FT 464
487, 2000-10-25
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                                      Registration No.  333-48256
                                           1940 Act No. 811-05903

               SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                     Washington, D.C.  20549

                   Amendment No. 1 to Form S-6

 FOR REGISTRATION UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 OF SECURITIES
       OF UNIT INVESTMENT TRUSTS REGISTERED ON FORM N-8B-2

A.   Exact name of trust:

                             FT 464

B.   Name of depositor:

                      NIKE SECURITIES L.P.

C.   Complete address of depositor's principal executive offices:

                      1001 Warrenville Road
                     Lisle, Illinois  60532

D.        Name and complete address of agents for service:

                                        Copy to:
     JAMES A. BOWEN                     ERIC F. FESS
     c/o Nike Securities L.P.           c/o Chapman and Cutler
     1001 Warrenville Road              111 West Monroe Street
     Lisle, Illinois  60532             Chicago, Illinois 60603

E.   Title of Securities Being Registered:

     An indefinite number of Units pursuant to Rule 24f-2
     promulgated under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
     amended


F.   Approximate date of proposed sale to public:

     As soon as practicable after the effective date of the
     Registration Statement.

|XXX|Check  box  if it is proposed that this filing  will  become
     effective on October 25, 2000 at 2:00 p.m. pursuant to Rule 487.

                ________________________________

                   ASEA CAPITAL ADVANTAGE GROWTH TRUST

                                 FT 464


FT 464 is a series of a unit investment trust, the FT Series. FT 464
consists of a single portfolio known as ASEA Capital Advantage Growth
Trust (the "Trust"). The Trust invests in a diversified portfolio of
common stocks ("Securities") of companies which are headquartered or
incorporated, or have a strong presence, in the State of Alabama. The
objective of the Trust is to provide above-average capital appreciation.


THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION HAS NOT APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED
OF THESE SECURITIES OR PASSED UPON THE ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY
REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.


             The date of this prospectus is October 25, 2000


Page 1


                        Table of Contents

Summary of Essential Information                         3
Fee Table                                                4
Report of Independent Auditors                           5
Statement of Net Assets                                  6
Schedule of Investments                                  7
The FT Series                                            8
Portfolio                                                8
Risk Factors                                            10
Portfolio Securities Descriptions                       11
Public Offering                                         12
Distribution of Units                                   15
The Sponsor's Profits                                   15
The Secondary Market                                    16
How We Purchase Units                                   16
Expenses and Charges                                    16
Tax Status                                              17
Retirement Plans                                        18
Rights of Unit Holders                                  18
Income and Capital Distributions                        19
Redeeming Your Units                                    20
Removing Securities from the Trust                      21
Amending or Terminating the Indenture                   21
Information on Sunset Financial Services, Inc.,
   the Sponsor, Trustee and Evaluator                   22
Other Information                                       23

Page 2


                   Summary of Essential Information

                   ASEA Capital Advantage Growth Trust
                                 FT 464


                    At the Opening of Business on the
                Initial Date of Deposit-October 25, 2000


                    Sponsor:  Nike Securities L.P.
                    Trustee:  The Chase Manhattan Bank
                  Evaluator:  First Trust Advisors L.P.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                                                         <C>
Initial Number of Units (1)                                                                                     15,022
Fractional Undivided Interest in the Trust per Unit (1)                                                       1/15,022
Public Offering Price:
    Aggregate Offering Price Evaluation of Securities per Unit (2)                                          $    9.900
    Maximum Sales Charge of 4.40% of the Public Offering Price per Unit
        (4.444% of the net amount invested, exclusive of the deferred sales charge) (3)                     $     .440
    Less Deferred Sales Charge per Unit                                                                     $    (.340)
Public Offering Price per Unit (4)                                                                          $   10.000
Sponsor's Initial Repurchase Price per Unit (5)                                                             $    9.560
Redemption Price per Unit
    (based on aggregate underlying value of Securities less deferred sales charge) (5)                      $    9.560
Cash CUSIP Number                                                                                           30265U 571
Reinvestment CUSIP Number                                                                                   30265U 589
Fee Accounts Cash CUSIP Number                                                                              30265U 597
Fee Accounts Reinvestment CUSIP Number                                                                      30265U 605
Security Code                                                                                                    59824
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                      <C>
First Settlement Date                    October 30, 2000
Mandatory Termination Date (6)           October 31, 2006
Income Distribution Record Date          Fifteenth day of each June and December, commencing December 15, 2000.
Income Distribution Date (7)             Last day of each June and December, commencing December 31, 2000.

______________

<FN>
                NOTES TO SUMMARY OF ESSENTIAL INFORMATION

(1) As of the close of business on the Initial Date of Deposit, we may
adjust the number of Units of the Trust so that the Public Offering
Price per Unit will equal approximately $10.00. If we make such an
adjustment, the fractional undivided interest per Unit will vary from
the amounts indicated above.

(2) Each listed Security is valued at its last closing sale price. If a
Security is not listed, or if no closing sale price exists, it is valued
at its closing ask price. Evaluations for purposes of determining the
purchase, sale or redemption price of Units are made as of the close of
trading on the New York Stock Exchange ("NYSE") (generally 4:00 p.m.
Eastern time) on each day on which it is open (the "Evaluation Time").

(3) The maximum sales charge consists of an initial sales charge and a
deferred sales charge. See "Fee Table" and "Public Offering."

(4) The Public Offering Price shown above reflects the value of the
Securities on the business day prior to the Initial Date of Deposit. No
investor will purchase Units at this price. The price you pay for your
Units will be based on their valuation at the Evaluation Time on the
date you purchase your Units. On the Initial Date of Deposit the Public
Offering Price per Unit will not include any accumulated dividends on
the Securities. After this date a pro rata share of any accumulated
dividends on the Securities will be included.

(5) Until the earlier of six months after the Initial Date of Deposit or
the end of the initial offering period, the Sponsor's Initial Repurchase
Price per Unit and the Redemption Price per Unit will include the
estimated organization costs per Unit set forth under "Fee Table." After
such date, the Sponsor's Repurchase Price and Redemption Price per Unit
will not include such estimated organization costs. See "Redeeming Your
Units."

(6) See "Amending or Terminating the Indenture."

(7) Distributions from the Capital Account will be made monthly on the
last day of the month to Unit holders of record on the fifteenth day of
such month if the amount available for distribution equals at least
$1.00 per 100 Units. In any case, we will distribute any funds in the
Capital Account in December of each year.
</FN>
</TABLE>

Page 3


                           Fee Table

This Fee Table describes the fees and expenses that you may, directly or
indirectly, pay if you buy and hold Units of the Trust. See "Public
Offering" and "Expenses and Charges." Although the Trust has a term of
approximately six years and is a unit investment trust rather than a
mutual fund, this information allows you to compare fees.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                 Amount
                                                                                                                 per Unit
                                                                                                                 ________
<S>                                                                                                  <C>         <C>
Unit Holder Transaction Expenses
(as a percentage of public offering price)
Maximum sales charge                                                                                 4.40%       $.440
                                                                                                     =======     =======
Initial sales charge (paid at time of purchase)                                                      1.00%(a)    $.100
Deferred sales charge (paid in installments or at redemption)                                        3.40%(b)     .340

Organization Costs
(as a percentage of public offering price)
Estimated organization costs                                                                          .150%(c)   $.0150
                                                                                                     =======     =======
Estimated Annual Trust Operating Expenses(d)
(as a percentage of average net assets)
Portfolio supervision, bookkeeping, administrative and evaluation fees                                .100%      $.0098
Creation and development fee                                                                          .350%(e)    .0343
Trustee's fee and other operating expenses                                                            .153%(f)    .0150
                                                                                                     ______      ______
Total                                                                                                 .603%      $.0591
                                                                                                     =======     =======
</TABLE>

                                 Example

This example is intended to help you compare the cost of investing in
the Trust with the cost of investing in other investment products. The
example assumes that you invest $10,000 in the Trust for the periods
shown and sell your Units at the end of those periods. The example also
assumes a 5% return on your investment each year and that the Trust's
operating expenses stay the same. Although your actual costs may vary,
based on these assumptions your costs would be:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
1 Year       3 Years       5 Years       6 Years
______       _______       _______       _______
<S>          <C>           <C>           <C>
$515         $638          $772          $844

The example will not differ if you hold rather than sell your Units at
the end of each period.

_____________

<FN>
(a) The initial sales charge is equal to the difference between the
maximum sales charge of 4.40% and any remaining deferred sales charge.

(b) The deferred sales charge is a fixed dollar amount equal to $.340
per Unit which, as a percentage of the Public Offering Price, will vary
over time. The deferred sales charge will be deducted in five monthly
installments commencing May 18, 2001.

(c) Estimated organization costs will be deducted from the assets of the
Trust at the earlier of six months after the Initial Date of Deposit or
the end of the initial offering period.

(d) With the exception of the creation and development fee, each of the
fees listed herein is assessed on a fixed dollar amount per Unit basis
which, as a percentage of average net assets, will vary over time.

(e) The creation and development fee compensates the Sponsor for creating
and developing the Trust. During the life of the Trust, this fee is
accrued daily based on the Trust's net asset value at the annual rate of
 .35%. The Trust pays the amount of any accrued creation and development
fee to the Sponsor monthly from the Trust's assets. In connection with
the creation and development fee, in no event will the Sponsor collect
over the life of the Trust more than 2.85% of a Unit holder's initial
investment.

(f) the costs incurred by the Trust for annually updating the Trust's
registration statement. Historically, we paid these costs. Other
operating expenses do not, however, include brokerage costs and other
portfolio transaction fees. In certain circumstances the Trust may incur
additional expenses not set forth above. See "Expenses and Charges."
</FN>
</TABLE>

Page 4


                  Report of Independent Auditors

The Sponsor, Nike Securities L.P., and Unit Holders
FT 464


We have audited the accompanying statement of net assets, including the
schedule of investments, of FT 464, comprised of the ASEA Capital
Advantage Growth Trust, as of the opening of business on October 25,
2000. This statement of net assets is the responsibility of the Trust's
Sponsor. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on this statement
of net assets based on our audit.



We conducted our audit in accordance with auditing standards generally
accepted in the United States. Those standards require that we plan and
perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
statement of net assets is free of material misstatement. An audit
includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and
disclosures in the statement of net assets. Our procedures included
confirmation of the letter of credit held by the Trustee and deposited
in the Trust on October 25, 2000. An audit also includes assessing the
accounting principles used and significant estimates made by the
Sponsor, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the statement
of net assets. We believe that our audit of the statement of net assets
provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.



In our opinion, the statement of net assets referred to above presents
fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of FT 464,
comprised of the ASEA Capital Advantage Growth Trust, at the opening of
business on October 25, 2000 in conformity with accounting principles
generally accepted in the United States.



                                      ERNST & YOUNG LLP


Chicago, Illinois
October 25, 2000


Page 5


                      Statement of Net Assets

                   ASEA Capital Advantage Growth Trust
                                 FT 464


                    At the Opening of Business on the
                Initial Date of Deposit-October 25, 2000



<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                                                       <C>
                                                         NET ASSETS
Investment in Securities represented by purchase contracts (1) (2)                                        $148,717
Less liability for reimbursement to Sponsor for organization costs (3)                                        (225)
Less liability for deferred sales charge (4)                                                                (5,107)
                                                                                                          ________
Net assets                                                                                                $143,385
                                                                                                          ========
Units outstanding                                                                                           15,022

                                                   ANALYSIS OF NET ASSETS
Cost to investors (5)                                                                                     $150,220
Less maximum sales charge (5)                                                                               (6,610)
Less estimated reimbursement to Sponsor for organization costs (3)                                            (225)
                                                                                                          ________
Net assets                                                                                                $143,385
                                                                                                          ========

_____________

<FN>
                    NOTES TO STATEMENT OF NET ASSETS

(1) Aggregate cost of the Securities listed under "Schedule of
Investments" is based on their aggregate underlying value.

(2) An irrevocable letter of credit issued by The Chase Manhattan Bank,
of which $200,000 will be allocated to the Trust, has been deposited
with the Trustee as collateral, covering the monies necessary for the
purchase of the Securities according to their purchase contracts.

(3) A portion of the Public Offering Price consists of an amount
sufficient to reimburse the Sponsor for all or a portion of the costs of
establishing the Trust. These costs have been estimated at $.0150 per
Unit for the Trust. A payment will be made at the earlier of six months
after the Initial Date of Deposit or the end of the initial offering
period to an account maintained by the Trustee from which the obligation
of the investors to the Sponsor will be satisfied. To the extent that
actual organization costs of the Trust are greater than the estimated
amount, only the estimated organization costs added to the Public
Offering Price will be reimbursed to the Sponsor and deducted from the
assets of the Trust.

