FIDELITY COMMONWEALTH TRUST
485BPOS, 1995-12-13
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM N-1A
REGISTRATION STATEMENT (No. 2-52322) 
  UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 [X]
 Pre-Effective Amendment No.           [  ]
 Post-Effective Amendment No. 59          [X]
and
REGISTRATION STATEMENT (No. 811-2546) 
 UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940    [X]
 Amendment No.         [  ]
Fidelity Commonwealth Trust                          
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)
82 Devonshire St., Boston, Massachusetts 02109 
(Address Of Principal Executive Offices)  (Zip Code)
Registrant's Telephone Number:  617-570-7000 
Arthur S. Loring, Secretary
82 Devonshire Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02109 
(Name and Address of Agent for Service)
It is proposed that this filing will become effective
 (  ) immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
 (x) on (December 13, 1995) pursuant to paragraph (b) 
 (  ) 60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)
 (  ) on (             ) pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)   
 (  ) 75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(ii)
 (  ) on (            ) pursuant to paragraph (a)(ii) of rule 485. 
If appropriate, check the following box:
 (  ) this post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a
previously filed 
      post-effective amendment.
Registrant has filed a declaration pursuant to Rule 24f-2 under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 and filed the Notice required by such Rule
on June 27, 1995.
FIDELITY COMMONWEALTH TRUST:
FIDELITY SMALL CAP STOCK FUND
FIDELITY LARGE CAP STOCK FUND
 
FIDELITY DEVONSHIRE TRUST:
FIDELITY MID-CAP STOCK FUND
CROSS REFERENCE SHEET
FORM N-1A
ITEM NUMBER PROSPECTUS SECTION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                     <C>                                                   
1...................................    Cover Page                                            
 ...                                                                                           
 
2a..................................    Expenses                                              
 ..                                                                                            
 
   b,                                   Contents; The Funds at a Glance; Who May Want to      
c...............................        Invest                                                
 
3a..................................    Financial Highlights                                  
 ..                                                                                            
 
  b.................................    *                                                     
 
   c, d.............................    Performance                                           
 
4a   i..............................    Charter                                               
 
                                        The Funds at a Glance; Investment Principles and      
ii...............................       Risks                                                 
 
                                        Investment  Principles and Risks                      
b...................................                                                          
 
                                        Who May Want to Invest; Investment Principles and     
c...................................    Risks                                                 
 
5a..................................    Charter                                               
 ..                                                                                            
 
   b                                    Cover Page; The Funds at a Glance; Charter; Doing     
i..............................         Business with Fidelity                                
 
                                        Charter                                               
ii..............................                                                              
 
                                        Expenses; Breakdown of Expenses                       
iii.............................                                                              
 
  c................................     Charter                                               
 
                                        Charter; Breakdown of Expenses                        
d...................................                                                          
 .                                                                                             
 
                                        Cover Page; Charter                                   
e....................................                                                         
 
                                        Expenses                                              
f....................................                                                         
 
 g   i..............................    Charter                                               
 
                                        *                                                     
ii...............................                                                             
 
5A.................................     Performance                                           
 .                                                                                             
 
6a                                      Charter                                               
i.................................                                                            
 
                                        How to Buy Shares; How to Sell Shares; Transaction    
ii................................      Details; Exchange Restrictions                        
 
                                        Charter                                               
iii................................                                                           
 
                                        *                                                     
b..................................                                                           
 
                                        Transaction Details; Exchange Restrictions            
c..................................                                                           
 
                                        *                                                     
d..................................                                                           
 
                                        Doing Business with Fidelity; How to Buy Shares;      
e..................................     How to Sell Shares; Investor Services                 
 
    f,                                  Dividends, Capital Gains, and Taxes                   
g..............................                                                               
 
7                                       Cover Page; Charter                                   
a..................................                                                           
 
                                        Expenses; How to Buy Shares; Transaction Details      
b.................................                                                            
 
                                        Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers                   
c..................................                                                           
 
                                        How to Buy Shares                                     
d..................................                                                           
 
                                        *                                                     
e..................................                                                           
 
    f................................   *                                                     
 
8...................................    How to Sell Shares; Investor Services; Transaction    
 ...                                     Details; Exchange Restrictions                        
 
9...................................    *                                                     
 ...                                                                                           
 
</TABLE>
 
*  Not Applicable
FIDELITY COMMONWEALTH TRUST:
FIDELITY SMALL CAP STOCK FUND
FIDELITY LARGE CAP STOCK FUND
 
FIDELITY DEVONSHIRE TRUST:
FIDELITY MID-CAP STOCK FUND
CROSS REFERENCE SHEET (CONTINUED)
FORM N-1A
ITEM NUMBER  STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION SECTION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                    <C>                                                
10,                                    Cover Page                                         
11.............................                                                           
 
12..................................   Description of the Trusts                          
 ..                                                                                        
 
13a -                                  Investment Policies and Limitations                
c............................                                                             
 
                                       Portfolio Transactions                             
d..................................                                                       
 
14a -                                  Trustees and Officers                              
c............................                                                             
 
15a,   b..........................     *                                                  
 
15      c..........................    Trustees and Officers                              
 
16a                                    FMR, Portfolio Transactions                        
i................................                                                         
 
                                       Trustees and Officers                              
ii..............................                                                          
 
                                       Management Contracts                               
iii..............................                                                         
 
                                       Management Contracts                               
b.................................                                                        
 
     c,                                Contracts with FMR Affiliates                      
d.............................                                                            
 
     e -                               *                                                  
g...........................                                                              
 
                                       Description of the Trusts                          
h.................................                                                        
 
                                       Contracts with FMR Affiliates                      
i.................................                                                        
 
17a ............................       Portfolio Transactions                             
 
     b..............................   Portfolio Transactions                             
 
     c..............................   Portfolio Transactions                             
 
                                       *                                                  
d,e..............................                                                         
 
18a................................    Description of the Trusts                          
 ..                                                                                        
 
                                       *                                                  
b.................................                                                        
 
19a................................    Additional Purchase and Redemption Information     
 ..                                                                                        
 
                                       Additional Purchase and Redemption Information;    
b................................      Valuation of Portfolio Securities                  
 
                                       *                                                  
c.................................                                                        
 
20..................................   Distributions and Taxes                            
 ..                                                                                        
 
21a,                                   Contracts with FMR Affiliates                      
b............................                                                             
 
                                       *                                                  
c.................................                                                        
 
22..................................   Performance                                        
 ..                                                                                        
 
23..................................   Financial Statements                               
 ..                                                                                        
 
</TABLE>
 
* Not Applicable
 
SUPPLEMENT TO THE
FIDELITY SMALL CAP 
STOCK FUND, FIDELITY 
MID-CAP STOCK FUND 
AND FIDELITY LARGE CAP 
STOCK FUND PROSPECTUS
DATED JUNE 22, 1995
The Board of Trustees of 
Fidelity Small Cap Stock 
Fund has authorized 
adoption of a redemption fee 
of 0.75% (payable to the 
fund) on shares purchased 
after December 4, 1995 and 
held less than 90 days.
The following information 
replaces corresponding 
sections with respect to 
Fidelity Small Cap Stock 
Fund under the heading 
"Expenses" on page 6.
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION 
EXPENSES are charges you 
pay when you buy, sell or hold 
shares of a fund. See pages 
24 and 31-37 for an 
explanation of how and when 
these charges apply. Lower 
sales charges may be 
available for accounts under 
$250,000.
Maximum sales charge on 
purchases
(as a % of offering price) 
for Small Cap Stock 3.00%
for Mid-Cap Stock None
for Large Cap Stock None
Maximum sales charge on 
reinvested 
distributions  None
Deferred sales charge on 
redemptions None
Exchange fee None
Redemption fee on shares held 
less than
90 days for shares purchased  
after
December 4, 1995
(Small Cap Stock only) 0.75%
Annual account maintenance fee
(for accounts under $2,500) $12.
00
The following information 
supplements information in 
the section entitled 
"Transaction Details" 
beginning on page 31.
The redemption fee for Small 
Cap Stock, if applicable, will 
be deducted from the amount 
of your redemption. This fee is 
paid to the fund rather than 
FMR, and it does not apply to 
shares that were acquired 
through reinvestment of 
distributions. If shares were 
not all held for the same 
length of time, those shares 
you held longest will be 
redeemed first for purposes of 
determining whether the fee 
applies.
   The following information 
replaces the similar 
information found in the 
"Transaction Details" section 
on page 34.
FDC collects the proceeds 
from the fund's     3   % sales 
charge and may pay a 
portion of them to securities 
dealers who have sold the 
fund's shares, or to others, 
including banks and other 
financial institutions (qualified 
recipients), under special 
arrangements in connection 
with FDC's sales activities. 
The sales charge paid to 
qualified recipients is 2.25% 
of the fund's offering price. 
However, beginning January 
1, 1996, the sales charge 
paid to qualified recipients 
will be 1.50% of the fund's 
offering price.
The following information 
replaces the similar 
information found in the 
"Waivers" section on page 
36.
6. To shares purchased 
through Portfolio Advisory 
Services or Fidelity 
Charitable Advisory Services.    
SUPPLEMENT TO THE
FIDELITY SMALL CAP 
STOCK FUND, FIDELITY 
MID-CAP STOCK FUND 
AND FIDELITY LARGE CAP 
STOCK FUND PROSPECTUS
DATED JUNE 22, 1995
The Board of Trustees of 
Fidelity Small Cap Stock 
Fund has authorized 
adoption of a redemption fee 
of 0.75% (payable to the 
fund) on shares purchased 
after December 4, 1995 and 
held less than 90 days.
The following information 
replaces corresponding 
sections with respect to 
Fidelity Small Cap Stock 
Fund under the heading 
"Expenses" on page 6.
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION 
EXPENSES are charges you 
pay when you buy, sell or hold 
shares of a fund. See pages 
24 and 31-37 for an 
explanation of how and when 
these charges apply. Lower 
sales charges may be 
available for accounts under 
$250,000.
Maximum sales charge on 
purchases
(as a % of offering price) 
for Small Cap Stock 3.00%
for Mid-Cap Stock None
for Large Cap Stock None
Maximum sales charge on 
reinvested 
distributions  None
Deferred sales charge on 
redemptions None
Exchange fee None
Redemption fee on shares held 
less than
90 days for shares purchased  
after
December 4, 1995
(Small Cap Stock only) 0.75%
Annual account maintenance fee
(for accounts under $2,500) $12.
00
The following information 
supplements information in 
the section entitled 
"Transaction Details" 
beginning on page 31.
The redemption fee for Small 
Cap Stock, if applicable, will 
be deducted from the amount 
of your redemption. This fee is 
paid to the fund rather than 
FMR, and it does not apply to 
shares that were acquired 
through reinvestment of 
distributions. If shares were 
not all held for the same 
length of time, those shares 
you held longest will be 
redeemed first for purposes of 
determining whether the fee 
applies.
   The following information 
replaces the similar 
information found in the 
"Transaction Details" section 
on page 34.
FDC collects the proceeds 
from the fund's     3   % sales 
charge and may pay a 
portion of them to securities 
dealers who have sold the 
fund's shares, or to others, 
including banks and other 
financial institutions (qualified 
recipients), under special 
arrangements in connection 
with FDC's sales activities. 
The sales charge paid to 
qualified recipients is 2.25% 
of the fund's offering price. 
However, beginning January 
1, 1996, the sales charge 
paid to qualified recipients 
will be 1.50% of the fund's 
offering price.
The following information 
replaces the similar 
information found in the 
"Waivers" section on page 
36.
6. To shares purchased 
through Portfolio Advisory 
Services or Fidelity 
Charitable Advisory Services.
SML-95-2     PAGE 1 OF 2    December 13, 1995
SML-95-2     PAGE 1 OF 2    December 13, 1995    
 
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
   The following information supplements the information set forth 
in the Prospectus. The tables report selected data of Fidelity 
Large Cap Stock Fund for a share outstanding throughout the 
periods June 22, 1995 (commencement of operations) to 
October 31, 1995:    
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
   The following information supplements the information set forth 
in the Prospectus. The tables report selected data of Fidelity 
Large Cap Stock Fund for a share outstanding throughout the 
periods June 22, 1995 (commencement of operations) to 
October 31, 1995:    
SML-95-2    (PAGE 2 OF 2) December 13, 1995    
SML-95-2    (PAGE 2 OF 2) December 13, 1995
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                         <C>         
                                                               1995C          
 
   Selected Per-Share Data                                                       
 
   Net asset value, beginning of period                           $ 10.00        
 
   Income from Investment Operations                                             
 
    Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)                        .59           
 
   Less Distributions                                                            
 
   Net asset value, end of period                                 $ 10.59        
 
   Total return B                                                  5.90%         
 
   RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA                                                  
 
   Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)                        $ 59,442       
 
   Ratio of expenses to average net assets                         1.91%A        
 
   Ratio of net investment income to average net assets            .12%A         
 
   Portfolio turnover rate                                         90%A          
 
   A ANNUALIZED
B TOTAL RETURNS  FOR PERIODS OF LESS THAN ONE YEAR ARE NOT ANNUALIZED. 
C FROM JUNE 22, 1995 (COMMENCEMENT OF OPERATIONS) TO OCTOBER 31, 1995.
 
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
                                                               1995C          
 
   Selected Per-Share Data                                                       
 
   Net asset value, beginning of period                           $ 10.00        
 
   Income from Investment Operations                                             
 
    Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)                        .59           
 
   Less Distributions                                                            
 
   Net asset value, end of period                                 $ 10.59        
 
   Total return                                                    5.90%         
 
   RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA                                                  
 
   Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)                        $ 59,442       
 
   Ratio of expenses to average net assets                         1.91%A        
 
   Ratio of net investment income to average net assets            .12%A         
 
   Portfolio turnover rate                                         90%A          
</TABLE> 
   A ANNUALIZED
B TOTAL RETURNS  FOR PERIODS OF LESS THAN ONE YEAR ARE NOT ANNUALIZED. 
C FROM JUNE 22, 1995 (COMMENCEMENT OF OPERATIONS) TO OCTOBER 31, 1995.    
Please read this prospectus before investing, and keep it on file for
future reference. It contains important information, including how each
fund invests and the services available to shareholders.
To learn more about each fund and its investments, you can obtain a copy of
the funds' most recent financial reports and portfolio listing, or a copy
of the Statement of Additional Information (SAI) dated June 22, 1995. The
SAI has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and is
incorporated herein by reference (legally forms a part of the prospectus).
For a free copy of either document, call Fidelity at 1-800-544-8888.
Mutual fund shares are not deposits or obligations of, or guaranteed by,
any depository institution. Shares are not insured by the FDIC, the Federal
Reserve Board, or any other agency, and are subject to investment risk,
including the possible loss of principal.
 
FIDELITY
SMALL CAP STOCK
FUND
   
FIDELITY
MID-CAP STOCK 
FUND
   
   FIDELITY
LARGE CAP STOCK 
FUND    
These funds are growth funds. They seek to increase the value of your
investment over the long term. Using a computer-aided quantitative
approach, SMALL CAP STOCK invests mainly in equity securities of companies
with small market capitalizations. MID-CAP STOCK invests mainly in equity
securities of companies with medium market capitalizations.    LARGE CAP
STOCK invests mainly in equity securities of companies with large market
capitalizations.    
PROSPECTUS
JUNE 22, 1995(FIDELITY_LOGO_GRAPHIC) 82 DEVONSHIRE STREET, BOSTON, MA 02109
 
LIKE ALL MUTUAL 
FUNDS, THESE 
SECURITIES HAVE NOT 
BEEN APPROVED OR 
DISAPPROVED BY THE 
SECURITIES AND 
EXCHANGE 
COMMISSION OR ANY 
STATE SECURITIES 
COMMISSION, NOR HAS 
THE SECURITIES AND 
EXCHANGE 
COMMISSION OR ANY 
STATE SECURITIES 
COMMISSION PASSED 
UPON THE ACCURACY 
OR ADEQUACY OF THIS 
PROSPECTUS. ANY 
REPRESENTATION TO 
THE CONTRARY IS A 
CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
   SML    -pro-695
 
 
CONTENTS
 
 
KEY FACTS                   THE FUNDS AT A GLANCE                 
 
                            WHO MAY WANT TO INVEST                
 
THE FUNDS IN DETAIL         CHARTER How each fund is              
                            organized.                            
 
                            INVESTMENT PRINCIPLES AND RISKS       
                            Each fund's overall approach to       
                            investing.                            
 
                            BREAKDOWN OF EXPENSES How             
                            operating costs are calculated and    
                            what they include.                    
 
YOUR ACCOUNT                DOING BUSINESS WITH FIDELITY          
 
                            TYPES OF ACCOUNTS Different           
                            ways to set up your account,          
                            including tax-sheltered retirement    
                            plans.                                
 
                            HOW TO BUY SHARES Opening an          
                            account and making additional         
                            investments.                          
 
                            HOW TO SELL SHARES Taking money       
                            out and closing your account.         
 
                            INVESTOR SERVICES  Services to        
                            help you manage your account.         
 
SHAREHOLDER AND             DIVIDENDS, CAPITAL GAINS, AND         
ACCOUNT POLICIES            TAXES                                 
 
                            TRANSACTION DETAILS Share price       
                            calculations and the timing of        
                            purchases and redemptions.            
 
                            EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS                 
 
                            SALES CHARGE REDUCTIONS AND           
                            WAIVERS                               
 
   KEY FACTS    
 
 
THE FUNDS AT A GLANCE
MANAGEMENT: Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) is the management
arm of Fidelity Investments, which was established in 1946 and is now
America's largest mutual fund manager. Foreign affiliates of FMR may help
choose investments for the funds.
SMALL CAP STOCK
   MID-CAP STOCK    
GOAL: Capital appreciation (increase in the value of the fund's shares). As
with any mutual fund, there is no assurance that the fund will achieve its
goal. 
STRATEGY: Invests mainly in equity securities of companies with small
market capitalizations that the manager determines, through both
fundamental and technical analysis, to be undervalued compared to others in
their industries. 
SIZE: As of April 30, 1995, the fund had over $   562 million     in
assets.
MID-CAP STOCK
   MID-CAP STOCK    
GOAL: Long-term growth of capital (increase in the value of the fund's
shares). As with any mutual fund, there is no assurance that the fund will
achieve its goal.
STRATEGY: Invests mainly in equity securities of companies with medium
market capitalizations.
SIZE: As of April 30, 1995, the fund had over $   459 million     in
assets. 
   LARGE CAP STOCK
MID-CAP STOCK    
GOAL:    Long-term growth of capital (increase in the value of the fund's
shares). As with any mutual fund, there is no assurance that the fund will
achieve its goal.    
STRATEGY:    Invests mainly in equity securities of companies with large
market capitalizations.    
WHO MAY WANT TO INVEST
These funds may be appropriate for investors who are willing to ride out
stock market fluctuations in pursuit of potentially high long-term returns.
The funds are designed for those who want to focus on    small, medium, or
large     capitalization stocks in search of above average returns. A
company's market capitalization is the total market value of its
outstanding common stock. Small Cap Stock uses a disciplined investment
approach that combines computer-aided, quantitative analysis with
fundamental research.
The value of    the funds    ' investments will vary from day to day, and
generally reflect market conditions, interest rates, and other company,
political, or economic news. In the short-term, stock prices can fluctuate
dramatically in response to these factors. The securities of small, less
well-known companies may be more volatile than those of larger companies.
Over time, however, stocks have shown greater growth potential than other
types of securities. When you sell your shares, they may be worth more or
less than what you paid for them. By themselves, the funds do not
constitute a balanced investment plan.
 
 
THE SPECTRUM OF 
FIDELITY FUNDS 
Broad categories of Fidelity 
funds are presented here in 
order of ascending risk. 
Generally, investors seeking 
to maximize return must 
assume greater risk. The 
funds in this prospectus are 
in the GROWTH category. 
(solid bullet) MONEY MARKET Seeks 
income and stability by 
investing in high-quality, 
short-term investments.
(solid bullet) INCOME Seeks income by 
investing in bonds. 
(solid bullet) GROWTH AND INCOME 
Seeks long-term growth and 
income by investing in stocks 
and bonds.
(right arrow) GROWTH Seeks long-term 
growth by investing mainly in 
stocks. 
(checkmark)
EXPENSES 
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES are charges you pay when you buy, sell or
hold shares of a fund. See pages     and -     for an explanation of how
and when these charges apply. Lower sales charges may be available for
accounts over $250,000.
Maximum sales charge on purchases
(as a % of offering price) 
   for Small Cap Stock     3.00%
   for Mid-Cap Stock None
for Large Cap Stock     None
Maximum sales charge on reinvested distributions  None
Deferred sales charge on redemptions None
Exchange fee None
Annual account maintenance fee
(for accounts under $2,500) $12.00
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES are paid out of each fund's assets. Each
fund pays a management fee that varies based on its performance. It also
incurs other expenses for services such as maintaining shareholder records
and furnishing shareholder statements and financial reports. A fund's
expenses are factored into its share price or dividends and are not charged
directly to shareholder accounts (see page ).
The following are projections based on estimated expenses, and are
calculated as a percentage of average net assets.    A portion of the
brokerage commissions that Small Cap Stock and Mid-Cap Stock paid was used
to reduce each fund's expenses. Without this reduction, the total fund
operating expenses would have been .97% for Small Cap Stock and 1.27% for
Mid-Cap Stock.    
SMALL CAP STOCK
   MID-CAP STOCK    
Management fee                     .56%       
 
12b-1 fee                       None          
 
Other expenses                     .34%       
 
Total fund operating expenses      .90%       
 
MID-CAP STOCK
   MID-CAP STOCK    
Management fee                     .66%       
 
12b-1 fee                       None          
 
Other expenses                     .56%       
 
Total fund operating expenses      1.22       
                                   %          
 
   LARGE CAP STOCK
MID-CAP STOCK    
Management fee                     .62%       
 
12b-1 fee                       None          
 
Other expenses                     .74%       
 
Total fund operating expenses      1.36       
                                   %          
 
EXAMPLES: Let's say, hypothetically, that each fund's annual return is 5%
and that its operating expenses are exactly as just described. For every
$1,000 you invested, here's how much you would pay in total expenses if you
close your account after the number of years indicated:
SMALL CAP STOCK
   MID-CAP STOCK    
After 1 year     $    39       
 
After 3 years    $    58       
 
After 5 years       $ 78       
 
After 10 years      $ 13       
                    7          
 
MID-CAP STOCK 
   MID-CAP STOCK    
After 1 year        $ 1    2   
 
After 3 years    $    39       
 
After 5 years    $    67       
 
After 10 years      $ 14       
                    8          
 
LARGE CAP STOCK
   MID-CAP STOCK    
After 1 year        $ 14       
 
After 3 years       $ 4    3   
 
After 5 years       $ 7    4   
 
After 10 years      $ 16       
                    4          
 
These examples illustrate the effect of expenses, but are not meant to
suggest actual or expected costs or returns, all of which may vary.
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
The tables that follow are included in    Small Cap Stock's and Mid-Cap
Stock's     Annual    Reports     and have been audited by Coopers &
Lybrand L.L.P., independent accountants. Their reports on the financial
statements and financial highlights are included in each fund's Annual
Report. The financial statements and financial highlights are incorporated
by reference into (are legally a part of) the funds' Statement of
Additional Information.    Large Cap Stock is not included because it is a
new fund.
    SMALL CAP STOCK 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                        <C>         <C>         
Selected Per-Share Data and Ratios                                                 
 
Years Ended April 30                                       1994C       1995        
 
Net asset value, beginning of period                       $ 10.00     $ 10.61     
 
Income from Investment Operations                                                  
 
 Net investment income                                      .02         .05        
 
 Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments     .65         .28        
 
 Total from investment operations                           .67         .33        
 
Less Distributions                                                                 
 
 From net investment income                                 --          (.01)      
 
 In excess of net investment income                         (.02)       --         
 
 In excess of net realized gain                             (.04)       --         
 
 Total distributions                                        (.06)       (.01)      
 
Net asset value, end of period                             $ 10.61     $ 10.93     
 
Total return B                                              6.70%       3.12%      
 
Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)                    $ 661,804   $ 562,736   
 
Ratio of expenses to average net assets                     1.18%A      .90%       
 
Ratio of expenses to average net assets before expense      1.20%A      .97%       
reductions                                                                         
 
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets        .03%A       .40%       
 
Portfolio turnover rate                                     210%A       182%       
 
</TABLE>
 
   A ANNUALIZED
B THE TOTAL RETURNS DO NOT INCLUDE THE ONE TIME SALES CHARGE AND FOR
PERIODS OF LESS THAN ONE YEAR ARE NOT ANNUALIZED. THE TOTAL RETURNS WOULD
HAVE BEEN LOWER HAD CERTAIN EXPENSES NOT BEEN REDUCED DURING THE PERIODS
SHOWN.
C FROM JUNE 28, 1993 (COMMENCEMENT OF OPERATIONS) TO APRIL 30, 1994.
    MID-CAP STOCK 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                        <C>         <C>         
Selected Per-Share Data and Ratios                                                 
 
Periods ended April 30                                     1995C       1995D       
 
Net asset value, beginning of period                       $ 10.00     $ 10.78     
 
Income from Investment Operations                                                  
 
 Net investment income                                      .00         .02        
 
 Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments     .92         1.23       
 
 Total from investment operations                           .92         1.25       
 
Less Distributions                                                                 
 
 From net realized gain                                     (.14)       (.02)      
 
Net asset value, end of period                             $ 10.78     $ 12.01     
 
Total returnB                                               9.27%       11.61%     
 
Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)                    $ 138,167   $ 459,019   
 
Ratio of expenses to average net assets                     1.61%A      1.22%A     
 
Ratio of expenses to average net assets before expense      1.63%A      1.27%A     
reductions                                                                         
 
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets        (.03)%A     .95%A      
 
Portfolio turnover rate                                     190%A       163%A      
 
</TABLE>
 
   A ANNUALIZED
B TOTAL RETURNS FOR PERIODS OF LESS THAN ONE YEAR ARE NOT ANNUALIZED. THE
TOTAL RETURNS WOULD HAVE BEEN LOWER HAD CERTAIN EXPENSES NOT BEEN REDUCED
DURING THE PERIODS SHOWN.
C FROM MARCH 29, 1994 (COMMENCEMENT OF OPERATIONS) TO JANUARY 31, 1995.
D FROM FEBRUARY 1, 1995 TO APRIL 30, 1995.    
PERFORMANCE
Mutual fund performance is commonly measured as TOTAL RETURN. The total
returns that follow are based on historical fund results and do not reflect
the effect of taxes.
Each fund's fiscal year runs from May 1 through April 30. The tables    at
right     show    Small Cap Stock's and Mid-Cap Stock's     performance
over past fiscal    periods     compared to two measures: investing in a
broad selection of stocks (Russell 2000 Index for Small Cap Stock; S&P
MidCap 400 for Mid-Cap Stock) and not investing at all (inflation, or CPI).
   Because Large Cap Stock was new when this prospectus was printed, its
performance is not included.     To help you compare Small Cap Stock to
other funds, the chart on page    11     displays calendar-year
performance.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
UNDERSTANDING
PERFORMANCE
Because the funds invest in 
stocks, their performance is 
related to that of the overall 
stock market. Historically, 
stock market performance 
has been characterized by 
volatility in the short run and 
growth in the long run.
(checkmark)
SMALL CAP STOCK
   MID-CAP STOCK
Fiscal periods ended
                Past 1
          Life of
       
   April 30, 1995                       Year             FundA          
 
   Average annual
                       3.12%            5.33%         
   total return                                                         
 
   Average annual
                       0.02%            3.60%         
   total return
                                                        
   (load adj. B)                                                        
 
   Cumulative
                           3.12%            10.03%        
   total return                                                         
 
   Cumulative total return
              0.02%            6.73%         
   (load adj.B)                                                         
 
       Russell 2000 Index    
           7.21%            9.95%         
   (average annual)                                                     
 
       Russell 2000 Index    
           7.21%            19.08%        
   (cumulative)                                                         
 
   Consumer Price Index
                 3.05%            2.80%         
   (average annual)                                                     
 
   Consumer Price Index
                 3.05%            5.19%         
   (cumulative)                                                         
 
A FROM JUNE 28, 1993 (COMMENCEMENT OF OPERATIONS)
B LOAD-ADJUSTED RETURNS INCLUDE THE EFFECT OF PAYING THE FUND'S 3% SALES
CHARGE.
MID-CAP STOCK
   MID-CAP STOCK
Fiscal periods ended
          Past 1
          Life of
       
   April 30, 1995                 Year             FundC          
 
   Average annual
                 23.94%           19.97%        
   total return                                                   
 
   Cumulative
                     23.94%           21.96%        
   total return                                                   
 
   S&P MidCap 400
                 9.79%            5.96%         
   (average annual)                                               
 
   S&P MidCap 400
                 9.79%            6.52%         
   (cumulative)                                                   
 
   Consumer Price Index
           3.05%            2.94%         
   (average annual)                                               
 
   Consumer Price Index
           3.05%            3.19%         
   (cumulative)                                                   
 
C FROM MARCH 29, 1994 (COMMENCEMENT OF OPERATIONS)
EXPLANATION OF TERMS
TOTAL RETURN is the change in value of an investment in a fund over a given
period, assuming reinvestment of any dividends and capital gains. A
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN reflects actual performance over a stated period of
time. An AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN is a hypothetical rate of return that,
if achieved annually, would have produced the same cumulative total return
if performance had been constant over the entire period. Average annual
total returns smooth out variations in performance; they are not the same
as actual year-by-year results.    Average annual total returns covering
periods of less than one year assume that performance will remain constant
for the rest of the year.
SMALL CAP STOCK
Calendar year total returns           
1994
    Small Cap Stock             -3.32
%
Competitive funds average          
- -0.72%
MID-CAP STOCK AND LARGE CAP STOCK ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THE CHART 
BECAUSE THEY HAVE NOT COMPLETED ONE FULL CALENDAR YEAR OF OPERATIONS.
Percentage (%)    
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: nil
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: nil
Row: 2, Col: 1, Value: nil
Row: 2, Col: 2, Value: nil
Row: 3, Col: 1, Value: nil
Row: 3, Col: 2, Value: nil
Row: 4, Col: 1, Value: nil
Row: 4, Col: 2, Value: nil
Row: 5, Col: 1, Value: nil
Row: 5, Col: 2, Value: nil
Row: 6, Col: 1, Value: nil
Row: 6, Col: 2, Value: nil
Row: 7, Col: 1, Value: nil
Row: 7, Col: 2, Value: nil
Row: 8, Col: 1, Value: nil
Row: 8, Col: 2, Value: nil
Row: 9, Col: 1, Value: nil
Row: 9, Col: 2, Value: nil
Row: 10, Col: 1, Value: -3.32
Row: 10, Col: 2, Value: -0.7200000000000001
   (large solid box)     Small Cap 
Stock   
(large hollow box) Competitive
 
funds 
average    
RUSSELL 2000 INDEX(registered trademark) is a broad index of small
capitalization stocks. The Russell 2000 figures assume reinvestment of all
dividends paid by stocks included in the index. They do not, however,
include any allowance for the brokerage commissions or other fees you would
pay if you actually invested in those stocks. 
S&P MIDCAP 400(registered trademark) is the Standard & Poor's MidCap 400
Index, a widely recognized, unmanaged index of mid-cap common stock prices.
The S&P MidCap 400 figures assume reinvestment of all dividends paid by
stocks included in the index. They do not, however, include any allowance
for the brokerage commissions or other fees you would pay if you actually
invested in those stocks. 
   S&P 500(registered trademark) is the Standard & Poor's Composite Index
of 500 Stocks, a widely recognized, unmanaged index of common stock prices.
The S&P 500 figures assume reinvestment of all dividends paid by stocks
included in the index. They do not, however, include any allowance for the
brokerage commissions or other fees you would pay if you actually invested
in those stocks.    
THE CONSUMER PRICE INDEX is a widely recognized measure of inflation
calculated by the U.S. government.
THE COMPETITIVE FUNDS AVERAGES, which assume reinvestment of distributions,
are published by Lipper Analytical Services, Inc. Small Cap Stock com-pares
its performance to the Small Company Growth Funds Average, and Mid-Cap
Stock compares to the Mid-Cap Funds Average. These averages currently
reflect the performance of over 230 and 75 mutual funds with similar
objectives, respectively.
Other illustrations of fund performance may show moving averages over
specified periods.
The funds' recent strategies, performance, and holdings are detailed twice
a year in financial reports, which are sent to all shareholders. For
current performance or a free annual report, call 1-800-544-8888.
   TOTAL RETURNS ARE BASED ON PAST RESULTS AND ARE NOT AN INDICATION OF
FUTURE PERFORMANCE    .
THE FUNDS IN DETAIL
 
