CASH EQUIVALENT FUND
497, 1998-12-04
Previous: TRIFLEX FUND INC, 485BXT, 1998-12-04
Next: CONNECTICUT ENERGY CORP, 10-K, 1998-12-04



CASH EQUIVALENT FUND
222 South Riverside Plaza
Chicago, Illinois 60606

Table of Contents
- --------------------------------------------------------
Summary                                              1
- --------------------------------------------------------
Summary of Expenses                                  2
- --------------------------------------------------------
Financial  Highlights                                2
- --------------------------------------------------------
Investment Objectives, Policies
and Risk Factors                                     5
- --------------------------------------------------------
Net Asset Value                                     10
- --------------------------------------------------------
Purchase of Shares                                  10
- --------------------------------------------------------
Redemption of Shares                                11
- --------------------------------------------------------
Special Features                                    14
- --------------------------------------------------------
Dividends and Taxes                                 14
- --------------------------------------------------------
Investment Manager and
Shareholder Services                                16
- --------------------------------------------------------
Performance                                         18
- --------------------------------------------------------
Capital Structure                                   19
- --------------------------------------------------------


This prospectus contains  information about the Fund that a prospective investor
should know before  investing  and should be retained  for future  reference.  A
Statement  of  Additional   Information   dated  November  30,  1998,  which  is
incorporated  herein  by  reference,  has been  filed  with the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission  (the  "SEC") and is  available  along  with other  related
materials  on the SEC's  Internet Web site  (http//www.sec.gov).  It may also be
obtained upon request  without  charge from the Fund at the address or telephone
number on this cover or the firm from which this prospectus was received.

Cash
Equivalent
Fund

PROSPECTUS November 30, 1998

CASH EQUIVALENT FUND
222 South Riverside Plaza, Chicago, Illinois 60606
1-800-231-8568.

The Fund offers a choice of investment  portfolios and is designed for investors
who seek  maximum  current  income to the extent  consistent  with  stability of
capital.  The Fund currently offers the Money Market  Portfolio,  the Government
Securities  Portfolio  and the  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio.  Each  Portfolio  invests
exclusively in high quality money market instruments.

An  investment  in the  Fund is  neither  insured  nor  guaranteed  by the  U.S.
Government, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Reserve Board
or any other  agency,  and is not a deposit or  obligation  of, or guaranteed or
endorsed by, any bank.  There can be no assurance  that the Fund will be able to
maintain a stable net asset value of $1.00 per share.

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

<PAGE>

CASH EQUIVALENT FUND

222 South Riverside Plaza, Chicago, Illinois 60606, Telephone 1-800-231-8568

SUMMARY

Investment  Objectives.  Cash  Equivalent  Fund  (the  "Fund")  is an  open-end,
diversified,  management  investment company. The Fund currently offers a choice
of three  investment  portfolios  ("Portfolios").  Each  Portfolio  invests in a
portfolio of high quality  short-term money market  instruments  consistent with
its specific objective.  The Money Market Portfolio seeks maximum current income
to the extent consistent with stability of capital from a portfolio primarily of
commercial paper and bank obligations. The Government Securities Portfolio seeks
maximum current income to the extent consistent with stability of capital from a
portfolio  of  obligations  issued or  guaranteed  by the U.S.  Government,  its
agencies or  instrumentalities.  The Tax-Exempt  Portfolio seeks maximum current
income that is exempt from federal  income taxes to the extent  consistent  with
stability of capital from a portfolio of municipal  securities.  Each  Portfolio
may use a variety of investment techniques, including the purchase of repurchase
agreements and variable rate securities.  Each Portfolio seeks to maintain a net
asset value of $1.00 per share.  There is no assurance that the objective of any
Portfolio  will be achieved or that any Portfolio will be able to maintain a net
asset value of $1.00 per share.  See "Investment  Objectives,  Policies and Risk
Factors."  

Investment  Manager and Services.  Scudder Kemper  Investments,  Inc.  ("Scudder
Kemper" or "the  Adviser") is the  investment  manager for the Fund and provides
the Fund with continuous professional  investment  supervision.  With respect to
the Money Market and Government  Securities  Portfolios,  the Adviser is paid an
investment  management  fee  monthly,  on a  graduated  basis at an annual  rate
ranging  from 0.22% of the first  $500  million of  combined  average  daily net
assets of such Portfolios to 0.15% of combined  average daily net assets of such
Portfolios  over $3  billion.  With  respect to the  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio,  the
Adviser is paid an investment management fee monthly, on a graduated basis at an
annual rate ranging  from 0.22% of the first $500  million of average  daily net
assets of such  Portfolio to 0.15% of average daily net assets of such Portfolio
over $3 billion. Kemper Distributors, Inc. ("KDI"), an affiliate of the Adviser,
is primary administrator, distributor and principal underwriter of the Fund and,
as  such,   provides   information  and  services  for  existing  and  potential
shareholders  and  acts as  agent  of the  Fund in the  sale of its  shares.  As
distributor,  KDI receives an annual fee, payable  monthly,  of 0.38% of average
daily net assets of the Money Market and  Government  Securities  Portfolios and
0.33%  of  average  daily  net  assets  of the  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio.  KDI pays
financial  services  firms that provide cash  management  and other services for
their  customers  through the Fund a fee ranging from 0.15% to 0.40% annually of
average  daily net assets of those  accounts in the Fund that they  maintain and
service. See "Investment Manager and Shareholder Services."

Purchases and  Redemptions.  Shares of each Portfolio are available at net asset
value through selected  financial services firms. The minimum initial investment
for each Portfolio is $1,000 and the minimum subsequent  investment is $100. See
"Purchase  of  Shares."  Shares  may be  redeemed  at the net asset  value  next
determined after receipt by the Fund's Shareholder Service Agent of a request to
redeem in proper form. Shares may be redeemed by written request or by using one
of the Fund's  expedited  redemption  procedures.  See  "Redemption  of Shares."

Dividends.  Dividends  are  declared  daily  and  paid  monthly.  Dividends  are
automatically reinvested in additional shares of the same Portfolio,  unless the
shareholder makes a different election. See "Dividends and Taxes."

                                        1
<PAGE>

General Information and Capital. The Fund is organized as a business trust under
the laws of  Massachusetts  and may  issue an  unlimited  number  of  shares  of
beneficial  interest.  Shares are fully paid and nonassessable  when issued, are
transferable  without  restriction and have no preemptive or conversion  rights.
The Fund is not required to hold annual shareholder  meetings;  but it will hold
special  meetings as required or deemed  desirable for such purposes as electing
trustees,  changing fundamental  policies or approving an investment  management
agreement. See "Capital Structure."

SUMMARY OF EXPENSES

Shareholder Transaction Expenses............................................None

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                               <C>            <C>                     <C>
Annual Fund Operating Expenses                    Money Market   Government Securities   Tax-Exempt
(as a percentage of average net assets)            Portfolio         Portfolio            Portfolio
                                                   ---------         ---------            ---------
Management Fees                                      0.20%            0.20%                0.22%
12b-1 Fees                                           0.38%            0.38%                0.33%
Other Expenses                                       0.33%            0.27%                0.11%
Total Operating Expenses                             0.91%            0.85%                0.66%
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

<S>                                                <C>                 <C>        <C>        <C>         <C>
Example                                            Portfolio           1 Year     3 Years    5 Years     10 Years
                                                   ---------           ------     -------    -------     --------

You would pay the following expenses on a      Money Market              $9         $29        $50         $112
$1,000 investment, assuming (1) 5% annual      Government Securities     $9         $27        $47         $105
return and (2) redemption at the end of        Tax-Exempt                $7         $21        $37         $ 82
each time period:
</TABLE>

The purpose of the preceding table is to assist investors in  understanding  the
various  costs and expenses  that an investor in the Fund will bear  directly or
indirectly.   Investment  dealers  and  other  firms  may  independently  charge
shareholders  additional  fees;  please see their  materials  for details.  As a
result of the accrual of 12b-1 fees,  long-term  shareholders  may pay more than
the economic  equivalent of the maximum front-end sales charges permitted by the
National Association of Securities Dealers. The Example assumes a 5% annual rate
of return pursuant to  requirements  of the Securities and Exchange  Commission.
This hypothetical rate of return is not intended to be representative of past or
future  performance  of any  Portfolio  of the Fund.  The Example  should not be
considered to be a representation  of past or future  expenses.  Actual expenses
may be greater or lesser than those shown.