(4) Represents the amount of mandatory deferred sales charge
distributions from the Trust ($.340 per Unit), payable to us in five
equal monthly installments beginning on May 18, 2001 and on the
twentieth day of each month thereafter (or if such date is not a
business day, on the preceding business day) through September 20, 2001.
If you redeem your Units before September 20, 2001 you will have to pay
the remaining amount of the deferred sales charge applicable to such
Units when you redeem them.

(5) The aggregate cost to investors in the Trust includes a maximum
sales charge (comprised of an initial sales charge and a deferred sales
charge) computed at the rate of 4.40% of the Public Offering Price per
Unit (equivalent to 4.444% of the net amount invested, exclusive of the
deferred sales charge), assuming no reduction of sales charge as set
forth under "Public Offering."
</FN>
</TABLE>

Page 6


                        Schedule of Investments

                   ASEA Capital Advantage Growth Trust
                                 FT 464


                    At the Opening of Business on the
                Initial Date of Deposit-October 25, 2000


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  Percentage        Market       Cost of
Number        Ticker Symbol and                                                   of Aggregate      Value per    Securities to
of Shares     Name of Issuer of Securities (1)                                    Offering Price    Share        the Trust (2)
_________     _____________________________________                               _________         ______       _____________
<S>           <C>                                                                 <C>               <C>          <C>
184          ADTN       ADTRAN, Inc.                                                5%              $40.000      $  7,360
384          ALAB       Alabama National BanCorporation                             5%               19.875         7,632
400          ALFA       Alfa Corporation                                            5%               18.250         7,300
585          ASO        AmSouth Bancorporation                                      5%               12.750         7,459
111          AVCT       Avocent Corporation                                         5%               67.063         7,444
171          BLS        BellSouth Corporation                                       5%               43.438         7,428
639          CMX        Caremark Rx, Inc.                                           5%               11.563         7,389
880          CNB        The Colonial BancGroup, Inc.                                5%                8.438         7,425
167          DCX        DaimlerChrysler AG (3)                                      5%               44.910         7,500
244          EGN        Energen Corporation                                         5%               29.875         7,290
141          GE         General Electric Company                                    5%               53.375         7,526
629          HRC        HealthSouth Corporation                                     5%               11.938         7,509
113          HMC        Honda Motor Co., Ltd. (ADR)                                 5%               65.875         7,444
293          PL         Protective Life Corporation                                 5%               25.250         7,398
359          RGBK       Regions Financial Corporation                               5%               20.688         7,427
177          SCI        SCI Systems, Inc.                                           5%               42.000         7,434
251          SO         The Southern Company                                        5%               29.500         7,404
249          SOTR       SouthTrust Corporation                                      5%               30.000         7,470
246          TMK        Torchmark Corporation                                       5%               30.188         7,426
192          VMC        Vulcan Materials Company                                    5%               38.813         7,452
                                                                                  _______                        _______
                               Total Investments                                  100%                           $148,717
                                                                                  ======                         ======

_____________

<FN>
(1) All Securities are represented by regular way contracts to purchase
such Securities which are backed by an irrevocable letter of credit
deposited with the Trustee. We entered into purchase contracts for the
Securities on October 24, 2000.

(2) The cost of the Securities to the Trust represents the aggregate
underlying value with respect to the Securities acquired (generally
determined by the closing sale prices of the listed Securities and the
ask prices of the over-the-counter traded Securities at the Evaluation
Time on the business day preceding the Initial Date of Deposit). The
valuation of the Securities has been determined by the Evaluator, an
affiliate of ours. The cost of the Securities to us and our loss (which
is the difference between the cost of the Securities to us and the cost
of the Securities to the Trust) are $148,955 and $238, respectively.

(3) This Security represents the common stock of a foreign company which
trades directly on a U.S. national securities exchange.
</FN>
</TABLE>

Page 7


                      The FT Series

The FT Series Defined.

We, Nike Securities L.P. (the "Sponsor"), have created hundreds of
similar yet separate series of a unit investment trust which we have
named the FT Series. The series to which this prospectus relates, FT
464, consists of a single portfolio known as ASEA Capital Advantage
Growth Trust.

The Trust was created under the laws of the State of New York by a Trust
Agreement (the "Indenture") dated the Initial Date of Deposit. This
agreement, entered into among Nike Securities L.P., as Sponsor, The
Chase Manhattan Bank as Trustee and First Trust Advisors L.P. as
Portfolio Supervisor and Evaluator, governs the operation of the Trust.

YOU MAY GET MORE SPECIFIC DETAILS CONCERNING THE NATURE, STRUCTURE AND
RISKS OF THIS PRODUCT IN AN "INFORMATION SUPPLEMENT" BY CALLING THE
TRUSTEE AT 1-800-682-7520.

How We Created the Trust.

On the Initial Date of Deposit, we deposited a portfolio of common
stocks with the Trustee and in turn, the Trustee delivered documents to
us representing our ownership of the Trust in the form of units ("Units").

After the Initial Date of Deposit, we may deposit additional Securities
in the Trust, or cash (including a letter of credit) with instructions
to buy more Securities to create new Units for sale. If we create
additional Units, we will attempt, to the extent practicable, to
maintain the percentage relationship established among the Securities on
the Initial Date of Deposit (as set forth under "Schedule of
Investments"), and not the percentage relationship existing on the day
we are creating new Units, since the two may differ. This difference may
be due to the sale, redemption or liquidation of any of the Securities.

Since the prices of the Securities will fluctuate daily, the ratio of
Securities in the Trust, on a market value basis, will also change
daily. The portion of Securities represented by each Unit will not
change as a result of the deposit of additional Securities or cash in
the Trust. If we deposit cash, you and new investors may experience a
dilution of your investment. This is because prices of Securities will
fluctuate between the time of the cash deposit and the purchase of the
Securities, and because the Trust pays the associated brokerage fees. To
reduce this dilution, the Trust will try to buy the Securities as close
to the Evaluation Time and as close to the evaluation price as possible.
In addition, because the Trust pays the brokerage fees associated with
its creation of new Units and with the sale of Securities to meet
redemption and exchange requests, frequent redemption and exchange
activity will likely result in higher brokerage expenses.

An affiliate of the Trustee may receive these brokerage fees or the
Trustee may retain and pay us (or our affiliate) to act as agent for the
Trust to buy Securities. If we or an affiliate of ours act as agent to
the Trust, we will be subject to the restrictions under the Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended.

We cannot guarantee that the Trust will keep its present size and
composition for any length of time. Securities may periodically be sold
under certain circumstances, and the proceeds from these sales will be
used to meet Trust obligations or distributed to Unit holders, but will
not be reinvested. However, Securities will not be sold to take
advantage of market fluctuations or changes in anticipated rates of
appreciation or depreciation, or if they no longer meet the criteria by
which they were selected. You will not be able to dispose of or vote any
of the Securities in the Trust. As the holder of the Securities, the
Trustee will vote all of the Securities and will do so based on our
instructions.

Neither we nor the Trustee will be liable for a failure in any of the
Securities. However, if a contract for the purchase of any of the
Securities initially deposited in the Trust fails, unless we can
purchase substitute Securities ("Replacement Securities"), we will
refund to you that portion of the purchase price and sales charge
resulting from the failed contract on the next Income Distribution Date.
Any Replacement Security the Trust acquires will be identical to those
from the failed contract.

                        Portfolio

Objectives.


The objective of the Trust is to provide investors with the potential
for above-average capital appreciation through an investment in a
diversified portfolio of common stocks of companies which are

Page 8

headquartered or incorporated, or have a strong presence, in the State
of Alabama. The Trust has an expected life of approximately six years.



For over 50 years, the Alabama State Employees Association ("ASEA") has
supported the needs, concerns and rights of its members. In its role,
ASEA has worked to safeguard the retirement system, protect the state's
merit system principles, handle job-related problems and secure fair
salary treatment and fringe benefits.



Another important ASEA priority is their commitment to the
ideal of building a better Alabama. As such, ASEA is proud to make
available the ASEA Capital Advantage Growth Trust. This Trust offers
ASEA members the opportunity to invest in some of Alabama's largest
public companies, or companies with a strong presence in the State of
Alabama, and to potentially profit from the growth of these companies.



The ASEA Capital Advantage Growth Trust is one of several investment
options designed exclusively for ASEA members and families to supplement
participation in the State of Alabama Deferred Compensation
Program. According to the United States Social Security Administration,
approximately 60% of your retirement income will have to come from
sources other than your Deferred Compensation Program, Pensions, and/or
Social Security. ASEA recognizes the need for investors to save for their
future whether the investment goal is stockpiling additional funds for
retirement, saving for college tuition, a dream vacation or any other
financial milestone.


The objective of the Trust is to provide investors with above-average
capital appreciation potential and to reduce risk through diversification.

Why Do Companies in Alabama Offer an Investment Opportunity?

- Sense of History: Alabama, situated in the East South Central United
States, is often referred to as the "Heart of Dixie." Residents have a
deep-seated sense of their 450-year history.

The most marked change in Alabama, however, has been its comparatively
rapid industrialization, particularly in the second half of the 20th
century. In the northwest, the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) program
of hydroelectric power production, begun in the 1930s, fostered the
growth of giant fertilizer, munitions and aluminum industries.

Beginning in the 1950s, the United States space flight program made
Huntsville a leading aerospace center. Similar industrial expansion has
occurred in central and southwestern areas, including around Birmingham,
the state's largest city.

- Business Today: Alabama is home to more than 6,600 manufacturing,
assembly and processing establishments which employ more than 380,000
people and export approximately $5.4 billion in products and services
worldwide.

Manufacturing contributes more to personal income and more to the gross
state product than any other economic sector in Alabama.

Other leading industries are chemical manufacturing, primary metal
manufacturing and textile mills. Industries also employing a large
number of Alabama residents are meatpackers; manufacturers of men's and
boys' apparel; makers of vehicle tires; producers of motor vehicle
parts; and lumber mills. [Alabama Development Office]

- Growth Potential: Alabama companies have expanded within the past
decade with an average of $2 billion annually in capital investment,
according to the Alabama Department of Development.


Units of the Trust are offered through Sunset Financial Services, Inc.
("SFS"). SFS believes the business climate for existing companies in
Alabama is favorable for continued growth, largely due to a progressive
state business environment demonstrated by comprehensive "right-to-work"
laws, one-stop environmental permitting and a positive state and local
government attitude toward new and expanding business.



With its strong regional economy and national and worldwide
participation, SFS believes that a portfolio of Alabama companies has
the potential to provide investors with capital appreciation to the
extent that the companies in the Trust continue to grow. Of course,
there can be no guarantee current economic trends will continue.
In the opinion of SFS, companies with a strong presence in the State
of Alabama are those which conduct significant operations in the state
either in the form of manufacturing facilities, regional offices or
sales activities.


An investment in the Trust should be made with the understanding that
companies in the State of Alabama, as in any state, are subject to and

Page 9

may be affected by various factors, including the general state of the
economy, legislative changes and consumer spending trends.

The Trust is not sponsored, created or managed by ASEA. Of course, as
with any similar investments, there can be no guarantee that the
objective of the Trust will be achieved. See "Risk Factors" for a
discussion of the risks of investing in the Trust.

                      Risk Factors

Price Volatility. The Trust invests in common stocks. The value of the
Trust's Units will fluctuate with changes in the value of these common
stocks. Common stock prices fluctuate for several reasons including
changes in investors' perceptions of the financial condition of an
issuer or the general condition of the relevant stock market, or when
political or economic events affecting the issuers occur. In addition,
common stock prices may be particularly sensitive to rising interest
rates, as the cost of capital rises and borrowing costs increase.

Because the Trust is not managed, the Trustee will not sell stocks in
response to or in anticipation of market fluctuations, as is common in
managed investments. As with any investment, we cannot guarantee that
the performance of the Trust will be positive over any period of time or
that you won't lose money. Units of the Trust are not deposits of any
bank and are not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation or any other government agency.


Certain of the Securities in the Trust are issued by companies with
market capitalizations of less than $1 billion. The share prices of
these small-cap companies are often more volatile than those of larger
companies as a result of several factors common to many such issuers,
including limited trading volumes, products or financial resources,
management inexperience and less publicly available information.


