser's control.

         Any notice, instruction or other communication required or contemplated
by this  Agreement  shall  be in  writing.  All  such  communications  shall  be
addressed to the recipient at the address set forth below,  provided that either
party may, by notice,  designate a different  recipient  and/or address for such
party.

Investment Manager:        American Skandia Investment Services, Incorporated
                           One Corporate Drive
                           Shelton, Connecticut  06484
                           Attention:  Thomas M. Mazzaferro
                           President & Chief Operating Officer

Sub-Adviser:               Lord Abbett & Co.
                           The General Motors Building
                           767 Fifth Avenue
                           New York, NY 10153-0203
                           Attention: Thomas Konop, Esq.

Company:          American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
                           One Corporate Drive
                           Shelton, Connecticut 06484
                           Attention: Eric C. Freed, Esq.

14.  Indemnification.  The Sub-Adviser agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the
Investment Manager,  any affiliated person within the meaning of Section 2(a)(3)
of the ICA ("affiliated  person") of the Investment  Manager and each person, if
any  who,  within  the  meaning  of  Section  15  of  the  1933  Act,   controls
("controlling  person")  the  Investment  Manager,  against  any and all losses,
claims, damages, liabilities or litigation (including reasonable legal and other
expenses),  to  which  the  Investment  Manager  or such  affiliated  person  or
controlling  person of the Investment  Manager may become subject under the 1933
Act, the ICA, the Advisers Act, under any other statute, law, rule or regulation
at common law or otherwise,  arising out of the  Sub-Adviser's  responsibilities
hereunder  (1) to the extent of and as a result of the willful  misconduct,  bad
faith,  or  gross  negligence  by the  Sub-Adviser,  any  of  the  Sub-Adviser's
employees or  representatives or any affiliate of or any person acting on behalf
of the Sub-Adviser, or (2) as a result of any untrue statement or alleged untrue
statement of a material fact contained in the Registration Statement,  including
any  amendment  thereof or any  supplement  thereto,  or the omission or alleged
omission  to state  therein a material  fact  required  to be stated  therein or
necessary to make the statement  therein not misleading,  if such a statement or
omission was made in reliance  upon and in conformity  with written  information
furnished by the Sub-Adviser to the Investment Manager, the Fund, the Company or
any affiliated person of the Investment Manager, the Fund or the Company or upon
verbal information confirmed by the Sub-Adviser in writing, or (3) to the extent
of, and as a result of, the failure of the  Sub-Adviser to execute,  or cause to
be executed,  portfolio investment transactions according to the requirements of
the ICA; provided,  however,  that in no case is the Sub-Adviser's  indemnity in
favor of the Investment  Manager or any affiliated person or controlling  person
of the Investment Manager deemed to protect such person against any liability to
which  any  such  person  would  otherwise  be  subject  by  reason  of  willful
misconduct, bad faith or gross negligence in the performance of its duties or by
reason of its  reckless  disregard  of its  obligations  and  duties  under this
Agreement.

         The  Investment  Manager  agrees to  indemnify  and hold  harmless  the
Sub-Adviser,  any  affiliated  person of the  Sub-Adviser  and each  controlling
person of the Sub-Adviser,  if any, against any and all losses, claims, damages,
liabilities or litigation  (including  reasonable legal and other expenses),  to
which the  Sub-Adviser or such  affiliated  person or controlling  person of the
Sub-Adviser  may become  subject  under the 1933 Act, the ICA, the Advisers Act,
under any other statute,  law, rule or  regulation,  at common law or otherwise,
arising out of the Investment  Manager's  responsibilities as investment manager
of the Fund (1) to the extent of and as a result of the willful misconduct,  bad
faith,  or gross  negligence by the  Investment  Manager,  any of the Investment
Manager's  employees or representatives or any affiliate of or any person acting
on behalf of the Investment  Manager, or (2) as a result of any untrue statement
or alleged  untrue  statement of a material fact  contained in the  Registration
Statement,  including any  amendment  thereof or any  supplement  thereto or the
omission or alleged  omission to state  therein a material  fact  required to be
stated  therein or necessary to make the statement  therein not  misleading,  if
such a  statement  or  omission  was made  other  than in  reliance  upon and in
conformity  with  written  information  furnished  by  the  Sub-Adviser,  or any
affiliated  person of the  Sub-Adviser  or other  than upon  verbal  information
confirmed by the Sub-Adviser in writing;  provided,  however, that in no case is
the Investment Manager's indemnity in favor of the Sub-Adviser or any affiliated
person or controlling  person of the  Sub-Adviser  deemed to protect such person
against any  liability  to which any such person  would  otherwise be subject by
reason of willful  misconduct,  bad faith or gross negligence in the performance
of its duties or by reason of its  reckless  disregard  of its  obligations  and
duties  under  this  Agreement.  It is  agreed  that  the  Investment  Manager's
indemnification  obligations  under this  Section 14 will extend to expenses and
costs  (including  reasonable  attorneys  fees) incurred by the Sub-Adviser as a
result  of  any  litigation  brought  by the  Investment  Manager  alleging  the
Sub-Adviser's  failure  to  perform  its  obligations  and  duties in the manner
required  under this  Agreement  unless  judgment is rendered for the Investment
Manager.

15.  Conflict of Laws. The provisions of this Agreement  shall be subject to all
applicable statutes, laws, rules and regulations, including, without limitation,
the  applicable  provisions  of the ICA and  rules and  regulations  promulgated
thereunder. To the extent that any provision contained herein conflicts with any
such applicable  provision of law or regulation,  the latter shall control.  The
terms and  provisions of this Agreement  shall be  interpreted  and defined in a
manner  consistent  with the  provisions  and  definitions  of the  ICA.  If any
provision of this Agreement  shall be held or made invalid by a court  decision,
statute,  rule or otherwise,  the remainder of this Agreement  shall continue in
full force and effect and shall not be affected by such invalidity.

16.  Amendments,  Waivers,  etc.  Provisions  of this  Agreement may be changed,
waived,  discharged or terminated only by an instrument in writing signed by the
party against which enforcement of the change, waiver,  discharge or termination
is sought.  This  Agreement  (including  Exhibit A hereto) may be amended at any
time by written mutual consent of the parties,  subject to the  requirements  of
the ICA and rules and regulations promulgated and orders granted thereunder.

     17.  Governing  State  Law.  This  Agreement  is made  under,  and shall be
governed  by and  construed  in  accordance  with,  the  laws  of the  State  of
Connecticut.

18. Severability.  Each provision of this Agreement is intended to be severable.
If any  provision  of this  Agreement  is held to be illegal or made  invalid by
court decision,  statute, rule or otherwise,  such illegality or invalidity will
not affect the validity or enforceability of the remainder of this Agreement.

The effective date of this agreement is January 2, 1998.

FOR THE INVESTMENT MANAGER:             FOR THE SUB-ADVISER:



                                        -----------------------------------
___________________________________     
Thomas M. Mazzaferro
President & Chief Financial Officer


Date:    ____________________________   Date:    ____________________________


Attest:  ____________________________   Attest:  ____________________________



<PAGE>



                      American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
                     ASAF Lord Abbett Growth and Income Fund
                             Sub-Advisory Agreement

                                    EXHIBIT A




         An annual rate of .50% of the  portion of the average  daily net assets
of the Fund not in excess of $200  million;  plus .40% of the portion  over $200
million but not in excess of $500  million;  plus .375% of the portion over $500
million but not in excess of $700  million;  plus .35% of the portion  over $700
million but not in excess of $900 million;  when the average daily net assets of
the Fund  equal or exceed  $900  million,  an annual  rate of .30% of the entire
average daily net assets of the Fund.