 
CHARTER 
EACH FUND IS A MUTUAL FUND: an investment that pools shareholders' money
and invests it toward a specified goal. In technical terms,Fidelity Small
Cap Stock Fund    and Large Cap Stock ar    e currently diversified funds
of Fidelity        Commonwealth Trust, and Mid-Cap Stock is currently a
diversified fund of Fidelity Devonshire Trust. Both trusts are open-end
management investment companies. Fidelity        Commonwealth Trust was
organized as a Massachusetts business trust on November 8, 1974. Fidelity
Devonshire Trust was organized as a Massachusetts business trust on March
4, 1985. There is a remote possibility that one fund might become liable
for a misstatement in the prospectus about another fund.
EACH FUND IS GOVERNED BY A BOARD OF TRUSTEES, which is responsible for
protecting the interests of shareholders. The trustees are experienced
executives who meet throughout the year to oversee the funds' activities,
review contractual arrangements with companies that provide services to the
funds, and review performance. The majority of trustees are not otherwise
affiliated with Fidelity.
THE FUNDS MAY HOLD SPECIAL MEETINGS AND MAIL PROXY MATERIALS. These
meetings may be called to elect or remove trustees, change fundamental
policies, approve a management contract, or for other purposes.
Shareholders not attending these meetings are encouraged to vote by proxy.
Fidelity will mail proxy materials in advance, including a voting card and
information about the proposals to be voted on. The number of votes you are
entitled to is based upon the dollar value of your investment. 
FMR AND ITS AFFILIATES 
The funds are managed by FMR, which chooses their investments and handles
their business affairs. Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (FMR
U.K.), in London, England, and Fidelity Management & Research (Far East)
Inc. (FMR Far East), in Tokyo, Japan, assist FMR with foreign investments.
Bradford Lewis is manager and vice president of Small Cap Stock, which he
has managed since June 1993. Mr. Lewis also manages Disciplined Equity and
Stock Selector as well as portfolios for Fidelity Investments Canada.
Previously, he managed Select Air Transportation, Select Defense and
Aerospace, and Select Medical Delivery. Mr. Lewis joined Fidelity in 1985.
Jennifer Uhrig manages Mid-Cap Stock, which she has managed since    March
1994.     Previously, Ms. Uhrig managed Select Retail, Select Developing
Communication, and Select Telecommunications. Ms. Uhrig joined Fidelity in
1987.
   John McDowell manages Large Cap Stock, which he has managed since June
1995. He also has been a senior vice president for Fidelity Management
Trust Company and lead portfolio manager for Fidelity Earnings Growth
discipline accounts since 1990. Mr. McDowell joined Fidelity in 1985.    
Fidelity investment personnel may invest in securities for their own
account pursuant to a code of ethics that establishes procedures for
personal investing and restricts certain transactions.
Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) distributes and markets Fidelity's
funds and services. Fidelity Service Co. (FSC) performs transfer agent
servicing functions for the funds.
FMR Corp. is the parent company of FMR, FMR Far East, and FMR U.K. Through
ownership of voting common stock, members of the Edward C. Johnson 3d
family form a controlling group with respect to FMR Corp. Changes may occur
in the Johnson family group, through death or disability, which would
result in changes in each individual family member's holding of stock. Such
changes could result in one or more family members becoming holders of over
25% of the stock. FMR Corp. has received an opinion of counsel that changes
in the composition of the Johnson family group under these circumstances
would not result in the termination of the funds' management or
distribution contracts and, accordingly, would not require a shareholder
vote to continue operation under those contracts.
FMR may use its broker-dealer affiliates and other firms that sell fund
shares to carry out a fund's transactions, provided that the fund receives
brokerage services and commission rates comparable to those of other
broker-dealers. 
INVESTMENT PRINCIPLES AND RISKS
SMALL CAP STOCK SEEKS CAPITAL APPRECIATION by investing primarily in equity
securities of companies that have small market capitalizations. FMR
normally invests at least 65% of the fund's total assets in these
securities. The fund has the flexibility, however, to invest the balance in
other market capitalizations and security types.
Small market capitalization companies are those with market
   capitalizations     of $750 million or less at the time of the fund's
investment. Companies whose capitalization falls outside this range after
purchase continue to be considered small-capitalized for purposes of the
65% policy.
   In selecting the fund's investments, FMR uses a     disciplined approach
which involves computer-aided, quantitative analysis supported by
fundamental research. FMR's computer model systematically reviews thousands
of stocks, using historical earnings, dividend yield, earnings per share,
and many other factors. Then, potential investments are analyzed further
using fundamental criteria, such as a company's growth potential and
estimates of current earnings.
Investing in small capitalization stocks may involve greater risk than
investing in    medium and     large capitalization stocks, since they can
be subject to more abrupt or erratic movements. Small capitalization
companies may have more limited product lines, markets, or financial
resources.
MID-CAP STOCK SEEKS LONG-TERM GROWTH OF CAPITAL by investing primarily in
equity securities of companies with medium market capitalizations. FMR
normally invests at least 65% of the fund's total assets in these
securities. The fund has the flexibility, however, to invest the balance in
other market capitalizations and security types.
Medium market capitalization companies are those whose market
capitalization falls within the capitalization range of the S&P MidCap 400
at the time of the fund's investment. Companies whose capitalization falls
outside this range after purchase continue to be considered
medium-capitalized for purposes of the 65% policy. As of April 30, 1995,
the S&P MidCap 400 included companies with capitalizations of between   
$109 million and $5 billion.     
Investing in medium capitalization stocks may involve greater risk than
investing in large capitalization stocks, since they can be subject to more
abrupt or erratic movements. However, they tend to involve less risk than
stocks of small capitalization companies.
   LARGE CAP STOCK SEEKS LONG-TERM GROWTH OF CAPITAL by investing primarily
in equity securities of companies with large market capitalizations. FMR
normally invests at least 65% of the fund's total assets in these
securities. The fund has the flexibility, however, to invest the balance in
other market capitalizations and security types.
FMR defines large market capitalization companies as those with market
capitalizations of $1 billion or more at the time of the fund's investment.
Companies whose capitalization falls below this level after purchase
continue to be considered large-capitalized for purposes of the 65% policy.
Companies with large market capitalizations typically have a large number
of publicly held shares and a high trading volume, resulting in a high
degree of liquidity. These tend to be quality companies with strong
management organizations. However, large capitalization companies may have
less growth potential than smaller companies and may be able to react less
quickly to changes in the marketplace.    
The value of the    funds'     domestic and foreign investments varies in
response to many factors. Stock values fluctuate in response to the
activities of individual companies, and general market and economic
conditions. Investments in foreign securities may involve risks in addition
to those of U.S. investments, including increased political and economic
risk, as well as exposure to currency fluctuations.
FMR may use various investment techniques to hedge a    portion of the
funds'     risks, but there is no guarantee that these strategies will work
as FMR intends. Also, as mutual funds,    each fund seeks     to spread
investment risk by diversifying    its     holdings among many companies
and industries. Of course, when you sell your shares of a fund, they may be
worth more or less than what you paid for them.
FMR normally invests each fund's assets according to its investment
strategy. Each fund also reserves the right to invest without limitation in
preferred stocks and investment-grade debt instruments for temporary,
defensive purposes.
SECURITIES AND INVESTMENT PRACTICES
The following pages contain more detailed information about types of
instruments in which a fund may invest, and strategies FMR may employ in
pursuit of a fund's investment objective. A summary of risks and
restrictions associated with these instrument types and investment
practices is included as well. A complete listing of each fund's policies
and limitations and more detailed information about the funds' investments
is contained in the funds' SAI. Policies and limitations are considered at
the time of purchase; the sale of instruments is not required in the event
of a subsequent change in circumstances.
FMR may not buy all of these instruments or use all of these techniques to
the full extent permitted unless it believes that doing so will help the
funds achieve their goals. Current holdings and recent investment
strategies are described in the funds' financial reports which are sent to
shareholders twice a year. For a free SAI or financial report, call
1-800-544-8888. 
EQUITY SECURITIES may include common stocks, preferred stocks, convertible
securities, and warrants. Common stocks, the most familiar type, represent
an equity (ownership) interest in a corporation. Although equity securities
have a history of long-term growth in value, their prices fluctuate based
on changes in a company's financial condition and on overall market and
economic conditions. Smaller companies are especially sensitive to these
factors.
RESTRICTIONS: With respect to 75% of total assets, a fund may not own more
than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of a single issuer.
DEBT SECURITIES. Bonds and other debt instruments are used by issuers to
borrow money from investors. The issuer pays the investor a fixed or
variable rate of interest, and must repay the amount borrowed at maturity.
Some debt securities, such as zero coupon bonds, do not pay current
interest, but are purchased at a discount from their face values. In
general, bond prices rise when interest rates fall, and vice versa. Debt
securities have varying degrees of quality and varying levels of
sensitivity to changes in interest rates. Longer-term bonds are generally
more sensitive to interest rate changes than short-term bonds.
Investment-grade debt securities are medium- and high-quality securities.
Some, however, may possess speculative characteristics and may be more
sensitive to economic changes and to changes in the financial condition of
issuers.
Lower-quality debt securities (sometimes called "junk bonds")    are
considered to have speculative characteristics     and involve greater risk
of default or price changes due to changes in the issuer's
creditworthiness, or they may already be in default. The market prices of
these securities may fluctuate more than higher-quality securities and may
decline significantly in periods of general economic difficulty.
The table    below     provides a summary of ratings assigned to debt
holdings (not including money market instruments) in Mid-Cap Stock's
portfolio.    Because Large Cap Stock has not been in operation for a full
fiscal year, its debt holdings table is not included.     These figures are
dollar-weighted averages of month-end portfolio holdings during the fiscal
period ended April 30, 1995, and are presented as a percentage of total
security investments. These percentages are historical and do not
necessarily indicate the fund's current or future debt holdings.
    MID-CAP STOCK
FISCAL     1995 DEBT HOLDINGS, BY RATING
 MOODY'S STANDARD & POOR'S
 INVESTORS SERVICE, INC.  CORPORATION 
 Rating  Average A  Rating  Averag
eA 
INVESTMENT GRADE    
Highest quality Aaa    0.16%     AAA    0.16%    
High quality Aa __ AA __
Upper-medium grade A __ A __
Medium grade Baa __ BBB __
LOWER QUALITY    
Moderately speculative Ba __ BB __
Speculative B __ B __
Highly speculative Caa __ CCC __
Poor quality Ca __ CC __
Lowest quality, no interest C __ C __
In default, in arrears __  D __
     0.16%  0.16%    
 A FOR SOME FOREIGN GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS, FMR ASSIGNS THE RATINGS OF THE 
SOVEREIGN CREDIT OF THE ISSUING GOVERNMENT. THE DOLLAR-WEIGHTED AVERAGE 
OF DEBT SECURITIES NOT RATED DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY BY MOODY'S OR S&P 
AMOUNTED TO    0%    . THIS MAY INCLUDE SECURITIES RATED BY OTHER
NATIONALLY 
RECOGNIZED RATING SERVICES, AS WELL AS UNRATED SECURITIES. REFER TO THE 
FUND'S STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR A MORE COMPLETE DISCUSSION 
OF THESE RATINGS.
       
RESTRICTIONS:    Purchase     of a debt security is consistent with    each
    fund's debt quality policy if it is rated at or above the stated level
by Moody's or rated in the equivalent categories by S&P, or is unrated but
judged to be of equivalent quality by FMR. Small Cap Stock currently
intends to limit its investments in lower than Baa-quality debt securities
to 5% of its assets. Mid-Cap    Stock and Large Cap Stock     currently
intend to limit    their     investments in lower than Baa-quality debt
securities to    less than     35% of their assets.
EXPOSURE TO FOREIGN MARKETS. Foreign securities, foreign currencies, and
securities issued by U.S. entities with substantial foreign operations may
involve additional risks and considerations. These include risks relating
to political or economic conditions in foreign countries, fluctuations in
foreign currencies, withholding or other taxes, operational risks,
increased regulatory burdens, and the potentially less stringent investor
protection and disclosure standards of foreign markets. Additionally,
governmental issuers of foreign securities may be unwilling to repay
principal and interest when due, and may require that the conditions for
payment be renegotiated. All of these factors can make foreign investments,
especially those in developing countries, more volatile.
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS. In a repurchase agreement, a fund buys a security at
one price and simultaneously agrees to sell it back at a higher price.
Delays or losses could result if the other party to the agreement defaults
or becomes insolvent. 
ADJUSTING INVESTMENT EXPOSURE. A fund can use various techniques to
increase or decrease its exposure to changing security prices, interest
rates, currency exchange rates, commodity prices, or other factors that
affect security values. These techniques may involve derivative
transactions such as buying and selling options and futures contracts,
entering into currency exchange contracts or swap agreements, and
purchasing indexed securities.
FMR can use these practices to adjust the risk and return characteristics
of a fund's portfolio of investments. If FMR judges market conditions
incorrectly or employs a strategy that does not correlate well with   
a     fund's investments, these techniques could result in a loss,
regardless of whether the intent was to reduce risk or increase return.
These techniques may increase the volatility of the fund and may involve a
small investment of cash relative to the magnitude of the risk assumed. In
addition, these techniques could result in a loss if the counterparty to
the transaction does not perform as promised. 
DIRECT DEBT. Loans and other direct debt instruments are interests in
amounts owed to another party by a company, government, or other borrower.
They have additional risks beyond conventional debt securities because they
may entail less legal protection for a fund, or there may be a requirement
that a fund supply additional cash to a borrower on demand.
ILLIQUID AND RESTRICTED SECURITIES. Some investments may be determined by
FMR, under the supervision of the Board of Trustees, to be illiquid, which
means that they may be difficult to sell promptly at an acceptable price.
The sale of some illiquid securities and some other securities may be
subject to legal restrictions. Difficulty in selling securities may result
in a loss or may be costly to a fund. 
RESTRICTIONS: A fund may not purchase a security if, as a result, more than
10% of its assets would be invested in illiquid securities. 
OTHER INSTRUMENTS may include securities of closed-end investment companies
and real estate-related investments.
DIVERSIFICATION. Diversifying a fund's investment portfolio can reduce the
risks of investing. This may include limiting the amount of money invested
in any one issuer or, on a broader scale, in any one industry.
RESTRICTIONS: With respect to 75% of total assets, a fund may not invest
more than 5% of its total assets in any one issuer. A fund may not invest
more than 25% of its total assets in any one industry. These limitations do
not apply to U.S. government securities.
BORROWING. A fund may borrow from banks or from other funds advised by FMR,
or through reverse repurchase agreements. If a fund borrows money, its
share price may be subject to greater fluctuation until the borrowing is
paid off. If the fund makes additional investments while borrowings are
outstanding, this may be considered a form of leverage.
RESTRICTIONS: A fund may borrow only for temporary or emergency purposes,
but not in an amount exceeding 33% of its total assets.
LENDING. Lending securities to broker-dealers and institutions, including
   Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc. (FBSI)    , an affiliate of FMR, is a
means of earning income. This practice could result in a loss or a delay in
recovering a fund's securities. A fund may also lend money to other funds
advised by FMR.
RESTRICTIONS: Loans, in the aggregate, may not exceed 33% of a fund's total
assets.
FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT POLICIES AND RESTRICTIONS
Some of the policies and restrictions discussed on the preceding pages are
fundamental, that is, subject to change only by shareholder approval. The
following paragraphs restate all those that are fundamental. All policies
stated throughout this prospectus, other than those identified in the
following paragraphs, can be changed without shareholder approval. 
FIDELITY SMALL CAP STOCK seeks capital appreciation.
FIDELITY MID-CAP STOCK seeks long-term growth of capital.
   FIDELITY LARGE CAP STOCK seeks long-term growth of capital.    
EACH FUND, with respect to 75% of total assets, may not invest more than 5%
of its total assets in any one issuer and may not own more than 10% of the
outstanding voting securities of a single issuer. Each fund may not invest
more than 25% of its total assets in any one industry. Each fund may borrow
only for temporary or emergency purposes, but not in an amount exceeding
33% of its total assets. Loans, in the aggregate, may not exceed 33% of a
fund's total assets.
BREAKDOWN OF EXPENSES 
Like all mutual funds, the funds pay fees related to their daily
operations. Expenses paid out of a fund's assets are reflected in its share
price or dividends; they are neither billed directly to shareholders nor
deducted from shareholder accounts. 
Each fund pays a MANAGEMENT FEE to FMR for managing its investments and
business affairs. FMR in turn pays fees to affiliates who provide
assistance with these services. Each fund also pays OTHER EXPENSES, which
are explained on page    .    
FMR may, from time to time, agree to reimburse the funds for management
fees and other expenses above a specified limit. FMR retains the ability to
be repaid by a fund if expenses fall below the specified limit prior to the
end of the fiscal year. Reimbursement arrangements, which may be terminated
at any time without notice, can decrease a fund's expenses and boost its
performance.
MANAGEMENT FEE 
The management fee is calculated and paid to FMR every month. The amount of
the fee is determined by taking a BASIC FEE and then applying a PERFORMANCE
ADJUSTMENT. The performance adjustment either increases or decreases the
management fee, depending on how well a fund has performed relative to
   its comparative     index. 
Manage   =   Ba    +/-   Performa   
ment         sic         nce        
fee          fee         adjustme   
                         nt         
 
THE BASIC FEE (calculated monthly) is calculated by adding a group fee rate
to an individual fund fee rate, and multiplying the result by a fund's
average net assets. The group fee rate is based on the average net assets
of all the mutual funds advised by FMR. This rate cannot rise above .52%,
and it drops as total assets under management increase.
For April 1995, the group fee rate was    .32%    . The individual fund fee
rate is .35% for Fidelity Small Cap Stock Fund and .30% for Mid-Cap Stock
   and Large Cap Stock.     The basic fee rate for fiscal 1995 was    .67%
    forFidelity Small Cap Stock Fund and    .62%     (annualized) for
Mid-Cap Stock.
THE PERFORMANCE ADJUSTMENT rate is calculated monthly by comparing
   each     fund's performance to that of the Russell 2000 for Small Cap
Stock, the S&P MidCap 400 for Mid-Cap Stock,    and the S&P 500 for Large
Cap Stock     over the most recent 36-month period.    For Large Cap Stock,
the performance period will begin on July 1, 1995 and will eventually span
36 months, but the performance adjustment will not take effect until June
1, 1996.     The difference is translated into a dollar amount that is
added to or subtracted from the basic fee. The maximum annualized
performance adjustment rate is ".20%. 
   The total management fee rate for fiscal 1995 was .56% for Small Cap
Stock and .66% (annualized) for Mid-Cap Stock. Large Cap Stock's total
management fee rate, for fiscal 1995, is estimated to be .62%.    
FMR HAS SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENTS with FMR U.K. and FMR Far East. These
sub-advisers provide FMR with investment research and advice on issuers
based outside the United States. Under the sub-advisory agreements, FMR
pays FMR U.K. and FMR Far East fees equal to 110% and 105%, respectively,
of the costs of providing these services.
The sub-advisers may also provide investment management services. In
return, FMR pays FMR U.K. and FMR Far East a fee equal to 50% of its
management fee rate with respect to a fund's investments that the
sub-adviser manages on a discretionary basis.
OTHER EXPENSES 
While the management fee is a significant component of the funds' annual
operating costs, the funds have other expenses as well. 
The funds contract with FSC to perform many transaction and accounting
functions. These services include processing shareholder transactions,
valuing each fund's investments, and handling securities loans. In fiscal
1995,Fidelity Small Cap Stock Fund and Mid-Cap Stock paid FSC fees equal to
   .30% and .27%     (annualized), respectively, of their average net
assets.
The funds also pay other expenses, such as legal, audit, and custodian
fees; proxy solicitation costs; and the compensation of trustees who are
not affiliated with Fidelity. A broker-dealer may use a portion of the
commissions paid by a fund to reduce the fund's custodian or transfer agent
fees.
Mid-Cap Stock    and Large Cap Stock have each     adopted a Distribution
and Service Plan.    These plans recogniz    e that FMR may use its
resources, including management fees, to pay expenses associated with the
sale of fund shares. This may include payments to third parties, such as
banks or broker-dealers, that provide shareholder support services or
engage in the sale of the fund's shares. It is important to note, however,
that the    funds do     not pay FMR any separate fees for this service.
For fiscal 1995, the  portfolio turnover rates forFidelity Small Cap Stock
Fund and Mid-Cap Stock were    182% and 163%     (annualized),
respectively.    Large Cap Stock's annualized portfolio turnover rate is
not expected to exceed 200% in the first fiscal period.     These rates
vary from year to year. High turnover rates increase transaction costs and
may increase taxable capital gains. FMR considers these effects when
evaluating the anticipated benefits of short-term investing.
YOUR ACCOUNT
 
 
DOING BUSINESS WITH FIDELITY
Fidelity Investments was established in 1946 to manage one of America's
first mutual funds. Today, Fidelity is the largest mutual fund company in
the country, and is known as an innovative provider of high-quality
financial services to individuals and institutions.
In addition to its mutual fund business, the company operates one of
America's leading discount brokerage firms,    FBSI.     Fidelity is also a
leader in providing tax-sheltered retirement plans for individuals
investing on their own or through their employer.
Fidelity is committed to providing investors with practical information to
make investment decisions. Based in Boston, Fidelity provides customers
with complete service 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, through a network of
telephone service centers around the country. 
To reach Fidelity for general information, call these numbers:
(small solid bullet) For mutual funds, 1-800-544-8888
(small solid bullet) For brokerage, 1-800-544-7272
If you would prefer to speak with a representative in person, Fidelity has
over 75 walk-in Investor Centers across the country.
TYPES OF ACCOUNTS
You may set up an account directly in a fund or, if you own or intend to
purchase individual securities as part of your total investment portfolio,
you may consider investing in a fund through a brokerage account. 
If you are investing through FBSI or another financial institution or
investment professional, refer to its program materials for any special
provisions regarding your investment in the fund.
The different ways to set up (register) your account with Fidelity are
listed at right.
The account guidelines that follow may not apply to certain retirement
accounts. If your employer offers a fund through a retirement program,
contact your employer for more information. Otherwise, call Fidelity
directly.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
FIDELITY FACTS
Fidelity offers the broadest
selection of mutual funds
in the world.
(solid bullet) Number of Fidelity mutual 
funds: over 210
(solid bullet) Assets in Fidelity mutual 
funds: over $280 billion
(solid bullet) Number of shareholder 
accounts: over 20 million
(solid bullet) Number of investment 
analysts and portfolio 
managers: over 200
(checkmark)
WAYS TO SET UP YOUR ACCOUNT
INDIVIDUAL OR JOINT TENANT
FOR YOUR GENERAL INVESTMENT NEEDS 
Individual accounts are owned by one person. Joint accounts can have two or
more owners (tenants).
RETIREMENT 
TO SHELTER YOUR RETIREMENT SAVINGS FROM TAXES 
 Retirement plans allow individuals to shelter investment income and
capital gains from current taxes. In addition, contributions to these
accounts may be tax deductible. Retirement accounts require special
applications and typically have lower minimums. 
(solid bullet) INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS (IRAS) allow anyone of legal
age and under 70 with earned income to invest up to $2,000 per tax year.
Individuals can also invest in a spouse's IRA if the spouse has earned
income of less than $250.
(solid bullet) ROLLOVER IRAS retain special tax advantages for certain
distributions from employer-sponsored retirement plans. 
(solid bullet) KEOGH OR CORPORATE PROFIT SHARING AND MONEY PURCHASE PENSION
PLANS allow self-employed individuals or small business owners (and their
employees) to make tax-deductible contributions for themselves and any
eligible employees up to $30,000 per year. 
(solid bullet) SIMPLIFIED EMPLOYEE PENSION PLANS (SEP-IRAS) provide small
business owners or those with self-employed income (and their eligible
employees) with many of the same advantages as a Keogh, but with fewer
administrative requirements. 
(solid bullet) 403(B) CUSTODIAL ACCOUNTS are available to employees of most
tax-exempt institutions, including schools, hospitals, and other charitable
organizations. 
(solid bullet) 401(K) PROGRAMS allow employees of corporations of all sizes
to contribute a percentage of their wages on a tax-deferred basis. These
accounts need to be established by the trustee of the plan.
GIFTS OR TRANSFERS TO A MINOR (UGMA, UTMA) 
TO INVEST FOR A CHILD'S EDUCATION OR OTHER FUTURE NEEDS 
These custodial accounts provide a way to give money to a child and obtain
tax benefits. An individual can give up to $10,000 a year per child without
paying federal gift tax. Depending on state laws, you can set up a
custodial account under the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act (UGMA) or the
Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA).
TRUST 
FOR MONEY BEING INVESTED BY A TRUST 
The trust must be established before an account can be opened.
BUSINESS OR ORGANIZATION 
FOR INVESTMENT NEEDS OF CORPORATIONS, ASSOCIATIONS, PARTNERSHIPS, OR OTHER
GROUPS
Requires a special application.
HOW TO BUY SHARES
ONCE EACH BUSINESS DAY, TWO SHARE PRICES ARE CALCULATED FOR EACH FUND: the
offering price and the net asset value (NAV). The offering price includes
any sales charge, which you pay when you buy shares, unless you qualify for
a reduction or waiver as described on page    .     When you buy shares of
Small Cap Stock at the offering price, Fidelity deducts 3% and invests the
rest at the NAV. Shares of Mid-Cap    Stock and Large Cap Stock     are
sold without a sales charge.
Shares are purchased at the next share price calculated after your
investment is received and accepted. Share price is normally calculated at
4 p.m. Eastern time.
IF YOU ARE NEW TO FIDELITY, complete and sign an account application and
mail it along with your check. You may also open your account in person or
by wire as described on page    25    . If there is no application
accompanying this prospectus, call 1-800-544-8888.
IF YOU ALREADY HAVE MONEY INVESTED IN A FIDELITY FUND, you can:
(small solid bullet) Mail in an application with a check, or
(small solid bullet) Open your account by exchanging from another Fidelity
fund.
IF YOU ARE INVESTING THROUGH A TAX-SHELTERED RETIREMENT PLAN, such as an
IRA, for the first time, you will need a special application. Retirement
investing also involves its own investment procedures. Call 1-800-544-8888
for more information and a retirement application.
If you buy shares by check or Fidelity Money Line(registered trademark),
and then sell those shares by any method other than by exchange to another
Fidelity fund, the payment may be delayed for up to seven business days to
ensure that your previous investment has cleared.
MINIMUM INVESTMENTS 
   MID-CAP STOCK    
TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT  $2,500
For Fidelity retirement accounts  $500
TO ADD TO AN ACCOUNT  $250
For Fidelity retirement accounts $250
Through automatic investment plans $100
MINIMUM BALANCE $1,000
For Fidelity retirement accounts $500
 
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<S>                                   <C>                                           <C>                                           
                                      TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT                            TO ADD TO AN ACCOUNT                          
 
Phone 1-800-544-777 (phone_graphic)   (small solid bullet) Exchange from another    (small solid bullet) Exchange from another    
                                      Fidelity fund account                         Fidelity fund account                         
                                      with the same                                 with the same                                 
                                      registration, including                       registration, including                       
                                      name, address, and                            name, address, and                            
                                      taxpayer ID number.                           taxpayer ID number.                           
                                                                                    (small solid bullet) Use Fidelity Money       
                                                                                    Line to transfer from                         
                                                                                    your bank account. Call                       
                                                                                    before your first use to                      
                                                                                    verify that this service                      
                                                                                    is in place on your                           
                                                                                    account. Maximum                              
                                                                                    Money Line: $50,000.                          
 
</TABLE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                   <C>                                           <C>                                            
Mail (mail_graphic)   (small solid bullet) Complete and sign the    (small solid bullet) Make your check           
                      application. Make your                        payable to the complete                        
                      check payable to the                          name of the fund.                              
                      complete name of the                          Indicate your fund                             
                      fund of your choice.                          account number on                              
                      Mail to the address                           your check and mail to                         
                      indicated on the                              the address printed on                         
                      application.                                  your account statement.                        
                                                                    (small solid bullet) Exchange by mail: call    
                                                                    1-800-544-6666 for                             
                                                                    instructions.                                  
 
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<CAPTION>
<S>                        <C>                                            <C>                                           
In Person (hand_graphic)   (small solid bullet) Bring your application    (small solid bullet) Bring your check to a    
                           and check to a Fidelity                        Fidelity Investor Center.                     
                           Investor Center. Call                          Call 1-800-544-9797 for                       
                           1-800-544-9797 for the                         the center nearest you.                       
                           center nearest you.                                                                          
 
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<CAPTION>
<S>                   <C>                                             <C>                                       
Wire (wire_graphic)   (small solid bullet) Call 1-800-544-7777 to     (small solid bullet) Not available for    
                      set up your account                             retirement accounts.                      
                      and to arrange a wire                           (small solid bullet) Wire to:             
                      transaction. Not                                Bankers Trust                             
                      available for retirement                        Company,                                  
                      accounts.                                       Bank Routing                              
                      (small solid bullet) Wire within 24 hours to:   #021001033,                               
                      Bankers Trust                                   Account #00163053.                        
                      Company,                                        Specify the complete                      
                      Bank Routing                                    name of the fund and                      
                      #021001033,                                     include your account                      
                      Account #00163053.                              number and your                           
                      Specify the complete                            name.                                     
                      name of the fund and                                                                      
                      include your new                                                                          
                      account number and                                                                        
                      your name.                                                                                
 
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<CAPTION>
<S>                                 <C>                                   <C>                                            
Automatically (automatic_graphic)   (small solid bullet) Not available.   (small solid bullet) Use Fidelity Automatic    
                                                                          Account Builder. Sign                          
                                                                          up for this service                            
                                                                          when opening your                              
                                                                          account, or call                               
                                                                          1-800-544-6666 to add                          
                                                                          it.                                            
 
</TABLE>
 
 
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<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                             <C>   <C>   
(tdd_graphic) TDD - Service for the Deaf and Hearing Impaired: 1-800-544-0118               
 
</TABLE>
 
HOW TO SELL SHARES 
You can arrange to take money out of your fund account at any time by
selling (redeeming) some or all of your shares. Your shares will be sold at
the next share price calculated after your order is received and accepted.
Share price is normally calculated at 4 p.m. Eastern time. 
TO SELL SHARES IN A NON-RETIREMENT ACCOUNT, you may use any of the methods
described on these two pages. 
TO SELL SHARES IN A FIDELITY RETIREMENT ACCOUNT, your request must be made
in writing, except for exchanges to other Fidelity funds, which can be
requested by phone or in writing. Call 1-800-544-6666 for a retirement
distribution form. 
IF YOU ARE SELLING SOME BUT NOT ALL OF YOUR SHARES, leave at least $1,000
worth of shares in the account to keep it open ($500 for retirement
accounts). 
TO SELL SHARES BY BANK WIRE OR FIDELITY MONEY LINE, you will need to sign
up for these services in advance. 
CERTAIN REQUESTS MUST INCLUDE A SIGNATURE GUARANTEE. It is designed to
protect you and Fidelity from fraud. Your request must be made in writing
and include a signature guarantee if any of the following situations apply: 
(small solid bullet) You wish to redeem more than $100,000 worth of shares, 
(small solid bullet) Your account registration has changed within the last
30 days,
(small solid bullet) The check is being mailed to a different address than
the one on your account (record address), 
(small solid bullet) The check is being made payable to someone other than
the account owner, or 
(small solid bullet) The redemption proceeds are being transferred to a
Fidelity account with a different registration. 
You should be able to obtain a signature guarantee from a bank, broker
(including Fidelity Investor Centers), dealer, credit union (if authorized
under state law), securities exchange or association, clearing agency, or
savings association. A notary public cannot provide a signature guarantee. 
SELLING SHARES IN WRITING 
Write a "letter of instruction" with: 
(small solid bullet) Your name, 
(small solid bullet) The fund's name, 
(small solid bullet) Your fund account number, 
(small solid bullet) The dollar amount or number of shares to be redeemed,
and 
(small solid bullet) Any other applicable requirements listed in the table
at right. 
Unless otherwise instructed, Fidelity will send a check to the record
address. Deliver your letter to a Fidelity Investor Center, or mail it to: 
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 660602
Dallas, TX 75266-0602 
      ACCOUNT TYPE   SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS   
 
 
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<CAPTION>
<S>                                              <C>                   <C>                                                    
Phone 1-800-544-777 (phone_graphic)              All account types     (small solid bullet) Maximum check request:            
                                                 except retirement     $100,000.                                              
                                                                       (small solid bullet) For Money Line transfers to       
                                                 All account types     your bank account; minimum:                            
                                                                       $10; maximum: $100,000.                                
                                                                       (small solid bullet) You may exchange to other         
                                                                       Fidelity funds if both                                 
                                                                       accounts are registered with                           
                                                                       the same name(s), address,                             
                                                                       and taxpayer ID number.                                
 
Mail or in Person (mail_graphic)(hand_graphic)   Individual, Joint     (small solid bullet) The letter of instruction must    
                                                 Tenant,               be signed by all persons                               
                                                 Sole Proprietorship   required to sign for                                   
                                                 , UGMA, UTMA          transactions, exactly as their                         
                                                 Retirement account    names appear on the                                    
                                                                       account.                                               
                                                                       (small solid bullet) The account owner should          
                                                 Trust                 complete a retirement                                  
                                                                       distribution form. Call                                
                                                                       1-800-544-6666 to request                              
                                                                       one.                                                   
                                                 Business or           (small solid bullet) The trustee must sign the         
                                                 Organization          letter indicating capacity as                          
                                                                       trustee. If the trustee's name                         
                                                                       is not in the account                                  
                                                                       registration, provide a copy of                        
                                                                       the trust document certified                           
                                                 Executor,             within the last 60 days.                               
                                                 Administrator,        (small solid bullet) At least one person               
                                                 Conservator,          authorized by corporate                                
                                                 Guardian              resolution to act on the                               
                                                                       account must sign the letter.                          
                                                                       (small solid bullet) Include a corporate               
                                                                       resolution with corporate seal                         
                                                                       or a signature guarantee.                              
                                                                       (small solid bullet) Call 1-800-544-6666 for           
                                                                       instructions.                                          
 
Wire (wire_graphic)                              All account types     (small solid bullet) You must sign up for the wire     
                                                 except retirement     feature before using it. To                            
                                                                       verify that it is in place, call                       
                                                                       1-800-544-6666. Minimum                                
                                                                       wire: $5,000.                                          
                                                                       (small solid bullet) Your wire redemption request      
                                                                       must be received by Fidelity                           
                                                                       before 4 p.m. Eastern time                             
                                                                       for money to be wired on the                           
                                                                       next business day.                                     
 
</TABLE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                             <C>   <C>   
(tdd_graphic) TDD - Service for the Deaf and Hearing Impaired: 1-800-544-0118               
 
</TABLE>
 
INVESTOR SERVICES
Fidelity provides a variety of services to help you manage your account.
INFORMATION SERVICES
FIDELITY'S TELEPHONE REPRESENTATIVES are available 24 hours a day, 365 days
a year. Whenever you call, you can speak with someone equipped to provide
the information or service you need.
24-HOUR SERVICE
ACCOUNT ASSISTANCE
1-800-544-6666
ACCOUNT BALANCES
1-800-544-7544
ACCOUNT TRANSACTIONS
1-800-544-7777
PRODUCT INFORMATION
1-800-544-8888
QUOTES
1-800-544-8544
RETIREMENT ACCOUNT 
ASSISTANCE
1-800-544-4774
 AUTOMATED SERVICE
(checkmark)
STATEMENTS AND REPORTS that Fidelity sends to you include the following:
(small solid bullet) Confirmation statements (after every transaction,
except reinvestments, that affects your account balance or your account
registration)
(small solid bullet) Account statements (quarterly)
(small solid bullet) Financial reports (every six months)
 
 
 
 
To reduce expenses, only one copy of most financial reports will be mailed
to your household, even if you have more than one account in the fund. Call
1-800-544-6666 if you need copies of financial reports or historical
account information.
TRANSACTION SERVICES 
   EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE. You may sell your fund shares and buy shares of
other Fidelity funds by telephone or in writing. The shares you exchange
will carry credit for any sales charge you previously paid in connection
with their purchase.    
Note that exchanges out of a fund are limited to four per calendar year,
and that they may have tax consequences for you. For details on policies
and restrictions governing exchanges, including circumstances under which a
shareholder's exchange privilege may be suspended or revoked, see page
   .    
SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLANS let you set up periodic redemptions from your
account. Because of Small Cap Stock's sales charge, you may not want to set
up a systematic withdrawal plan during a period when you are buying shares
on a regular basis.
FIDELITY MONEY LINE(registered trademark) enables you to transfer money by
phone between your bank account and your fund account. Most transfers are
complete within three business days of your call.
REGULAR INVESTMENT PLANS
One easy way to pursue your financial goals is to invest money regularly.
Fidelity offers convenient services that let you transfer money into your
fund account, or between fund accounts, automatically. While regular
investment plans do not guarantee a profit and will not protect you against
loss in a declining market, they can be an excellent way to invest for
retirement, a home, educational expenses, and other long-term financial
goals. Certain restrictions apply for retirement accounts. Call
1-800-544-6666 for more information.
REGULAR INVESTMENT PLANS               
 
FIDELITY AUTOMATIC ACCOUNT BUILDERSM                                  
TO MOVE MONEY FROM YOUR BANK ACCOUNT TO A FIDELITY FUND               
 
 
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<CAPTION>
<S>       <C>           <C>                                                          
MINIMUM   FREQUENCY     SETTING UP OR CHANGING                                       
$100      Monthly or    (small solid bullet) For a new account, complete the         
          quarterly     appropriate section on the fund                              
                        application.                                                 
                        (small solid bullet) For existing accounts, call             
                        1-800-544-6666 for an application.                           
                        (small solid bullet) To change the amount or frequency of    
                        your investment, call 1-800-544-6666 at                      
                        least three business days prior to your                      
                        next scheduled investment date.                              
 
</TABLE>
 
 
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<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                                 <C>   <C>   
DIRECT DEPOSIT                                                                                  
TO SEND ALL OR A PORTION OF YOUR PAYCHECK OR GOVERNMENT CHECK TO A FIDELITY FUNDA               
 
</TABLE>
 
 
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<CAPTION>
<S>       <C>          <C>                                                           
MINIMUM   FREQUENCY    SETTING UP OR CHANGING                                        
$100      Every pay    (small solid bullet) Check the appropriate box on the fund    
          period       application, or call 1-800-544-6666 for an                    
                       authorization form.                                           
                       (small solid bullet) Changes require a new authorization      
                       form.                                                         
 
</TABLE>
 
 
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<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                        <C>   <C>   
FIDELITY AUTOMATIC EXCHANGE SERVICE                                                    
TO MOVE MONEY FROM A FIDELITY MONEY MARKET FUND TO ANOTHER FIDELITY FUND               
 
</TABLE>
 
 
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<CAPTION>
<S>       <C>              <C>                                                             
MINIMUM   FREQUENCY        SETTING UP OR CHANGING                                          
$100      Monthly,         (small solid bullet) To establish, call 1-800-544-6666 after    
          bimonthly,       both accounts are opened.                                       
          quarterly, or    (small solid bullet) To change the amount or frequency of       
          annually         your investment, call 1-800-544-6666.                           
 