Dividends. There is no guarantee that the issuers of the Securities will
declare dividends in the future or that if declared they will either
remain at current levels or increase over time.


Financial Services Industry. Because more than 25% of the Trust is
invested in banks and insurance companies, the Trust is considered to be
concentrated in the financial services industry, which includes banks
and thrifts, financial services and insurance companies. A portfolio
concentrated in a single industry may present more risks than a
portfolio broadly diversified over several industries. Banks, thrifts
and their holding companies are especially subject to the adverse
effects of economic recession; volatile interest rates; portfolio
concentrations in geographic markets and in commercial and residential
real estate loans; and competition from new entrants in their fields of
business. Although recently-enacted legislation repealed most of the
barriers which separated the banking, insurance and securities
industries, these industries are still extensively regulated at both the
federal and state level and may be adversely affected by increased
regulations.



Banks and thrifts face increased competition from nontraditional lending
sources as regulatory changes, such as the recently enacted financial-
services overhaul legislation, permit new entrants to offer various
financial products. Technological advances such as the Internet allow
these nontraditional lending sources to cut overhead and permit the more
efficient use of customer data.



Companies involved in the insurance industry are engaged in
underwriting, selling, distributing or placing of property and casualty,
life or health insurance. Insurance company profits are affected by many
factors, including interest rate movements, the imposition of premium
rate caps, competition and pressure to compete globally. Property and
casualty insurance profits may also be affected by weather catastrophes
and other disasters. Life and health insurance profits may be affected
by mortality rates. Already extensively regulated, insurance companies'
profits may also be adversely affected by increased government
regulations or tax law changes.


Legislation/Litigation. From time to time, various legislative
initiatives are proposed in the United States and abroad which may have
a negative impact on certain of the companies represented in the Trust.
In addition, litigation regarding any of the issuers of the Securities,
or the industries represented in the Trust in general, may negatively
impact the share prices of these Securities. We cannot predict what
impact any pending or proposed legislation or pending or threatened
litigation will have on the share prices of the Securities.


Foreign Stocks. Certain of the Securities in the Trust are issued by
foreign companies, which makes the Trust subject to more risks than if
it invested solely in domestic common stocks. These Securities are

Page 10

either directly listed on a U.S. securities exchange or are in the form
of American Depositary Receipts ("ADRs") which are listed on a U.S.
securities exchange. Risks of foreign common stocks include higher
brokerage costs; different accounting standards; expropriation,
nationalization or other adverse political or economic developments;
currency devaluations, blockages or transfer restrictions; restrictions
on foreign investments and exchange of securities; inadequate financial
information; and lack of liquidity of certain foreign markets.


            Portfolio Securities Descriptions


ADTRAN, Inc., headquartered in Huntsville, Alabama, designs, develops,
makes, markets and services a broad range of high speed digital
transmission products utilized by telephone companies and corporate end-
users to implement advanced digital data services over existing
telephone networks.



Alabama National BanCorporation, headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama,
through subsidiaries, conducts a commercial banking business in Alabama
and Florida. The company also offers brokerage, receivables factoring,
insurance and finance services.



Alfa Corporation, headquartered in Montgomery, Alabama, writes
individual life insurance and property and casualty insurance policies,
mainly in the southeastern United States. The company also engages in
consumer financing, leasing, real estate investments, residential and
commercial construction, and real estate sales.



AmSouth Bancorporation, headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama, through
wholly-owned AmSouth Bank, operates a retail and commercial banking and
trust business through offices in four states. Operations are divided
into three segments: consumer banking, commercial banking and capital
management, which offer trust, investment management and corporate
trustee services.



Avocent Corporation, headquartered in Huntsville, Alabama, is a leading
supplier of connectivity solutions for enterprise data centers, service
providers and financial institutions worldwide.



BellSouth Corporation, headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia, is a
communications company serving customers in 17 countries. The company
provides wireline network access services for voice, digital and data,
cable and digital TV and advertising services, web design and hosting
and Internet access and wireless communications. BellSouth's operating
telephone company serves nine southern states, including Alabama.



Caremark Rx, Inc., headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama, is one of the
largest pharmaceutical services companies in the United States,
providing pharmacy benefit management services and therapeutic
pharmaceutical services. These services are sold separately and together
to assist corporations, insurance companies, unions, government employee
groups and managed care organizations throughout the United States in
delivering prescription drugs to their members in a cost-effective manner.



The Colonial BancGroup, Inc., headquartered in Montgomery, Alabama,
conducts a general commercial banking business through offices in six
states and operates a retail and wholesale mortgage banking business.
The company, through its wholly-owned banking subsidiary, Colonial Bank,
conducts a general commercial banking business in its respective service
areas.



DaimlerChrysler AG, headquartered in Stuttgart, Germany, manufactures
and assembles passenger cars, trucks and buses on six continents. Brand
names include "Mercedes-Benz," "Chrysler," "Dodge," "Plymouth" and
"Jeep." One of the company's subsidiaries, Mercedes-Benz U.S.
International Inc., manufactures its M-Class sport-utility vehicle at
its state-of-the-art assembly plant in Tuscaloosa County, Alabama.



Energen Corporation, headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama, supplies
natural gas to customers in central and northern Alabama; explores for
and produces oil and gas properties; develops coal-bed methane; and
operates an intrastate gas pipeline and gathering system.



General Electric Company, headquartered in Fairfield, Connecticut, makes
major appliances, industrial and power systems, aircraft engines,
engineered plastics, silicones, superabrasives, laminates and technical
products. The company is one of the leading chemicals and plastic
manufacturers in Alabama, with numerous divisions located throughout the
state.



HealthSouth Corporation, headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama, provides
outpatient and rehabilitative healthcare services through its national
network of outpatient and inpatient rehabilitation facilities,
outpatient surgery centers, medical centers and other healthcare
facilities.


Page 11



Honda Motor Co., Ltd. (ADR), headquartered in Tokyo, Japan, with
subsidiaries, makes a wide variety of products using internal combustion
engines, including motorcycles, automobiles, and power products such as
portable generators, small general purpose engines, lawn mowers and
tractors, power tillers, outboard engines and four-wheeled all-terrain
vehicles. One of the company's subsidiaries, Honda Manufacturing of
Alabama, is building an assembly plant in Lincoln, Alabama, that is
scheduled to begin operations in 2002.



Protective Life Corporation, headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama,
through subsidiaries, markets individual life insurance, indemnity and
prepaid dental products, credit life and disability insurance,
guaranteed investment contracts, guaranteed funding agreements, and
fixed and variable annuities throughout the United States.



Regions Financial Corporation, headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama, is
a regional bank holding company with full-service banking offices in
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana and Tennessee.



SCI Systems, Inc., headquartered in Huntsville, Alabama, designs, makes,
markets and services products for the computer, computer peripheral,
telecommunication, medical, industrial, consumer, and military and
aerospace markets.



The Southern Company, headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia, through wholly-
owned subsidiaries, supplies electricity in Alabama, Florida, Georgia
and Mississippi; and owns generating units at a large electric
generating station which supplies power to certain utility subsidiaries.



SouthTrust Corporation, headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama, conducts a
general banking business in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi,
North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas. The company also
provides computer services, mobile home finance servicing, trust
services, life insurance, insurance agency operations, investment
services, mortgage banking and leasing.



Torchmark Corporation, headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama, is an
insurance and diversified financial services holding company that
provides individual life and supplemental health insurance, annuities
and related products.



Vulcan Materials Company, headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama, is
principally engaged in the production, distribution and sale of
construction materials and industrial and specialty chemicals. The
company is the nation's foremost producer of construction aggregates, a
major producer of other construction materials and a leading chemicals
manufacturer, supplying chloralkali and other industrial and specialty
chemicals.


We have obtained the foregoing descriptions from sources we deem
reliable. We have not independently verified the provided information
either in terms of accuracy or completeness.

                     Public Offering

The Public Offering Price.

You may buy Units at the Public Offering Price, the per Unit price of
which is comprised of the following:

- The aggregate underlying value of the Securities;

- The amount of any cash in the Income and Capital Accounts;

- Dividends receivable on Securities; and

- The total sales charge (which combines an initial upfront sales charge
and a deferred sales charge).

The price you pay for your Units will differ from the amount stated
under "Summary of Essential Information" due to various factors,
including fluctuations in the prices of the Securities and changes in
the value of the Income and/or Capital Accounts.

Although you are not required to pay for your Units until three business
days following your order (the "date of settlement"), you may pay before
then. You will become the owner of Units ("Record Owner") on the date of
settlement if payment has been received. If you pay for your Units
before the date of settlement, we may use your payment during this time
and it may be considered a benefit to us, subject to the limitations of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

Organization Costs. Securities purchased with the portion of the Public
Offering Price intended to be used to reimburse the Sponsor for the
Trust's organization costs (including costs of preparing the
registration statement, the Indenture and other closing documents,
registering Units with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC")
and states, the initial audit of the Trust portfolio, legal fees and the
initial fees and expenses of the Trustee) will be purchased in the same

Page 12

proportionate relationship as all the Securities contained in the Trust.
Securities will be sold to reimburse the Sponsor for the Trust's
organization costs at the earlier of six months after the Initial Date
of Deposit or the end of the initial offering period (a significantly
shorter time period than the life of the Trust). During the period
ending with the earlier of six months after the Initial Date of Deposit
or the end of the initial offering period, there may be a decrease in
the value of the Securities. To the extent the proceeds from the sale of
these Securities are insufficient to repay the Sponsor for Trust
organization costs, the Trustee will sell additional Securities to allow
the Trust to fully reimburse the Sponsor. In that event, the net asset
value per Unit of the Trust will be reduced by the amount of additional
Securities sold. Although the dollar amount of the reimbursement due to
the Sponsor will remain fixed and will never exceed the per Unit amount
set forth in "Notes to Statement of Net Assets," this will result in a
greater effective cost per Unit to Unit holders for the reimbursement to
the Sponsor. To the extent actual organization costs are less than the
estimated amount, only the actual organization costs will be deducted
from the assets of the Trust. When Securities are sold to reimburse the
Sponsor for organization costs, the Trustee will sell Securities, to the
extent practicable, which will maintain the same proportionate
relationship among the Securities contained in the Trust as existed
prior to such sale.

Minimum Purchase.

The minimum amount you can purchase of the Trust is $1,000 worth of
Units ($500 if you are purchasing Units for your Individual Retirement
Account or any other qualified retirement plan).

Sales Charges.

The sales charge you will pay has both an initial and a deferred
component. The initial sales charge, which you will pay at the time of
purchase, is equal to the difference between the maximum sales charge of
4.40% of the Public Offering Price and the maximum remaining deferred
sales charge (initially $.340 per Unit). This initial sales charge is
initially equal to approximately 1.00% of the Public Offering Price of a
Unit, but will vary from 1.00% depending on the purchase price of your
Units and as deferred sales charge payments are made. When the Public
Offering Price per Unit exceeds $10.00, the initial sales charge will
exceed 1.00% of the Public Offering Price.

Monthly Deferred Sales Charge. In addition, five monthly deferred sales
charge payments of $.068 per Unit will be deducted from the Trust's
assets on approximately the 20th day of each month from May 18, 2001
through September 20, 2001. If you buy Units at a price of less than
$10.00 per Unit, the dollar amount of the deferred sales charge will not
change, but the deferred sales charge on a percentage basis will be more
than 3.40% of the Public Offering Price.

If you purchase Units after the last deferred sales charge payment has
been assessed, your sales charge will consist of a one-time initial
sales charge of 4.40% of the Public Offering Price per Unit (equivalent
to 4.603% of the net amount invested). The sales charge will be reduced
by 1/2 of 1% on each subsequent October 31, commencing October 31, 2001,
to a minimum sales charge of 3.00%.

Discounts for Certain Persons.

If you invest at least $50,000 (except if you are purchasing for "Fee
Accounts" as described below), the maximum sales charge is reduced as
follows:

                                    Your maximum
If you invest                       sales charge
(in thousands):*                    will be:
_________________                   ____________
$50 but less than $100              4.15%
$100 but less than $250             3.90%
$250 but less than $500             3.40%

$500 but less than $1,000           2.40%
$1,000 or more                      1.50%


* Breakpoint sales charges are also applied on a Unit basis utilizing a
breakpoint equivalent in the above table of $10 per Unit and will be
applied on whichever basis is more favorable to the investor. The
breakpoints will be adjusted to take into consideration purchase orders
stated in dollars which cannot be completely fulfilled due to the
requirement that only whole Units be issued.