WERNER & KENNEDY
                                  1633 Broadway
                               New York, NY 10019
                                    ---------
                        EMAIL: [email protected]
                            TELEPHONE (212) 408-6900
                            FACSIMILE (212) 408-6950

WRITER'S DIRECT DIAL NUMBER
(212) 408-6900


                                                              December 31, 1997


American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
One Corporate Drive
Shelton, Connecticut  06484

Re:    Post-Effective Amendment No. 2 to the Registration Statement
       of American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc. filed on Form N-1A under the
       Securities Act of 1933 and Amendment No. 5 to the Registration Statement
       under the Investment Company Act of 1940
       Securities Act Registration No.: 333-23017
       Investment Company Act No.: 811-08085
       Our File No. 74876-00-114                                

Dear Mesdames and Messrs.:

         You have  requested us, as counsel to American  Skandia  Advisor Funds,
Inc. (the "Company"), to furnish you with this opinion and consent in connection
with the above-referenced  registration statement (the "Registration Statement")
filed by the Company  under the  Securities  Act of 1933,  as amended (the "1933
Act"), and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act").

         We have made such examination of the statutes, authorities, and records
of the Company and other  documents as in our  judgment are  necessary to form a
basis for opinions hereinafter  expressed.  In our examination,  we have assumed
the genuineness of all signatures on, and authenticity of, and the conformity to
original  documents of all copies  submitted  to us. As to various  questions of
fact material to our opinion, we have relied upon statements and certificates of
officers and representatives of the Company and others.

         Based upon the  foregoing,  we are of the opinion that the Company is a
Maryland  corporation  organized  with  one or  more  series  of  shares  and is
registered as an open-end management  investment company under the 1940 Act, and
that the shares,  when issued and sold in accordance with the laws of applicable
jurisdictions,  and with the terms of the Prospectus and Statement of Additional
Information  included  as part of the  Registration  Statement,  will be  valid,
legally issued, fully paid, and non-assessable.

         We hereby  consent  to the use of this  opinion  as an  exhibit  to the
Registration Statement under the 1933 Act and the 1940 Act, and to the reference
to our name  under the  heading  "Legal  Counsel  and  Independent  Accountants"
included in the Registration Statement.

                                                          Very truly yours,


                                                          /s/ Werner & Kennedy
                                                          Werner & Kennedy





                       CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

     We  consent  to the  inclusion  in  Post-Effective  Amendment  No. 2 to the
Registration  Statement of American Skandia Advisor Funds,  Inc. (the "Company")
on Form N-1A (File No.  333-23017) of our report dated  December 12, 1997 on our
audit of the financial statements and financial highlights of the Company, which
report is included in the Annual  Report to  Shareholders  for the period ending
October  31,  1997 which is  included  in the  Post-Effective  Amendment  to the
Registration  Statement.  We also consent to the reference to our Firm under the
heading "Legal Counsel and Independent  Accountants" in the Prospectus and under
the  headings  "Independent  Accountants"  and  "Financial  Statements"  in  the
Statement of Additional Information.



/s/ Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P.
Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P.


2400 Eleven Penn Center
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
December 31, 1997





                       CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

     We consent to the  inclusion of our report  dated  December 12, 1997 on our
audit of the financial  statements and financial  highlights of American Skandia
Master  Trust  as of  October  31,  1997  with  respect  to this  Post-Effective
Amendment  No.  2 to  the  Registration  Statement  (No.  333-23017)  under  the
Securities Act of 1933 on Form N-1A.



/s/ Coopers & Lybrand
Coopers & Lybrand

Chartered Accountants and Registered Auditors
Dublin, Republic of Ireland
December 31, 1997




                                            


   LAW OFFICES
                                CAPLIN & DRYSDALE
                                    CHARTERED
                             ONE THOMAS CIRCLE, N.W.
                           WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-5802
                                      -----
                                 (202 ) 862-5000

                            FACSIMILE (202) 429-3301
                                  
                                 


                                                   July 11, 1997



American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
One Corporate Drive
Shelton, Connecticut  06484

Dear Sirs:

                  You have  requested  our  opinion on an issue  relating to the
taxability of the funds (each a "Fund" and together the "Funds")  comprising the
American  Skandia Advisor Funds,  Inc. (the  "Company") as regulated  investment
companies  ("RICs") under part I of subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986, as amended (the "Code"). More specifically, you have requested our opinion
on whether a marketing  arrangement  involving  the  issuance of bonus shares to
purchasers  of a  particular  class of  shares  of each  Fund  will give rise to
nondeductible  "preferential  dividends" within the meaning of section 562(c) of
the Code.

                  For  purposes of this  opinion,  it is assumed  that each Fund
will  satisfy  all  other  requirements  applicable  to  RICs  under  part  I of
subchapter M of the Code, and that the dividends  declared and paid by the Funds
will otherwise qualify as deductible,  nonpreferential dividends. Our opinion is
based  upon our  understanding  of the  relevant  facts  and the  status of this
marketing  arrangement  under the Federal  securities laws, which are summarized
below.





<PAGE>


                                      - 2 -



                                 RELEVANT FACTS

                  The Company was organized as a Maryland  corporation  on March
5, 1997, and constitutes an open-end  management  investment  company within the
meaning of the Investment Company Act of 1940, 15 U.S.C. ss. 80a-1 et seq., (the
"1940 Act").  The Company is comprised of ten separate  Funds,  each of which is
intended  to qualify and be taxed as a RIC under part I of  subchapter  M of the
Code.  Five of the Funds will operate as "Feeder  Funds"  under a  master-feeder
structure;  each of the Feeder  Funds will be  exclusively  invested in a single
underlying  portfolio of securities that is part of the American  Skandia Master
Trust.  The five  non-feeder  Funds will hold their own  diversified  securities
portfolios.

                  American  Skandia  Investment  Services,  Inc.  ("ASISI") will
serve as investment  manager of the five non-feeder Funds and for the portfolios
in which the five feeder  Funds are  invested.  For each Fund or  portfolio  for
which ASISI serves as investment manager, an unrelated sub-advisor will actually
manage the securities portfolios.

                  American Skandia Marketing, Inc. ("ASM"), a company affiliated
with ASISI,1 will serve as the principal  underwriter  and  distributor  of each
Fund pursuant to an underwriting  agreement  initially  approved by the Board of
Directors  of the  Company.  ASM will bear all  expenses of  providing  services
pursuant to the underwriting agreement,  including the payment of commissions to
broker-dealers  that effect the sale of Fund shares through  selling  agreements
with ASM.

                  Pursuant  to Rule  18f-3  under  the 1940 Act,  17 C.F.R.  ss.
270.18f-3, each Fund will offer four classes of shares, designated as Classes A,
B, C, and X.  Consistent with the  requirements  of Rule 18f-3,  the Company has
adopted a  distribution  and service  plan for each class of shares  pursuant to
Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act. 17 C.F.R. ss. 270.12b-1.  The 12b-1 plan for each
class  of  shares  provides  for the  payment  of fees  to  ASM,  the  principal
underwriter,  as  compensation  for its costs and services in  distributing  the
shares and servicing the  shareholder  accounts of that class. As required under
Rule  18f-3,  the 12b-1  fees to be paid to ASM with  respect  to each  class of
shares are borne solely by the  shareholders  of that class,  i.e.,  are charged
proportionately  against  the net asset  value of all shares in that  class.  As
further  required  under Rule  18f-3,  the Board of  Directors  of the  Company,
including  a majority of the  directors  who are not  interested  persons of the
Company within the meaning of the 1940 Act, have determined that each 12b-1 plan
is in the best interests of each plan individually and the Company as a
- --------
1  ASISI and ASM are members of an affiliated group of U.S.
corporations, of which Skandia U.S. Investment Holding Corp. is
the common parent.


<PAGE>


                                      - 3 -



whole.  Pursuant to Rule 12b-1,  the 12b-1 plan for each class of shares must be
approved  annually by the Company's Board of Directors,  including a majority of
its disinterested directors, and may be terminated at any time.

                  Other  than the 12b-1  fees  allocated  to the  shares of each
class,  all  expenses  of  each  Fund  are  borne  by  the  Fund  and  allocated
proportionately  against the net asset  values of all  outstanding  Fund shares,
regardless of class.  Similarly,  the  dividends  declared and paid by each Fund
with respect to any outstanding  share,  regardless of class, will vary from the
distributions  paid on all other shares solely as a result of the  allocation of
12b-1 fees.