</TABLE>
 
A BECAUSE THEIR SHARE PRICES FLUCTUATE, THESE FUNDS MAY NOT BE APPROPRIATE
CHOICES FOR DIRECT DEPOSIT OF YOUR ENTIRE CHECK.
SHAREHOLDER AND ACCOUNT POLICIES
 
 
DIVIDENDS, CAPITAL GAINS, AND TAXES 
Each fund distributes substantially all of its net income and capital gains
to shareholders each year. Normally, dividends and capital gains are
distributed in June and December. 
DISTRIBUTION OPTIONS 
When you open an account, specify on your application how you want to
receive your distributions. If the option you prefer is not listed on the
application, call 1-800-544-6666 for instructions. Each fund offers four
options: 
1. REINVESTMENT OPTION. Your dividend and capital gain distributions will
be automatically reinvested in additional shares of the fund. If you do not
indicate a choice on your application, you will be assigned this option. 
2. INCOME-EARNED OPTION. Your capital gain distributions will be
automatically reinvested, but you will be sent a check for each dividend
distribution.
3. CASH OPTION. You will be sent a check for your dividend and capital gain
distributions. 
4. DIRECTED DIVIDENDS(registered trademark) OPTION. Your dividend and
capital gain distributions will be automatically invested in another
identically registered Fidelity fund.
FOR RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS, all distributions are automatically reinvested.
When you are over 59 years old, you can receive distributions in cash. 
SHARES PURCHASED THROUGH REINVESTMENT of dividend and capital gain
distributions are not subject to Small Cap Stock's 3% sales charge.
Likewise, if you direct distributions from Small Cap Stock to a fund with a
3% sales charge, you will not pay a sales charge on those purchases. 
When a fund deducts a distribution from its NAV, the reinvestment price is
the fund's NAV at the close of business that day. Cash distribution checks
will be mailed within seven days.
UNDERSTANDING
DISTRIBUTIONS
As a fund shareholder, you 
are entitled to your share of 
the fund's net income and 
gains on its investments. The 
fund passes its earnings 
along to its investors as 
DISTRIBUTIONS.
Each fund earns dividends 
from stocks and interest from 
bond, money market, and 
other investments. These are 
passed along as DIVIDEND 
DISTRIBUTIONS. The fund 
realizes capital gains 
whenever it sells securities 
for a higher price than it paid 
for them. These are passed 
along as CAPITAL GAIN 
DISTRIBUTIONS.
(checkmark)
TAXES 
As with any investment, you should consider how your investment in a fund
will be taxed. If your account is not a tax-deferred retirement account,
you should be aware of these tax implications. 
TAXES ON DISTRIBUTIONS. Distributions are subject to federal income tax,
and may also be subject to state or local taxes. If you live outside the
United States, your distributions could also be taxed by the country in
which you reside. Your distributions are taxable when they are paid,
whether you take them in cash or reinvest them. However, distributions
declared in December and paid in January are taxable as if they were paid
on December 31. 
For federal tax purposes, each fund's income and short-term capital gain
distributions are taxed as dividends; long-term capital gain distributions
are taxed as long-term capital gains. Every January, Fidelity will send you
and the IRS a statement showing the taxable distributions paid to you in
the previous year.
TAXES ON TRANSACTIONS. Your redemptions - including exchanges to other
Fidelity funds - are subject to capital gains tax. A capital gain or loss
is the difference between the cost of your shares and the price you receive
when you sell them. 
Whenever you sell shares of a fund, Fidelity will send you a confirmation
statement showing how many shares you sold and at what price. You will also
receive a consolidated transaction statement every January. However, it is
up to you or your tax preparer to determine whether this sale resulted in a
capital gain and, if so, the amount of tax to be paid. Be sure to keep your
regular account statements; the information they contain will be essential
in calculating the amount of your capital gains. 
"BUYING A DIVIDEND." If you buy shares just before a fund deducts a
distribution from its NAV, you will pay the full price for the shares and
then receive a portion of the price back in the form of a taxable
distribution.
EFFECT OF FOREIGN TAXES. Foreign governments may impose taxes on a fund and
its investments and these taxes generally will reduce the fund's
distributions. However, an offsetting tax credit or deduction may be
available to you. If so, your tax statement will show more taxable income
or capital gains than were actually distributed by the fund, but will also
show the amount of the available offsetting credit or deduction.
There are tax requirements that all funds must follow in order to avoid
federal taxation. In its effort to adhere to these requirements, a fund may
have to limit its investment activity in some types of instruments.
TRANSACTION DETAILS 
THE FUNDS ARE OPEN FOR BUSINESS each day the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
is open. Fidelity normally calculates each fund's NAV and offering price as
of the close of business of the NYSE, normally 4 p.m. Eastern time.
EACH FUND'S NAV is the value of a single share. The NAV is computed by
adding the value of the fund's investments, cash, and other assets,
subtracting its liabilities, and then dividing the result by the number of
shares outstanding. 
Each fund's assets are valued primarily on the basis of market quotations.
Foreign securities are valued on the basis of quotations from the primary
market in which they are traded, and are translated from the local currency
into U.S. dollars using current exchange rates. If quotations are not
readily available, or if the values have been materially affected by events
occurring after the closing of a foreign market, assets are valued by a
method that the Board of Trustees believes accurately reflects fair value. 
THE OFFERING PRICE (price to buy one share) is the fund's NAV plus a sales
charge, if any. Small Cap Stock has a sales charge of 3% of the offering
price, or 3.09% of the net amount invested. The REDEMPTION PRICE (price to
sell one share) is the fund's NAV. 
WHEN YOU SIGN YOUR ACCOUNT APPLICATION, you will be asked to certify that
your Social Security or taxpayer identification number is correct and that
you are not subject to 31% backup withholding for failing to report income
to the IRS. If you violate IRS regulations, the IRS can require a fund to
withhold 31% of your taxable distributions and redemptions. 
YOU MAY INITIATE MANY TRANSACTIONS BY TELEPHONE. Fidelity may only be
liable for losses resulting from unauthorized transactions if it does not
follow reasonable procedures designed to verify the identity of the caller.
Fidelity will request personalized security codes or other information, and
may also record calls. You should verify the accuracy of your confirmation
statements immediately after you receive them. If you do not want the
ability to redeem and exchange by telephone, call Fidelity for
instructions.
IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO REACH FIDELITY BY PHONE (for example, during periods
of unusual market activity), consider placing your order by mail or by
visiting a Fidelity Investor Center. 
EACH FUND RESERVES THE RIGHT TO SUSPEND THE OFFERING OF SHARES for a period
of time. Each fund also reserves the right to reject any specific purchase
order, including certain purchases by exchange. See "Exchange Restrictions"
on page        . Purchase orders may be refused if, in FMR's opinion, they
would disrupt management of a fund. 
WHEN YOU PLACE AN ORDER TO BUY SHARES, your order will be processed at the
next offering price calculated after your order is received and accepted.
Note the following: 
(small solid bullet) All of your purchases must be made in U.S. dollars and
checks must be drawn on U.S. banks. 
(small solid bullet) Fidelity does not accept cash. 
(small solid bullet) When making a purchase with more than one check, each
check must have a value of at least $50. 
(small solid bullet) Each fund reserves the right to limit the number of
checks processed at one time.
(small solid bullet) If your check does not clear, your purchase will be
cancelled and you could be liable for any losses or fees a fund or its
transfer agent has incurred. 
TO AVOID THE COLLECTION PERIOD associated with check and Money Line
purchases, consider buying shares by bank wire, U.S. Postal money order,
U.S. Treasury check, Federal Reserve check, or direct deposit instead. 
YOU MAY BUY SHARES OF THE FUNDS (AT THE OFFERING PRICE) OR SELL THEM
THROUGH A BROKER, who may charge you a fee for this service. If you invest
through a broker or other institution, read its program materials for any
additional service features or fees that may apply. 
CERTAIN FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS that have entered into sales agreements with
FDC may enter confirmed purchase orders on behalf of customers by phone,
with payment to follow no later than the time when a fund is priced on the
following business day. If payment is not received by that time, the
financial institution could be held liable for resulting fees or losses.
WHEN YOU PLACE AN ORDER TO SELL SHARES, your shares will be sold at the
next NAV calculated after your request is received and accepted. Note the
following: 
(small solid bullet) Normally, redemption proceeds will be mailed to you on
the next business day, but if making immediate payment could adversely
affect a fund, it may take up to seven days to pay you. 
(small solid bullet) Fidelity Money Line redemptions generally will be
credited to your bank account on the second or third business day after
your phone call.
(small solid bullet) Each fund may hold payment on redemptions until it is
reasonably satisfied that investments made by check or Fidelity Money Line
have been collected, which can take up to seven business days.
(small solid bullet) Redemptions may be suspended or payment dates
postponed when the NYSE is closed (other than weekends or holidays), when
trading on the NYSE is restricted, or as permitted by the SEC.
FIDELITY RESERVES THE RIGHT TO DEDUCT AN ANNUAL MAINTENANCE FEE of $12.00
from accounts with a value of less than $2,500 (including any amount paid
as a sales charge), subject to an annual maximum charge of $60.00 per
shareholder. It is expected that accounts will be valued on the second
Friday in November of each year. Accounts opened after September 30 will
not be subject to the fee for that year. The fee, which is payable to the
transfer agent, is designed to offset in part the relatively higher costs
of servicing smaller accounts. The fee will not be deducted from retirement
   accounts (except non-prototype retirement accounts)    , accounts using
regular investment plans, or if total assets in Fidelity funds exceed
$50,000. Eligibility for the $50,000 waiver is determined by aggregating
Fidelity mutual fund accounts maintained by FSC or FBSI which are
registered under the same social security number or which list the same
social security number for the custodian of a Uniform Gifts/Transfers to
Minors Act account.
IF YOUR ACCOUNT BALANCE FALLS BELOW $1,000, you will be given 30 days'
notice to reestablish the minimum balance. If you do not increase your
balance, Fidelity reserves the right to close your account and send the
proceeds to you. Your shares will be redeemed at the NAV on the day your
account is closed. 
FIDELITY MAY CHARGE A FEE FOR SPECIAL SERVICES, such as providing
historical account documents, that are beyond the normal scope of its
services. 
FDC collects the proceeds from Small Cap Stock's 3% sales charge and may
pay a portion of them to securities dealers who have sold the fund's
shares, or to others, including banks and other financial institutions
(qualified recipients), under special arrangements in connection with FDC's
sales activities. The sales charge paid to qualified recipients is 2.25% of
the fund's offering price.
FDC may, at its own expense, provide promotional incentives to qualified
recipients who support the sale of shares of the funds without
reimbursement from the funds. In some instances, these incentives may be
offered only to certain institutions whose representatives provide services
in connection with the sale or expected sale of significant amounts of
shares.
EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS
As a shareholder, you have the privilege of exchanging shares of a fund for
shares of other Fidelity funds. However, you should note the following:
(small solid bullet) The fund you are exchanging into must be registered
for sale in your state.
(small solid bullet) You may only exchange between accounts that are
registered in the same name, address, and taxpayer identification number.
(small solid bullet) Before exchanging into a fund, read its prospectus.
(small solid bullet) If you exchange into a fund with a sales charge, you
pay the percentage-point difference between that fund's sales charge and
any sales charge you have previously paid in connection with the shares you
are exchanging. For example, if you had already paid a sales charge of 2%
on your shares and you exchange them into a fund with a 3% sales charge,
you would pay an additional 1% sales charge.
(small solid bullet) Exchanges may have tax consequences for you.
(small solid bullet) Because excessive trading can hurt fund performance
and shareholders, each fund reserves the right to temporarily or
permanently terminate the exchange privilege of any investor who makes more
than four exchanges out of the fund per calendar year. Accounts under
common ownership or control, including accounts with the same taxpayer
identification number, will be counted together for purposes of the four
exchange limit.
(small solid bullet) The exchange limit may be modified for accounts in
certain institutional retirement plans to conform to plan exchange limits
and Department of Labor regulations. See your plan materials for further
information.
(small solid bullet) Each fund reserves the right to refuse exchange
purchases by any person or group if, in FMR's judgment, the fund would be
unable to invest the money effectively in accordance with its investment
objective and policies, or would otherwise potentially be adversely
affected.
(small solid bullet) Your exchanges may be restricted or refused if a fund
receives or anticipates simultaneous orders affecting significant portions
of the fund's assets. In particular, a pattern of exchanges that coincides
with a "market timing" strategy may be disruptive to a fund.
Although the funds will attempt to give you prior notice whenever they are
reasonably able to do so, they may impose these restrictions at any time.
The funds reserve the right to terminate or modify the exchange privilege
in the future. 
OTHER FUNDS MAY HAVE DIFFERENT EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS, and may impose
administrative fees of up to $7.50 and redemption fees of up to 1.50% on
exchanges. Check each fund's prospectus for details.
SALES CHARGE REDUCTIONS AND WAIVERS 
REDUCTIONS. Small Cap Stock's sales charge may be reduced if you invest
directly with Fidelity or through prototype or prototype-like retirement
plans sponsored by FMR or FMR Corp. The amount you invest, plus the value
of your account, must fall within the ranges shown below. However,
purchases made with assistance or intervention from a financial
intermediary are not eligible. Call Fidelity to see if your purchase
qualifies.
Ranges               Sales charge   Net amount invested   
 
$0 - 249,999         3%             3.09%                 
 
$250,000 - 499,999   2%             2.04%                 
 
$500,000 - 999,999   1%             1.01%                 
 
$1,000,000 or more   none           none                  
 
The sales charge will also be reduced by the percentage of any sales charge
you previously paid on investments in other Fidelity funds (not including
Fidelity's Foreign Currency Funds). Similarly, your shares carry credit for
any sales charge you would have paid if the reductions in the table above
had not existed. These sales charge credits only apply to purchases made in
one of the ways listed below, and only if you continuously owned Fidelity
fund shares or a Fidelity brokerage core account, or participated in The
CORPORATEplan for Retirement Program.
1. By exchange from another Fidelity fund. 
2. With proceeds of a transaction within a Fidelity brokerage core account,
including any free credit balance, core money market fund, or margin
availability, to the extent such proceeds were derived from redemption
proceeds from another Fidelity fund. 
3. With redemption proceeds from one of Fidelity's Foreign Currency
Portfolios, if the Foreign Currency Portfolio shares were originally
purchased with redemption proceeds from a Fidelity fund. 
4. Through the Directed Dividends Option (see page        ). 
5. By participants in The CORPORATEplan for Retirement Program when shares
are purchased through plan-qualified loan repayments, and for exchanges
into and out of the Managed Income Portfolio. 
WAIVERS. Small Cap Stock's sales charge will not apply: 
1. If you buy shares as part of an employee benefit plan having more than
200 eligible employees or a minimum of $3 million in plan assets invested
in Fidelity mutual funds. 
2. To shares in a Fidelity Rollover IRA account purchased with the proceeds
of a distribution from an employee benefit plan, provided that at the time
of the distribution, the employer or its affiliate maintained a plan that
both qualified for waiver (1) above and had at least some of its assets
invested in Fidelity-managed products. 
3. If you are a charitable organization (as defined in Section 501(c)(3) of
the Internal Revenue Code) investing $100,000 or more. 
4. If you purchase shares for a charitable remainder trust or life income
pool established for the benefit of a charitable organization (as defined
by Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code). 
5. If you are an investor participating in the Fidelity Trust Portfolios
program. 
6. To shares purchased through Portfolio Advisory Services.
7. If you are a current or former trustee or officer of a Fidelity fund or
a current or retired officer, director, or regular employee of FMR Corp. or
its direct or indirect subsidiaries (a Fidelity Trustee or employee), the
spouse of a Fidelity trustee or employee, a Fidelity trustee or employee
acting as custodian for a minor child, or a person acting as trustee of a
trust for the sole benefit of the minor child of a Fidelity trustee or
employee. 
8. If you are a bank trust officer, registered representative, or other
employee of a qualified recipient, as defined on page        .
9. To contributions and exchanges to a prototype or prototype-like
retirement plan sponsored by FMR Corp. or FMR and which is marketed and
distributed directly to plan sponsors or participants without any
assistance or intervention from any intermediary distribution channel.
10. If you invest through a non-prototype pension or profit-sharing plan
that maintains all of its mutual fund assets in Fidelity mutual funds,
provided the plan executes a Fidelity non-prototype sales charge waiver
request form confirming its qualification.
11. If you are a registered investment adviser (RIA) purchasing for your
discretionary accounts, provided you execute a Fidelity RIA load waiver
agreement which specifies certain aggregate minimum and operating
provisions. Except for correspondents of National Financial Services
Corporation, this waiver is available only for shares purchased directly
from Fidelity, and is unavailable if the RIA is part of an organization
principally engaged in the brokerage business.
12. If you are a trust institution or bank trust department purchasing for
your non-discretionary, non-retirement fiduciary accounts, provided you
execute a Fidelity Trust load waiver agreement which specifies certain
aggregate minimum and operating provisions. This waiver is available only
for shares purchased either directly from Fidelity or through a
bank-affiliated broker, and is unavailable if the trust department or
institution is part of an organization not principally engaged in banking
or trust activities.
These waivers must be qualified through FDC in advance. More detailed
information about waivers (1), (2), (5),     (9), and (11)     is contained
in the Statement of Additional Information. A representative of your plan
or organization should call Fidelity for more information.
 
 
 
This prospectus is printed on recycled paper using soy-based inks.
FIDELITY SMALL CAP STOCK FUND
FIDELITY LARGE CAP STOCK FUND
 FUNDS OF FIDELITY COMMONWEALTH TRUST
FIDELITY MID-CAP STOCK FUND
A FUND OF FIDELITY DEVONSHIRE TRUST
SUPPLEMENT TO THE STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
DATED JUNE 22, 1995
The unaudited Financial Statements and Financial Highlights included in
Fidelity Large Cap Stock Fund's SemiAnnual Report for the periods June 22,
1995 (commencement of operations) to October 31, 1995 are incorporated
herein by reference.
FIDELITY SMALL CAP STOCK FUND
   FIDELITY LARGE CAP STOCK FUND
FUNDS     OF FIDELITY COMMONWEALTH TRUST
FIDELITY MID-CAP STOCK FUND
A FUND OF FIDELITY DEVONSHIRE TRUST
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
   JUNE 22, 1995    
This Statement is not a prospectus but should be read in conjunction with
the funds' current Prospectus (dated    June 22, 1995    ). Please retain
this document for future reference.    The funds    ' financial statements
and financial highlights, included in the Annual Reports for the fiscal
year ended    April 30, 1995     are incorporated herein by reference. To
obtain an additional copy of the Prospectus or an Annual Report, please
call Fidelity Distributors Corporation at 1-800-544-8888.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                              <C>    
TABLE OF CONTENTS                                                                PAGE   
 
Investment Policies and Limitations                                                     
 
Portfolio Transactions                                                                  
 
Valuation of Portfolio Securities                                                       
 
Performance                                                                             
 
Additional Purchase and Redemption Information                                          
 
Distributions and Taxes                                                                 
 
FMR                                                                                     
 
Trustees and Officers                                                                   
 
Management Contracts                                                                    
 
Distribution and Service Plans (Mid-Cap Stock    and Large Cap Stock     only)          
 