The reduced sales charge for quantity purchases will apply only to
purchases made by the same person on any one day from any one dealer. To
help you reach the above levels, you can combine the Units you purchase
of the Trust in this prospectus with any other same day purchases of
other trusts for which we are Principal Underwriter and are currently in
the initial offering period. In addition, we will also consider Units

Page 13

you purchase in the name of your spouse or child under 21 years of age
to be purchases by you. The reduced sales charges will also apply to a
trustee or other fiduciary purchasing Units for a single trust estate or
single fiduciary account. You must inform your dealer of any combined
purchases before the sale in order to be eligible for the reduced sales
charge. Broker/dealers will receive a concession of 1.00% of the Public
Offering Price on Units sold subject to the sales charge reduction for
purchases of $1 million or more. In all other instances, any reduced
sales charge is the responsibility of the party making the sale.


You may use redemption or termination proceeds from any unit investment
trust we sponsor to purchase Units of the Trust during the initial
offering period at the Public Offering Price less 1.00%. Please note
that any deferred sales charge remaining on units you redeem to buy
Units of this Trust will be deducted from those redemption proceeds.

Investors purchasing Units through registered broker/dealers who charge
periodic fees in lieu of commissions or who charge for financial
planning, investment advisory or asset management services, or provide
these or comparable services as part of an investment account where a
comprehensive "wrap fee" or similar charge is imposed ("Fee Accounts")
will not be assessed the initial or deferred sales charge described in
this section on the purchase of Units. We reserve the right to limit or
deny purchases of Units not subject to the initial or deferred sales
charge by investors whose frequent trading activity we determine to be
detrimental to the Trust.

Employees, officers and directors (and immediate family members) of the
Sponsor, our related companies, dealers and their affiliates, and
vendors providing services to us may purchase Units at the Public
Offering Price less the applicable dealer concession. Immediate family
members include spouses, children, grandchildren, parents, grandparents,
siblings, mothers-in-law, fathers-in-law, sons-in-law, daughters-in-law,
brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law, and trustees, custodians or
fiduciaries for the benefit of such persons.

You will be charged the deferred sales charge per Unit regardless of any
discounts. However, if you are eligible to receive a discount such that
the maximum sales charge you must pay is less than the applicable
maximum deferred sales charge, including Fee Accounts Units, you will be
credited the difference between your maximum sales charge and the
maximum deferred sales charge at the time you buy your Units. If you
elect to have distributions reinvested into additional Units of the
Trust, in addition to the reinvestment Units you receive you will also
be credited additional Units with a dollar value at the time of
reinvestment sufficient to cover the amount of any remaining deferred
sales charge to be collected on such reinvestment Units. The dollar
value of these additional credited Units (as with all Units) will
fluctuate over time, and may be less on the dates deferred sales charges
are collected than their value at the time they were issued.

The Value of the Securities.

The Evaluator will appraise the aggregate underlying value of the
Securities in the Trust as of the Evaluation Time on each business day
and will adjust the Public Offering Price of the Units according to this
valuation. This Public Offering Price will be effective for all orders
received before the Evaluation Time on each such day. If we or the
Trustee receive orders for purchases, sales or redemptions after that
time, or on a day which is not a business day, they will be held until
the next determination of price. The term "business day" as used in this
prospectus will exclude Saturdays, Sundays and certain national holidays
on which the NYSE is closed.

The aggregate underlying value of the Securities in the Trust will be
determined as follows: if the Securities are listed on a securities
exchange or The Nasdaq Stock Market, their value is generally based on
the closing sale prices on that exchange or system (unless it is
determined that these prices are not appropriate as a basis for
valuation). However, if there is no closing sale price on that exchange
or system, they are valued based on the closing ask prices. If the
Securities are not so listed, or, if so listed and the principal market
for them is other than on that exchange or system, their value will
generally be based on the current ask prices on the over-the-counter
market (unless it is determined that these prices are not appropriate as
a basis for valuation). If current ask prices are unavailable, the
valuation is generally determined:

a) On the basis of current ask prices for comparable securities;

b) By appraising the value of the Securities on the ask side of the
market; or

c) By any combination of the above.

Page 14


After the initial offering period is over, the aggregate underlying
value of the Securities will be determined as set forth above, except
that bid prices are used instead of ask prices when necessary.

                  Distribution of Units

We intend to qualify Units of the Trust for sale in a number of states.
All Units will be sold at the then current Public Offering Price.

Dealer Concessions.

Dealers and other selling agents can purchase Units at prices which
reflect a concession or agency commission of 3.50% of the Public
Offering Price per Unit (or 65% of the maximum sales charge after
October 31, 2001). However, for Units subject to a sales charge which
are purchased using redemption or termination proceeds, this amount will
be reduced to 2.50% of the sales price of these Units.

Dealers and other selling agents who sell Units of the Trust during the
initial offering period in the dollar amounts shown below will be
entitled to the following additional sales concessions as a percentage
of the Public Offering Price:

Total Sales                         Additional
(in millions):                      Concession:
_________________                   ___________
$10 but less than $20               .05%
$20 or more                         .10%

Dealers and other selling agents will not receive a concession on the
sale of Units which are not subject to the initial or deferred sales
charge, but such Units will be included in determining whether the above
volume sales levels are met. Dealers and other selling agents who,
during any consecutive 12-month period, sell at least $2 billion worth
of primary market units of unit investment trusts sponsored by us will
receive a concession of $30,000 in the month following the achievement
of this level. We reserve the right to change the amount of concessions
or agency commissions from time to time. Certain commercial banks may be
making Units of the Trust available to their customers on an agency
basis. A portion of the sales charge paid by these customers is kept by
or given to the banks in the amounts shown above.

Award Programs.

From time to time we may sponsor programs which provide awards to a
dealer's registered representatives who have sold a minimum number of
Units during a specified time period. We may also pay fees to qualifying
dealers for services or activities which are meant to result in sales of
Units of the Trust. In addition, we will pay to dealers who sponsor
sales contests or recognition programs that conform to our criteria, or
participate in our sales programs, amounts equal to no more than the
total applicable sales charge on Units sold by such persons during such
programs. We make these payments out of our own assets and not out of
Trust assets. These programs will not change the price you pay for your
Units.

Investment Comparisons.

From time to time we may compare the estimated returns of the Trust
(which may show performance net of the expenses and charges the Trust
would have incurred) and returns over specified periods of other similar
trusts we sponsor in our advertising and sales materials, with (1)
returns on other taxable investments such as the common stocks
comprising various market indexes, corporate or U.S. Government bonds,
bank CDs and money market accounts or funds, (2) performance data from
Morningstar Publications, Inc. or (3) information from publications such
as Money, The New York Times, U.S. News and World Report, BusinessWeek,
Forbes or Fortune. The investment characteristics of each Trust differ
from other comparative investments. You should not assume that these
performance comparisons will be representative of the Trust's future
performance.

                  The Sponsor's Profits

We will receive a gross sales commission equal to the maximum sales
charge per Unit of the Trust less any reduced sales charge as stated in
"Public Offering." Also, any difference between our cost to purchase the
Securities and the price at which we sell them to the Trust is
considered a profit or loss (see Note 2 of "Schedule of Investments").
During the initial offering period, dealers and others may also realize
profits or sustain losses as a result of fluctuations in the Public
Offering Price they receive when they sell the Units.

In maintaining a market for the Units, any difference between the price
at which we purchase Units and the price at which we sell or redeem them
will be a profit or loss to us.

Page 15


                  The Secondary Market

Although not obligated, we intend to maintain a market for the Units
after the initial offering period and continuously offer to purchase
Units at prices based on the Redemption Price per Unit.

We will pay all expenses to maintain a secondary market, except the
Evaluator fees, Trustee costs to transfer and record the ownership of
Units and costs incurred in annually updating the Trust's registration
statement. We may discontinue purchases of Units at any time. IF YOU
WISH TO DISPOSE OF YOUR UNITS, YOU SHOULD ASK US FOR THE CURRENT MARKET
PRICES BEFORE MAKING A TENDER FOR REDEMPTION TO THE TRUSTEE. If you sell
or redeem your Units before you have paid the total deferred sales
charge on your Units, you will have to pay the remainder at that time.

                  How We Purchase Units

The Trustee will notify us of any tender of Units for redemption. If our
bid at that time is equal to or greater than the Redemption Price per
Unit, we may purchase the Units. You will receive your proceeds from the
sale no later than if they were redeemed by the Trustee. We may tender
Units that we hold to the Trustee for redemption as any other Units. If
we elect not to purchase Units, the Trustee may sell tendered Units in
the over-the-counter market, if any. However, the amount you will
receive is the same as you would have received on redemption of the Units.

                  Expenses and Charges

The estimated annual expenses of the Trust are listed under "Fee Table."
If actual expenses of the Trust exceed the estimate, the Trust will bear
the excess. The Trustee will pay operating expenses of the Trust from
the Income Account if funds are available, and then from the Capital
Account. The Income and Capital Accounts are noninterest-bearing to Unit
holders, so the Trustee may earn interest on these funds, thus
benefiting from their use.

As Sponsor, we will be compensated for providing bookkeeping and other
administrative services to the Trust and will receive brokerage fees
when the Trust uses us (or an affiliate of ours) as agent in buying or
selling Securities. Legal, typesetting, electronic filing and regulatory
filing fees and expenses associated with updating the Trust's
registration statement yearly are also now chargeable to the Trust.
Historically, we paid these fees and expenses. First Trust Advisors
L.P., an affiliate of ours, acts as both Portfolio Supervisor and
Evaluator to the Trust and will receive the fees set forth under "Fee
Table" for providing portfolio supervisory and evaluation services to
the Trust. In providing portfolio supervisory services, the Portfolio
Supervisor may purchase research services from a number of sources,
which may include underwriters or dealers of the Trust.

The fees payable to us, First Trust Advisors L.P. and the Trustee are
based on the largest aggregate number of Units of the Trust outstanding
at any time during the calendar year, except during the initial offering
period, in which case these fees are calculated based on the largest
number of Units outstanding during the period for which compensation is
paid. These fees may be adjusted for inflation without Unit holders'
approval, but in no case will the annual fees paid to us or our
affiliates for providing a given service to all unit investment trusts
for which we provide such services be more than the actual cost of
providing such services in such year.

As Sponsor, we will receive a fee from the Trust for creating and
developing the Trust, including determining the Trust's objectives,
policies, composition and size, selecting service providers and
information services and for providing other similar administrative and
ministerial functions. The "creation and development fee" is accrued
(and becomes a liability of the Trust) on a daily basis. The dollar
amount of the creation and development fee accrued each day, which will
vary with fluctuations in the Trust's net asset value, is determined by
multiplying the net asset value of the Trust on that day by 1/365 of the
annual creation and development fee of .35%. The total amount of any
accrued but unpaid creation and development fee is paid to the Sponsor
on a monthly basis from the assets of the Trust. If you redeem your
Units, you will only be responsible for any accrued and unpaid creation
and development fee through the date of redemption. In connection with
the creation and development fee, in no event will the Sponsor collect
over the life of the Trust more than 2.85% of a Unit holder's initial
investment. We do not use this fee to pay distribution expenses or as
compensation for sales efforts.

In addition to the Trust's operating expenses and those fees described

Page 16

above, each Trust may also incur the following charges:

- All legal and annual auditing expenses of the Trustee according to its
responsibilities under the Indenture;

- The expenses and costs incurred by the Trustee to protect the Trust
and your rights and interests;

- Fees for any extraordinary services the Trustee performed under the
Indenture;

- Payment for any loss, liability or expense the Trustee incurred
without negligence, bad faith or willful misconduct on its part, in
connection with its acceptance or administration of the Trust;

- Payment for any loss, liability or expenses we incurred without
negligence, bad faith or willful misconduct in acting as Depositor of
the Trust; and/or

- All taxes and other government charges imposed upon the Securities or
any part of the Trust.

The above expenses and the Trustee's annual fee are secured by a lien on
the Trust. Since the Securities are all common stocks and dividend
income is unpredictable, we cannot guarantee that dividends will be
sufficient to meet any or all expenses of the Trust. If there is not
enough cash in the Income or Capital Account, the Trustee has the power
to sell Securities in the Trust to make cash available to pay these
charges which may result in capital gains or losses to you. See "Tax
Status."

