<PAGE>
Filed Pursuant to Rule 497(c)
Registration File No.: 33-39494
PROSPECTUS - AUGUST 17, 2000
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
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TECHNOLOGY FUND
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A MUTUAL FUND THAT SEEKS
LONG-TERM CAPITAL APPRECIATION
The Securities and Exchange Commission has not approved or disapproved these
securities or passed upon the adequacy of this Prospectus. Any
representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
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CONTENTS
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The Fund Investment Objective ...............................1
Principal Investment Strategies ....................1
Principal Risks ....................................2
Fees and Expenses ..................................4
Additional Investment Strategy Information .........5
Additional Risk Information ........................6
Fund Management ....................................7
Shareholder Information Pricing Fund Shares ................................8
Underwriting .......................................8
How to Buy Shares ..................................9
How to Exchange Shares ............................10
How to Sell Shares ................................12
Distributions .....................................13
Tax Consequences ..................................14
Share Class Arrangements ..........................14
Our Family of Funds ....................................Inside Back Cover
This Prospectus contains important information about
the Fund. Please read it carefully and keep it
for future reference.
</TABLE>
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THE FUND
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INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE
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Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Technology Fund seeks long-term capital
appreciation.
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PRINCIPAL INVESTMENT STRATEGIES
-------------------------------
(sidebar)
CAPITAL APPRECIATION
An investment objective having the goal of selecting securities with the
potential to rise in price rather than pay out income.
(end sidebar)
The Fund will normally invest at least 65% of its total assets in common stocks
of companies of any asset size engaged in technology and technology-related
industries. These include a wide range of industries such as computers; software
and peripheral products; electronics; communications equipment and services;
internet; telecommunications; entertainment; multimedia; and information
services. A company will be considered engaged in technology or
technology-related industries if it derives at least 50% of its revenues or
earnings from those industries or it devotes at least 50% of its assets to those
industries.
When selecting investments for the Fund's portfolio, the Fund's "Sub-Advisor,"
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Investment Management Inc., extensively researches
technology trends in order to identify particular sectors and issuers it views
to have strong growth prospects. The Sub-Advisor first seeks to identify
sectors that are expected to benefit from anticipated shifts in fundamental
patterns in the technology and technology-related industries. The Sub-Advisor
then looks to invest in issuers that are believed to be leaders in their
respective industries, with strong management teams, reasonable valuations
relative to growth prospects and whose competitors face barriers to market
entry. In deciding whether to sell a particular security, the Sub-Advisor
considers a number of factors, including changing technology trends,
unfavorable earnings revisions or estimates, negative fundamental information,
excessive market valuations in relation to growth prospects, changes in the
issuer's financial condition or industry position, and general economic and
market conditions.
Common stock is a share ownership or equity interest in a corporation. It may
or may not pay dividends, as some companies reinvest all of their profits back
into their businesses, while others pay out some of their profits to
shareholders as dividends.
The Fund may invest up to 35% of its total assets in foreign securities,
including emerging market securities. This percentage limitation, however, does
not apply to securities of foreign companies, including depository receipts,
that are listed in the U.S. on a national securities exchange.
In addition, the Fund may invest in fixed-income and convertible securities and
forward currency contracts.
In pursuing the Fund's investment objective, the Sub-Advisor has considerable
leeway in deciding which investments it buys, holds or sells on a day-to-day
basis -- and which trading or investment strategies it uses. For example, the
Sub-Advisor in its discretion may determine to use some permitted trading or
investment strategies while not using others.
1
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PRINCIPAL RISKS
---------------
There is no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective. The
Fund's share price will fluctuate with changes in the market value of the
Fund's portfolio securities. When you sell Fund shares, they may be worth less
than what you paid for them and, accordingly, you can lose money investing in
this Fund.
TECHNOLOGY-ORIENTED COMPANIES. Because of the concentration of the Fund's
investments in companies that are involved in technology and technology-related
industries, the value of the Fund's shares may be substantially more volatile
than the share value of funds that do not invest in technology-oriented
companies. The technology sector is a rapidly changing field, and stocks of
these companies may be subject to more abrupt or erratic market movements than
the stock market in general. The products and services of technology-oriented
companies may be subject to rapid obsolescence as a result of greater
competition, advancing technological developments, and changing market and
consumer preferences. In addition, these companies may have limited product
lines, markets or financial resources and the management of such companies may
be more dependent upon one or a few key people. As a result, the securities of
these companies may exhibit substantially greater price volatility than those
of companies in other industries.
COMMON STOCKS. A principal risk of investing in the Fund is associated with its
common stock investments. In general, stock values fluctuate in response to
activities specific to the company as well as general market, economic and
political conditions. Stock prices can fluctuate widely in response to these
factors.
SMALL & MEDIUM CAPITALIZATION COMPANIES. The Fund's investments in smaller and
medium-sized companies carry more risk than investments in larger companies.
While some of the Fund's holdings in these companies may be listed on a
national securities exchange, such securities are more likely to be traded in
the over-the-counter market. The low market liquidity of these securities may
have an adverse impact on the Fund's ability to sell certain securities at
favorable prices and may also make it difficult for the Fund to obtain market
quotations based on actual trades for purposes of valuing the Fund's
securities. Investing in lesser-known, smaller and medium capitalization
companies involves greater risk of volatility of the Fund's net asset value
than is customarily associated with larger, more established companies. Often
smaller and medium capitalization companies and the industries in which they
are focused are still evolving and, while this may offer better growth
potential than larger, more established companies, it also may make them more
sensitive to changing market conditions.
FOREIGN SECURITIES. The Fund's investments in foreign securities may involve
risks in addition to the risks associated with domestic securities. One
additional risk is currency risk. While the price of Fund shares is quoted in
U.S. dollars, the Fund generally converts U.S. dollars to a foreign market's
local currency to purchase a security in that market. If the value of that
local currency falls relative to the U.S. dollar, the U.S. dollar value of the
foreign security will decrease. This is true even if the foreign security's
local price remains unchanged.
Foreign securities (including depository receipts) also have risks related to
economic and political developments abroad, including expropriations,
confiscatory taxation, exchange control regulation, limitations on the use or
transfer of Fund assets and any
2
<PAGE>
effects of foreign social, economic or political instability. Foreign
companies, in general, are not subject to the regulatory requirements of U.S.
companies and, as such, there may be less publicly available information about
these companies. Moreover, foreign accounting, auditing and financial reporting
standards generally are different from those applicable to U.S. companies.
Securities of foreign issuers may be less liquid than comparable securities of
U.S. issuers and, as such, their price changes may be more volatile.
Furthermore, foreign exchanges and broker-dealers are generally subject to less
government and exchange scrutiny and regulation than their U.S. counterparts.
In addition, differences in clearance and settlement procedures in foreign
markets may occasion delays in settlements of the Fund's trades effected in
those markets.
Certain foreign securities in which the Fund may invest may be issued by
companies located in developing or emerging countries. Compared to the United
States and other developed countries, developing or emerging countries may have
unstable governments, economies based on only a few industries and securities
markets that trade a small number of securities. Securities issued by companies
located in these countries tend to be especially volatile and may be less
liquid than securities traded in developed countries. In the past, securities
in these countries have offered greater potential loss (as well as gain) than
securities of companies located in developed countries.
NON-DIVERSIFIED STATUS. The Fund is a "non-diversified" mutual fund and, as
such, its investments are not required to meet certain diversification
requirements under federal law. Compared with "diversified" funds, the Fund may
invest a greater percentage of its assets in the securities of an individual
corporation or governmental entity. Thus, the Fund's assets may be concentrated
in fewer securities than other funds. A decline in the value of those
investments would cause the Fund's overall value to decline to a greater
degree.
OTHER RISKS. The performance of the Fund also will depend on whether the
Sub-Advisor is successful in pursuing the Fund's investment strategies. The
Fund is subject to other risks from its permissible investments including the
risks associated with fixed-income and convertible securities and forward
currency contracts. For more information about these risks, see the "Additional
Risk Information" section.
Shares of the Fund are not bank deposits and are not guaranteed or insured by
the FDIC or any other government agency.
3
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FEES AND EXPENSES
-----------------
The table below briefly describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if you
buy and hold shares of the Fund. The Fund offers four classes of shares:
Classes A, B, C and D. Each Class has a different combination of fees, expenses
and other features. The Fund does not charge account or exchange fees. See the
"Share Class Arrangements" section for further fee and expense information.
(sidebar)
SHAREHOLDER FEES
These fees are paid directly from your investment.
(end sideabr)
(sidebar)
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES
These expenses are deducted from the Fund's assets.
(end sideabr)
<TABLE>
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CLASS A CLASS B CLASS C CLASS D
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SHAREHOLDER FEES
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Maximum sales charge (load) imposed on
purchases (as a percentage of offering price) 5.25%(1) None None None
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Maximum deferred sales charge (load) (as a
percentage based on the lesser of the offering None(2) 5.00%(3) 1.00%(4) None
price or net asset value at redemption)
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ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES
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Management fee(5) 1.00% 1.00% 1.00% 1.00%
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Distribution and service (12b-1) fees 0.25% 1.00% 1.00% None
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Other expenses(5,6) 0.32% 0.32% 0.32% 0.32%
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Total annual Fund operating expenses(5) 1.57% 2.32% 2.32% 1.32%
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</TABLE>
(1) Reduced for purchases of $25,000 and over.
(2) Investments that are not subject to any sales charge at the time of
purchase are subject to a contingent deferred sales charge ("CDSC") of
1.00% that will be imposed if you sell your shares within one year after
purchase, except for certain specific circumstances.
(3) The CDSC is scaled down to 1.00% during the sixth year, reaching zero
thereafter. See "Share Class Arrangements" for a complete discussion of the
CDSC.
(4) Only applicable if you sell your shares within one year after purchase.
(5) The Investment Manager has agreed to assume all operating expenses (except
for brokerage and 12b-1 fees) and waive the compensation provided in its
investment management agreement until such time as the Fund has $50 million
of net assets or until six months from the date of commencement of the
Fund's operations, whichever occurs first. The expenses and fees disclosed
above do not reflect the assumption of any expenses or the waiver of any
compensation by the Investment Manager.
(6) "Other Expenses" are estimated based on expenses anticipated for the first
complete fiscal year of the Fund.
EXAMPLE
This example is intended to help you compare the cost of investing in the Fund
with the cost of investing in other mutual funds.
The example assumes that you invest $10,000 in the Fund, your investment has a
5% return each year, and the Fund's operating expenses remain the same.
Although your actual costs may be higher or lower, the tables below show your
costs at the end of each period based on these assumptions depending upon
whether or not you sell your shares at the end of each period.
IF YOU SOLD YOUR SHARES: IF YOU HELD YOUR SHARES:
------------------------------------ ---------------------------
1 Year 3 Years 1 Year 3 Years
------------------------------------ ---------------------------
CLASS A $676 $ 995 $676 $995
------------------------------------ ---------------------------
CLASS B $735 $1,024 $235 $724
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CLASS C $335 $ 724 $235 $724
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CLASS D $134 $ 418 $134 $418
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4
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Long-term shareholders of Class B and Class C may pay more in sales charges,
including distribution fees, than the economic equivalent of the maximum
front-end sales charges permitted by the NASD.
The Fund was recently organized and as of the date of this Prospectus had no
historical performance to report.
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ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT STRATEGY INFORMATION
------------------------------------------
This section provides additional information relating to the Fund's principal
investment strategies.
CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES AND FIXED-INCOME SECURITIES. The Fund may invest up to
35% of its total assets in convertible securities, preferred securities, U.S.
government securities, fixed-income securities issued by foreign governments
and international organizations and investment grade corporate debt securities
(including zero coupon securities).
FORWARD CURRENCY CONTRACTS. The Fund's investments also may include forward
currency contracts, which involve the purchase or sale of a specific amount of
foreign currency at the current price with delivery at a specified future date.
The Fund may use these contracts to hedge against adverse price movements in
its portfolio securities and the currencies in which they are denominated.
DEFENSIVE INVESTING. The Fund may take temporary "defensive" positions that are
inconsistent with the Fund's principal investment strategies in attempting to
respond to adverse market conditions. The Fund may invest any amount of its
total assets in cash or money market instruments in a defensive posture when
the Sub-Advisor believes it is advisable to do so. Although taking a defensive
posture is designed to protect the Fund from an anticipated market downturn, it
could have the effect of reducing the benefit from any upswing in the market.
When the Fund takes a defensive position, it may not achieve its investment
objective.
PORTFOLIO TURNOVER. The Fund may engage in active and frequent trading of its
portfolio securities. The Fund's portfolio turnover rate may exceed 250%. A
portfolio turnover rate of 200%, for example, is equivalent to the Fund buying
and selling all of its securities two times during the course of the year. A
high portfolio turnover rate (over 100%) could result in high brokerage costs
and an increase in taxable capital gains distributions to the Fund's
shareholders. See the sections on "Distributions" and "Tax Consequences."
The percentage limitations relating to the composition of the Fund's portfolio
apply at the time the Fund acquires an investment and refer to the Fund's net
assets, unless otherwise noted. Subsequent percentage changes that result from
market fluctuations will not require the Fund to sell any portfolio security.
The Fund may change its principal investment strategies without shareholder
approval; however, you would be notified of any changes.
5
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ADDITIONAL RISK INFORMATION
---------------------------
This section provides additional information relating to the principal risks of
investing in the Fund.
FIXED-INCOME AND CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES. Principal risks of investing in the
Fund are associated with its fixed-income and convertible securities
investments. All fixed-income securities, such as corporate debt, are subject
to two types of risk: credit risk and interest rate risk. Credit risk refers to
the possibility that the issuer of a security will be unable to make interest
payments and/or repay the principal on its debt.
Interest rate risk refers to fluctuations in the value of a fixed-income
security resulting from changes in the general level of interest rates. When
the general level of interest rates goes up, the prices of most fixed-income
securities go down. When the general level of interest rates goes down, the
prices of most fixed-income securities go up. (Zero coupon securities are
typically subject to greater price fluctuations than comparable securities that
pay interest.)
The Fund's investments in convertible securities subject the Fund to the risks
associated with both fixed-income securities and common stocks. Convertible
securities are securities that generally pay interest and may be converted into
common stock. To the extent that a convertible security's investment value is
greater than its conversion value, its price will be likely to increase when
interest rates fall and decrease when interest rates rise, as with a
fixed-income security. If the conversion value exceeds the investment value,
the price of the convertible security will tend to fluctuate directly with the
price of the underlying equity security. Because there are no credit quality
restrictions concerning the Fund's convertible securities investments, a
portion of these securities may include junk bonds, which have speculative
characteristics.
FORWARD CURRENCY CONTRACTS. The Fund's participation in forward currency
contracts also involves risks. If the Sub-Advisor employs a strategy that does
not correlate well with the Fund's investments or the currencies in which the
investments are denominated, currency contracts could result in a loss. The
contracts also may increase the Fund's volatility and may involve a significant
risk.
6
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FUND MANAGEMENT
---------------
(sidebar)
MORGAN STANLEY DEAN WITTER ADVISORS INC.
The Investment Manager is widely recognized as a leader in the mutual fund
industry and together with Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Services Company Inc.,
its wholly-owned subsidiary, had approximately $150 billion in assets under
management as of July 31, 2000.
(end sidebar)
The Fund has retained the Investment Manager -- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
Advisors Inc. -- to provide administrative services and manage its business
affairs. The Investment Manager has, in turn, contracted with the Sub-Advisor --
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Investment Management Inc. -- to invest the Fund's
assets, including the placing of orders for the purchase and sale of portfolio
securities. The Investment Manager is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter & Co., a preeminent global financial services firm that
maintains leading market positions in each of its three primary businesses:
securities, asset management and credit services. Its main business office is
located at Two World Trade Center, New York, NY 10048.
The Sub-Advisor, together with its institutional investment management
affiliates, manages more than $179 billion primarily for employee benefit
plans, investment companies, endowments, foundations and wealthy individuals.
The Sub-Advisor also is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
& Co. Its main business office is located at 1221 Avenue of the Americas, New
York, NY 10020.
The Fund's portfolio is managed within the Sub-Advisor's Institutional Equity
Group. Alexander L. Umansky and Dennis Lynch, each a Vice President of the
Sub-Advisor, are the primary portfolio managers of the Fund. Mr. Umansky joined
the Sub-Advisor in 1994 as a compliance analyst, became a research analyst in
the Institutional Equity Group in 1996 and a portfolio manager in the
Institutional Equity Group in 1998 focusing primarily on technology. Mr. Lynch
joined the Sub-Advisor in 1998 as a research analyst and has been a portfolio
manager in the Institutional Equity Group since January, 1999. Prior to joining
the Sub-Advisor, Mr. Lynch worked as a research analyst for JP Morgan Securities
from 1994 to 1996 and was a student at Columbia University from 1996 to 1998,
where he obtained his M.B.A.
The Fund pays the Investment Manager a monthly management fee as full
compensation for the services and facilities furnished to the Fund, and for
Fund expenses assumed by the Investment Manager. The fee is calculated at the
annual rate of 1.0% of the Fund's average daily net assets. The Investment
Manager pays the Sub-Advisor compensation equal to 40% of this fee.
7
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SHAREHOLDER INFORMATION
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PRICING FUND SHARES
-------------------
The price of Fund shares (excluding sales charges), called "net asset value,"
is based on the value of the Fund's portfolio securities. While the assets of
each Class are invested in a single portfolio of securities, the net asset
value of each Class will differ because the Classes have different ongoing
distribution fees.
The net asset value per share of the Fund is determined once daily at 4:00 p.m.
Eastern time on each day that the New York Stock Exchange is open (or, on days
when the New York Stock Exchange closes prior to 4:00 p.m., at such earlier
time). Shares will not be priced on days that the New York Stock Exchange is
closed.
The value of the Fund's portfolio securities is based on the securities' market
price when available. When a market price is not readily available, including
circumstances under which the Investment Manager and/or Sub-Advisor determine
that a security's market price is not accurate, a portfolio security is valued
at its fair value, as determined under procedures established by the Fund's
Board of Trustees. In these cases, the Fund's net asset value will reflect
certain portfolio securities' fair value rather than their market price. With
respect to securities that are primarily listed on foreign exchanges, the value
of the Fund's portfolio securities may change on days when you will not be able
to purchase or sell your shares.
An exception to the Fund's general policy of using market prices concerns its
short-term debt portfolio securities. Debt securities with remaining maturities
of sixty days or less at the time of purchase are valued at amortized cost.
However, if the cost does not reflect the securities' market value, these
securities will be valued at their fair value.
[GRAPHIC OMITTED]
UNDERWRITING
------------
The Fund will initially offer its shares from approximately September 25, 2000
through October 24, 2000 in an underwriting by the Fund's Distributor, Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter Distributors Inc., as the Fund's principal underwriter.
During this period, you may place orders to buy shares through the Distributor,
however, shares will not be issued until the Closing Date, which will take
place on October 27, 2000 or on such later date as agreed upon by the Fund and
the Distributor. You are not obligated to pay for the shares prior to the
Closing Date. If any orders are accompanied by payment, the payment will be
returned to you, unless you request that such payment be invested in a Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter Money Market Fund. In such case the funds will be
automatically transferred from the Money Market Fund to the Fund on the Closing
Date. You may cancel your order to purchase shares without penalty at any time
prior to the Closing Date. A continuous offering of the Fund's shares will
begin approximately two weeks after the Closing Date.
The Distributor will purchase Class B, Class C and Class D shares from the Fund
at $10.00 per share with all proceeds going to the Fund and will purchase Class
A shares at $10.00 per share plus a sales charge with the sales charge paid to
the Distributor and the net asset value of $10.00 per share going to the Fund.
The Distributor may also receive contingent deferred sales charges from future
redemptions of Class A, Class B and Class C shares.
8
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The minimum number of Fund shares which may be purchased by any shareholder
during the initial offering period is 100 shares. Certificates for shares
purchased will not be issued unless requested by the shareholder in writing.
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HOW TO BUY SHARES
-----------------
(sidebar)
CONTACTING A FINANCIAL ADVISOR
If you are new to the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Family of Funds and would like
to contact a Financial Advisor, call (877) 937-MSDW (toll-free) for the
telephone number of the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter office nearest you. You may
also access our office locator on our Internet site at: www.msdwadvice.com/funds
(end sidebar)
You may open a new account to buy Fund shares or buy additional Fund shares for
an existing account by contacting your Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Financial
Advisor or other authorized financial representative. Your Financial Advisor
will assist you, step-by-step, with the procedures to invest in the Fund. You
may also purchase shares directly by calling the Fund's transfer agent and
requesting an application.