   Contracts With FMR Affiliates                                                        
 
Description of the Trusts                                                               
 
Financial Statements                                                                    
 
Appendix                                                                                
 
</TABLE>
 
INVESTMENT ADVISER
Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR)
INVESTMENT SUB-ADVISERS
Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (FMR U.K.)
Fidelity Management & Research (Far East) Inc. (FMR Far East)
DISTRIBUTOR
Fidelity Distributors Corp. (FDC)
TRANSFER AGENT 
Fidelity Service Co. (FSC)
   SML    -ptb-695
INVESTMENT POLICIES AND LIMITATIONS
The following policies and limitations supplement those set forth in the
Prospectus. Unless otherwise noted, whenever an investment policy or
limitation states a maximum percentage of a fund's assets that may be
invested in any security or other asset, or sets forth a policy regarding
quality standards, such standard or percentage limitation will be
determined immediately after and as a result of the fund's acquisition of
such security or other asset. Accordingly, any subsequent change in values,
net assets, or other circumstances will not be considered when determining
whether the investment complies with the fund's investment policies and
limitations.
Each fund's fundamental investment policies and limitations cannot be
changed without approval by a "majority of the outstanding voting
securities" (as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940) of the fund.
However, except for the fundamental investment limitations    listed    
below, the investment policies and limitations described in this Statement
of Additional Information are not fundamental and may be changed without
shareholder approval.
INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS OF SMALL CAP STOCK FUND 
THE FOLLOWING ARE SMALL CAP STOCK FUND'S FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS
SET FORTH IN THEIR ENTIRETY. THE FUND MAY NOT:
(1)  with respect to 75% of the fund's total assets, purchase the
securities of any issuer (other than securities issued or guaranteed by the
U.S. government or any of its agencies or instrumentalities) if, as a
result, (a) more than 5% of the fund's total assets would be invested in
the securities of that issuer, or (b) the fund would hold more than 10% of
the outstanding voting securities of that issuer;
(2) issue senior securities, except as permitted under the Investment
Company Act of 1940;
(3) borrow money, except that the fund may borrow money for temporary or
emergency purposes (not for leveraging or investment) in an amount not
exceeding 33 1/3% of its total assets (including the amount borrowed) less
liabilities (other than borrowings). Any borrowings that come to exceed
this amount will be reduced within three days (not including Sundays and
holidays) to the extent necessary to comply with the 33 1/3% limitation;
(4) underwrite securities issued by others, except to the extent that the
fund may be considered an underwriter within the meaning of the Securities
Act of 1933 in the disposition of restricted securities;
(5) purchase the securities of any issuer (other than securities issued or
guaranteed by the U.S. government or any of its agencies or
instrumentalities) if, as a result, more than 25% of the fund's total
assets would be invested in the securities of companies whose principal
business activities are in the same industry;
(6) purchase or sell real estate unless acquired as a result of ownership
of securities or other instruments (but this shall not prevent the fund
from investing in securities or other instruments backed by real estate or
securities of companies engaged in the real estate business);
(7) purchase or sell physical commodities unless acquired as a result of
ownership of securities or other instruments (but this shall not prevent
the fund from purchasing or selling options and futures contracts or from
investing in securities or other instruments backed by physical
commodities); or
(8) lend any security or make any other loan if, as a result, more than 33
1/3% of its total assets would be lent to other parties, but this
limitation does not apply to purchases of debt securities or to repurchase
agreements.
(9) The fund may, notwithstanding any other fundamental investment policy
or limitation, invest all of its assets in the securities of a single
open-end management investment company with substantially the same
fundamental investment objective, policies, and limitations as the fund.
THE FOLLOWING INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS ARE NOT FUNDAMENTAL AND MAY BE CHANGED
WITHOUT SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL.
(i) The fund does not currently intend to sell securities short, unless it
owns or has the right to obtain securities equivalent in kind and amount to
the securities sold short, and provided that transactions in futures
contracts and options are not deemed to constitute selling securities
short.
(ii) The fund does not currently intend to purchase securities on margin,
except that the fund may obtain such short-term credits as are necessary
for the clearance of transactions, and provided that margin payments in
connection with futures contracts and options on futures contracts shall
not constitute purchasing securities on margin.
(iii) The fund may borrow money only (a) from a bank or from a registered
investment company or portfolio for which FMR or an affiliate serves as
investment adviser or (b) by engaging in reverse repurchase agreements with
any party (reverse repurchase agreements are treated as borrowings for
purposes of fundamental investment limitation (3)). The fund will not
purchase any security while borrowings representing more than 5% of its
total assets are outstanding. The fund will not borrow from other funds
advised by FMR or its affiliates if total outstanding borrowings
immediately after such borrowing would exceed 15% of the fund's total
assets.
(iv) The fund does not currently intend to purchase any security if, as a
result, more than 10% of its net assets would be invested in securities
that are deemed to be illiquid because they are subject to legal or
contractual restrictions on resale or because they cannot be sold or
disposed of in the ordinary course of business at approximately the prices
at which they are valued.
   (v) The fund does not currently intend to purchase interests in real
estate investment trusts that are not readily marketable or interests in
real estate limited partnerships that are not listed on an exchange or
traded on the NASDAQ National Market System if, as a result, the sum of
such interests and other investments considered illiquid under limitation
(iv) would exceed 10% of the fund's net assets.    
(vi) The fund does not currently intend to lend assets other than
securities to other parties, except by (a) lending money (up to 5% of the
fund's net assets) to a registered investment company or portfolio for
which FMR or an affiliate serves as investment adviser or (b) acquiring
loans, loan participations, or other forms of direct debt instruments and,
in connection therewith, assuming any associated unfunded commitments of
the sellers. (This limitation does not apply to purchases of debt
securities or to repurchase agreements.)
(vii) The fund does not currently intend to (a) purchase securities of
other investment companies, except in the open market where no commission
except the ordinary broker's commission is paid, or (b) purchase or retain
securities issued by other open-end investment companies. Limitations (a)
and (b) do not apply to securities received as dividends, through offers of
exchange, or as a result of a reorganization, consolidation, or merger.
(viii) The fund does not currently intend to purchase the securities of any
issuer (other than securities issued or guaranteed by domestic or foreign
governments or political subdivisions thereof) if, as a result, more than
5% of its total assets would be invested in the securities of business
enterprises that, including predecessors, have a record of less than three
years of continuous operation.
(ix) The fund does not currently intend to purchase warrants, valued at the
lower of cost or market, in excess of 5% of the fund's net assets. Included
in that amount, but not to exceed 2% of the fund's net assets, may be
warrants that are not listed on the New York Stock Exchange or the American
Stock Exchange. Warrants acquired by the fund in units or attached to
securities are not subject to these restrictions.
(x) The fund does not currently intend to invest in oil, gas, or other
mineral exploration or development programs or leases.
(xi) The fund does not currently intend to purchase the securities of any
issuer if those officers and Trustees of the Trust and those officers and
directors of FMR who individually own more than 1/2 of 1% of the securities
of such issuer together own more than 5% of such issuer's securities.
(xii) The fund does not currently intend to invest all of its assets in the
securities of a single open-end management investment company with
substantially the same fundamental investment objective, policies, and
limitations as the fund.
INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS OF MID-CAP STOCK FUND
THE FOLLOWING ARE MID-CAP STOCK FUND'S FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS
SET FORTH IN THEIR ENTIRETY. THE FUND MAY NOT:
(1) with respect to 75% of the fund's total assets, purchase the securities
of any issuer (other than securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
government or any of its agencies or instrumentalities) if, as a result,
(a) more than 5% of the fund's total assets would be invested in the
securities of that issuer, or (b) the fund would hold more than 10% of the
outstanding voting securities of that issuer;
(2) issue senior securities, except as permitted under the Investment
Company Act of 1940;
(3) borrow money, except that the fund may borrow money for temporary or
emergency purposes (not for leveraging or investment) in an amount not
exceeding 33 1/3% of its total assets (including the amount borrowed) less
liabilities (other than borrowings). Any borrowings that come to exceed
this amount will be reduced within three days (not including Sundays and
holidays) to the extent necessary to comply with the 33 1/3% limitation;
(4) underwrite securities issued by others, except to the extent that the
fund may be considered an underwriter within the meaning of the Securities
Act of 1933 in the disposition of restricted securities;
(5) purchase the securities of any issuer (other than securities issued or
guaranteed by the U.S. government or any of its agencies or
instrumentalities) if, as a result, more than 25% of the fund's total
assets would be invested in the securities of companies whose principal
business activities are in the same industry;
(6) purchase or sell real estate unless acquired as a result of ownership
of securities or other instruments (but this shall not prevent the fund
from investing in securities or other instruments backed by real estate or
securities of companies engaged in the real estate business);
(7) purchase or sell physical commodities unless acquired as a result of
ownership of securities or other instruments (but this shall not prevent
the fund from purchasing or selling options and futures contracts or from
investing in securities or other instruments backed by physical
commodities); or
(8) lend any security or make any other loan if, as a result, more than 33
1/3% of its total assets would be lent to other parties, but this
limitation does not apply to purchases of debt securities or to repurchase
agreements.
(9) The fund may, notwithstanding any other fundamental investment policy
or limitation, invest all of its assets in the securities of a single
open-end management investment company with substantially the same
investment objectives, policies, and limitations as the fund.
THE FOLLOWING INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS ARE NOT FUNDAMENTAL AND MAY BE CHANGED
WITHOUT SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL.
(i) The fund does not currently intend to sell securities short, unless it
owns or has the right to obtain securities equivalent in kind and amount to
the securities sold short, and provided that transactions in futures
contracts and options are not deemed to constitute selling securities
short.
(ii) The fund does not currently intend to purchase securities on margin,
except that the fund may obtain such short-term credits as are necessary
for the clearance of transactions, and provided that margin payments in
connection with futures contracts and options on futures contracts shall
not constitute purchasing securities on margin.
(iii) The fund may borrow money only (a) from a bank or from a registered
investment company or portfolio for which FMR or an affiliate serves as
investment adviser or (b) by engaging in reverse repurchase agreements with
any party (reverse repurchase agreements are treated as borrowings for
purposes of fundamental investment limitation (3)). The fund will not
purchase any security while borrowings representing more than 5% of its
total assets are outstanding. The fund will not borrow from other funds
advised by FMR or its affiliates if total outstanding borrowings
immediately after such borrowing would exceed 15% of the fund's total
assets.
(iv) The fund does not currently intend to purchase any security if, as a
result, more than 10% of its net assets would be invested in securities
that are deemed to be illiquid because they are subject to legal or
contractual restrictions on resale or because they cannot be sold or
disposed of in the ordinary course of business at approximately the prices
at which they are valued.
(v) The fund does not currently intend to purchase interests in real estate
investment trusts that are not readily marketable or interests in real
estate limited partnerships that are not listed on an exchange or traded on
the NASDAQ National Market System if, as a result, the sum of such
interests and other investments considered illiquid under limitation (iv)
would exceed 10% of the fund's net assets.
(vi) The fund does not currently intend to lend assets other than
securities to other parties, except by    (a)     lending money (up to 5%
of the fund's net assets) to a registered investment company or portfolio
for which FMR or an affiliate serves as investment adviser or (   b)    
acquiring loans, loan participations, or other forms of direct debt
instruments and, in connection therewith, assuming any associated unfunded
commitments of the sellers. (This limitation does not apply to purchases of
debt securities or to repurchase agreements.)
(vii) The fund does not currently intend to (a) purchase securities of
other investment companies, except in the open market where no commission
except the ordinary broker's commission is paid, or (b) purchase or retain
securities issued by other open-end investment companies. Limitations (a)
and (b) do not apply to securities received as dividends, through offers of
exchange, or as a result of a reorganization, consolidation, or merger.
(viii) The fund does not currently intend to purchase the securities of any
issuer (other than securities issued or guaranteed by domestic or foreign
governments or political subdivisions thereof) if, as a result, more than
5% of its total assets would be invested in the securities of business
enterprises that, including predecessors, have a record of less than three
years of continuous operation.
(ix) The fund does not currently intend to purchase warrants, valued at the
lower of cost or market, in excess of 5% of the fund's net assets. Warrants
acquired by the fund in units or attached to securities are not subject to
this restriction.
(x) The fund does not currently intend to invest in oil, gas, or other
mineral exploration or development programs or leases.
(xi) The fund does not currently intend to invest all of its assets in the
securities of a single open-end management investment company with
substantially the same fundamental investment objective, policies, and
limitations as the fund. 
   INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS OF LARGE CAP STOCK FUND 
    THE FOLLOWING ARE LARGE CAP STOCK FUND'S FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT
LIMITATIONS SET FORTH IN THEIR ENTIRETY. THE FUND MAY NOT:   
(1) with respect to 75% of the fund's total assets, purchase the securities
of any issuer (other than securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
government or any of its agencies or instrumentalities) if, as a result,
(a) more than 5% of the fund's total assets would be invested in the
securities of that issuer, or (b) the fund would hold more than 10% of the
outstanding voting securities of that issuer;
(2) issue senior securities, except as permitted under the Investment
Company Act of 1940;
(3) borrow money, except that the fund may borrow money for temporary or
emergency purposes (not for leveraging or investment) in an amount not
exceeding 33 1/3% of its total assets (including the amount borrowed) less
liabilities (other than borrowings). Any borrowings that come to exceed
this amount will be reduced within three days (not including Sundays and
holidays) to the extent necessary to comply with the 33 1/3% limitation;
(4) underwrite securities issued by others, except to the extent that the
fund may be considered an underwriter within the meaning of the Securities
Act of 1933 in the disposition of restricted securities;
(5) purchase the securities of any issuer (other than securities issued or
guaranteed by the U.S. government or any of its agencies or
instrumentalities) if, as a result, more than 25% of the fund's total
assets would be invested in the securities of companies whose principal
business activities are in the same industry;
(6) purchase or sell real estate unless acquired as a result of ownership
of securities or other instruments (but this shall not prevent the fund
from investing in securities or other instruments backed by real estate or
securities of companies engaged in the real estate business);
(7) purchase or sell physical commodities unless acquired as a result of
ownership of securities or other instruments (but this shall not prevent
the fund from purchasing or selling options and futures contracts or from
investing in securities or other instruments backed by physical
commodities); or
(8) lend any security or make any other loan if, as a result, more than 33
1/3% of its total assets would be lent to other parties, but this
limitation does not apply to purchases of debt securities or to repurchase
agreements.
(9) The fund may, notwithstanding any other fundamental investment policy
or limitation, invest all of its assets in the securities of a single
open-end management investment company managed by Fidelity Management &
Research Company or an affiliate or successor with substantially the same
investment objective, policies, and limitations as the fund.
    THE FOLLOWING INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS ARE NOT FUNDAMENTAL AND MAY BE
CHANGED WITHOUT SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL.   
(i) The fund does not currently intend to sell securities short, unless it
owns or has the right to obtain securities equivalent in kind and amount to
the securities sold short, and provided that transactions in futures
contracts and options are not deemed to constitute selling securities
short.
(ii) The fund does not currently intend to purchase securities on margin,
except that the fund may obtain such short-term credits as are necessary
for the clearance of transactions, and provided that margin payments in
connection with futures contracts and options on futures contracts shall
not constitute purchasing securities on margin.
(iii) The fund may borrow money only (a) from a bank or from a registered
investment company or portfolio for which FMR or an affiliate serves as
investment adviser or (b) by engaging in reverse repurchase agreements with
any party (reverse repurchase agreements are treated as borrowings for
purposes of fundamental investment limitation (3)). The fund will not
purchase any security while borrowings representing more than 5% of its
total assets are outstanding. The fund will not borrow from other funds
advised by FMR or its affiliates if total outstanding borrowings
immediately after such borrowing would exceed 15% of the fund's total
assets.
(iv) The fund does not currently intend to purchase any security if, as a
result, more than 10% of its net assets would be invested in securities
that are deemed to be illiquid because they are subject to legal or
contractual restrictions on resale or because they cannot be sold or
disposed of in the ordinary course of business at approximately the prices
at which they are valued.
(v) The fund does not currently intend to purchase interests in real estate
investment trusts that are not readily marketable or interests in real
estate limited partnerships that are not listed on an exchange or traded on
the NASDAQ National Market System if, as a result, the sum of such
interests and other investments considered illiquid under limitation (iv)
would exceed 10% of the fund's net assets.
(vi) The fund does not currently intend to lend assets other than
securities to other parties, except by (a) lending money (up to 5% of the
fund's net assets) to a registered investment company or portfolio for
which FMR or an affiliate serves as investment adviser or (b) acquiring
loans, loan participations, or other forms of direct debt instruments and,
in connection therewith, assuming any associated unfunded commitments of
the sellers. (This limitation does not apply to purchases of debt
securities or to repurchase agreements.)
(vii) The fund does not currently intend to (a) purchase securities of
other investment companies, except in the open market where no commission
except the ordinary broker's commission is paid, or (b) purchase or retain
securities issued by other open-end investment companies. Limitations (a)
and (b) do not apply to securities received as dividends, through offers of
exchange, or as a result of a reorganization, consolidation, or merger.
(viii) The fund does not currently intend to invest in oil, gas, or other
mineral exploration or development programs or leases.
(ix) The fund does not currently intend to purchase warrants, valued at the
lower of cost or market, in excess of 5% of the fund's net assets. Warrants
acquired by the fund in units or attached to securities are not subject to
these restrictions.
(x) The fund does not currently intend to purchase the securities of any
issuer (other than securities issued or guaranteed by domestic or foreign
governments or political subdivisions thereof) if, as a result, more than
5% of its total assets would be invested in the securities of business
enterprises that, including predecessors, have a record of less than three
years of continuous operation.
(xi) The fund does not currently intend to invest all of its assets in the
securities of a single open-end management investment company managed by
Fidelity Management & Research Company or an affiliate or successor with
substantially the same fundamental investment objective, policies, and
limitations as the fund. 
For the funds' limitations on futures and options transactions, see the
section entitled "Limitations on Futures and Options Transactions" on page
 .
Each fund's investments must be consistent with its investment objective
and policies. Accordingly, not all of the security types and investment
techniques discussed below are eligible investments for each of the
funds.    
AFFILIATED BANK TRANSACTIONS. A fund may engage in transactions with
financial institutions that are, or may be considered to be, "affiliated
persons" of the fund under the Investment Company Act of 1940. These
transactions may include repurchase agreements with custodian banks;
short-term obligations of, and repurchase agreements with, the 50 largest
U.S. banks (measured by deposits); municipal securities; U.S. government
securities with affiliated financial institutions that are primary dealers
in these securities; short-term currency transactions; and short-term
borrowings. In accordance with exemptive orders issued by the Securities
and Exchange Commission    (SEC)    , the Board of Trustees has established
and periodically reviews procedures applicable to transactions involving
affiliated financial institutions.
FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSACTIONS. The funds may conduct foreign currency
transactions on a spot (i.e., cash) basis or by entering into forward
contracts to purchase or sell foreign currencies at a future date and
price. The funds will convert currency on a spot basis from time to time,
and investors should be aware of the costs of currency conversion. Although
foreign exchange dealers generally do not charge a fee for conversion, they
do realize a profit based on the difference 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. Forward contracts are generally traded in an interbank market
conducted directly between currency traders (usually large commercial
banks) and their customers. The parties to a forward contract may agree to
offset or terminate the contract before its maturity, or may hold the
contract to maturity and complete the contemplated currency exchange.
Each fund may use currency forward contracts for any purpose consistent
with its investment objective. The following discussion summarizes the
principal currency management strategies involving forward contracts that
could be used by each fund. The funds may also use swap agreements, indexed
securities, and options and futures contracts relating to foreign
currencies for the same purposes.
When a fund agrees to buy or sell a security denominated in a foreign
currency, it may desire to "lock in" the U.S. dollar price of the security.
By entering into a forward contract for the purchase or sale, for a fixed
amount of U.S. dollars, of the amount of foreign currency involved in the
underlying security transaction, the fund will be able to protect itself
against an adverse change in foreign currency values between the date the
security is purchased or sold and the date on which payment is made or
received. This technique is sometimes referred to as a "settlement hedge"
or "transaction hedge." The funds may also enter into forward contracts to
purchase or sell a foreign currency in anticipation of future purchases or
sales of securities denominated in foreign currency, even if the specific
investments have not yet been selected by FMR.
The funds may also use forward contracts to hedge against a decline in the
value of existing investments denominated in foreign currency. For example,
if a fund owned securities denominated in pounds sterling, it could enter
into a forward contract to sell pounds sterling in return for U.S. dollars
to hedge against possible declines in the pound's value. Such a hedge,
sometimes referred to as a "position hedge," would tend to offset both
positive and negative currency fluctuations, but would not offset changes
in security values caused by other factors. A fund could also hedge the
position by selling another currency expected to perform similarly to the
pound sterling - for example, by entering into a forward contract to sell
Deutschemarks or European Currency Units in return for U.S. dollars. This
type of hedge, sometimes referred to as a "proxy hedge," could offer
advantages in terms of cost, yield, or efficiency, but generally would not
hedge currency exposure as effectively as a simple hedge into U.S. dollars.
Proxy hedges may result in losses if the currency used to hedge does not
perform similarly to the currency in which the hedged securities are
denominated.
Each fund may enter into forward contracts to shift its investment exposure
from one currency into another. This may include shifting exposure from
U.S. dollars to a foreign currency, or from one foreign currency to another
foreign currency. For example, if a fund held investments denominated in
Deutschemarks, the fund could enter into forward contracts to sell
Deutschemarks and purchase Swiss Francs. This type of strategy, sometimes
known as a "cross-hedge," will tend to reduce or eliminate exposure to the
currency that is sold, and increase exposure to the currency that is
purchased, much as if the fund had sold a security denominated in one
currency and purchased an equivalent security denominated in another.
Cross-hedges protect against losses resulting from a decline in the hedged
currency, but will cause the fund to assume the risk of fluctuations in the
value of the currency it purchases.
Under certain conditions, SEC guidelines require mutual funds to set aside
appropriate liquid assets in a segregated custodial account to cover
currency forward contracts. As required by SEC guidelines, the funds will
segregate assets to cover currency forward contracts, if any, whose purpose
is essentially speculative. The funds will not segregate assets to cover
forward contracts entered into for hedging purposes, including settlement
hedges, position hedges, and proxy hedges.
Successful use of currency management strategies will depend on FMR's skill
in analyzing and predicting currency values. Currency management strategies
may substantially change a fund's investment exposure to changes in
currency exchange rates, and could result in losses to the fund if
currencies do not perform as FMR anticipates. For example, if a currency's
value rose at a time when FMR had hedged a fund by selling that currency in
exchange for dollars, the fund would be unable to participate in the
currency's appreciation. If FMR hedges currency exposure through proxy
hedges, a fund could realize currency losses from the hedge and the
security position at the same time if the two currencies do not move in
tandem. Similarly, if FMR increases a fund's exposure to a foreign
currency, and that currency's value declines, the fund will realize a loss.
There is no assurance that FMR's use of currency management strategies will
be advantageous to the funds or that it will hedge at an appropriate time.
FOREIGN INVESTMENTS. Investing in securities issued by companies or other
issuers whose principal activities are outside the United States may
involve significant risks in addition to the risks inherent in U.S.
investments. The value of securities denominated in foreign currencies and
of dividends and interest paid with respect to such securities will
fluctuate based on the relative strength of the U.S. dollar. In addition,
there is generally less publicly available information about foreign
issuers' financial condition and operations, particularly those not subject
to the disclosure and reporting requirements of the U.S. securities laws.
Foreign issuers are generally not bound by uniform accounting, auditing,
and financial reporting requirements and standards of practice comparable
to those applicable to U.S. issuers. Further, economies of particular
countries or areas of the world may differ favorably or unfavorably from
the economy of the United States.
Investing abroad also involves different political and economic risks.
Foreign investments may be affected by actions of foreign governments
adverse to the interests of U.S. investors, including the possibility of
expropriation or nationalization of assets, confiscatory taxation,
restrictions on U.S. investment or on the ability to repatriate assets or
convert currency into U.S. dollars, or other government intervention. There
may be a greater possibility of default by foreign governments or foreign
government-sponsored enterprises. Investments in foreign countries also
involve a risk of local political, economic, or social instability,
military action or unrest, or adverse diplomatic developments. There is no
assurance that FMR will be able to anticipate these potential events or
counter their effects. The considerations noted above generally are
intensified for investments in developing countries. Developing countries
may have relatively unstable governments, economies based on only a few
industries, and securities markets that trade a small number of securities.
Foreign markets may offer less protection to investors than U.S. markets.
It is anticipated that in most cases the best available market for foreign
securities will be on exchanges or in over-the-counter markets located
outside of the United States. Foreign stock markets, while growing in
volume and sophistication, are generally not as developed as those in the
United States, and securities of some foreign issuers (particularly those
located in developing countries) may be less liquid and more volatile than
securities of comparable U.S. issuers. Foreign security trading practices,
including those involving securities settlement where fund assets may be
released prior to receipt of payment, may expose a fund to increased risk
in the event of a failed trade or the insolvency of a foreign
broker-dealer, and may involve substantial delays. In addition, the costs
of foreign investing, including withholding taxes, brokerage commissions
and custodial costs, are generally higher than for U.S. investors. In
general, there is less overall governmental supervision and regulation of
securities exchanges, brokers, and listed companies than in the United
States. It may also be difficult to enforce legal rights in foreign
countries.
A fund may invest in foreign securities that impose restrictions on
transfer within the United States or to U.S. persons. Although securities
subject to such transfer restrictions may be marketable abroad, they may be
less liquid than foreign securities of the same class that are not subject
to such restrictions.
A fund may invest in American Depository Receipts and European Depository
Receipts (ADRs and EDRs), which are certificates evidencing ownership of
shares of a foreign-based issuer held in trust by a bank or similar
financial institution. Designed for use in the U.S. and European securities
markets, respectively, ADRs and EDRs are alternatives to the purchase of
the underlying securities in their national markets and currencies.
FUNDS' RIGHTS AS A SHAREHOLDER. The funds do not intend to direct or
administer the day-to-day operations of any company. Each fund, however,
may exercise its rights as a shareholder and may communicate its views on
important matters of policy to management, the Board of Directors, and
shareholders of a company when FMR determines that such matters could have
a significant effect on the value of the fund's investment in the company.
The activities that a fund may engage in, either individually or in
conjunction with others, may include, among others, supporting or opposing
proposed changes in a company's corporate structure or business activities;
seeking changes in a company's directors or management; seeking changes in
a company's direction or policies; seeking the sale or reorganization of
the company or a portion of its assets; or supporting or opposing third
party takeover efforts. This area of corporate activity is increasingly
prone to litigation and it is possible that a fund could be involved in
lawsuits related to such activities. FMR will monitor such activities with
a view to mitigating, to the extent possible, the risk of litigation
against a fund and the risk of actual liability if a fund is involved in
litigation. No guarantee can be made, however, that litigation against a
fund will not be undertaken or liabilities incurred.
   FUTURES AND OPTIONS. The following sections pertain to futures and
options: Asset Coverage for Futures and Options Positions, Combined
Positions, Correlation of Price Changes, Futures Contracts, Futures Margin
Payments, Limitation on Futures and Options Transactions, Liquidity of
Options and Futures Contracts, Options and Futures Relating to Foreign
Currencies, OTC Options, Purchasing Put and Call Options, and Writing Put
and Call Options.    
ASSET COVERAGE FOR FUTURES AND OPTIONS POSITIONS. The funds will comply
with guidelines established by the Securities and Exchange Commission with
respect to coverage of options and futures strategies by mutual funds, and
if the guidelines so require will set aside appropriate liquid assets in a
segregated custodial account in the amount prescribed. Securities held in a
segregated account cannot be sold while the futures or option strategy is
outstanding, unless they are replaced with other suitable assets. As a
result, there is a possibility that segregation of a large percentage of a
fund's assets could impede portfolio management or the fund's ability to
meet redemption requests or other current obligations.
COMBINED POSITIONS. A fund may purchase and write options in combination
with each other, or in combination with futures or forward contracts, to
adjust the risk and return characteristics of the overall position. For
example, a fund may purchase a put option and write a call option on the
same underlying instrument, in order to construct a combined position whose
risk and return characteristics are similar to selling a futures contract.
Another possible combined position would involve writing a call option at
one strike price and buying a call option at a lower price, in order to
reduce the risk of the written call option in the event of a substantial
price increase. Because combined options positions involve multiple trades,
they result in higher transaction costs and may be more difficult to open
and close out.
CORRELATION OF PRICE CHANGES. Because there are a limited number of types
of exchange-traded options and futures contracts, it is likely that the
standardized contracts available will not match a fund's current or
anticipated investments exactly. The funds may invest in options and
futures contracts based on securities with different issuers, maturities,
or other characteristics from the securities in which they typically
invest, which involves a risk that the options or futures position will not
track the performance of a fund's other investments.
Options and futures prices can also diverge from the prices of their
underlying instruments, even if the underlying instruments match a fund's
investments well. Options and futures prices are affected by such factors
as current and anticipated short-term interest rates, changes in volatility
of the underlying instrument, and the time remaining until expiration of
the contract, which may not affect security prices the same way. Imperfect
correlation may also result from differing levels of demand in the options
and futures markets and the securities markets, from structural differences
in how options and futures and securities are traded, or from imposition of
daily price fluctuation limits or trading halts. A fund may purchase or
sell options and futures contracts with a greater or lesser value than the
securities it wishes to hedge or intends to purchase in order to attempt to
compensate for differences in volatility between the contract and the
securities, although this may not be successful in all cases. If price
changes in a fund's options or futures positions are poorly correlated with
its other investments, the positions may fail to produce anticipated gains
or result in losses that are not offset by gains in other investments.
FUTURES CONTRACTS. When a fund purchases a futures contract, it agrees to
purchase a specified underlying instrument at a specified future date. When
a fund sells a futures contract, it agrees to sell the underlying
instrument at a specified future date. The price at which the purchase and
sale will take place is fixed when the fund enters into the contract. Some
currently available futures contracts are based on specific securities,
such as U.S. Treasury bonds or notes, and some are based on indices of
securities prices, such as the Standard & Poor's Composite Index of 500
Stocks (S&P 500). Futures can be held until their delivery dates, or can be
closed out before then if a liquid secondary market is available.
The value of a futures contract tends to increase and decrease in tandem
with the value of its underlying instrument. Therefore, purchasing futures
contracts will tend to increase a fund's exposure to positive and negative
price fluctuations in the underlying instrument, much as if it had
purchased the underlying instrument directly. When a fund sells a futures
contract, by contrast, the value of its futures position will tend to move
in a direction contrary to the market. Selling futures contracts,
therefore, will tend to offset both positive and negative market price
changes, much as if the underlying instrument had been sold.
FUTURES MARGIN PAYMENTS. The purchaser or seller of a futures contract is
not required to deliver or pay for the underlying instrument unless the
contract is held until the delivery date. However, both the purchaser and
seller are required to deposit "initial margin" with a futures broker,
known as a futures commission merchant (FCM), when the contract is entered
into. Initial margin deposits are typically equal to a percentage of the
contract's value. If the value of either party's position declines, that
party will be required to make additional "variation margin" payments to
settle the change in value on a daily basis. The party that has a gain may
be entitled to receive all or a portion of this amount. Initial and
variation margin payments do not constitute purchasing securities on margin
for purposes of a fund's investment limitations. In the event of the
bankruptcy of an FCM that holds margin on behalf of a fund, the fund may be
entitled to return of margin owed to it only in proportion to the amount
received by the FCM's other customers, potentially resulting in losses to
the fund.
LIMITATIONS ON FUTURES AND OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS. Each fund has filed a
notice of eligibility for exclusion from the definition of the term
"commodity pool operator" with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(CFTC) and the National Futures Association, which regulate trading in the
futures markets. The funds intend to comply with Rule 4.5 under the
Commodity Exchange Act, which limits the extent to which the funds can
commit assets to initial margin deposits and option premiums.
In addition, each fund will not: (a) sell futures contracts, purchase put
options, or write call options if, as a result, more than 25% of the fund's
total assets would be hedged with futures and options under normal
conditions; (b) purchase futures contracts or write put options if, as a
result, the fund's total obligations upon settlement or exercise of
purchased futures contracts and written put options would exceed 25% of its
total assets; or (c) purchase call options if, as a result, the current
value of option premiums for call options purchased by the fund would
exceed 5% of the fund's total assets. These limitations do not apply to
options attached to or acquired or traded together with their underlying
securities, and do not apply to securities that incorporate features
similar to options.
The above limitations on the funds' investments in futures contracts and
options, and the funds' policies regarding futures contracts and options
discussed elsewhere in this Statement of Additional Information, may be
changed as regulatory agencies permit.
LIQUIDITY OF OPTIONS AND FUTURES CONTRACTS. There is no assurance a liquid
secondary market will exist for any particular options or futures contract
at any particular time. Options may have relatively low trading volume and
liquidity if their strike prices are not close to the underlying
instrument's current price. In addition, exchanges may establish daily
price fluctuation limits for options and futures contracts, and may halt
trading if a contract's price moves upward or downward more than the limit
in a given day. On volatile trading days when the price fluctuation limit
is reached or a trading halt is imposed, it may be impossible for a fund to
enter into new positions or close out existing positions. If the secondary
market for a contract is not liquid because of price fluctuation limits or
otherwise, it could prevent prompt liquidation of unfavorable positions,
and potentially could require a fund to continue to hold a position until
delivery or expiration regardless of changes in its value. As a result, a
fund's access to other assets held to cover its options or futures
positions could also be impaired.
OPTIONS AND FUTURES RELATING TO FOREIGN CURRENCIES. Currency futures
contracts are similar to forward currency exchange contracts, except that
they are traded on exchanges (and have margin requirements) and are
standardized as to contract size and delivery date. Most currency futures
contracts call for payment or delivery in U.S. dollars. The underlying
instrument of a currency option may be a foreign currency, which generally
is purchased or delivered in exchange for U.S. dollars, or may be a futures
contract. The purchaser of a currency call obtains the right to purchase
the underlying currency, and the purchaser of a currency put obtains the
right to sell the underlying currency.
The uses and risks of currency options and futures are similar to options
and futures relating to securities or indices, as discussed above. The
funds may purchase and sell currency futures and may purchase and write
currency options to increase or decrease their exposure to different
foreign currencies. A fund may also purchase and write currency options in
conjunction with each other or with currency futures or forward contracts.
Currency futures and options values can be expected to correlate with
exchange rates, but may not reflect other factors that affect the value of
a fund's investments. A currency hedge, for example, should protect a
Yen-denominated security from a decline in the Yen, but will not protect a
fund against a price decline resulting from deterioration in the issuer's
creditworthiness. Because the value of a fund's foreign-denominated
investments changes in response to many factors other than exchange rates,
it may not be possible to match the amount of currency options and futures
to the value of the fund's investments exactly over time.
OTC OPTIONS. Unlike exchange-traded options, which are standardized with
respect to the underlying instrument, expiration date, contract size, and
strike price, the terms of over-the-counter (OTC) options (options not
traded on exchanges) generally are established through negotiation with the
other party to the option contract. While this type of arrangement allows
the funds greater flexibility to tailor an option to its needs, OTC options
generally involve greater credit risk than exchange-traded options, which
are guaranteed by the clearing organization of the exchanges where they are
traded.
PURCHASING PUT AND CALL OPTIONS. By purchasing a put option, a fund obtains
the right (but not the obligation) to sell the option's underlying
instrument at a fixed strike price. In return for this right, the fund pays
the current market price for the option (known as the option premium).
Options have various types of underlying instruments, including specific
securities, indices of securities prices, and futures contracts. The fund
may terminate its position in a put option it has purchased by allowing it
to expire or by exercising the option. If the option is allowed to expire,
the fund will lose the entire premium it paid. If the fund exercises the
option, it completes the sale of the underlying instrument at the strike
price. A fund may also terminate a put option position by closing it out in
the secondary market at its current price, if a liquid secondary market
exists.
The buyer of a typical put option can expect to realize a gain if security
prices fall substantially. However, if the underlying instrument's price
does not fall enough to offset the cost of purchasing the option, a put
buyer can expect to suffer a loss (limited to the amount of the premium
paid, plus related transaction costs).
The features of call options are essentially the same as those of put
options, except that the purchaser of a call option obtains the right to
purchase, rather than sell, the underlying instrument at the option's
strike price. A call buyer typically attempts to participate in potential
price increases of the underlying instrument with risk limited to the cost
of the option if security prices fall. At the same time, the buyer can
expect to suffer a loss if security prices do not rise sufficiently to
offset the cost of the option.
WRITING PUT AND CALL OPTIONS. When a fund writes a put option, it takes the
opposite side of the transaction from the option's purchaser. In return for
receipt of the premium, the fund assumes the obligation to pay the strike
price for the option's underlying instrument if the other party to the
option chooses to exercise it. When writing an option on a futures
contract, the fund will be required to make margin payments to an FCM as
described above for futures contracts. A fund may seek to terminate its
position in a put option it writes before exercise by closing out the
option in the secondary market at its current price. If the secondary
market is not liquid for a put option the fund has written, however, the
fund must continue to be prepared to pay the strike price while the option
is outstanding, regardless of price changes, and must continue to set aside
assets to cover its position.
If security prices rise, a put writer would generally expect to profit,
although its gain would be limited to the amount of the premium it
received. If security prices remain the same over time, it is likely that
the writer will also profit, because it should be able to close out the
option at a lower price. If security prices fall, the put writer would
expect to suffer a loss. This loss should be less than the loss from
purchasing the underlying instrument directly, however, because the premium
received for writing the option should mitigate the effects of the decline.
Writing a call option obligates a fund to sell or deliver the option's
underlying instrument, in return for the strike price, upon exercise of the
option. The characteristics of writing call options are similar to those of
writing put options, except that writing calls generally is a profitable
strategy if prices remain the same or fall. Through receipt of the option
premium, a call writer mitigates the effects of a price decline. At the
same time, because a call writer must be prepared to deliver the underlying
instrument in return for the strike price, even if its current value is
greater, a call writer gives up some ability to participate in security
price increases.
ILLIQUID INVESTMENTS are investments that cannot be sold or disposed of in
the ordinary course of business at approximately the prices at which they
are valued. Under the supervision of the Board of Trustees, FMR determines
the liquidity of a fund's investments and, through reports from FMR, the
Board monitors investments in illiquid instruments. In determining the
liquidity of a fund's investments, FMR may consider various factors,
including (1) the frequency of trades and quotations, (2) the number of
dealers and prospective purchasers in the marketplace, (3) dealer
undertakings to make a market, (4) the nature of the security (including
any demand or tender features), and (5) the nature of the marketplace for
trades (including the ability to assign or offset the fund's rights and
obligations relating to the investment).
Investments currently considered by the funds to be illiquid include
repurchase agreements not entitling the holder to payment of principal and
interest within seven days, over-the-counter options, and non-government
stripped fixed-rate mortgage-backed securities. Also, FMR may determine
some restricted securities, government-stripped fixed-rate mortgage-backed
securities, loans and other direct debt instruments, emerging market
securities, and swap agreements to be illiquid. However, with respect to
over-the-counter options a fund writes, all or a portion of the value of
the underlying instrument may be illiquid depending on the assets held to
cover the option and the nature and terms of any agreement the fund may
have to close out the option before expiration.
In the absence of market quotations, illiquid investments are priced at
fair value as determined in good faith by a committee appointed by the
Board of Trustees. If through a change in values, net assets, or other
circumstances, a fund were in a position where more than 10% of its net
assets was invested in illiquid securities, it would seek to take
appropriate steps to protect liquidity.
INDEXED SECURITIES. Each fund may purchase securities whose prices are
indexed to the prices of other securities, securities indices, currencies,
precious metals or other commodities, or other financial indicators.
Indexed securities typically, but not always, are debt securities or
deposits whose value at maturity or coupon rate is determined by reference
to a specific instrument or statistic. Gold-indexed securities, for
example, typically provide for a maturity value that depends on the price
of gold, resulting in a security whose price tends to rise and fall
together with gold prices. Currency-indexed securities typically are
short-term to intermediate-term debt securities whose maturity values or
interest rates are determined by reference to the values of one or more
specified foreign currencies, and may offer higher yields than U.S.
dollar-denominated securities of equivalent issuers. Currency-indexed
securities may be positively or negatively indexed; that is, their maturity
value may increase when the specified currency value increases, resulting
in a security that performs similarly to a foreign-denominated instrument,
or their maturity value may decline when foreign currencies increase,
resulting in a security whose price characteristics are similar to a put on
the underlying currency. Currency-indexed securities may also have prices
that depend on the values of a number of different foreign currencies
relative to each other.
The performance of indexed securities depends to a great extent on the
performance of the security, currency, or other instrument to which they
are indexed, and may also be influenced by interest rate changes in the
United States and abroad. At the same time, indexed securities are subject
to the credit risks associated with the issuer of the security, and their
values may decline substantially if the issuer's creditworthiness
deteriorates. Recent issuers of indexed securities have included banks,
corporations, and certain U.S. government agencies. Indexed securities may
be more volatile than the underlying instruments.
INTERFUND BORROWING    AND LENDING     PROGRAM. Pursuant to an exemptive
order issued by the SEC, each fund has received permission to lend money
to, and borrow money from, other funds advised by FMR or its affiliates.
Interfund loans and borrowings normally extend overnight, but can have a
maximum duration of seven days. Loans may be called on one day's notice. A
fund will lend through the program only when the returns are higher than
those available from other short-term instruments (such as repurchase
agreements), and will borrow through the program only when the costs are
equal to or lower than the cost of bank loans. A fund may have to borrow
from a bank at a higher interest rate if an interfund loan is called or not
renewed. Any delay in repayment to a lending fund could result in a lost
investment opportunity or additional borrowing costs.
LOANS AND OTHER DIRECT DEBT INSTRUMENTS. Direct debt instruments are
interests in amounts owed by a corporate, governmental, or other borrower
to lenders or lending syndicates (loans and loan participations), to
suppliers of goods or services (trade claims or other receivables), or to
other parties. Direct debt instruments are subject to each fund's policies
regarding the quality of debt securities. 
Purchasers of loans and other forms of direct indebtedness depend primarily
upon the creditworthiness of the borrower for payment of principal and
interest. Direct debt instruments may not be rated by any nationally
recognized rating service. If a fund does not receive scheduled interest or
principal payments on such indebtedness, the fund's share price and yield
could be adversely affected. Loans that are fully secured offer a fund more
protections than an unsecured loan in the event of non-payment of scheduled
interest or principal. However, there is no assurance that the liquidation
of collateral from a secured loan would satisfy the borrower's obligation,
or that the collateral could be liquidated. Indebtedness of borrowers whose
creditworthiness is poor involves substantially greater risks and may be
highly speculative. Borrowers that are in bankruptcy or restructuring may
never pay off their indebtedness, or may pay only a small fraction of the
amount owed. Direct indebtedness of developing countries also involves a
risk that the governmental entities responsible for the repayment of the
debt may be unable, or unwilling, to pay interest and repay principal when
due.
Investments in loans through direct assignment of a financial institution's
interests with respect to a loan may involve additional risks to a fund.
For example, if a loan is foreclosed, the fund could become part owner of
any collateral, and would bear the costs and liabilities associated with
owning and disposing of the collateral. In addition, it is conceivable that
under emerging legal theories of lender liability, the fund could be held
liable as a co-lender. Direct debt instruments may also involve a risk of
insolvency of the lending bank or other intermediary. Direct debt
instruments that are not in the form of securities may offer less legal
protection to a fund in the event of fraud or misrepresentation. In the
absence of definitive regulatory guidance, each fund relies on FMR's
research in an attempt to avoid situations where fraud or misrepresentation
could adversely affect the fund.
A loan is often administered by a bank or other financial institution that
acts as agent for all holders. The agent administers the terms of the loan,
as specified in the loan agreement. Unless, under the terms of the loan or
other indebtedness, each fund has direct recourse against the borrower, it
may have to rely on the agent to apply appropriate credit remedies against
a borrower. If assets held by the agent for the benefit of a fund were
determined to be subject to the claims of the agent's general creditors,
the fund might incur certain costs and delays in realizing payment on the
loan or loan participation and could suffer a loss of principal or
interest.
Direct indebtedness purchased by each fund may include letters of credit,
revolving credit facilities, or other standby financing commitments
obligating the fund to pay additional cash on demand. These commitments may
have the effect of requiring the fund to increase its investment in a
borrower at a time when it would not otherwise have done so, even if the
borrower's condition makes it unlikely that the amount will ever be repaid.
Each fund will set aside appropriate liquid assets in a segregated
custodial account to cover its potential obligations under standby
financing commitments. 
Each fund limits the amount of total assets that it will invest in any one
issuer or in issuers within the same industry (see limitations 1 and 5 for
each fund). For purposes of these limitations, each fund generally will
treat the borrower as the "issuer" of indebtedness held by the fund. In the
case of loan participations where a bank or other lending institution
serves as financial intermediary between each fund and the borrower, if the
participation does not shift to the fund the direct debtor-creditor
relationship with the borrower, SEC interpretations require the fund, in
appropriate circumstances, to treat both the lending bank or other lending
institution and the borrower as "issuers" for these purposes. Treating a
financial intermediary as an issuer of indebtedness may restrict a fund's
ability to invest in indebtedness related to a single financial
intermediary, or a group of intermediaries engaged in the same industry,
even if the underlying borrowers represent many different companies and
industries.
LOWER-QUALITY DEBT SECURITIES. While the market for high-yield corporate
debt securities has been in existence for many years and has weathered
previous economic downturns, the 1980s brought a dramatic increase in the
use of such securities to fund highly leveraged corporate acquisitions and
restructurings. Past experience may not provide an accurate indication of
the future performance of the high-yield bond market, especially during
periods of economic recession. In fact, from 1989 to 1991, the percentage
of lower-quality securities that defaulted rose significantly above prior
levels, although the default rate decreased in 1992 and 1993.
The market for lower-quality debt securities may be thinner and less active
than that for higher-quality debt securities, which can adversely affect
the prices at which the former are sold. If market quotations are not
available, lower-quality debt securities will be valued in accordance with
procedures established by the Board of Trustees, including the use of
outside pricing services. Judgment plays a greater role in valuing
high-yield corporate debt securities than is the case for securities for
which more external sources for quotations and last-sale information are
available. Adverse publicity and changing investor perceptions may affect
the ability of outside pricing services to value lower-quality debt
securities and a fund's ability to dispose of these securities.
Since the risk of default is higher for lower-quality debt securities,
FMR's research and credit analysis are an especially important part of
managing securities of this type held by a fund. In considering investments
for the fund, FMR will attempt to identify those issuers of high-yielding
securities whose financial condition is adequate to meet future
obligations, has improved, or is expected to improve in the future. FMR's
analysis focuses on relative values based on such factors as interest or
dividend coverage, asset coverage, earnings prospects, and the experience
and managerial strength of the issuer.
Each fund may choose, at its expense or in conjunction with others, to
pursue litigation or otherwise to exercise its rights as a security holder
to seek to protect the interests of security holders if it determines this
to be in the best interest of the fund's shareholders.
REAL ESTATE-RELATED INSTRUMENTS include real estate investment trusts,
commercial and residential mortgage-backed securities, and real estate
financings. Real estate-related instruments are sensitive to factors such
as real estate values and property taxes, interest rates, cash flow of
underlying real estate assets, overbuilding, and the management skill and
creditworthiness of the issuer. Real estate-related instruments may also be
affected by tax and regulatory requirements, such as those relating to the
environment.
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS. In a repurchase agreement, a fund purchases a
security and simultaneously commits to sell that security back to the
original seller at an agreed-upon price. The resale price reflects the
purchase price plus an agreed-upon incremental amount which is unrelated to
the coupon rate or maturity of the purchased security.    The securities
purchased by a fund are used to collateralize the repurchase obligation. As
such, they are held in an account of the fund at a bank, marked-to-market
daily, and maintained at a value at least equal to the sale price plus the
accrued incremental amount.     While it does not presently appear possible
to eliminate all risks from these transactions (particularly the
possibility that the value of the underlying security will be less than the
resale price, as well as delays and costs to a fund in connection with
bankruptcy proceedings), it is each fund's current policy to engage in
repurchase agreement transactions with parties whose creditworthiness has
been reviewed and found satisfactory by FMR.
RESTRICTED SECURITIES generally can be sold in privately negotiated
transactions, pursuant to an exemption from registration under the
Securities Act of 1933, or in a registered public offering. Where
registration is required, a fund may be obligated to pay all or part of the
registration expense and a considerable period may elapse between the time
it decides to seek registration and the time it may be permitted to sell a
security under an effective registration statement. If, during such a
period, adverse market conditions were to develop, a fund might obtain a
less favorable price than prevailed when it decided to seek registration of
the security.
REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS. In a reverse repurchase agreement, a fund
sells a portfolio instrument to another party, such as a bank or
broker-dealer, in return for cash and agrees to repurchase the instrument
at a particular price and time. While a reverse repurchase agreement is
outstanding, the fund will maintain appropriate liquid assets in a
segregated custodial account to cover its obligation under the agreement. A
fund will enter into reverse repurchase agreements only with parties whose
creditworthiness has been found satisfactory by FMR. Such transactions may
increase fluctuations in the market value of the fund's assets and may be
viewed as a form of leverage.
SECURITIES LENDING. A fund may lend securities to parties such as
broker-dealers or institutional investors, including Fidelity Brokerage
Services, Inc. (FBSI). FBSI is a member of the New York Stock Exchange and
a subsidiary of FMR Corp.
Securities lending allows a fund to retain ownership of the securities
loaned and, at the same time, to earn additional income. Since there may be
delays in the recovery of loaned securities, or even a loss of rights in
collateral supplied should the borrower fail financially, loans will be
made only to parties deemed by FMR to be of good standing. Furthermore,
they will only be made if, in FMR's judgment, the consideration to be
earned from such loans would justify the risk.
FMR understands that it is the current view of the SEC Staff that a fund
may engage in loan transactions only under the following conditions: (1)
the fund must receive 100% collateral in the form of cash or cash
equivalents (e.g., U.S. Treasury bills or notes) from the borrower; (2) the
borrower must increase the collateral whenever the market value of the
securities loaned (determined on a daily basis) rises above the value of
the collateral; (3) after giving notice, the fund must be able to terminate
the loan at any time; (4) the fund must receive reasonable interest on the
loan or a flat fee from the borrower, as well as amounts equivalent to any
dividends, interest, or other distributions on the securities loaned and to
any increase in market value; (5) the fund may pay only reasonable
custodian fees in connection with the loan; and (6) the Board of Trustees
must be able to vote proxies on the securities loaned, either by
terminating the loan or by entering into an alternative arrangement with
the borrower.
Cash received through loan transactions may be invested in any security in
which a fund is authorized to invest. Investing this cash subjects that
investment, as well as the security loaned, to market forces (i.e., capital
appreciation or depreciation).
SHORT SALES "AGAINST THE BOX." If a fund enters into a short sale against
the box, it will be required to set aside securities equivalent in kind and
amount to the securities sold short (or securities convertible or
exchangeable into such securities) and will be required to hold such
securities while the short sale is outstanding. The fund will incur
transaction costs, including interest expenses, in connection with opening,
maintaining, and closing short sales against the box.
SWAP AGREEMENTS. Swap agreements can be individually negotiated and
structured to include exposure to a variety of different types of
investments or market factors. Depending on their structure, swap
agreements may increase or decrease a fund's exposure to long- or
short-term interest rates (in the United States or abroad), foreign
currency values, mortgage securities, corporate borrowing rates, or other
factors such as security prices or inflation rates. Swap agreements can
take many different forms and are known by a variety of names. A fund is
not limited to any particular form of swap agreement if FMR determines it
is consistent with the fund's investment objective and policies.
In a typical cap or floor agreement, one party agrees to make payments only
under specified circumstances, usually in return for payment of a fee by
the other party. For example, the buyer of an interest rate cap obtains the
right to receive payments to the extent that a specified interest rate
exceeds an agreed-upon level, while the seller of an interest rate floor is
obligated to make payments to the extent that a specified interest rate
falls below an agreed-upon level. An interest rate collar combines elements
of buying a cap and selling a floor.
Swap agreements will tend to shift a fund's investment exposure from one
type of investment to another. For example, if the fund agreed to exchange
payments in dollars for payments in foreign currency, the swap agreement
would tend to decrease the fund's exposure to U.S. interest rates and
increase its exposure to foreign currency and interest rates. Caps and
floors have an effect similar to buying or writing options. Depending on
how they are used, swap agreements may increase or decrease the overall
volatility of a fund's investments and its share price.
The most significant factor in the performance of swap agreements is the
change in the specific interest rate, currency, or other factors that
determine the amounts of payments due to and from a fund. If a swap
agreement calls for payments by the fund, the fund must be prepared to make
such payments when due. In addition, if the counterparty's creditworthiness
declined, the value of a swap agreement would be likely to decline,
potentially resulting in losses. Each fund expects to be able to eliminate
its exposure under swap agreements either by assignment or other
disposition, or by entering into an offsetting swap agreement with the same
party or a similarly creditworthy party.
Each fund will maintain appropriate liquid assets in a segregated custodial
account to cover its current obligations under swap agreements. If a fund
enters into a swap agreement on a net basis, it will segregate assets with
a daily value at least equal to the excess, if any, of the fund's accrued
obligations under the swap agreement over the accrued amount the fund is
entitled to receive under the agreement. If a fund enters into a swap
agreement on other than a net basis, it will segregate assets with a value
equal to the full amount of the fund's accrued obligations under the
agreement.
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
All orders for the purchase or sale of portfolio securities are placed on
behalf of each fund by FMR pursuant to authority contained in the
management contract. If FMR grants investment management authority to the
sub-advisers (see the section entitled "Management Contracts"), the
sub-advisers are authorized to place orders for the purchase and sale of
portfolio securities, and will do so in accordance with the policies
described below. FMR is also responsible for the placement of transaction
orders for other investment companies and accounts for which it or its
affiliates act as investment adviser. In selecting broker-dealers, subject
to applicable limitations of the federal securities laws, FMR considers
various relevant factors, including, but not limited to: the size and type
of the transaction; the nature and character of the markets for the
security to be purchased or sold; the execution efficiency, settlement
capability, and financial condition of the broker-dealer firm; the
broker-dealer's execution services rendered on a continuing basis; the
reasonableness of any commissions; and arrangements for payment of fund
expenses. Generally, commissions for foreign investments traded will be
higher than for U.S. investments and may not be subject to negotiation.
The funds may execute portfolio transactions with broker-dealers who
provide research and execution services to the funds or other accounts over
which FMR or its affiliates exercise investment discretion. Such services
may include advice concerning the value of securities; the advisability of
investing in, purchasing, or selling securities;    and     the
availability of securities or the purchasers or sellers of    securities.
In addition, such broker-dealers may furnish     analyses and reports
concerning issuers, industries, securities, economic factors and trends,
portfolio strategy, and performance of accounts;    effect     securities
transactions, and perform functions incidental thereto (such as clearance
and settlement). The selection of such broker-dealers generally is made by
FMR (to the extent possible consistent with execution considerations) in
accordance with a ranking of broker-dealers determined periodically by
FMR's investment staff based upon the quality of research and execution
services provided.
The receipt of research from broker-dealers that execute transactions on
behalf of the funds may be useful to FMR in rendering investment management
services to the funds or its other clients, and conversely, such research
provided by broker-dealers who have executed transaction orders on behalf
of other FMR clients may be useful to FMR in carrying out its obligations
to the funds. The receipt of such research has not reduced FMR's normal
independent research activities; however, it enables FMR to avoid the
additional expenses that could be incurred if FMR tried to develop
comparable information through its own efforts.
Subject to applicable limitations of the federal securities laws,
broker-dealers may receive commissions for agency transactions that are in
excess of the amount of commissions charged by other broker-dealers in
recognition of their research and execution services. In order to cause
each fund to pay such higher commissions, FMR must determine in good faith
that such commissions are reasonable in relation to the value of the
brokerage and research services provided by such executing broker-dealers,
viewed in terms of a particular transaction or FMR's overall
responsibilities to the funds and its other clients. In reaching this
determination, FMR will not attempt to place a specific dollar value on the
brokerage and research services provided, or to determine what portion of
the compensation should be related to those services.
FMR is authorized to use research services provided by and to place
portfolio transactions with brokerage firms that have provided assistance
in the distribution of shares of the funds or shares of other Fidelity
funds to the extent permitted by law. FMR may use research services
provided by and place agency transactions with Fidelity Brokerage Services,
Inc. (FBSI) and    Fidelity Brokerage Services (FBS    ), subsidiaries of
FMR Corp., if the commissions are fair, reasonable, and comparable to
commissions charged by non-affiliated, qualified brokerage firms for
similar services.    From September 1992 through December 1994, FBS
operated under the name Fidelity Brokerage Services Limited, Inc. (FBSL).
As of January 1995, FBSL was converted to an unlimited liability company
and assumed the name FBS. Prior to September 4, 1992, FBSL operated under
the name Fidelity Portfolio Services, Ltd. (FPSL) as a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Fidelity International Limited (FIL). Edward C. Johnson 3d is
Chairman of FIL. Mr. Johnson 3d, Johnson family members, and various trusts
for the benefit of the Johnson family own, directly or indirectly, more
than 25% of the voting common stock of FIL.    
FMR may allocate brokerage transactions to broker-dealers who have entered
into arrangements with FMR under which the broker-dealer allocates a
portion of the commissions paid by each fund toward payment of the fund's
expenses, such as transfer agent fees or custodian fees. The transaction
quality must, however, be comparable to those of other qualified
broker-dealers.
Section 11(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 prohibits members of
national securities exchanges from executing exchange transactions for
accounts which they or their affiliates manage, unless certain requirements
are satisfied. Pursuant to such requirements, the Board of Trustees has
authorized FBSI to execute portfolio transactions on national securities
exchanges in accordance with approved procedures and applicable SEC rules.
Each fund's Trustees periodically review FMR's performance of its
responsibilities in connection with the placement of portfolio transactions
on behalf of the funds and review the commissions paid by each fund over
representative periods of time to determine if they are reasonable in
relation to the benefits to the fund.
Small Cap Stock's portfolio turnover rates for the fiscal year ended April
30, 1995, and the fiscal period June 28, 1993 (commencement of operations)
through April 30, 1994, were    182%     and 210% (annualized),
respectively. Effective March 16, 1995, the fiscal year end for Mid-Cap
Stock was changed from January 31 to April 30. Mid-Cap Stock's annualized
portfolio turnover rates for the fiscal periods February 1, 1995 through
April 30, 1995, and March 29, 1994 (commencement of operations) through
January 31, 1995, were 163% and 190%, respectively.    Large Cap Stock's
annualized portfolio turnover rate for its first fiscal period is not
expected to exceed 200%.     Because a high turnover rate increases
transaction costs and may increase taxable gains, FMR carefully weighs the
anticipated benefits of short-term investing against these consequences.
   Each fund pays both commissions and spreads in connection with the
placement of portfolio transactions. FBSI is paid on a commission basis.
The table below lists Small Cap Stock's and Mid-Cap Stock's total brokerage
commissions, the total commissions and the percentage of brokerage
commissions paid to brokerage firms that provided research services, and
the dollar amount of commissions paid to FBSI during each fund's respective
fiscal periods. The table also lists the percentages of each fund's
aggregate brokerage commissions paid to FBSI during their respective fiscal
periods, as well as the percentages of each fund's aggregate dollar amount
of transactions effected through FBSI during the same periods. The
difference between the percentage of brokerage commissions paid to and the
percentage of the dollar amount of transactions effected through FBSI is a
result of the low commission rates charged by FBSI.    
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                      <C>           <C>              <C>          <C>            <C>            <C>             
   Fiscal Period 
       Total         Total            % Paid to    Commissions    % of           % of            
   Ended April     30                  Commissions      Firms        Paid           Commissions    Transactions    
                                       Paid to Firms    Providing    To FBSI        Paid to FBSI   Effected        
                                       Providing        Research                                   Through FBSI    
                                       Research                                                                    
 