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

The tables below show  financial  information  for each  Portfolio  expressed in
terms of one share  outstanding  throughout the period.  The  information in the
tables is covered by the report of the Fund's independent  auditors.  The report
is  contained in the Fund's  Registration  Statement  and is available  from the
Fund.  The  financial  statements  contained in the Fund's 1998 Annual Report to
Shareholders are incorporated herein by reference and may be obtained by writing
or calling the Fund.

                                        2
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Money Market Portfolio
                                                                            Year ended July 31,
<S>                                                        <C>          <C>         <C>         <C>         <C> 
                                                           1998         1997        1996        1995        1994
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Per Share Operating Performance:
Net asset value, beginning of year                        $1.00        1.00         1.00        1.00        1.00
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                       .05         .05          .05         .05         .03
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less dividends declared                                     .05         .05          .05         .05         .03
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value, end of year                              $1.00        1.00         1.00        1.00        1.00
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Return                                              4.93%        4.78         4.94        4.95        2.82
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to Average Net Assets:
Expenses                                                   .91%         .93          .89         .87         .88
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                     4.83%        4.64         4.86        4.84        2.78
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Supplemental Data:
Net assets at end of year (in thousands)                $851,592    970,516      2,774,595   3,593,294   3,387,245
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Money Market Portfolio (continued)
                                                                            Year ended July 31,
                                                           1993        1992         1991        1990        1989
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Per Share Operating Performance:
Net asset value, beginning of year                     $  1.00         1.00        1.00         1.00        1.00
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                      .03          .04         .07          .08         .08
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less dividends declared                                    .03          .04         .07          .08         .08
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value, end of year                           $  1.00         1.00        1.00         1.00        1.00
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Return                                             2.60%         4.09        6.76         8.11        8.60
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to Average Net Assets:
Expenses                                                  .85%          .82         .84          .83         .88
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                    2.57%         4.01        6.57         7.87        8.31
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Supplemental Data:
Net assets at end of year (in thousands)               $3,616,636   3,916,708   3,719,927    4,040,918   6,716,008
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Government Securities Portfolio
                                                                            Year ended July 31,
                                                           1998         1997        1996        1995        1994
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Per Share Operating Performance:
Net asset value, beginning of year                        $1.00        1.00         1.00        1.00        1.00
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                       .05         .05          .05         .05         .03
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less dividends declared                                     .05         .05          .05         .05         .03
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value, end of year                              $1.00        1.00         1.00        1.00        1.00
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Return                                              4.89%        4.85         5.00        4.96        2.82
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to Average Net Assets:
Expenses                                                   .85%         .83          .79         .81         .81
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                     4.79%        4.73         4.90        4.87        2.72
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Supplemental Data:
Net assets at end of year (in thousands)                $391,861    404,037      1,594,128   1,785,098   1,538,011
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                       3
<PAGE>

Government Securities Portfolio (continued)
                                                                            Year ended July 31,
                                                           1993        1992         1991        1990        1989
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Per Share Operating Performance:
Net asset value, beginning of year                     $  1.00         1.00        1.00         1.00        1.00
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                      .03          .04         .06          .08         .08
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less dividends declared                                    .03          .04         .06          .08         .08
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value, end of year                           $  1.00         1.00        1.00         1.00        1.00
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Return                                             2.60%         4.12        6.62         8.18        8.72
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to Average Net Assets:
Expenses                                                  .78%          .75         .72          .69         .70
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                    2.57%         4.06        6.38         7.90        8.53
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Supplemental Data:
Net assets at end of year (in thousands)               $2,825,357   3,000,890   3,239,272    2,779,707   2,986,780
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Tax-Exempt Portfolio
                                                                            Year ended July 31,
                                                           1998         1997        1996        1995        1994

- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Per Share Operating Performance:
Net asset value, beginning of year                        $1.00        1.00         1.00        1.00        1.00
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                       .03         .03          .03         .03         .02
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less dividends declared                                     .03         .03          .03         .03         .02
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value, end of year                              $1.00        1.00         1.00        1.00        1.00
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Return                                              3.13%        3.03         3.11        3.21        2.05
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to Average Net Assets:
Expenses                                                   .66%         .71          .70         .68         .68
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                     3.09%        2.97         3.08        3.15        2.02
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Supplemental Data:
Net assets at end of year (in thousands)                $333,427    444,939      931,564     1,109,861   1,136,901
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Tax-Exempt Portfolio (continued)
                                                                            Year ended July 31,
                                                           1993        1992         1991        1990        1989

- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Per Share Operating Performance:
Net asset value, beginning of year                     $  1.00         1.00        1.00         1.00        1.00
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                      .02          .03         .05          .05         .06
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less dividends declared                                    .02          .03         .05          .05         .06
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value, end of year                           $  1.00         1.00        1.00         1.00        1.00
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Return                                             2.12%         3.29        4.75         5.55        5.96
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to Average Net Assets:
Expenses                                                  .64%          .64         .64          .63         .63
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                    2.09%         3.21        4.65         5.44        5.82
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Supplemental Data:
Net assets at end of year (in thousands)               $1,417,307   1,289,560   1,129,368    1,195,736   2,164,784
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

                                       4
<PAGE>

Note: The Money Market Portfolio's total return for the year ended July 31, 1995
includes  the  effect of a capital  contribution  from the  investment  manager.
Without the capital contribution, the total return would have been 4.28%.

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES, POLICIES AND RISK FACTORS

The Fund is a mutual fund designed to provide its shareholders with professional
management of short-term  investment  dollars.  It is designed for investors who
seek maximum current income consistent with stability of capital. The Fund pools
individual and institutional  investors' money which it uses to buy high quality
money market  instruments.  The Fund is a series investment company that is able
to  provide   investors  with  a  choice  of  separate   investment   portfolios
("Portfolios").  It currently  offers  three  investment  Portfolios:  the Money
Market  Portfolio,  the  Government  Securities  Portfolio  and  the  Tax-Exempt
Portfolio.  Because each Portfolio combines its shareholders'  money, it can buy
and sell  large  blocks  of  securities,  which  reduces  transaction  costs and
maximizes  yields.  The Fund is managed by investment  professionals who analyze
market trends to take advantage of changing  conditions and who seek to minimize
risk by diversifying each Portfolio's investments. A Portfolio's investments are
subject to price fluctuations  resulting from rising or declining interest rates
and are  subject to the  ability  of the  issuers  of such  investments  to make
payment at maturity.  However, because of their short maturities,  liquidity and
high quality ratings,  high quality money market  instruments,  such as those in
which  the  Fund  invests,  are  generally  considered  to be among  the  safest
available.  Thus,  the Fund is  designed  for  investors  who want to avoid  the
fluctuations  of principal  commonly  associated  with equity and long-term bond
investments.  There  can be no  guarantee  that a  Portfolio  will  achieve  its
objective or that it will maintain a net asset value of $1.00 per share. The net
asset value of $1.00 per share has, however,  been maintained for each Portfolio
since its inception.

Money Market Portfolio.  The Money Market Portfolio seeks maximum current income
consistent  with  stability of capital.  The Portfolio  pursues its objective by
investing  exclusively in the following types of U.S. Dollar  denominated  money
market instruments that mature in 12 months or less:

1.   Obligations of, or guaranteed by, the U.S. or Canadian  Governments,  their
     agencies or instrumentalities.

2.   Bank certificates of deposit, time deposits or bankers' acceptances limited
     to domestic banks (including their foreign branches) and Canadian chartered
     banks having total assets in excess of $1 billion.

3.   Certificates  of deposit and time  deposits  of  domestic  savings and loan
     associations having total assets in excess of $1 billion.

4.   Bank certificates of deposit, time deposits or bankers' acceptances of U.S.
     branches of foreign banks having total assets in excess of $10 billion.

5.   Commercial  paper rated  Prime-1 or Prime-2 by Moody's  Investors  Service,
     Inc. ("Moody's") or A-1 or A-2 by Standard & Poor's Corporation ("S&P"), or
     commercial  paper or notes issued by companies with an unsecured debt issue
     outstanding  currently  rated A or  higher  by  Moody's  or S&P  where  the
     obligation is on the same or a higher level of priority as the rated issue,
     and  investments in other  corporate  obligations  such as publicly  traded
     bonds,  debentures  and notes  rated A or higher by Moody's  or S&P.  For a
     description of these ratings,  see "Appendix -- Ratings of  Investments" in
     the Statement of Additional Information.