Because every investor has different immediate financial needs and long-term
investment goals, the Fund offers investors four Classes of shares: Classes A,
B, C and D. Class D shares are only offered to a limited group of investors.
Each Class of shares offers a distinct structure of sales charges, distribution
and service fees, and other features that are designed to address a variety of
needs. Your Financial Advisor or other authorized financial representative can
help you decide which Class may be most appropriate for you. When purchasing
Fund shares, you must specify which Class of shares you wish to purchase.
When you buy Fund shares, the shares are purchased at the next share price
calculated (less any applicable front-end sales charge for Class A shares)
after we receive your purchase order. Your payment is due on the third business
day after you place your purchase order. We reserve the right to reject any
order for the purchase of Fund shares.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
MINIMUM INVESTMENT AMOUNTS
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MINIMUM INVESTMENT
---------------------------
INVESTMENT OPTIONS INITIAL ADDITIONAL
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S> <C> <C>
Regular Accounts $1,000 $100
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Individual Retirement Accounts: Regular IRAs $1,000 $100
Education IRAs $ 500 $100
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
EasyInvest(SM)
(Automatically from your
checking or savings account or
Money Market Fund) $ 100* $100*
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
* Provided your schedule of investments totals $1,000 in twelve months.
(sidebar)
EASYINVEST(SM)
A purchase plan that allows you to transfer money automatically from your
checking or savings account or from a Money Market Fund on a semi-monthly,
monthly or quarterly basis. Contact your Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Financial
Advisor for further information about this service.
(end sidebar)
There is no minimum investment amount if you purchase Fund shares through: (1)
the Investment Manager's mutual fund asset allocation plan, (2) a program,
approved by the Fund's distributor, in which you pay an asset-based fee for
advisory, administrative and/or brokerage services, or (3) employer-sponsored
employee benefit plan accounts.
INVESTMENT OPTIONS FOR CERTAIN INSTITUTIONAL AND OTHER INVESTORS/CLASS D SHARES.
To be eligible to purchase Class D shares, you must qualify under one of the
investor categories specified in the "Share Class Arrangements" section of this
Prospectus.
9
<PAGE>
SUBSEQUENT INVESTMENTS SENT DIRECTLY TO THE FUND. In addition to buying
additional Fund shares for an existing account by contacting your Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter Financial Advisor, you may send a check directly to the
Fund. To buy additional shares in this manner:
o Write a "letter of instruction" to the Fund specifying the name(s) on the
account, the account number, the social security or tax identification
number, the Class of shares you wish to purchase, and the investment amount
(which would include any applicable front-end sales charge). The letter
must be signed by the account owner(s).
o Make out a check for the total amount payable to: Morgan Stanley Dean
Witter Technology Fund.
o Mail the letter and check to Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Trust FSB at P.O.
Box 1040, Jersey City, NJ 07303.
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HOW TO EXCHANGE SHARES
----------------------
PERMISSIBLE FUND EXCHANGES. You may exchange shares of any Class of the Fund
for the same Class of any other continuously offered Multi-Class Fund, or for
shares of a No-Load Fund, a Money Market Fund, North American Government Income
Trust or Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust, without the imposition of an exchange
fee. In addition, Class A shares of the Fund may be exchanged for shares of a
FSC Fund (fund subject to a front-end sales charge). See the inside back cover
of this Prospectus for each Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Fund's designation as a
Multi-Class Fund, No-Load Fund, Money Market Fund or FSC Fund. If a Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter Fund is not listed, consult the inside back cover of that
fund's prospectus for its designation. For purposes of exchanges, shares of FSC
Funds (subject to a front-end sales charge) are treated as Class A shares of a
Multi-Class Fund.
Exchanges may be made after shares of the Fund acquired by purchase have been
held for thirty days. There is no waiting period for exchanges of shares
acquired by exchange or dividend reinvestment. The current prospectus for each
fund describes its investment objective(s), policies and investment minimum,
and should be read before investment. Since exchanges are available only into
continuously offered Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds, exchanges are not
available into any new Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Fund during its initial
offering period, or when shares of a particular Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Fund
are not being offered for purchase.
EXCHANGE PROCEDURES. You can process an exchange by contacting your Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter Financial Advisor or other authorized financial
representative. Otherwise, you must forward an exchange privilege authorization
form to the Fund's transfer agent -- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Trust FSB --
and then write the transfer agent or call (800) 869-NEWS to place an exchange
order. You can obtain an exchange privilege authorization form by contacting
your Financial Advisor or other authorized financial representative or by
calling (800) 869-NEWS. If you hold share certificates, no exchanges may be
processed until we have received all applicable share certificates.
An exchange to any Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Fund (except a Money Market Fund)
is made on the basis of the next calculated net asset values of the funds
involved after
10
<PAGE>
the exchange instructions are accepted. When exchanging into a Money Market
Fund, the Fund's shares are sold at their next calculated net asset value and
the Money Market Fund's shares are purchased at their net asset value on the
following business day.
The Fund may terminate or revise the exchange privilege upon required notice.
The check writing privilege is not available for Money Market Fund shares you
acquire in an exchange.
TELEPHONE EXCHANGES. For your protection when calling Morgan Stanley Dean
Witter Trust FSB, we will employ reasonable procedures to confirm that exchange
instructions communicated over the telephone are genuine. These procedures may
include requiring various forms of personal identification such as name,
mailing address, social security or other tax identification number. Telephone
instructions also may be recorded.
Telephone instructions will be accepted if received by the Fund's transfer
agent between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. Eastern time on any day the New York
Stock Exchange is open for business. During periods of drastic economic or
market changes, it is possible that the telephone exchange procedures may be
difficult to implement, although this has not been the case with the Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter Funds in the past.
MARGIN ACCOUNTS. If you have pledged your Fund shares in a margin account,
contact your Morgan Stanely Dean Witter Financial Advisor or other authorized
financial representative regarding restrictions on the exchange of such shares.
TAX CONSIDERATIONS OF EXCHANGES. If you exchange shares of the Fund for shares
of another Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Fund, there are important tax
considerations. For tax purposes, the exchange out of the Fund is considered a
sale of the Fund's shares -- and the exchange into the other fund is considered
a purchase. As a result, you may realize a capital gain or loss.
You should review the "Tax Consequences" section and consult your own tax
professional about the tax consequences of an exchange.
LIMITATIONS ON EXCHANGES. Certain patterns of exchanges and/or purchase or sale
transactions involving the Fund or other Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds may
result in the Fund limiting or prohibiting, at its discretion, additional
purchases and/or exchanges. Determinations in this regard may be made based on
the frequency or dollar amount of previous exchanges. The Fund will notify you
in advance of limiting your exchange privileges.
CDSC CALCULATIONS ON EXCHANGES. See the "Share Class Arrangements" section of
this Prospectus for a discussion of how applicable contingent deferred sales
charges (CDSCs) are calculated for shares of one Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
Fund that are exchanged for shares of another.
For further information regarding exchange privileges, you should contact your
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Financial Advisor or call (800) 869-NEWS.
11
<PAGE>
[GRAPHIC OMITTED]
HOW TO SELL SHARES
------------------
You can sell some or all of your Fund shares at any time. If you sell Class A,
Class B or Class C shares, your net sale proceeds are reduced by the amount of
any applicable CDSC. Your shares will be sold at the next price calculated
after we receive your order to sell as described below.
<TABLE>
<S> <C>
OPTIONS PROCEDURES
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contact Your To sell your shares, simply call your Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Financial
Financial Advisor Advisor or other authorized financial representative.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[GRAPHIC OMITTED] Payment will be sent to the address to which the account is registered or
deposited in your brokerage account.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By Letter You can also sell your shares by writing a "letter of instruction" that includes:
o your account number;
[GRAPHIC OMITTED] o the dollar amount or the number of shares you wish to sell;
o the Class of shares you wish to sell; and
o the signature of each owner as it appears on the account.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If you are requesting payment to anyone other than the registered owner(s) or
that payment be sent to any address other than the address of the registered
owner(s) or pre-designated bank account, you will need a signature guarantee.
You can obtain a signature guarantee from an eligible guarantor acceptable to
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Trust FSB. (You should contact Morgan Stanley
Dean Witter Trust FSB at (800) 869-NEWS for a determination as to whether a
particular institution is an eligible guarantor.) A notary public cannot provide a
signature guarantee. Additional documentation may be required for shares held
by a corporation, partnership, trustee or executor.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mail the letter to Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Trust FSB at P.O. Box 983,
Jersey City, NJ 07303. If you hold share certificates, you must return the
certificates, along with the letter and any required additional documentation.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A check will be mailed to the name(s) and address in which the account is
registered, or otherwise according to your instructions.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Systematic If your investment in all of the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Family of Funds has
Withdrawal Plan a total market value of at least $10,000, you may elect to withdraw amounts of
$25 or more, or in any whole percentage of a fund's balance (provided the
[GRAPHIC OMITTED] amount is at least $25), on a monthly, quarterly, semi-annual or annual basis,
from any fund with a balance of at least $1,000. Each time you add a fund to the
plan, you must meet the plan requirements.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Amounts withdrawn are subject to any applicable CDSC. A CDSC may be
waived under certain circumstances. See the Class B waiver categories listed in
the "Share Class Arrangements" section of this Prospectus.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign up for the Systematic Withdrawal Plan, contact your Morgan Stanley
Dean Witter Financial Advisor or call (800) 869-NEWS. You may terminate or
suspend your plan at any time. Please remember that withdrawals from the plan
are sales of shares, not Fund "distributions," and ultimately may exhaust your
account balance. The Fund may terminate or revise the plan at any time.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
PAYMENT FOR SOLD SHARES. After we receive your complete instructions to sell as
described above, a check will be mailed to you within seven days, although we
will attempt to make payment within one business day. Payment may also be sent
to your brokerage account.
Payment may be postponed or the right to sell your shares suspended under
unusual circumstances. If you request to sell shares that were recently
purchased by check, your sale will not be effected until it has been verified
that the check has been honored.
12
<PAGE>
TAX CONSIDERATIONS. Normally, your sale of Fund shares is subject to federal
and state income tax. You should review the "Tax Consequences" section of this
Prospectus and consult your own tax professional about the tax consequences of
a sale.
REINSTATEMENT PRIVILEGE. If you sell Fund shares and have not previously
exercised the reinstatement privilege, you may, within 35 days after the date
of sale, invest any portion of the proceeds in the same Class of Fund shares at
their net asset value and receive a pro rata credit for any CDSC paid in
connection with the sale.
INVOLUNTARY SALES. The Fund reserves the right, on sixty days' notice, to sell
the shares of any shareholder (other than shares held in an IRA or 403(b)
Custodial Account) whose shares, due to sales by the shareholder, have a value
below $100, or in the case of an account opened through EasyInvest(SM), if after
12 months the shareholder has invested less than $1,000 in the account.
However, before the Fund sells your shares in this manner, we will notify you
and allow you sixty days to make an additional investment in an amount that
will increase the value of your account to at least the required amount before
the sale is processed. No CDSC will be imposed on any involuntary sale.
MARGIN ACCOUNTS. If you have pledged your Fund shares in a margin account,
contact your Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Financial Advisor or other authorized
financial representative regarding restrictions on the sale of such shares.
[GRAPHIC OMITTED]
DISTRIBUTIONS
-------------
(sidebar)
TARGETED DIVIDENDS(SM)
You may select to have your Fund distributions automatically invested in other
Classes of Fund shares or Classes of another Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Fund
that you own. Contact your Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Financial Advisor for
further information about this service.
(end sidebar)
The Fund passes substantially all of its earnings from income and capital gains
along to its investors as "distributions." The Fund earns income from stocks and
interest from fixed-income investments. These amounts are passed along to Fund
shareholders as "income dividend distributions." The Fund realizes capital gains
whenever it sells securities for a higher price than it paid for them. These
amounts may be passed along as "capital gain distributions."
The Fund declares income dividends separately for each Class. Distributions
paid on Class A and Class D shares usually will be higher than for Class B and
Class C because distribution fees that Class B and Class C pay are higher.
Normally, income dividends are distributed to shareholders annually. Capital
gains, if any, are usually distributed in December. The Fund, however, may
retain and reinvest any long-term capital gains. The Fund may at times make
payments from sources other than income or capital gains that represent a
return of a portion of your investment.
Distributions are reinvested automatically in additional shares of the same
Class and automatically credited to your account, unless you request in writing
that all distributions be paid in cash. If you elect the cash option, the Fund
will mail a check to you no later than seven business days after the
distribution is declared. However, if you purchase Fund shares through a
Financial Advisor within three business days prior to the record date for the
distribution, the distribution will automatically be paid to you in cash, even
if you did not request to receive all distributions in cash. No interest will
accrue on uncashed checks. If you wish to change how your distributions are
paid, your request should be received by the Fund's transfer agent, Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter Trust FSB, at least five business days prior to the record
date of the distributions.
13
<PAGE>
[GRAPHIC OMITTED]
TAX CONSEQUENCES
----------------
As with any investment, you should consider how your Fund investment will be
taxed. The tax information in this Prospectus is provided as general
information. You should consult your own tax professional about the tax
consequences of an investment in the Fund.
Unless your investment in the Fund is through a tax-deferred retirement
account, such as a 401(k) plan or IRA, you need to be aware of the possible tax
consequences when:
o The Fund makes distributions; and
o You sell Fund shares, including an exchange to another Morgan Stanley Dean
Witter Fund.
TAXES ON DISTRIBUTIONS. Your distributions are normally subject to federal and
state income tax when they are paid, whether you take them in cash or reinvest
them in Fund shares. A distribution also may be subject to local income tax.
Any income dividend distributions and any short-term capital gain distributions
are taxable to you as ordinary income. Any long-term capital gain distributions
are taxable as long-term capital gains, no matter how long you have owned
shares in the Fund.
Every January, you will be sent a statement (IRS Form 1099-DIV) showing the
taxable distributions paid to you in the previous year. The statement provides
information on your dividends and capital gains for tax purposes.
TAXES ON SALES. Your sale of Fund shares normally is subject to federal and
state income tax and may result in a taxable gain or loss to you. A sale also
may be subject to local income tax. Your exchange of Fund shares for shares of
another Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Fund is treated for tax purposes like a sale
of your original shares and a purchase of your new shares. Thus, the exchange
may, like a sale, result in a taxable gain or loss to you and will give you a
new tax basis for your new shares.
When you open your Fund account, you should provide your social security or tax
identification number on your investment application. By providing this
information, you will avoid being subject to a federal backup withholding tax
of 31% on taxable distributions and redemption proceeds. Any withheld amount
would be sent to the IRS as an advance tax payment.
[GRAPHIC OMITTED]
SHARE CLASS ARRANGEMENTS
------------------------
The Fund offers several Classes of shares having different distribution
arrangements designed to provide you with different purchase options according
to your investment needs. Your Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Financial Advisor or
other authorized financial representative can help you decide which Class may
be appropriate for you.
The general public is offered three Classes: Class A shares, Class B shares and
Class C shares, which differ principally in terms of sales charges and ongoing
expenses. A fourth Class, Class D shares, is offered only to a limited category
of investors. Shares that you acquire through reinvested distributions will not
be subject to any front-end sales charge or CDSC -- contingent deferred sales
charge. Sales personnel may receive different compensation for selling each
Class of shares. The sales charges applicable to each Class provide for the
distribution financing of shares of that Class.
14
<PAGE>
The chart below compares the sales charge and annual 12b-1 fees applicable to
each Class:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
MAXIMUM
CLASS SALES CHARGE ANNUAL 12B-1 FEE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S> <C> <C>
A Maximum 5.25% initial sales charge reduced for purchase of
$25,000 or more; shares sold without an initial sales charge are
generally subject to a 1.0% CDSC during first year. 0.25%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
B Maximum 5.0% CDSC during the first year decreasing to 0%
after six years. 1.0%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C 1.0% CDSC during first year 1.0%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D None None
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
CLASS A SHARES Class A shares are sold at net asset value plus an initial sales
charge of up to 5.25%. The initial sales charge is reduced for purchases of
$25,000 or more according to the schedule below. Investments of $1 million or
more are not subject to an initial sales charge, but are generally subject to a
contingent deferred sales charge, or CDSC, of 1.0% on sales made within one year
after the last day of the month of purchase. The CDSC will be assessed in the
same manner and with the same CDSC waivers as with Class B shares. Class A
shares are also subject to a distribution (12b-1) fee of up to 0.25% of the
average daily net assets of the Class.
The offering price of Class A shares includes a sales charge (expressed as a
percentage of the offering price) on a single transaction as shown in the
following table:
(sidebar)
FRONT-END SALES CHARGE OR FSC
An initial sales charge you pay when purchasing Class A shares that is based on
a percentage of the offering price. The percentage declines based upon the
dollar value of Class A shares you purchase. We offer three ways to reduce your
Class A sales charges -- the Combined Purchase Privilege, Right of Accumulation
and Letter of Intent.
(end sidebar)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
FRONT-END SALES CHARGE
--------------------------------------------------
PERCENTAGE OF APPROXIMATE PERCENTAGE
AMOUNT OF SINGLE TRANSACTION PUBLIC OFFERING PRICE OF NET AMOUNT INVESTED
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S> <C> <C>
Less than $25,000 5.25% 5.54%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$25,000 but less than $50,000 4.75% 4.99%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$50,000 but less than $100,000 4.00% 4.17%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$100,000 but less than $250,000 3.00% 3.09%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$250,000 but less than $1 million 2.00% 2.04%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$1 million and over 0 0
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
The reduced sales charge schedule is applicable to purchases of Class A shares
in a single transaction by:
o A single account (including an individual, trust or fiduciary account).
o Family member accounts (limited to husband, wife and children under the age
of 21).
o Pension, profit sharing or other employee benefit plans of companies and
their affiliates.
o Tax-exempt organizations.
o Groups organized for a purpose other than to buy mutual fund shares.
15
<PAGE>
COMBINED PURCHASE PRIVILEGE. You also will have the benefit of reduced sales
charges by combining purchases of Class A shares of the Fund in a single
transaction with purchases of Class A shares of other Multi-Class Funds and
shares of FSC Funds.
RIGHT OF ACCUMULATION. You also may benefit from a reduction of sales charges,
if the cumulative net asset value of Class A shares of the Fund purchased in a
single transaction, together with shares of other Funds you currently own which
were previously purchased at a price including a front-end sales charge
(including shares acquired through reinvestment of distributions), amounts to
$25,000 or more. Also, if you have a cumulative net asset value of all your
Class A and Class D shares equal to at least $5 million (or $25 million for
certain employee benefit plans), you are eligible to purchase Class D shares of
any Fund subject to the Fund's minimum initial investment requirement.
You must notify your Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Financial Advisor or other
authorized financial representative (or Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Trust FSB if
you purchase directly through the Fund) at the time a purchase order is placed,
that the purchase qualifies for the reduced sales charge under the Right of
Accumulation. Similar notification must be made in writing when an order is
placed by mail. The reduced sales charge will not be granted if: (i)
notification is not furnished at the time of the order; or (ii) a review of the
records of Dean Witter Reynolds or other authorized dealer of Fund shares or
the Fund's transfer agent does not confirm your represented holdings.
LETTER OF INTENT. The schedule of reduced sales charges for larger purchases
also will be available to you if you enter into a written "letter of intent." A
letter of intent provides for the purchase of Class A shares of the Fund or
other Multi-Class Funds or shares of FSC Funds within a thirteen-month period.
The initial purchase under a letter of intent must be at least 5% of the stated
investment goal. To determine the applicable sales charge reduction, you may
also include: (1) the cost of shares of other Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds
which were previously purchased at a price including a front-end sales charge
during the 90-day period prior to the distributor receiving the letter of
intent, and (2) the cost of shares of other funds you currently own acquired in
exchange for shares of funds purchased during that period at a price including
a front-end sales charge. You can obtain a letter of intent by contacting your
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Financial Advisor or other authorized financial
representative, or by calling (800) 869-NEWS. If you do not achieve the stated
investment goal within the thirteen-month period, you are required to pay the
difference between the sales charges otherwise applicable and sales charges
actually paid, which may be deducted from your investment.