The Trust will be audited annually. So long as we are making a secondary
market for Units, we will bear the cost of these annual audits to the
extent the costs exceed $0.0050 per Unit. Otherwise, the Trust will pay
for the audit. You can request a copy of the audited financial
statements from the Trustee.

                       Tax Status

This section summarizes some of the main U.S. federal income tax
consequences of owning Units of the Trust. This section is current as of
the date of this prospectus. Tax laws and interpretations change
frequently, and these summaries do not describe all of the tax
consequences to all taxpayers. For example, these summaries generally do
not describe your situation if you are a non-U.S. person, a
broker/dealer, or other investor with special circumstances. In
addition, this section does not describe your state or foreign taxes. As
with any investment, you should consult your own tax professional about
your particular consequences.

Trust Status.

The Trust will not be taxed as corporations for federal income tax
purposes. As a Unit owner, you will be treated as the owner of a pro
rata portion of the Securities and other assets held by your Trust, and
as such you will be considered to have received a pro rata share of
income (i.e., dividends and capital gains, if any) from each Security
when such income is considered to be received by your Trust. This is
true even if you elect to have your distributions automatically
reinvested into additional Units. In addition, the income from the Trust
which you must take into account for federal income tax purposes is not
reduced by amounts used to pay Trust expenses (including a deferred
sales charge, if any).

Your Tax Basis and Income or Loss upon Disposition.

If the Trust disposes of Securities, you will generally recognize gain
or loss. If you dispose of your Units or redeem your Units for cash, you
will also generally recognize gain or loss. To determine the amount of
this gain or loss, you must subtract your tax basis in the related
Securities from your share of the total amount received in the
transaction. You can generally determine your initial tax basis in each
Security or other Trust asset by apportioning the cost of your Units,
generally including sales charges, among each Security or other Trust
asset ratably according to their value on the date you purchase your
Units. In certain circumstances, however, you may have to adjust your
tax basis after you purchase your Units (for example, in the case of
certain dividends that exceed a corporation's accumulated earnings and
profits).

If you are an individual, the maximum marginal federal tax rate for net
capital gain is generally 20% (10% for certain taxpayers in the lowest
tax bracket). Net capital gain equals net long-term capital gain minus
net short-term capital loss for the taxable year. Capital gain or loss
is long-term if the holding period for the asset is more than one year
and is short-term if the holding period for the asset is one year or
less. You must exclude the date you purchase your Units to determine the
holding period of your Units. The tax rates for capital gains realized
from assets held for one year or less are generally the same as for
ordinary income. The tax code may, however, treat certain capital gains
as ordinary income in special situations.

In-Kind Distributions.

Under certain circumstances, you may request a distribution of

Page 17

Securities (an "In-Kind Distribution") when you redeem your Units
(except for Fee Accounts) or at the Trust's termination. If you request
an In-Kind Distribution you will be responsible for any expenses related
to this distribution. By electing to receive an In-Kind Distribution,
you will receive whole shares of stock plus, possibly, cash.

You will not recognize gain or loss if you only receive Securities in
exchange for your pro rata portion of the Securities held by the Trust.
However, if you also receive cash in exchange for a fractional share of
a Security held by the Trust, you will generally recognize gain or loss
based on the difference between the amount of cash you receive and your
tax basis in such fractional share of the Security.

Limitations on the Deductibility of Trust Expenses.

Generally, for federal income tax purposes, you must take into account
your full pro rata share of the Trust's income, even if some of that
income is used to pay Trust expenses. You may deduct your pro rata share
of each expense paid by the Trust to the same extent as if you directly
paid the expense. You may, however, be required to treat some or all of
the expenses of the Trust as miscellaneous itemized deductions.
Individuals may only deduct certain miscellaneous itemized deductions to
the extent they exceed 2% of adjusted gross income.


Foreign, State and Local Taxes.



Some distributions by the Trust may be subject to foreign withholding
taxes. Any dividends withheld will nevertheless be treated as income to
you. However, because you are deemed to have paid directly your share of
foreign taxes that have been paid or accrued by the Trust, you may be
entitled to a foreign tax credit or deduction for U.S. tax purposes with
respect to such taxes.


Under the existing income tax laws of the State and City of New York,
the Trust will not be taxed as a corporation, and the income of the
Trust will be treated as the income of the Unit holders in the same
manner as for federal income tax purposes.

                    Retirement Plans

You may purchase Units of the Trust for:

- Individual Retirement Accounts;

- Keogh Plans;

- Pension funds; and

- Other tax-deferred retirement plans.

Generally, the federal income tax on capital gains and income received
in each of the above plans is deferred until you receive distributions.
These distributions are generally treated as ordinary income but may, in
some cases, be eligible for special averaging or tax-deferred rollover
treatment. Before participating in a plan like this, you should review
the tax laws regarding these plans and consult your attorney or tax
advisor. Brokerage firms and other financial institutions offer these
plans with varying fees and charges.

                 Rights of Unit Holders

Unit Ownership.

The Trustee will treat as Record Owner of Units persons registered as
such on its books. It is your responsibility to notify the Trustee when
you become Record Owner, but normally your broker/dealer provides this
notice. You may elect to hold your Units in either certificated or
uncertificated form. All Fee Accounts Units, however, will be held in
uncertificated form.

Certificated Units. When you purchase your Units you can request that
they be evidenced by certificates, which will be delivered shortly after
your order. Certificates will be issued in fully registered form,
transferable only on the books of the Trustee in denominations of one
Unit or any multiple thereof. You can transfer or redeem your
certificated Units by endorsing and surrendering the certificate to the
Trustee, along with a written instrument of transfer. You must sign your
name exactly as it appears on the face of the certificate with your
signature guaranteed by an eligible institution. In certain cases the
Trustee may require additional documentation before they will transfer
or redeem your Units.

You may be required to pay a nominal fee to the Trustee for each
certificate reissued or transferred, and to pay any government charge
that may be imposed for each transfer or exchange. If a certificate gets
lost, stolen or destroyed, you may be required to furnish indemnity to
the Trustee to receive replacement certificates. You must surrender
mutilated certificates to the Trustee for replacement.

Uncertificated Units. You may also choose to hold your Units in
uncertificated form. If you choose this option, the Trustee will

Page 18

establish an account for you and credit your account with the number of
Units you purchase. Within two business days of the issuance or transfer
of Units held in uncertificated form, the Trustee will send you:

- A written initial transaction statement containing a description of
the Trust;

- A list of the number of Units issued or transferred;

- Your name, address and Taxpayer Identification Number ("TIN");

- A notation of any liens or restrictions of the issuer and any adverse
claims; and

- The date the transfer was registered.

Uncertificated Units may be transferred the same way as certificated
Units, except that no certificate needs to be presented to the Trustee.
Also, no certificate will be issued when the transfer takes place unless
you request it. You may at any time request that the Trustee issue
certificates for your Units.

Unit Holder Reports.

In connection with each distribution, the Trustee will provide you with
a statement detailing the per Unit amount of income (if any)
distributed. After the end of each calendar year, the Trustee will
provide you with the following information:

- A summary of transactions in the Trust for the year;

- A list of any Securities sold during the year and the Securities held
at the end of that year by the Trust;

- The Redemption Price per Unit, computed on the 31st day of December of
such year (or the last business day before); and

- Amounts of income and capital distributed during the year.

You may request from the Trustee copies of the evaluations of the
Securities as prepared by the Evaluator to enable you to comply with
federal and state tax reporting requirements.

            Income and Capital Distributions

You will begin receiving distributions on your Units only after you
become a Record Owner. The Trustee will credit dividends received on the
Trust's Securities to the Income Account of the Trust. All other
receipts, such as return of capital, are credited to the Capital Account
of the Trust.

The Trustee will distribute any net income in the Income Account on or
near the Income Distribution Dates to Unit holders of record on the
preceding Income Distribution Record Date. See "Summary of Essential
Information." No income distribution will be paid if accrued expenses of
the Trust exceed amounts in the Income Account on the Income
Distribution Dates. Distribution amounts will vary with changes in the
Trust's fees and expenses, in dividends received and with the sale of
Securities. The Trustee will distribute amounts in the Capital Account,
net of amounts designated to meet redemptions, pay the deferred sales
charge or pay expenses on the last day of each month to Unit holders of
record on the fifteenth day of each month provided the amount equals at
least $1.00 per 100 Units. If the Trustee does not have your TIN, it is
required to withhold a certain percentage of your distribution and
deliver such amount to the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS"). You may
recover this amount by giving your TIN to the Trustee, or when you file
a tax return. However, you should check your statements to make sure the
Trustee has your TIN to avoid this "back-up withholding."

We anticipate that there will be enough money in the Capital Account of
the Trust to pay the deferred sales charge. If not, the Trustee may sell
Securities to meet the shortfall.

Within a reasonable time after the Trust is terminated, you will receive
the pro rata share of the money from the sale of the Securities.
However, if you are eligible, you may elect to receive an In-Kind
Distribution as described under "Amending or Terminating the Indenture."
You will receive a pro rata share of any other assets remaining in your
Trust after deducting any unpaid expenses.

The Trustee may establish reserves (the "Reserve Account") within the
Trust to cover anticipated state and local taxes or any governmental
charges to be paid out of the Trust.

Distribution Reinvestment Option. You may elect to have each
distribution of income and/or capital reinvested into additional Units
of the Trust by notifying the Trustee at least 10 days before any Record
Date. Each later distribution of income and/or capital on your Units
will be reinvested by the Trustee into additional Units of the Trust.
There is no sales charge on Units acquired through the Distribution
Reinvestment Option, as discussed under "Public Offering." This option

Page 19

may not be available in all states.PLEASE NOTE THAT EVEN IF YOU REINVEST
DISTRIBUTIONS, THEY ARE STILL CONSIDERED DISTRIBUTIONS FOR INCOME TAX
PURPOSES.

                  Redeeming Your Units

You may redeem all or a portion of your Units at any time by sending the
certificates representing the Units you want to redeem to the Trustee at
its unit investment trust office. If your Units are uncertificated, you
need only deliver a request for redemption to the Trustee. In either
case, the certificates or the redemption request must be properly
endorsed with proper instruments of transfer and signature guarantees as
explained in "Rights of Unit Holders-Unit Ownership" (or by providing
satisfactory indemnity if the certificates were lost, stolen, or
destroyed). No redemption fee will be charged, but you are responsible
for any governmental charges that apply. Three business days after the
day you tender your Units (the "Date of Tender") you will receive cash
in an amount for each Unit equal to the Redemption Price per Unit
calculated at the Evaluation Time on the Date of Tender.

The Date of Tender is considered to be the date on which the Trustee
receives your certificates or redemption request (if such day is a day
the NYSE is open for trading). However, if your certificates or
redemption request are received after 4:00 p.m. Eastern time (or after
any earlier closing time on a day on which the NYSE is scheduled in
advance to close at such earlier time), the Date of Tender is the next
day the NYSE is open for trading.

Any amounts paid on redemption representing income will be withdrawn
from the Income Account if funds are available for that purpose, or from
the Capital Account. All other amounts paid on redemption will be taken
from the Capital Account. The IRS will require the Trustee to withhold a
portion of your redemption proceeds if it does not have your TIN, as
generally discussed under "Income and Capital Distributions."

If you tender 1,000 Units or more for redemption (except for Fee
Accounts), rather than receiving cash, you may elect to receive an In-
Kind Distribution in an amount equal to the Redemption Price per Unit by
making this request in writing to the Trustee at the time of tender.
However, no In-Kind Distribution requests submitted during the nine
business days prior to the Trust's Mandatory Termination Date will be
honored. Where possible, the Trustee will make an In-Kind Distribution
by distributing each of the Securities in book-entry form to your bank
or broker/dealer account at the Depository Trust Company. The Trustee
will subtract any customary transfer and registration charges from your
In-Kind Distribution. As a tendering Unit holder, you will receive your
pro rata number of whole shares of the Securities that make up the
portfolio, and cash from the Capital Account equal to the fractional
shares to which you are entitled.

The Trustee may sell Securities to make funds available for redemption.
If Securities are sold, the size and diversification of the Trust will
be reduced. These sales may result in lower prices than if the
Securities were sold at a different time.

Your right to redeem Units (and therefore, your right to receive
payment) may be delayed:

- If the NYSE is closed (other than customary weekend and holiday
closings);

- If the SEC determines that trading on the NYSE is restricted or that
an emergency exists making sale or evaluation of the Securities not
reasonably practical; or

- For any other period permitted by SEC order.

The Trustee is not liable to any person for any loss or damage which may
result from such a suspension or postponement.