   Small Cap Stock                                                                                                 
 
    1995                 $ 1,991,619   $ 1,700,334       85.4%       $ 144,241       7.2%           7.2%           
 
    1994    *             1,648,301     938,302          57.0%        178,800        11.0%          7.4%           
 
   Mid-Cap Stock                                                                                                   
 
    1995*    *           $ 478,966     $ 455,987         95.0%       $ 145,249       30.0%          43.0%          
 
    1995***               251,433       241,388          96.0%        123,577        49.0%          57.0%          
 
</TABLE>
 
   * From June 28, 1993 (commencement of operations) to April 30, 1994.
** From February 1, 1995 to April 30, 1995.
*** From March 29, 1994 (commencement of operations) to January 31,
1995.    
From time to time the Trustees will review whether the recapture for the
benefit of the funds of some portion of the brokerage commissions or
similar fees paid by the funds on portfolio transactions is legally
permissible and advisable. Each fund seeks to recapture soliciting
broker-dealer fees on the tender of portfolio securities, but at present no
other recapture arrangements are in effect. The Trustees intend to continue
to review whether recapture opportunities are available and are legally
permissible and, if so, to determine in the exercise of their business
judgment whether it would be advisable for each fund to seek such
recapture.
Although the Trustees and officers of each fund are substantially the same
as those of other funds managed by FMR, investment decisions for each fund
are made independently from those of other funds managed by FMR or accounts
managed by FMR affiliates. It sometimes happens that the same security is
held in the portfolio of more than one of these funds or accounts.
Simultaneous transactions are inevitable when several funds and accounts
are managed by the same investment adviser, particularly when the same
security is suitable for the investment objective of more than one fund or
account.
When two or more funds are simultaneously engaged in the purchase or sale
of the same security, the prices and amounts are allocated in accordance
with procedures believed to be appropriate and equitable for each fund. In
some cases this system could have a detrimental effect on the price or
value of the security as far as each fund is concerned. In other cases,
however, the ability of the funds to participate in volume transactions
will produce better executions and prices for the funds. It is the current
opinion of the Trustees that the desirability of retaining FMR as
investment adviser to each fund outweighs any disadvantages that may be
said to exist from exposure to simultaneous transactions.
VALUATION OF PORTFOLIO SECURITIES
Portfolio securities are valued by various methods depending on the primary
market or exchange on which they trade. Most equity securities for which
the primary market is the U.S. are valued at last sale price or, if no sale
has occurred, at the closing bid price. Most equity securities for which
the primary market is outside the U.S. are valued using the official
closing price or the last sale price in the principal market where they are
traded. If the last sale price (on the local exchange) is unavailable, the
last evaluated quote or last bid price is normally used. Short-term
securities are valued either at amortized cost or at original cost plus
accrued interest, both of which approximate current value. Convertible
securities and fixed-income securities are valued primarily by a pricing
service that uses a vendor security valuation matrix which incorporates
both dealer-supplied valuations and electronic data processing techniques.
This two-fold approach is believed to more accurately reflect fair value
because it takes into account appropriate factors such as institutional
trading in similar groups of securities, yield, quality, coupon rate,
maturity, type of issue, trading characteristics, and other market data,
without exclusive reliance upon quoted, exchange, or over-the counter
prices. Use of pricing services has been approved by the Board of Trustees.
Securities and other assets for which there is no readily available market
are valued in good faith by a committee appointed by the Board of Trustees.
The procedures set forth above need not be used to determine the value of
the securities owned by the fund if, in the opinion of a committee
appointed by the Board of Trustees, some other method (e.g., closing
over-the-counter bid prices in the case of debt instruments traded on an
exchange) would more accurately reflect the fair market value of such
securities.
Generally, the valuation of foreign and domestic equity securities, as well
as corporate bonds, U.S. government securities, money market instruments,
and repurchase agreements, is substantially completed each day at the close
of the NYSE. The values of any such securities held by a fund are
determined as of such time for the purpose of computing the fund's net
asset value. Foreign security prices are furnished by independent brokers
or quotation services which express the value of securities in their local
currency. FSC gathers all exchange rates daily at the close of the NYSE
using the last quoted price on the local currency and then translates the
value of foreign securities from their local currency into U.S. dollars.
Any changes in the value of forward contracts due to exchange rate
fluctuations and days to maturity are included in the calculation of net
asset value. If an extraordinary event that is expected to materially
affect the value of a portfolio security occurs after the close of an
exchange on which that security is traded, then the security will be valued
as determined in good faith by a committee appointed by the Board of
Trustees.
PERFORMANCE
The funds may quote performance in various ways. All performance
information supplied by the funds in advertising is historical and is not
intended to indicate future returns. Each fund's share price, yield, and
total return fluctuate in response to market conditions and other factors,
and the value of fund shares when redeemed may be more or less than their
original cost. 
TOTAL RETURN CALCULATIONS. Total returns quoted in advertising reflect all
aspects of a fund's return, including the effect of reinvesting dividends
and capital gain distributions, and any change in the fund's    net asset
value     (NAV) over a stated period. Average annual total returns are
calculated by determining the growth or decline in value of a hypothetical
historical investment in a fund over a stated period, and then calculating
the annually compounded percentage rate that would have produced the same
result if the rate of growth or decline in value had been constant over the
period. For example, a cumulative total return of 100% over ten years would
produce an average annual return of 7.18%, which is the steady annual rate
of return that would equal 100% growth on a compounded basis in ten years.
   Average annual returns covering periods of less than one year are
calculated by determining a fund's total return for the period, extending
that return for a full year (assuming that return remains constant over the
year), and quoting the result as an annual return.     While average annual
returns are a convenient means of comparing investment alternatives,
investors should realize that a fund's performance is not constant over
time, but changes from year to year, and that average annual returns
represent averaged figures as opposed to the actual year-to-year
performance of the fund.
In addition to average annual total returns, a fund may quote unaveraged or
cumulative total returns reflecting the simple change in value of an
investment over a stated period. Average annual and cumulative total
returns may be quoted as a percentage or as a dollar amount, and may be
calculated for a single investment, a series of investments, or a series of
redemptions, over any time period. Total returns may be broken down into
their components of income and capital (including capital gains and changes
in share price) in order to illustrate the relationship of these factors
and their contributions to total return. Total returns may be quoted on a
before-tax or after-tax basis, and, for Small Cap Stock, may be quoted with
or without taking the fund's 3% sales charge into account. Excluding a
fund's sales charge from a total return calculation produces a higher total
return figure. Total returns, yields, and other performance information may
be quoted numerically or in a table, graph, or similar illustration.
NET ASSET VALUE. Charts and graphs using a fund's net asset values,
adjusted net asset values, and benchmark indices may be used to exhibit
performance. An adjusted NAV includes any distributions paid by a fund and
reflects all elements of its return. Unless otherwise indicated, a fund's
adjusted NAVs are not adjusted for sales charges, if any.
MOVING AVERAGES. A fund may illustrate performance using moving averages. A
long-term moving average is the average of each week's adjusted closing NAV
for a specified period. A short-term moving average is the average of each
day's adjusted closing NAV for a specified period. Moving Average Activity
Indicators combine adjusted closing NAVs from the last business day of each
week with moving averages for a specified period to produce indicators
showing when an NAV has crossed, stayed above, or stayed below its moving
average. On    April 28, 1995     the 13-week and 39-week long-term moving
averages were    10.58     and    10.44    , respectively, for Small Cap
Stock and 11.50 and 10.91, respectively, for Mid-Cap Stock.
HISTORICAL FUND RESULTS. The following table shows    Small Cap Stock's and
Mid-Cap Stock's     total returns for periods ended    April 30, 1995.
Total return figures for Small Cap Stock     include the effect of the
fund's 3% sales charge.
SMALL CAP STOCK
Average Annual Total Returns               Cumulative Total Returns     
 
One                    Life of          One                    Life of         
Year                   Fund*            Year                   Fund*           
 
                                                                               
 
     0.02    %              3.60%            0.02    %             6.7    3%   
 
* From June 28, 1993 (commencement of operations).
MID-CAP STOCK
Average Annual Total Returns               Cumulative Total Returns      
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>               <C>   <C>               <C>               <C>   <C>              
One                     Life of           One                     Life of          
Year                    Fund*             Year                    Fund*            
 
                                                                                   
 
     23.94    %              19.97    %        23.94    %             21.96%       
 
</TABLE>
 
* From March 29, 1994 (commencement of operations).
The following tables show the income and capital elements of    Small Cap
Stock's and Mid-Cap Stock's     cumulative total return. The    tables
    compare each fund's return to the record of the Standard and Poor's
Composite Index of 500 Stocks (S&P 500(registered trademark)), the Dow
Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), and the cost of living (measured by the
Consumer Price Index, or CPI) over the same period. The CPI information is
as of the    month-end     closest to the initial investment date for each
fund. In addition, Small Cap Stock's table compares the fund's returns to
the Russell 2000 Index (Russell 2000) and Mid-Cap Stock's table compares
the fund's returns to the Standard & Poor's MidCap 400 Index (S&P MidCap
400(registered trademark)). The S&P 500 and the DJIA comparisons are
provided to show how each fund's total return compared to the record of a
broad average of common stock prices and a narrower set of stocks of major
industrial companies, respectively, over the same period. Each fund has the
ability to invest in securities not included in either index, and its
investment portfolio may or may not be similar in composition to the
indices. Figures for the    S&P MidCap 400, Russell 2000,     S&P 500 and
DJIA are based on the prices of unmanaged groups of stocks and, unlike the
funds' returns, do not include the effect of paying brokerage commissions
and other costs of investing.
During the period June 28, 1993 (commencement of operations)    to    
April 30, 1995, a hypothetical $10,000 investment in Small Cap Stock would
have grown to $   10,673    , assuming all distributions were    reinvested
and including the effect of the 3% sales charge.     This was a period of
fluctuating stock prices and the figures that follow should not be
considered representative of the dividend income or capital gain or loss
that could be realized from an investment in the fund today.
FIDELITY SMALL CAP STOCK FUND INDICES
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>        <C>          <C>             <C>             <C>     <C>       <C>       <C>    <C>           
           Value of     Value of        Value of                                                         
 
Period     Initial      Reinvested      Reinvested                                                       
 
Ended      $10,000      Dividend        Capital Gain    Total   Russell                                  
 
April 30   Investment   Distributions   Distributions   Value    2000     S&P 500   DJIA   CPI(dagger)   
 
</TABLE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>              <C>         <C>     <C>     <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        
    1995         $ 10,602    $ 31    $ 40    $ 10,673   $ 11,908   $ 12,095   $ 13,013   $ 10,519   
 
    1994    *       10,292      20      39     10,350     11,105     10,297     10,793     10,208   
 
</TABLE>
 
* From June 28, 1993 (commencement of operations).
(dagger) From month-end closest to initial investment.
Explanatory Notes: With an initial investment of $10,000 made on June 28,
1993, the net amount invested in fund shares was $9,700 (assuming the
fund's 3% sales charge). The cost of the initial investment ($10,000),
together with the aggregate cost of reinvested dividends and capital gain
distributions for the period covered (their cash value at the time they
were reinvested), amounted to $   10,068.     If distributions had not been
   reinvested the amount of distributions earned from the fund over time
would have been smaller and cash payments for the period would have
amounted to $29 for dividends and $39 for capital gain distributions. Tax
consequences of different investments have not been factored into the above
figures.
During the period March 29, 1994 (commencement of operations) through April
30, 1995, a hypothetical $10,000 investment in Mid-Cap Stock would have
grown to $12,196, assuming all distributions were reinvested. This was a
period of fluctuating stock prices and the figures that follow should not
be considered representative of the dividend income or capital gain or loss
that could be realized from an investment in the fund today.    
FIDELITY MID-CAP STOCK FUND INDICES
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>        <C>          <C>             <C>             <C>     <C>        <C>       <C>    <C>           
           Value of     Value of        Value of                                                          
 
Period     Initial      Reinvested      Reinvested                                                        
 
Ended      $10,000      Dividend        Capital Gain    Total   S&P Mid-                                  
 
April 30   Investment   Distributions   Distributions   Value    Cap 400   S&P 500   DJIA   CPI(dagger)   
 
</TABLE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>             <C>        <C>    <C>      <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>       
    1995        $ 12,010   $ 0    $ 186    $ 12,196   $ 10,652   $ 11,531   $ 11,828   $10,319   
 
    1994*       $ 9,840    $ 0    $ 0      $ 9,840    $ 9,702    $ 9,817    $ 9,810    $10,014   
 
</TABLE>
 
* From March 29, 1994 (commencement of operations).
(dagger) From month-end closest to initial investment.
Explanatory Notes: With an initial investment of $10,000 made on March 29,
1994, the net amount invested in fund shares was $10,000. The cost of the
initial investment ($10,000), together with the aggregate cost of
reinvested dividends and capital gain distributions for the period covered
(their cash value at the time they were reinvested), amounted to
   $10,160    . If distributions had not been reinvested, the amount of
distributions earned from the fund over time would have been smaller, and
cash payments for the period would have amounted to    $160     for capital
gain distributions. No dividends were paid during the period. Tax
consequences of different investments have not been factored into the above
figures.
A fund's performance may be compared to the performance of other mutual
funds in general, or to the performance of particular types of mutual
funds. These comparisons may be expressed as mutual fund rankings prepared
by Lipper Analytical Services, Inc. (Lipper), an independent service
located in Summit, New Jersey that monitors the performance of mutual
funds. Lipper generally ranks funds on the basis of total return, assuming
reinvestment of distributions, but does not take sales charges or
redemption fees into consideration, and is prepared without regard to tax
consequences. In addition to the mutual fund rankings, a fund's performance
may be compared to stock, bond, and money market mutual fund performance
indices prepared by Lipper or other organizations. When comparing these
indices, it is important to remember the risk and return characteristics of
each type of investment. For example, while stock mutual funds may offer
higher potential returns, they also carry the highest degree of share price
volatility. Likewise, money market funds may offer greater stability of
principal, but generally do not offer the higher potential returns from
stock mutual funds.
From time to time, a fund's performance may also be compared to other
mutual funds tracked by financial or business publications and periodicals.
For example, the fund may quote Morningstar, Inc. in its advertising
materials. Morningstar, Inc. is a mutual fund rating service that rates
mutual funds on the basis of risk-adjusted performance. Rankings that
compare the performance of Fidelity funds to one another in appropriate
categories over specific periods of time may also be quoted in advertising.
A fund may be compared in advertising to Certificates of Deposit (CDs) or
other investments issued by banks or other depository institutions. Mutual
funds differ from bank investments in several respects. For example, a fund
may offer greater liquidity or higher potential returns than CDs, a fund
does not guarantee your principal or your return, and fund shares are not
FDIC insured.
Fidelity may provide information designed to help individuals understand
their investment goals and explore various financial strategies. Such
information may include information about current economic, market, and
political conditions; materials that describe general principles of
investing, such as asset allocation, diversification, risk tolerance, and
goal setting; questionnaires designed to help create a personal financial
profile; worksheets used to project savings needs based on assumed rates of
inflation and hypothetical rates of return; and action plans offering
investment alternatives. Materials may also include discussions of
Fidelity's asset allocation funds and other Fidelity funds, products, and
services.
Ibbotson Associates of Chicago, Illinois (Ibbotson) provides historical
returns of the capital markets in the United States, including common
stocks, small capitalization stocks, long-term corporate bonds,
intermediate-term government bonds, long-term government bonds, Treasury
bills, the U.S. rate of inflation (based on the CPI), and combinations of
various capital markets. The performance of these capital markets is based
on the returns of different indices. 
Fidelity funds may use the performance of these capital markets in order to
demonstrate general risk-versus-reward investment scenarios. Performance
comparisons may also include the value of a hypothetical investment in any
of these capital markets. The risks associated with the security types in
any capital market may or may not correspond directly to those of the
funds. Ibbotson calculates total returns in the same method as the funds.
The funds may also compare performance to that of other compilations or
indices that may be developed and made available in the future. 
In advertising materials, Fidelity may reference or discuss its products
and services, which may include: other Fidelity funds; retirement
investing; brokerage products and services; the effects of periodic
investment plans and dollar cost averaging; saving for college or other
goals; charitable giving; and the Fidelity credit card. In addition,
Fidelity may quote or reprint financial or business publications and
periodicals, including model portfolios or allocations, as they relate to
current economic and political conditions, fund management, portfolio
composition, investment philosophy, investment techniques, the desirability
of owning a particular mutual fund, and Fidelity services and products.
Fidelity may also reprint, and use as advertising and sales literature,
articles from Fidelity Focus, a quarterly magazine provided free of charge
to Fidelity fund shareholders.
A fund may present its fund number, Quotron(trademark) number, and CUSIP
number, and discuss or quote its current portfolio manager.
VOLATILITY. A fund may quote various measures of volatility and benchmark
correlation in advertising. In addition, the fund may compare these
measures to those of other funds. Measures of volatility seek to compare
the fund's historical share price fluctuations or total returns to those of
a benchmark. Measures of benchmark correlation indicate how valid a
comparative benchmark may be. All measures of volatility and correlation
are calculated using averages of historical data. 
MOMENTUM INDICATORS indicate a fund's price movements over specific periods
of time. Each point on the momentum indicator represents the fund's
percentage change in price movements over that period.
A fund may advertise examples of the effects of periodic investment plans,
including the principle of dollar cost averaging. In such a program, an
investor invests a fixed dollar amount in a fund at periodic intervals,
thereby purchasing fewer shares when prices are high and more shares when
prices are low. While such a strategy does not assure a profit or guard
against loss in a declining market, the investor's average cost per share
can be lower than if fixed numbers of shares are purchased at the same
intervals. In evaluating such a plan, investors should consider their
ability to continue purchasing shares during periods of low price levels.
A fund may be available for purchase through retirement plans or other
programs offering deferral of, or exemption from, income taxes, which may
produce superior after-tax returns over time. For example, a $1,000
investment earning a taxable return of 10% annually would have an after-tax
value of $1,949 after ten years, assuming tax was deducted from the return
each year at a 31% rate. An equivalent tax-deferred investment would have
an after-tax value of $2,100 after ten years, assuming tax was deducted at
a 31% rate from the tax-deferred earnings at the end of the ten-year
period.
As of    April 30, 1995     FMR advised over $24 billion in tax-free fund
assets, $70 billion in money market fund assets, $180 billion in equity
   fund assets, $43 billion in international     fund assets, and $21
billion in Spartan fund assets. The funds may reference the growth and
variety of money market mutual funds and the adviser's innovation and
participation in the industry. The equity funds under management figure
represents the largest amount of equity fund assets under management by a
mutual fund investment adviser in the United States, making FMR America's
leading equity (stock) fund manager. FMR, its subsidiaries, and affiliates
maintain a worldwide information and communications network for the purpose
of researching and managing investments abroad.
ADDITIONAL PURCHASE AND REDEMPTION INFORMATION
   Pursuant to Rule 22d-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the
1940 Act), FDC exercises its right to waive Small Cap Stock's front-end
sales charge on shares acquired through reinvestment of dividends and
capital gain distributions or in connection with the fund's merger with or
acquisition of any investment company or trust. In addition, FDC has chosen
to waive the fund's sales charge in certain instances because of
efficiencies involved in those sales of shares. The sales charges will not
apply:
(1) to shares purchased in connection     with an employee benefit plan
(including the Fidelity-sponsored 403(b) and corporate IRA programs but
otherwise as defined in the Employee Retirement Income Security Act)
maintained by a U.S. employer and having more than 200 eligible employees,
or a minimum of $3,000,000 in plan assets invested in Fidelity mutual
funds, or as part of an employee benefit plan maintained by a U.S. employer
that is a member of a parent-subsidiary group of corporations (within the
meaning of Section 1563(a)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code, with "50%"
substituted for "80%") any member of which maintains an employee benefit
plan having more than 200 eligible employees, or a minimum of $3,000,000 in
plan assets invested in Fidelity mutual funds, or as part of an employee
benefit plan maintained by a non-U.S. employer having 200 or more eligible
employees, or a minimum of $3,000,000 in plan assets invested in Fidelity
mutual funds, the assets of which are held in a bona fide trust for the
exclusive benefit of employees participating therein; 
(2) to shares purchased by an insurance company separate account used to
fund annuity contracts purchased by employee benefit plans (including
403(b) programs, but otherwise as defined in the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act), which, in the aggregate, have either more than 200 eligible
employees or a minimum of $3,000,000 in assets invested in Fidelity funds; 
(3) to shares in a Fidelity IRA account purchased (including purchases by
exchange) with the proceeds of a distribution from an employee benefit plan
provided that: (i) at the time of distribution, the employer, or an
affiliate (as described in exemption (1) above) of such employer,
maintained at least one employee benefit plan that qualified for exemption
(1) and that had at least some portion of its assets invested in one or
more mutual funds advised by FMR, or in one or more accounts or pools
advised by Fidelity Management Trust Company; and (ii) the distribution is
transferred from the plan to a Fidelity Rollover IRA account within 60 days
from the date of the distribution; 
(4)    to shares purchased by     a charitable organization (as defined in
Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code) investing $100,000 or more; 
(5)    to shares purchased     for a charitable remainder trust or life
income pool established for the benefit of a charitable organization (as
defined by Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code); 
(6)    to shares purchased b    y an investor participating in the Fidelity
Trust Portfolios program (these investors must make initial investments of
$100,000 or more in Trust Portfolios funds and must, during the initial six
month period, reach and maintain an aggregate balance of at least $500,000
in all accounts and subaccounts purchased through the Trust Portfolios
program); 
(7) to shares purchased through Portfolio Advisory Services; 
(8)    to shares purchased by     a current or former Trustee or officer of
a Fidelity fund or a current or retired officer, director, or regular
employee of FMR Corp. or its direct or indirect subsidiaries (a Fidelity
Trustee or employee), the spouse of a Fidelity Trustee or employee, a
Fidelity Trustee or employee acting as custodian for a minor child, or a
person acting as trustee of a trust for the sole benefit of the minor child
of a Fidelity Trustee or employee; 
(9)    to shares purchased by a bank trust officer, registered
representative, or other employee of a qualified recipient. Qualified
recipients     are securities dealers or other entities, including banks
and other financial institutions, who have sold the fund's shares under
special arrangements in connection with FDC's sales activities; 
(10) to shares purchased by contributions and exchanges to the following
prototype or prototype-like retirement plans sponsored by FMR Corp. or FMR
and that are marketed and distributed directly to plan sponsors or
participants without any intervention or assistance from any intermediary
distribution channel: The Fidelity IRA, The Fidelity Rollover IRA, The
Fidelity SEP-IRA and SARSEP, The Fidelity Retirement Plan, Fidelity Defined
Benefit Plan, The Fidelity Group IRA, The Fidelity 403(b) Program, The
Fidelity Investments 401(a) Prototype Plan for Tax-Exempt Employers, and
The CORPORATEplan for Retirement (Profit Sharing and Money Purchase Plan); 
(11) to shares purchased as part of a pension or profit-sharing plan as
defined in Section 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code that maintains all
of its mutual fund assets in Fidelity mutual funds, provided the plan
executes a Fidelity non-prototype sales charge waiver request form
confirming its qualifications. 
(12) to shares purchased by a registered investment adviser (RIA) for
   his or her     discretionary accounts, provided he or she execute a
Fidelity RIA load waiver agreement which specifies certain aggregate
minimum and operating provisions. This waiver is available only for shares
purchased directly from Fidelity, without a broker, unless purchased
through a brokerage firm which is a correspondent of National Financial
Services Corporation (NFSC). The waiver is unavailable, however if the RIA
is part of an organization principally engaged in the brokerage business,
unless the brokerage firm in the organization firm in the organization is
an NFSC correspondent; 
(   13) to shares purchased by a trust institution or bank trust department
purchasing for its non-discretionary, non-retirement fiduciary accounts,
provided it executes a Fidelity Trust load waiver agreement which specifies
certain aggregate minimum and operating provisions. This waiver is
available only for shares purchased either directly from Fidelity or
through a bank-affiliated broker, and is unavailable if the trust
department or institution is part of an organization not principally
engaged in banking or trust     activities; or
Small Cap Stock's sales charge may be reduced to reflect sales charges
previously paid, or    that     would have been paid absent a reduction
   for some purchases made directly with Fidelity     as noted in the
prospectus, in connection with investments in other Fidelity funds. This
includes reductions for investments in prototype or prototype-like
retirement plans sponsored by FMR or FMR Corp., which are listed above.
Each fund is open for business and its net asset value per share (NAV) is
calculated each day the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) is open for trading.
The NYSE has designated the following holiday closings for 1995: New Year's
Day (observed), Presidents' Day    (observed    ), Good Friday, Memorial
Day    (observed    ), Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, and
Christmas Day. Although FMR expects the same holiday schedule to be
observed in the future, the NYSE may modify its holiday schedule at any
time.    In addition, the funds will not process wire purchases and
redemptions on days when the Federal Reserve Wire System is closed.    
FSC normally determines each fund's NAV as of the close of the NYSE
(normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). However, NAV may be calculated earlier
if trading on the NYSE is restricted or as permitted by the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC). To the extent that portfolio securities are
traded in other markets on days when the NYSE is closed, a fund's NAV may
be affected on days when investors do not have access to the fund to
purchase or redeem shares. In addition, trading in some of a fund's
portfolio securities may not occur on days when the fund is open for
business.
If the Trustees determine that existing conditions make cash payments
undesirable, redemption payments may be made in whole or in part in
securities or other property, valued for this purpose as they are valued in
computing a fund's NAV. Shareholders receiving securities or other property
on redemption may realize a gain or loss for tax purposes, and will incur
any costs of sale, as well as the associated inconveniences.
Pursuant to Rule 11a-3 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the 1940
Act), each fund is required to give shareholders at least 60 days' notice
prior to terminating or modifying its exchange privilege. Under the Rule,
the 60-day notification requirement may be waived if (i) the only effect of
a modification would be to reduce or eliminate an administrative fee,
redemption fee, or deferred sales charge ordinarily payable at the time of
an exchange, or (ii) the fund suspends the redemption of the shares to be
exchanged as permitted under the 1940 Act or the rules and regulations
thereunder, or the fund to be acquired suspends the sale of its shares
because it is unable to invest amounts effectively in accordance with its
investment objective and policies.
In the Prospectus, each fund has notified shareholders that it reserves the
right at any time, without prior notice, to refuse exchange purchases by
any person or group if, in FMR's judgment, the fund would be unable to
invest effectively in accordance with its investment objective and
policies, or would otherwise potentially be adversely affected.
DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
DISTRIBUTIONS. If you request to have distributions mailed to you and the
U.S. Postal Service cannot deliver your checks, or if your checks remain
uncashed for six months, Fidelity may reinvest your distributions at the
then-current NAV. All subsequent distributions will then be reinvested
until you provide Fidelity with alternate instructions.
DIVIDENDS. A portion of each fund's income may qualify for the
dividends-received deduction available to corporate shareholders to the
extent that each fund's income is derived from qualifying dividends.
Because each fund may earn other types of income, such as interest, income
from securities loans, non-qualifying dividends, and short-term capital
gains, the percentage of dividends from the fund that qualifies for the
deduction generally will be less than 100%. Each fund will notify corporate
shareholders annually of the percentage of fund dividends that qualifies
for the dividends-received deduction. A portion of each fund's dividends
derived from certain U.S. government obligations may be exempt from state
and local taxation. Gains (losses) attributable to foreign currency
fluctuations are generally taxable as ordinary income, and therefore will
increase (decrease) dividend distributions. Short-term capital gains are
distributed as dividend income. Each fund will send each shareholder a
notice in January describing the tax status of dividends and capital gain
distributions for the prior year.
CAPITAL GAIN DISTRIBUTIONS. Long-term capital gains earned by each fund on
the sale of securities and distributed to shareholders are federally
taxable as long-term capital gains, regardless of the length of time
shareholders have held their shares. If a shareholder receives a long-term
capital gain distribution on shares of a fund, and such shares are held six
months or less and are sold at a loss, the portion of the loss equal to the
amount of the long-term capital gain distribution will be considered a
long-term loss for tax purposes. Short-term capital gains distributed by
each fund are taxable to shareholders as dividends, not as capital gains. 
As of    April 30, 1995     Mid-Cap Stock hereby designates approximately
$324,971 as a capital gain dividend for the purpose of the dividend-paid
deduction.
   As of April 30, 1995, Small Cap Stock had a capital loss carryforward
aggregating approximately $25,259,000. This loss carryforward, of which the
total amount will expire on April 30, 2003, is available to offset future
capital gains.    
FOREIGN TAXES. Foreign governments may withhold taxes on dividends and
interest paid with respect to foreign securities. Foreign governments may
also impose taxes on other payments or gains with respect to foreign
securities. If, at the close of its fiscal year, more than 50% of a fund's
total assets are invested in securities of foreign issuers, the fund may
elect to pass through foreign taxes paid and thereby allow shareholders to
take a credit or deduction on their individual tax returns. 
TAX STATUS OF THE FUNDS. Each fund intends to qualify each year as a
"regulated investment company" for tax purposes so that it will not be
liable for federal tax on income and capital gains distributed to
shareholders. In order to qualify as a regulated investment company and
avoid being subject to federal income or excise taxes at the fund level,
each fund intends to distribute substantially all of its net investment
income and net realized capital gains within each calendar year as well as
on a fiscal year basis. Each fund intends to comply with other tax rules
applicable to regulated investment companies, including a requirement that
capital gains from the sale of securities held less than three months
constitute less than 30% of the fund's gross income for each fiscal year.
Gains from some forward currency contracts, futures contracts, and options
are included in this 30% calculation, which may limit a fund's investments
in such instruments.
If a fund purchases shares in certain foreign investment entities, defined
as passive foreign investment companies (PFICs) in the Internal Revenue
Code, it may be subject to U.S. federal income tax on a portion of any
excess distribution or gain from the disposition of such shares. Interest
charges may also be imposed on a fund with respect to deferred taxes
arising from such distributions or gains. Generally, each fund will elect
to mark-to-market any PFIC shares. Unrealized gains will be recognized as
income for tax purposes and must be distributed to shareholders as
dividends. 
For tax purposes, Small Cap Stock, Mid-Cap Stock,    and Large Cap Stock
    are treated as separate entities from the other funds of their trusts.
Fidelity        Commonwealth Trust and Mid-Cap Stock is a fund of Fidelity
Devonshire Trust. 
OTHER TAX INFORMATION. The information above is only a summary of some of
the tax consequences generally affecting each fund and its shareholders,
and no attempt has been made to discuss individual tax consequences. In
addition to federal income taxes, shareholders may be subject to state and
local taxes on fund distributions, and shares may be subject to state and
local personal property taxes. Investors should consult their tax advisers
to determine whether a fund is suitable to their particular tax situation.
FMR
All of the stock of FMR is owned by FMR Corp., its parent company organized
in 1972. Through ownership of voting common stock and the execution of a
shareholders' voting agreement, Edward C. Johnson 3d, Johnson family
members, and various trusts for the benefit of the Johnson family form a
controlling group with respect to FMR Corp.
At present, the principal operating activities of FMR Corp. are those
conducted by three of its divisions as follows: FSC, which is the transfer
and shareholder servicing agent for certain of the funds advised by FMR;
Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, which performs
shareholder servicing functions for institutional customers and funds sold
through intermediaries; and Fidelity Investments Retail Marketing Company,
which provides marketing services to various companies within the Fidelity
organization.
Fidelity investment personnel may invest in securities for their own
account pursuant to a code of ethics that sets forth all employees'
fiduciary responsibilities regarding the funds, establishes procedures for
personal investing and restricts certain transactions. For example, all
personal trades in most securities require pre-clearance, and participation
in initial public offerings is prohibited. In addition, restrictions on the
timing of personal investing in relation to trades by Fidelity funds and on
short-term trading have been adopted.
TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS
The Trustees and executive officers of each trust are listed below. Except
as indicated, each individual has held the office shown or other offices in
the same company for the last five years. All persons named as Trustees
also serve in similar capacities for other funds advised by FMR. Unless
otherwise noted, the business address of each Trustee and officer is 82
Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109, which is also the address
of FMR. Those Trustees who are "interested persons" (as defined in the
Investment Company Act of 1940) by virtue of their affiliation with either
the trust or FMR are indicated by an asterisk (*).
*EDWARD C. JOHNSON 3d (64), Trustee and President, is Chairman, Chief
Executive Officer and a Director of FMR Corp.; a Director and Chairman of
the Board and of the Executive Committee of FMR; Chairman and a Director of
FMR Texas Inc. (1989), Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc., and
Fidelity Management & Research (Far East) Inc.
*J. GARY BURKHEAD (53), Trustee and Senior Vice President, is President of
FMR; and President and a Director of FMR Texas Inc., Fidelity Management &
Research (U.K.) Inc., and Fidelity Management & Research (Far East) Inc.
RALPH F. COX (62), 200 Rivercrest Drive, Fort Worth, TX, Trustee (1991), is
a consultant to Western Mining Corporation (1994). Prior to February 1994,
he was President of Greenhill Petroleum Corporation (petroleum exploration
and production, 1990). Until March 1990, Mr. Cox was President and Chief
Operating Officer of Union Pacific Resources Company (exploration and
production). He is a Director of Sanifill Corporation (non-hazardous waste,
1993) and CH2M Hill Companies (engineering). In addition, he served on the
Board of Directors of the Norton Company (manufacturer of industrial
devices, 1983-1990) and continues to serve on the Board of Directors of the
Texas State Chamber of Commerce, and is a member of advisory boards of
Texas A&M University and the University of Texas at Austin.
PHYLLIS BURKE DAVIS (63), P.O. Box 264, Bridgehampton, NY, Trustee (1992).
Prior to her retirement in September 1991, Mrs. Davis was the Senior Vice
President of Corporate Affairs of Avon Products, Inc. She is currently a
Director of BellSouth Corporation (telecommunications), Eaton Corporation
(manufacturing, 1991), and the TJX Companies, Inc. (retail stores, 1990),
and previously served as a Director of Hallmark Cards, Inc. (1985-1991) and
Nabisco Brands, Inc. In addition, she is a member of the President's
Advisory Council of The University of Vermont School of Business
Administration.
RICHARD J. FLYNN (71), 77 Fiske Hill, Sturbridge, MA, Trustee, is a
financial consultant. Prior to September 1986, Mr. Flynn was Vice Chairman
and a Director of the Norton Company (manufacturer of industrial devices).
He is currently a Trustee of College of the Holy Cross and Old Sturbridge
Village, Inc.,    and he previously served as Director of Mechanics Bank
(1971-1995).    
E. BRADLEY JONES (67), 3881-2 Lander Road, Chagrin Falls, OH, Trustee
(1990). Prior to his retirement in 1984, Mr. Jones was Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of LTV Steel Company.    He is a Director of TRW Inc.
(original equipment and replacement products), Cleveland-Cliffs Inc.
(mining), Consolidated Rail Corporation, Birmingham Steel Corporation, and
RPM, Inc. (manufacturer of chemical products, 1990) and he previously
served as Director of NACCO Industries, Inc. (mining and marketing,
1985-1995) and Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, Inc. (1985-1995).     In
addition, he serves as a Trustee of First Union Real Estate Investments, a
Trustee and member of the Executive Committee of the Cleveland Clinic
Foundation, a Trustee and member of the Executive Committee of University
School (Cleveland), and a Trustee of Cleveland Clinic Florida.
DONALD J. KIRK (62), One Harborside, 680 Steamboat Road, Greenwich, CT,
Trustee, is Executive-in-Residence (1995) at Columbia University Graduate
School of Business and a financial consultant. From 1987 to January 1995,
Mr. Kirk was a Professor at Columbia University Graduate School of
Business. Prior to 1987, he was Chairman of the Financial Accounting
Standards Board. Mr. Kirk is a Director of General Re Corporation
(reinsurance) and he previously served as a Director of Valuation Research
Corp. (appraisals and valuations, 1993-1995). In addition, he serves as
Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors of the National Arts Stabilization
Fund, Vice Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Greenwich Hospital
Association, and as a Member of the Public Oversight Board of the American
Institute of Certified Public Accountants' SEC Practice Section (1995).
*PETER S. LYNCH (52), Trustee (1990) is Vice Chairman of FMR (1992). Prior
to May 31, 1990, he was a Director of FMR and Executive Vice President of
FMR (a position he held until March 31, 1991); Vice President of Fidelity
Magellan Fund and FMR Growth Group Leader; and Managing Director of FMR
Corp. Mr. Lynch was also Vice President of Fidelity Investments Corporate
Services (1991-1992). He is a Director of W.R. Grace & Co. (chemicals) and
Morrison Knudsen Corporation (engineering and construction). In addition,
he serves as a Trustee of Boston College, Massachusetts Eye & Ear
Infirmary, Historic Deerfield  and Society for the Preservation of New
England Antiquities, and as an Overseer of the Museum of Fine Arts of
Boston (1990).
GERALD C. McDONOUGH (65), 135 Aspenwood Drive, Cleveland, OH, Trustee, is
Chairman of G.M. Management Group (strategic advisory services). Prior to
his retirement in July 1988, he was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
Leaseway Transportation Corp. (physical distribution services). Mr.
McDonough is a Director of ACME-Cleveland Corp. (metal working,
telecommunications and electronic products), Brush-Wellman Inc. (metal
refining), York International Corp. (air conditioning and refrigeration),
Commercial Intertech Corp. (water treatment equipment, 1992), and
Associated Estates Realty Corporation (a real estate investment trust,
1993). 
EDWARD H. MALONE (70), 5601 Turtle Bay Drive #2104, Naples, FL, Trustee.
Prior to his retirement in 1985, Mr. Malone was Chairman, General Electric
Investment Corporation and a Vice President of General Electric Company. He
is a Director of Allegheny Power Systems, Inc. (electric utility), General
Re Corporation (reinsurance) and Mattel Inc. (toy manufacturer). In
addition, he serves as a Trustee of Corporate Property Investors, the EPS
Foundation at Trinity College, the Naples Philharmonic Center for the Arts,
and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and he is a member of the Advisory
Boards of Butler Capital Corporation Funds and Warburg, Pincus Partnership
Funds.
MARVIN L. MANN (62), 55 Railroad Avenue, Greenwich, CT, Trustee (1993) is
Chairman of the Board, President, and Chief Executive Officer of Lexmark
International, Inc. (office machines, 1991). Prior to 1991, he held the
positions of Vice President of International Business Machines Corporation
("IBM") and President and General Manager of various IBM divisions and
subsidiaries. Mr. Mann is a Director of M.A. Hanna Company (chemicals,
1993) and Infomart (marketing services, 1991), a Trammell Crow Co. In
addition, he serves as the Campaign Vice Chairman of the Tri-State United
Way (1993) and is a member of the University of Alabama President's Cabinet
(1990).
THOMAS R. WILLIAMS (66), 21st Floor, 191 Peachtree Street, N.E., Atlanta,
GA, Trustee, is President of The Wales Group, Inc. (management and
financial advisory services). Prior to retiring in 1987, Mr. Williams
served as Chairman of the Board of First Wachovia Corporation (bank holding
company), and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of The First National
Bank of Atlanta and First Atlanta Corporation (bank holding company). He is
currently a Director of BellSouth Corporation (telecommunications),
ConAgra, Inc. (agricultural products), Fisher Business Systems, Inc.
(computer software), Georgia Power Company (electric utility), Gerber Alley
& Associates, Inc. (computer software), National Life Insurance Company of
Vermont, American Software, Inc., and AppleSouth, Inc. (restaurants, 1992).
WILLIAM J. HAYES (60), Vice President (1994), is Vice President of
Fidelity's equity funds; Senior Vice President of FMR; and Managing
Director of FMR Corp.
ROBERT H. MORRISON (55), Manager of Security Transactions of Fidelity's
equity funds is Vice President of FMR.
BRADFORD LEWIS (40), is manager and Vice President of Small Cap Stock,
which he has managed since June 1993. Mr. Lewis also manages Disciplined
Equity and Stock Selector as well as portfolios for Fidelity Investments
Canada. Previously, he managed Select Air Transportation, Select Defense
and Aerospace, and Select Medical Delivery. Mr. Lewis joined Fidelity in
1985. 
ARTHUR S. LORING (47), Secretary, is Senior Vice President (1993) and
General Counsel of FMR, Vice President-Legal of FMR Corp., and Vice
President and Clerk of FDC.
STEPHEN P. JONAS (42), Treasurer (1995), is Treasurer and Vice President of
FMR (1993). Mr. Jonas is also Treasurer of FMR Texas Inc. (1994), Fidelity
Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (1994), and Fidelity Management &
Research (Far East) Inc. (1994). Prior to becoming Treasurer of FMR, Mr.
Jonas was Senior Vice President, Finance - Fidelity Brokerage Services,
Inc. (1991-1992) and Senior Vice President, Strategic Business Systems -
Fidelity Investments Retail Marketing Company (1989-1991).
JOHN H. COSTELLO (48), Assistant Treasurer, is an employee of FMR.
LEONARD M. RUSH (49), Assistant Treasurer (1994), is an employee of FMR
(1994). Prior to becoming Assistant Treasurer of the Fidelity Funds, Mr.
Rush was Chief Compliance of Officer of FMR Corp. (1993-1994); Chief
Financial Officer of Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc. (1990-1993); and
Vice President, Assistant Controller, and Director of the Accounting
Department - First Boston Corp. (1986-1990).
The following table sets forth information describing the compensation of
each current trustee of each fund for his or her services as trustee for
the fiscal year ended April 30, 1995. 
COMPENSATION TABLE
      Aggregate Compensation   
 