                  Apart from the  distribution  expenses  paid through the 12b-1
fees, the various  classes of Fund shares are subject to front-end sales charges
or contingent deferred sales charges ("CDSCs"), which reimburse ASM for expenses
incurred in providing  distribution-related  services. Such charges are borne at
the  shareholder  level and reduce  either the  amount  invested  in a Fund on a
shareholder's behalf or the amount of a shareholder's redemption proceeds from a
Fund.  The amounts  payable to ASM in the form of  front-end  sales  charges and
CDSCs have been  taken  into  account by the  Company's  Board of  Directors  in
approving the fees payable to ASM under the 12b-1 plan for each class of shares.

                  The issue  addressed in this letter  relates to the  marketing
arrangement  and 12b-1 plan for the Class X shares of each Fund.  Class X shares
will initially be offered only to certain tax-qualified retirement arrangements,
including  IRAs and SIMPLE IRAs under  section  408 of the Code.  To promote the
sale of Class X shares,  ASM, as principal  underwriter  and distributor of each
Fund,  has  undertaken  to  purchase  for the  account  of each Class X investor
additional  Class X shares ("Bonus Shares") equal to 2 1/2 percent of the amount
invested by the investor (excluding reinvested dividends). The Bonus Shares will
be  purchased at net asset value with ASM's  assets.  ASM intends to finance the
cost of its Bonus Share purchases  through an unrelated  third party;  the Funds
will not be a party to or in any way obligated under that financing transaction.

                  ASM expects to recover its cost of purchasing Bonus Shares for
Class X Investors  out of the fees it will receive  under the 12b-1 plan for the
Class X shares and the CDSCs payable to it upon redemption of Class X shares. In
agreeing to the level of fees  payable to ASM under the Class X 12b-1 plan,  the
Company's  Board of  Directors  was  informed  that such fees were to  provide a
source of  reimbursement  to ASM for the  projected  cost of the Bonus Shares as
well as  compensation  for ASM's other  distribution  expenses and services with
respect to the Class X shares. Nonetheless, the Funds are under no obligation to
make ASM  whole  for its  Bonus  Share  costs  and  other  Class X  distribution
expenses, and, as previously noted, the Class X 12b-1 plan


<PAGE>


                                      - 4 -



will be subject to termination by the Company's Board of
Directors at any time.

                  The Bonus Share  arrangement  is in the nature of a sales load
reduction,  which will  reflect  ASM's  reduced  distribution  costs for Class X
shares.  This may be  illustrated  by comparing  the Class X shares with Class B
shares. No front-end sales charge will be imposed on purchases of either Class X
or Class B shares, redemptions of both classes will be subject to the same CDSCs
(grading from 6 percent of the original  purchase price down to zero seven years
after  purchase),  and 12b-1 fees will be  charged to both  classes at an annual
rate equal to 1.00 percent of the net asset value of outstanding  shares.  Thus,
the Class X and Class B shares of each Fund will be subject to identical charges
and will have the same net asset values.  However,  under ASM's sales agreements
with broker-dealers,  it will normally pay commissions from its own resources of
5.5  percent  on sales of Class B  shares  and 3.0  percent  on sales of Class X
shares.  This difference in expected  commission costs,  equal to 2.5 percent of
the amount  invested  by each Class X investor,  represents  the amount that ASM
will  expend  for the  purchase  of  Class X Bonus  Shares.  While  the  reduced
commission  costs might have been passed on to Class X investors  in the form of
lower 12b-1 fees on Class X shares,  the  purchase of Bonus  Shares will instead
have the effect of reducing the investors' cost of acquiring Class X shares.

                  The opinion set forth in this letter is specifically  premised
on our understanding  that (i) the Fund's use of 12b-1 fees to reimburse ASM for
the cost of the Bonus  Shares will  represent a  distribution  expense  properly
incurred and  allocable  to Class X shares under SEC Rules 12b-1 and 18f-3;  and
(ii)  consistent  with the  requirements  of SEC Rule 18f-3, no part of the fees
paid or expenses incurred by the Funds,  other than the Class X 12b-1 fees, will
be  intended  or have the  effect of  reimbursing  or  compensating  ASM for its
purchase of the Bonus Shares.


                                                     ANALYSIS

1.  Overview of Preferential Dividends Rule.

                  Section  852(a)(1) of the Code provides that a RIC, as defined
in section 851,  shall not be taxable  under part I of  subchapter M of the Code
unless the RIC's deduction for dividends paid, as defined in section 561, equals
or  exceeds  90  percent  of  its   taxable   income  (and  90  percent  of  its
exempt-interest income), subject to certain adjustments.

                  Section 561(a)  provides that the deduction for dividends paid
includes all dividends paid during the taxable year, and section 561(b) provides
that dividends  eligible for the dividends  paid  deduction  shall be determined
under  section 562.  Section  562(a)  provides as a general rule that  dividends
eligible


<PAGE>


                                      - 5 -



for the dividends paid deduction  shall include  dividends  described in section
316, which generally describes corporate  distributions  taxable to shareholders
as dividends. However, section 562(c) further provides as follows:

                           The amount of any distribution shall not be
                  considered as a dividend for purposes of computing the
                  dividends paid deduction, unless such distribution is
                  pro rata, with no preference to any share of stock as
                  compared with other shares of the same class, and with
                  no preference to one class of stock as compared with
                  another class except to the extent that the former is
                  entitled (without reference to waivers of their rights
                  by shareholders) to such preference. . . .

                  The regulations under section 562(c) explain that no
dividends paid deduction will be allowed with respect to any
distribution upon a class of stock if there is distributed to any
shareholder of such class more or less than his pro rata part of
the distribution, and that the disallowance extends to the entire
amount of the distribution, not merely the preferential part.
Reg. ss. 1.562-2(a).  An example in the regulations indicates that
the pro rata standard is separately applied to each distribution
of dividends paid by a corporation during a taxable year, and
that the dividends paid under successive non-pro rata distri-
butions are disallowed, even though the combined effect of the
distributions is pro rata.  Reg. ss. 1.562-2(b) Ex. (1).  Accord,
Safety Convoy Co. v. Thomas, 139 F.2d 219 (3d Cir. 1943).  It
follows that a pro rata distribution of dividends during a
taxable year qualifies for the dividends paid deduction, even
though a separate dividend distribution made during the same
taxable year is preferential and nondeductible.  Cf. New York
Stocks, Inc. v. Commissioner, 164 F.2d 75, 77 (2d Cir. 1947).

                  The disallowance of preferential dividends originated with the
enactment of the  dividends  paid  deduction as part of the Revenue Act of 1936.
The deduction was intended to stimulate the distribution of corporate profits to
create  taxable  income  at  the  shareholder   level,   and  the  exclusion  of
preferential dividends was intended to prevent special dividends to shareholders
in lower tax  brackets.  See Black  Motor  Co.  v.  Commissioner,  125 F.2d 977,
979-980  (6th  Cir.  1942).  The  preferential   dividends  rule  was  reenacted
substantially  in its present form as part of the Revenue Act of 1938. The House
Ways and Means Committee then described the purpose of the rule as follows:

                  No dividends-paid credit should be allowed in the case
                  of a distribution not in conformity with the rights of
                  shareholders generally inherent in their stock-
                  holdings, whether the preferential distribution
                  reflects an act of injustice to shareholders or a
                  device acquiesced in by shareholders, rigged with a
                  view to tax avoidance. . . . The committee believes
                  that no distribution which treats shareholders with


<PAGE>


                                      - 6 -



                  substantial impartiality and in a manner consistent
                  with their rights under their stockholding interests,
                  should be regarded as preferential by reason of minor
                  differences in valuations of property distributed.
                  [H.R. Rep. No. 1860, 75th Cong., 3d Sess. 23 (1938).]