6.   Commercial  paper  secured by a letter of credit  issued by a  domestic  or
     Canadian  chartered  bank having  total  assets in excess of $1 billion and
     rated Prime-1 by Moody's.

7.   Repurchase agreements of obligations that are suitable for investment under
     the categories set forth above. Repurchase agreements are discussed below.

                                        5
<PAGE>

In addition,  the Portfolio  limits its  investments to securities that meet the
quality  and  diversification  requirements  of Rule 2a-7  under the  Investment
Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act").  See "Net Asset  Value."

To the extent the Money Market Portfolio  purchases  Eurodollar  certificates of
deposit issued by London branches of U.S.  banks, or commercial  paper issued by
foreign  entities,  consideration  will be  given  to  their  marketability  and
possible restrictions on international  currency transactions and to regulations
imposed by the domicile country of the foreign issuer.  Eurodollar  certificates
of  deposit  may  not  be  subject  to  the  same  regulatory   requirements  as
certificates  of  deposit  issued by U.S.  banks and  associated  income  may be
subject to the imposition of foreign taxes.

The Money  Market  Portfolio  may  invest in  commercial  paper  issued by major
corporations  under the Securities Act of 1933 in reliance on the exemption from
registration  afforded by Section 3(a)(3) thereof.  Such commercial paper may be
issued only to finance  current  transactions  and must mature in nine months or
less.  Trading of such commercial paper is conducted  primarily by institutional
investors through  investment dealers and individual  investor  participation in
the commercial paper market is very limited.

The  Portfolio  also may invest in  commercial  paper  issued in reliance on the
so-called "private  placement"  exemption from registration which is afforded by
Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933 ("Section 4(2) paper").  Section 4(2)
paper is restricted as to  disposition  under the federal  securities  laws, and
generally is sold to  institutional  investors  such as the Portfolio that agree
that they are  purchasing the paper for investment and not with a view to public
distribution.  Any  resale by the  purchaser  must be in an exempt  transaction.
Section 4(2) paper normally is resold to other institutional  investors like the
Portfolio through or with the assistance of the issuer or investment dealers who
make a market in the Section 4(2) paper,  thus providing  liquidity.  The Fund's
investment manager considers the legally restricted but readily saleable Section
4(2) paper to be liquid;  however,  pursuant to procedures approved by the Board
of Trustees of the Fund, if a particular investment in Section 4(2) paper is not
determined  to be  liquid,  that  investment  will be  included  within  the 10%
limitation on illiquid  securities  discussed under "The Fund" below. The Fund's
investment  manager  monitors the liquidity of the  Portfolio's  investments  in
Section 4(2) paper on a continuous basis.

The Money Market  Portfolio may concentrate  more than 25% of its assets in bank
certificates  of deposit  or  banker's  acceptances  of United  States  banks in
accordance  with  its  investment  objective  and  policies.   Accordingly,  the
Portfolio  may be more  adversely  affected  by  changes  in market or  economic
conditions and other circumstances  affecting the banking industry than it would
be if the Portfolio's assets were not so concentrated.

Government  Securities  Portfolio.  The Government  Securities  Portfolio  seeks
maximum  current  income  consistent  with  stability of capital.  The Portfolio
pursues its objective by investing  exclusively in U.S.  Treasury bills,  notes,
bonds and other  obligations  issued or guaranteed by the U.S.  Government,  its
agencies or instrumentalities and repurchase agreements of such obligations. All
securities purchased mature within 12 months or less. In addition, the Portfolio
limits its investments to securities  that meet the quality and  diversification
requirements  of Rule 2a-7  under  the 1940 Act.  See "Net  Asset  Value."  Some
securities issued by U.S. Government agencies or instrumentalities are supported
only by the credit of the agency or instrumentality, such as those issued by the
Federal Home Loan Bank,  and others have an  additional  line of credit with the
U.S.   Treasury,   such  as  those  issued  by  the  Federal  National  Mortgage
Association,   Farm  Credit  System  and  Student  Loan  Marketing  Association.
Short-term U.S. Government obligations generally are considered to be the safest
short-term investment.  The U.S. Government guarantee of the securities owned by
the  Portfolio,  however,  does not  guarantee the net asset value of its shares
which the Fund seeks to  maintain  at $1.00 per  share.  Also,  with  respect to
securities supported only by the credit of the issuing agency or instrumentality
or by an additional line of credit with the U.S. Treasury, there is no guarantee
that  the  U.S.   Government   will   provide   support  to  such   agencies  or
instrumentalities  and such securities may involve risk of loss of principal and
interest. Repurchase agreements are discussed below.

                                       6
<PAGE>

Tax-Exempt Portfolio. The Tax-Exempt Portfolio seeks maximum current income that
is exempt from federal income taxes to the extent  consistent  with stability of
capital.  The Portfolio pursues its objective primarily through a professionally
managed,  diversified  portfolio of short-term high quality tax-exempt municipal
obligations.  Under normal  market  conditions  at least 80% of the  Portfolio's
total assets will, as a fundamental policy, be invested in obligations issued by
or on behalf of states, territories and possessions of the United States and the
District  of  Columbia   and  their   political   subdivisions,   agencies   and
instrumentalities,  the income  from  which is exempt  from  federal  income tax
("Municipal Securities").

Dividends  representing net interest income received by the Tax-Exempt Portfolio
on Municipal  Securities will be exempt from federal income tax when distributed
to the  Portfolio's  shareholders.  Such dividend income may be subject to state
and  local  taxes.  See  "Dividends  and  Taxes --  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio."  The
Portfolio's assets will consist of Municipal  Securities,  temporary investments
as  described  below and cash.  The  Portfolio  considers  short-term  Municipal
Securities to be those that mature in one year or less.

The Tax-Exempt  Portfolio will invest only in Municipal  Securities which at the
time of purchase:  (a) are rated within the two  highest-ratings  for  Municipal
Securities  (Aaa or Aa)  assigned by Moody's or (AAA or AA) assigned by S&P; (b)
are guaranteed or insured by the U.S.  Government as to the payment of principal
and  interest;  (c) are fully  collateralized  by an  escrow of U.S.  Government
securities  acceptable to the Fund's investment manager; (d) have at the time of
purchase Moody's short-term  Municipal Securities rating of MIG-2 or higher or a
municipal  commercial  paper  rating  of  P-2  or  higher,  or  S&P's  municipal
commercial  paper  rating of A-2 or  higher;  (e) are  unrated,  if longer  term
Municipal  Securities  of that issuer are rated  within the two  highest  rating
categories  by Moody's or S&P;  or (f) are  determined  to be at least  equal in
quality  to one or more of the above  ratings  in the  discretion  of the Fund's
investment  manager.  In  addition,  the  Portfolio  limits  its  investment  to
securities that meet the quality and  diversification  requirements of Rule 2a-7
under the 1940 Act. See "Net Asset Value."

Municipal  Securities  generally  are  classified  as  "general  obligation"  or
"revenue" issues. General obligation bonds are secured by the issuer's pledge of
its full credit and taxing  power for the  payment of  principal  and  interest.
Revenue  bonds are payable  only from the  revenues  derived  from a  particular
facility  or class of  facilities  or, in some  cases,  from the  proceeds  of a
special  excise tax or other  specific  revenue  source  such as the user of the
facility being financed.  Industrial  development  bonds held by the Fund are in
most cases revenue bonds and are not payable from the  unrestricted  revenues of
the  issuer.  Among other  types of  instruments,  the  Portfolio  may  purchase
tax-exempt commercial paper, warrants and short-term municipal notes such as tax
anticipation  notes,  bond  anticipation  notes,   revenue  anticipation  notes,
construction  loan notes and other  forms of  short-term  loans.  Such notes are
issued  with  a  short-term  maturity  in  anticipation  of the  receipt  of tax
payments,  the proceeds of bond  placements or other  revenues.  A more detailed
discussion  of  Municipal  Securities  and the Moody's and S&P ratings  outlined
above is contained  in the  Statement of  Additional  Information.  As indicated
above and under "Dividends and Taxes -- Tax-Exempt Portfolio," the Portfolio may
invest in short-term "private activity" bonds.