OTHER SALES CHARGE WAIVERS. In addition to investments of $1 million or more,
your purchase of Class A shares is not subject to a front-end sales charge (or
a CDSC upon sale) if your account qualifies under one of the following
categories:
o A trust for which Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Trust FSB provides
discretionary trustee services.
o Persons participating in a fee-based investment program (subject to all of
its terms and conditions, including termination fees, mandatory sale or
transfer restrictions
16
<PAGE>
on termination) approved by the Fund's distributor pursuant to which they
pay an asset based fee for investment advisory, administrative and/or
brokerage services.
o Employer-sponsored employee benefit plans, whether or not qualified under
the Internal Revenue Code, for which Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Trust FSB
serves as trustee or Dean Witter Reynolds' Retirement Plan Services serves
as recordkeeper under a written Recordkeeping Services Agreement ("MSDW
Eligible Plans") which have at least 200 eligible employees.
o A MSDW Eligible Plan whose Class B shares have converted to Class A shares,
regardless of the plan's asset size or number of eligible employees.
o A client of a Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Financial Advisor who joined us
from another investment firm within six months prior to the date of
purchase of Fund shares, and you used the proceeds from the sale of shares
of a proprietary mutual fund of that Financial Advisor's previous firm that
imposed either a front-end or deferred sales charge to purchase Class A
shares, provided that: (1) you sold the shares not more than 60 days prior
to the purchase of Fund shares, and (2) the sale proceeds were maintained
in the interim in cash or a money market fund.
o Current or retired Directors/Trustees of the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
Funds, such persons' spouses and children under the age of 21, and trust
accounts for which any of such persons is a beneficiary.
o Current or retired directors, officers and employees of Morgan Stanley Dean
Witter & Co. and any of its subsidiaries, such persons' spouses and
children under the age of 21, and trust accounts for which any of such
persons is a beneficiary.
CLASS B SHARES Class B shares are offered at net asset value with no initial
sales charge but are subject to a contingent deferred sales charge, or CDSC, as
set forth in the table below. For the purpose of calculating the CDSC, shares
are deemed to have been purchased on the last day of the month during which they
were purchased.
(sidebar)
CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE OR CDSC
A fee you pay when you sell shares of certain Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds
purchased without an initial sales charge. This fee declines the longer you hold
your shares as set forth in the table.
(end sidebar)
YEAR SINCE PURCHASE PAYMENT MADE CDSC AS A PERCENTAGE OF AMOUNT REDEEMED
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
First 5.0%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second 4.0%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Third 3.0%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fourth 2.0%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fifth 2.0%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sixth 1.0%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Seventh and thereafter None
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Each time you place an order to sell or exchange shares, shares with no CDSC
will be sold or exchanged first, then shares with the lowest CDSC will be sold
or exchanged next. For any shares subject to a CDSC, the CDSC will be assessed
on an amount equal to the lesser of the current market value or the cost of the
shares being sold.
17
<PAGE>
CDSC WAIVERS. A CDSC, if otherwise applicable, will be waived in the case of:
o Sales of shares held at the time you die or become disabled (within the
definition in Section 72(m)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code which relates
to the ability to engage in gainful employment), if the shares are: (i)
registered either in your name (not a trust) or in the names of you and
your spouse as joint tenants with right of survivorship; or (ii) held in a
qualified corporate or self-employed retirement plan, IRA or 403(b)
Custodial Account, provided in either case that the sale is requested
within one year of your death or initial determination of disability.
o Sales in connection with the following retirement plan "distributions:" (i)
lump-sum or other distributions from a qualified corporate or self-employed
retirement plan following retirement (or, in the case of a "key employee"
of a "top heavy" plan, following attainment of age 59 1/2); (ii)
distributions from an IRA or 403(b) Custodial Account following attainment
of age 59 1/2; or (iii) a tax-free return of an excess IRA contribution (a
"distribution" does not include a direct transfer of IRA, 403(b) Custodial
Account or retirement plan assets to a successor custodian or trustee).
o Sales of shares held for you as a participant in a MSDW Eligible Plan.
o Sales of shares in connection with the Systematic Withdrawal Plan of up to
12% annually of the value of each fund from which plan sales are made. The
percentage is determined on the date you establish the Systematic
Withdrawal Plan and based on the next calculated share price. You may have
this CDSC waiver applied in amounts up to 1% per month, 3% per quarter, 6%
semi-annually or 12% annually. Shares with no CDSC will be sold first,
followed by those with the lowest CDSC. As such, the waiver benefit will be
reduced by the amount of your shares that are not subject to a CDSC. If you
suspend your participation in the plan, you may later resume plan payments
without requiring a new determination of the account value for the 12% CDSC
waiver.
o Sales of shares if you simultaneously invest the proceeds in the Investment
Manager's mutual fund asset allocation program, pursuant to which investors
pay an asset-based fee. Any shares acquired in connection with the
Investment Manager's mutual fund asset allocation program are subject to
all of the terms and conditions of that program, including termination
fees, mandatory sale or transfer restrictions on termination.
All waivers will be granted only following the Fund's distributor receiving
confirmation of your entitlement. If you believe you are eligible for a CDSC
waiver, please contact your Financial Advisor or call (800) 869-NEWS.
DISTRIBUTION FEE. Class B shares are subject to an annual 12b-1 fee of 1.0% of
the average daily net assets of Class B.
CONVERSION FEATURE. After ten (10) years, Class B shares will convert
automatically to Class A shares of the Fund with no initial sales charge. The
ten year period runs from the last day of the month in which the shares were
purchased, or in the case of Class B shares acquired through an exchange, from
the last day of the month in which the original Class B shares were purchased;
the shares will convert to Class A shares based on their relative net asset
values in the month following the ten year period. At the
18
<PAGE>
same time, an equal proportion of Class B shares acquired through automatically
reinvested distributions will convert to Class A shares on the same basis.
(Class B shares acquired in exchange for shares of another Morgan Stanley Dean
Witter Fund originally purchased before May 1, 1997, however, will convert to
Class A shares in
May 2007).
In the case of Class B shares held in a MSDW Eligible Plan, the plan is treated
as a single investor and all Class B shares will convert to Class A shares on
the conversion date of the Class B shares of a Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Fund
purchased by that plan.
Currently, the Class B share conversion is not a taxable event; the conversion
feature may be cancelled if it is deemed a taxable event in the future by the
Internal Revenue Service.
If you exchange your Class B shares for shares of a Money Market Fund, a
No-Load Fund, North American Government Income Trust or Short-Term U.S.
Treasury Trust, the holding period for conversion is frozen as of the last day
of the month of the exchange and resumes on the last day of the month you
exchange back into Class B shares.
EXCHANGING SHARES SUBJECT TO A CDSC. There are special considerations when you
exchange Fund shares that are subject to a CDSC. When determining the length of
time you held the shares and the corresponding CDSC rate, any period (starting
at the end of the month) during which you held shares of a fund that does not
charge a CDSC will not be counted. Thus, in effect the "holding period" for
purposes of calculating the CDSC is frozen upon exchanging into a fund that
does not charge a CDSC.
For example, if you held Class B shares of the Fund for one year, exchanged to
Class B of another Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Multi-Class Fund for another
year, then sold your shares, a CDSC rate of 4% would be imposed on the shares
based on a two year holding period -- one year for each fund. However, if you
had exchanged the shares of the Fund for a Money Market Fund (which does not
charge a CDSC) instead of the Multi-Class Fund, then sold your shares, a CDSC
rate of 5% would be imposed on the shares based on a one year holding period.
The one year in the Money Market Fund would not be counted. Nevertheless, if
shares subject to a CDSC are exchanged for a fund that does not charge a CDSC,
you will receive a credit when you sell the shares equal to the distribution
(12b-1) fees you paid on those shares while in that fund up to the amount of
any applicable CDSC.
In addition, shares that are exchanged into or from a Morgan Stanley Dean
Witter Fund subject to a higher CDSC rate will be subject to the higher rate,
even if the shares are re-exchanged into a fund with a lower CDSC rate.
CLASS C SHARES Class C shares are sold at net asset value with no initial sales
charge but are subject to a CDSC of 1.0% on sales made within one year after the
last day of the month of purchase. The CDSC will be assessed in the same manner
and with the same CDSC waivers as with Class B shares.
DISTRIBUTION FEE. Class C shares are subject to an annual distribution (12b-1)
fee of up to 1.0% of the average daily net assets of that Class. The Class C
shares' distribution fee may cause that Class to have higher expenses and pay
lower dividends than Class A or
19
<PAGE>
Class D shares. Unlike Class B shares, Class C shares have no conversion
feature and, accordingly, an investor that purchases Class C shares may be
subject to distribution (12b-1) fees applicable to Class C shares for an
indefinite period.
CLASS D SHARES Class D shares are offered without any sales charge on purchases
or sales and without any distribution (12b-1) fee. Class D shares are offered
only to investors meeting an initial investment minimum of $5 million ($25
million for MSDW Eligible Plans) and the following categories of investors:
o Investors participating in the Investment Manager's mutual fund asset
allocation program (subject to all of its terms and conditions, including
termination fees, mandatory sale or transfer restrictions on termination)
pursuant to which they pay an asset-based fee.
o Persons participating in a fee-based investment program (subject to all of
its terms and conditions, including termination fees, mandatory sale or
transfer restrictions on termination) approved by the Fund's distributor
pursuant to which they pay an asset based fee for investment advisory,
administrative and/or brokerage services.
o Employee benefit plans maintained by Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co. or
any of its subsidiaries for the benefit of certain employees of Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter & Co. and its subsidiaries.
o Certain unit investment trusts sponsored by Dean Witter Reynolds.
o Certain other open-end investment companies whose shares are distributed by
the Fund's distributor.
o Investors who were shareholders of the Dean Witter Retirement Series on
September 11, 1998 for additional purchases for their former Dean Witter
Retirement Series accounts.
MEETING CLASS D ELIGIBILITY MINIMUMS. To meet the $5 million ($25 million for
MSDW Eligible Plans) initial investment to qualify to purchase Class D shares
you may combine: (1) purchases in a single transaction of Class D shares of the
Fund and other Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Multi-Class Funds; and/or (2)
previous purchases of Class A and Class D shares of Multi-Class Funds and
shares of FSC Funds you currently own, along with shares of Morgan Stanley Dean
Witter Funds you currently own that you acquired in exchange for those shares.
NO SALES CHARGES FOR REINVESTED CASH DISTRIBUTIONS If you receive a cash payment
representing an income dividend or capital gain and you reinvest that amount in
the applicable Class of shares by returning the check within 30 days of the
payment date, the purchased shares would not be subject to an initial sales
charge or CDSC.
20
<PAGE>
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION (RULE 12B-1 FEES) The Fund has adopted a Plan of
Distribution in accordance with Rule 12b-1 under the Investment Company Act of
1940 with respect to the distribution of Class A, Class B and Class C shares.
The Plan allows the Fund to pay distribution fees for the sale and distribution
of these shares. It also allows the Fund to pay for services to shareholders of
Class A, Class B and Class C shares. Because these fees are paid out of the
Fund's assets on an ongoing basis, over time these fees will increase the cost
of your investment in these Classes and may cost you more than paying other
types of sales charges.
21
<PAGE>
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<PAGE>
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<PAGE>
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24
<PAGE>
MORGAN STANLEY DEAN WITTER
FAMILY OF FUNDS
The Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Family of Funds
offers investors a wide range of investment choices.
Come on in and meet the family!
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S> <C> <C>
GROWTH FUNDS GROWTH FUNDS THEME FUNDS
Aggressive Equity Fund Financial Services Trust
American Opportunities Fund Health Sciences Trust
Capital Growth Securities Information Fund
Developing Growth Securities Natural Resource Development Securities
Growth Fund Technology Fund
Market Leader Trust GLOBAL/INTERNATIONAL FUNDS
Mid-Cap Equity Trust Competitive Edge Fund - "Best Ideas" Portfolio
New Discoveries Fund European Growth Fund
Next Generation Trust Fund of Funds - International Portfolio
Small Cap Growth Fund International Fund
Special Value Fund International SmallCap Fund
Tax-Managed Growth Fund Japan Fund
21st Century Trend Fund Latin American Growth Fund
Pacific Growth Fund
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GROWTH & INCOME FUNDS Balanced Growth Fund Total Market Index Fund
Balanced Income Fund Total Return Trust
Convertible Securities Trust Value Fund
Dividend Growth Securities Value-Added Market Series/Equity Portfolio
Equity Fund THEME FUNDS
Fund of Funds - Domestic Portfolio Real Estate Fund
Income Builder Fund Utilities Fund
Mid-Cap Dividend Growth Securities GLOBAL FUNDS
S&P 500 Index Fund Global Dividend Growth Securities
S&P 500 Select Fund Global Utilities Fund
Strategist Fund
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INCOME FUNDS GOVERNMENT INCOME FUNDS GLOBAL INCOME FUNDS
Federal Securities Trust North American Government Income Trust
Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust World Wide Income Trust
U.S. Government Securities Trust TAX-FREE INCOME FUNDS
DIVERSIFIED INCOME FUNDS California Tax-Free Income Fund
Diversified Income Trust Hawaii Municipal Trust(FSC)
CORPORATE INCOME FUNDS Limited Term Municipal Trust(NL)
High Yield Securities Multi-State Municipal Series Trust(FSC)
Intermediate Income Securities New York Tax-Free Income Fund
Short-Term Bond Fund(NL) Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MONEY MARKET FUNDS TAXABLE MONEY MARKET FUNDS TAX-FREE MONEY MARKET FUNDS
Liquid Asset Fund(MM) California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust(MM)
U.S. Government Money Market Trust(MM) New York Municipal Money Market Trust(MM)
Tax-Free Daily Income Trust(MM)
</TABLE>
There may be funds created after this Prospectus was published. Please consult
the inside back cover of a new fund's prospectus for its designation, e.g.,
Multi-Class Fund or Money Market Fund.
Unless otherwise noted, each listed Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Fund, except for
North American Government Income Trust and Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust, is a
Multi-Class Fund. A Multi-Class Fund is a mutual fund offering multiple Classes
of shares. The other types of funds are: NL -- No-Load (Mutual) Fund; MM --
Money Market Fund; FSC -- A mutual fund sold with a front-end sales charge and
a distribution (12b-1) fee.
<PAGE>
MORGAN STANLEY DEAN WITTER
TECHNOLOGY FUND
The Fund's Statement of Additional Information also provides additional
information about the Fund. The Statement of Additional Information is
incorporated herein by reference (legally is part of this Prospectus). For a
free copy of this document, to request other information about the Fund, or to
make shareholder inquiries, please call:
(800) 869-NEWS
You also may obtain information about the Fund by calling your Morgan Stanley
Dean Witter Financial Advisor or by visiting our Internet site at:
WWW.MSDWADVICE.COM/FUNDS
Information about the Fund (including the Statement of Additional Information)
can be viewed and copied at the Securities and Exchange Commission's Public
Reference Room in Washington, DC. Information about the Reference Room's
operations may be obtained by calling the SEC at (202) 942-8090. Reports and
other information about the Fund are available on the EDGAR Database on the
SEC's Internet site (www.sec.gov), and copies of this information may be
obtained, after paying a duplicating fee, by electronic request at the
following e-mail address: [email protected], or by writing the Public
Reference Section of the SEC, Washington, DC 20549-0102.
(THE FUND'S INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT FILE NO. IS 811-9983)
<PAGE>
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
AUGUST 17, 2000
MORGAN STANLEY DEAN WITTER
TECHNOLOGY FUND
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
This Statement of Additional Information is not a Prospectus. The
Prospectus (dated August 17, 2000) for the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
Technology Fund may be obtained without charge from the Fund at its address
or telephone number listed below or from Dean Witter Reynolds at any of its
branch offices.
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Technology Fund
Two World Trade Center
New York, New York 10048
(800) 869-NEWS
<PAGE>
TABLE OF CONTENTS
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
I. Fund History ................................................. 4
II. Description of the Fund and Its Investments and Risks ........ 4
A. Classification ................................................ 4
B. Investment Strategies and Risks ............................... 4
C. Fund Policies/Investment Restrictions ......................... 12
III. Management of the Fund ....................................... 13
A. Board of Trustees ............................................. 13
B. Management Information ........................................ 13
C. Compensation .................................................. 17
IV. Control Persons and Principal Holders of Securities .......... 19
V. Investment Management and Other Services ..................... 19
A. Investment Manager and Sub-Advisor............................. 19
B. Principal Underwriter ......................................... 20
C. Services Provided by the Investment Manager and the
Sub-Advisor.................................................... 21
D. Dealer Reallowances ........................................... 22
E. Rule 12b-1 Plan ............................................... 22
F. Other Service Providers ...................................... 25
G. Codes of Ethics ............................................... 25
VI. Brokerage Allocation and Other Practices ..................... 25
A. Brokerage Transactions ........................................ 25
B. Commissions ................................................... 26
C. Brokerage Selection ........................................... 26
D. Directed Brokerage ............................................ 27
E. Regular Broker-Dealers ........................................ 27
VII. Capital Stock and Other Securities ........................... 27
VIII. Purchase, Redemption and Pricing of Shares ................... 28
A. Purchase/Redemption of Shares ................................. 28
B. Offering Price ................................................ 28
IX. Taxation of the Fund and Shareholders ........................ 29
X. Underwriters ................................................. 31
XI. Calculation of Performance Data .............................. 32
XII. Financial Statements ......................................... 33
</TABLE>
2
<PAGE>
GLOSSARY OF SELECTED DEFINED TERMS
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The terms defined in this glossary are frequently used in this Statement
of Additional Information (other terms used occasionally are defined in the
text of the document).
"Custodian" -- The Bank of New York.
"Dean Witter Reynolds" -- Dean Witter Reynolds Inc., a wholly-owned
broker-dealer subsidiary of MSDW.
"Distributor" -- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Distributors Inc., a
wholly-owned broker-dealer subsidiary of MSDW.
"Financial Advisors" -- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter authorized financial
services representatives.
"Fund" -- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Technology Fund, a registered
open-end investment company.
"Independent Trustees" -- Trustees who are not "interested persons" (as
defined by the Investment Company Act) of the Fund.
"Investment Manager" -- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Advisors Inc., a
wholly-owned investment advisor subsidiary of MSDW.
"MSDW" -- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co., a preeminent global financial
services firm.
"MSDW Services Company" -- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Services Company
Inc., a wholly-owned fund services subsidiary of the Investment Manager.
"Morgan Stanley & Co." -- Morgan Stanley & Co. Incorporated, a
wholly-owned broker-dealer subsidiary of MSDW.
"Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds" -- Registered investment companies (i)
for which the Investment Manager serves as the investment advisor; and (ii)
that hold themselves out to investors as related companies for investment and
investor services.
"Sub-Advisor" -- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Investment Management Inc., a
wholly-owned subsidiary of MSDW.
"Transfer Agent" -- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Trust FSB, a wholly-owned
transfer agent subsidiary of MSDW.
"Trustees" -- The Board of Trustees of the Fund.
3
<PAGE>
I. FUND HISTORY
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Fund was organized as a Massachusetts business trust, under a
Declaration of Trust, on June 14, 2000.
II. DESCRIPTION OF THE FUND AND ITS INVESTMENTS AND RISKS
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. CLASSIFICATION
The Fund is an open-end, non-diversified management investment company
whose investment objective is long-term capital appreciation.
B. INVESTMENT STRATEGIES AND RISKS
The following discussion of the Fund's investment strategies and risks
should be read with the sections of the Fund's Prospectus titled "Principal
Investment Strategies," "Principal Risks," "Additional Investment Strategy
Information" and "Additional Risk Information."
FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY EXCHANGE CONTRACTS. The Fund may enter into
forward foreign currency exchange contracts ("forward contracts") to "lock
in" the price of a security in U.S. dollars or some other foreign currency
which the Fund is holding in its portfolio. By entering into a forward
contract for the purchase or sale, for a fixed amount of dollars or other
currency, of the amount of foreign currency involved in the underlying
security transactions, the Fund may be able to protect itself against a
possible loss resulting from an adverse change in the relationship between
the U.S. dollar or other currency which is being used for the security
purchase and the foreign currency in which the security is denominated during
the period between the date on which the security is purchased or sold and
the date on which payment is made or received. A forward contract involves an
obligation to purchase or sell a specific currency at a future date, which
may be any fixed number of days from the date of the contract agreed upon by
the parties, at a price set at the time of the contract. These contracts are
traded in the interbank market conducted directly between currency traders
(usually large, commercial and investment banks) and their customers. Forward
contracts only will be entered into with United States banks and their
foreign branches, insurance companies and other dealers or foreign banks
whose assets total $1 billion or more. A forward contract generally has no
deposit requirement, and no commissions are charged at any stage for trades.
The Fund may enter into forward contracts under various circumstances. The
typical use of a forward contract is to "lock in" the price of a security in
U.S. dollars or a foreign currency which the Fund is holding in its
portfolio. By entering into a forward contract for the purchase or sale, for
a fixed amount of dollars or other currency, of the amount of foreign
currency involved in the underlying security transactions, the Fund may be
able to protect itself against a possible loss resulting from an adverse
change in the relationship between the U.S. dollar or other currency which is
being used for the security purchase and the foreign currency in which the
security is denominated during the period between the date on which the
security is purchased or sold and the date on which payment is made or
received.