                  The Tax Court has concluded on the basis of this
legislative history that

                  where a distribution is made available in conformity
                  with the rights of each stockholder, where no act of
                  injustice to any stockholder is contemplated or
                  perpetrated, where there is no suggestion of a tax
                  avoidance scheme, and where each stockholder is treated
                  with absolute impartiality, the distribution is not
                  preferential within the meaning of the statute. [United
                  Artists Theatre Circuit, Inc. v. Commissioner, 1 T.C.
                  424, 430 (1943).]2

                  The clear  import  of the  preferential  dividends  rule is to
disallow the dividends paid deduction to any declared or  constructive  dividend
that has the effect of diverting corporate earnings to a shareholder or group of
shareholders  that would  otherwise be available  for pro rata  distribution  to
other shareholders based on the rights inhering in the corporation's  classes of
stock. In other words,  the distribution of preferential  dividends  involves an
act of  "discrimination"  inconsistent  with the dividend  rights  inhering in a
corporation's  stock  or  classes  of  stock.  See  National  Securities  Series
Industrial Stocks Series v. Commissioner,  13 T.C. 884, 888 (1949),  acq. 1950-1
C.B. 4.

                  Absent such corporate-level discrimination among shareholders,
there is no  published  authority  treating an actual or  constructive  dividend
distribution as preferential.  For example, the fact that some shareholders have
made higher capital contributions with respect to their shares of stock does not
cause the dividends paid to other  shareholders to be  preferential.  See Elmore
Milling  Co. v.  Commissioner,  42 B.T.A.  1410  (1940),  acq.  1941-1  C.B.  4.
Therefore,  though  not  expressly  linked  to  this  rationale  or the  related
authority,  the Internal Revenue Service has long and consistently accepted that
differing sales load charges borne by a RIC's  shareholders,  and thus differing
per share acquisition costs, do not give rise to preferential dividends.3
- --------
                  2 There  has  been  little  recent  authority  addressing  the
                  purpose  and scope of the  preferential  dividends  rule,  but
                  there is no indication  that its  reenactment  in the 1954 and
                  1986 Codes was intended to have any different effect.
3  See, e.g., PLR 9049016 (Sept. 7, 1990); PLR 8746045 (Aug.
18, 1987).


<PAGE>


                                      - 7 -




2. Pro Rata Distributions to Class X Shareholders.

                  If the Class A, B, C, and X shares of each Fund are treated as
separate classes of stock for purposes of section 562(c),  and assuming that the
dividend rights of each separate class are observed, the Bonus Share arrangement
will give rise to an  impermissible  preference  under section 562(c) only if it
gives rise to non-pro rata dividend distributions among Class X shareholders.

                  The Funds' classes of shares have been established as separate
classes pursuant to the Company's  Articles of Incorporation  and are treated as
such under SEC Rule 18f-3.  Moreover,  the Company's  Articles of  Incorporation
provide for  differences in dividends among the classes of Fund shares by reason
of expenses that the Company's Board of Directors determines to be attributable,
and which are  charged,  to each  separate  class.  We are aware of no published
authority  suggesting  that the  separate  classes of Fund shares  should not be
treated as  separate  classes  with  separate  dividend  rights for  purposes of
section  562(c).  Cf.  Revenue  Ruling 89-81,  1989-2 C.B. 226;  Revenue  Ruling
74-177, 1974-1 C.B. 166.

                  On that  basis,  it is  difficult  to see how the Bonus  Share
arrangement  for Class X shares could be regarded as creating any  impermissible
preference within the meaning of section 562(c).  All of the dividends  declared
and paid on Class X shares -- which are the only Class X dividends for which the
Funds would claim dividends paid deductions -- will be equal and pro rata.

                  The  issuance  of Bonus  Shares  will not itself be a pro rata
distribution  on Class X shares since Bonus Shares will be issued at the time of
purchase and not  concurrently  to existing Class X shareholders.  However,  the
Funds will not be claiming a dividends  paid  deduction  or any other  deduction
that might be disallowed upon the issuance of the Bonus Shares.  In this regard,
it is  important  to point out that even  before the  Internal  Revenue  Service
accepted  that  non-pro rata  distributions  made by RICs on the  redemption  of
shares  qualified for the dividends paid deduction,  the Service did not dispute
that  regular  pro  rata  dividends  paid in the  same  year  qualified  for the
dividends paid deduction. See New York Stocks, Inc. v.
Commissioner, supra, at 77.4

- --------
4 The Service  subsequently  acquiesced in a decision holding that distributions
in redemption  qualified for the dividends  paid  deduction and issued a revenue
ruling to that  effect.  See  National  Securities  Series -  Industrial  Stocks
Series, 13 T.C. 884 (1949), 1950-1 C.B. 4; Revenue Ruling 55-416, 1955-1 C.B.
416.


<PAGE>


                                      - 8 -



                  Moreover, since a Fund will issue Bonus Shares only
upon receipt of a purchase payment from ASM equal to the net
asset value of the Bonus Shares, the Fund itself will not incur
any economic detriment upon such issuance that might be
characterized as a distribution of property to Class X share-
holders in their capacity as such.  Therefore, we do not believe
that a Fund's issuance of Bonus Shares can by itself be
characterized as a distribution on stock, much less a
preferential distribution within the scope of section 562(c).
See Reg. ss. ss. 1.316-1(a)(1) and 1.301-1(c); Citizens Bank & Trust
Co. v. United States, 580 F.2d 442 (Ct. Cl. 1978); McCabe Packing
Co. v. United States, 809 F. Supp. 614 (C.D. Ill. 1992).

                  Although  the issuance of Bonus Shares does not by itself have
the  characteristics  of a dividend  distribution,  it might be argued  that the
overall  effect of the  arrangement  will be equivalent to the  distribution  of
dividends by the Funds because the Funds will indirectly bear all or part of the
cost of the Bonus Shares through the payment of 12b-1 fees to ASM. That is, some
portion of the 12b-1 fees payable with respect to Class X shares might be viewed
as an  indirect  or  constructive  distribution  of  Fund  property  to  Class X
shareholders used to cover the cost of their Bonus Shares.  One response to such
a  characterization  is that there will be no direct  linkage  between the Bonus
Share purchases and the payment of 12b-1 fees; the Funds will have no obligation
to reimburse  ASM for its actual costs in purchasing  the Bonus Shares,  and the
12b-1 plans will be terminable by the Funds at any time.

                  More  fundamentally,  however,  we believe such a constructive
dividend  theory  proves too much,  for it would be equally  applicable in every
case in which a RIC's  payment of 12b-1 fees enables its shares to be offered to
investors at a lower price because of reduced  front-end  sales charges.  In all
such cases, the RIC shareholders  derive a benefit in the form of a reduced cost
for the shares they  acquire,  which is precisely  the benefit  conferred by the
Bonus Share arrangement. Moreover, in all such cases that benefit can reasonably
be viewed as derived  from the RIC's  payment  of 12b-1 fees out of its  assets.
However,  since the 12b-1 fees are charged to the  shareholders  who derive that
benefit,  the net effect is merely a  difference  in the manner in which a RIC's
distribution expenses are borne by its shareholders.

                  It is  important  to point out in this  regard  that,  while a
corporation's  stock  issuance  expenses  are  ordinarily  non-deductible,   the
Internal Revenue Service has long held that stock issuance  expenses paid out of
a RIC's assets are deductible as ordinary and necessary  business expenses under
section 162. See Revenue Ruling 73-463,  1973-2 C.B. 34.  Moreover,  the Service
has expressly ruled that this principle  applies to  distribution  expenses paid
through  12b-1 fees.  See Revenue  Ruling  94-70,  1994-2 C.B.  17.  Since these
rulings recognize that a RIC's distribution  expenses might otherwise be paid at
the shareholder


<PAGE>


                                      - 9 -



level,  the  indirect  shareholder  benefit  flowing  from the  payment  of such
expenses out of RIC assets is well  understood.  Nonetheless,  the  treatment of
such  payments as ordinary  and  necessary  business  expenses  precludes  their
characterization as constructive or indirect dividends to shareholders.