The Tax-Exempt Portfolio may purchase high quality Certificates of Participation
in trusts that hold Municipal  Securities.  A Certificate of Participation gives
the Portfolio an undivided  interest in the Municipal Security in the proportion
that  the  Portfolio's  interest  bears to the  total  principal  amount  of the
Municipal Security.  These Certificates of Participation may be variable rate or
fixed rate with  remaining  maturities  of one year or less.  A  Certificate  of
Participation may be backed by an irrevocable letter of credit or guarantee of a
financial institution that satisfies rating agencies as to the credit quality of
the Municipal  Security  supporting the payment of principal and interest on the
Certificate  of  Participation.  Payments of  principal  and  interest  would be
dependent upon the underlying  Municipal  Security and may be guaranteed under a
letter of credit to the extent of such  credit.  The quality  rating by a rating
service of an issue of Certificates of Participation is based primarily upon the
rating of the Municipal  Security held by the trust and the credit rating of the
issuer of any letter of credit and of any other

                                       7
<PAGE>

guarantor  providing credit support to the issue. The Fund's investment  manager
considers these factors as well as others, such as any quality ratings issued by
the rating services  identified above, in reviewing the credit risk presented by
a Certificate of  Participation  and in determining  whether the  Certificate of
Participation is appropriate for investment by the Portfolio.  It is anticipated
by the Fund's investment manager that, for most publicly offered Certificates of
Participation,  there will be a liquid  secondary  market or there may be demand
features   enabling  the   Portfolio  to  readily  sell  its   Certificates   of
Participation  prior to  maturity  to the issuer or a third  party.  As to those
instruments with demand features, the Portfolio intends to exercise its right to
demand  payment from the issuer of the demand  feature only upon a default under
the terms of the  Municipal  Security,  as needed to provide  liquidity  to meet
redemptions, or to maintain a high quality investment portfolio.

The Tax-Exempt  Portfolio may purchase  securities that provide for the right to
resell them to an issuer, bank or dealer at an agreed upon price or yield within
a specified period prior to the maturity date of such  securities.  Such a right
to resell is referred  to as a "Standby  Commitment."  Securities  may cost more
with Standby  Commitments than without them. Standby Commitments will be entered
into solely to  facilitate  portfolio  liquidity.  A Standby  Commitment  may be
exercised  before the  maturity  date of the related  Municipal  Security if the
Fund's investment manager revises its evaluation of the  creditworthiness of the
underlying  security  or of the  entity  issuing  the  Standby  Commitment.  The
Portfolio's policy is to enter into Standby Commitments only with issuers, banks
or  dealers  that are  determined  by the Fund's  investment  manager to present
minimal  credit  risks.  If an  issuer,  bank or dealer  should  default  on its
obligation to repurchase an underlying  security,  the Portfolio might be unable
to  recover  all or a  portion  of any loss  sustained  from  having to sell the
security  elsewhere.  For  purposes of valuing  the  Portfolio's  securities  at
amortized cost, the stated maturity of Municipal  Securities  subject to Standby
Commitments is not changed.

The  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio  may  purchase  and sell  Municipal  Securities  on a
when-issued  or delayed  delivery  basis.  A  when-issued  or  delayed  delivery
transaction  arises when  securities  are bought or sold for future  payment and
delivery to secure what is considered to be an  advantageous  price and yield to
the Portfolio at the time it enters into the  transaction.  In  determining  the
maturity of portfolio  securities purchased on a when-issued or delayed delivery
basis,  the Portfolio will consider them to have been purchased on the date when
it committed itself to the purchase.

A security  purchased on a when-issued  basis,  like all securities  held by the
Tax-Exempt  Portfolio,  is subject to changes in market value based upon changes
in  the  level  of   interest   rates   and   investors'   perceptions   of  the
creditworthiness  of the issuer.  Generally such  securities  will appreciate in
value when  interest  rates  decline and decrease in value when  interest  rates
rise.  Therefore if, in order to achieve higher interest  income,  the Portfolio
remains  substantially  fully  invested  at the same time that it has  purchased
securities on a when-issued basis, there will be a greater  possibility that the
market value of the Portfolio's assets will vary from $1.00 per share, since the
value of a when-issued security is subject to market fluctuation and no interest
accrues to the purchaser prior to settlement of the transaction.  See "Net Asset
Value."

The Portfolio will only make commitments to purchase  Municipal  Securities on a
when-issued or delayed  delivery basis with the intention of actually  acquiring
the securities,  but the Portfolio  reserves the right to sell these  securities
before the settlement date if deemed advisable. The sale of these securities may
result in the realization of gains that are not exempt from federal income tax.

In seeking to achieve its investment  objective,  the  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio may
invest all or any part of its assets in Municipal Securities that are industrial
development bonds. Moreover, although the Portfolio does not currently intend to
do so on a regular basis, it may invest more than 25% of its assets in Municipal
Securities that are repayable out of revenue streams generated from economically
related projects or facilities, if such investment

                                       8
<PAGE>

is deemed necessary or appropriate by the Portfolio's investment manager. To the
extent that the  Portfolio's  assets are  concentrated  in Municipal  Securities
payable from  revenues on  economically  related  projects and  facilities,  the
Portfolio  will be subject to the risks  presented by such projects to a greater
extent than it would be if the Portfolio's assets were not so concentrated.

From  time  to  time,  as a  defensive  measure  or when  acceptable  short-term
Municipal  Securities are not available,  the Tax-Exempt Portfolio may invest in
taxable  "temporary   investments"  which  include:   obligations  of  the  U.S.
Government, its agencies or instrumentalities;  debt securities rated within the
two highest grades by Moody's or S&P;  commercial paper rated in the two highest
grades by either of such rating  services;  certificates  of deposit of domestic
banks  with  assets of $1 billion or more;  and any of the  foregoing  temporary
investments  subject  to  repurchase   agreements.   Repurchase  agreements  are
discussed  below.  Interest  income  from  temporary  investments  is taxable to
shareholders as ordinary  income.  Although the Portfolio is permitted to invest
in taxable  securities,  it is the  Portfolio's  primary  intention  to generate
income  dividends that are not subject to federal  income taxes.  See "Dividends
and  Taxes." For a  description  of the  ratings,  see  "Appendix  -- Ratings of
Investments" in the Statement of Additional Information.

The  Fund.  Each  Portfolio  may  invest  in  repurchase  agreements,  which are
instruments  under which a Portfolio  acquires  ownership  of a security  from a
broker-dealer  or bank that  agrees to  repurchase  the  security  at a mutually
agreed  upon time and price  (which  price is higher than the  purchase  price),
thereby determining the yield during the Portfolio's holding period. Maturity of
the  securities  subject to  repurchase  may exceed one year.  In the event of a
bankruptcy or other default of a seller of a repurchase  agreement,  a Portfolio
might have  expenses in  enforcing  its  rights,  and could  experience  losses,
including  a  decline  in the  value of the  underlying  securities  and loss of
income.  A Portfolio  will not  purchase  illiquid  securities,  including  time
deposits  and  repurchase  agreements  maturing in more than seven days if, as a
result thereof,  more than 10% of such Portfolio's net assets valued at the time
of the transaction would be invested in such securities.

Each  Portfolio  may invest in  instruments  having  rates of interest  that are
adjusted  periodically  or  that  "float"  continuously  according  to  formulae
intended to minimize  fluctuation in values of the  instruments  ("Variable Rate
Securities").  The  interest  rate of Variable  Rate  Securities  ordinarily  is
determined by reference to or is a percentage of an objective standard such as a
bank's prime rate, the 90-day U.S.  Treasury bill rate, or the rate of return on
commercial paper or bank certificates of deposit.  Generally, the changes in the
interest rate on Variable Rate  Securities  reduce the fluctuation in the market
value of such securities.  Accordingly,  as interest rates decrease or increase,
the  potential  for  capital  appreciation  or  depreciation  is less  than  for
fixed-rate  obligations.  Some Variable Rate  Securities  ("Variable Rate Demand
Securities")  have a demand  feature  entitling  the  purchaser  to  resell  the
securities at an amount  approximately  equal to amortized cost or the principal
amount  thereof plus accrued  interest.  As is the case for other  Variable Rate
Securities,  the  interest  rate  on  Variable  Rate  Demand  Securities  varies
according to some  objective  standard  intended to minimize  fluctuation in the
values of the  instruments.  Each Portfolio  determines the maturity of Variable
Rate  Securities  in  accordance  with Rule 2a-7,  which allows the Portfolio to
consider  certain of such  instruments  as having  maturities  shorter  than the
maturity date on the face of the instrument.