 
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>          <C>        <C>   <C>     <C>     <C>       <C>     <C>    <C>     <C>       <C>    <C>            <C>            
             J. Gary    Ralph Phyllis Richard Edward C. E.      Donald Peter   Gerald    Edward Marvin         Thomas         
             Burkhead** F.    Burke   J.      Johnson   Bradley J.     S.      C.        H.     L.             R.             
                        Cox   Davis   Flynn   3d**      Jones   Kirk   Lynch** McDonough Malone Mann           Williams       
 
Small Cap    $    0     $ 310 $ 299   $ 385   $ 0       $ 310   $ 309  $ 0     $ 309     $ 313  $ 306       $    306       
Stock   
 
Mid-Cap         0       34    35      44       0        36      36      0      36         36      36             35         
Stock   
 
   Large Cap 0          25    25      30       0        25      25      0      25         25      25             25         
   Stock+    
 
</TABLE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                      <C>     <C>                  <C>                 <C>             
Trustees                         Pension or           Estimated Annual    Total           
                                 Retirement           Benefits Upon       Compensation    
                                 Benefits Accrued     Retirement from     from the Fund   
                                 As Part of Fund      the Fund            Complex*        
                                 Expenses from the    Complex*                            
                                 Fund Complex*                                            
 
J. Gary Burkhead**               $ 0                  $ 0                 $ 0             
 
Ralph F. Cox                      5,200                52,000              125,000        
 
Phyllis Burke Davis               5,200                52,000              122,000        
 
Richard J. Flynn                  0                    52,000              154,500        
 
Edward C. Johnson 3d**            0                    0                   0              
 
E. Bradley Jones                  5,200                49,400              123,500        
 
Donald J. Kirk                    5,200                52,000              125,000        
 
Peter S. Lynch**                  0                    0                   0              
 
Gerald C. McDonough               5,200                52,000              125,000        
 
Edward H. Malone                  5,200                44,200              128,000        
 
Marvin L. Mann                    5,200                52,000              125,000        
 
Thomas R. Williams                5,200                52,000              126,500        
 
</TABLE>
 
* Information is as of December 31, 1994 for 206 funds in the complex.
** Interested    trustees of the fund    s are compensated by FMR.
   +     Estimated    
Under a retirement program adopted in July 1988, the non-interested
Trustees, upon reaching age 72, become eligible to participate in a
retirement program under which they receive payments during their lifetime
from a fund based on their basic trustee fees and length of service. The
obligation of a fund to make such payment is not secured or funded.
Trustees become eligible if, at the time of retirement, they have served on
the Board for at least five years. Currently, Messrs. Ralph S. Saul,
William R. Spaulding, Bertram H. Witham, and David L. Yunich, all former
non-interested Trustees, receive retirement benefits under the program.
   As of April 30, 1995, the Trustees and officers of Small Cap Stock and
Mid-Cap Stock owned, in the aggregate, less than 1% of each fund's total
outstanding shares. As of the date of this Statement of Additional
Information, FMR owns the majority of the outstanding shares of Large Cap
Stock.    
MANAGEMENT CONTRACTS
Each fund employs FMR to furnish investment advisory and other services.
Under its management contract with each fund, FMR acts as investment
adviser and, subject to the supervision of the Board of Trustees, directs
the investments of each fund in accordance with its investment objective,
policies, and limitations. FMR also provides each fund with all necessary
office facilities and personnel for servicing each fund's investments,
compensates all officers of each fund and all Trustees who are "interested
persons" of the trusts or of FMR, and all personnel of each fund or FMR
performing services relating to research, statistical, and investment
activities.
In addition, FMR or its affiliates, subject to the supervision of the Board
of Trustees, provide the management and administrative services necessary
for the operation of each fund. These services include providing facilities
for maintaining each fund's organization; supervising relations with
custodians, transfer and pricing agents, accountants, underwriters, and
other persons dealing with each fund; preparing all general shareholder
communications and conducting shareholder relations; maintaining each
fund's records and the registration of each fund's shares under federal and
state laws; developing management and shareholder services for each fund;
and furnishing reports, evaluations, and analyses on a variety of subjects
to the Trustees.
In addition to the management fee payable to FMR and the fees payable to
FSC, each fund pays all of its expenses, without limitation, that are not
assumed by those parties. Each fund pays for the typesetting, printing, and
mailing of its proxy materials to shareholders, legal expenses, and the
fees of the custodian, auditor and non-interested Trustees. Although each
fund's current management contract provides that each fund will pay for
typesetting, printing, and mailing prospectuses, statements of additional
information, notices, and reports to shareholders, the trust, on behalf of
each fund has entered into a revised transfer agent agreement with FSC,
pursuant to which FSC bears the costs of providing these services to
existing shareholders. Other expenses paid by each fund include interest,
taxes, brokerage commissions, and each fund's proportionate share of
insurance premiums and Investment Company Institute dues. Each fund is also
liable for such non-recurring expenses as may arise, including costs of any
litigation to which each fund may be a party, and any obligation it may
have to indemnify its officers and Trustees with respect to litigation.
FMR is    each fund's     manager pursuant to management contracts dated
November 1, 1994, which was approved by shareholders on October 26, 1994
for Small Cap Stock, February 17, 1994, which was approved by FMR, then the
sole shareholder, on February 24, 1994 for Mid-Cap Stock,    and May 18,
1995, which was approved by FMR, then the sole shareholder, on June 5, 1995
for Large Cap Stock.    
For the services of FMR under the contract, each fund pays FMR a monthly
management fee composed of the sum of two elements: a basic fee and a
performance adjustment based on a comparison of each fund's performance to
the performance of its comparative index.
COMPUTING THE BASIC FEE. Each fund's basic fee rate is composed of two
elements: a group fee rate and an individual fund fee rate.
The group fee rate is based on the monthly average net assets of all of the
registered investment companies with which FMR has management contracts and
is calculated on a cumulative basis pursuant to the graduated fee rate
schedule shown    to the left on the following page.     The schedule
   shown to the right on the following pag    e shows the effective annual
group fee rate at various asset levels, which is the result of cumulatively
applying the annualized rates on the left. For example, the effective
annual fee rate at $   29    6 billion of group net assets - the
approximate level for April 1995 - was .   3166%    , which is the weighted
average of the respective fee rates for each level of group net assets up
to    $296     billion.
   Below is the schedule for Small Cap Stock and Mid-Cap Stock:    
   GROUP FEE RATE SCHEDULE        EFFECTIVE ANNUAL FEE RATES   
 
     Average Group   Annualized   Group Net    Effective Annual    
 Assets               Rate         Assets      Fee Rate            
 
0 - $  3 billion   .5200%    $ 0.5 billion   .5200%   
 
3 -    6           .4900      25             .4238    
 
6 -    9           .4600      50             .3823    
 
9 -    12          .4300      75             .3626    
 
12 -   15          .4000     100             .3512    
 
15 -   18          .3850     125             .3430    
 
18 -   21          .3700     150             .3371    
 
21 -   24          .3600     175             .3325    
 
24 -   30          .3500     200             .3284    
 
30 -   36          .3450     225             .3253    
 
36 -   42          .3400     250             .3223    
 
42 -   48          .3350     275             .3198    
 
48 -   66          .3250     300             .3175    
 
66 -   84          .3200     325             .3153    
 
84 -   102         .3150     350             .3133    
 
102 -   138        .3100                              
 
138 -   174        .3050                              
 
174 -   228        .3000                              
 
228 -   282        .2950                              
 
282 -   336        .2900                              
 
        Over 336   .2850                              
 
For Small Cap Stock, prior to November 1, 1994, the group fee rate was
based on a schedule with breakpoints ending at  .3000% for average group
assets in excess of $174 billion. The additional breakpoints shown above
for average group assets in excess of $228 billion were voluntarily adopted
by FMR on November 1, 1993. Mid-Cap Stock's management contract, dated
February 17, 1994, contains the group fee rate breakpoints shown above.
   On August 1, 1994, FMR voluntarily revised the prior extensions to the
group fee rate schedule, and added new breakpoints. The revised group fee
rate schedule provides for lower management fee rates as FMR's assets under
management increase. For Small Cap Stock and Mid-Cap Stock, the revised
group fee rate schedule is identical to the above schedule for average
group assets under $210 billion. Small Cap Stock's current management
contract reflects the group fee rate schedule above for average group
assets under $210 billion and the group fee rate schedule below for average
group assets in excess of $210 billion. For Mid-Cap Stock, for average
group assets in excess of $210 billion, the group fee rate schedule
voluntarily adopted by FMR follows.    
   GROUP FEE RATE SCHEDULE        EFFECTIVE ANNUAL FEE RATES   
 
     Average Group   Annualized   Group Net      Effective Annual    
 Assets               Rate         Assets        Fee Rate            
 
138 - $174 billion   .3050%       $150 billion   .3371%              
 
174 -    210         .3000          175          .3325               
 
210 -    246         .2950          200          .3284               
 
246 -    282         .2900          225          .3249               
 
 282 -    318        .2850          250          .3219               
 
 318 -    354        .2800          275          .3190               
 
 354 -    390        .2750          300          .3163               
 
 Over 390            .2700          325          .3137               
 
              350    .3113   
 
              375    .3090   
 
              400    .3067   
 
   Below is the schedule for Large Cap Stock:    
   GROUP FEE RATE SCHEDULE        EFFECTIVE ANNUAL FEE RATES   
 
     Average Group   Annualized   Group Net    Effective Annual    
 Assets               Rate         Assets      Fee Rate            
 
   0 - $  3 billion       .5200%    $ 0.5 billion   .5200%   
 
   3 -    6               .4900      25             .4238    
 
   6 -    9               .4600      50             .3823    
 
   9 -    12              .4300      75             .3626    
 
1   2 -   15              .4000     100             .3512    
 
   15 -   18              .3850     125             .3430    
 
1   8 -   21              .3700     150             .3371    
 
   21 -   24              .3600     175             .3325    
 
   24 -   3    0          .3500     200             .3284    
 
   30 -   36              .3450     225             .3249    
 
3   6 -   42              .3400     250             .3219    
 
   42 -   48              .3350     275             .3190    
 
   48 -   66              .3250     300             .3163    
 
   66 -   84              .3200     325             .3137    
 
   84 -   102             .3150     350             .3113    
 
   102 -   138            .3100     375             .3090    
 
   138 -   174            .3050     400             .3067    
 
   174 -   210            .3000                              
 
2   10 -   24    6        .2950                              
 
   246 -   282            .2900                              
 
   282 -   318            .2850                              
 
   318 -   354            .2800                              
 
   354 -   390            .2750                              
 
           Over 390       .2700                              
 
The individual fund fee rates for Small Cap Stock, Mid-Cap Stock,    and
Large Cap Stock     are .35%, .30%, and    .30%    , respectively. Based on
the average group net assets of the funds advised by FMR for April 1995,
the annual basic fee rate would be calculated as follows:
 Group Fee Rate              Individual Fund Fee Rate Basic Fee Rate
   Small Cap Stock .3166% + .35%      = .6666%
Mid-Cap Stock .3166% + .30%      = .6166%
Large Cap Stock      .3166% + .30%      = .6166%
One-twelfth of this annual basic fee rate is applied to each fund's net
assets averaged for the most recent month, giving a dollar amount, which is
the fee for that month.
COMPUTING THE PERFORMANCE ADJUSTMENT. The basic fee is subject to upward or
downward adjustment, depending upon whether, and to what extent, each
fund's investment performance for the performance period exceeds, or is
exceeded by, the record of the Russell 2000 Index (Small Cap Stock), the
S&P MidCap 400(registered trademark) (Mid-Cap Stock),    or the S&P 500
(Large Cap Stock)     over the same period. The funds' performance periods
commenced on July 1,    1993     (Small Cap Stock), and April 1, 1994
(Mid-Cap Stock).    Large Cap Stock's performance period will commence on
July 1, 1995.     Starting with the twelfth month, the performance
adjustment takes effect. Each month subsequent to the twelfth month, a new
month is added to the performance period until the performance period
equals 36 months. Thereafter, the performance period consists of the most
recent month plus the previous 35 months. Each percentage point of
difference, calculated to the nearest 1.0% (up to a maximum difference of
(plus/minus)10.00)  is multiplied by a performance adjustment rate of .02%.
Thus, the maximum annualized adjustment rate is (plus/minus).20%. This
performance comparison is made at the end of each month. One twelfth (1/12)
of this rate is then applied to each fund's average net assets for the
entire performance period, giving a dollar amount which will be added to
(or subtracted from) the basic fee.
Each fund's performance is calculated based on change in net asset value.
For purposes of calculating the performance adjustment, any dividends or
capital gain distributions paid by each fund are treated as if reinvested
in fund shares at the net asset value as of the record date for payment.
The record of each fund's comparative index is based on change in value and
is adjusted for any cash distributions from the companies whose securities
compose    each     index.
Because the adjustment to the basic fee is based on each fund's performance
compared to the investment record of its comparative index, the controlling
factor is not whether each fund's performance is up or down per se, but
whether it is up or down more or less than the record of its comparative
index. Moreover, the comparative investment performance of each fund is
based solely on the relevant performance period without regard to the
cumulative performance over a longer or shorter period of time.
The table below shows the management fees paid to FMR (including the amount
of the performance adjustment); the dollar amount of negative or positive
performance adjustments; and the net management fee as a percentage of the
funds' average net assets for the periods ending April 30, 1995    and the
period June 28, 1993 through April 30    , 1994 for Small Cap Stock,    and
the periods February 1, 1995 through April 30,     1995 and    March 29,
1994 through     January 31, 1995 for Mid-Cap Stock.    Large Cap Stock is
not included in the table because it is a new fund.    
                  Management Fee                        Management Fee       
                  Including Performance   Performance   as a % of            
                  Adjustment              Adjustment    Average Net Assets   
 
SMALL CAP STOCK                                                              
 
   1995            $ 3,575,703            (708,057)       .56%               
 
   1994*           $ 3,261,052            n/a             .68%+              
 
                                                                             
 
* From June 28, 1993 (commencement of operations)
+ Annualized
MID-CAP STOCK                                                
 
   April 30, 1995**           $ 497,918   23,200     .66%+   
   January 31, 1995***        $ 321,245   n/a        .62%+   
 
** For the fiscal period February 1, 1995 through April 30, 1995.
*** From March 29, 1994 (commencement of operations).
+  Annualized.
FMR may, from time to time, voluntarily reimburse all or a portion of each
fund's operating expenses (exclusive of interest, taxes, brokerage
commissions, and extraordinary expenses). FMR retains the ability to be
repaid for these expense reimbursements in the amount that expenses fall
below the limit prior to the end of the fiscal year. Expense reimbursements
by FMR will increase each fund's total returns and repayment of the
reimbursement by each fund will lower its total returns.
To comply with the California Code of Regulations, FMR will reimburse each
fund if and to the extent that each fund's aggregate annual operating
expenses exceed specified percentages of its average net assets. The
applicable percentages are 2 1/2% of the first $30 million, 2% of the next
$70 million, and 1 1/2% of average net assets in excess of $100 million.
When calculating each fund's expenses for purposes of this regulation, each
fund may exclude interest, taxes, brokerage commissions, and extraordinary
expenses, as well as a portion of distribution plan expenses    (Mid-Cap
Stock and Large Cap Stock only)     and custodian fees attributable to
investments in foreign securities.
SUB-ADVISERS. On behalf of the funds, FMR has entered into sub-advisory
agreements with FMR U.K. and FMR Far East. Pursuant to the sub-advisory
agreements, FMR may receive investment advice and research services outside
the United States from the sub-advisers. FMR may also grant the
sub-advisers investment management authority as well as the authority to
buy and sell securities if FMR believes it would be beneficial to the
funds.
Currently, FMR U.K. and FMR Far East each focus on issuers in countries
other than the United States such as those in Europe, Asia, and the Pacific
Basin.
FMR U.K. and FMR Far East, which were organized in 1986, are wholly owned
subsidiaries of FMR. Under the sub-advisory agreements FMR pays the fees of
FMR U.K. and FMR Far East. For providing non-discretionary investment
advice and research services, FMR pays FMR U.K. and FMR Far East fees equal
to 110% and 105%, respectively, of FMR U.K.'s and FMR Far East's costs
incurred in connection with providing investment advice and research
services.
For providing discretionary investment management and executing portfolio
transactions, FMR pays FMR U.K. and FMR Far East a fee equal to 50% of its
monthly management fee rate (including any performance adjustment) with
respect to each fund's average net assets managed by the sub-adviser on a
discretionary basis.
For providing investment advice and research services, the fees paid to the
sub-advisers on    behalf of Small Cap Stock and Mid-Cap Stock     for
fiscal 1995 and 1994 were as follows:
SMALL CAP STOCK
Fiscal year    FMR U.K.   FMR Far East   
 
   1995         $ 60       $ 50          
 
   1994*        $ 12.50    $ 16.30       
 
* From June 28, 1993 (commencement of operations).
MID-CAP STOCK
   Fiscal period             FMR U.K.   FMR Far East   
 
   April 30, 1995**           $ 3,066    $ 2,306       
   January 31, 1995***        $ 119      $ 117         
 
** For the fiscal period February 1, 1995 through April 30, 1995.
*** From March 29, 1994 (commencement of operations).
DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE    PLANS     (MID-CAP STOCK AND LARGE CAP STOCK)
The Trustees have approved Distribution and Service    Plans     on behalf
of Mid-Cap Stock and Large Cap Stock (the Plans) pursuant to Rule 12b-1
under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the Rule). The Rule provides in
substance that a mutual fund may not engage directly or indirectly in
financing any activity that is primarily intended to result in the sale of
shares of a fund except pursuant to a plan approved on behalf of the fund
under the Rule.    The Plans, as approved by the Trustees, allow each fund
and FMR to incur certain expenses that might be considered to constitute
indirect     payment by the funds of distribution expenses.
   Under each Plan, if the payment of management fees by the fund to FMR is
deemed to be indirect financing by the funds of the distribution of
    their shares, such payment is authorized by the Plans. Each Plan also
specifically recognizes that FMR, either directly or through FDC, may use
its management fee revenue, past profits, or other resources, without
limitation, to pay promo   tional and administrative expenses     in
connection with the offer and sale of shares of the fund. In addition, each
Plan provides that FMR may use its resources, including its management fee
revenues, to make payments to third parties that assist in selling shares
   of each fund, or to third parties, including banks, that render
shareholder support services.    
The Trustees have not authorized such payments to date.
   Prior to approving each Plan,     the Trustees carefully considered all
pertinent factors relating to the implementation of each Plan, and have
determined that there is a reasonable likelihood that the Plan will benefit
the fund and its shareholders. In particu   lar, the Trustees noted that
each Plan does not authorize payments by the fund other than those made to
FMR under its management     contract with the fund. To the extent that
each Plan gives FMR and FDC greater flexibility in connection with the
distribution of shares of the fund, additional sales of fund shares may
result. Furthermore, certain shareholder support services may be
pro   vided more effectively under each     Plan by local entities with
whom shareholders have other relationships.
   Mid-Cap Stock's and Large Cap Stock's Plans were approved by FMR, the
then sole shareholder of each fund, on February 24, 1994 and June 5, 1995,
respectively.    
The Glass-Steagall Act generally prohibits federally and state chartered or
supervised banks from engaging in the business of underwriting, selling, or
distributing securities. Although the scope of this prohibition under the
Glass-Steagall Act has not been clearly defined by the courts or
appropriate regulatory agencies, FDC believes that the Glass-Steagall Act
should not preclude a bank from performing shareholder support services, or
servicing and recordkeeping functions. FDC intends to engage banks only to
perform such functions. However, changes in federal or state statutes and
regulations pertaining to the permissible activities of banks and their
affiliates or subsidiaries, as well as further judicial or administrative
decisions or interpretations, could prevent a bank from continuing to
perform all or a part of the contemplated services. If a bank were
prohibited from so acting, the Trustees would consider what actions, if
any, would be necessary to continue to provide efficient and effective
shareholder services. In such event, changes in the operation of the fund
might occur, including possible termination of any automatic investment or
redemption or other services then provided by the bank. It is not expected
that shareholders would suffer any adverse financial consequences as a
result of any of these occurrences. In addition, state securities laws on
this issue may differ from the interpretations of federal law expressed
herein, and banks and financial institutions may be required to register as
dealers pursuant to state law. 
   Each fund may execute portfolio transactions with, and purchase
securities issued by, depository institutions that receive payments under
the Plans.     No preference for the instruments of such depository
institutions will be shown in the selection of investments.
C   ONTRACTS WITH FMR AFFIL    IATES
   FSC is transfer, dividend disbursing, and shareholder servicing agent
for each fund. FSC receives annual account fees and asset-based fees for
each retail account and certain institutional accounts based on account
size. In addition, the fees for retail accounts are subject to increase
based on postal rate changes. With respect to certain institutional
retirement accounts, FSC receives asset-based fees only. The asset-based
fees are subject to adjustment if the year-to-date total return of the
Standard & Poor's Composite Index of 500 Stocks is greater than positive or
negative 15%. FSC also collects small account fees from certain accounts
with balances of less than $2,500.    
FSC pays out-of-pocket expenses associated with providing transfer agent
services. In addition, FSC bears the expense of typesetting, printing, and
mailing prospectuses, statements of additional information, and all other
reports, notices, and statements to shareholders, with the exception of
proxy statements.
FSC also performs the calculations necessary to determine each fund's net
asset value per share and dividends, and maintains each fund's accounting
records. The annual fee rates for these pricing and bookkeeping services
are based on each fund's average net assets, specifically, .06% for the
first $500 million of average net assets and .03% for average net assets in
excess of $500 million. The fee is limited to a minimum of $45,000 and a
maximum of $750,000 per year.
For Small Cap Stock, the table below shows the fees paid to FSC for pricing
and bookkeeping services, including related out-of-pocket expenses during
the fund's last two fiscal periods ended April 30, 1995 and 1994. For
Mid-Cap Stock, the table shows these fees for the fiscal period ended
January 31, 1995 and the fiscal period ended April 30, 1995.
      Pricing and Bookkeeping Fees                     
 