                  Lastly,  even if a portion of the 12b-1 fees paid by the Funds
with  respect  to Class X shares  could be viewed as a form of  constructive  or
indirect  distribution  for the collective  benefit of Class X shareholders,  it
would  not  necessarily   follow  that  such  constructive   distributions  were
preferential.5   The  12b-1  fees  will  be  borne  pro  rata  by  all  Class  X
shareholders,  and we can see no basis  to  conclude  that any  group of Class X
shareholders  will  derive a  disproportionate  benefit  from the payment of the
12b-1 fees. The only benefit derived by the Class X shareholders themselves will
be the Bonus Shares credited at the time of purchase, and that benefit will have
been proportionate to the amount invested by each Class X shareholder.

                  Therefore, assuming that the Class X shares are respected as a
separate  class of stock  for  purposes  of  section  562(c),  the  Bonus  Share
arrangement should not give rise to preferential dividends.

3.  Possible Single-Class View and Revenue Procedure 96-47.

                  It is far  from  clear,  however,  that the  Internal  Revenue
Service  would agree that the separate  classes of Fund shares are to be treated
as separate  classes for purposes of section 562(c).  Over the last decade,  the
Service has issued  more than two  hundred  private  letter  rulings  addressing
"preferential  dividend"  and  other  Federal  income  tax  issues  relating  to
multi-class RICs that have differing  distribution and service  arrangements for
different classes of shares. Although the Service has not been consistent in its
view of such multi- class RICs,  in recent years it has taken the position  that
the differing  distribution and service  arrangements and the differing  charges
imposed with respect to such  arrangements  are not  sufficient  to give rise to
separate classes of stock for purposes of section 562(c).6

- --------
5 On that view, it would arguably follow that such portion could not be deducted
by the Funds as ordinary and necessary  business  expenses under section 162 and
could be deducted, if at all, only under sections 852(b)(2)(D) and 561. However,
amounts  disallowed as ordinary and necessary  business  expenses and treated as
constructive   dividends   qualify  for  the   dividends   paid   deduction   if
non-preferential. See H. Schwartz Corp. v.
Commissioner, 70 T.C. 728 (1973).
6 See, e.g., PLR 9529014 (Apr. 20, 1995); PLR 9529017 (Apr. 21, 1995).


<PAGE>


                                     - 10 -



                  Consistent with the  single-class  view adopted in the private
letter rulings,  the Service has concluded that certain  expenses of a RIC, such
as  investment  advisory and  custodial  fees,  must be charged  proportionately
against  the net asset  values of all RIC shares in order to avoid  preferential
dividends under section 562(c).  However,  the Service's  private letter rulings
have  accommodated  dividend  variations  attributable to 12b-1 fees and certain
shareholder  servicing  expenses allocated to particular classes of RIC stock by
treating such expenses as indirect shareholder  expenses,  rather than RIC-level
expenses. The Service has reasoned that 12b-1 fees are properly characterized as
shareholder expenses because the fees are a substitute for front-end sales loads
and CDSCs, and a RIC is reimbursed for these outlays by the shareholders to whom
the  12b-1  fees  are  allocated.7  Conceptually,  therefore,  the  Service  has
characterized  12b-1 fees as not paid by the RIC itself.  These  private  letter
rulings do not constitute official  precedent,  and our opinion is not issued in
reliance on any of these rulings.

                  However,  in September of 1996, the Service  published Revenue
Procedure 96-47,  1996-39 I.R.B. 10, which does constitute an official statement
of the Service's position regarding differences in RIC dividends attributable to
12b-1 fees and shareholder  servicing  expenses charged to different  classes of
RIC stock pursuant to SEC rule 18f-3.  Revenue  Procedure 96-47 does not address
whether  different  classes of RIC  shares  established  pursuant  to Rule 18f-3
constitute a single class or multiple  classes for purposes of section 562(c) of
the Code; instead, it labels a class of shares established under Rule 18f-3 as a
"Qualified Group." Nonetheless, Revenue Procedure 96-47 holds that variations in
dividend  distributions to shareholders of different Qualified Groups that exist
as the result of the  allocation  to  Qualified  Groups of expenses  relating to
differing  distribution and shareholder servicing  arrangements do not give rise
to preferential  dividends under section  562(c).8 The  determination of whether
different  groups of shares have different  arrangements  for  distribution  and
shareholder  servicing  is to be made in a  manner  consistent  with  the  SEC's
interpretation  of  the  analogous  requirements  of  Rule  18f-3.  See  Revenue
Procedure 96-47, ss. 3.02.

- --------
7 Id.
8 Revenue Procedure 96-47 also allows variations in dividend distributions among
Qualified  Groups that  result from  allocations  of other  expenses  (excluding
advisory fees and other  expenses  related to the management of a RIC's assets),
but  provides  that such other  expenses  may be  allocated  by net asset value,
regardless of Qualified  Group, or on the basis of the amount incurred on behalf
of each Qualified Group. Rev. Proc.
96-47, ss. 3.04.


<PAGE>


                                     - 11 -



                  Assuming the Service will adhere to its  unpublished  position
that the different classes of shares in a multi-class RIC are a single class for
purposes  of section  562(c),  we  nonetheless  believe  that any  variation  in
distributions by the Funds  attributable to the Bonus Share  arrangement will be
of the type  permitted  under  Revenue  Procedure  96-47.  That is, based on our
understanding of the SEC's interpretation of Rule 18f-3 as well as the substance
of the Bonus Share arrangement, we believe that the 12b-1 fees paid with respect
to the Class X shares are  properly  treated as  expenses  for  distribution  or
shareholder  servicing  within the meaning of section 3.02 of Revenue  Procedure
96-47, and thus that variations in distributions  attributable to the allocation
of those fees would not be preferential dividends under Revenue Procedure 96-47.

                  The Service might  contend,  however,  that Revenue  Procedure
96-47 was not intended to encompass variations in distributions  attributable to
incentive  arrangements under which 12b-1 fees are indirectly used to provide an
additional benefit to shareholders of a particular class, rather than being used
to pay customary  distribution  expenses.  We note in this regard that, prior to
the publication of Revenue  Procedure  96-47, the Service had issued two private
letter  rulings which held that the use of 12b-1 fees to provide  frequent flyer
miles to  holders  of  particular  classes  of RIC  shares  did not give rise to
preferential  dividends;  the Service  subsequently revoked those private letter
rulings on the ground that they no longer  reflected  the views of the  Service.
See PLR 9147021  (Aug.  15, 1991) and PLR 9334019  (June 1, 1993) revoked by PLR
9535041 (June 2, 1995).  It is not clear whether the Service would take the same
position following the publication of Revenue Procedure 96-47.

                  In any  event,  we  believe  the  shareholder  benefit  in the
frequent  flyer  rulings was very  different  from that to be derived by Class X
investors through the Bonus Share arrangement. Under the facts of those rulings,
12b-1 fees were used to provide an in-kind  benefit to RIC  shareholders  in the
form of periodic awards of frequent flyer miles. Apart from concerns the Service
may have had regarding  the income tax treatment of those in-kind  distributions
at the shareholder  level,9 the 12b-1 fees were clearly being used to provide an
ongoing economic  benefit to  shareholders,  not just a reduction in the cost of
RIC shares.  In contrast,  the combination of the Bonus Shares and Class X 12b-1
fees will not involve any periodic flow of economic benefits to
- --------
9 As a general  rule,  a corporate  shareholder  realizes and  recognizes  gross
income  equal to the fair  market  value of any  in-kind  dividend  distribution
received with respect to stock.  See, e.g., Melvin v.  Commissioner,  88 T.C. 63
(1987),  aff'd on other issues, 894 F.2d 1072 (9th Cir. 1990); Ireland v. United
States,  621 F.2d 731 (5th Cir.  1980).  It is not clear,  however,  whether any
taxable value was imputed or reported with respect to the frequent flyer awards.