The Sub-Advisor also may from time to time utilize forward contracts for
other purposes. For example, they may be used to hedge a foreign security
held in the portfolio or a security which pays out principal tied to an
exchange rate between the U.S. dollar and a foreign currency, against a
decline in value of the applicable foreign currency. They also may be used to
lock in the current exchange rate of the currency in which those securities
anticipated to be purchased are denominated. At times, the Fund may enter
into "cross-currency" hedging transactions involving currencies other than
those in which securities are held or proposed to be purchased are
denominated.
The Fund will not enter into forward currency contracts or maintain a net
exposure to these contracts where the consummation of the contracts would
obligate the Fund to deliver an amount of foreign currency in excess of the
value of the Fund's portfolio securities.
Although the Fund values its assets daily in terms of U.S. dollars, it
does not intend to convert its holdings of foreign currencies into U.S.
dollars on a daily basis. It will, however, do so from time to time,
4
<PAGE>
and investors should be aware of the costs of currency conversion. Although
foreign exchange dealers do not charge a fee for conversion, they do realize
a profit based on the spread between the prices at which they are buying and
selling various currencies. Thus, a dealer may offer to sell a foreign
currency to the Fund at one rate, while offering a lesser rate of exchange
should the Fund desire to resell that currency to the dealer.
The Fund may be limited in its ability to enter into hedging transactions
involving forward contracts by the Internal Revenue Code requirements
relating to qualification as a regulated investment company.
Forward currency contracts may limit gains on portfolio securities that
could otherwise be realized had they not been utilized and could result in
losses.
OPTIONS AND FUTURES TRANSACTIONS. The Fund may engage in transactions in
listed and OTC options. Listed options are issued or guaranteed by the
exchange on which they are traded or by a clearing corporation such as the
Options Clearing Corporation ("OCC"). Ownership of a listed call option gives
the Fund the right to buy from the OCC (in the U.S.) or other clearing
corporation or exchange, the underlying security or currency covered by the
option at the stated exercise price (the price per unit of the underlying
security) by filing an exercise notice prior to the expiration date of the
option. The writer (seller) of the option would then have the obligation to
sell to the OCC (in the U.S.) or other clearing corporation or exchange, the
underlying security or currency at that exercise price prior to the
expiration date of the option, regardless of its then current market price.
Ownership of a listed put option would give the Fund the right to sell the
underlying security or currency to the OCC (in the U.S.) or other clearing
corporation or exchange, at the stated exercise price. Upon notice of
exercise of the put option, the writer of the put would have the obligation
to purchase the underlying security from the OCC (in the U.S.) or other
clearing corporation or exchange, at the exercise price.
Covered Call Writing. The Fund is permitted to write covered call options
on portfolio securities and on the U.S. dollar and foreign currencies in
which they are denominated, without limit. The Fund will receive from the
purchaser, in return for a call it has written, a "premium;" i.e., the price
of the option. Receipt of these premiums may better enable the Fund to earn a
higher level of current income than it would earn from holding the underlying
securities (or currencies) alone. Moreover, the premium received will offset
a portion of the potential loss incurred by the Fund if the securities (or
currencies) underlying the option decline in value.
The Fund may be required, at any time during the option period, to deliver
the underlying security (or currency) against payment of the exercise price
on any calls it has written. This obligation is terminated upon the
expiration of the option period or at such earlier time when the writer
effects a closing purchase transaction. A closing purchase transaction is
accomplished by purchasing an option of the same series as the option
previously written. However, once the Fund has been assigned an exercise
notice, the Fund will be unable to effect a closing purchase transaction.
A call option is "covered" if the Fund owns the underlying security
subject to the option or has an absolute and immediate right to acquire that
security without additional cash consideration (or for additional
consideration (in cash, Treasury bills or other liquid portfolio securities)
held in a segregated account on the Fund's books) upon conversion or exchange
of other securities held in its portfolio. A call option is also covered if
the Fund holds a call on the same security as the call written where the
exercise price of the call held is (i) equal to or less than the exercise
price of the call written or (ii) greater than the exercise price of the call
written if the difference is maintained by the Fund in cash, Treasury bills
or other liquid portfolio securities in a segregated account on the Fund's
books.
Options written by the Fund normally have expiration dates of up to
eighteen months from the date written. The exercise price of a call option
may be below, equal to or above the current market value of the underlying
security at the time the option is written.
Covered Put Writing. A writer of a covered put option incurs an obligation
to buy the security underlying the option from the purchaser of the put, at
the option's exercise price at any time during the option period, at the
purchaser's election. Through the writing of a put option, the Fund would
receive income from the premium paid by purchasers. The potential gain on a
covered put option is limited to the
5
<PAGE>
premium received on the option (less the commissions paid on the
transaction). During the option period, the Fund may be required, at any
time, to make payment of the exercise price against delivery of the
underlying security. A put option is "covered" if the Fund maintains cash,
Treasury bills or other liquid portfolio securities with a value equal to the
exercise price in a segregated account on the Fund's books, or holds a put on
the same security as the put written where the exercise price of the put held
is equal to or greater than the exercise price of the put written. The
aggregate value of the obligations underlying puts may not exceed 50% of the
Fund's assets. The operation of and limitations on covered put options in
other respects are substantially identical to those of call options.
Purchasing Call and Put Options. The Fund may purchase listed and OTC call
and put options on securities and stock indexes in amounts equaling up to 5%
of its total assets. The Fund may purchase put options on securities which it
holds (or has the right to acquire) in its portfolio only to protect itself
against a decline in the value of the security. The Fund may also purchase
put options to close out written put positions in a manner similar to call
option closing purchase transactions. The purchase of a call option would
enable the Fund, in return for the premium paid, to lock in a purchase price
for a security during the term of the option. The purchase of a put option
would enable the Fund, in return for a premium paid, to lock in a price at
which it may sell a security during the term of the option.
Options on Foreign Currencies. The Fund may purchase and write options on
foreign currencies for purposes similar to those involved with investing in
forward foreign currency exchange contracts.
OTC Options. OTC options are purchased from or sold (written) to dealers
or financial institutions which have entered into direct agreements with the
Fund. With OTC options, such variables as expiration date, exercise price and
premium will be agreed upon between the Fund and the transacting dealer,
without the intermediation of a third party such as the OCC. The Fund will
engage in OTC option transactions only with member banks of the Federal
Reserve Bank System or primary dealers in U.S. Government securities or with
affiliates of such banks or dealers. Certain OTC options are considered to be
illiquid investments.
Risks of Options Transactions. The successful use of options depends on
the ability of the Sub-Advisor to forecast correctly interest rates, currency
exchange rates and/or market movements. If the market value of the portfolio
securities (or the currencies in which they are denominated) upon which call
options have been written increases, the Fund may receive a lower total
return from the portion of its portfolio upon which calls have been written
than it would have had such calls not been written. During the option period,
the covered call writer has, in return for the premium on the option, given
up the opportunity for capital appreciation above the exercise price should
the market price of the underlying security (or the value of its denominated
currency) increase, but has retained the risk of loss should the price of the
underlying security (or the value of its denominated currency) decline. The
covered put writer also retains the risk of loss should the market value of
the underlying security decline below the exercise price of the option less
the premium received on the sale of the option. In both cases, the writer has
no control over the time when it may be required to fulfill its obligation as
a writer of the option. Prior to exercise or expiration, an option position
can only be terminated by entering into a closing purchase or sale
transaction. Once an option writer has received an exercise notice, it cannot
effect a closing purchase transaction in order to terminate its obligation
under the option and must deliver or receive the underlying securities at the
exercise price.
The Fund's ability to close out its position as a writer of an option is
dependent upon the existence of a liquid secondary market on option
exchanges. There is no assurance that such a market will exist particularly
in the case of OTC options.
In the event of the bankruptcy of a broker through which the Fund engages
in transactions in options, the Fund could experience delays and/or losses in
liquidating open positions purchased or sold through the broker and/or incur
a loss of all or part of its margin deposits with the broker. In the case of
OTC options, if the transacting dealer fails to make or take delivery of the
securities underlying an option it has written, in accordance with the terms
of that option, due to insolvency or otherwise, the Fund would lose the
premium paid for the option as well as any anticipated benefit of the
transaction.
Each of the exchanges has established limitations governing the maximum
number of call or put options on the same underlying security which may be
written by a single investor, whether acting alone
6
<PAGE>
or in concert with others (regardless of whether such options are written on
the same or different exchanges or are held or written on one or more
accounts or through one or more brokers). An exchange may order the
liquidation of positions found to be in violation of these limits and it may
impose other sanctions or restrictions. These position limits may restrict
the number of listed options which the Fund may write.
The hours of trading for options may not conform to the hours during which
the underlying securities are traded. To the extent that the option markets
close before the markets for the underlying securities, significant price and
rate movements can take place in the underlying markets that cannot be
reflected in the option markets.
The markets in foreign currency options are relatively new and the Fund's
ability to establish and close out positions on such options is subject to
the maintenance of a liquid secondary market. There can be no assurance that
a liquid secondary market will exist for a particular option at any specific
time.
The value of a foreign currency option depends upon the value of the
underlying currency relative to the U.S. dollar. As a result, the price of
the option position may vary with changes in the value of either or both
currencies and have no relationship to the investment merits of a foreign
security. Because foreign currency transactions occurring in the interbank
market involve substantially larger amounts than those that may be involved
in the use of foreign currency options, investors may be disadvantaged by
having to deal in an odd lot market (generally consisting of transactions of
less than $1 million) for the underlying foreign currencies at prices that
are less favorable than for round lots.
There is no systematic reporting of last sale information for foreign
currencies or any regulatory requirement that quotations available through
dealers or other market sources be firm or revised on a timely basis.
Quotation information available is generally representative of very large
transactions in the interbank market and thus may not reflect relatively
smaller transactions (i.e., less than $1 million) where rates may be less
favorable. The interbank market in foreign currencies is a global,
around-the-clock market. To the extent that the U.S. options markets are
closed while the markets for the underlying currencies remain open,
significant price and rate movements may take place in the underlying markets
that are not reflected in the options market.
Futures Contracts. The Fund may purchase and sell interest rate, currency
and index futures contracts that are traded on U.S. commodity exchanges on
such underlying securities as U.S. Treasury bonds, notes, bills and GNMA
Certificates and/or any foreign government fixed income security, on various
currencies and on such indexes of U.S. and foreign securities as may exist or
come into existence.
A futures contract purchaser incurs an obligation to take delivery of a
specified amount of the obligation underlying the contract at a specified
time in the future for a specified price. A seller of a futures contract
incurs an obligation to deliver the specified amount of the underlying
obligation at a specified time in return for an agreed upon price. The
purchase of a futures contract enables the Fund, during the term of the
contract, to lock in a price at which it may purchase a security and protect
against a rise in prices pending purchase of portfolio securities. The sale
of a futures contract enables the Fund to lock in a price at which it may
sell a security and protect against declines in the value of portfolio
securities.
Although most futures contracts call for actual delivery or acceptance of
securities, the contracts usually are closed out before the settlement date
without the making or taking of delivery. Index futures contracts provide for
the delivery of an amount of cash equal to a specified dollar amount times
the difference between the index value at the open or close of the last
trading day of the contract and the futures contract price. A futures
contract sale is closed out by effecting a futures contract purchase for the
same aggregate amount of the specific type of security (currency) and the
same delivery date. If the sale price exceeds the offsetting purchase price,
the seller would be paid the difference and would realize a gain. If the
offsetting purchase price exceeds the sale price, the seller would pay the
difference and would realize a loss. Similarly, a futures contract purchase
is closed out by effecting a futures contract sale for the same aggregate
amount of the specific type of security (currency) and the same delivery
date. If the offsetting sale price exceeds the purchase price, the purchaser
would realize a gain, whereas if the purchase price exceeds the offsetting
sale price, the purchaser would realize a loss. There is no assurance that
the Fund will be able to enter into a closing transaction.
7
<PAGE>
Margin. If the Fund enters into a futures contract, it is initially
required to deposit an "initial margin" of cash or U.S. Government securities
or other liquid portfolio securities ranging from approximately 2% to 5% of
the contract amount. Initial margin requirements are established by the
exchanges on which futures contracts trade and may, from time to time,
change. In addition, brokers may establish margin deposit requirements in
excess of those required by the exchanges.
Initial margin in futures transactions is different from margin in
securities transactions in that initial margin does not involve the borrowing
of funds by a broker's client but is, rather, a good faith deposit on the
futures contract which will be returned to the Fund upon the proper
termination of the futures contract. The margin deposits made are marked to
market daily and the Fund may be required to make subsequent deposits of cash
or U.S. Government securities, called "variation margin," which are
reflective of price fluctuations in the futures contract.
Options on Futures Contracts. The Fund may purchase and write call and put
options on futures contracts and enter into closing transactions with respect
to such options to terminate an existing position. An option on a futures
contract gives the purchaser the right (in return for the premium paid), and
the writer the obligation, to assume a position in a futures contract (a long
position if the option is a call and a short position if the option is a put)
at a specified exercise price at any time during the term of the option. Upon
exercise of the option, the delivery of the futures position by the writer of
the option to the holder of the option is accompanied by delivery of the
accumulated balance in the writer's futures margin account, which represents
the amount by which the market price of the futures contract at the time of
exercise exceeds, in the case of a call, or is less than, in the case of a
put, the exercise price of the option on the futures contract.
The writer of an option on a futures contract is required to deposit
initial and variation margin pursuant to requirements similar to those
applicable to futures contracts. Premiums received from the writing of an
option on a futures contract are included in initial margin deposits.
Limitations on Futures Contracts and Options on Futures. The Fund may not
enter into futures contracts or purchase related options thereon if,
immediately thereafter, the amount committed to margin plus the amount paid
for premiums for unexpired options on futures contracts exceeds 5% of the
value of the Fund's total assets, after taking into account unrealized gains
and unrealized losses on such contracts it has entered into, provided,
however, that in the case of an option that is in-the-money (the exercise
price of the call (put) option is less (more) than the market price of the
underlying security) at the time of purchase, the in-the-money amount may be
excluded in calculating the 5%. However, there is no overall limitation on
the percentage of the Fund's net assets which may be subject to a hedge
position.
Risks of Transactions in Futures Contracts and Related Options. The prices
of securities and indexes subject to futures contracts (and thereby the
futures contract prices) may correlate imperfectly with the behavior of the
cash prices of the Fund's portfolio securities (and the currencies in which
they are denominated). Also, prices of futures contracts may not move in
tandem with the changes in prevailing interest rates and market movements
against which the Fund seeks a hedge. A correlation may also be distorted (a)
temporarily, by short-term traders' seeking to profit from the difference
between a contract or security price objective and their cost of borrowed
funds; (b) by investors in futures contracts electing to close out their
contracts through offsetting transactions rather than meet margin deposit
requirements; (c) by investors in futures contracts opting to make or take
delivery of underlying securities rather than engage in closing transactions,
thereby reducing liquidity of the futures market; and (d) temporarily, by
speculators who view the deposit requirements in the futures markets as less
onerous than margin requirements in the cash market. Due to the possibility
of price distortion in the futures market and because of the possible
imperfect correlation between movements in the prices of securities and
movements in the prices of futures contracts, a correct forecast of interest
rate and/or market movement trends by the Sub-Advisor may still not result in
a successful hedging transaction.
There is no assurance that a liquid secondary market will exist for
futures contracts and related options in which the Fund may invest. In the
event a liquid market does not exist, it may not be possible
8
<PAGE>
to close out a futures position and, in the event of adverse price movements,
the Fund would continue to be required to make daily cash payments of
variation margin. The absence of a liquid market in futures contracts might
cause the Fund to make or take delivery of the underlying securities
(currencies) at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so.
Exchanges also limit the amount by which the price of a futures contract
may move on any day. If the price moves equal the daily limit on successive
days, then it may prove impossible to liquidate a futures position until the
daily limit moves have ceased. In the event of adverse price movements, the
Fund would continue to be required to make daily cash payments of variation
margin on open futures positions. In these situations, if the Fund has
insufficient cash, it may have to sell portfolio securities to meet daily
variation margin requirements at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do
so. In addition, the Fund may be required to take or make delivery of the
instruments underlying interest rate futures contracts it holds at a time
when it is disadvantageous to do so. The inability to close out options and
futures positions could also have an adverse impact on the Fund's ability to
effectively hedge its portfolio.
Futures contracts and options thereon which are purchased or sold on
foreign commodities exchanges may have greater price volatility than their
U.S. counterparts. Furthermore, foreign commodities exchanges may be less
regulated and under less governmental scrutiny than U.S. exchanges. Brokerage
commissions, clearing costs and other transaction costs may be higher on
foreign exchanges. Greater margin requirements may limit the Fund's ability
to enter into certain commodity transactions on foreign exchanges. Moreover,
differences in clearance and delivery requirements on foreign exchanges may
occasion delays in the settlement of the Fund's transactions effected on
foreign exchanges.
In the event of the bankruptcy of a broker through which the Fund engages
in transactions in futures or options thereon, the Fund could experience
delays and/or losses in liquidating open positions purchased or sold through
the broker and/or incur a loss of all or part of its margin deposits with the
broker.
If the Fund maintains a short position in a futures contract or has sold a
call option in a futures contract, it will cover this position by holding, in
a segregated account maintained on the books of the Fund, cash, U.S.
government securities or other liquid portfolio securities equal in value
(when added to any initial or variation margin on deposit) to the market
value of the securities underlying the futures contract or the exercise price
of the option. Such a position may also be covered by owning the securities
underlying the futures contract (in the case of a stock index futures
contract a portfolio of securities substantially replicating the relevant
index), or by holding a call option permitting the Fund to purchase the same
contract at a price no higher than the price at which the short position was
established.
In addition, if the Fund holds a long position in a futures contract or
has sold a put option on a futures contract, it will hold cash, U.S.
government securities or other liquid portfolio securities equal to the
purchase price of the contract or the exercise price of the put option (less
the amount of initial or variation margin on deposit) in a segregated account
maintained on the books of the Fund. Alternatively, the Fund could cover its
long position by purchasing a put option on the same futures contract with an
exercise price as high or higher than the price of the contract held by the
Fund.
MONEY MARKET SECURITIES. In addition to the money market securities in
which the Fund may otherwise invest, the Fund may invest in various money
market securities for cash management purposes or when assuming a temporary
defensive position, which among others may include commercial paper, bank
acceptances, bank obligations, corporate debt securities, certificates of
deposit, U.S. Government securities, obligations of savings institutions and
repurchase agreements. Such securities are limited to:
U.S. Government Securities. Obligations issued or guaranteed as to
principal and interest by the United States or its agencies (such as the
Export-Import Bank of the United States, Federal Housing Administration and
Government National Mortgage Association) or its instrumentalities (such as
the Federal Home Loan Bank), including Treasury bills, notes and bonds;
9
<PAGE>
Bank Obligations. Obligations (including certificates of deposit, time
deposits and bankers' acceptances) of banks subject to regulation by the U.S.
Government and having total assets of $1 billion or more, and instruments
secured by such obligations, not including obligations of foreign branches of
domestic banks except to the extent below;
Eurodollar Certificates of Deposit. Eurodollar certificates of deposit
issued by foreign branches of domestic banks having total assets of $1
billion or more;
Obligations of Savings Institutions. Certificates of deposit of savings
banks and savings and loan associations, having total assets of $1 billion or
more;
Fully Insured Certificates of Deposit. Certificates of deposit of banks
and savings institutions, having total assets of less than $1 billion, if the
principal amount of the obligation is federally insured by the Bank Insurance
Fund or the Savings Association Insurance Fund (each of which is administered
by the FDIC), limited to $100,000 principal amount per certificate and to 15%
or less of the Fund's net assets in all such obligations and in all illiquid
assets, in the aggregate;
Commercial Paper. Commercial paper rated within the two highest grades by
Standard & Poor's Corporation ("S&P") or the highest grade by Moody's
Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's") or, if not rated, issued by a company
having an outstanding debt issue rated at least AAA by S&P or Aaa by Moody's;
and
Repurchase Agreements. The Fund may invest in repurchase agreements. When
cash may be available for only a few days, it may be invested by the Fund in
repurchase agreements until such time as it may otherwise be invested or used
for payments of obligations of the Fund. These agreements, which may be
viewed as a type of secured lending by the Fund, typically involve the
acquisition by the Fund of debt securities from a selling financial
institution such as a bank, savings and loan association or broker-dealer.