                  1995                 1994                            
 
Small Cap Stock   $    343,221         $    263,768    *               
 
Mid-Cap Stock     $ 4   5,020    **                                    
 
                  $    45,699    ***                                   
 
* From June 28, 1993 (commencement of operations).
** For the fiscal period February 1, 1995 through April 30, 1995.
*** For the fiscal period March 29, 1994 (commencement of operations)
through January 31, 1995.
   For fiscal 1995 and 1994, Small Cap Stock and Mid-Cap Stock had no
securities lending fees.    
Each fund has a distribution agreement with FDC, a Massachusetts
corporation organized on July 18, 1960. FDC is a broker-dealer registered
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and is a member of the National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. The distribution agreements call
for FDC to use all reasonable efforts, consistent with its other business,
to secure purchasers for shares of each fund, which,    for Mid-Cap Stock
and Large Cap Stock, are continuously offered at net asset value.
Promotional and administrative expenses in connection with the offer and
sale of shares are paid by FMR for Mid-Cap Stock and Large Cap Stock    
and by FDC for Small Cap Stock. For the fiscal year ended April 30, 1995,
and the fiscal period June 28, 1993 (commencement of operations) through
April 30, 1994, sales charge revenue paid to FDC on behalf of Small Cap
Stock amounted to $   1,239,724     and $2,299,056, respectively.
DESCRIPTION OF THE TRUSTS
TRUST ORGANIZATION.Fidelity        Commonwealth Trust   , an open-end
management investment company organized as a Massachusetts business trust
on November 8, 1974. On April 11, 1975, the trust's name was changed from
Fidelity Investors Trust to Fidelity Thrift Trust. On September 1, 1987,
the trust's name was changed from Fidelity Thrift Trust to Fidelity
Intermediate Bond Fund. On February 16, 1990, the trust's name was changed
from Fidelity Intermediate Bond Fund to Fidelity Commonwealth Trust.
Currently, there are four funds of the trust: Fidelity Intermediate Bond
Fund, Fidelity Market Index Fund, Fidelity Small Cap Stock Fund, and
Fidelity Large Cap Stock Fund.    
Fidelity Mid-Cap Stock Fund is a fund of Fidelity Devonshire Trust, an
open-end management investment company originally organized as a
Massachusetts corporation on December 16, 1965. On March 4, 1985, the trust
was reorganized as a Massachusetts business trust, at which time its name
was changed from Fidelity Equity-Income Fund, Inc. to Fidelity
Equity-Income Fund. On December 19, 1986, the Board of Trustees voted to
change the name of the trust from Fidelity Equity-Income Fund to Fidelity
Devonshire Trust. Currently, there are six funds of the trust: Spartan
Adjustable Rate Government Fund, Fidelity Equity-Income Fund, Fidelity Real
Estate Investment Portfolio, Spartan Long-Term Government Bond Fund,
Fidelity Mid-Cap Stock Fund, and Fidelity Utilities Fund.
Each fund's Declaration of Trust permits the Trustees to create additional
funds.
In the event that FMR ceases to be the investment adviser to a trust or a
fund, the right of a trust or fund to use the identifying name "Fidelity"
may be withdrawn. There is a remote possibility that one fund might become
liable for any misstatement in its prospectus or statement of additional
information about another fund. 
The assets of each trust received for the issue or sale of shares of each
fund and all income, earnings, profits, and proceeds thereof, subject only
to the rights of creditors, are especially allocated to such fund, and
constitute the underlying assets of such fund. The underlying assets of
each fund are segregated on the books of account, and are to be charged
with the liabilities with respect to such fund and with a share of the
general expenses of the trust. Expenses with respect to each trust are to
be allocated in proportion to the asset value of the respective funds,
except where allocations of direct expense can otherwise be fairly made.
The officers of each trust, subject to the general supervision of the Board
of Trustees, have the power to determine which expenses are allocable to a
given fund, or which are general or allocable to all of the funds. In the
event of the dissolution or liquidation of a trust, shareholders of each
fund are entitled to receive as a class the underlying assets of such fund
available for distribution.
SHAREHOLDER AND TRUSTEE LIABILITY. Each trust is an entity of the type
commonly known as "Massachusetts business trust." Under Massachusetts law,
shareholders of such a trust may, under certain circumstances, be held
personally liable for the obligations of a trust. Each Declaration of Trust
provides that the trust shall not have any claim against shareholders
except for the payment of the purchase price of shares and requires that
each agreement, obligation, or instrument entered into or executed by each
trust or the Trustees shall include a provision limiting the obligations
created thereby to each trust and its assets. Each Declaration of Trust
provides for indemnification out of each fund's property of any
shareholders held personally liable for the obligations of the fund. Each
Declaration of Trust also provides that each fund shall, upon request,
assume the defense of any claim made against any shareholder for any act or
obligation of the fund and satisfy any judgment thereon. 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. FMR believes that, in view of the above, the risk of
personal liability to shareholders is remote.
Each Declaration of Trust further provides that the Trustees, if they have
exercised reasonable care, will not be liable for any neglect or
wrongdoing, but nothing in each Declaration of Trust protects Trustees
against any liability to which they would otherwise be subject by reason of
willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless disregard of
the duties involved in the conduct of their office.
VOTING RIGHTS. Each fund's capital consists of shares of beneficial
interest. As a shareholder, you receive one vote for each dollar value of
net asset value you own. The shares have no preemptive or conversion
rights; the voting and dividend rights, the right of redemption, and the
privilege of exchange are described in the Prospectus. Shares are fully
paid and nonassessable, except as set forth under the heading "Shareholder
and Trustee Liability" above. Shareholders representing 10% or more of the
trust or a fund may, as set forth in the Declaration of Trust, call
meetings of the trust or a fund for any purpose related to the trust or
fund, as the case may be, including, in the case of a meeting of the entire
trust, the purpose of voting on removal of one or more Trustees. The trust
or any fund may be terminated upon the sale of its assets to another
open-end management investment company, or upon liquidation and
distribution of its assets, if approved by vote of the holders of a
majority of the trust or the fund, as determined by the current value of
each shareholder's investment in the fund or trust. If not so terminated,
the trust and the funds will continue indefinitely. Each fund within either
trust may invest all of its assets in another investment company.
CUSTODIANS. Brown Brothers Harriman & Co., 40 Water Street, Boston,
Massachusetts, is custodian of the assets of Small Cap Stock    and Large
Cap Stock.     The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 1211 Avenue of the Americas,
New York, New York, is custodian of the assets of Mid-Cap Stock. The
custodians are responsible for the safekeeping of the funds' assets and the
appointment of    the subcustodian banks and clearing agencies. The
custodians take no part in determining the investment policies of a fund or
in deciding which securities are purchased or sold by a fund. However, a
fund may invest in obligations of their respective custodian and may
purchase securities from or sell securities to their respective custodian,
Morgan Guaranty Trust Company of New York, The Bank of New York, and
Chemical Bank, each headquartered in New York, also may serve as a special
purpose custodian of certain assets in connection with pooled repurchase
agreement transactions.    
FMR, its officers and directors, its affiliated companies, and the Board of
   Trustees     may, from time to time, conduct transactions with various
banks, including banks serving as custodians for certain of the funds
advised by FMR. The Boston branch of Small Cap Stock's    and Large Cap
Stock'    s custodian leases its office space from an affiliate of FMR at a
lease payment which, when entered into, was consistent with prevailing
market rates. Transactions that have occurred to date include mortgages and
personal and general business loans. In the judgment of FMR, the terms and
conditions of those transactions were not influenced by existing or
potential custodial or other fund relationships.
AUDITOR. Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P., One Post Office Square, Boston,
Massachusetts serves as each trust's independent accountant. The auditor
examines financial statements for the funds and provides other audit, tax,
and related services.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
   Small Cap Stock's and Mid-Cap Stock's     financial statements and
financial highlights for the fiscal period ended April 30, 1995, are
included in each fund's Annual Report, which are separate reports supplied
with this Statement of Additional Information. Each fund's financial
statements and financial highlights are incorporated herein by reference. 
APPENDIX
DESCRIPTION OF MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC.'S CORPORATE BOND RATINGS:
AAA - Bonds rated Aaa are judged to be of the best quality. They carry the
smallest degree of investment risk and are generally referred to as "gilt
edge."  Interest payments are protected by a large or by an exceptionally
stable margin and principal is secure. While the various protective
elements are likely to change, such changes as can be visualized are most
unlikely to impair the fundamentally strong position of such issues.
AA - Bonds rated Aa are judged to be of high quality by all standards.
Together with the Aaa group they comprise what are generally known as
high-grade bonds. They are rated lower than the best bonds because margins
of protection may not be as large as in Aaa securities or fluctuation of
protective elements may be of greater amplitude or there may be other
elements present which make the long-term risks appear somewhat larger than
in Aaa securities.
A - Bonds rated A possess many favorable investment attributes and are to
be considered as upper-medium-grade obligations. Factors giving security to
principal and interest are considered adequate but elements may be present
which suggest a susceptibility to impairment sometime in the future.
BAA - Bonds rated Baa are considered as medium-grade obligations, i.e.,
they are neither highly protected nor poorly secured. Interest payments and
principal security appear adequate for the present but certain protective
elements may be lacking or may be characteristically unreliable over any
great length of time. Such bonds lack outstanding investment
characteristics and in fact have speculative characteristics as well.
BA - Bonds rated Ba are judged to have speculative elements. Their future
cannot be considered as well assured. Often the protection of interest and
principal payments may be very moderate and thereby not well safeguarded
during both good and bad times over the future. Uncertainty of position
characterizes bonds in this class.
B - Bonds rated B generally lack characteristics of the desirable
investment. Assurance of interest and principal payments or maintenance of
other terms of the contract over any long period of time may be small.
CAA - Bonds rated Caa are of poor standing. Such issues may be in default
or there may be present elements of danger with respect to principal or
interest.
CA - Bonds rated Ca represent obligations which are speculative in a high
degree. Such issues are often in default or have other marked
short-comings.
C - Bonds rated C are the lowest-rated class of bonds and issued so rated
can be regarded as having extremely poor prospects of ever attaining any
real investment standing.
Moody's applies numerical modifiers, 1, 2, and 3, in each generic rating
classification from Aa through B in its corporate bond rating system. The
modifier 1 indicates that the security ranks in the higher end of its
generic rating category; the modifier 2 indicates a mid-range ranking; and
the modifier 3 indicates that the issue ranks in the lower end of its
generic rating category.
DESCRIPTION OF STANDARD & POOR'S CORPORATION'S CORPORATE BOND RATINGS:
AAA - Debt rated AAA has the highest rating assigned by Standard & Poor's
to a debt obligation. Capacity to pay interest and repay principal is
extremely strong.
AA - Debt rated AA has a very strong capacity to pay interest and repay
principal and differs from the higher-rated issues only in small degree.
A - Debt rated A has a strong capacity to pay interest and repay principal,
although it is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of changes
in circumstances and economic conditions.
BBB - Debt rated BBB is regarded as having an adequate capacity to pay
interest and repay principal. Whereas it normally exhibits adequate
protection parameters, adverse economic conditions or changing
circumstances are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity to pay
interest and repay principal for debt in this category than in higher-rated
categories.
BB - Debt rate BB has less near-term vulnerability to default than other
speculative issues. However, it faces major ongoing uncertainties or
exposure to adverse business, financial, or economic conditions which could
lead to inadequate capacity to meet timely interest and principal payments.
B - Debt rated B has a greater vulnerability to default but currently has
the capacity to meet interest payments and principal repayments. Adverse
business, financial, or economic conditions will likely impair capacity or
willingness to pay interest and repay principal. The B rating category is
also used for debt subordinated to senior debt that is assigned an actual
or implied BB- rating.
CCC - Debt rated CCC has a currently identifiable vulnerability to default,
and is dependent upon favorable business, financial, and economic
conditions to meet timely payment of interest and repayment of principal.
In the event of adverse business, financial, or economic conditions, it is
not likely to have the capacity to pay interest and repay principal.
CC - Debt rated CC is typically applied to debt subordinated to senior debt
which is assigned an actual or implied CCC debt rating.
C - The rating C is typically applied to debt subordinated to senior debt
which is assigned an actual or implied CCC- debt rating. The C rating may
be used to cover a situation where a bankruptcy petition has been filed but
debt service payments are continued.
CI - The rating CI is reserved for income bonds on which no interest is
being paid.
D - Debt rated D is in payment default. The D rating category is used when
interest payments or principal payments are not made on the date due even
if the applicable grace period has not expired, unless S&P believes that
such payments will be made during such grace period. The D rating will also
be used upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition if debt service payments
are jeopardized.
The ratings from AA to CCC may be modified by the addition of a plus or
minus to show relative standing within the major rating categories.
PART C - OTHER INFORMATION
Item 24. Financial Statements and Exhibits
  (a) 1. Financial Statements and Financial Highlights, included in the
Semiannual Report for Fidelity Large Cap Stock Fund for the fiscal period
June 22, 1995 (commencement of operations) through October 31, 1995 are
incorporated herein by reference into the fund's Statement of Additional
Information and are filed herein as Exhibit 24(a)(1).
  (b)  Exhibits:
 1.  Amended and Restated Declaration of Trust, dated June 16, 1994, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 1(a) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 53.
 2.  Bylaws of Trust, as amended, are incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 2(a) to Fidelity Union Street Trust's (File No. 2-50318)
Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
 3.  Not applicable.
 4.  Not applicable.
 5. (a) Management Contract, dated December 1, 1994, between Fidelity
Commonwealth Trust, on behalf of Fidelity Intermediate Bond Fund, and
Fidelity Management & Research Company is incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 5(a) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 56.
  (b) Management Contract, dated February 15, 1990, between Fidelity
Commonwealth Trust, on behalf of Fidelity Market Index Fund (formerly
Spartan Market Index Fund), and Fidelity Management & Research Company is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 5(b) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 57.
  (c) Management Contract, dated November 1, 1994, between Fidelity
Commonwealth Trust, on behalf of Fidelity Small Cap Stock Fund, and
Fidelity Management & Research Company is incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 5(c) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 56.
  (d) Management Contract, dated May 18, 1995, between Fidelity
Commonwealth Trust, on behalf of Fidelity Large Cap Stock Fund and Fidelity
Management & Research Company, is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 5(d) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 57.
  (e) Sub-Advisory Agreement, dated December 1, 1994, between Fidelity
Management & Research Company and Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.)
Inc., on behalf of Fidelity Intermediate Bond Fund is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit 5(e) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 56.
  (f) Sub-Advisory Agreement, dated December 1, 1994, between Fidelity
Management & Research Company and Fidelity Management & Research (Far East)
Inc. on behalf of Fidelity Intermediate Bond Fund is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 5(f) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 56.
  (g) Sub-Advisory Agreement, dated June 17, 1993, between Fidelity
Management & Research Company and Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.)
Inc. on behalf of Fidelity Small Cap Stock Fund is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 5(f) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 50.
  (h) Sub-Advisory Agreement, dated June 17, 1993, between Fidelity
Management & Research Company and Fidelity Management & Research (Far East)
Inc. on behalf of Fidelity Small Cap Stock Fund is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 5(g) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 50.
  (i) Sub-Advisory Agreement, dated May 18, 1995, between Fidelity
Management & Research Company and Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.)
Inc. on behalf of Fidelity Large Cap Stock Fund is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 5(i) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 57.
  (j) Sub-Advisory Agreement, dated May 18, 1995, between Fidelity
Management & Research Company and Fidelity Management & Research (Far East)
Inc. on behalf of Fidelity Large Cap Stock Fund is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 5(j) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 57.
 6. (a) General Distribution Agreement, dated April 1, 1987, between
Fidelity Intermediate Bond Fund and Fidelity Distributors Corporation is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 6(a) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 57.
  (b) Amendment to General Distribution Agreement, dated January 1, 1988,
between Registrant and Fidelity Distributors Corporation is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 6(b) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 57.
  (c) General Distribution Agreement, dated February 15, 1990, between
Fidelity Market Index Fund (formerly Spartan Market Index Fund) and
Fidelity Distributors Corporation is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 6(c) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 57.
  (d) General Distribution Agreement, dated June 17, 1993, between Fidelity
Small Cap Stock Fund and Fidelity Distributors Corporation is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 6(d) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 50.
  (e) General Distribution Agreement, dated May 18, 1995, between Fidelity
Large Cap Stock Fund and Fidelity Distributors Corporation is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 6(e) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 57.
 7.  Retirement Plan for Non-Interested Person Trustees, Directors or
General Partners, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 7 to
Fidelity Union Street Trust's (File No. 2-50318) Post-Effective Amendment
No. 87.
 8. (a) Custodian Agreement, Appendix A, and Appendix C, dated September 1,
1994, between Brown Brothers Harriman & Company and Fidelity Commonwealth
Trust on behalf of Fidelity Market Index Fund and Fidelity Small Cap Stock
Fund is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 8(a) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 56.
  (b) Appendix B, dated December 15, 1994, to the Custodian Agreement,
dated September 1, 1994, between Brown Brothers Harriman & Company and
Fidelity Commonwealth Trust on behalf of Fidelity Market Index Fund and
Fidelity Small Cap Stock Fund is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 8(b) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 56.
  (c) Custodian Agreement and Appendix C, dated December 1, 1994, between
The Bank of New York and Fidelity Commonwealth Trust on behalf of Fidelity
Intermediate Bond Fund is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 8(a)
to Fidelity Hereford Street Trust's Post-Effective Amendment No. 4 (File
No. 33-52577).
  (d) Appendix A, dated September 14, 1995, to the Custodian Agreement,
dated December 1, 1994, between The Bank of New York and Fidelity
Commonwealth Trust on behalf of Fidelity Intermediate Bond Fund is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 8(d) to Fidelity Charles Street
Trust's Post-Effective Amendment No. 54. (File No. 2-73133).
  (e) Appendix B, dated September 14, 1995, to the Custodian Agreement,
dated December 1, 1994, between The Bank of New York and Fidelity
Commonwealth Trust on behalf of Fidelity Intermediate Bond Fund is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 8(e) to Fidelity Charles Street
Trust's Post-Effective Amendment No. 54. (File No. 2-73133).
   9.  Not applicable.
 10.  Not applicable.
 11.  Not applicable.
 12.  Not applicable.
 13.  Not applicable.
 14. (a) Fidelity Individual Retirement Account Custodial Agreement and
Disclosure Statement, as currently in effect, is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 14(a) to Fidelity Union Street Trust's (File No.
2-50318) Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
     (b) Fidelity Institutional Individual Retirement Account Custodial
Agreement and Disclosure Statement, as currently in effect, is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 14(d) to Fidelity Union Street Trust's (File
No. 2-50318) Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
     (c) National Financial Services Corporation Individual Retirement
Account Custodial Agreement and Disclosure Statement, as currently in
effect, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(h) to Fidelity
Union Street Trust's (File No. 2-50318) Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
     (d) Fidelity Portfolio Advisory Services Individual Retirement Account
Custodial Agreement and Disclosure Statement, as currently in effect, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(i) to Fidelity Union Street
Trust's (File No. 2-50318) Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
     (e) Fidelity 403(b)(7) Custodial Account Agreement, as currently in
effect, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(e) to Fidelity
Union Street Trust's (File No. 2-50318) Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
     (f) National Financial Services Corporation Defined Contribution
Retirement Plan and Trust Agreement, as currently in effect, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(k) to Fidelity Union Street
Trust's (File No. 2-50318) Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
     (g) The CORPORATEplan for Retirement Profit Sharing/401K Plan, as
currently in effect, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(l)
to Fidelity Union Street Trust's (File No. 2-50318) Post-Effective
Amendment No. 87.
     (h) The CORPORATEplan for Retirement Money Purchase Pension Plan, as
currently in effect, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(m)
to Fidelity Union Street Trust's (File No. 2-50318) Post-Effective
Amendment No. 87.
     (i) Fidelity Investments Section 403(b)(7) Individual Custodial
Account Agreement and Disclosure Statement, as currently in effect, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(f) to Fidelity Commonwealth
Trust's (File No. 2-52322) Post Effective Amendment No. 57.
     (j) Plymouth Investments Defined Contribution Retirement Plan and
Trust Agreement, as currently in effect, is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 14(o) to Fidelity Commonwealth Trust's (File No.
2-52322) Post Effective Amendment No. 57.
     (k) The Fidelity Prototype Defined Benefit Pension Plan and Trust
Basic Plan Document and Adoption Agreement, as currently in effect, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(d) to Fidelity Securities
Fund's (File No. 2-93601) Post Effective Amendment No. 33.
     (l) The Institutional Prototype Plan Basic Plan Document, Standardized
Adoption Agreement, and Non-Standardized Adoption Agreement, as currently
in effect, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(o) to Fidelity
Securities Fund's (File No. 2-93601) Post Effective Amendment No. 33.
     (m) The CORPORATEplan for Retirement 100SM Profit Sharing/401(k) Basic
Plan Document, Standardized Adoption Agreement, and Non-Standardized
Adoption Agreement, as currently in effect, is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 14(f) to Fidelity Securities Fund's (File No. 2-93601)
Post Effective Amendment No. 33.
     (n) The Fidelity Investments 401(a) Prototype Plan for Tax-Exempt
Employers Basic Plan Document, Standardized Profit Sharing Plan Adoption
Agreement, Non-Standardized Discretionary Contribution Plan No. 002
Adoption Agreement, and Non-Standardized Discretionary Contribution Plan
No. 003 Adoption Agreement, as currently in effect, is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit 14(g) to Fidelity Securities Fund's (File No.
2-93601) Post Effective Amendment No. 33.
     (o) Fidelity Investments 403(b) Sample Plan Basic Plan Document and
Adoption Agreement, as currently in effect, is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 14(p) to Fidelity Securities Fund's (File No. 2-93601)
Post Effective Amendment No. 33.
     (p) Fidelity Defined Contribution Retirement Plan and Trust Agreement,
as currently in effect, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit
14(c) to Fidelity Securities Fund's (File No. 2-93601) Post Effective
Amendment No. 33.
 15. (a) Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for Fidelity
Intermediate Bond Fund (formerly Fidelity Thrift Trust) is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 15(a) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 57.
  (b) Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for Fidelity
Market Index Fund (formerly Spartan Market Index Fund) is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 15(b) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 57.
  (c) Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for Fidelity
Large Cap Stock Fund is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 15(c)
to Post-Effective Amendment No. 57.
 16.  A schedule for computation of performance quotations for Fidelity
Market Index Fund is incorporated by reference to Exhibit 16 to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 57.
 17.  Financial Data Schedules are filed herein as Exhibit 27.
 18.  Not applicable.
Item 25. Persons Controlled by or under Common Control with Registrant
 The Board of Trustees of Registrant is the same as the boards of other
funds advised by FMR, each of which has Fidelity Management & Research
Company as its investment adviser.  In addition, the officers of these
funds are substantially identical.  Nonetheless, Registrant takes the
position that it is not under common control with these other funds since
the power residing in the respective boards and officers arises as the
result of an official position with the respective funds.
Item 26. Number of Holders of Securities
October 31, 1995
Title of Class:  Shares of Beneficial Interest
  Name of Series      Number of Record Holders
 Fidelity Intermediate Bond Fund    508,876
 Fidelity Market Index Fund     22,665
 Fidelity Small Cap Stock Fund     62,224
 Fidelity Large Cap Stock Fund     5,984
Item 27.  Indemnification
 Article XI, Section 2 of the Declaration of Trust sets forth the
reasonable and fair means for determining whether indemnification shall be
provided to any past or present Trustee or officer.  It states that the
Registrant shall indemnify any present or past Trustee or officer to the
fullest extent permitted by law against liability and all expenses
reasonably incurred by him in connection with any claim, action, suit or
proceeding in which he is involved by virtue of his service as a trustee,
an officer, or both.  Additionally, amounts paid or incurred in settlement
of such matters are covered by this indemnification.  Indemnification will
not be provided in certain circumstances, however.  These include instances
of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, and reckless disregard
of the duties involved in the conduct of the particular office involved.
 
Item 28. Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser
 (1)  FIDELITY MANAGEMENT & RESEARCH COMPANY
 FMR serves as investment adviser to a number of other investment
companies.  The directors and officers of the Adviser have held, during the
past two fiscal years, the following positions of a substantial nature.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                    <C>                                                          
Edward C. Johnson 3d   Chairman of the Executive Committee of FMR; President        
                       and Chief Executive Officer of FMR Corp.; Chairman of        
                       the Board and a Director of FMR, FMR Corp., FMR Texas        
                       Inc., Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc., and        
                       Fidelity Management & Research (Far East) Inc.; President    
                       and Trustee of funds advised by FMR.                         
 
                                                                                    
 
J. Gary Burkhead       President of FMR; Managing Director of FMR Corp.;            
                       President and a Director of FMR Texas Inc., Fidelity         
                       Management & Research (U.K.) Inc., and Fidelity              
                       Management & Research (Far East) Inc.; Senior Vice           
                       President and Trustee of funds advised by FMR.               
 
                                                                                    
 
Peter S. Lynch         Vice Chairman and Director of FMR.                           
 
                                                                                    
 
Robert Beckwitt        Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR.           
 
                                                                                    
 
David Breazzano        Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                       FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                    
 
Stephan Campbell       Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                    
 
Dwight Churchill       Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                    
 
William Danoff         Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                       FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                    
 
Scott DeSano           Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                    
 
Penelope Dobkin        Vice President of FMR and of a fund advised by FMR.          
 
                                                                                    
 
Larry Domash           Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                    
 
George Domolky         Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                       FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                    
 
Robert K. Duby         Vice President of FMR.                                       
 
                                                                                    
 
Margaret L. Eagle      Vice President of FMR and of a fund advised by FMR.          
 
                                                                                    
 
Kathryn L. Eklund      Vice President of FMR.                                       
 
                                                                                    
 
Richard B. Fentin      Senior Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised    
                       by FMR.                                                      
 
                                                                                    
 
Daniel R. Frank        Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR.           
 
                                                                                    
 
Michael S. Gray        Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR.           
 
                                                                                    
 
Lawrence Greenberg     Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                    
 
Barry A. Greenfield    Vice President of FMR and of a fund advised by FMR.          
 
                                                                                    
 
William J. Hayes       Senior Vice President of FMR; Equity Division Leader.        
 
                                                                                    
 
Robert Haber           Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR.           
 
                                                                                    
 
Richard Haberman       Senior Vice President of FMR (1993).                         
 
                                                                                    
 
Daniel Harmetz         Vice President of FMR and of a fund advised by FMR.          
 
                                                                                    
 
Ellen S. Heller        Vice President of FMR.                                       
 
                                                                                    
 
</TABLE>
 
John Hickling   Vice President of FMR (1993) and of funds advised by    
                FMR.                                                    
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                         <C>                                                          
                                                                                         
 
Robert F. Hill              Vice President of FMR; Director of Technical Research.       
 
                                                                                         
 
Curtis Hollingsworth        Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Stephen P. Jonas            Treasurer and Vice President of FMR (1993)); Treasurer of    
                            FMR Texas Inc. (1993), Fidelity Management & Research        
                            (U.K.) Inc. (1993), and Fidelity Management & Research       
                            (Far East) Inc. (1993).                                      
 
                                                                                         
 
David B. Jones              Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Steven Kaye                 Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                            FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                         
 
Frank Knox                  Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Robert A. Lawrence          Senior Vice President of FMR (1993); High Income             
                            Division Leader.                                             
 
                                                                                         
 
Alan Leifer                 Vice President of FMR and of a fund advised by FMR.          
 
                                                                                         
 
Harris Leviton              Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                            FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                         
 
Bradford E. Lewis           Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR.           
 
                                                                                         
 
Malcolm W. MacNaught III    Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Robert H. Morrison          Vice President of FMR; Director of Equity Trading.           
 
                                                                                         
 
David Murphy                Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR.           
 
                                                                                         
 
Andrew Offit                Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Judy Pagliuca               Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Jacques Perold              Vice President of FMR.                                       
 
                                                                                         
 
Anne Punzak                 Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR.           
 
                                                                                         
 
Lee Sandwen                 Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Patricia A. Satterthwaite   Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                            FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                         
 
Thomas T. Soviero           Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Richard Spillane            Vice President of FMR; Senior Vice President and Director    
                            of Operations and Compliance of FMR U.K. (1993).             
 
                                                                                         
 
Robert E. Stansky           Senior Vice President of FMR (1993) and of funds advised     
                            by FMR.                                                      
 
                                                                                         
 
Gary L. Swayze              Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR;           
                            Tax-Free Fixed-Income Group Leader.                          
 
                                                                                         
 
Thomas Sweeney              Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Beth F. Terrana             Senior Vice President of FMR (1993) and of funds advised     
                            by FMR.                                                      
 
                                                                                         
 
Joel Tillinghast            Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                            FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                         
 
Robert Tucket               Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
George A. Vanderheiden      Senior Vice President of FMR; Vice President of funds        
                            advised by FMR; Growth Group Leader.                         
 
                                                                                         
 
Jeffrey Vinik               Senior Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised    
                            by FMR.                                                      
 
                                                                                         
 
Arthur S. Loring            Senior Vice President (1993), Clerk, and General Counsel     
                            of FMR; Vice President, Legal of FMR Corp.; Secretary of     
                            funds advised by FMR.                                        
 
</TABLE>
 
 
(2)  FIDELITY MANAGEMENT & RESEARCH (U.K.) INC. (FMR U.K.)
 FMR U.K. provides investment advisory services to Fidelity Management &
Research Company and Fidelity Management Trust Company.  The directors and
officers of the Sub-Adviser have held the following positions of a
substantial nature during the past two fiscal years.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                    <C>                                                               
Edward C. Johnson 3d   Chairman and Director of FMR U.K.; Chairman of the                
                       Executive Committee of FMR; Chief Executive Officer of FMR        
                       Corp.; Chairman of the Board and a Director of FMR, FMR           
                       Corp., FMR Texas Inc., and Fidelity Management & Research         
                       (Far East) Inc.; President and Trustee of funds advised by FMR.   
 
                                                                                         
 
J. Gary Burkhead       President and Director of FMR U.K.; President of FMR;             
                       Managing Director of FMR Corp.; President and a Director of       
                       FMR Texas Inc. and Fidelity Management & Research (Far            
                       East) Inc.; Senior Vice President and Trustee of funds advised    
                       by FMR.                                                           
 
                                                                                         
 
Richard C. Habermann   Senior Vice President of FMR U.K.; Senior Vice President of       
                       Fidelity Management & Research (Far East) Inc.; Director of       
                       Worldwide Research of FMR.                                        
 
                                                                                         
 
Richard Spillane       Senior Vice President and Director of Operations and              
                       Compliance of FMR U.K. (1993).                                    
 
                                                                                         
 
Stephen P. Jonas       Treasurer of FMR U.K. (1993), Fidelity Management &               
                       Research (Far East) Inc. (1993), and FMR Texas Inc. (1993);       
                       Treasurer and Vice President of FMR (1993).                       
 
                                                                                         
 
David Weinstein        Clerk of FMR U.K.; Clerk of Fidelity Management & Research        
                       (Far East) Inc.; Secretary of FMR Texas Inc.                      
 
</TABLE>
 
 
 
(3)  FIDELITY MANAGEMENT & RESEARCH (FAR EAST) INC. (FMR Far East)
 FMR Far East provides investment advisory services to Fidelity Management
& Research Company and Fidelity Management Trust Company.  The directors
and officers of the Sub-Adviser have held the following positions of a
substantial nature during the past two fiscal years.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                    <C>                                                           
Edward C. Johnson 3d   Chairman and Director of FMR Far East; Chairman of the        
                       Executive Committee of FMR; Chief Executive Officer of        
                       FMR Corp.; Chairman of the Board and a Director of            
                       FMR, FMR Corp., FMR Texas Inc. and Fidelity                   
                       Management & Research (U.K.) Inc.; President and              
                       Trustee of funds advised by FMR.                              
 
                                                                                     
 
J. Gary Burkhead       President and Director of FMR Far East; President of          
                       FMR; Managing Director of FMR Corp.; President and a          
                       Director of FMR Texas Inc. and Fidelity Management &          
                       Research (U.K.) Inc.; Senior Vice President and Trustee       
                       of funds advised by FMR.                                      
 
                                                                                     
 
Richard C. Habermann   Senior Vice President of FMR Far East; Senior Vice            
                       President of Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.)            
                       Inc.; Director of Worldwide Research of FMR.                  
 
                                                                                     
 
William R. Ebsworth    Vice President of FMR Far East.                               
 
                                                                                     
 
Bill Wilder            Vice President of FMR Far East (1993).                        
 
                                                                                     
 
Stephen P. Jonas        Treasurer of FMR Far East (1993), Fidelity Management        
                          & Research (U.K.) Inc. (1993), and FMR Texas Inc.          
                            (1993); Treasurer and Vice President of FMR (1993).      
 
                                                                                     
 
David C. Weinstein     Clerk of FMR Far East; Clerk of Fidelity Management &         
                       Research (U.K.) Inc.; Secretary of FMR Texas Inc.             
 
</TABLE>
 
 
 
(a) Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) acts as distributor for most
funds advised by FMR.
(b)                                                                  
 
Name and Principal   Positions and Offices   Positions and Offices   
 
Business Address*    With Underwriter        With Registrant         
 
Edward C. Johnson 3d   Director                   Trustee and President   
 
W. Humphrey Bogart     Director                   None                    
 
Kurt A. Lange          President and Treasurer    None                    
 
Thomas W. Littauer     Senior Vice President      None                    
 
Arthur S. Loring       Vice President and Clerk   Secretary               
 
* 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, MA
 (c) Not applicable.
Item 30. Location of Accounts and Records
 All accounts, books, and other documents required to be maintained by
Section 31a of the 1940 Act and the Rules promulgated thereunder are
maintained by Fidelity Management & Research Company or Fidelity Service
Co., 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, MA 02109, or the funds' respective
custodians, The Bank of New York, 110 Washington Street, New York, N.Y.
(Fidelity Intermediate Bond Fund), and Brown Brothers Harriman & Co., 40
Water Street, Boston, MA. (Fidelity Market Index Fund, Fidelity Small Cap
Stock Fund and Fidelity Large Cap Stock Fund)
 
Item 31.  Management Services
 Not applicable.
Item 32.  Undertakings
The Registrant, on behalf of Fidelity Intermediate Bond Fund, Fidelity
Market Index Fund, Fidelity Small Cap Stock Fund, and Fidelity Large Cap
Stock Fund, undertakes to: (1) to call a meeting of shareholders for the
purpose of voting upon the question of removal of a trustee or trustees,
when requested to do so by record holders of not less than 10% of its
outstanding shares; and (2) to assist in communications with other
shareholders pursuant to Section 16(c)(1) and (2), whenever shareholders
meeting the qualifications set forth in Section 16(c) seek the opportunity
to communicate with other shareholders with a view toward requesting a
meeting.
The Registrant on behalf of Fidelity Intermediate Bond Fund, Fidelity
Market Index Fund, Fidelity Small Cap Stock Fund and Fidelity Large Cap
Stock Fund undertakes, provided the information required by Item 5A is
contained in the annual report, to furnish each person to whom a prospectus
has been delivered, upon their request and without charge, a copy of the
Registrant's latest annual report to shareholders.
The Registrant, on behalf of Fidelity Intermediate Bond Fund, Fidelity
Market Index Fund, Fidelity Small Cap Stock Fund and Fidelity Large Cap
Stock Fund, undertakes to deliver to each person who has received the
prospectus or annual or semiannual financial report for the fund in an
electronic format, upon his or her request and without charge, a paper copy
of the prospectus or annual or semiannual report for the fund.
POWER OF ATTORNEY
 We, the undersigned Directors, Trustees or General Partners, as the case
may be, of the following investment companies:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                   <C>                                               
Fidelity Advisor Annuity Fund         Fidelity Income Fund                              
Fidelity Advisor Series I             Fidelity Institutional Trust                      
Fidelity Advisor Series II            Fidelity Investment Trust                         
Fidelity Advisor Series III           Fidelity Magellan Fund                            
Fidelity Advisor Series IV            Fidelity Massachusetts Municipal Trust            
Fidelity Advisor Series V             Fidelity Mt. Vernon Street Trust                  
Fidelity Advisor Series VI            Fidelity Municipal Trust                          
Fidelity Advisor Series VII           Fidelity New York Municipal Trust                 
Fidelity Advisor Series VIII          Fidelity Puritan Trust                            
Fidelity California Municipal Trust   Fidelity School Street Trust                      
Fidelity Capital Trust                Fidelity Securities Fund                          
Fidelity Charles Street Trust         Fidelity Select Portfolios                        
Fidelity Commonwealth Trust           Fidelity Sterling Performance Portfolio, L.P.     
Fidelity Congress Street Fund         Fidelity Summer Street Trust                      
Fidelity Contrafund                   Fidelity Trend Fund                               
Fidelity Corporate Trust              Fidelity U.S. Investments-Bond Fund, L.P.         
Fidelity Court Street Trust           Fidelity U.S. Investments-Government Securities   
Fidelity Deutsche Mark Performance       Fund, L.P.                                     
  Portfolio, L.P.                     Fidelity Union Street Trust                       
Fidelity Devonshire Trust             Fidelity Yen Performance Portfolio, L.P.          
Fidelity Exchange Fund                Spartan U.S. Treasury Money Market                
Fidelity Financial Trust                 Fund                                           
Fidelity Fixed-Income Trust           Variable Insurance Products Fund                  
Fidelity Government Securities Fund   Variable Insurance Products Fund II               
Fidelity Hastings Street Trust                                                          
 
</TABLE>
 
plus any other investment company for which Fidelity Management & Research
Company acts as investment adviser and for which the undersigned
individuals serve as Board Members (collectively, the "Funds"), hereby
severally constitute and appoint Arthur J. Brown, Arthur C. Delibert,
Robert C. Hacker, Richard M. Phillips, Dana L. Platt and Stephanie A.
Djinis, each of them singly, our true and lawful attorneys-in-fact, with
full power of substitution, and with full power to each of them, to sign
for us and in our names in the appropriate capacities, all Pre-Effective
Amendments to any Registration Statements of the Funds, any and all
subsequent Post-Effective Amendments to said Registration Statements, any
Registration Statements on Form N-14, and any supplements or other
instruments in connection therewith, and generally to do all such things in
our names and behalf in connection therewith as said attorneys-in-fact deem
necessary or appropriate, to comply with the provisions of the Securities
Act of 1933 and Investment Company Act of 1940, and all related
requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission, hereby ratifying
and confirming all that said attorneys-in-fact or their substitutes may do
or cause to be done by virtue hereof.
 WITNESS our hands on this fifteenth day of December, 1994.
/s/Edward C. Johnson 3d         /s/Donald J. Kirk              
 
Edward C. Johnson 3d            Donald J. Kirk                 
 
                                                               
 
                                                               
 
/s/J. Gary Burkhead             /s/Peter S. Lynch              
 
J. Gary Burkhead                Peter S. Lynch                 
 
                                                               
 
                                                               
 
/s/Ralph F. Cox                 /s/Marvin L. Mann              
 
Ralph F. Cox                    Marvin L. Mann                 
 
                                                               
 
                                                               
 
/s/Phyllis Burke Davis          /s/Edward H. Malone            
 
Phyllis Burke Davis             Edward H. Malone               
 
                                                               
 
                                                               
 
/s/Richard J. Flynn             /s/Gerald C. McDonough         
 
Richard J. Flynn                Gerald C. McDonough            
 
                                                               
 
                                                               
 
/s/E. Bradley Jones             /s/Thomas R. Williams          
 
E. Bradley Jones                Thomas R. Williams             
 
POWER OF ATTORNEY
 I, the undersigned President and Director, Trustee or General Partner, as
the case may be, of the following investment companies:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                   <C>                                               
Fidelity Advisor Annuity Fund         Fidelity Institutional Trust                      
Fidelity Advisor Series I             Fidelity Investment Trust                         
Fidelity Advisor Series II            Fidelity Magellan Fund                            
Fidelity Advisor Series III           Fidelity Massachusetts Municipal Trust            
Fidelity Advisor Series IV            Fidelity Money Market Trust                       
Fidelity Advisor Series V             Fidelity Mt. Vernon Street Trust                  
Fidelity Advisor Series VI            Fidelity Municipal Trust                          
Fidelity Advisor Series VII           Fidelity New York Municipal Trust                 
Fidelity Advisor Series VIII          Fidelity Puritan Trust                            
Fidelity California Municipal Trust   Fidelity School Street Trust                      
Fidelity Capital Trust                Fidelity Securities Fund                          
Fidelity Charles Street Trust         Fidelity Select Portfolios                        
Fidelity Commonwealth Trust           Fidelity Sterling Performance Portfolio, L.P.     
Fidelity Congress Street Fund         Fidelity Summer Street Trust                      
Fidelity Contrafund                   Fidelity Trend Fund                               
Fidelity Corporate Trust              Fidelity U.S. Investments-Bond Fund, L.P.         
Fidelity Court Street Trust           Fidelity U.S. Investments-Government Securities   
Fidelity Destiny Portfolios              Fund, L.P.                                     
Fidelity Deutsche Mark Performance    Fidelity Union Street Trust                       
  Portfolio, L.P.                     Fidelity Yen Performance Portfolio, L.P.          
Fidelity Devonshire Trust             Spartan U.S. Treasury Money Market                
Fidelity Exchange Fund                   Fund                                           
Fidelity Financial Trust              Variable Insurance Products Fund                  
Fidelity Fixed-Income Trust           Variable Insurance Products Fund II               
Fidelity Government Securities Fund                                                     
Fidelity Hastings Street Trust                                                          
Fidelity Income Fund                                                                    
 
</TABLE>
 
plus any other investment company for which Fidelity Management & Research
Company acts as investment adviser and for which the undersigned individual
serves as President and Board Member (collectively, the "Funds"), hereby
severally constitute and appoint J. Gary Burkhead, my true and lawful
attorney-in-fact, with full power of substitution, and with full power to
sign for me and in my name in the appropriate capacity, all Pre-Effective
Amendments to any Registration Statements of the Funds, any and all
subsequent Post-Effective Amendments to said Registration Statements, any
Registration Statements on Form N-14, and any supplements or other
instruments in connection therewith, and generally to do all such things in
my name and behalf in connection therewith as said attorney-in-fact deem
necessary or appropriate, to comply with the provisions of the Securities
Act of 1933 and Investment Company Act of 1940, and all related
requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission.  I hereby ratify
and confirm all that said attorneys-in-fact or their substitutes may do or
cause to be done by virtue hereof.
 WITNESS my hand on the date set forth below.
/s/Edward C. Johnson 3d   December 15, 1994   
 
Edward C. Johnson 3d                          
 
 
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant certifies that it meets all
of the requirements for the effectiveness of this Registration Statement
pursuant to Rule 485(b) under the Securities Act of 1933 and has duly
caused this Post-Effective Amendment No. 59 to the Registration Statement
to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized,
in the City of Boston, and State of Massachusetts, on the 13th day of
December 1995.
      FIDELITY COMMONWEALTH TRUST
      By /s/Edward C. Johnson 3d (dagger)
        Edward C. Johnson 3d, President
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this
Registration Statement has been signed below by the following persons in
the capacities and on the dates indicated.
     (Signature)    (Title)   (Date)   
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                               <C>                             <C>                 
/s/Edward C. Johnson 3d(dagger)   President and Trustee           December 13, 1995   
 
    Edward C. Johnson 3d          (Principal Executive Officer)                       
 
                                                                                      
 
</TABLE>
 
/s/Kenneth A. Rathgeber     Treasurer   December 13, 1995   
 
    Kenneth A. Rathgeber               
 
/s/J. Gary Burkhead    Trustee   December 13, 1995   
 
    J. Gary Burkhead               
 
                                                               
/s/Ralph F. Cox              *   Trustee   December 13, 1995   
 
   Ralph F. Cox               
 
                                                           
/s/Phyllis Burke Davis   *   Trustee   December 13, 1995   
 
    Phyllis Burke Davis               
 
                                                              
/s/Richard J. Flynn         *   Trustee   December 13, 1995   
 
    Richard J. Flynn               
 
                                                              
/s/E. Bradley Jones         *   Trustee   December 13, 1995   
 
    E. Bradley Jones               
 
                                                                
/s/Donald J. Kirk             *   Trustee   December 13, 1995   
 
    Donald J. Kirk               
 
                                                                
/s/Peter S. Lynch             *   Trustee   December 13, 1995   
 
    Peter S. Lynch               
 
                                                           
/s/Edward H. Malone      *   Trustee   December 13, 1995   
 
   Edward H. Malone                
 
                                                         
/s/Marvin L. Mann_____*    Trustee   December 13, 1995   
 
   Marvin L. Mann                
 
/s/Gerald C. McDonough*   Trustee   December 13, 1995   
 
    Gerald C. McDonough               
 
/s/Thomas R. Williams    *   Trustee   December 13, 1995   
 
   Thomas R. Williams               
 
(dagger) Signatures affixed by J. Gary Burkhead pursuant to a power of
attorney dated December 15, 1994 and filed herewith.
* Signature affixed by Robert C. Hacker pursuant to a power of attorney
dated December 15, 1994 and filed herewith.

 
 
 
(2_FIDELITY_LOGOS)FIDELITY
 
LARGE CAP STOCK
FUND
SEMIANNUAL REPORT
OCTOBER 31, 1995
CONTENTS
 
 
PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE     3   Ned Johnson on investing                 
                            strategies.                              
 
PERFORMANCE             4   How the fund has done over time.         
 
FUND TALK               5   The manager's review of fund             
                            performance, strategy and outlook.       
 
INVESTMENT SUMMARY      8   A summary of the fund's                  
                            investments.                             
 
INVESTMENTS            9    A complete list of the fund's            
                            investments with their market            
                            values.                                  
 
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS   17   Statements of assets and liabilities,    
                            operations, and changes in net           
                            assets,                                  
                            as well as financial highlights.         
 
NOTES                  21   Notes to the financial statements.       
 
 
THIS REPORT AND THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTAINED HEREIN ARE SUBMITTED FOR
THE GENERAL 
INFORMATION OF THE SHAREHOLDERS OF THE FUND. THIS REPORT IS NOT AUTHORIZED
FOR DISTRIBUTION TO 
PROSPECTIVE INVESTORS IN THE FUND UNLESS PRECEDED OR ACCOMPANIED BY AN
EFFECTIVE 
PROSPECTUS. 
MUTUAL FUND SHARES ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OBLIGATIONS OF, OR GUARANTEED BY, 
ANY DEPOSITORY INSTITUTION. SHARES ARE NOT INSURED BY THE FDIC, 
FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD OR ANY OTHER AGENCY, AND ARE SUBJECT TO 
INVESTMENT RISK, INCLUDING THE POSSIBLE LOSS OF PRINCIPAL AMOUNT INVESTED. 
NEITHER THE FUND NOR FIDELITY DISTRIBUTORS CORPORATION IS A BANK. 
FOR MORE INFORMATION ON ANY FIDELITY FUND, INCLUDING CHARGES AND EXPENSES,
CALL 
1-800-544-8888 FOR A FREE PROSPECTUS. READ IT CAREFULLY BEFORE YOU INVEST
OR SEND MONEY.
PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE
 
 
 
DEAR SHAREHOLDER:
Although the markets have been fairly positive this year, no one can
predict what lies ahead for investors. Last year, stocks posted
below-average returns and bonds had one of the worst years in history. This
downturn followed a period in which the investing environment was generally
very positive.
These market ups and downs are a normal part of investing, and there are
some basic principles that are helpful for investors to remember in
different types of markets.
If you can leave your money invested over the long term, you can avoid the
results of the volatility that generally accompanies the stock market in
the short term, as we witnessed last year. You also can help to manage some
of the risks of investing through diversification. A stock fund is already
diversified because it invests in many issues. You can diversify even
further by placing some of your money in several different types of stock
funds or in other investment categories, such as bonds.
If you have a short investment time horizon, you might want to consider
moving some of your investment into a money market fund, which seeks income
and a stable share price by investing in high-quality, short-term
investments. Of course, there is no assurance that a money market fund will
achieve its goal, and it is important to remember that money market funds
are not insured or guaranteed by any agency of the U.S. government.
Finally, no matter what your investment horizon or portfolio diversity, it
makes good sense to follow a regular investment plan - investing a certain
amount of money at the same time each month or quarter - and to review your
portfolio periodically. A periodic investment plan will not, of course,
assure a profit or protect against a loss.
If you have any questions, please call us at 1-800-544-8888. We stand ready
to provide the information you need to make the investments that are right
for you.
Best regards,
Edward C. Johnson 3d
PERFORMANCE: THE BOTTOM LINE
 
 
There are several ways to evaluate a fund's historical performance. You can
look at the total percentage change in value, the average annual percentage
change, or the growth of a hypothetical $10,000 investment. A fund's total
return includes changes in a fund's share price, plus reinvestment of any
dividends (or income) and capital gains (the profits the fund earns when it
sells securities that have grown in value).
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS will appear once the fund is a year old, and
the growth of a hypothetical $10,000 INVESTMENT in the fund will appear in
the fund's next report six months from now.
 