<PAGE>


                                     - 12 -



Class X shareholders  and will not differ in substance  from other  arrangements
permitted under Revenue  Procedure 96-47. That is, as in other cases where 12b-1
fees function as a substitute for front-end  sales charges,  the benefit derived
by Class X investors will be a reduction in the cost of Class X shares. However,
the level of 12b-1 fees not only will enable the Class X front-end sales charges
to be reduced to zero,  but in effect will enable ASM to distribute  the Class X
shares  with a negative  front-end  sales  charge.  Although  this form of price
adjustment  is not usual,  it has no different  economic  effect than other load
adjustments recognized under Revenue Procedure 96-47.10

                  We  note,  however,   that  the  variations  in  distributions
permitted  under  Revenue   Procedure  96-47  require  that  "[t]he  rights  and
obligations  of the  shareholders  of each  Qualified  Group  are  fixed  in the
corporation's organizing documents." Revenue Procedure 96-47, ss. 3.05. The term
"organizing  documents"  is not  defined.  It is our  understanding  that  ASM's
undertaking to purchase  Bonus Shares on behalf of Class X  shareholders  is set
forth in the  registration  statement and prospectuses for the Funds, but is not
set forth in any other governing documents for the Funds. We do not know whether
the Service would construe section 3.05 of Revenue  Procedure 96-47 to mean that
the issuance of Bonus Shares to Class X Investors is a shareholder "right", and,
if  so,  whether  it  would  regard  the  Funds'   registration   statement  and
prospectuses as "organizing  documents".  In principle, we cannot see any reason
why the  Bonus  Share  arrangement  would be held to any  different  documentary
requirement  than  applies  to  front-end  sales  charges  or  CDSCs,  which are
generally described in registration  statements and prospectuses,  but not fixed
in a  RIC's  organizational  documents.  Nonetheless,  Revenue  Procedure  96-47
represents the Service's own unilateral statement of position,  and it would not
be precluded from taking a restrictive view of its terms.


                                   CONCLUSION

                  Whatever  uncertainty  there  may be  concerning  the scope of
Revenue  Procedure  96-47 or the status of Class X shares as a separate class of
stock for purposes of section  562(c),  the ultimate  legal issue is whether the
Bonus Share  arrangement  involves any form of  "discrimination"  proscribed  by
section 562(c). As discussed earlier, we believe this issue turns on
- --------
10 In terms of realizable  redemption value, ASM's purchase of Bonus Shares will
place a Class X  shareholder  in the same position as if the Class X shares were
subject to a lower rate of 12b-1 fees and a lower CDSC for a period of time. For
example,  for a Fund  with a  pre-12b-1  fee rate of  return  of 10%,  a Class X
investor  will be in  essentially  the same  position  as if no 12b-1  fees were
imposed for the first two years and eight  months,  and the CDSC was reduced for
the same period.


<PAGE>


                                     - 13 -


whether a  corporation's  actual or  constructive  dividends  have the effect of
diverting to one shareholder or a group of shareholders  corporate earnings that
would otherwise be available for distribution to other shareholders based on the
rights  inhering  in  their  stock.  In  this  context,   therefore,   we  would
characterize  the issue as  whether  the  Bonus  Share  arrangement  for Class X
shareholders is in any way subsidized by, or detrimental to, other  shareholders
of the  Funds.  Based on our  understanding  of the facts set  forth  above,  it
clearly is not.  For whether the cost of the Bonus  Shares is  considered  to be
borne  by ASM or by the  Class  X  shareholders  by  reason  of the  12b-1  fees
allocated  to the  Class X  shares,  it is  clear  that the  arrangement  is not
affecting the earnings distributable to other shareholders.

                  Based upon the foregoing analysis and our understanding of the
relevant facts  (including the consistency of the Bonus Share  arrangement  with
applicable  requirements under SEC Rule 18f-3), it is our opinion that the Bonus
Share  arrangement for Class X shares of the Funds will not cause dividends paid
by the Funds to be characterized as "preferential  dividends" within the meaning
of  section  562(c)  of the Code.  We can give no  assurance  that the  Internal
Revenue  Service will agree with this  position,  or that if the Service were to
assert a  contrary  position  upon  examination  of the Funds and the issue were
litigated,  that such a contrary  position  would not ultimately be sustained by
the courts. However, based upon the relevant Code provisions currently in effect
and existing  published  authorities,  it is our further  opinion  that,  if the
Service  were to assert  such a  contrary  position,  and if the  Funds  were to
litigate their entitlement to the dividends paid deduction,  the Funds' position
would be sustained by the courts.

                                               Very truly yours,



                                               /s/ CAPLIN & DRYSDALE, CHARTERED
                                               CAPLIN & DRYSDALE, CHARTERED


 


                                 Rogers & Wells
                             Two Hundred Park Avenue
                            New York, N.Y. 10166-0153
                            TELEPHONE (212) 878-8000
                            FACSIMILE (212) 878-8375

                                                                    May 5, 1997


American Skandia Advisor Funds, Inc.
c/o PFPC International (Cayman) Ltd.
Ugland House
South Church Street
P.O. Box 309
Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands
British West Indies

Dear Sirs:

         We have acted as counsel to American  Skandia  Advisor  Funds,  Inc., a
Maryland corporation (the "Company") that is organized as an open-end management
investment  company comprised of ten diversified  investment  portfolios (each a
"Fund" and together the "Funds"),  in connection  with the  organization  of the
Company and the Funds, and the adoption by the Company of a multiple class share
structure.  Five of the Funds  (each a "Feeder  Fund" and  together  the "Feeder
Funds") invest all their investable assets in a corresponding  portfolio (each a
"Portfolio" and together the  "Portfolios") of the American Skandia Master Trust
(the  "Trust"),  an open-end  management  investment  company  comprised of five
diversified  investment  portfolios.  Each  Portfolio  of the Trust  invests  in
securities in accordance with an investment  objective,  investment policies and
limitations identical to those of its corresponding Feeder Fund.

         The  shares of each Fund are  divided  into four  classes,  denominated
Class A, B, C and X. Each class of shares of a Fund will  represent an identical
interest in the  investment  portfolio of the Fund and will have the same rights
with respect to assets and liquidation,  except as to expenses  described below.
The Company has adopted  separate  Distribution  and Service  plans for Class A,
Class B, Class C and Class X shares  pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Investment
Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act") (the "Class A Plan", "Class B Plan", "Class
C Plan" and "Class X Plan", individually,  and collectively, the "Plans"), which
permit the payment of certain fees to American Skandia  Marketing,  Incorporated
(the  "Distributor"),  the principal  underwriter and distributor for each Fund,
for its services and costs in distributing Fund shares and servicing shareholder
accounts.

         The Plans  were  adopted  by a majority  vote of the  Directors  of the
Company, including at least a majority of Directors who are not, and were not at
the time they voted,  "interested  persons" of the Funds (as defined in the 1940
Act) and do not and did not have any direct or  indirect  financial  interest in
the operation of the Plans. The Plans, pursuant to their terms, remain in effect
from year to year provided such continuance is approved  annually by vote of the
Directors in the manner  described  above. A Plan may be terminated at any time,
without payment of any penalty,  by vote of the majority of the Directors of the
Company  who are not  interested  persons  of the  Fund and  have no  direct  or
indirect  financial  interest in the  operations  of the Plan, or by a vote of a
"majority of the outstanding  voting securities" (as defined in the 1940 Act) of
the Fund affected thereby.

         Dividends paid by each Fund for each class of shares will be calculated
in the same  manner at the same time and will  differ  only to the  extent  that
shareholder account servicing and/or distribution fees will be borne exclusively
by that class.  A class of shares will vote as a separate class as to any matter
with  respect to which a separate  vote of the class is  required  by federal or
state law. A class will not be entitled to any vote as to a matter that does not
affect the  interest of the class,  and only the holders of shares of the one or
more affected classes will be entitled to vote. In particular, Class A, Class B,
Class C and Class X shares of a Fund each will have exclusive voting rights with
respect to the Plan adopted with respect to such class.