A Portfolio may not borrow money except as a temporary measure for extraordinary
or emergency  purposes,  and then only in an amount up to one-third of the value
of its total assets,  in order to meet redemption  requests without  immediately
selling any portfolio securities.  Any such borrowings under this provision will
not be collateralized  except that the Tax-Exempt Portfolio may pledge up to 10%
of its net  assets to secure  such  borrowings.  No  Portfolio  will  borrow for
leverage purposes.

The Fund has adopted for each Portfolio certain investment restrictions that are
presented in the Statement of Additional Information and that, together with the
investment objective and policies of such Portfolio (limited

                                       9
<PAGE>

in regard to the  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio  to the  policies in the first and third
paragraphs  under  "Tax-Exempt  Portfolio"  above),  cannot be  changed  without
approval by holders of a majority of its outstanding  voting shares.  As defined
in the 1940 Act,  this means with respect to a Portfolio  the lesser of the vote
of (a) 67% of the shares of such Portfolio  present at a meeting where more than
50% of the outstanding shares of the Portfolio are present in person or by proxy
or (b) more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the Portfolio.

NET ASSET VALUE

The net asset value per share of each  Portfolio is  calculated  by dividing the
total assets of such Portfolio  less its  liabilities by the total number of its
shares  outstanding.  The  net  asset  value  per  share  of each  Portfolio  is
determined on each day the New York Stock Exchange is open for trading, at 11:00
a.m.,  1:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m.  Chicago time for the Money Market and Government
Securities  Portfolios  and at 11:00  a.m.  and 3:00 p.m.  Chicago  time for the
Tax-Exempt  Portfolio.  Fund  shares  are  sold  at the  net  asset  value  next
determined  after an order and payment are received in the form described  under
"Purchase of Shares."  Each  Portfolio  seeks to maintain its net asset value at
$1.00 per share.

Each Portfolio values its portfolio  instruments at amortized cost in accordance
with Rule 2a-7  under the 1940 Act,  which  means  that they are valued at their
acquisition  cost (as  adjusted  for  amortization  of premium or  accretion  of
discount) rather than at current market value.  Calculations are made to compare
the  value  of each  Portfolio's  investments  valued  at  amortized  cost  with
market-based  values.  Market-based  valuations  are  obtained  by using  actual
quotations  provided by market  makers,  estimates  of market  value,  or values
obtained  from  yield data  relating  to  classes  of money  market  instruments
published by reputable  sources at the mean between the bid and asked prices for
the  instruments.  If a deviation  of 1/2 of 1% or more were to occur  between a
Portfolio's  net asset value per share  calculated by reference to  market-based
values and the Portfolio's $1.00 per share net asset value, or if there were any
other  deviation that the Board of Trustees  believed would result in a material
dilution to  shareholders  or  purchasers,  the Board of Trustees would promptly
consider  what  action,  if any,  should  be  initiated.  In order to value  its
investments at amortized  cost, the Portfolios  purchase only  securities with a
maturity of one year or less and maintain a  dollar-weighted  average  portfolio
maturity of 90 days or less. In addition,  the Portfolios  limit their portfolio
investments to securities that meet the quality and diversification requirements
of Rule 2a-7.

PURCHASE OF SHARES

Shares  of each  Portfolio  of the  Fund  are sold at net  asset  value  through
selected  financial  services firms, such as broker-dealers and banks ("firms").
Investors must indicate the Portfolio in which they wish to invest. The Fund has
established a minimum  initial  investment for each Portfolio of $1,000 and $100
for  subsequent  investments,  but these  minimums may be changed at any time in
management's discretion.  Firms offering Fund shares may set higher minimums for
accounts they service and may change such minimums at their discretion.

The Fund seeks to have its Portfolios as fully invested as possible at all times
in order to achieve  maximum  income.  Since each Portfolio will be investing in
instruments  that normally  require  immediate  payment in Federal Funds (monies
credited to a bank's account with its regional  Federal Reserve Bank),  the Fund
has adopted  procedures for the  convenience of its  shareholders  and to ensure
that each Portfolio receives  investable funds. Orders for purchase of shares of
a  Portfolio  received  by wire  transfer  in the form of Federal  Funds will be
effected at the next determined net asset value.  Shares  purchased by wire will
receive  that day's  dividend if  effected at or prior to the 1:00 p.m.  Chicago
time net asset  value  determination  for the Money  Market  and the  Government
Securities  Portfolios and at or prior to the 11:00 a.m.  Chicago time net asset
value determination for the Tax-Exempt 

                                       10
<PAGE>

Portfolio, otherwise such shares will receive the dividend for the next calendar
day if effected at 3:00 p.m. Chicago time. Orders for purchase  accompanied by a
check or other  negotiable  bank draft will be accepted  and effected as of 3:00
p.m.  Chicago time on the next  business day  following  receipt and such shares
will receive the dividend for the calendar day following the day the purchase is
effected.  If an order is accompanied by a check drawn on a foreign bank,  funds
must normally be collected on such check before  shares will be  purchased.  See
"Purchase and Redemption of Shares" in the Statement of Additional Information.

If payment is wired in Federal  Funds,  the payment should be directed to United
Missouri Bank of Kansas City,  N.A. (ABA  #101-000-695),  10th and Grand Avenue,
Kansas City, M0 64106 for credit to the appropriate  Portfolio bank account (CEF
Money Market Portfolio 17:  98-0103-348-4;  CEF Government  Securities Portfolio
23: 98-0103-378-6; CEF Tax-Exempt Portfolio 45: 98-0103-380-8).

Clients of Firms.  Firms  provide  varying  arrangements  for their clients with
respect to the  purchase  and  redemption  of Fund  shares and the  confirmation
thereof  and  may  arrange   with  their   clients  for  other   investment   or
administrative  services. Such firms are responsible for the prompt transmission
of purchase and  redemption  orders.  Some firms may  establish  higher  minimum
investment  requirements  than set forth  above.  Such  firms may  independently
establish and charge  additional  amounts to their  clients for their  services,
which charges would reduce their clients'  yield or return.  Firms may also hold
Fund  shares  in  nominee  or  street  name as agent  for and on behalf of their
clients.  In such instances,  the Fund's transfer agent will have no information
with  respect to or control  over the  accounts of specific  shareholders.  Such
shareholders  may obtain access to their  accounts and  information  about their
accounts only from their firm.  Certain of these firms may receive  compensation
from the Fund's  Shareholder  Service Agent for recordkeeping and other expenses
relating to these nominee accounts. In addition, certain privileges with respect
to the purchase and redemption of shares (such as check writing  redemptions) or
the  reinvestment  of dividends  may not be available  through such firms or may
only be available subject to certain  conditions or limitations.  Some firms may
participate  in a program  allowing them access to their  clients'  accounts for
servicing including, without limitation,  transfers of registration and dividend
payee  changes;  and may perform  functions  such as generation of  confirmation
statements and disbursement of cash dividends.  The prospectus should be read in
connection with such firm's material regarding its fees and services.

Other  Information.  The Fund  reserves the right to withdraw all or any part of
the offering made by this prospectus or to reject purchase orders. The Fund also
reserves  the  right at any time to waive or  increase  the  minimum  investment
requirements.  All  orders to  purchase  shares of a  Portfolio  are  subject to
acceptance  by the Fund and are not  binding  until  confirmed  or  accepted  in
writing.  Any purchase which would result in total account balances for a single
shareholder  in excess of $3 million is subject to prior  approval  by the Fund.
Share  certificates  are  issued  only on  request  to the  Fund  and may not be
available for certain types of accounts.  A $10 service fee will be charged when
a check for the  purchase  of shares is  returned  because  of  insufficient  or
uncollected  funds or a stop payment order.  Firms may charge different  service
fees.

Shareholders  should direct their inquiries to the firm from which they received
this prospectus or to Kemper Service Company  ("KSvC"),  the Fund's  Shareholder
Service Agent, 811 Main Street, Kansas City, Missouri 64105-2005.

REDEMPTION OF SHARES

General.  Upon receipt by the Shareholder Service Agent of a request in the form
described below,  shares of a Portfolio will be redeemed by the Fund at the next
determined net asset value. If processed at 3 p.m. Chicago time, the shareholder
will receive that day's  dividend.  A shareholder  may use either the regular or
expedited redemption  procedures.  Shareholders who redeem all their shares of a
Portfolio  will  receive the net asset value of such shares and all declared but
unpaid dividends on such shares.