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN
 PERIOD ENDED OCTOBER 31, 1995 LIFE OF 
  FUND 
Large Cap Stock 5.90%
S&P 500(registered trademark) 7.78%
Average Growth Fund 5.83%
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS show the fund's performance in percentage terms
over a set period - in this case, since the fund started on June 22, 1995.
For example, if you invested $1,000 in a fund that had a 5% return over the 
past year, the value of your investment would be $1,050. You can compare
the fund's returns to the performance of the Standard & Poor's Composite
Index of 500 Stocks - a common proxy of the U.S. stock market. To measure
how the fund's performance stacked up against its peers, you can compare it
to the performance of the average growth fund, which reflects the
performance of 623 growth funds with similar objectives tracked by Lipper
Analytical Services over the period. Both benchmarks include reinvested
dividends and capital gains, if any.
 
 
UNDERSTANDING
PERFORMANCE
How a fund did yesterday is 
no guarantee of how it will do 
tomorrow. The stock market, 
for example, has a history of 
growth in the long run and 
volatility in the short run. In 
turn, the share price and return 
of a fund that invests in stocks 
will vary. That means if you 
sell your shares during a 
market downturn, you might 
lose money. 
But if you can ride out the 
market's ups and downs, you 
may have a gain.
(checkmark)
FUND TALK: THE MANAGER'S OVERVIEW
 
 
An interview with John McDowell, Portfolio Manager of Fidelity Large Cap
Stock Fund
Q. HOW DID THE FUND PERFORM, JOHN?
A. This fund was introduced on June 22, 1995. Fidelity generally looks at
performance for six- or 12- month periods. For this report, we will look at
performance since inception. For the period ended October 31, 1995, the
fund returned 5.90%, while its benchmark index, the Standard & Poor's
Composite Index of 500 Stocks, returned 7.78%. According to Lipper
Analytical Services, from June 22, 1995, to October 31, 1995, the average
growth fund returned 5.83%.
Q. TECHNOLOGY, FINANCIAL SERVICES AND HEALTH CARE STOCKS HAVE LED THE
MARKET THIS YEAR. HAS THE FUND BEEN ABLE TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE RUN-UP IN
THESE KINDS OF STOCKS?
A. Absolutely. Financial stocks such as American Express and Allstate have
been strong performers. Health care stocks from industries such as
pharmaceuticals, medical equipment and managed care have performed well.
Some of the health care stocks that have benefited the fund include Abbott
Labs, Pfizer and Medtronic. The torrid pace of the technology sector slowed
somewhat in the third quarter due to some earnings disappointments.
Nevertheless, I liked software companies like Microsoft; networking
companies like Cisco Systems and 3Com Corp.; semiconductor companies like
Intel and Micron Technology and computer companies such as Compaq Computer
Corp. and Hewlett-Packard.
Q. WHAT AREAS HELD THE FUND BACK?
A. Although cyclicals and retail stocks were not some of the fund's top
market sectors, their underperformance hurt the fund somewhat. As the
economy slowed this year, cyclical stocks, which generally trade well in
the first stages of an economic expansion, underperformed. Some of these
cyclicals include heavy-equipment maker Caterpillar, waste management
company Browning-Ferris and electrical connector maker AMP. Additionally,
retail stocks are better performers when people are spending money -
because most often this means a high-growth environment. Because I buy and
sell stocks on a case-by-case basis, I'm sticking with many of these stocks
because I believe that, over time, they may show strong earnings growth. 
Q. WHAT OTHER AREAS OF THE TECHNOLOGY SECTOR WILL BE IMPORTANT IN THE
FUTURE?
A. I see improving earnings momentum in software companies such as
Microsoft and Symantec. Strong sales of Windows 95 may help Microsoft, and
Symantec - which makes Norton Utilities - may also benefit as a maker of
Windows 95-compatible products. I'm also optimistic about companies that
are taking advantage of corporate America's growing need to outsource
technology-related functions such as payroll processing and employee
benefits administration. There's been a huge capital spending boom on
computer hardware and now a lot of companies are saying "Wait a second. We
don't know how to manage this stuff. Let's hire an expert to help us." Some
of these companies include Automatic Data Processing Inc., First Data Corp,
Computer Sciences Corp. and General Motors subsidiary Electronic Data
Systems. 
Q. WHY HAVE YOU TARGETED REGIONAL BELL COMPANIES RECENTLY?
A. I've targeted these companies because their earnings growth rate has
accelerated due to rapid expansion of their cellular phone businesses as
well as value-added services such as voice mail, caller ID and call
waiting. A company's earnings growth rate represents its rate of increase
in after-tax profits during a certain period. Regional Bell companies also
are operating in a more favorable regulatory environment with less
rate-of-return regulation and more price-cap agreements - or the maximum
amount they can charge customers. In essence, a favorable regulatory
environment allows these companies to keep gains reaped from increased
business efficiency. In addition, although the telecommunications
legislation currently before Congress would allow long-distance companies
like AT&T to enter regional markets, regional 
companies will be able to compete in the long distance market, which, in my
opinion, they can adapt to quickly. 
Q. WHAT IS THE FUND'S FOREIGN EXPOSURE?
A. I've only invested 3.7% of the fund's assets in American Depository
Receipts or ADRs. ADRs are shares of non-U.S. companies traded on American
stock exchanges. Like the rest of the portfolio, these companies are
selected for their potential earnings growth and attractive valuation.
What's important is that the fund owns many "global companies." In order to
stay competitive, many large U.S. corporations such as Gillette, PepsiCo
and Philip Morris, had to expand overseas. In fact, if you compared the
growth of their internal divisions, the majority of their international
divisions are growing faster than their U.S. ones. Of course, international
markets may be more volatile than domestic markets.
Q. WHAT'S YOUR STRATEGY?
A. I plan to use a stock-by-stock, bottom-up approach to every domestic or
foreign company I look at. I spend little time analyzing the latest
economic pronouncements; I spend the majority of my time looking for stocks
with good earnings potential at the best value.
Q. SO WHAT'S YOUR OUTLOOK, JOHN?
A. While the budget situation in Washington is a big question mark right
now, I believe the general investment 
environment is pretty favorable. When it comes to inflation, the classic
warning flag is an upward pressure on wages. To date, the data is not there
to indicate a general rise in wages. While many will argue that stocks are
becoming too expensive, I believe that if corporate earnings growth
continues to be positive, the stock market could benefit.
 
FUND FACTS
GOAL: to seek long-term 
capital appreciation by 
investing in companies with 
market capitalizations 
greater than $1 billion at the 
time of investment
START DATE: June 22, 1995
SIZE: As of October 31, 1995, 
more than $59 million
MANAGER: John McDowell, 
since June 22, 1995; manager, 
Fidelity Earnings Growth 
accounts; joined Fidelity in 
1985
(checkmark)
JOHN MCDOWELL ON HIS 
INVESTMENT STYLE:
"I boil it down to a three-step 
process. First, I try to identify 
companies that I believe can 
produce a future earnings 
growth rate that is above 
average. Generally, that 
means stocks with anticipated 
earnings above the 8% 
projected earnings growth rate 
of the fund's benchmark index, 
the S&P 500. Next, I take 
those stocks and, based on 
input from Fidelity's research 
staff, try to determine which 
ones have relative short-term 
earnings momentum. Finally, I 
try to put into numerical terms 
how much I would have to pay 
for a stock's anticipated 
earnings growth. Ideally, one 
would want to end up with a 
group of stocks that are 
cheap versus their potential 
growth rates.
"The fund is going to own a lot 
of household names like GE 
or Johnson & Johnson. These 
companies are in the portfolio 
because I believe they are 
capable of producing 
above-average growth in 
earnings per share."
DISTRIBUTIONS
The Board of Trustees of Fidelity 
Large Cap Stock voted to pay 
on December 11, 1995, to 
shareholders of record at the 
opening of business on 
December 8, 1995, a 
distribution of $.xx derived from 
capital gains realized from 
sales of portfolio securities and 
a dividend of $.xx from net 
investment income.
   
INVESTMENT SUMMARY
 
 
TOP TEN STOCKS AS OF OCTOBER 31, 1995
   MID-CAP STOCK    
                                        % OF FUND'S INVESTMENTS    
 
Philip Morris Companies, Inc.           3.0                        
 
General Electric Co.                    2.7                        
 
AT&T Corp.                              2.3                        
 
International Business Machines Corp.   2.1                        
 
Federal National Mortgage Association   1.9                        
 
SBC Communications, Inc.                1.8                        
 
Ameritech Corp.                         1.8                        
 
Microsoft Corp.                         1.8                        
 
Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corp.           1.7                        
 
Intel Corp.                             1.7                        
 
TOP FIVE MARKET SECTORS AS OF OCTOBER 31, 1995
   MID-CAP STOCK    
              % OF FUND'S INVESTMENTS    
 
Technology    27.2                       
 
Health        13.8                       
 
Nondurables   10.6                       
 
Finance       9.8                        
 
Utilities     9.1                        
 
ASSET ALLOCATION
   MID-CAP STOCK    
AS OF OCTOBER 31, 1995 * 
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 5.2
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 44.8
Row: 1, Col: 3, Value: 50.0
Stocks  94.8%
Short-term investments  
5.2%
FOREIGN INVESTMENTS  3.7%
*
INVESTMENTS OCTOBER 31, 1995 (UNAUDITED)
 
Showing Percentage of Total Value of Investment in Securities
 
 
COMMON STOCKS - 94.8%
 SHARES VALUE (NOTE 1)
AEROSPACE & DEFENSE - 0.6%
Lockheed Martin Corp.   5,180 $ 352,877  53983010
BASIC INDUSTRIES - 1.8%
CHEMICALS & PLASTICS - 0.9%
Great Lakes Chemical Corp.   4,700  315,488  39056810
Nalco Chemical Co.   6,990  209,700  62985310
  525,188
PACKAGING & CONTAINERS - 0.5%
Owens-Illinois, Inc. (a)  23,970  302,621  69076840
PAPER & FOREST PRODUCTS - 0.4%
Scott Paper Co.   4,340  231,105  80987710
TOTAL BASIC INDUSTRIES   1,058,914
CONGLOMERATES - 0.9%
Tyco International Ltd.   8,480  515,160  90212010
CONSTRUCTION & REAL ESTATE - 0.9%
BUILDING MATERIALS - 0.4%
Sherwin-Williams Co.   6,400  240,800  82434810
ENGINEERING - 0.5%
Fluor Corp.   5,400  305,100  34386110
TOTAL CONSTRUCTION & REAL ESTATE   545,900
DURABLES - 1.7%
AUTOS, TIRES, & ACCESSORIES - 1.0%
Chrysler Corp.   11,610  599,366  17119610
HOME FURNISHINGS - 0.1%
Heilig-Meyers Co.   3,200  58,800  42289310
TEXTILES & APPAREL - 0.6%
Nine West Group, Inc. (a)  7,740  344,430  65440D10
TOTAL DURABLES   1,002,596
COMMON STOCKS - CONTINUED
 SHARES VALUE (NOTE 1)
ENERGY - 4.2%
ENERGY SERVICES - 0.5%
Schlumberger Ltd.   5,140 $ 319,965  80685710
OIL & GAS - 3.7%
Amerada Hess Corp.   3,430  154,779  02355110
Amoco Corp.   4,400  281,050  03190510
Atlantic Richfield Co.   2,920  311,710  04882510
British Petroleum PLC ADR  7,100  626,575  11088940
Exxon Corp.   2,100  160,388  30229010
Phillips Petroleum Co.   10,010  322,823  71850710
Unocal Corp.   11,720  307,650  91528910
  2,164,975
TOTAL ENERGY   2,484,940
FINANCE - 9.8%
BANKS - 1.8%
Banc One Corp.   9,240  311,850  05943810
Bank of New York Co., Inc.   11,890  499,380  06405710
NationsBank Corp.   4,200  276,150  63858510
  1,087,380
CREDIT & OTHER FINANCE - 1.6%
American Express Co.   23,390  950,219  02581610
FEDERAL SPONSORED CREDIT - 3.1%
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation  5,900  408,575  31340030
Federal National Mortgage Association  10,400  1,090,700  31358610
Student Loan Marketing Association  5,700  335,588  86387150
  1,834,863
INSURANCE - 2.6%
Allstate Corp.   19,271  708,209  02000210
American International Group, Inc.   5,600  472,500  02687410
General Re Corp.   2,320  336,110  37056310
  1,516,819
SECURITIES INDUSTRY - 0.7%
Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.   7,000  388,500  59018810
TOTAL FINANCE   5,777,781
COMMON STOCKS - CONTINUED
 SHARES VALUE (NOTE 1)
HEALTH - 13.8%
DRUGS & PHARMACEUTICALS - 5.6%
American Home Products Corp.   7,860 $ 696,593  02660910
Amgen, Inc. (a)  6,960  334,080  03116210
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.   3,200  244,000  11012210
Merck & Co., Inc.   16,570  952,775  58933110
Pfizer, Inc.   9,250  530,719  71708110
Schering-Plough Corp.   10,290  551,801  80660510
  3,309,968
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT & SUPPLIES - 5.2%
Abbott Laboratories  4,540  180,465  00282410
Baxter International, Inc.   17,180  663,578  07181310
Becton, Dickinson & Co.   5,120  332,800  07588710
Cardinal Health, Inc.   4,000  205,500  14149Y10
Johnson & Johnson  10,200  831,300  47816010
Medtronic, Inc.   5,100  294,525  58505510
Millipore Corp.   8,460  299,273  60107310
St. Jude Medical, Inc. (a)  4,180  222,585  79084910
  3,030,026
MEDICAL FACILITIES MANAGEMENT - 3.0%
Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corp.   20,550  1,009,519  19767710
Health Management Associates, Inc. Class A (a)  10,620  228,330  42193310
Health Care & Retirement Corp.   4,800  141,000  42193710
United HealthCare Corp.   6,970  370,281  91058110
  1,749,130
TOTAL HEALTH   8,089,124
INDUSTRIAL MACHINERY & EQUIPMENT - 5.2%
ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT - 3.3%
Emerson Electric Co.   4,200  299,250  29101110
General Electric Co.   25,490  1,612,243  36960410
  1,911,493
INDUSTRIAL MACHINERY & EQUIPMENT - 0.9%
Caterpillar, Inc.   9,670  542,729  14912310
POLLUTION CONTROL - 1.0%
Browning-Ferris Industries, Inc.   20,220  588,908  11588510
TOTAL INDUSTRIAL MACHINERY & EQUIPMENT   3,043,130
COMMON STOCKS - CONTINUED
 SHARES VALUE (NOTE 1)
MEDIA & LEISURE - 4.1%
BROADCASTING - 0.7%
Capital Cities/ABC, Inc.   930 $ 110,321  13985910
Viacom, Inc. Class B (non-vtg.)  6,100  305,000  92552430
  415,321
ENTERTAINMENT - 0.3%
Disney (Walt) Co.   3,150  181,519  25468710
LEISURE DURABLES & TOYS - 0.6%
Mattel, Inc.   11,610  333,788  57708110
LODGING & GAMING - 1.5%
HFS, Inc.   5,790  354,638  40418110
Harrah's Entertainment, Inc.   3,000  74,250  41361910
Marriott International, Inc.   9,040  333,350  57190010
Mirage Resorts, Inc.   3,100  101,525  60462E10
  863,763
PUBLISHING - 0.1%
News Corp. Ltd. ADR  3,950  78,506  65248770
RESTAURANTS - 0.9%
McDonald's Corp.   13,150  539,150  58013510
TOTAL MEDIA & LEISURE   2,412,047
NONDURABLES - 10.6%
AGRICULTURE - 0.5%
Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc.   6,100  302,713  72368610
BEVERAGES - 1.8%
Coca-Cola Company (The)  5,230  375,906  19121610
PepsiCo, Inc.   13,170  694,718  71344810
  1,070,624
FOODS - 3.0%
CPC International, Inc.   4,300  285,413  12614910
General Mills, Inc.   1,600  91,800  37033410
Kellogg Co.   6,890  497,803  48783610
Ralston Purina Co.   5,970  354,469  75127730
Sysco Corp.   7,500  227,813  87182910
Tyson Foods, Inc.   12,430  296,766  90249410
  1,754,064
COMMON STOCKS - CONTINUED
 SHARES VALUE (NOTE 1)
NONDURABLES - CONTINUED
HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTS - 2.2%
Avon Products, Inc.   3,500 $ 248,938  05430310
Gillette Co.   7,000  338,625  37576610
Procter & Gamble Co.   8,690  703,890  74271810
  1,291,453
TOBACCO - 3.1%
Philip Morris Companies, Inc.   20,980  1,772,810  71815410
RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp.   1,396  42,927  74960K87
  1,815,737
TOTAL NONDURABLES   6,234,591
RETAIL & WHOLESALE - 3.5%
APPAREL STORES - 0.4%
Gymboree Corp. (a)  10,790  244,124  40377710
GENERAL MERCHANDISE STORES - 2.4%
May Department Stores Co. (The)  7,370  289,273  57777810
Sears, Roebuck & Co.   17,980  611,320  81238710
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.   23,830  515,324  93114210
  1,415,917
RETAIL & WHOLESALE, MISCELLANEOUS - 0.7%
Barnes & Noble, Inc. (a)  670  24,455  06777410
Lowe's Companies, Inc.   14,110  380,970  54866110
  405,425
TOTAL RETAIL & WHOLESALE   2,065,466
SERVICES - 1.2%
ADVERTISING - 0.4%
Omnicom Group, Inc.   3,600  229,950  68191910
SERVICES - 0.8%
Block (H&R), Inc.   2,800  115,500  09367110
Service Corp. International  8,680  348,285  81756510
  463,785
TOTAL SERVICES   693,735
COMMON STOCKS - CONTINUED
 SHARES VALUE (NOTE 1)
TECHNOLOGY - 27.2%
COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT - 4.1%
Cisco Systems, Inc. (a)  11,730 $ 909,075  17275R10
DSC Communications Corp. (a)  4,830  178,710  23331110
Ericsson (L.M.) Telephone Co. Class B ADR (a)  14,690  313,769  29482140
Nokia Corp. AB sponsored ADR  9,020  502,865  65490220
Octel Communications Corp.   5,000  170,625  67572410
3Com Corp. (a)  6,480  304,560  88553510
  2,379,604
COMPUTER SERVICES & SOFTWARE - 10.6%
America Online, Inc.   4,100  328,000  02364J10
Automatic Data Processing, Inc.   11,980  856,570  05301510
Broderbund Software, Inc. (a)  6,990  484,931  11201410
CUC International, Inc. (a)  9,805  339,498  12654510
Ceridian Corp. (a)  7,450  324,075  15677T10
Computer Sciences Corp. (a)  5,760  385,200  20536310
DST Systems, Inc.   200  4,200  23332510
Equifax, Inc.   4,900  191,100  29442910
First Data Corp.   2,537  167,759  31996310
General Motors Corp. Class E  12,640  595,660  37044240
HBO & Co.   3,000  212,250  40410010
Microsoft Corp. (a)  10,520  1,052,000  59491810
Oracle Systems Corp. (a)  10,000  436,250  68389X10
Stratacom, Inc. (a)  6,090  374,535  86268310
Symantec Corp. (a)  18,970  461,208  87150310
  6,213,236
COMPUTERS & OFFICE EQUIPMENT - 6.6%
Adaptec, Inc. (a)  8,620  383,590  00651F10
Bay Networks, Inc. (a)  5,930  392,863  07251010
Compaq Computer Corp. (a)  9,020  502,865  20449310
Hewlett-Packard Co.   3,860  357,533  42823610
International Business Machines Corp.   12,820  1,246,745  45920010
Pitney Bowes, Inc.   12,110  528,299  72447910
Xerox Corp.   3,780  490,455  98412110
  3,902,350
ELECTRONIC INSTRUMENTS - 0.4%
Applied Materials, Inc.   4,500  225,563  03822210
COMMON STOCKS - CONTINUED
 SHARES VALUE (NOTE 1)
TECHNOLOGY - CONTINUED
ELECTRONICS - 5.0%
AMP, Inc.   12,180 $ 478,065  03189710
Intel Corp.   14,390  1,005,501  45814010
Kemet Corp. (a)  2,000  69,000  48836010
Linear Technology Corp.   7,840  343,000  53567810
Micron Technology, Inc.   2,570  181,506  59511210
Motorola, Inc.   3,240  212,625  62007610
National Semiconductor Corp. (a)  12,180  296,888  63764010
Texas Instruments, Inc.   4,420  301,665  88250810
Xilinx, Inc.   900  41,400  98391910
  2,929,650
PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT - 0.5%
Eastman Kodak Co.   4,770  298,721  27746110
TOTAL TECHNOLOGY   15,949,124
TRANSPORTATION - 0.2%
RAILROADS - 0.2%
CSX Corp.   1,058  88,608  12640810
UTILITIES - 9.1%
CELLULAR - 1.6%
AirTouch Communications, Inc.   9,800  279,300  00949T10
Vodafone Group PLC sponsored ADR  15,680  640,920  92857T10
  920,220
TELEPHONE SERVICES - 7.5%
AT&T Corp.   21,240  1,359,360  00195710
Ameritech Corp.  19,750  1,066,500  03095410
Bell Atlantic Corp.   400  25,450  07785310
Frontier Corp.   13,290  358,830  35906P10
NYNEX Corp.   11,700  549,900  67076810
SBC Communications, Inc.   19,280  1,077,270  78387G10
  4,437,310
TOTAL UTILITIES   5,357,530
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS
(Cost $54,068,084)   55,671,523
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS - 5.2%
 MATURITY VALUE
 AMOUNT  (NOTE 1)
Investments in repurchase agreements
(U.S. Treasury obligations) in a joint
trading account at 5.88%, dated
10/31/95 due 11/1/95  $ 3,080,503 $ 3,080,000  82699H9K
TOTAL INVESTMENT IN SECURITIES - 100%
(Cost $57,148,084)  $ 58,751,523
LEGEND
(1.) Non-income producing
INCOME TAX INFORMATION
At October 31, 1995, the aggregate cost of investment securities for income
tax purposes was $57,148,084. Net unrealized appreciation aggregated
$1,603,439, of which $3,074,803, related to appreciated investment
securities and $1,471,364 related to depreciated investment securities.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
 
       STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                         <C>           <C>            
 OCTOBER 31, 1995 (UNAUDITED)                                                            
 
ASSETS                                                                                   
 
Investment in securities, at value (including repurchase                  $ 58,751,523   
agreements of $3,080,000) (cost $57,148,084) -                                           
See accompanying schedule                                                                
 
Cash                                                                       88            
 
Receivable for investments sold                                            2,880,490     
 
Receivable for fund shares sold                                            1,072,316     
 
Dividends receivable                                                       60,798        
 
 TOTAL ASSETS                                                              62,765,215    
 
LIABILITIES                                                                              
 
Payable for investments purchased                           $ 2,363,320                  
 
Payable for fund shares redeemed                             881,179                     
 
Accrued management fee                                       27,190                      
 
Other payables and accrued expenses                          51,671                      
 
 TOTAL LIABILITIES                                                         3,323,360     
 
NET ASSETS                                                                $ 59,441,855   
 
Net Assets consist of:                                                                   
 
Paid in capital                                                           $ 58,081,063   
 
Undistributed net investment income                                        13,339        
 
Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss)                         (255,986)     
on investments                                                                           
 
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on                              1,603,439     
investments                                                                              
 
NET ASSETS, for 5,610,582 shares outstanding                              $ 59,441,855   
 
NET ASSET VALUE, offering price and redemption price per                   $10.59        
share ($59,441,855 (divided by) 5,610,582 shares)                                        
 
</TABLE>
 
       STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                          <C>        <C>           
JUNE 22, 1995 (COMMENCEMENT OF OPERATIONS) TO OCTOBER 31, 1995 (UNAUDITED)                            
 
INVESTMENT INCOME                                                                       $ 163,956     
Dividends                                                                                             
 
Interest                                                                                 66,449       
 
 TOTAL INCOME                                                                            230,405      
 
EXPENSES                                                                                              
 
Management fee                                                               $ 68,605                 
 
Transfer agent fees                                                           36,794                  
 
Accounting fees and expenses                                                  16,089                  
 
Non-interested trustees' compensation                                         16                      
 
Custodian fees and expenses                                                   23,825                  
 
Registration fees                                                             63,265                  
 
Audit                                                                         8,402                   
 
Miscellaneous                                                                 95                      
 
 Total expenses before reductions                                             217,091                 
 
 Expense reductions                                                           (25)       217,066      
 
NET INVESTMENT INCOME                                                                    13,339       
 
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS)                                                      (255,986)    
Net realized gain (loss) on investment securities                                                     
 
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on                                  1,603,439    
investment securities                                                                                 
 
NET GAIN (LOSS)                                                                          1,347,453    
 
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING                                         $ 1,360,792   
FROM OPERATIONS                                                                                       
 
</TABLE>
 
       STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                          <C>                
                                                                             JUNE 22, 1995      
                                                                             (COMMENCEMENT      
                                                                             OF                 
                                                                             OPERATIONS) TO     
                                                                             OCTOBER 31, 1995   
                                                                             (UNAUDITED)        
 
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS                                                               
 
Operations                                                                   $ 13,339           
Net investment income                                                                           
 
 Net realized gain (loss)                                                     (255,986)         
 
 Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)                         1,603,439         
 
 NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING                              1,360,792         
FROM OPERATIONS                                                                                 
 
Share transactions                                                            71,817,845        
Net proceeds from sales of shares                                                               
 
 Cost of shares redeemed                                                      (13,736,782)      
 
 NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM SHARE                   58,081,063        
TRANSACTIONS                                                                                    
 
  TOTAL INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS                                     59,441,855        
 
NET ASSETS                                                                                      
 
 Beginning of period                                                          -                 
 
 End of period (including undistributed net investment income of $13,339)    $ 59,441,855       
 
OTHER INFORMATION                                                                               
Shares                                                                                          
 
 Sold                                                                         6,929,475         
 
 Redeemed                                                                     (1,318,893)       
 
 Net increase (decrease)                                                      5,610,582         
 
</TABLE>
 
       FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
                                                        JUNE 22, 1995       
                                                        (COMMENCEMEN        
                                                        T OF OPERATIONS)    
                                                        TO OCTOBER 31,      
                                                        1995                
 
                                                        (UNAUDITED)         
 
SELECTED PER-SHARE DATA                                                     
 
Net asset value, beginning of period                    $ 10.00             
 
Income from Investment Operations                                           
 
 Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)                 .59                
 
Net asset value, end of period                          $ 10.59             
 
TOTAL RETURN B                                           5.90%              
 
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA                                                
 
Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)                 $ 59,442            
 
Ratio of expenses to average net assets                  1.91% A            
 
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets     .12% A             
 
Portfolio turnover rate                                  90% A              
 
A ANNUALIZED
B TOTAL RETURNS FOR PERIODS OF LESS THAN ONE YEAR ARE NOT ANNUALIZED.
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
For the period ended October 31, 1995 (Unaudited)
 
 
1. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES.
Fidelity Large Cap Stock Fund (the fund) is a fund of Fidelity Commonwealth
Trust (the trust) and is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares.
The trust is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended (the 1940 Act), as an open-end management investment company
organized as a Massachusetts business trust. The following summarizes the
significant accounting policies of the fund:
SECURITY VALUATION. Securities for which exchange quotations are readily
available are valued at the last sale price, or if no sale price, at the
closing bid price. Securities for which exchange quotations are not readily
available (and in certain cases debt securities which trade on an
exchange), are valued primarily using dealer-supplied valuations or at
their fair value as determined in good faith under consistently applied
procedures under the general supervision of the Board of Trustees.
Short-term securities maturing within sixty days of their purchase date are
valued at amortized cost or original cost plus accrued interest, both of
which approximate current value.
FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION. The accounting records of the fund are
maintained in U.S. dollars. Investment securities and other assets and
liabilities denominated in a foreign currency are translated into U.S.
dollars at the prevailing rates of exchange at period end. Purchases and
sales of securities, income receipts, and expense payments are translated
into U.S. dollars at the prevailing exchange rate on the respective dates
of the transactions.
Net realized gains and losses on foreign currency transactions represent
net gains and losses from sales and maturities of forward currency
contracts, disposition of foreign currencies, currency gains and losses
realized between the trade and settlement dates on securities transactions,
and the difference between the amount of net investment income accrued and
the U.S. dollar amount actually received. The effects of changes in foreign
currency exchange rates on investments in securities are included with the
net realized and unrealized gain or loss on investment securities.
INCOME TAXES. The fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company
under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code. By so qualifying, the fund
will not be subject to income taxes to the extent that it distributes
substantially all of its taxable income for its fiscal year. The schedule
of investments includes information regarding income taxes under the
caption "Income Tax Information."
INVESTMENT INCOME. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date,
except certain dividends from foreign securities where the ex-dividend date
may have passed, are recorded as soon as the fund is informed of the
ex-dividend date. Interest income is accrued as earned. Investment income
is recorded net of foreign taxes withheld where recovery of such taxes is
uncertain.
1. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES - CONTINUED
EXPENSES. Most expenses of the trust can be directly attributed to a fund.
Expenses which cannot be directly attributed are apportioned between the
funds in the trust.
DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS. Distributions are recorded on the
ex-dividend date.
Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with
income tax regulations which may differ from generally accepted accounting
principles. These differences may result in distribution reclassifications.
Permanent book and tax basis differences relating to shareholder
distributions will result in reclassifications to paid in capital and may
affect the per-share allocation between net investment income and realized
and unrealized gain (loss). Undistributed net investment income and
accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) on investments may
include temporary book and tax basis differences which will reverse in a
subsequent period. Any taxable income or gain remaining at fiscal year end
is distributed in the following year.
SECURITY TRANSACTIONS. Security transactions are accounted for as of trade
date. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of
identified cost.
2. OPERATING POLICIES.
FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY CONTRACTS. The fund may use foreign currency
contracts to facilitate transactions in foreign securities and to manage
the fund's currency exposure. Contracts to buy generally are used to
acquire exposure to foreign currencies, while contracts to sell are used to
hedge the fund's investments against currency fluctuations. Also, a
contract to buy or sell can offset a previous contract. Losses may arise
from changes in the value of the foreign currency or if the counterparties
do not perform under the contracts' terms.
The U.S. dollar value of forward foreign currency contracts is determined
using forward currency exchange rates supplied by a quotation service.
Purchases and sales of forward foreign currency contracts having the same
settlement date and broker are offset and any realized gain (loss) is
recognized on the date of offset; otherwise, gain (loss) is recognized on
settlement date. 
JOINT TRADING ACCOUNT. Pursuant to an Exemptive Order issued by the
Securities and Exchange Commission, the fund, along with other affiliated
entities of Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR), may transfer
uninvested cash balances into one or more joint trading accounts. These
balances are invested in one or more repurchase agreements that mature in
60 days or less from the date of purchase, and are collateralized by U.S.
Treasury or Federal Agency obligations.
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS. The fund, through its custodian, receives delivery
of the underlying U.S. Treasury or Federal Agency Securities, the market
value of which is required to be at least equal to the repurchase price.
For term repurchase agreement transactions, the underlying 
2. OPERATING POLICIES - CONTINUED
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS -
CONTINUED
securities are marked-to-market daily and maintained at a value at least
equal to the repurchase price. FMR, the fund's investment adviser, is
responsible for determining that the value of the underlying securities
remains in accordance with the market value requirements stated above. 
3. PURCHASES AND SALES OF INVESTMENTS. 
Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities,
aggregated $62,634,759 and $8,310,689, respectively.
4. FEES AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES. 
MANAGEMENT FEE. As the fund's investment adviser, FMR receives a monthly
basic fee that is calculated on the basis of a group fee rate plus a fixed
individual fund fee rate applied to the average net assets of the fund. The
group fee rate is the weighted average of a series of rates and is based on
the monthly average net assets of all the mutual funds advised by FMR. The
rates ranged from .2700% to .5200% for the period. In the event that these
rates were lower than the contractual rates in effect during the period,
FMR voluntarily implemented the above rates, as they resulted in the same
or a lower management fee. The annual individual fund fee rate is .30%. The
basic fee is subject to a performance adjustment (up to a maximum of
(plus/minus) .20%) based on the fund's investment performance as compared
to the appropriate index over a specified period of time. The fund's
performance adjustment will not take effect until June, 1996. For the
period, the management fee was equivalent to an annualized rate of .61% of
average net assets.
TRANSFER AGENT FEES. Fidelity Service Co. (FSC), an affiliate of FMR, is
the fund's transfer, dividend disbursing and shareholder servicing agent.
FSC receives account fees and asset-based fees that vary according to
account size and type of account. FSC pays for typesetting, printing and
mailing of all shareholder reports, except proxy statements.
ACCOUNTING FEES. FSC maintains the fund's accounting records. The fee is
based on the level of average net assets for the month plus out-of-pocket
expenses.
BROKERAGE COMMISSIONS. The fund placed a portion of its portfolio
transactions with brokerage firms which are affiliates of FMR. The
commissions paid to these affiliated firms were $16,662 for the period.
5. EXPENSE REDUCTIONS.
FMR has directed certain portfolio trades to brokers who paid a portion of
the fund's expenses. For the period, the fund's expenses were reduced by
$25 under this arrangement.
 
INVESTMENT ADVISER
Fidelity Management & Research 
 Company
Boston, MA
INVESTMENT SUB-ADVISERS
Fidelity Management & Research 
 (Far East) Inc., Tokyo, Japan
Fidelity Management & Research 
 (U.K.) Inc., London, England
OFFICERS
Edward C. Johnson 3d, President
J. Gary Burkhead, Senior Vice President
William J. Hayes, Vice President
Arthur S. Loring, Secretary
Kenneth A. Rathgeber, Treasurer
Robert H. Morrison, Manager,
 Security Transactions
John H. Costello, Assistant Treasurer
Leonard M. Rush, Assistant Treasurer
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
J. Gary Burkhead
Ralph F. Cox*
Phyllis Burke Davis*
Richard J. Flynn*
Edward C. Johnson 3d
E. Bradley Jones*
Donald J. Kirk*
Peter S. Lynch
Edward H. Malone*
Marvin L. Mann*
Gerald C. McDonough*
Thomas R. Williams*
GENERAL DISTRIBUTOR
Fidelity Distributors Corporation
Boston, MA
TRANSFER AND SHAREHOLDER
SERVICING AGENT
Fidelity Service Co.
Boston, MA
CUSTODIAN
Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.
Boston, MA
FIDELITY'S GROWTH FUNDS
Blue Chip Growth Fund
Capital Appreciation Fund
Contrafund
Disciplined Equity Fund
Dividend Growth Fund
Emerging Growth Fund
Export Fund
Fidelity Fifty Fund
Growth Company Fund
Large Cap Stock Fund
Low-Priced Stock Fund
Magellan(registered trademark) Fund
Mid-Cap Stock Fund
New Millennium(trademark) Fund
OTC Portfolio
Retirement Growth Fund
Small Cap Stock Fund
Stock Selector
Trend Fund
Value Fund
THE FIDELITY TELEPHONE CONNECTION
MUTUAL FUND 24-HOUR SERVICE
Account Balances  1-800-544-7544
Exchanges/Redemptions  1-800-544-7777
Mutual Fund Quotes   1-800-544-8544
Account Assistance 1-800-544-6666
Product Information 1-800-544-8888
Retirement Accounts 1-800-544-4774 
 (8 a.m. - 9 p.m.)
TDD Service 1-800-544-0118
 for the deaf and hearing impaired
 (9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Eastern time)
(registered trademark)
* INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES
 AUTOMATED LINES FOR QUICKEST SERVICE


<TABLE> <S> <C>
 
 
<ARTICLE> 6 
<CIK> 0000205323
<NAME> Fidelity Commonwealth Trust
<SERIES>
 <NUMBER> 41
 <NAME> Fidelity Large Cap Stock Fund
<MULTIPLIER> 1,000
       
<S>
<C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                 4-mos         
 
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>             Apr-30-1996   
 
<PERIOD-END>                  oct-31-1995   
 
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<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>        58,752        
 
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<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>     0             
 
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>      0             
 
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<SHARES-REINVESTED>           0             
 
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