         Class A shares will incur an initial  sales charge when  purchased  and
will also be subject to an ongoing fee to  compensate  the  Distributor  for its
services  and  costs  in  distributing  Class A  shares  and  servicing  Class A
shareholder accounts (the "Class A Plan"). Under the Class A Plan, the Fund pays
the  Distributor  0.50% of the Fund's average daily net assets  attributable  to
Class A shares,  0.25% of which is  intended as a fee for  services  provided to
existing  shareholders.  The maximum initial sales charge for the Class A shares
is 4.25% of the offering  price for high yield bond and total return bond Funds,
and 5% of the offering  price for all other Funds,  and is reduced for purchases
of $50,000  and over and  reduced or waived for  purchases  of Class A shares by
certain  retirement  plans and in connection with certain  investment  programs.
Purchases of $1,000,000 or more, and certain other purchases, are not subject to
an initial sales charge, but such purchases are subject to a contingent deferred
sales charge (the "Class A CDSC") of 1.00% of the lower of the original purchase
price or the  redemption  proceeds  if the shares are  redeemed  within one year
after purchase. The Class A CDSC will be waived in certain cases.

         Class B shares will not incur an initial  sales charge when  purchased,
but will be subject to an ongoing  fee to  compensate  the  Distributor  for its
services  and  costs  in  distributing  Class B  shares  and  servicing  Class B
shareholder accounts (the "Class B Plan"). Under the Class B Plan, the Fund pays
the  Distributor  1.00% of the Fund's average daily net assets  attributable  to
Class B shares  that  are  outstanding  for 8 years  or less,  0.25% of which is
intended as a fee for  services  provided to existing  shareholders.  If Class B
shares are redeemed within 7 years of their  purchase,  the redemption will give
rise to a contingent deferred sales charge (the "Class B CDSC"), of a percentage
of the lower of the original  purchase  price or the redemption  proceeds,  such
percentage declining each year of the shareholder's  holding period. The Class B
CDSC will be waived in certain cases. Eight years after issuance, Class B shares
will convert automatically into Class A shares. Class B shares are not available
for "qualified" purchases,  such as purchases by IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, 401(k) plans
and 403(b) (7) plans.

         Class C shares will not incur an initial  sales charge when  purchased,
but will be subject to an ongoing  fee to  compensate  the  Distributor  for its
services  and  costs  in  distributing  Class C  shares  and  servicing  Class C
shareholder accounts (the "Class C Plan"). Under the Class C Plan, the Fund pays
the  Distributor  1.00% of the Fund's average daily net assets  attributable  to
Class C shares,  0.25% of which is  intended as a fee for  services  provided to
existing  shareholders.  If Class C shares are redeemed  within 12 months of the
first business day of the calendar month of their purchase,  the redemption will
give rise to a contingent  deferred sales charge (the "Class C CDSC"),  of 1% of
the lower of the original purchase price or the redemption proceeds. The Class C
CDSC will be waived in certain cases.

         Class X shares will not incur an initial  sales charge when  purchased,
and investors  purchasing  Class X shares will receive,  as a bonus,  additional
shares  having a value equal to 2.5% of the amount  invested  ("Bonus  Shares"),
which will be paid for by the Distributor.  Class X shares will be subject to an
ongoing  fee to  compensate  the  Distributor  for its  services  and  costs  in
distributing  Class X shares and  servicing  Class X  shareholder  accounts (the
"Class X Plan").  Under the Class X Plan, the Fund pays the Distributor 1.00% of
the Fund's  average  daily net assets  attributable  to Class X shares  that are
outstanding  for 8 years or  less,  0.25%  of  which  is  intended  as a fee for
services  provided  to  existing  shareholders.  If Class X shares are  redeemed
within 7 years of their purchase,  the redemption will give rise to a contingent
deferred sales charge (the "Class X CDSC"),  of a percentage of the lower of the
original purchase price or the redemption  proceeds,  such percentage  declining
each year of the shareholder's  holding period.  The Class X CDSC will be waived
in certain  cases.  Eight years  after  issuance,  Class X shares  will  convert
automatically  into Class A shares.  Class X shares are currently only available
for certain "qualified" purchases, such as purchases by IRAs and SIMPLE IRAs.

         American Skandia  Investment  Services,  Incorporated  (the "Investment
Manager"), acts as the investment manager for both the Funds of the Company that
do not  have a  "master/feeder"  structure  (the  "Non-Feeder  Funds"),  and the
Portfolios,  pursuant  to separate  investment  management  agreements  with the
Company  and  the  Trust,  respectively  (the  "Management   Agreements").   The
Investment Manager in turn engages sub-advisors for the investment management of
each  Non-Feeder  Fund and  Portfolio.  Under the  Management  Agreements,  each
Non-Feeder  Fund and  Portfolio  has  agreed to pay the  Investment  Manager  an
investment  management fee, which is accrued daily and paid monthly,  equal to a
stated  percentage of the  respective  Fund's or  Portfolio's  average daily net
asset value. The Investment  Manager pays the sub-advisory fees of sub-advisors.
Subject to certain limitations, the Investment Manager has voluntarily agreed to
reimburse the Funds in order to prevent  certain Fund expenses from  exceeding a
specified percentage of each Fund's average daily net assets.

         In rendering the opinions  expressed herein, we have examined originals
or copies,  certified  or  otherwise  identified  to our  satisfaction,  of such
documents,  corporate  records and other instruments as we have deemed necessary
or  appropriate  for the  purpose  of  rendering  this  opinion,  including  the
Certificate  of the Secretary of the Company  attached  hereto as Exhibit A (the
"Certificate").

         In  addition,   we  have   examined  and  relied  upon  the   Company's
Registration  Statement  on Form  N-lA  relating  to  shares  of the Funds to be
offered,  filed with the Securities and Exchange  Commission (the  "Commission")
pursuant to the  provisions of the Securities Act of 1933 and the 1940 Act, each
as amended, and the rules and regulations of the Commission thereunder.

         As to questions of fact material to this  opinion,  we have relied upon
the representations made in the Certificate.

         The opinions  set forth below are based upon the Internal  Revenue Code
of 1986, as amended (the "Code"),  the  regulations  promulgated by the Treasury
Department,  published administrative  announcements and rulings of the Internal
Revenue Service and court decisions, all as of the date of this letter.

         Based on and subject to the foregoing,  and such examinations of law as
we have deemed  necessary,  it is our opinion that for U.S.  Federal  income tax
purposes:

         (1) The adoption and  operation of the multiple  class share  structure
described above will not cause  dividends  declared and paid with respect to any
class of shares of any Fund to be treated as preferential  dividends  within the
meaning of Section 562(c) of the Code. Consequently,  each Fund will be entitled
to deduct all dividends paid by it to its  shareholders  during the taxable year
under Sections 561 (a) and 852 of the Code,  provided the Fund  otherwise  meets
the conditions of those Sections.

         The grant of Bonus Shares to  purchasers  of Class X shares will not be
treated as the  distribution of a dividend from a Fund, and accordingly will not
give rise to preferential  dividends,  because the Bonus Shares are given by the
Distributor  and not the Fund.  In this  regard,  the fact that the  Distributor
receives  Class X Plan fees with  respect  to Class X shares  that are sold with
Bonus  Shares  does not cause the Bonus  Shares  to be  treated  as an  indirect
transfer of value from the Fund to the purchasers of Class X shares constituting
a dividend,  because the Class X Plan must be approved annually by the Company's
Board  of  Directors,  including  a  majority  of  the  Company's  disinterested
Directors.  Securities  and Exchange  Commission  ("SEC") Rule 12b-1,  17 C.F.R.
270.12b-1;  cf., T.A.M.  9345003 (July 15, 1993) (Rule 12b-1 plan fees for years
following  the sale of mutual  fund shares are not  recognized  as income by the
distributor in the year of sale because the  distributor's  receipt of such fees
is contingent on the continued approval of the Rule 12b-1 plan).