The agreement provides that the Fund will sell back to the institution, and
that the institution will repurchase, the underlying security serving as
collateral at a specified price and at a fixed time in the future, usually
not more than seven days from the date of purchase. The collateral will be
marked-to-market daily to determine that the value of the collateral, as
specified in the agreement, does not decrease below the purchase price plus
accrued interest. If such decrease occurs, additional collateral will be
requested and, when received, added to the account to maintain full
collateralization. The Fund will accrue interest from the institution until
the time when the repurchase is to occur. Although this date is deemed by the
Fund to be the maturity date of a repurchase agreement, the maturities of
securities subject to repurchase agreements are not subject to any limits.
While repurchase agreements involve certain risks not associated with
direct investments in debt securities, the Fund follows procedures designed
to minimize such risks. These procedures include effecting repurchase
transactions only with large, well-capitalized and well-established financial
institutions whose financial condition will be continually monitored by the
Sub-Advisor subject to procedures established by the Trustees. In addition,
as described above, the value of the collateral underlying the repurchase
agreement will be at least equal to the repurchase price, including any
accrued interest earned on the repurchase agreement. In the event of a
default or bankruptcy by a selling financial institution, the Fund will seek
to liquidate such collateral. However, the exercising of the Fund's right to
liquidate such collateral could involve certain costs or delays and, to the
extent that proceeds from any sale upon a default of the obligation to
repurchase were less than the repurchase price, the Fund could suffer a loss.
It is the current policy of the Fund not to invest in repurchase agreements
that do not mature within seven days if any such investment, together with
any other illiquid assets held by the Fund, amounts to more than 15% of its
net assets.
LENDING PORTFOLIO SECURITIES. The Fund may lend its portfolio securities
to brokers, dealers and other financial institutions, provided that the loans
are callable at any time by the Fund, and are at all times secured by cash or
cash equivalents, which are maintained in a segregated account pursuant to
applicable regulations and that are equal to at least 100% of the market
value, determined daily, of the loaned securities. The advantage of these
loans is that the Fund continues to receive the income on the loaned
securities while at the same time earning interest on the cash amounts
deposited as collateral, which will be invested in short-term obligations.
The Fund will not lend more than 25% of the value of its total assets.
10
<PAGE>
As with any extensions of credit, there are risks of delay in recovery
and, in some cases, even loss of rights in the collateral should the borrower
of the securities fail financially. However, these loans of portfolio
securities will only be made to firms deemed by the Fund's management to be
creditworthy and when the income which can be earned from such loans
justifies the attendant risks. Upon termination of the loan, the borrower is
required to return the securities to the Fund. Any gain or loss in the market
price during the loan period would inure to the Fund.
When voting or consent rights which accompany loaned securities pass to
the borrower, the Fund will follow the policy of calling the loaned
securities, to be delivered within one day after notice, to permit the
exercise of the rights if the matters involved would have a material effect
on the Fund's investment in the loaned securities. The Fund will pay
reasonable finder's, administrative and custodial fees in connection with a
loan of its securities.
WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED DELIVERY SECURITIES AND FORWARD COMMITMENTS. From
time to time the Fund may purchase securities on a when-issued or delayed
delivery basis or may purchase or sell securities on a forward commitment
basis. When these transactions are negotiated, the price is fixed at the time
of the commitment, but delivery and payment can take place a month or more
after the date of commitment. While the Fund will only purchase securities on
a when-issued, delayed delivery or forward commitment basis with the
intention of acquiring the securities, the Fund may sell the securities
before the settlement date, if it is deemed advisable. The securities so
purchased or sold are subject to market fluctuation and no interest or
dividends accrue to the purchaser prior to the settlement date.
At the time the Fund makes the commitment to purchase or sell securities
on a when-issued, delayed delivery or forward commitment basis, it will
record the transaction and thereafter reflect the value, each day, of such
security purchased, or if a sale, the proceeds to be received, in determining
its net asset value. At the time of delivery of the securities, their value
may be more or less than the purchase or sale price. An increase in the
percentage of the Fund's assets committed to the purchase of securities on a
when-issued, delayed delivery or forward commitment basis may increase the
volatility of its net asset value. The Fund will also establish a segregated
account on the Fund's books in which it will continually maintain cash or
cash equivalents or other liquid portfolio securities equal in value to
commitments to purchase securities on a when-issued, delayed delivery or
forward commitment basis.
WHEN, AS AND IF ISSUED SECURITIES. The Fund may purchase securities on a
"when, as and if issued" basis under which the issuance of the security
depends upon the occurrence of a subsequent event, such as approval of a
merger, corporate reorganization or debt restructuring. The commitment for
the purchase of any such security will not be recognized in the portfolio of
the Fund until the Sub-Advisor determines that issuance of the security is
probable. At that time, the Fund will record the transaction and, in
determining its net asset value, will reflect the value of the security
daily. At that time, the Fund will also establish a segregated account on the
Fund's books in which it will maintain cash or cash equivalents, U.S.
Government securities or other liquid portfolio securities equal in value to
recognized commitments for such securities.
An increase in the percentage of the Fund's total assets committed to the
purchase of securities on a "when, as and if issued" basis may increase the
volatility of its net asset value. The Fund may also sell securities on a
"when, as and if issued" basis provided that the issuance of the security
will result automatically from the exchange or conversion of a security owned
by the Fund at the time of sale.
PRIVATE PLACEMENTS. The Fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets in
securities which are subject to restrictions on resale because they have not
been registered under the Securities Act of 1933 (the "Securities Act"), or
which are otherwise not readily marketable. (Securities eligible for resale
pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act, and determined to be liquid
pursuant to the procedures discussed in the following paragraph, are not
subject to the foregoing restriction.) These securities are generally
referred to as private placements or restricted securities. Limitations on
the resale of these securities may have an adverse effect on their
marketability, and may prevent the Fund from disposing of them promptly at
reasonable prices. The Fund may have to bear the expense of registering the
securities for resale and the risk of substantial delays in effecting the
registration.
11
<PAGE>
Rule 144A permits the Fund to sell restricted securities to qualified
institutional buyers without limitation. The Investment Manager and/or the
Sub-Advisor, pursuant to procedures adopted by the Trustees, will make a
determination as to the liquidity of each restricted security purchased by
the Fund. If a restricted security is determined to be "liquid," the security
will not be included within the category "illiquid securities," which may not
exceed 15% of the Fund's net assets. However, investing in Rule 144A
securities could have the effect of increasing the level of Fund illiquidity
to the extent the Fund, at a particular point in time, may be unable to find
qualified institutional buyers interested in purchasing such securities.
WARRANTS AND SUBSCRIPTION RIGHTS. The Fund may acquire warrants and/or
rights which are attached to other securities. A warrant is, in effect, an
option to purchase equity securities at a specific price, generally valid for
a specific period of time, and has no voting rights, pays no dividends and
has no rights with respect to the corporations issuing them.
A subscription right is a privilege granted to existing shareholders of a
corporation to subscribe to shares of a new issue of common stock before it
is offered to the public. A subscription right normally has a life of two to
four weeks and a subscription price lower than the current market value of
the common stock.
OTHER INVESTMENT VEHICLES. The Fund may acquire shares in other investment
companies. As a shareholder in an investment company, the Fund would bear its
ratable share of that entity's expenses, including its advisory and
administration fees. At the same time the Fund would continue to pay its own
investment management fees and other expenses, as a result of which the Fund
and its shareholders in effect will be absorbing duplicate levels of fees
with respect to investments in other investment companies.
C. FUND POLICIES/INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
The investment objective, policies and restrictions listed below have been
adopted by the Fund as fundamental policies. Under the Investment Company Act
of 1940 (the "Investment Company Act"), a fundamental policy may not be
changed without the vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities
of the Fund. The Investment Company Act defines a majority as the lesser of
(a) 67% or more of the shares present at a meeting of shareholders, if the
holders of 50% of the outstanding shares of the Fund are present or
represented by proxy; or (b) more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the
Fund. For purposes of the following restrictions: (i) all percentage
limitations apply immediately after a purchase or initial investment; and
(ii) any subsequent change in any applicable percentage resulting from market
fluctuations or other changes in total or net assets does not require
elimination of any security from the portfolio.
The Fund will:
1. Seek long-term capital appreciation.
The Fund may not:
1. Invest 25% or more of the value of its total assets in securities of
issuers in any one industry, except that the Fund will invest at least
25% of its total assets in the technology industry. This restriction
does not apply to obligations issued or guaranteed by the United
States government, its agencies or instrumentalities.
2. Purchase or sell real estate or interests therein (including limited
partnership interests), although the Fund may purchase securities of
issuers which engage in real estate operations and securities secured
by real estate or interests therein.
3. Borrow money (except insofar as the Fund may be deemed to have
borrowed by entrance into a reverse repurchase agreement up to an
amount not exceeding 10% of the Fund's total assets), except that the
Fund may borrow from a bank for temporary or emergency purposes in
amounts not exceeding 5% (taken at the lower of cost or current value)
of its total assets (not including the amount borrowed).
12
<PAGE>
4. Issue senior securities as defined in the Investment Company Act
except insofar as the Fund may be deemed to have issued a senior
security by reason of (a) entering into any repurchase agreement; (b)
purchasing any securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis;
(c) purchasing or selling any futures contracts; (d) borrowing money;
or (e) lending portfolio securities.
5. Make loans of money or securities, except: (a) by the purchase of
portfolio securities; (b) by investment in repurchase agreements; or
(c) by lending its portfolio securities.
6. Purchase or sell commodities or commodities contracts except that the
Fund may purchase or sell futures contracts or options thereon.
7. Engage in the underwriting of securities, except insofar as the Fund
may be deemed an underwriter under the Securities Act in disposing of
a portfolio security.
In addition, as a non-fundamental policy, the Fund may not invest in other
investment companies in reliance on Section 12(d)(1)(F), 12(d)(1)(G) or
12(d)(1)(J) of the Investment Company Act.
Notwithstanding any other investment policy or restriction, the Fund may
seek to achieve its investment objective by investing all or substantially
all of its assets in another investment company having substantially the same
investment objective and policies as the Fund.
III. MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. BOARD OF TRUSTEES
The Board of Trustees of the Fund oversees the management of the Fund but
does not itself manage the Fund. The Trustees review various services
provided by or under the direction of the Investment Manager to ensure that
the Fund's general investment policies and programs are properly carried out.
The Trustees also conduct their review to ensure that administrative services
are provided to the Fund in a satisfactory manner.
Under state law, the duties of the Trustees are generally characterized as
a duty of loyalty and a duty of care. The duty of loyalty requires a Trustee
to exercise his or her powers in the interest of the Fund and not the
Trustee's own interest or the interest of another person or organization. A
Trustee satisfies his or her duty of care by acting in good faith with the
care of an ordinarily prudent person and in a manner the Trustee reasonably
believes to be in the best interest of the Fund and its shareholders.
B. MANAGEMENT INFORMATION
TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS. The Board of the Fund consists of nine (9)
Trustees. These same individuals also serve as directors or trustees for all
of the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds. Six Trustees (67% of the total
number) have no affiliation or business connection with the Investment
Manager or any of its affiliated persons and do not own any stock or other
securities issued by the Investment Manager's parent company, MSDW. These are
the "non-interested" or "independent" Trustees. The other three Trustees (the
"management Trustees") are affiliated with the Investment Manager.
The Trustees and executive officers of the Fund, their principal business
occupations during the last five years and their affiliations, if any, with
the Investment Manager, and with the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds (there
were 93 such Funds as of the calendar year ended December 31, 1999) are shown
below.
13
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME, AGE, POSITION WITH FUND AND ADDRESS PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
-------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------
<S> <C>
Michael Bozic (59) ......................... Vice Chairman of Kmart Corporation (since December
Trustee 1998); Director or Trustee of the Morgan Stanley Dean
c/o Kmart Corporation Witter Funds; formerly Chairman and Chief Executive
3100 West Big Beaver Road Officer of Levitz Furniture Corporation (November
Troy, Michigan 1995-November 1998) and President and Chief Executive
Officer of Hills Department Stores (May 1991-July
1995); formerly variously Chairman, Chief Executive
Officer, President and Chief Operating Officer
(1987-1991) of the Sears Merchandise Group of Sears,
Roebuck and Co.; Director of Weirton Steel Corporation.
Charles A. Fiumefreddo* (67) ............... Chairman, Director or Trustee and Chief Executive
Chairman of the Board, Chief Officer of the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds;
Executive Officer and Trustee formerly Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Director
Two World Trade Center of the Investment Manager, the Distributor and MSDW
New York, New York Services Company; Executive Vice President and Director
of Dean Witter Reynolds; Chairman and Director of the
Transfer Agent; formerly Director and/or officer of
various MSDW subsidiaries (until June 1998).
Edwin J. Garn (67) ......................... Director or Trustee of the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
Trustee Funds; formerly United States Senator
c/o Summit Ventures LLC (R-Utah)(1974-1992) and Chairman, Senate Banking
1 Utah Center Committee (1980-1986); formerly Mayor of Salt Lake
201 S. Main Street City, Utah (1971-1974); formerly Astronaut, Space
Salt Lake City, Utah Shuttle Discovery (April 12-19, 1985); Vice Chairman,
Managing Director of Huntsman Corporation (chemical company); Director of
Summit Ventures LLC Franklin Covey (time management systems), BMW Bank of
North America, Inc. (industrial loan corporation),
United Space Alliance (joint venture between Lockheed
Martin and the Boeing Company) and Nuskin Asia Pacific
(multilevel marketing); member of the Utah Regional
Advisory Board of Pacific Corp.; member of the board of
various civic and charitable organizations.
Wayne E. Hedien (66) ....................... Retired; Director or Trustee of the Morgan Stanley Dean
Trustee Witter Funds; Director of The PMI Group, Inc. (private
c/o Mayer, Brown & Platt mortgage insurance); Trustee and Vice Chairman of The
Counsel to the Independent Trustees Field Museum of Natural History; formerly associated
1675 Broadway with the Allstate Companies (1966-1994), most recently
New York, New York as Chairman of The Allstate Corporation (March
1993-December 1994) and Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer of its wholly-owned subsidiary, Allstate
Insurance Company (July 1989-December 1994); director
of various other business and charitable organizations.
14
<PAGE>
<CAPTION>
NAME, AGE, POSITION WITH FUND AND ADDRESS PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
-------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------
<S> <C>
James F. Higgins* (52) Chairman of the Private Client Group of MSDW (since May
Trustee 1999); Director of the Transfer Agent and Dean Witter
Two World Trade Center Realty Inc.; Director or Trustee of various Morgan
New York, New York Stanley Dean Witter Funds (since June 2000); previously
President and Chief Operating Officer of Individual
Securities of MSDW (February 1997-May 1999), President
and Chief Operating Officer of Dean Witter Securities
of MSDW (1995-February 1997), and President and Chief
Operating Officer of Dean Witter Financial (1989-1995)
and Director (1985-1997) of Dean Witter Reynolds.
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson (51) ................. Senior Partner, Johnson Smick International, Inc., a
Trustee consulting firm; Co-Chairman and a founder of the Group
c/o Johnson Smick International, Inc. of Seven Council (G7C), an international economic
1133 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. commission; Chairman of the Audit Committee and
Washington, D.C. Director or Trustee of the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
Funds; Director of Greenwich Capital Markets, Inc.
(broker-dealer), Independence Standards Board (private
sector organization governing independence of auditors)
and NVR, Inc. (home construction); Chairman and Trustee
of the Financial Accounting Foundation (oversight
organization of the Financial Accounting Standards
Board); formerly Vice Chairman of the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System and Assistant
Secretary of the U.S. Treasury.
Michael E. Nugent (64) ..................... General Partner, Triumph Capital, L.P., a private
Trustee investment partnership; Chairman of the Insurance
c/o Triumph Capital, L.P. Committee and Director or Trustee of the Morgan Stanley
237 Park Avenue Dean Witter Funds; formerly Vice President, Bankers
New York, New York Trust Company and BT Capital Corporation (1984-1988);
director of various business organizations.
Philip J. Purcell* (56) .................... Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Executive
Trustee Officer of MSDW, Dean Witter Reynolds and Novus Credit
1585 Broadway Services Inc.; Director of the Distributor; Director or
New York, New York Trustee of the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds;
Director of American Airlines, Inc. and its parent
company, AMR Corporation; Director and/or officer of
various MSDW subsidiaries.
John L. Schroeder (69) ..................... Retired; Chairman of the Derivatives Committee and
Trustee Director or Trustee of the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
c/o Mayer, Brown & Platt Funds; Director of Citizens Utilities Company
Counsel to the Independent Trustees (telecommunications, gas, electric and water utilities
1675 Broadway company); formerly Executive Vice President and Chief
New York, New York Investment Officer of the Home Insurance Company
(August 1991- September 1995).
15
<PAGE>
<CAPTION>
NAME, AGE, POSITION WITH FUND AND ADDRESS PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
-------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------
<S> <C>
Mitchell M. Merin (46)...................... President and Chief Operating Officer of Asset
President Management of MSDW (since December 1998); President and
Two World Trade Center Director (since April 1997) and Chief Executive Officer
New York, New York (since June 1998) of the Investment Manager and MSDW
Services Company; Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and
Director of the Distributor (since June 1998); Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer (since June 1998) and
Director (since January 1998) of the Transfer Agent;
Director of various MSDW subsidiaries; President of the
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds (since May 1999);
Trustee of various Van Kampen investment companies
(since December 1999); previously Chief Strategic
Officer of the Investment Manager and MSDW Services
Company and Executive Vice President of the Distributor
(April 1997-June 1998), Vice President of the Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter Funds (May 1997-April 1999), and
Executive Vice President of Dean Witter, Discover & Co.
Barry Fink (45) ............................ General Counsel of Asset Management of MSDW (since May
Vice President, 2000); Executive Vice President (since December 1999)
Secretary and General Counsel and Secretary and General Counsel (since February 1997)
Two World Trade Center and Director (since July 1998) of the Investment
New York, New York Manager and MSDW Services Company; Vice President,
Secretary and General Counsel of the Morgan Stanley
Dean Witter Funds (since February 1997); Vice President
and Secretary of the Distributor; previously, Senior
Vice President (March 1997-December 1999), First Vice
President, Assistant Secretary and Assistant General
Counsel of the Investment Manager and MSDW Services
Company.
Thomas F. Caloia (54)....................... First Vice President and Assistant Treasurer of the
Treasurer Investment Manager, the Distributor and MSDW Services
Two World Trade Center Company; Treasurer of the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
New York, New York Funds.
</TABLE>
------------
* A Trustee who is an "interested person" of the Fund, as defined in the
Investment Company Act.
In addition, Ronald E. Robison, Executive Vice President, Chief
Administrative Officer and Director of the Investment Manager and MSDW
Services Company, Robert S. Giambrone, Senior Vice President of the
Investment Manager, MSDW Services Company, the Distributor and the Transfer
Agent and Director of the Transfer Agent and Joseph J. McAlinden, Executive
Vice President and Chief Investment Officer of the Investment Manager and
Director of the Transfer Agent, are Vice Presidents of the Fund.
In addition, Marilyn K. Cranney, Todd Lebo, Lou Anne D. McInnis, Carsten
Otto and Ruth Rossi, First Vice Presidents and Assistant General Counsels of
the Investment Manager and MSDW Services Company, and Natasha Kassian,
Assistant Vice President and Assistant General Counsel of the Investment
Manager and MSDW Services Company, are Assistant Secretaries of the Fund.
INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS/TRUSTEES AND THE COMMITTEES. Law and regulation
establish both general guidelines and specific duties for the independent
directors/trustees. The Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds seek as independent
directors/trustees individuals of distinction and experience in business and
finance, government service or academia; these are people whose advice and
counsel are in demand by others and for whom there is often competition. To
accept a position on the Funds' boards, such individuals may reject other
attractive assignments because the Funds make substantial demands on their
time. All of the independent directors/trustees serve as members of the Audit
Committee. In
16
<PAGE>
addition, three of the directors/trustees, including two independent
directors/trustees, serve as members of the Derivatives Committee and the
Insurance Committee.
The independent directors/trustees are charged with recommending to the
full board approval of management, advisory and administration contracts,
Rule 12b-1 plans and distribution and underwriting agreements; continually
reviewing Fund performance; checking on the pricing of portfolio securities,
brokerage commissions, transfer agent costs and performance, and trading
among Funds in the same complex; and approving fidelity bond and related
insurance coverage and allocations, as well as other matters that arise from
time to time. The independent directors/trustees are required to select and
nominate individuals to fill any independent director/trustee vacancy on the
board of any Fund that has a Rule 12b-1 plan of distribution. Most of the
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds have a Rule 12b-1 plan.