                                       11
<PAGE>

If shares of a  Portfolio  to be  redeemed  were  purchased  by check or through
certain  Automated  Clearing  House  ("ACH")  transactions,  the Fund may  delay
transmittal of redemption  proceeds until it has determined that collected funds
have been received for the purchase of such shares,  which will be up to 10 days
from  receipt  by the  Fund of the  purchase  amount.  Shareholders  may not use
expedited  redemption  procedures (wire transfer or Redemption  Check) until the
shares being redeemed have been owned for at least 10 days, and shareholders may
not use such procedures to redeem shares held in certificated  form. There is no
delay when shares being redeemed were purchased by wiring Federal Funds.

If shares being  redeemed  were  acquired from an exchange of shares of a mutual
fund  that  were  offered  subject  to a  contingent  deferred  sales  charge as
described in the  prospectus  for that other fund, the redemption of such shares
by the Fund may be subject to a contingent deferred sales charge as explained in
such prospectus.

Shareholders  can request the following  telephone  privileges:  expedited  wire
transfer redemptions,  ACH transactions and exchange transactions for individual
and institutional accounts and pre-authorized  telephone redemption transactions
for certain institutional accounts.  Shareholders may choose these privileges on
the account  application  or by  contacting  the  Shareholder  Service Agent for
appropriate  instructions.  Please note that the telephone exchange privilege is
automatic unless the shareholder refuses it on the account application. The Fund
or its agents may be liable for any  losses,  expenses  or costs  arising out of
fraudulent or  unauthorized  telephone  requests  pursuant to these  privileges,
unless  the  Fund  or its  agents  reasonably  believe,  based  upon  reasonable
verification  procedures,  that the  telephonic  instructions  are genuine.  The
shareholder will bear the risk of loss, including loss resulting from fraudulent
or unauthorized transactions,  as long as the reasonable verification procedures
are  followed.  The  verification  procedures  include  recording  instructions,
requiring certain  identifying  information  before acting upon instructions and
sending written confirmations.

Because of the high cost of maintaining  small  accounts,  the Fund reserves the
right to redeem an  account  that  falls  below the  minimum  investment  level,
currently  $1,000. A shareholder will be notified in writing and will be allowed
60 days to make  additional  purchases  to  bring  the  account  value up to the
minimum investment level before the Fund redeems the shareholder account.

Firms provide varying arrangements for their clients to redeem Fund shares. Such
firms may  independently  establish  minimums and maximums and charge additional
amounts to their clients for such services.

Regular  Redemptions.  Shareholders should contact the firm through which shares
were purchased for redemption  instructions.  However,  when shares are held for
the account of a shareholder by the Fund's transfer  agent,  the shareholder may
redeem them by sending a written  request with  signatures  guaranteed to Kemper
Service  Company,  P.O.  Box 419153,  Kansas  City,  Missouri  64141-6153.  When
certificates  for shares have been  issued,  they must be mailed to or deposited
with the Shareholder  Service Agent,  along with a duly endorsed stock power and
accompanied by a written request for redemption. Redemption requests and a stock
power must be endorsed by the account  holder with  signatures  guaranteed  by a
commercial bank, trust company,  savings and loan  association,  federal savings
bank, member firm of a national  securities exchange or other eligible financial
institution.  The  redemption  request and stock power must be signed exactly as
the  account is  registered  including  any special  capacity of the  registered
owner. Additional  documentation may be requested,  and a signature guarantee is
normally  required,  from  institutional and fiduciary account holders,  such as
corporations,  custodians  (e.g.,  under the Uniform  Transfers  to Minors Act),
executors, administrators, trustees, or guardians.

Telephone Redemptions. If the proceeds of the redemption are $50,000 or less and
the proceeds are payable to the  shareholder of record at the address of record,
normally a  telephone  request or a written  request by any one  account  holder
without a signature  guarantee is sufficient  for  redemptions  by individual or
joint account  holders,  and trust,  executor,  guardian and  custodian  account
holders, provided the trustee, executor, guardian or

                                       12
<PAGE>

custodian  is named in the account  registration.  Other  institutional  account
holders  and  guardian  account  holders  of  custodial  accounts  for gifts and
transfers to minors may exercise this special  privilege of redeeming  shares by
telephone request or written request without signature  guarantee subject to the
same conditions as individual  account holders and subject to the limitations on
liability described under "General" above, provided that this privilege has been
pre-authorized by the institutional account holder or guardian account holder by
written instruction to the Shareholder Service Agent with signatures guaranteed.
Shares  purchased  by check  or  through  certain  ACH  transactions  may not be
redeemed  under this  privilege of redeeming  shares by telephone  request until
such shares have been owned for at least 10 days.  This  privilege  of redeeming
shares by telephone request or by written request without a signature  guarantee
may not be used to redeem shares held in  certificated  form and may not be used
if the  shareholder's  account has had an address  change  within 30 days of the
redemption  request.  During  periods  when  it  is  difficult  to  contact  the
Shareholder Service Agent by telephone, it may be difficult to use the telephone
redemption  privilege,  although  investors  can still redeem by mail.  The Fund
reserves the right to terminate or modify this privilege at any time.

Expedited   Wire  Transfer   Redemptions.   If  the  account  holder  has  given
authorization for expedited wire redemption to the account holder's brokerage or
bank  account,  shares  can be  redeemed  and  proceeds  sent by a federal  wire
transfer to a single  previously  designated  account.  Requests received by the
Shareholder Service Agent prior to 11:00 a.m. Chicago time will result in shares
being redeemed that day and normally the proceeds will be sent to the designated
account that day. Once  authorization is on file, the Shareholder  Service Agent
will honor  requests by telephone or in writing,  subject to the  limitations on
liability  described under "General"  above. The Fund is not responsible for the
efficiency of the federal wire system or the account holder's financial services
firm or bank.  The Fund  currently  does not charge the account  holder for wire
transfers.  The account  holder is  responsible  for any charges  imposed by the
account  holder's firm or bank.  There is a $1,000 wire redemption  minimum.  To
change the designated account to receive wire redemption  proceeds,  contact the
firm through which shares of the Fund were  purchased or send a written  request
to the Shareholder Service Agent with signatures  guaranteed as described above.
Shares  purchased  by check  or  through  certain  ACH  transactions  may not be
redeemed by wire transfer until the shares have been owned for at least 10 days.
Account holders may not use this procedure to redeem shares held in certificated
form.  During  periods when it is difficult to contact the  Shareholder  Service
Agent by  telephone,  it may be difficult  to use the  expedited  wire  transfer
redemption  privilege.  The Fund  reserves the right to terminate or modify this
privilege at any time.

Expedited Redemptions by Draft. Upon request, shareholders will be provided with
drafts to be drawn on the Fund  ("Redemption  Checks").  These Redemption Checks
may be made  payable to the order of any  person  for not more than $5  million.
Shareholders  should  not write  Redemption  Checks in an amount  less than $250
since a $10 service fee will be charged as  described  below.  When a Redemption
Check is presented  for  payment,  a  sufficient  number of full and  fractional
shares in the  shareholder's  account will be redeemed as of the next determined
net asset value to cover the amount of the  Redemption  Check.  This will enable
the  shareholder  to continue  earning  dividends  until the Fund  receives  the
Redemption  Check. A shareholder  wishing to use this method of redemption  must
complete and file an Account  Information  Form which is available from the Fund
or firms through which shares were  purchased.  Redemption  Checks should not be
used to close an account since the account normally  includes accrued but unpaid
dividends.  The Fund reserves the right to terminate or modify this privilege at
any time. This privilege may not be available through some firms that distribute
shares of the Fund. In addition,  firms may impose minimum balance  requirements
in order to obtain this  feature.  Firms may also impose fees to  investors  for
this  privilege  or, if approved by the Fund,  establish  variations  of minimum
check amounts.

                                       13
<PAGE>

Unless one signer is  authorized  on the Account  Information  Form,  Redemption
Checks  must be signed  by all  account  holders.  Any  change in the  signature
authorization  must be made by written notice to the Shareholder  Service Agent.
Shares  purchased  by check  or  through  certain  ACH  transactions  may not be
redeemed by Redemption  Check until the shares have been on the Fund's books for
at least 10 days.  Shareholders may not use this procedure to redeem shares held
in  certificated  form.  The Fund reserves the right to terminate or modify this
privilege at any time.