         Furthermore,  even if the receipt of Bonus  Shares  were  treated as an
indirect  transfer of value from the Fund to the purchasers of Class X shares in
the form of a rebate  of  future  Class X Plan  fees,  such  rebate  will not be
treated as giving rise to  preferential  dividends.  In effect,  differences  in
distributions that arise under a multiple class distribution plan under SEC Rule
l8f-3 are treated as not giving rise to preferential dividends because fees paid
pursuant to Rule 12b-1 plans and contingent  deferred sales charge  arrangements
are considered indirect shareholder expenses,  insofar as the fund is reimbursed
for Rule  12b-l plan  outlays by  shareholders  participating  in the plan,  and
shareholders  are directly  responsible  for payment of the contingent  deferred
sales charge monies for distribution costs. See Rev. Proc. 96-47, 1996-39 I.R.B.
10; A rebate of Rule  12b-1  plan  fees to a  purchaser  of shares  that is made
indirectly  through the fund by way of a waiver of Rule 12b-1 plan fees will not
give rise to preferential  dividends,  and there is no greater reason to treat a
rebate as giving rise to  preferential  dividends where it is made directly by a
distributor to the purchasing shareholder.

         (2)  Conversion  of Class B shares and Class X shares to Class A Shares
will not  result in gain or loss to the  shareholders.  The  holding  period and
basis of the shares converted will not be affected by the conversion.

         (3) The status of each Fund as a regulated investment company (a "RIC")
under Sections 851 through 855 of the Code will not be affected as result of the
adoption of a multiple class share structure as described above.

         (4) Purchasers of Class X shares will not realize gross income upon the
receipt  of  Bonus  Shares.  Rather,  the  receipt  of Bonus  Shares  will be an
adjustment to the purchase price of the Class x shares. Freedom Newspapers, Inc.
v.  Commissioner,  36  T.C.M.  1755  (1977),  acq.,  A.O.D.  1978-62;  Eaton  v.
Commissioner, 37 B.T.A. 715 (1938), acq., 1938-2 C.B. 10; Brown v. Commissioner,
10 B.T.A. 1036 (1928), nonacq. A.O.D. 1976-435.

         The opinion set forth in (3) above is subject to the qualification that
we have made no independent  investigation  with respect to the qualification of
any Fund as a regulated investment company under the Code.

         The opinions set forth in this letter  represent our  conclusions as to
the application of Federal income tax law existing as of the date of this letter
to the transactions  described herein. We can give no assurance that legislative
enactments,  administrative  changes or court  decisions may not be  forthcoming
that would modify or supersede our opinions.

         The opinions  contained  herein are limited to those matters  expressly
covered;  no  opinion is to be  implied  in  respect  of any other  matter.  The
opinions  set  forth  herein  are as of the  data  hereof  and we  disclaim  any
undertaking  to update this letter or otherwise  advise you as to any changes of
law or fact that may  hereinafter be brought to our attention.  The opinions set
forth herein may not be relied on by any person or entity other than you without
our prior written consent.

                                                             Very truly yours,



                                                             /s/ Rogers & Wells
                                                             Rogers & Wells




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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 014
   <NAME> T. ROWE PRICE INTERNATIONAL - CLASS X
       
<S>                             <C>
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 021
   <NAME> JANUS CAPITAL GROWTH - CLASS A
       
<S>                             <C>
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 022
   <NAME> JANUS CAPITAL GROWTH - CLASS B
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 023
   <NAME> JANUS CAPITAL GROWTH - CLASS C
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 024
   <NAME> JANUS CAPITAL GROWTH - CLASS X
       
<S>                             <C>
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 031
   <NAME> INVESCO EQUITY - CLASS A
       
<S>                             <C>
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 032
   <NAME> INVESCO EQUITY - CLASS B
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 033
   <NAME> INVESCO EQUITY - CLASS C
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 034
   <NAME> INVESCO EQUITY - CLASS X
       
<S>                             <C>
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<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                       (13204)
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 041
   <NAME> TOTAL RETURN BOND - CLASS A
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 042
   <NAME> TOTAL RETURN BOND - CLASS B
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
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<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                         1180008
<RECEIVABLES>                                    56002
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                   78936
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<NET-ASSETS>                                   1183677
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 043
   <NAME> TOTAL RETURN BOND - CLASS C
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
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<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   1.90
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 044
   <NAME> TOTAL RETURN BOND - CLASS X
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 051
   <NAME> JPM MONEY MARKET - CLASS A
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 052
   <NAME> JPM MONEY MARKET - CLASS B
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 053
   <NAME> JPM MONEY MARKET - CLASS C
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 054
   <NAME> JPM MONEY MARKET - CLASS X
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
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<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
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<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
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   <NAME> T. ROWE PRICE SMALL CO. - CLASS C
       
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   <NAME> AMERICAN CENTURY STRATEGIC BALANCED - CLASS A
       
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<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
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   <NAME> AMERICAN CENTURY STRATEGIC BALANCED - CLASS C
       
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<TABLE> <S> <C>

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<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
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   <NAME> AMERICAN CENTURY STRATEGIC BALANCED - CLASS X
       
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<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                         183227
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<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               9.95
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   2.10
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 101
   <NAME> FEDERATED HIGHYIELD BOND - CLASS A
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                          4417473
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                         4392626
<RECEIVABLES>                                   310285
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<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                        (4183)
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<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                         3826459
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<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                            10.00
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<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               9.93
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 102
   <NAME> FEDERATED HIGHYIELD BOND - CLASS B
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                          4417473
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                         4392626
<RECEIVABLES>                                   310285
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                   82436
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<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                          (.07)
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<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   2.00
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</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 103
   <NAME> FEDERATED HIGHYIELD BOND - CLASS C
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                          4417473
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                         4392626
<RECEIVABLES>                                   310285
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                   82436
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<PER-SHARE-NII>                                    .03
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                          (.07)
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<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                            0
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<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               9.93
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   2.00
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035018
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA ADVISOR FUNDS, INC.
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 104
   <NAME> FEDERATED HIGHYIELD BOND - CLASS X
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   4-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                          4417473
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                         4392626
<RECEIVABLES>                                   310285
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<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                        856379
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<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                        (4183)
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<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                         3826459
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<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               9.93
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   2.00
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
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</TABLE>
WARNING: THE EDGAR SYSTEM ENCOUNTERED ERROR(S) WHILE PROCESSING THIS SCHEDULE.

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035215
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER TRUST
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 02
   <NAME> JANUS CAPITAL GROWTH
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   5-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                          7914248
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                         7921173
<RECEIVABLES>                                   317586
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<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                 8262367
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                        221400
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                        58190
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<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                       7982777
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                           702824
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<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                              0
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<NET-ASSETS>                                   7982777
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<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                         843343
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<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   2.79
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</TABLE>
WARNING: THE EDGAR SYSTEM ENCOUNTERED ERROR(S) WHILE PROCESSING THIS SCHEDULE.

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035215
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER TRUST
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 03
   <NAME> INVESCO EQUITY INCOME
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   5-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                          7065977
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                         7122381
<RECEIVABLES>                                   559783
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<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                       1162497
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
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<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                            1203177
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                       6502681
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                           625740
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                                0
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                              0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
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<NET-ASSETS>                                   6502681
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<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                       (18651)
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<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                         6482681
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</TABLE>
WARNING: THE EDGAR SYSTEM ENCOUNTERED ERROR(S) WHILE PROCESSING THIS SCHEDULE.

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035215
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER TRUST
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 04
   <NAME> PIMCO TOTAL RETURN BOND
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   5-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                          5378389
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                         5438844
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<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                        500000
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<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                       5024543
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                           490916
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</TABLE>
WARNING: THE EDGAR SYSTEM ENCOUNTERED ERROR(S) WHILE PROCESSING THIS SCHEDULE.

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0001035215
<NAME> AMERICAN SKANDIA MASTER TRUST
<SERIES>
   <NUMBER> 05
   <NAME> JPM MONEY MARKET
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   5-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          OCT-31-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               OCT-31-1997
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<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            0
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<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                             0
<NET-ASSETS>                                   1994895
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