The Audit Committee is charged with recommending to the full board the
engagement or discharge of the Fund's independent accountants; directing
investigations into matters within the scope of the independent accountants'
duties, including the power to retain outside specialists; reviewing with the
independent accountants the audit plan and results of the auditing
engagement; approving professional services provided by the independent
accountants and other accounting firms prior to the performance of the
services; reviewing the independence of the independent accountants;
considering the range of audit and non-audit fees; reviewing the adequacy of
the Fund's system of internal controls; and preparing and submitting
Committee meeting minutes to the full board.
The board of each Fund has a Derivatives Committee to approve parameters
for and monitor the activities of the Fund with respect to derivative
investments, if any, made by the Fund.
Finally, the board of each Fund has formed an Insurance Committee to
review and monitor the insurance coverage maintained by the Fund.
ADVANTAGES OF HAVING SAME INDIVIDUALS AS INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS/TRUSTEES
FOR ALL MORGAN STANLEY DEAN WITTER FUNDS. The independent directors/trustees
and the Funds' management believe that having the same independent
directors/trustees for each of the Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds avoids
the duplication of effort that would arise from having different groups of
individuals serving as independent directors/trustees for each of the Funds
or even of sub-groups of Funds. They believe that having the same individuals
serve as independent directors/trustees of all the Funds tends to increase
their knowledge and expertise regarding matters which affect the Fund complex
generally and enhances their ability to negotiate on behalf of each Fund with
the Fund's service providers. This arrangement also precludes the possibility
of separate groups of independent directors/trustees arriving at conflicting
decisions regarding operations and management of the Funds and avoids the
cost and confusion that would likely ensue. Finally, having the same
independent directors/trustees serve on all Fund boards enhances the ability
of each Fund to obtain, at modest cost to each separate Fund, the services of
independent directors/trustees, of the caliber, experience and business
acumen of the individuals who serve as independent directors/trustees of the
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds.
TRUSTEE AND OFFICER INDEMNIFICATION. The Fund's Declaration of Trust
provides that no Trustee, officer, employee or agent of the Fund is liable to
the Fund or to a shareholder, nor is any Trustee, officer, employee or agent
liable to any third persons in connection with the affairs of the Fund,
except as such liability may arise from his/her or its own bad faith, willful
misfeasance, gross negligence or reckless disregard of his/her or its duties.
It also provides that all third persons shall look solely to the Fund
property for satisfaction of claims arising in connection with the affairs of
the Fund. With the exceptions stated, the Declaration of Trust provides that
a Trustee, officer, employee or agent is entitled to be indemnified against
all liability in connection with the affairs of the Fund.
C. COMPENSATION
The Fund pays each Independent Trustee an annual fee of $800 plus a per
meeting fee of $50 for meetings of the Board of Trustees, the Independent
Trustees or Committees of the Board of Trustees attended by the Trustee (the
Fund pays the Chairman of the Audit Committee an additional annual fee of
$750, and the Chairmen of the Derivatives and Insurance Committees additional
annual fees of $500). If a Board meeting and a meeting of the Independent
Trustees or a Committee meeting, or a meeting of
17
<PAGE>
the Independent Trustees and/or more than one Committee meeting, take place
on a single day, the Trustees are paid a single meeting fee by the Fund. The
Fund also reimburses such Trustees for travel and other out-of-pocket
expenses incurred by them in connection with attending such meetings.
Trustees and officers of the Fund who are or have been employed by the
Investment Manager or an affiliated company receive no compensation or
expense reimbursement from the Fund for their services as Trustee.
At such time as the Fund has been in operation, and has paid fees to the
Independent Trustees, for a full fiscal year, and assuming that during such
fiscal year the Fund holds the same number of meetings of the Board, the
Independent Trustees and the Committees as were held by the other Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter Funds during the calendar year ended December 31, 1999,
it is estimated that the compensation paid to each Independent Trustee during
such fiscal year will be the amount shown in the following table:
FUND COMPENSATION (ESTIMATED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
AGGREGATE
NAME OF INDEPENDENT COMPENSATION
TRUSTEE FROM THE FUND
-------------------------- ---------------
<S> <C>
Michael Bozic ............. $1,600
Edwin J. Garn ............. 1,600
Wayne E. Hedien ........... 1,600
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson .... 2,350
Michael E. Nugent ......... 2,100
John L. Schroeder ......... 2,100
</TABLE>
The following table illustrates the compensation paid to the Fund's
Independent Trustees for the calendar year ended December 31, 1999 for
services to the 93 Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds that were in operation at
December 31, 1999.
CASH COMPENSATION FROM MORGAN STANLEY DEAN WITTER FUNDS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
TOTAL CASH
COMPENSATION
FOR SERVICES
TO 93
MORGAN STANLEY
NAME OF INDEPENDENT DEAN WITTER
TRUSTEE FUNDS
-------------------------- --------------
<S> <C>
Michael Bozic ............. $134,600
Edwin J. Garn ............. 138,700
Wayne E. Hedien ........... 138,700
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson .... 208,638
Michael E. Nugent ......... 193,324
John L. Schroeder ......... 193,324
</TABLE>
As of the date of this Statement of Additional Information, 55 of the
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds, not including the Fund, have adopted a
retirement program under which an independent director/trustee who retires
after serving for at least five years (or such lesser period as may be
determined by the Board) as an independent director/trustee of any Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter Fund that has adopted the retirement program (each such
Fund referred to as an "Adopting Fund" and each such trustee referred to as
an "Eligible Trustee") is entitled to retirement payments upon reaching the
eligible retirement age (normally, after attaining age 72). Annual payments
are based upon length of service.
Currently, upon retirement, each Eligible Trustee is entitled to receive
from the Adopting Fund, commencing as of his or her retirement date and
continuing for the remainder of his or her life, an annual retirement benefit
(the "Regular Benefit") equal to 30.22% of his or her Eligible Compensation
plus
18
<PAGE>
0.5036667% of such Eligible Compensation for each full month of service as an
independent director/ trustee of any Adopting Fund in excess of five years up
to a maximum of 60.44% after ten years of service. The foregoing percentages
may be changed by the Board (1). "Eligible Compensation" is one-fifth of the
total compensation earned by such Eligible Trustee for service to the
Adopting Fund in the five year period prior to the date of the Eligible
Trustee's retirement. Benefits under the retirement program are accrued as
expenses on the books of the Adopting Funds. Such benefits are not secured or
funded by the Adopting Funds.
The following table illustrates the retirement benefits accrued to the
Fund's Independent Trustees by the 55 Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds (not
including the Fund) for the calendar year ended December 31, 1999, and the
estimated retirement benefits for the Independent Trustees, to commence upon
their retirement, from the 55 Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds as of the
calendar year ended December 31, 1999.
------------
(1) An Eligible Trustee may elect alternative payments of his or her
retirement benefits based upon the combined life expectancy of the
Eligible Trustee and his or her spouse on the date of such Eligible
Trustee's retirement. In addition, the Eligible Trustee may elect that
the surviving spouse's periodic payment of benefits will be equal to a
lower percentage of the periodic amount when both spouses were alive.
The amount estimated to be payable under this method, through the
remainder of the later of the lives of the Eligible Trustee and spouse,
will be the actuarial equivalent of the Regular Benefit.
RETIREMENT BENEFITS FROM ALL MORGAN STANLEY DEAN WITTER FUNDS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
RETIREMENT ESTIMATED
BENEFITS ANNUAL
ESTIMATED ACCRUED AS BENEFITS UPON
CREDITED YEARS ESTIMATED EXPENSES RETIREMENT
OF SERVICE AT PERCENTAGE OF BY ALL FROM ALL
NAME OF RETIREMENT ELIGIBLE ADOPTING ADOPTING
INDEPENDENT TRUSTEE (MAXIMUM 10) COMPENSATION FUNDS FUNDS(2)
--------------------- -------------- --------------- ------------ ---------------
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C>
Michael Bozic......... 10 60.44% $20,933 $50,588
Edwin J. Garn......... 10 60.44 31,737 50,675
Wayne E. Hedien....... 9 51.37 39,566 43,000
Dr. Manuel H.
Johnson.............. 10 60.44 13,129 75,520
Michael E. Nugent .... 10 60.44 23,175 67,209
John L. Schroeder .... 8 50.37 41,558 52,994
</TABLE>
------------
(2) Based on current levels of compensation. Amount of annual benefits also
varies depending on the Trustee's elections described in Footnote (1)
above.
IV. CONTROL PERSONS AND PRINCIPAL HOLDERS OF SECURITIES
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Investment Manager provided the initial capital for the Fund by
purchasing 2,500 shares each of Class A, Class B, Class C and Class D of the
Fund for $25,000, respectively, on August 1, 2000. As of the date of this
Statement of Additional Information, the Investment Manager owned 100% of the
outstanding shares of the Fund. The Investment Manager may be deemed to
control the Fund until such time as it owns less than 25% of the outstanding
shares of the Fund.
As of the date of this Statement of Additional Information, the aggregate
number of shares of beneficial interest of the Fund owned by the Fund's
officers and Trustees as a group was less than 1% of the Fund's shares of
beneficial interest outstanding.
V. INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AND OTHER SERVICES
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. INVESTMENT MANAGER AND SUB-ADVISOR
The Investment Manager to the Fund is Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Advisors
Inc., a Delaware corporation, whose address is Two World Trade Center, New
York, NY 10048. The Investment Manager
19
<PAGE>
is a wholly-owned subsidiary of MSDW, a Delaware corporation. MSDW is a
preeminent global financial services firm that maintains leading market
positions in each of its three primary businesses: securities, asset
management and credit services.
The Sub-Advisor is Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Investment Management Inc.,
a wholly-owned subsidiary of MSDW and an affiliate of the Investment Manager,
whose address is 1221 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.
Pursuant to an Investment Management Agreement (the "Management
Agreement") with the Investment Manager, the Fund has retained the Investment
Manager to provide administrative services and manage the business affairs of
the Fund. The Fund pays the Investment Manager monthly compensation
calculated daily by applying the annual rate of 1.0% to the net assets of the
Fund determined as of the close of each business day. The Investment Manager
has agreed to assume all operating expenses (except for brokerage and 12b-1
fees) and waive the compensation provided in the Management Agreement until
such time as the Fund has $50 million of net assets or until 6 months from
the date of commencement of the Fund's operations, whichever occurs first.
The management fee is allocated among the Classes pro rata based on the net
assets of the Fund attributable to each Class.
Pursuant to a sub-advisory agreement (the "Sub-Advisory Agreement")
between the Investment Manager and Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Investment
Management Inc., the Sub-Advisor has been retained, subject to the overall
supervision of the Investment Manager and the Trustees of the Fund, to
continuously furnish investment advice concerning individual security
selections, asset allocations and overall economic trends with respect to
issuers and to manage the Fund's portfolio. As compensation for its service,
the Investment Manager pays the Sub-Advisor compensation equal to 40% of its
monthly compensation.
The Investment Manager has retained its wholly-owned subsidiary, MSDW
Services Company, to perform administrative services for the Fund.
B. PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITER
The Fund's principal underwriter is the Distributor (which has the same
address as the Investment Manager). In this capacity, the Fund's shares are
distributed by the Distributor. The Distributor has entered into a selected
dealer agreement with Dean Witter Reynolds, which through its own sales
organization sells shares of the Fund. In addition, the Distributor may enter
into similar agreements with other selected broker-dealers. The Distributor,
a Delaware corporation, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of MSDW.
The Distributor bears all expenses it may incur in providing services
under the Distribution Agreement. These expenses include the payment of
commissions for sales of the Fund's shares and incentive compensation to
Financial Advisors, the costs of educational and/or business-related trips
and educational and/or promotional and business-related expenses. The
Distributor also pays certain expenses in connection with the distribution of
the Fund's shares, including the costs of preparing, printing and
distributing advertising or promotional materials, and the costs of printing
and distributing prospectuses and supplements thereto used in connection with
the offering and sale of the Fund's shares. The Fund bears the costs of
initial typesetting, printing and distribution of prospectuses and
supplements thereto to shareholders. The Fund also bears the costs of
registering the Fund and its shares under federal and state securities laws
and pays filing fees in accordance with state securities laws.
The Fund and the Distributor have agreed to indemnify each other against
certain liabilities, including liabilities under the Securities Act. Under
the Distribution Agreement, the Distributor uses its best efforts in
rendering services to the Fund, but in the absence of willful misfeasance,
bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of its obligations, the
Distributor is not liable to the Fund or any of its shareholders for any
error of judgment or mistake of law or for any act or omission or for any
losses sustained by the Fund or its shareholders.
20
<PAGE>
C. SERVICES PROVIDED BY THE INVESTMENT MANAGER AND THE SUB-ADVISOR
The Investment Manager manages the Fund's business affairs and supervises
the investment of the Fund's assets. The Sub-Advisor manages the investment
of the Fund's assets, including the placing of orders for the purchase and
sale of portfolio securities. The Sub-Advisor obtains and evaluates the
information and advice relating to the economy, securities markets, and
specific securities as it considers necessary or useful to continuously
manage the assets of the Fund in a manner consistent with its investment
objective.
Under the terms of the Management Agreement, in addition to managing the
Fund's affairs, the Investment Manager maintains certain of the Fund's books
and records and furnishes, at its own expense, the office space, facilities,
equipment, clerical help, bookkeeping and certain legal services as the Fund
may reasonably require in the conduct of its business, including the
preparation of prospectuses, proxy statements and reports required to be
filed with federal and state securities commissions (except insofar as the
participation or assistance of independent accountants and attorneys is, in
the opinion of the Investment Manager, necessary or desirable). In addition,
the Investment Manager pays the salaries of all personnel, including officers
of the Fund, who are employees of the Investment Manager. The Investment
Manager also bears the cost of telephone service, heat, light, power and
other utilities provided to the Fund.
Expenses not expressly assumed by the Investment Manager under the
Management Agreement, the Sub-Advisor under the Sub-Advisory Agreement, or by
the Distributor, will be paid by the Fund. These expenses will be allocated
among the four Classes of shares pro rata based on the net assets of the Fund
attributable to each Class, except as described below. Such expenses include,
but are not limited to: expenses of the Plan of Distribution pursuant to Rule
12b-1; charges and expenses of any registrar, custodian, stock transfer and
dividend disbursing agent; brokerage commissions; taxes; engraving and
printing share certificates; registration costs of the Fund and its shares
under federal and state securities laws; the cost and expense of printing,
including typesetting, and distributing prospectuses of the Fund and
supplements thereto to the Fund's shareholders; all expenses of shareholders'
and Trustees' meetings and of preparing, printing and mailing of proxy
statements and reports to shareholders; fees and travel expenses of Trustees
or members of any advisory board or committee who are not employees of the
Investment Manager or any corporate affiliate of the Investment Manager; all
expenses incident to any dividend, withdrawal or redemption options; charges
and expenses of any outside service used for pricing of the Fund's shares;
fees and expenses of legal counsel, including counsel to the Trustees who are
not interested persons of the Fund or of the Investment Manager or the
Sub-Advisor (not including compensation or expenses of attorneys who are
employees of the Investment Manager or the Sub-Advisor); fees and expenses of
the Fund's independent accountants; membership dues of industry associations;
interest on Fund borrowings; postage; insurance premiums on property or
personnel (including officers and Trustees) of the Fund which inure to its
benefit; extraordinary expenses (including, but not limited to, legal claims
and liabilities and litigation costs and any indemnification relating
thereto); and all other costs of the Fund's operation. The 12b-1 fees
relating to a particular Class will be allocated directly to that Class. In
addition, other expenses associated with a particular Class (except advisory
or custodial fees) may be allocated directly to that Class, provided that
such expenses are reasonably identified as specifically attributable to that
Class and the direct allocation to that Class is approved by the Trustees.
The Management Agreement provides that in the absence of willful
misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of its
obligations thereunder, the Investment Manager is not liable to the Fund or
any of its investors for any act or omission by the Investment Manager or for
any losses sustained by the Fund or its investors.
The Management Agreement will remain in effect from year to year, provided
continuance of the Management Agreement is approved at least annually by the
vote of the holders of a majority, as defined in the Investment Company Act,
of the outstanding shares of the Fund, or by the Trustees, including a
majority of the Independent Trustees; provided that in either event such
continuance is approved annually by the vote of a majority of the Trustees,
including a majority of the Independent Trustees.
21
<PAGE>
D. DEALER REALLOWANCES
Upon notice to selected broker-dealers, the Distributor may reallow up to
the full applicable front-end sales charge during periods specified in such
notice. During periods when 90% or more of the sales charge is reallowed,
such selected broker-dealers may be deemed to be underwriters as that term is
defined in the Securities Act.
E. RULE 12b-1 PLAN
The Fund has adopted a Plan of Distribution pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under
the Investment Company Act (the "Plan") pursuant to which each Class, other
than Class D, pays the Distributor compensation accrued daily and payable
monthly at the following annual rates: 0.25%, 1.0% and 1.0% of the average
daily net assets of Class A, Class B and Class C, respectively.
The Distributor also receives the proceeds of front-end sales charges
("FSCs") and of contingent deferred sales charges ("CDSCs") imposed on
certain redemptions of shares, which are separate and apart from payments
made pursuant to the Plan.
The Distributor has informed the Fund that the entire fee payable by Class
A and a portion of the fees payable by each of Class B and Class C each year
pursuant to the Plan equal to 0.25% of such Class' average daily net assets
are currently each characterized as a "service fee" under the Rules of the
National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. (of which the Distributor is
a member). The "service fee" is a payment made for personal service and/or
the maintenance of shareholder accounts. The remaining portion of the Plan
fees payable by a Class, if any, is characterized as an "asset-based sales
charge" as such is defined by the Rules of the Association.
Under the Plan and as required by Rule 12b-1, the Trustees receive and
review promptly after the end of each calendar quarter a written report
provided by the Distributor of the amounts expended under the Plan and the
purpose for which such expenditures were made.
The Plan was adopted in order to permit the implementation of the Fund's
method of distribution. Under this distribution method the Fund offers four
Classes, each with a different distribution arrangement.
With respect to Class A shares, Dean Witter Reynolds compensates its
Financial Advisors by paying them, from proceeds of the FSC, commissions for
the sale of Class A shares, currently a gross sales credit of up to 5.0% of
the amount sold (except as provided in the following sentence) and an annual
residual commission, currently a residual of up to 0.25% of the current value
of the respective accounts for which they are the Financial Advisors or
dealers of record in all cases. On orders of $1 million or more (for which no
sales charge was paid) or net asset value purchases by employer-sponsored
employee benefit plans, whether or not qualified under the Internal Revenue
Code, for which the Transfer Agent serves as Trustee or Dean Witter Reynolds
Retirement Plan Services serves as recordkeeper pursuant to a written
Recordkeeping Services Agreement ("MSDW Eligible Plans"), the Investment
Manager compensates Financial Advisors by paying them, from its own funds, a
gross sales credit of 1.0% of the amount sold.
With respect to Class B shares, Dean Witter Reynolds compensates its
Financial Advisors by paying them, from its own funds, commissions for the
sale of Class B shares, currently a gross sales credit of up to 5.0% of the
amount sold (except as provided in the following sentence) and an annual
residual commission, currently a residual of up to 0.25% of the current value
(not including reinvested dividends or distributions) of the amount sold in
all cases. In the case of Class B shares purchased by MSDW Eligible Plans,
Dean Witter Reynolds compensates its Financial Advisors by paying them, from
its own funds, a gross sales credit of 3.0% of the amount sold.
With respect to Class C shares, Dean Witter Reynolds compensates its
Financial Advisors by paying them, from its own funds, commissions for the
sale of Class C shares, currently a gross sales credit of up to 1.0% of the
amount sold and an annual residual commission, currently up to 1.0% of the
current value of the respective accounts for which they are the Financial
Advisors of record.
22
<PAGE>
With respect to Class D shares other than shares held by participants in
the Investment Manager's mutual fund asset allocation program, the Investment
Manager compensates Dean Witter Reynolds' Financial Advisors by paying them,
from its own funds, commissions for the sale of Class D shares, currently a
gross sales credit of up to 1.0% of the amount sold. There is a chargeback of
100% of the amount paid if the Class D shares are redeemed in the first year
and a chargeback of 50% of the amount paid if the Class D shares are redeemed
in the second year after purchase. The Investment Manager also compensates
Dean Witter Reynolds's Financial Advisors by paying them, from its own funds,
an annual residual commission, currently up to 0.10% of the current value of
the respective accounts for which they are the Financial Advisors of record
(not including accounts of participants in the Investment Manager's mutual
fund asset allocation program).