The Fund may refuse to honor Redemption  Checks whenever the right of redemption
has been suspended or postponed,  or whenever the account is otherwise impaired.
A $10 service fee will be charged when a Redemption Check is presented to redeem
Fund  shares in excess of the value of a Fund  account or in an amount less than
$250;  when a Redemption  Check is presented  that would  require  redemption of
shares that were purchased by check or certain ACH transactions  within 10 days;
or when "stop  payment" of a  Redemption  Check is  requested.  Firms may charge
different service fees.

SPECIAL FEATURES

Certain  firms that offer  shares of the Fund also  provide  special  redemption
features  through charge or debit cards,  Automatic  Teller  Machines and checks
that  redeem  Fund  shares.  Various  firms  have  different  charges  for their
services. Shareholders should obtain information from their firm with respect to
any  special   redemption   features,   applicable   charges,   minimum  balance
requirements and special rules of the cash management program being offered.

Information  about Tax  Sheltered  Retirement  Programs,  Systematic  Withdrawal
Programs,  the Exchange  Privilege and  Electronic  Funds  Transfer  Programs is
contained in the Statement of Additional  Information;  and further  information
may be obtained without charge from KDI.

DIVIDENDS AND TAXES

Dividends are declared  daily and paid monthly.  Shareholders  may select one of
the following ways to receive dividends.

1.   Reinvest  Dividends at net asset value into  additional  shares of the same
     Portfolio. Dividends are normally reinvested on the 15th of each month if a
     business  day,  otherwise  on the  next  business  day.  Dividends  will be
     reinvested unless the shareholder elects to receive them in cash.

2.   Receive  Dividends in Cash, if so requested.  Checks will be mailed monthly
     to the shareholder or any person designated by the shareholder.

The Fund reinvests  dividend checks (and future dividends) in shares of the Fund
if checks are returned as  undeliverable.  Dividends and other  distributions in
the aggregate  amount of $10 or less are  automatically  reinvested in shares of
the Fund unless the shareholder  requests that such policy not be applied to the
shareholder's account.

Taxable  Portfolios.  The Money Market  Portfolio and the Government  Securities
Portfolio each intend to continue to qualify as a regulated  investment  company
under  Subchapter  M of the  Internal  Revenue  Code  (the  "Code")  and,  if so
qualified,  will not be  subject  to  federal  income  taxes to the  extent  its
earnings are distributed. Dividends derived from interest and short-term capital
gains are taxable as ordinary  income whether  received in cash or reinvested in
additional  shares.  Dividends  from these  Portfolios  do not  qualify  for the
dividends received deduction available to corporate shareholders.

                                       14
<PAGE>

Tax-Exempt  Portfolio.  The Tax-Exempt  Portfolio intends to continue to qualify
under the Code as a regulated investment company and, if so qualified,  will not
be liable for federal  income taxes to the extent its earnings are  distributed.
This Portfolio also intends to meet the  requirements  of the Code applicable to
regulated investment companies  distributing  tax-exempt interest dividends and,
accordingly,   dividends   representing  net  interest   received  on  Municipal
Securities  will not be  includable  by  shareholders  in their gross income for
federal  income tax  purposes,  except to the extent such interest is subject to
the alternative minimum tax as discussed below.  Dividends  representing taxable
net investment income (such as net interest income from temporary investments in
obligations of the U.S.  Government)  and net short-term  capital gains, if any,
are taxable to shareholders as ordinary income.

Net interest on certain  "private  activity  bonds" issued on or after August 8,
1986 is treated as an item of tax preference and may,  therefore,  be subject to
both the  individual  and  corporate  alternative  minimum  tax.  To the  extent
provided  by  regulations  to be  issued  by  the  Secretary  of  the  Treasury,
exempt-interest  dividends  from the  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio are to be treated as
interest on private  activity  bonds in  proportion  to the interest  income the
Portfolio receives from private activity bonds, reduced by allowable deductions.
For the 1996 calendar  year,  20% of the net interest  income of the  Tax-Exempt
Portfolio was derived from "private activity bonds."

Exempt-interest  dividends,  except to the  extent  of  interest  from  "private
activity  bonds,"  are not  treated as a tax  preference  item.  For a corporate
shareholder,  however,  such  dividends  will be  included in  determining  such
corporate shareholder's "adjusted current earnings." Seventy-five percent of the
excess, if any, of "adjusted current earnings" over the corporate  shareholder's
other alternative  minimum taxable income with certain adjustments will be a tax
preference  item.  Corporate  shareholders  are  advised  to  consult  their tax
advisers with respect to alternative minimum tax consequences.

Shareholders  will be required to disclose on their  federal  income tax returns
the  amount  of  tax-exempt   interest   earned   during  the  year,   including
exempt-interest dividends received from the Tax-Exempt Portfolio.

Individuals  whose  modified  income  exceeds a base  amount  will be subject to
federal  income tax on up to 85% of their  Social  Security  benefits.  Modified
income  includes   adjusted  gross  income,   tax-exempt   interest,   including
exempt-interest  dividends  from  the  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio  and 50% of  Social
Security  benefits.  Individuals  are advised to consult their tax advisers with
respect to the taxation of Social Security benefits.

The tax exemption of dividends from the Tax-Exempt  Portfolio for federal income
tax purposes does not necessarily  result in exemption under the income or other
tax laws of any state or local taxing authority.  The laws of the several states
and local  taxing  authorities  vary with respect to the taxation of such income
and  shareholders  of the Portfolio are advised to consult their own tax adviser
as to the status of their accounts under state and local tax laws.

The Fund. Dividends declared in October, November or December to shareholders of
record as of a date in one of those months and paid during the following January
are treated as paid on December 31 of the  calendar  year in which  declared for
federal  income tax  purposes.  The Fund may adjust its  schedule  for  dividend
reinvestment  for the month of December to assist it in complying with reporting
and minimum distribution  requirements  contained in the Code.

Each  Portfolio is required by law to withhold 31% of taxable  dividends paid to
certain shareholders who do not furnish a correct taxpayer identification number
(in the case of  individuals  a social  security  number)  and in certain  other
circumstances. Trustees of qualified retirement plans and 403(b)(7) accounts are
required by law to withhold 20% of the taxable portion of any distribution  that
is eligible to be "rolled over." The 20% withholding  requirement does not apply
to distributions from Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) or any part of a 

                                       15
<PAGE>

distribution that is transferred  directly to another qualified retirement plan,
403(b)(7)  account,  or IRA.  Shareholders  should  consult  their tax  advisers
regarding the 20% withholding requirement.

Shareholders  normally will receive  monthly  confirmations  of dividends and of
purchase  and  redemption  transactions  except that  confirmations  of dividend
reinvestment for IRAs and other fiduciary accounts for which Investors Fiduciary
Trust  Company  serves as  trustee  will be sent  quarterly.  Firms may  provide
varying  arrangements  with their  clients  with respect to  confirmations  (see
"Purchase  of Shares -- Clients of  Firms").  Tax  information  will be provided
annually.  Shareholders  are  encouraged  to  retain  copies  of  their  account
confirmation  statements  or year-end  statements  for tax  reporting  purposes.
However,  those  who have  incomplete  records  may  obtain  historical  account
transaction information at a reasonable fee.

INVESTMENT MANAGER AND SHAREHOLDER SERVICES

Investment Manager.  Scudder Kemper Investments,  Inc. ("Scudder Kemper" or "the
Adviser"), 345 Park Avenue, New York, New York, is the investment manager of the
Fund and provides the Fund with continuous  professional investment supervision.
The Adviser has been engaged in the management of investment funds for more than
seventy  years,  with more than $230  billion in assets  under  management.

The Adviser is an indirect  subsidiary  of Zurich  Financial  Services,  Inc., a
newly formed global insurance and financial  services company.  Zurich Financial
Services,  Inc. owns approximately 70% of the Adviser, with the balance owned by
the Adviser's officers and employees.

In connection with the formation of Zurich Financial Services, Inc., each Fund's
existing  investment  management  agreement  with the Adviser was deemed to have
been  assigned  and,  therefore,  terminated.  The  Board  has  approved  a  new
investment  management  agreement  with  the  Adviser,  which  is  substantially
identical to the current investment management agreement except for the dates of
execution and termination.  This agreement became effective upon the termination
of the then current  investment  management  agreement and will be submitted for
shareholder  approval at a special  meeting  currently  scheduled to conclude in
December 1998.