The Redemption Price.

The Redemption Price per Unit is determined by the Trustee by:

adding

1. cash in the Income and Capital Accounts of the Trust not designated
to purchase Securities;

2. the aggregate value of the Securities held in the Trust; and

3. dividends receivable on the Securities trading ex-dividend as of the
date of computation; and

deducting

1. any applicable taxes or governmental charges that need to be paid out
of the Trust;

2. any amounts owed to the Trustee for its advances;

3. estimated accrued expenses of the Trust, if any;

4. cash held for distribution to Unit holders of record of the Trust as
of the business day before the evaluation being made;

5. liquidation costs for foreign Securities, if any; and

6. other liabilities incurred by the Trust; and

Page 20


dividing

1. the result by the number of outstanding Units of the Trust.

Any remaining deferred sales charge on the Units when you redeem them
will be deducted from your redemption proceeds. In addition, until the
earlier of six months after the Initial Date of Deposit or the end of
the initial offering period, the Redemption Price per Unit will include
estimated organization costs as set forth under "Fee Table."

           Removing Securities from the Trust

The portfolio of the Trust is not managed. However, we may, but are not
required to, direct the Trustee to dispose of a Security in certain
limited circumstances, including situations in which:

- The issuer of the Security defaults in the payment of a declared
dividend;

- Any action or proceeding prevents the payment of dividends;

- There is any legal question or impediment affecting the Security;

- The issuer of the Security has breached a covenant which would affect
the payment of dividends, the issuer's credit standing, or otherwise
damage the sound investment character of the Security;

- The issuer has defaulted on the payment of any other of its
outstanding obligations;

- There has been a public tender offer made for a Security or a merger
or acquisition is announced affecting a Security, and that in our
opinion the sale or tender of the Security is in the best interest of
Unit holders; or

- The price of the Security has declined to such an extent, or such
other credit factors exist, that in our opinion keeping the Security
would be harmful to the Trust.

Except in the limited instance in which the Trust acquires Replacement
Securities, as described in "The FT Series," the Trust may not acquire
any securities or other property other than the Securities. The Trustee,
on behalf of the Trust, will reject any offer for new or exchanged
securities or property in exchange for a Security, such as those
acquired in a merger or other transaction. If such exchanged securities
or property are nevertheless acquired by the Trust, at our instruction,
they will either be sold or held in the Trust. In making the
determination as to whether to sell or hold the exchanged securities or
property we may get advice from each Portfolio Supervisor. Any proceeds
received from the sale of Securities, exchanged securities or property
will be credited to the Capital Account for distribution to Unit holders
or to meet redemption requests. The Trustee may retain and pay us or an
affiliate of ours to act as agent for the Trust to facilitate selling
Securities, exchanged securities or property from the Trust. If we or
our affiliate act in this capacity, we will be held subject to the
restrictions under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.

The Trustee may sell Securities designated by us or, absent our
direction, at its own discretion, in order to meet redemption requests
or pay expenses. In designating Securities to be sold, we will try to
maintain the proportionate relationship among the Securities. If this is
not possible, the composition and diversification of the Trust may be
changed. To get the best price for the Trust we may specify minimum
amounts (generally 100 shares) in which blocks of Securities are to be
sold. We may consider sales of units of unit investment trusts which we
sponsor when we make recommendations to the Trustee as to which
broker/dealers they select to execute the Trust's portfolio
transactions, or when acting as agent for the Trust in acquiring or
selling Securities on behalf of the Trust.

          Amending or Terminating the Indenture

Amendments. The Indenture may be amended by us and the Trustee without
your consent:

- To cure ambiguities;

- To correct or supplement any defective or inconsistent provision;

- To make any amendment required by any governmental agency; or

- To make other changes determined not to be materially adverse to your
best interests (as determined by us and the Trustee).

Termination. As provided by the Indenture, the Trust will terminate on
the Mandatory Termination Date as stated in the "Summary of Essential
Information." The Trust may be terminated earlier:

- Upon the consent of 100% of the Unit holders of the Trust;

- If the value of the Securities owned by the Trust as shown by any
evaluation is less than the lower of $2,000,000 or 20% of the total
value of Securities deposited in the Trust during the initial offering

Page 21

period ("Discretionary Liquidation Amount"); or

- In the event that Units of the Trust not yet sold aggregating more
than 60% of the Units of the Trust are tendered for redemption by
underwriters, including the Sponsor.

Prior to termination, the Trustee will send written notice to all Unit
holders which will specify how you should tender your certificates, if
any, to the Trustee. If the Trust is terminated due to this last reason,
we will refund your entire sales charge; however, termination of the
Trust before the Mandatory Termination Date for any other stated reason
will result in all remaining unpaid deferred sales charges on your Units
being deducted from your termination proceeds. For various reasons, the
Trust may be reduced below the Discretionary Liquidation Amount and
could therefore be terminated before the Mandatory Termination Date.

Unless terminated earlier, the Trustee will begin to sell Securities in
connection with the termination of the Trust during the period beginning
nine business days prior to, and no later than, the Mandatory
Termination Date. We will determine the manner and timing of the sale of
Securities. Because the Trustee must sell the Securities within a
relatively short period of time, the sale of Securities as part of the
termination process may result in a lower sales price than might
otherwise be realized if such sale were not required at this time.

If you own at least 1,000 Units of the Trust the Trustee will send you a
form at least 30 days prior to the Mandatory Termination Date which will
enable you to receive an In-Kind Distribution (reduced by customary
transfer and registration charges and subject to any additional
restrictions imposed on Fee Accounts by "wrap fee" plans) rather than
the typical cash distribution. See "Tax Status" for additional
information. You must notify the Trustee at least ten business days
prior to the Mandatory Termination Date if you elect this In-Kind
Distribution option. If you do not elect to participate in the In-Kind
Distribution option, you will receive a cash distribution from the sale
of the remaining Securities, along with your interest in the Income and
Capital Accounts, within a reasonable time after the Trust is
terminated. Regardless of the distribution involved, the Trustee will
deduct from the Trust any accrued costs, expenses, advances or
indemnities provided for by the Indenture, including estimated
compensation of the Trustee and costs of liquidation and any amounts
required as a reserve to pay any taxes or other governmental charges.

   Information on Sunset Financial Services, Inc., the
             Sponsor, Trustee and Evaluator

Sunset Financial Services, Inc.


Sunset Financial Services, Inc., a subsidiary of Kansas City Life
Insurance Company and affiliate of Sunset Life Insurance Company,
operates as a full-service brokerage firm and is a Registered Investment
Advisor. SFS is a member of the NASD and the SIPC. Kansas City Life and
its wholly-owned subsidiaries consistently earn high industry and
financial ratings.


The Sponsor.

We, Nike Securities L.P., specialize in the underwriting, trading and
wholesale distribution of unit investment trusts under the "First Trust"
brand name and other securities. An Illinois limited partnership formed
in 1991, we act as Sponsor for successive series of:

- The First Trust Combined Series

- FT Series (formerly known as The First Trust Special Situations Trust)

- The First Trust Insured Corporate Trust

- The First Trust of Insured Municipal Bonds

- The First Trust GNMA

First Trust introduced the first insured unit investment trust in 1974.
To date we have deposited more than $27 billion in First Trust unit
investment trusts. Our employees include a team of professionals with
many years of experience in the unit investment trust industry.

We are a member of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.
and Securities Investor Protection Corporation. Our principal offices
are at 1001 Warrenville Road, Lisle, Illinois 60532; telephone number
(630) 241-4141. As of December 31, 1999, the total partners' capital of
Nike Securities L.P. was $19,881,035 (audited).

This information refers only to us and not to the Trust or to any series
of the Trust or to any other dealer. We are including this information
only to inform you of our financial responsibility and our ability to

Page 22

carry out our contractual obligations. We will provide more detailed
financial information on request.

Code of Ethics. The Sponsor and the Trust have adopted a code of ethics
requiring the Sponsor's employees who have access to information on
Trust transactions to report personal securities transactions. The
purpose of the code is to avoid potential conflicts of interest and to
prevent fraud, deception or misconduct with respect to the Trust.

The Trustee.

The Trustee is The Chase Manhattan Bank, with its principal executive
office located at 270 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10017 and its unit
investment trust office at 4 New York Plaza, 6th Floor, New York, New
York, 10004-2413. If you have questions regarding the Trust, you may
call the Customer Service Help Line at 1-800-682-7520. The Trustee is
supervised by the Superintendent of Banks of the State of New York, the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.

The Trustee has not participated in selecting the Securities for the
Trust; it only provides administrative services.

Limitations of Liabilities of Sponsor and Trustee.

Neither we nor the Trustee will be liable for taking any action or for
not taking any action in good faith according to the Indenture. We will
also not be accountable for errors in judgment. We will only be liable
for our own willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence (ordinary
negligence in the Trustee's case) or reckless disregard of our
obligations and duties. The Trustee is not liable for any loss or
depreciation when the Securities are sold. If we fail to act under the
Indenture, the Trustee may do so, and the Trustee will not be liable for
any action it takes in good faith under the Indenture.

The Trustee will not be liable for any taxes or other governmental
charges or interest on the Securities which the Trustee may be required
to pay under any present or future law of the United States or of any
other taxing authority with jurisdiction. Also, the Indenture states
other provisions regarding the liability of the Trustee.

If we do not perform any of our duties under the Indenture or are not
able to act or become bankrupt, or if our affairs are taken over by
public authorities, then the Trustee may:

- Appoint a successor sponsor, paying them a reasonable rate not more
than that stated by the SEC;

- Terminate the Indenture and liquidate the Trust; or

- Continue to act as Trustee without terminating the Indenture.

The Evaluator.

The Evaluator is First Trust Advisors L.P., an Illinois limited
partnership formed in 1991 and an affiliate of the Sponsor. The
Evaluator's address is 1001 Warrenville Road, Lisle, Illinois 60532.

The Trustee, Sponsor and Unit holders may rely on the accuracy of any
evaluation prepared by the Evaluator. The Evaluator will make
determinations in good faith based upon the best available information,
but will not be liable to the Trustee, Sponsor or Unit holders for
errors in judgment.

                    Other Information

Legal Opinions.

Our counsel is Chapman and Cutler, 111 W. Monroe St., Chicago, Illinois,
60603. They have passed upon the legality of the Units offered hereby
and certain matters relating to federal tax law. Carter, Ledyard &
Milburn acts as the Trustee's counsel, as well as special New York tax
counsel for the Trust.

Experts.

Ernst & Young LLP, independent auditors, have audited the Trust's
statement of net assets, including the schedule of investments, at the
opening of business on the Initial Date of Deposit, as set forth in
their report. We've included the Trust's statement of net assets,
including the schedule of investments, in the prospectus and elsewhere
in the registration statement in reliance on Ernst & Young LLP's report,
given on their authority as experts in accounting and auditing.

Supplemental Information.

If you write or call the Trustee, you will receive free of charge
supplemental information about this Series, which has been filed with
the SEC and to which we have referred throughout. This information
states more specific details concerning the nature, structure and risks
of this product.

Page 23


                   ASEA CAPITAL ADVANTAGE GROWTH TRUST
                                 FT 464


                     Sunset Financial Services, Inc.

                              3520 Broadway
                          Kansas City, MO 64111
                              816-753-7000


                                Trustee:

                        The Chase Manhattan Bank

                       4 New York Plaza, 6th floor
                      New York, New York 10004-2413
                             1-800-682-7520
                          24-Hour Pricing Line:
                             1-800-446-0132

 This prospectus contains information relating to ASEA Capital Advantage
  Growth Trust, but does not contain all of the information about this
 investment company as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
                     in Washington, D.C. under the:


- Securities Act of 1933 (file no. 333-48256) and


- Investment Company Act of 1940 (file no. 811-05903)

    Information about the Trust, including its Code of Ethics, can be
 reviewed and copied at the Securities and Exchange Commission's Public
Reference Room in Washington D.C. Information regarding the operation of
  the Commission's Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling the
                      Commission at 1-202-942-8090.

  Information about the Trust is available on the EDGAR Database on the
                      Commission's Internet site at
                           http://www.sec.gov.

                 To obtain copies at prescribed rates -

              Write: Public Reference Section of the Commission
                     450 Fifth Street, N.W.
                     Washington, D.C. 20549-0102
     e-mail address: [email protected]


                            October 25, 2000


           PLEASE RETAIN THIS PROSPECTUS FOR FUTURE REFERENCE

Page 24


                   First Trust  (registered trademark)

                              The FT Series

                         Information Supplement

This Information Supplement provides additional information concerning
the structure, operations and risks of the unit investment trust
contained in FT 464 not found in the prospectus for the Trust. This
Information Supplement is not a prospectus and does not include all of
the information you should consider before investing in the Trust. This
Information Supplement should be read in conjunction with the prospectus
for the Trust in which you are considering investing.