The gross sales credit is a charge which reflects commissions paid by Dean
Witter Reynolds to its Financial Advisors and Dean Witter Reynolds's
Fund-associated distribution-related expenses, including sales compensation,
and overhead and other branch office distribution-related expenses including
(a) the expenses of operating Dean Witter Reynolds's branch offices in
connection with the sale of Fund shares, including lease costs, the salaries
and employee benefits of operations and sales support personnel, utility
costs, communications costs and the costs of stationery and supplies; (b) the
costs of client sales seminars; (c) travel expenses of mutual fund sales
coordinators to promote the sale of Fund shares; and (d) other expenses
relating to branch promotion of Fund sales.
The Investment Manager pays a retention fee to Financial Advisors at an
annual rate of 0.05% of the value of shares of the Fund sold after January 1,
2000 and held for at least one year. Shares purchased through the
reinvestment of dividends will be eligible for a retention fee, provided that
such dividends were earned on shares otherwise eligible for a retention fee
payment. Shares owned in variable annuities, closed-end fund shares and
shares held in 401(k) plans where the Transfer Agent or Dean Witter
Reynolds's Retirement Plan Services is either recordkeeper or trustee are not
eligible for a retention fee.
For the first year only, the retention fee is paid on any shares of the
Fund sold after January 1, 2000 and held by shareholders on December 31,
2000.
The retention fees are paid by the Investment Manager from its own assets,
which may include profits from investment management fees payable under the
Management Agreement, as well as from borrowed funds.
The distribution fee that the Distributor receives from the Fund under the
Plan, in effect, offsets distribution expenses incurred under the Plan on
behalf of the Fund and, in the case of Class B shares, opportunity costs,
such as the gross sales credit and an assumed interest charge thereon
("carrying charge"). These expenses may include the cost of Fund-related
educational and/or business-related trips or payment of Fund-related
educational and/or promotional expenses of Financial Advisors. In the
Distributor's reporting of the distribution expenses to the Fund, in the case
of Class B shares, such assumed interest (computed at the "broker's call
rate") has been calculated on the gross credit as it is reduced by amounts
received by the Distributor under the Plan and any contingent deferred sales
charges received by the Distributor upon redemption of shares of the Fund. No
other interest charge is included as a distribution expense in the
Distributor's calculation of its distribution costs for this purpose. The
broker's call rate is the interest rate charged to securities brokers on
loans secured by exchange-listed securities.
The Fund is authorized to reimburse expenses incurred or to be incurred in
promoting the distribution of the Fund's Class A and Class C shares and in
servicing shareholder accounts. Reimbursement will be made through payments
at the end of each month. The amount of each monthly payment may in no event
exceed an amount equal to a payment at the annual rate of 0.25%, in the case
of Class A, and 1.0%, in the case of Class C, of the average net assets of
the respective Class during the month. No interest or other financing
charges, if any, incurred on any distribution expenses on behalf of Class A
and Class C will be reimbursable under the Plan. With respect to Class A, in
the case of all expenses other than expenses representing the service fee,
and, with respect to Class C, in the case of all expenses other than expenses
representing a gross sales credit or a residual to Financial Advisors
23
<PAGE>
and other authorized financial representatives, such amounts shall be
determined at the beginning of each calendar quarter by the Trustees,
including, a majority of the Independent Trustees. Expenses representing the
service fee (for Class A) or a gross sales credit or a residual to Financial
Advisors and other authorized financial representatives (for Class C) may be
reimbursed without prior determination. In the event that the Distributor
proposes that monies shall be reimbursed for other than such expenses, then
in making quarterly determinations of the amounts that may be reimbursed by
the Fund, the Distributor will provide and the Trustees will review a
quarterly budget of projected distribution expenses to be incurred on behalf
of the Fund, together with a report explaining the purposes and anticipated
benefits of incurring such expenses. The Trustees will determine which
particular expenses, and the portions thereof, that may be borne by the Fund,
and in making such a determination shall consider the scope of the
Distributor's commitment to promoting the distribution of the Fund's Class A
and Class C shares.
In the case of Class B shares, at any given time, the expenses of
distributing shares of the Fund may be more or less than the total of (i) the
payments made by the Fund pursuant to the Plan; and (ii) the proceeds of
CDSCs paid by investors upon redemption of shares. For example, if $1 million
in expenses in distributing Class B shares of the Fund had been incurred and
$750,000 had been received as described in (i) and (ii) above, the excess
expense would amount to $250,000. Although there is no legal obligation for
the Fund to pay expenses incurred in excess of payments made to the
Distributor under the Plan and the proceeds of CDSCs paid by investors upon
redemption of shares, if for any reason the Plan is terminated, the Trustees
will consider at that time the manner in which to treat such expenses. Any
cumulative expenses incurred, but not yet recovered through distribution fees
or CDSCs, may or may not be recovered through future distribution fees or
CDSCs.
In the case of Class A and Class C shares, expenses incurred pursuant to
the Plan in any calendar year in excess of 0.25% or 1.0% of the average daily
net assets of Class A or Class C, respectively, will not be reimbursed by the
Fund through payments in any subsequent year, except that expenses
representing a gross sales commission credited to Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
Financial Advisors and other authorized financial representatives at the time
of sale may be reimbursed in the subsequent calendar year. No interest or
other financing charges will be incurred on any Class A or Class C
distribution expenses incurred by the Distributor under the Plan or on any
unreimbursed expenses due to the Distributor pursuant to the Plan.
No interested person of the Fund nor any Independent Trustee has any
direct financial interest in the operation of the Plan except to the extent
that the Distributor, the Investment Manager, the Sub-Advisor Dean Witter
Reynolds, MSDW Services Company or certain of their employees may be deemed
to have such an interest as a result of benefits derived from the successful
operation of the Plan or as a result of receiving a portion of the amounts
expended thereunder by the Fund.
On an annual basis, the Trustees, including a majority of the Independent
Trustees, consider whether the Plan should be continued. Prior to approving
the Plan, the Trustees requested and received from the Distributor and
reviewed all the information which they deemed necessary to arrive at an
informed determination. In making their determination, the Trustees
considered: (1) the benefits the Fund would be likely to obtain under the
Plan, including that: (a) the Plan is essential in order to give Fund
investors a choice of alternatives for payment of distribution and service
charges and to enable the Fund to continue to grow and avoid a pattern of net
redemptions which, in turn, are essential for effective investment
management; and (b) without the compensation to individual brokers and the
reimbursement of distribution and account maintenance expenses of Dean Witter
Reynolds' branch offices made possible by the 12b-1 fees, Dean Witter
Reynolds could not establish and maintain an effective system for
distribution, servicing of Fund shareholders and maintenance of shareholder
accounts; and (2) what services would be provided under the Plan to the Fund
and its shareholders. In the Trustees' quarterly review of the Plan, they
will consider its continued appropriateness and the level of compensation
provided therein.
The Plan may not be amended to increase materially the amount to be spent
for the services described therein without approval by the shareholders of
the affected Class or Classes of the Fund, and
24
<PAGE>
all material amendments to the Plan must also be approved by the Trustees in
the manner described above. The Plan may be terminated at any time, without
payment of any penalty, by vote of a majority of the Independent Trustees or
by a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund (as
defined in the Investment Company Act) on not more than thirty days' written
notice to any other party to the Plan. So long as the Plan is in effect, the
election and nomination of Independent Trustees shall be committed to the
discretion of the Independent Trustees.
F. OTHER SERVICE PROVIDERS
(1) TRANSFER AGENT/DIVIDEND-PAYING AGENT
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Trust FSB is the Transfer Agent for the Fund's
shares and the Dividend Disbursing Agent for payment of dividends and
distributions on Fund shares and Agent for shareholders under various
investment plans. The principal business address of the Transfer Agent is
Harborside Financial Center, Plaza Two, Jersey City, NJ 07311.
(2) CUSTODIAN AND INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
The Bank of New York, 100 Church Street, New York, NY 10007 is the
Custodian of the Fund's assets. Any of the Fund's cash balances with the
Custodian in excess of $100,000 are unprotected by federal deposit insurance.
These balances may, at times, be substantial.
Deloitte and Touche LLP, 2 World Financial Center, New York, New York
10281, serves as the independent accountants of the Fund. The independent
accountants are responsible for auditing the annual financial statements of
the Fund.
(3) AFFILIATED PERSONS
The Transfer Agent is an affiliate of the Investment Manager, the
Sub-Advisor, and the Distributor. As Transfer Agent and Dividend Disbursing
Agent, the Transfer Agent's responsibilities include maintaining shareholder
accounts, disbursing cash dividends and reinvesting dividends, processing
account registration changes, handling purchase and redemption transactions,
mailing prospectuses and reports, mailing and tabulating proxies, processing
share certificate transactions, and maintaining shareholder records and
lists. For these services, the Transfer Agent receives a per shareholder
account fee from the Fund and is reimbursed for its out-of-pocket expenses in
connection with such services.
G. CODES OF ETHICS
The Fund, the Investment Manager, the Sub-Advisor and the Distributor have
each adopted a Code of Ethics pursuant to Rule 17j-1 under the Investment
Company Act. The Codes of Ethics are designed to detect and prevent improper
personal trading. The Codes of Ethics permit personnel subject to the Codes
to invest in securities, including securities that may be purchased, sold or
held by the Fund, subject to a number of restrictions and controls including
prohibitions against purchases of securities in an Initial Public Offering
and a preclearance requirement with respect to personal securities
transactions.
VI. BROKERAGE ALLOCATION AND OTHER PRACTICES
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. BROKERAGE TRANSACTIONS
Subject to the general supervision of the Trustees, the Investment Manager
and/or the Sub-Advisor are responsible for decisions to buy and sell
securities for the Fund, the selection of brokers and dealers to effect the
transactions, and the negotiation of brokerage commissions, if any. Purchases
and sales of securities on a stock exchange are effected through brokers who
charge a commission for their services. In the over-the-counter market,
securities are generally traded on a "net" basis with dealers acting as
principal for their own accounts without a stated commission, although the
price of the security usually includes a profit to the dealer. The Fund also
expects that securities will be purchased at times in underwritten offerings
where the price includes a fixed amount of compensation, generally referred
to as
25
<PAGE>
the underwriter's concession or discount. Options and futures transactions
will usually be effected through a broker and a commission will be charged.
On occasion, the Fund may also purchase certain money market instruments
directly from an issuer, in which case no commissions or discounts are paid.
B. COMMISSIONS
Pursuant to an order of the SEC, the Fund may effect principal
transactions in certain money market instruments with Dean Witter Reynolds.
The Fund will limit its transactions with Dean Witter Reynolds to U.S.
Government and government agency securities, bank money instruments (i.e.,
certificates of deposit and bankers' acceptances) and commercial paper. The
transactions will be effected with Dean Witter Reynolds only when the price
available from Dean Witter Reynolds is better than that available from other
dealers.
Brokerage transactions in securities listed on exchanges or admitted to
unlisted trading privileges may be effected through Dean Witter Reynolds,
Morgan Stanley & Co. and other affiliated brokers and dealers. In order for
an affiliated broker or dealer to effect any portfolio transactions on an
exchange for the Fund, the commissions, fees or other remuneration received
by the affiliated broker or dealer must be reasonable and fair compared to
the commissions, fees or other remuneration paid to other brokers in
connection with comparable transactions involving similar securities being
purchased or sold on an exchange during a comparable period of time. This
standard would allow the affiliated broker or dealer to receive no more than
the remuneration which would be expected to be received by an unaffiliated
broker in a commensurate arm's-length transaction. Furthermore, the Trustees,
including the Independent Trustees, have adopted procedures which are
reasonably designed to provide that any commissions, fees or other
remuneration paid to an affiliated broker or dealer are consistent with the
foregoing standard. The Fund does not reduce the management fee it pays to
the Investment Manager by any amount of the brokerage commissions it may pay
to an affiliated broker or dealer.
C. BROKERAGE SELECTION
The policy of the Fund regarding purchases and sales of securities for its
portfolio is that primary consideration will be given to obtaining the most
favorable prices and efficient executions of transactions. Consistent with
this policy, when securities transactions are effected on a stock exchange,
the Fund's policy is to pay commissions which are considered fair and
reasonable without necessarily determining that the lowest possible
commissions are paid in all circumstances. The Fund believes that a
requirement always to seek the lowest possible commission cost could impede
effective portfolio management and preclude the Fund and the Investment
Manager and/or the Sub-Advisor from obtaining a high quality of brokerage and
research services. In seeking to determine the reasonableness of brokerage
commissions paid in any transaction, the Investment Manager and/or
Sub-Advisor rely upon their experience and knowledge regarding commissions
generally charged by various brokers and on their judgment in evaluating the
brokerage and research services received from the broker effecting the
transaction. These determinations are necessarily subjective and imprecise,
as in most cases an exact dollar value for those services is not
ascertainable.
The Fund anticipates that certain of its transactions involving foreign
securities will be effected on foreign securities exchanges. Fixed
commissions on such transactions are generally higher than negotiated
commissions on domestic transactions. There is also generally less government
supervision and regulation of foreign securities exchanges and brokers than
in the United States.
In seeking to implement the Fund's policies, the Investment Manager and/or
the Sub-Advisor effect transactions with those brokers and dealers who they
believe provide the most favorable prices and are capable of providing
efficient executions. If the Investment Manager and/or the Sub-Advisor
believe the prices and executions are obtainable from more than one broker or
dealer, they may give consideration to placing portfolio transactions with
those brokers and dealers who also furnish research and other services to the
Fund or the Investment Manager or the Sub-Advisor. The services may include,
but are not limited to, any one or more of the following: information as to
the availability of securities for purchase or sale; statistical or factual
information or opinions pertaining to investment; wire services; and
26
<PAGE>
appraisals or evaluations of portfolio securities. The information and
services received by the Investment Manager and/or the Sub-Advisor from
brokers and dealers may be of benefit to them in the management of accounts
of some of their other clients and may not in all cases benefit the Fund
directly.
The Investment Manager and the Sub-Advisor each currently serves as
investment adviser to a number of clients, including other investment
companies, and may in the future act as investment manager or advisor to
others. It is the practice of the Investment Manager and the Sub-Advisor to
cause purchase and sale transactions to be allocated among the Fund and
others whose assets it manages in such manner as it deems equitable. In
making such allocations among the Fund and other client accounts, various
factors may be considered, including the respective investment objectives,
the relative size of portfolio holdings of the same or comparable securities,
the availability of cash for investment, the size of investment commitments
generally held and the opinions of the persons responsible for managing the
portfolios of the Fund and other client accounts.
D. DIRECTED BROKERAGE
Not Applicable
E. REGULAR BROKER-DEALERS
Not Applicable
VII. CAPITAL STOCK AND OTHER SECURITIES
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The shareholders of the Fund are entitled to a full vote for each full
share of beneficial interest held. The Fund is authorized to issue an
unlimited number of shares of beneficial interest. All shares of beneficial
interest of the Fund are of $0.01 par value and are equal as to earnings,
assets and voting privileges except that each Class will have exclusive
voting privileges with respect to matters relating to distribution expenses
borne solely by such Class or any other matter in which the interests of one
Class differ from the interests of any other Class. In addition, Class B
shareholders will have the right to vote on any proposed material increase in
Class A's expenses, if such proposal is submitted separately to Class A
shareholders. Also, Class A, Class B and Class C bear expenses related to the
distribution of their respective shares.
The Fund's Declaration of Trust permits the Trustees to authorize the
creation of additional series of shares (the proceeds of which would be
invested in separate, independently managed portfolios) and additional
Classes of shares within any series. The Trustees have not presently
authorized any such additional series or Classes of shares other than as set
forth in the Prospectus.
The Fund is not required to hold annual meetings of shareholders and in
ordinary circumstances the Fund does not intend to hold such meetings. The
Trustees may call special meetings of shareholders for action by shareholder
vote as may be required by the Investment Company Act or the Declaration of
Trust. Under certain circumstances, the Trustees may be removed by the
actions of the Trustees. In addition, under certain circumstances the
shareholders may call a meeting to remove the Trustees and the Fund is
required to provide assistance in communicating with shareholders about such
a meeting. The voting rights of shareholders are not cumulative, so that
holders of more than 50 percent of the shares voting can, if they choose,
elect all Trustees being selected, while the holders of the remaining shares
would be unable to elect any Trustees.
Under Massachusetts law, shareholders of a business trust may, under
certain limited circumstances, be held personally liable as partners for the
obligations of the Fund. However, the Declaration of Trust contains an
express disclaimer of shareholder liability for acts or obligations of the
Fund, requires that notice of such Fund obligations include such disclaimer,
and provides for indemnification out of the Fund's property for any
shareholder held personally liable for the obligations of the Fund. Thus, the
risk of a shareholder incurring financial loss on account of shareholder
liability is limited to circumstances in which the Fund itself would be
unable to meet its obligations. Given the above limitations on shareholder
personal liability, and the nature of the Fund's assets and operations, the
possibility of the Fund being
27
<PAGE>
unable to meet its obligations is remote and thus, in the opinion of
Massachusetts counsel to the Fund, the risk to Fund shareholders of personal
liability is remote.
The Trustees themselves have the power to alter the number and the terms
of office of the Trustees (as provided for in the Declaration of Trust), and
they may at any time lengthen or shorten their own terms or make their terms
of unlimited duration and appoint their own successors, provided that always
at least a majority of the Trustees has been elected by the shareholders of
the Fund.
VIII. PURCHASE, REDEMPTION AND PRICING OF SHARES
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. PURCHASE/REDEMPTION OF SHARES
Information concerning how Fund shares are offered to the public (and how
they are redeemed and exchanged) is provided in the Fund's Prospectus.
TRANSFER AGENT AS AGENT. With respect to the redemption or repurchase of
Fund shares, the application of proceeds to the purchase of new shares in the
Fund or any other Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds and the general
administration of the exchange privilege, the Transfer Agent acts as agent
for the Distributor and for the shareholder's authorized broker-dealer, if
any, in the performance of such functions. With respect to exchanges,
redemptions or repurchases, the Transfer Agent shall be liable for its own
negligence and not for the default or negligence of its correspondents or for
losses in transit. The Fund shall not be liable for any default or negligence
of the Transfer Agent, the Distributor or any authorized broker-dealer.
The Distributor and any authorized broker-dealer have appointed the
Transfer Agent to act as their agent in connection with the application of
proceeds of any redemption of Fund shares to the purchase of shares of any
other Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Fund and the general administration of the
exchange privilege. No commission or discounts will be paid to the
Distributor or any authorized broker-dealer for any transactions pursuant to
the exchange privilege.
TRANSFERS OF SHARES. In the event a shareholder requests a transfer of
Fund shares to a new registration, the shares will be transferred without
sales charge at the time of transfer. With regard to the status of shares
which are either subject to a CDSC or free of such charge (and with regard to
the length of time shares subject to the charge have been held), any transfer
involving less than all of the shares in an account will be made on a pro
rata basis (that is, by transferring shares in the same proportion that the
transferred shares bear to the total shares in the account immediately prior
to the transfer). The transferred shares will continue to be subject to any
applicable CDSC as if they had not been so transferred.
B. OFFERING PRICE
The Fund's Class B, Class C and Class D shares are offered at net asset
value per share and the Class A shares are offered at net asset value per
share plus any applicable FSC which is distributed among the Fund's
Distributor, Dean Witter Reynolds and other authorized dealers as described
in Section "V. Investment Management and Other Services--E. Rule 12b-1 Plan."
The price of Fund shares, called "net asset value," is based on the value
of the Fund's portfolio securities. Net asset value per share of each Class
is calculated by dividing the value of the portion of the Fund's securities
and other assets attributable to that Class, less the liabilities
attributable to that Class, by the number of shares of that Class
outstanding. The assets of each Class of shares are invested in a single
portfolio. The net asset value of each Class, however, will differ because
the Classes have different ongoing fees.
In the calculation of the Fund's net asset value: (1) an equity portfolio
security listed or traded on the New York or American Stock Exchange, NASDAQ,
or other exchange is valued at its latest sale price, prior to the time when
assets are valued; if there were no sales that day, the security is valued at
the latest bid price (in cases where a security is traded on more than one
exchange, the security is valued on the exchange designated as the primary
market pursuant to procedures adopted by the Trustees; and
28
<PAGE>
(2) all other portfolio securities for which over-the-counter market
quotations are readily available are valued at the latest bid price. When
market quotations are not readily available, including circumstances under
which it is determined by the Investment Manager and/or the Sub-Advisor that
sale or bid prices are not reflective of a security's market value, portfolio
securities are valued at their fair value as determined in good faith under
procedures established by and under the general supervision of the Fund's
Trustees. For valuation purposes, quotations of foreign portfolio securities,
other assets and liabilities and forward contracts stated in foreign currency
are translated into U.S. dollar equivalents at the prevailing market rates
prior to the close of the New York Stock Exchange.
Short-term debt securities with remaining maturities of sixty days or less
at the time of purchase are valued at amortized cost, unless the Trustees
determine such does not reflect the securities' market value, in which case
these securities will be valued at their fair value as determined by the
Trustees.
Listed options on debt securities are valued at the latest sale price on
the exchange on which they are listed unless no sales of such options have
taken place that day, in which case they will be valued at the mean between
their latest bid and asked prices. Unlisted options on debt securities and
all options on equity securities are valued at the mean between their latest
bid and asked prices. Futures are valued at the latest sale price on the
commodities exchange on which they trade unless the Trustees determine such
price does not reflect their market value, in which case they will be valued
at their fair value as determined in good faith under procedures established
by and under the supervision of the Trustees.
Generally, trading in foreign securities, as well as corporate bonds, U.S.
Government securities and money market instruments, is substantially
completed each day at various times prior to the close of the New York Stock
Exchange. The values of such securities used in computing the net asset value
of the Fund's shares are determined as of such times. Foreign currency
exchange rates are also generally determined prior to the close of the New
York Stock Exchange. Occasionally, events which may affect the values of such
securities and such exchange rates may occur between the times at which they
are determined and the close of the New York Stock Exchange and will
therefore not be reflected in the computation of the Fund's net asset value.
If events that may affect the value of such securities occur during such
period, then these securities may be valued at their fair value as determined
in good faith under procedures established by and under the supervision of
the Trustees.
IX. TAXATION OF THE FUND AND SHAREHOLDERS
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Fund generally will make two basic types of distributions: ordinary
dividends and long-term capital gain distributions. These two types of
distributions are reported differently on a shareholder's income tax return
and they are also subject to different rates of tax. The tax treatment of the
investment activities of the Fund will affect the amount and timing and
character of the distributions made by the Fund. Tax issues relating to the
Fund are not generally a consideration for shareholders such as tax-exempt
entities and tax-advantaged retirement vehicles such as an IRA or 401(k)
plan. Shareholders are urged to consult their own tax professionals regarding
specific questions as to federal, state or local taxes.
INVESTMENT COMPANY TAXATION. The Fund intends to remain qualified as a
regulated investment company under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986. As such, the Fund will not be subject to federal income tax on its
net investment income and capital gains, if any, to the extent that it
distributes such income and capital gains to its shareholders.
The Fund generally intends to distribute sufficient income and gains so
that the Fund will not pay corporate income tax on its earnings. The Fund
also generally intends to distribute to its shareholders in each calendar
year a sufficient amount of ordinary income and capital gains to avoid the
imposition of a 4% excise tax. However, the Fund may instead determine to
retain all or part of any net long-term capital gains in any year for
reinvestment. In such event, the Fund will pay federal income tax (and
possibly excise tax) on such retained gains.
Gains or losses on sales of securities by the Fund will be long-term
capital gains or losses if the securities have a tax holding period of more
than one year. Gains or losses on the sale of securities with a tax holding
period of one year or less will be short-term gains or losses.
29
<PAGE>
Gains or losses on the Fund's transactions in listed non-equity options,
futures and options on futures generally are treated as 60% long-term and 40%
short-term. When the Fund engages in options and futures transactions,
various tax rules may accelerate or defer recognition of certain gains and
losses, change the character of certain gains or losses, or alter the holding
period of other investments held by the Fund. The application of these rules
would therefore also affect the amount, timing and character of distributions
made by the Fund.
The Fund's foreign currency gains or losses from forward contracts,
futures contracts that are not "regulated futures contracts," and unlisted
options, and certain other foreign currency gains or losses derived with
respect to fixed-income securities, are treated as ordinary income or loss.
In general, such foreign currency gains or losses will increase or decrease
the amount of the Fund's income available to be distributed to shareholders
as ordinary income, rather than increasing or decreasing the amount of the
Fund's net capital gain. Additionally, if such foreign currency losses exceed
other ordinary income during a taxable year, the Fund would not be able to
make ordinary income distributions for the year.
Under certain tax rules, the Fund may be required to accrue a portion of
any discount at which certain securities are purchased as income each year
even though the Fund receives no payments in cash on the security during the
year. In addition, if the Fund invests in an equity security of a non-U.S.
corporation classified as a "passive foreign investment company" for U.S. tax
purposes, the application of certain technical tax provisions applying to
investments in such companies may result in the Fund being required to accrue
income in respect of the security without any receipt of cash attributable to
such income. To the extent that the Fund invests in such securities, it would
be required to pay out such accrued discount as an income distribution in
each year in order to avoid taxation at the Fund level. Such distributions
will be made from the available cash of the Fund or by liquidation of
portfolio securities if necessary. If a distribution of cash necessitates the
liquidation of portfolio securities, the Investment Manager will select which
securities to sell. The Fund may realize a gain or loss from such sales. In
the event the Fund realizes net capital gains from such transactions, its
shareholders may receive a larger capital gain distribution, if any, than
they would in the absence of such transactions.
TAXATION OF DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS. Shareholders normally will have
to pay federal income taxes, and any state and/or local income taxes, on the
dividends and other distributions they receive from the Fund. Such dividends
and distributions, to the extent that they are derived from net investment
income or short-term capital gains, are taxable to the shareholder as
ordinary income regardless of whether the shareholder receives such payments
in additional shares or in cash.
Distributions of net long-term capital gains, if any, are taxable to
shareholders as long-term capital gains regardless of how long a shareholder
has held the Fund's shares and regardless of whether the distribution is
received in additional shares or in cash. The maximum tax rate on long-term
capital gains realized by non-corporate shareholders is 20%.
Shareholders are generally taxed on any ordinary dividend or capital gain
distributions from the Fund in the year they are actually distributed.
However, if any such dividends or distributions are declared in October,
November or December and paid in January then such amounts will be treated
for tax purposes as received by the shareholders on December 31, to
shareholders of record of such month.
Subject to certain exceptions, a corporate shareholder may be eligible for
a 70% dividends received deduction to the extent that the Fund earns and
distributes qualifying dividends from its investments. Distributions of net
capital gains by the Fund will not be eligible for the dividends received
deduction.
Shareholders who are not citizens or residents of the United States and
certain foreign entities may be subject to withholding of United States tax
on distributions made by the Fund of investment income and short-term capital
gains.
After the end of each calendar year, shareholders will be sent information
on their dividends and capital gain distributions for tax purposes, including
the portion taxable as ordinary income, the portion taxable as long-term
capital gains.
PURCHASES AND REDEMPTIONS AND EXCHANGES OF FUND SHARES. Any dividend or
capital gains distribution received by a shareholder from any investment
company will have the effect of reducing the
30
<PAGE>
net asset value of the shareholder's stock in that company by the exact
amount of the dividend or capital gains distribution. Furthermore, such
dividends and capital gains distributions are subject to federal income
taxes. If the net asset value of the shares should be reduced below a
shareholder's cost as a result of the payment of dividends or the
distribution of realized long-term capital gains, such payment or
distribution would be in part a return of the shareholder's investment but
nonetheless would be taxable to the shareholder. Therefore, an investor
should consider the tax implications of purchasing Fund shares immediately
prior to a distribution record date.
In general, a sale of shares results in capital gain or loss, and for
individual shareholders, is taxable at a federal rate dependent upon the
length of time the shares were held. A redemption of a shareholder's Fund
shares is normally treated as a sale for tax purposes. Fund shares held for a
period of one year or less will, for tax purposes, generally result in
short-term gains or losses and those held for more than one year generally
result in long-term gain or loss. Under current law, the maximum tax rate on
long-term capital gains realized by non-corporate shareholders is 20%. Any
loss realized by shareholders upon a sale or redemption of shares within six
months of the date of their purchase will be treated as a long-term capital
loss to the extent of any distributions of net long-term capital gains with
respect to such shares during the six-month period.
Gain or loss on the sale or redemption of shares in the Fund is measured
by the difference between the amount received and the tax basis of the
shares. Shareholders should keep records of investments made (including
shares acquired through reinvestment of dividends and distributions) so they
can compute the tax basis of their shares. Under certain circumstances a
shareholder may compute and use an average cost basis in determining the gain
or loss on the sale or redemption of shares.
Exchanges of Fund shares for shares of another fund, including shares of
other Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Funds, are also subject to similar tax
treatment. Such an exchange is treated for tax purposes as a sale of the
original shares in the first fund, followed by the purchase of shares in the
second fund.
If a shareholder realizes a loss on the redemption or exchange of a fund's
shares and reinvests in that fund's shares within 30 days before or after the
redemption or exchange, the transactions may be subject to the "wash sale"
rules, resulting in a postponement of the recognition of such loss for tax
purposes.
X. UNDERWRITERS
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Fund's Distributor, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Distributors Inc.
(which has the same address as the Investment Manager), is the principal
underwriter of the Fund's shares and has agreed to purchase up to 10,000,000
shares from the Fund, which number may be increased or decreased in
accordance with the Underwriting Agreement. The Underwriting Agreement
provides that the obligation of the Distributor is subject to certain
conditions precedent (such as the filling of certain forms and documents
required by various federal and state agencies and the rendering of certain
opinions of counsel) and that the Distributor will be obligated to purchase
the shares of the Fund on , 2000, or such other date as may be
agreed upon between the Distributor and the Fund and to purchase shares of
the Fund at a later date to be agreed upon between the Distributor and the
Fund (the "Closing Date"). Shares will not be issued and dividends will not
be declared by the Fund until after the Closing Date.
The Distributor will purchase Class B, Class C and Class D shares from the
Fund at $10.00 per share with all proceeds going to the Fund and will
purchase Class A shares at $10.00 per share plus a sales charge with the
sales charge paid to the Distributor and the $10.00 per share going to the
Fund.
The Distributor may, however, receive contingent deferred sales charges
for future redemptions of Class A, Class B and Class C shares (see "Purchase
of Fund Shares--Continuous Offering" in the Prospectus).
The Distributor shall, regardless of its expected underwriting commitment,
be entitled and obligated to purchase only the number of shares for which
purchase orders have been received by the Distributor prior to 2:00 p.m., New
York time, on the third business day preceding the Closing Date, or such
other date as may be agreed to between the parties.
31
<PAGE>
The minimum number of Fund shares which may be purchased pursuant to this
offering is 100 shares. Certificates for shares purchased will not be issued
unless requested by the shareholder in writing.
The Distributor has agreed to pay certain expenses of the initial offering
and the subsequent Continuous Offering of the Fund's shares. The Fund has
agreed to pay certain compensation to the Distributor pursuant to a Plan of
Distribution pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Act to compensate the
Distributor for services it renders and the expenses it bears under the
Underwriting Agreement. The Fund will bear the cost of initial typesetting,
printing and distribution of Prospectuses and Statements of Additional
Information and supplements thereto to shareholders. The Fund has agreed to
indemnify the Distributor against certain liabilities, including liabilities
under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.
A continuous offering of the Fund's shares will commence approximately two
weeks after the Closing Date. The Distributor, as the principal underwriter
of the shares, has certain obligations under the Distribution Agreement
concerning the distribution of the shares. These obligations and the
compensation the Distributor receives are described above in the sections
titled "Principal Underwriter" and "Rule 12b-1 Plan."
XI. CALCULATION OF PERFORMANCE DATA
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From time to time, the Fund may quote its "total return" in advertisements
and sales literature. These figures are computed separately for Class A,
Class B, Class C and Class D shares. The Fund's "average annual total return"
represents an annualization of the Fund's total return over a particular
period and is computed by finding the annual percentage rate which will
result in the ending redeemable value of a hypothetical $1,000 investment
made at the beginning of a one, five or ten year period, or for the period
from the date of commencement of operations, if shorter than any of the
foregoing. The ending redeemable value is reduced by any contingent deferred
sales charge ("CDSC") at the end of the one, five, ten year or other period.
For the purpose of this calculation, it is assumed that all dividends and
distributions are reinvested. The formula for computing the average annual
total return involved a percentage obtained by dividing the ending redeemable
value by the amount of the initial investment (which in the case of Class A
shares is reduced by the Class A initial sales charge), taking a root of the
quotient (which the root is equivalent to the number of years in the period)
and subtracting 1 from the result.
In addition, the Fund may advertise its total return for each Class over
different periods of time by means of aggregate, average, year-by-year or
other types of total return figures. These calculations may or may not
reflect the imposition of the maximum front-end sales charge for Class A or
the deduction of the CDSC for each of Class B and Class C which, if
reflected, would reduce the performance quoted. For example, the average
annual total return of the Fund may be calculated in the manner described
above, but without deduction for any applicable sales charge.
For periods of less than one year, the Fund quotes its total return on a
non-annualized basis. Accordingly, the Fund may compute its aggregate total
return for each Class for specified periods by determining the aggregate
percentage rate which will result in the ending value of a hypothetical
$1,000 investment made at the beginning of the period. For the purpose of
this calculation, it is assumed that all dividends and distribution are
reinvested. The formula for computing aggregate total return involves a
percentage obtained by dividing the ending value (without reduction for any
sale charge) by the initial $1,000 investment and subtracting 1 from the
result.
The Fund may also advertise the growth of hypothetical investments of
$10,000, $50,000 and $100,000 in each Class of shares of the Fund by adding 1
to the Fund's aggregate total return to date (expressed as a decimal and
without taking into account the effect of any applicable CDSC) and
multiplying by $9,475, $48,000 and $97,000 in the case of Class A
(investments of $10,000, $50,000 and $100,000 adjusted for the initial sales
charge) or by $10,000, $50,000 and $100,000 in the case of each of Class B,
Class C and Class D, as the case may be.
The Fund from time to time may also advertise its performance relative to
certain performance rankings and indexes compiled by recognized
organizations.
32
<PAGE>
XII. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
EXPERTS. The Statement of Assets and Liabilities of the Fund at August 3,
2000 included in this Statement of Additional Information and incorporated by
reference in the Prospectus has been so included and incorporated in reliance
on the report of Deloitte & Touche LLP, independent accountants, given on the
authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting.
* * * * *
This Statement of Additional Information and the Prospectus do not contain
all of the information set forth in the Registration Statement the Fund has
filed with the SEC. The complete Registration Statement may be obtained from
the SEC.
33
<PAGE>
MORGAN STANLEY DEAN WITTER TECHNOLOGY FUND
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES AS OF AUGUST 3, 2000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C>
ASSETS:
Cash .................................................... $100,000
Deferred offering costs (Note 1) ........................ 149,666
----------
Total Assets .......................................... 249,666
----------
LIABILITIES:
Offering costs payable (Note 1) ......................... 149,666
Commitments (Notes 1 and 2) ............................. --
----------
Total Liabilities ..................................... 149,666
----------
Net Assets ............................................ $100,000
==========
CLASS A SHARES:
Net Assets ............................................... $ 25,000
(divided by)
Shares Outstanding (unlimited authorized, $.01 par value) 2,500
---------
NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE .............................. $ 10.00
==========
MAXIMUM OFFERING PRICE
(net asset value plus 5.54% of net asset value) ....... $ 10.55
==========
CLASS B SHARES:
Net Assets ............................................... $ 25,000
(divided by)
Shares Outstanding (unlimited authorized, $.01 par value) 2,500
---------
NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE .............................. $ 10.00
==========
CLASS C SHARES:
Net Assets ............................................... $ 25,000
(divided by)
Shares Outstanding (unlimited authorized, $.01 par value) 2,500
---------
NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE .............................. $ 10.00
==========
CLASS D SHARES:
Net Assets ............................................... $ 25,000
(divided by)
Shares Outstanding (unlimited authorized, $.01 par value) 2,500
---------
NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE .............................. $ 10.00
==========
</TABLE>
------------
NOTE 1--Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Technology Fund (the "Fund") was organized
as a Massachusetts business trust on June 14, 2000. To date the Fund has had
no transactions other than those relating to organizational matters and the
sale of 2,500 shares of beneficial interest for $25,000 of each class of the
Fund to Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Advisors Inc. (the "Investment Manager").
The Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended
(the "Act"), as a non-diversified, open-end management investment company.
The investment objective of the Fund is to provide long-term capital
appreciation. The Fund will seek to achieve its investment objective by
investing primarily in equity securities of companies having stock market
values or capitalization of at least $1 billion and that exhibit strong or
accelerating earnings growth, while attempting to reduce the impact of
federal taxes. Estimated organizational expenses of the Fund, consisting of
accounting and legal fees, in the amount of approximately $24,100 incurred
prior to the offering of the Fund's shares will be absorbed by the Investment
Manager. It is currently estimated that the Investment Manager will incur,
and be reimbursed, approximately $149,666 by the Fund in offering costs,
consisting of printing and blue sky fees. Actual costs could differ from
these estimates. Offering costs will be deferred and amortized by the Fund on
the straight-line method over the period of benefit of approximately one year
or less from the date of commencement of operations.
NOTE 2--The Fund has entered into an Investment Management Agreement with the
Investment Manager. The Investment Manager has entered into a Sub-Advisory
Agreement with Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Investment Management Inc. (the
"Sub-Advisor"), an affiliate of the Investment Manager.
34
<PAGE>
The Sub-Advisor will provide investment advice and portfolio management
relating to the Fund's investments in securities, including the placing of
orders for the purchase and sale of portfolio securities, subject to the
overall supervision of the Investment Manager.
As full compensation for the services and facilities furnished to the Fund
and expenses of the Fund incurred by the Investment Manager, the Fund will
pay the Investment Manager monthly compensation calculated daily by applying
the annual rate of 1.0% to the Fund's daily net assets. As compensation for
the services to be provided pursuant to the Sub-Advisory Agreement, the
Investment Manager pays the Sub-Advisor monthly compensation equal to 40% of
its monthly compensation.
The Investment Manager has undertaken to assume all operating expenses of
the Fund (except for the Plan of Distribution fee and brokerage fees) and to
waive the compensation provided for in its Investment Management Agreement
until such time as the Fund has $50 million of net assets or until six months
from the date of commencement of the Fund's operations, whichever occurs
first.
Shares of the Fund are distributed by Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
Distributors Inc. (the "Distributor"), an affiliate of the Investment
Manager. The Fund has adopted a Plan of Distribution (the "Plan") pursuant to
Rule 12b-1 under the Act. The Plan provides that the Fund will pay the
Distributor a fee which is accrued daily and paid monthly at the following
annual rates; (i) Class A - up to 0.25% of the average daily net assets of
Class A; (ii) Class B - up to 1.0% of the average daily net assets of Class
B; and (iii) Class C - up to 1.0% of the average daily net assets of Class
C.
In the case of Class B shares, provided that the Plan continues in effect,
any cumulative expenses in excess of 1% incurred by the Distributor but not
yet recovered may be recovered through the payment of future distribution
fees from the Fund up to 1% in that year pursuant to the Plan and contingent
deferred sales charges paid by investors upon redemption of Class B shares.
Although there is no legal obligation for the Fund to pay expenses incurred
in excess of payments made to the Distributor under the Plan and the proceeds
of contingent deferred sales charges paid by investors upon redemption of
shares, if for any reason the Plan is terminated, the Trustees will consider
at that time the manner in which to treat such expenses.
In the case of Class A shares and Class C shares, expenses incurred
pursuant to the Plan in any calendar year in excess of 0.25% or 1.0% of the
average daily net assets of Class A or Class C, respectively, will not be
reimbursed by the Fund through payments in any subsequent year, except that
expenses representing a gross sales credit to Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
Financial Advisors or other selected broker-dealer representatives may be
reimbursed in the subsequent calendar year.
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Trust FSB, an affiliate of the Investment
Manager and the Distributor, is the Fund's transfer agent.
35
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INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT
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The Shareholders and Board of Trustees,
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Technology Fund:
We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Technology Fund (the "Fund") as of August 3, 2000.
This financial statement is the responsibility of the Fund's management. Our
responsibility is to express an opinion on this financial statement based on
our audit.
We conducted our audit in accordance with auditing standards generally
accepted in the United States of America. Those standards require that we
plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
financial statement is free of material misstatement. An audit includes
examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures
in the financial statement. An audit also includes assessing the accounting
principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as
evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our
audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
In our opinion, the financial statement referred to above presents fairly, in
all material respects, the financial position of Morgan Stanley Dean Witter
Technology Fund as of August 3, 2000 in conformity with accounting principles
generally accepted in the United States of America.
Deloitte & Touche LLP
New York, New York
August 4, 2000
36