This Information Supplement is dated October 25, 2000. Capitalized terms
have been defined in the prospectus.


                            Table of Contents

Risk Factors
   Securities                                                  1
   Dividends                                                   1

   Foreign Issuers                                             1
Concentration
   Financial Services                                          2


Risk Factors

Securities. An investment in Units should be made with an understanding
of the risks which an investment in common stocks entails, including the
risk that the financial condition of the issuers of the Securities or
the general condition of the relevant stock market may worsen, and the
value of the Securities and therefore the value of the Units may
decline. Common stocks are especially susceptible to general stock
market movements and to volatile increases and decreases of value, as
market confidence in and perceptions of the issuers change. These
perceptions are based on unpredictable factors, including expectations
regarding government, economic, monetary and fiscal policies, inflation
and interest rates, economic expansion or contraction, and global or
regional political, economic or banking crises. Both U.S. and foreign
markets have experienced substantial volatility and significant declines
recently as a result of certain or all of these factors.

Dividends. Shareholders of common stocks have rights to receive payments
from the issuers of those common stocks that are generally subordinate
to those of creditors of, or holders of debt obligations or preferred
stocks of, such issuers. Common stocks do not represent an obligation of
the issuer and, therefore, do not offer any assurance of income or
provide the same degree of protection of capital as do debt securities.
The issuance of additional debt securities or preferred stock will
create prior claims for payment of principal, interest and dividends
which could adversely affect the ability and inclination of the issuer
to declare or pay dividends on its common stock or the rights of holders
of common stock with respect to assets of the issuer upon liquidation or
bankruptcy.


Foreign Issuers. Since certain of the Securities included in the Trust
consist of securities of foreign issuers, an investment in the Trust
involves certain investment risks that are different in some respects
from an investment in a trust which invests entirely in the securities
of domestic issuers. These investment risks include future political or
governmental restrictions which might adversely affect the payment or
receipt of payment of dividends on the relevant Securities, the
possibility that the financial condition of the issuers of the
Securities may become impaired or that the general condition of the
relevant stock market may worsen (both of which would contribute
directly to a decrease in the value of the Securities and thus in the
value of the Units), the limited liquidity and relatively small market
capitalization of the relevant securities market, expropriation or
confiscatory taxation, economic uncertainties and foreign currency
devaluations and fluctuations. In addition, for foreign issuers that are
not subject to the reporting requirements of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934, there may be less publicly available information than is
available from a domestic issuer. Also, foreign issuers are not
necessarily subject to uniform accounting, auditing and financial
reporting standards, practices and requirements comparable to those
applicable to domestic issuers. The securities of many foreign issuers
are less liquid and their prices more volatile than securities of
comparable domestic issuers. In addition, fixed brokerage commissions
and other transaction costs on foreign securities exchanges are
generally higher than in the United States and there is generally less
government supervision and regulation of exchanges, brokers and issuers
in foreign countries than there is in the United States. However, due to

Page 1

the nature of the issuers of the Securities selected for the Trust, the
Sponsor believes that adequate information will be available to allow
the Supervisor to provide portfolio surveillance for the Trust.



Securities issued by non-U.S. issuers generally pay dividends in foreign
currencies and are principally traded in foreign currencies. Therefore,
there is a risk that the U.S. dollar value of these securities will vary
with fluctuations in the U.S. dollar foreign exchange rates for the
various Securities.



On the basis of the best information available to the Sponsor at the
present time, none of the Securities in the Trust are subject to
exchange control restrictions under existing law which would materially
interfere with payment to the Trust of dividends due on, or proceeds
from the sale of, the Securities. However, there can be no assurance
that exchange control regulations might not be adopted in the future
which might adversely affect payment to the Trust. The adoption of
exchange control regulations and other legal restrictions could have an
adverse impact on the marketability of international securities in the
Trust and on the ability of the Trust to satisfy its obligation to
redeem Units tendered to the Trustee for redemption. In addition,
restrictions on the settlement of transactions on either the purchase or
sale side, or both, could cause delays or increase the costs associated
with the purchase and sale of the foreign Securities and correspondingly
could affect the price of the Units.



Investors should be aware that it may not be possible to buy all
Securities at the same time because of the unavailability of any
Security, and restrictions applicable to the Trust relating to the
purchase of a Security by reason of the federal securities laws or
otherwise.



Foreign securities generally have not been registered under the
Securities Act of 1933 and may not be exempt from the registration
requirements of such Act. Sales of non-exempt Securities by the Trust in
the United States securities markets are subject to severe restrictions
and may not be practicable. Accordingly, sales of these Securities by
the Trust will generally be effected only in foreign securities markets.
Although the Sponsor does not believe that the Trust will encounter
obstacles in disposing of the Securities, investors should realize that
the Securities may be traded in foreign countries where the securities
markets are not as developed or efficient and may not be as liquid as
those in the United States. The value of the Securities will be
adversely affected if trading markets for the Securities are limited or
absent.



Concentration



Financial Services. An investment in Units of the Trust should be made
with an understanding of the problems and risks inherent in the bank and
financial services sector in general.



Banks, thrifts and their holding companies are especially subject to the
adverse effects of economic recession, volatile interest rates,
portfolio concentrations in geographic markets and in commercial and
residential real estate loans, and competition from new entrants in
their fields of business. Banks and thrifts are highly dependent on net
interest margin. Recently, bank profits have come under pressure as net
interest margins have contracted, but volume gains have been strong in
both commercial and consumer products. There is no certainty that such
conditions will continue. Bank and thrift institutions had received
significant consumer mortgage fee income as a result of activity in
mortgage and refinance markets. As initial home purchasing and
refinancing activity subsided, this income diminished. Economic
conditions in the real estate markets, which have been weak in the past,
can have a substantial effect upon banks and thrifts because they
generally have a portion of their assets invested in loans secured by
real estate. Banks, thrifts and their holding companies are subject to
extensive federal regulation and, when such institutions are state-
chartered, to state regulation as well. Such regulations impose strict
capital requirements and limitations on the nature and extent of
business activities that banks and thrifts may pursue. Furthermore, bank
regulators have a wide range of discretion in connection with their
supervisory and enforcement authority and may substantially restrict the
permissible activities of a particular institution if deemed to pose
significant risks to the soundness of such institution or the safety of
the federal deposit insurance fund. Regulatory actions, such as
increases in the minimum capital requirements applicable to banks and
thrifts and increases in deposit insurance premiums required to be paid
by banks and thrifts to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
("FDIC"), can negatively impact earnings and the ability of a company to
pay dividends. Neither federal insurance of deposits nor governmental
regulations, however, insures the solvency or profitability of banks or
their holding companies, or insures against any risk of investment in
the securities issued by such institutions.



The statutory requirements applicable to and regulatory supervision of
banks, thrifts and their holding companies have increased significantly
and have undergone substantial change in recent years. To a great
extent, these changes are embodied in the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery and Enforcement Act; enacted in August 1989, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991, the Resolution
Trust Corporation Refinancing, Restructuring, and Improvement Act of
1991 and the regulations promulgated under these laws. Many of the
regulations promulgated pursuant to these laws have only recently been
finalized and their impact on the business, financial condition and
prospects of the Securities in the Trust's portfolio cannot be predicted
with certainty. The recently enacted Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act repealed
most of the barriers set up by the 1933 Glass-Steagall Act which

Page 2

separated the banking, insurance and securities industries. Now banks,
insurance companies and securities firms can merge to form one-stop
financial conglomerates marketing a wide range of financial service
products to investors. This legislation will likely result in increased
merger activity and heightened competition among existing and new
participants in the field. Efforts to expand the ability of federal
thrifts to branch on an interstate basis have been initially successful
through promulgation of regulations, and legislation to liberalize
interstate banking has recently been signed into law. Under the
legislation, banks will be able to purchase or establish subsidiary
banks in any state, one year after the legislation's enactment. Since
mid-1997, banks have been allowed to turn existing banks into branches.
Consolidation is likely to continue. The Securities and Exchange
Commission and the Financial Accounting Standards Board require the
expanded use of market value accounting by banks and have imposed rules
requiring market accounting for investment securities held in trading
accounts or available for sale. Adoption of additional such rules may
result in increased volatility in the reported health of the industry,
and mandated regulatory intervention to correct such problems.
Additional legislative and regulatory changes may be forthcoming. For
example, the bank regulatory authorities have proposed substantial
changes to the Community Reinvestment Act and fair lending laws, rules
and regulations, and there can be no certainty as to the effect, if any,
that such changes would have on the Securities in the Trust's portfolio.
In addition, from time to time the deposit insurance system is reviewed
by Congress and federal regulators, and proposed reforms of that system
could, among other things, further restrict the ways in which deposited
moneys can be used by banks or reduce the dollar amount or number of
deposits insured for any depositor. Such reforms could reduce
profitability as investment opportunities available to bank institutions
become more limited and as consumers look for savings vehicles other
than bank deposits. Banks and thrifts face significant competition from
other financial institutions such as mutual funds, credit unions,
mortgage banking companies and insurance companies, and increased
competition may result from legislative broadening of regional and
national interstate banking powers as has been recently enacted. Among
other benefits, the legislation allows banks and bank holding companies
to acquire across previously prohibited state lines and to consolidate
their various bank subsidiaries into one unit. The Sponsor makes no
prediction as to what, if any, manner of bank and thrift regulatory
actions might ultimately be adopted or what ultimate effect such actions
might have on the Trust's portfolio.



The Federal Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 generally prohibits a bank
holding company from (1) acquiring, directly or indirectly, more than 5%
of the outstanding shares of any class of voting securities of a bank or
bank holding company, (2) acquiring control of a bank or another bank
holding company, (3) acquiring all or substantially all the assets of a
bank, or (4) merging or consolidating with another bank holding company,
without first obtaining Federal Reserve Board ("FRB") approval. In
considering an application with respect to any such transaction, the FRB
is required to consider a variety of factors, including the potential
anti-competitive effects of the transaction, the financial condition and
future prospects of the combining and resulting institutions, the
managerial resources of the resulting institution, the convenience and
needs of the communities the combined organization would serve, the
record of performance of each combining organization under the Community
Reinvestment Act and the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, and the
prospective availability to the FRB of information appropriate to
determine ongoing regulatory compliance with applicable banking laws. In
addition, the federal Change In Bank Control Act and various state laws
impose limitations on the ability of one or more individuals or other
entities to acquire control of banks or bank holding companies.



The FRB has issued a policy statement on the payment of cash dividends
by bank holding companies. In the policy statement, the FRB expressed
its view that a bank holding company experiencing earnings weaknesses
should not pay cash dividends which exceed its net income or which could
only be funded in ways that would weaken its financial health, such as
by borrowing. The FRB also may impose limitations on the payment of
dividends as a condition to its approval of certain applications,
including applications for approval of mergers and acquisitions. The
Sponsor makes no prediction as to the effect, if any, such laws will
have on the Securities or whether such approvals, if necessary, will be
obtained.



Companies involved in the insurance industry are engaged in
underwriting, reinsuring, selling, distributing or placing of property
and casualty, life or health insurance. Other growth areas within the
insurance industry include brokerage, reciprocals, claims processors and
multiline insurance companies. Insurance company profits are affected by
interest rate levels, general economic conditions, and price and
marketing competition. Property and casualty insurance profits may also
be affected by weather catastrophes and other disasters. Life and health
insurance profits may be affected by mortality and morbidity rates.
Individual companies may be exposed to material risks including reserve
inadequacy and the inability to collect from reinsurance carriers.
Insurance companies are subject to extensive governmental regulation,
including the imposition of maximum rate levels, which may not be
adequate for some lines of business. Proposed or potential tax law
changes may also adversely affect insurance companies' policy sales, tax
obligations, and profitability. In addition to the foregoing, profit
margins of these companies continue to shrink due to the commoditization
of traditional businesses, new competitors, capital expenditures on new
technology and the pressures to compete globally.


Page 3



In addition to the normal risks of business, companies involved in the
insurance industry are subject to significant risk factors, including
those applicable to regulated insurance companies, such as: (i) the
inherent uncertainty in the process of establishing property-liability
loss reserves, particularly reserves for the cost of environmental,
asbestos and mass tort claims, and the fact that ultimate losses could
materially exceed established loss reserves which could have a material
adverse effect on results of operations and financial condition; (ii)
the fact that insurance companies have experienced, and can be expected
in the future to experience, catastrophe losses which could have a
material adverse impact on their financial condition, results of
operations and cash flow; (iii) the inherent uncertainty in the process
of establishing property-liability loss reserves due to changes in loss
payment patterns caused by new claims settlement practices; (iv) the
need for insurance companies and their subsidiaries to maintain
appropriate levels of statutory capital and surplus, particularly in
light of continuing scrutiny by rating organizations and state insurance
regulatory authorities, and in order to maintain acceptable financial
strength or claims-paying ability rating; (v) the extensive regulation
and supervision to which insurance companies' subsidiaries are subject,
various regulatory initiatives that may affect insurance companies, and
regulatory and other legal actions; (vi) the adverse impact that
increases in interest rates could have on the value of an insurance
company's investment portfolio and on the attractiveness of certain of
its products; (vii) the need to adjust the effective duration of the
assets and liabilities of life insurance operations in order to meet the
anticipated cash flow requirements of its policyholder obligations; and
(vii) the uncertainty involved in estimating the availability of
reinsurance and the collectibility of reinsurance recoverables.



The state insurance regulatory framework has, during recent years, come
under increased federal scrutiny, and certain state legislatures have
considered or enacted laws that alter and, in many cases, increase state
authority to regulate insurance companies and insurance holding company
systems. Further, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners
("NAIC") and state insurance regulators are re-examining existing laws
and regulations, specifically focusing on insurance companies,
interpretations of existing laws and the development of new laws. In
addition, Congress and certain federal agencies have investigated the
condition of the insurance industry in the United States to determine
whether to promulgate additional federal regulation. The Sponsor is
unable to predict whether any state or federal legislation will be
enacted to change the nature or scope of regulation of the insurance
industry, or what effect, if any, such legislation would have on the
industry.



All insurance companies are subject to state laws and regulations that
require diversification of their investment portfolios and limit the
amount of investments in certain investment categories. Failure to
comply with these laws and regulations would cause non-conforming
investments to be treated as non-admitted assets for purposes of
measuring statutory surplus and, in some instances, would require
divestiture.



Environmental pollution clean-up is the subject of both federal and
state regulation. By some estimates, there are thousands of potential
waste sites subject to clean up. The insurance industry is involved in
extensive litigation regarding coverage issues. The Comprehensive
Environmental Response Compensation and Liability Act of 1980
("Superfund") and comparable state statutes ("mini-Superfund") govern
the clean-up and restoration by "Potentially Responsible Parties"
("PRP's"). Superfund and the mini-Superfunds ("Environmental Clean-up
Laws or "ECLs") establish a mechanism to pay for clean-up of waste sites
if PRP's fail to do so, and to assign liability to PRP's. The extent of
liability to be allocated to a PRP is dependent on a variety of factors.
The extent of clean-up necessary and the assignment of liability has not
been fully established. The insurance industry is disputing many such
claims. Key coverage issues include whether Superfund response costs are
considered damages under the policies, when and how coverage is
triggered, applicability of pollution exclusions, the potential for
joint and several liability and definition of an occurrence. Similar
coverage issues exist for clean up and waste sites not covered under
Superfund. To date, courts have been inconsistent in their rulings on
these issues. An insurer's exposure to liability with regard to its
insureds which have been, or may be, named as PRPs is uncertain.
Superfund reform proposals have been introduced in Congress, but none
have been enacted. There can be no assurance that any Superfund reform
legislation will be enacted or that any such legislation will provide
for a fair, effective and cost-efficient system for settlement of
Superfund related claims.



While current federal income tax law permits the tax-deferred
accumulation of earnings on the premiums paid by an annuity owner and
holders of certain savings-oriented life insurance products, no
assurance can be given that future tax law will continue to allow such
tax deferrals. If such deferrals were not allowed, consumer demand for
the affected products would be substantially reduced. In addition,
proposals to lower the federal income tax rates through a form of flat
tax or otherwise could have, if enacted, a negative impact on the demand
for such products.



Companies engaged in investment banking/brokerage and investment
management include brokerage firms, broker/dealers, investment banks,
finance companies and mutual fund companies. Earnings and share prices
of companies in this industry are quite volatile, and often exceed the
volatility levels of the market as a whole. Recently, ongoing
consolidation in the industry and the strong stock market has benefited
stocks which investors believe will benefit from greater investor and
issuer activity. Major determinants of future earnings of these

Page 4

companies are the direction of the stock market, investor confidence,
equity transaction volume, the level and direction of long-term and
short-term interest rates, and the outlook for emerging markets.
Negative trends in any of these earnings determinants could have a
serious adverse effect on the financial stability, as well as the stock
prices, of these companies. Furthermore, there can be no assurance that
the issuers of the Securities included in the Trust will be able to
respond in a timely manner to compete in the rapidly developing
marketplace. In addition to the foregoing, profit margins of these
companies continue to shrink due to the commoditization of traditional
businesses, new competitors, capital expenditures on new technology and
the pressures to compete globally.


Page 5



               CONTENTS OF REGISTRATION STATEMENT

A.   Bonding Arrangements of Depositor:

     Nike Securities L.P. is covered by a Brokers' Fidelity Bond,
     in  the  total  amount  of  $1,000,000,  the  insurer  being
     National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh.

B.   This Registration Statement on Form S-6 comprises the
     following papers and documents:

     The facing sheet

     The Prospectus

     The signatures

     Exhibits


                               S-1
                           SIGNATURES

     The  Registrant, FT 464, hereby identifies The  First  Trust
Special  Situations  Trust, Series 4;  The  First  Trust  Special
Situations  Trust, Series 18; The First Trust Special  Situations
Trust,  Series  69;  The  First Trust Special  Situations  Trust,
Series 108; The First Trust Special Situations Trust, Series 119;
The First Trust Special Situations Trust, Series 190; FT 286; The
First  Trust Combined Series 272; FT 412; and FT 438 for purposes
of  the  representations required by Rule 487 and represents  the
following:

     (1)   that the portfolio securities deposited in the  series
as  to  the  securities of which this Registration  Statement  is
being  filed  do  not differ materially in type or  quality  from
those deposited in such previous series;

     (2)   that,  except to the extent necessary to identify  the
specific  portfolio  securities  deposited  in,  and  to  provide
essential  financial information for, the series with respect  to
the  securities  of  which this Registration Statement  is  being
filed,  this  Registration Statement does not contain disclosures
that  differ in any material respect from those contained in  the
registration statements for such previous series as to which  the
effective date was determined by the Commission or the staff; and

     (3)  that it has complied with Rule 460 under the Securities
Act of 1933.

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of  1933,
the  Registrant,  FT  464,  has duly  caused  this  Amendment  to
Registration  Statement  to  be  signed  on  its  behalf  by  the
undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the Village  of  Lisle
and State of Illinois on October 25, 2000.

                              FT 464

                              By   NIKE SECURITIES L.P.
                                        Depositor




                              By   Robert M. Porcellino
                                   Senior Vice President

                               S-2

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of  1933,
this  Amendment  to the Registration Statement  has  been  signed
below  by  the following person in the capacity and on  the  date
indicated:

       NAME                TITLE*                 DATE

David J. Allen       Sole Director       )
                     of Nike Securities  )
                     Corporation, the    )   October 25, 2000
                     General Partner of  )
                     Nike Securities L.P.                )
                                         )
                                         )
                                         )  Robert M. Porcellino
                                         )   Attorney-in-Fact**
                                         )
                                         )



       *     The title of the person named herein represents  his
       capacity  in  and  relationship to Nike  Securities  L.P.,
       Depositor.

       **    An  executed copy of the related power  of  attorney
       was  filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission  in
       connection  with the Amendment No. 1 to Form  S-6  of  The
       First  Trust  Combined Series 258 (File No. 33-63483)  and
       the same is hereby incorporated herein by this reference.

                               S-3
                 CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

     We  consent  to the reference to our firm under the  caption
"Experts" and to the use of our report dated October 25, 2000  in
Amendment  No. 1 to the Registration Statement (Form  S-6)  (File
No. 333-48256) and related Prospectus of FT 464.



                                               ERNST & YOUNG LLP


Chicago, Illinois
October 25, 2000


                       CONSENTS OF COUNSEL

     The  consents  of counsel to the use of their names  in  the
Prospectus  included  in  this  Registration  Statement  will  be
contained  in their respective opinions to be filed  as  Exhibits
3.1, 3.2, 3.3 and 3.4 of the Registration Statement.


              CONSENT OF FIRST TRUST ADVISORS L.P.

     The  consent of First Trust Advisors L.P. to the use of  its
name  in  the  Prospectus included in the Registration  Statement
will be filed as Exhibit 4.1 to the Registration Statement.


                               S-4
                          EXHIBIT INDEX

1.1      Form  of Standard Terms and Conditions of Trust for  The
         First  Trust  Special Situations Trust,  Series  22  and
         certain  subsequent Series, effective November 20,  1991
         among  Nike Securities L.P., as Depositor, United States
         Trust   Company  of  New  York  as  Trustee,  Securities
         Evaluation Service, Inc., as Evaluator, and First  Trust
         Advisors  L.P. as Portfolio Supervisor (incorporated  by
         reference to Amendment No. 1 to Form S-6 [File  No.  33-
         43693]  filed  on  behalf  of The  First  Trust  Special
         Situations Trust, Series 22).

1.1.1    Form of Trust Agreement for FT 464 among Nike Securities
         L.P.,  as  Depositor,  The  Chase  Manhattan  Bank,   as
         Trustee,  First  Trust Advisors L.P., as Evaluator,  and
         First Trust Advisors L.P., as Portfolio Supervisor.

1.2      Copy  of  Certificate  of Limited  Partnership  of  Nike
         Securities L.P. (incorporated by reference to  Amendment
         No. 1 to Form S-6 [File No. 33-42683] filed on behalf of
         The First Trust Special Situations Trust, Series 18).

1.3      Copy   of   Amended  and  Restated  Limited  Partnership
         Agreement  of  Nike  Securities  L.P.  (incorporated  by
         reference to Amendment No. 1 to Form S-6 [File  No.  33-
         42683]  filed  on  behalf  of The  First  Trust  Special
         Situations Trust, Series 18).

1.4      Copy  of  Articles of Incorporation of  Nike  Securities
         Corporation,  the  general partner  of  Nike  Securities
         L.P.,  Depositor (incorporated by reference to Amendment
         No. 1 to Form S-6 [File No. 33-42683] filed on behalf of
         The First Trust Special Situations Trust, Series 18).

1.5      Copy  of  By-Laws  of Nike Securities  Corporation,  the
         general  partner  of  Nike  Securities  L.P.,  Depositor
         (incorporated by reference to Amendment No. 1 to Form S-
         6 [File No. 33-42683] filed on behalf of The First Trust
         Special Situations Trust, Series 18).

1.6      Underwriter  Agreement  (incorporated  by  reference  to
         Amendment No. 1 to Form S-6 [File No. 33-46455] filed on
         behalf  of  The  First Trust Special  Situations  Trust,
         Series 19).

2.1      Copy  of  Certificate of Ownership (included in  Exhibit
         1.1 filed herewith on page 2 and incorporated herein  by
         reference).

2.2     Copy  of  Code  of Ethics (incorporated by  reference  to
        Amendment  No.  1 to form S-6 [File No. 333-31176]  filed
        on behalf of FT 415).
                               S-5

3.1      Opinion  of  counsel as to legality of securities  being
         registered.

3.2      Opinion  of counsel as to Federal income tax  status  of
         securities being registered.

3.3      Opinion  of counsel as to New York income tax status  of
         securities being registered.

3.4      Opinion  of  counsel  as  to  advancement  of  funds  by
         Trustee.

4.1      Consent of First Trust Advisors L.P.

6.1      List  of  Directors and Officers of Depositor and  other
         related   information  (incorporated  by  reference   to
         Amendment No. 1 to Form S-6 [File No. 33-42683] filed on
         behalf  of  The  First Trust Special  Situations  Trust,
         Series 18).

7.1      Power  of  Attorney executed by the Director  listed  on
         page S-3 of this Registration Statement (incorporated by
         reference to Amendment No. 1 to Form S-6 [File  No.  33-
         63483]  filed  on  behalf of The  First  Trust  Combined
         Series 258).


                               S-6




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