Responsibility  for  overall  management  of the Fund  rests  with its  Board of
Trustees and officers.  Professional  investment  supervision is provided by the
Adviser. The investment management agreement provides that the Adviser shall act
as the Fund's  investment  adviser,  manage its investments and provide the Fund
with various services and facilities.  For the services and facilities furnished
to the Money  Market and  Government  Securities  Portfolios,  the Fund pays the
Adviser an investment  management fee monthly, on a graduated basis at an annual
rate ranging from 0.22% of the first $500 million of combined  average daily net
assets of such Portfolios to 0.15% of combined  average daily net assets of such
Portfolios  over $3 billion.  For the services and  facilities  furnished to the
Tax-Exempt  Portfolio,  the Fund pays the Adviser an investment  management  fee
monthly,  on a graduated basis at an annual rate ranging from 0.22% of the first
$500 million of average  daily net assets of such  Portfolio to 0.15% of average
daily net assets of such Portfolio over $3 billion.

Fund  Accounting  Agent.  Scudder  Fund  Accounting   Corporation   ("SFAC"),  a
subsidiary of the Adviser,  is responsible  for  determining the daily net asset
value per  share of the Fund and  maintaining  all  accounting  records  related
thereto.  Currently, SFAC receives no fee for its services to the Fund; however,
subject to Board approval, at some time in the future, SFAC may seek payment for
its services under this agreement.

Year 2000  Readiness.  Like  other  mutual  funds  and  financial  and  business
organizations  worldwide, the Portfolios could be adversely affected if computer
systems on which the  Portfolios  rely,  which  primarily  include those used by
Scudder Kemper, its affiliates or other service providers, are unable to process
correctly  date-related  information on and after January 1, 2000.  This risk is
commonly called the Year 2000 Issue. Failure to address 

                                       16
<PAGE>

successfully  the Year 2000 Issue  could  result in  interruptions  to and other
material  adverse  effects on the Portfolios'  business and operations.  Scudder
Kemper  had  commenced  a review of the Year  2000  Issue as it may  affect  the
Portfolios  and is taking steps it believes are  reasonably  designed to address
the Year 2000 Issue,  although there can be no assurances  that these steps will
be sufficient.  In addition, there can be no assurances that the Year 2000 Issue
will not have an adverse  effect on the companies  whose  securities are held by
the Portfolios or on global markets or economies generally.

Distributor  and  Administrator.  Pursuant  to  an  administration,  shareholder
services and distribution agreement and an underwriting agreement  (collectively
"distribution  agreement"),   Kemper  Distributors,   Inc.  ("KDI"),  222  South
Riverside,  Chicago,  Illinois  60606,  an affiliate  of the Adviser,  serves as
primary  administrator,  distributor  and principal  underwriter  to the Fund to
provide  information and services for existing and potential  shareholders.  The
distribution  agreement  provides  that  KDI  shall  appoint  various  financial
services  firms,  such as  broker-dealers  or banks,  to provide cash management
services  for their  customers  or clients  through  the Fund.  The firms are to
provide such office space and  equipment,  telephone  facilities,  personnel and
literature distribution as is necessary or appropriate for providing information
and services to the firms'  clients.  The Fund has adopted a plan in  accordance
with Rule 12b-1 of the 1940 Act (the  "12b-1  Plan").  This rule  regulates  the
manner in which an  investment  company  may  directly  or  indirectly  bear the
expenses of  distributing  its shares.  For its services under the  distribution
agreement  and  pursuant to the 12b-1 Plan,  KDI receives  annual fees,  payable
monthly,  of 0.38% of  average  daily  net  assets  from the  Money  Market  and
Government  Securities Portfolios and 0.33% of average daily net assets from the
Tax-Exempt  Portfolio.  Expenditures by KDI on behalf of the Portfolios need not
be made on the same basis  that such fees are  allocated.  The fees are  accrued
daily as an expense of the  Portfolios.  As principal  underwriter for the Fund,
KDI acts as agent of the Fund in the sale of its shares.

KDI has related services agreements with various  broker-dealer firms to provide
cash management and other services for Fund shareholders.  KDI also has services
agreements  with  banking  firms to provide  such  services,  except for certain
underwriting  or  distribution  services that the banks may be  prohibited  from
providing under the Glass-Steagall  Act, for their clients who wish to invest in
the Fund. If the  Glass-Steagall Act should prevent banking firms from acting in
any  capacity  or  providing  any of the  described  services,  management  will
consider what action,  if any, is appropriate.  Management does not believe that
termination of a relationship  with a bank would result in any material  adverse
consequences to the Fund. Banks or other financial services firms may be subject
to various state laws regarding the services described above and may be required
to register as dealers  pursuant to state law. KDI  normally  pays such firms at
annual rates  ranging  from 0.15% to 0.40% of average  daily net assets of those
accounts in the Money  Market and  Government  Securities  Portfolios  that they
maintain and service and ranging from 0.15% to 0.33% of average daily net assets
of those accounts in the Tax-Exempt Portfolio that they maintain and service. In
addition,  KDI may, from time to time,  from its own resources pay certain firms
additional amounts for such services including, without limitation, fixed dollar
amounts and  amounts  based upon a  percentage  of net assets or  increased  net
assets in those portfolio accounts that said firms maintain and service. KDI may
elect to keep a portion of the total  distribution fee to compensate  itself for
functions  performed  for the  Fund  or to pay  for  sales  materials  or  other
promotional activities.

Since the fees payable to KDI under the 12b-1 Plan are based upon percentages of
the average daily net assets of the  Portfolios  as provided  above and not upon
the actual  expenditures of KDI, the expenses of KDI, which may include overhead
expense,  may be more or less than the fees received by it under the 12b-1 Plan.
For example,  during the fiscal year ended July 31, 1998, KDI incurred  expenses
under the 12b-1 Plan of  approximately  $6,256,000  while it  received  from the
Money Market Portfolio, the Government Securities Portfolio and the 

                                       17
<PAGE>

Tax-Exempt Portfolio, $3,530,000,  $1,577,000 and $1,416,000,  respectively, for
an  aggregate  fee under  the 12b-1  Plan of  $6,523,000.  If the 12b-1  Plan is
terminated  in  accordance  with its terms,  the  obligation of the Fund to make
payments  to KDI  pursuant to the 12b-1 Plan will cease and the Fund will not be
required to make any payments past the termination date. Thus, there is no legal
obligation  for the Fund to pay any  expenses  incurred  by KDI in excess of its
fees under the 12b-1  Plan,  if for any reason the 12b-1 Plan is  terminated  in
accordance  with its terms.  Future  fees under the 12b-1 Plan may or may not be
sufficient to reimburse KDI for its cumulative expenses incurred.

Custodian,  Transfer Agent and Shareholder  Service Agent.  Investors  Fiduciary
Trust Company ("IFTC"), 801 Pennsylvania Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri 64105, as
custodian, and State Street Bank and Trust Company, 225 Franklin Street, Boston,
Massachusetts  02110, as sub-custodian,  have custody of all securities and cash
of the Fund. They attend to the collection of principal and income,  and payment
for and collection of proceeds of securities  bought and sold by the Fund.  IFTC
also is the Fund's transfer and  dividend-paying  agent.  Pursuant to a services
agreement  with IFTC,  KSvC, an affiliate of the Adviser,  serves as Shareholder
Service Agent of the Fund.

PERFORMANCE

The Fund may advertise several types of performance information for a Portfolio,
including  "yield,"  "effective  yield" and, for the Tax-Exempt  Portfolio only,
"tax equivalent yield." Each of these figures is based upon historical  earnings
and is not representative of the future performance of a Portfolio. The yield of
a Portfolio  refers to the net  investment  income  generated by a  hypothetical
investment  in  the  Portfolio  over  a  specific  seven-day  period.  This  net
investment income is then annualized, which means that the net investment income
generated  during the seven-day period is assumed to be generated each week over
an annual period and is shown as a percentage of the  investment.  The effective
yield is  calculated  similarly,  but the net  investment  income  earned by the
investment is assumed to be  compounded  weekly when  annualized.  The effective
yield will be slightly higher than the yield due to this compounding effect. Tax
equivalent  yield is the yield that a taxable  investment must generate in order
to equal the  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio's  yield for an investor in a stated federal
income tax bracket (normally assumed to be the maximum tax rate). Tax equivalent
yield is based upon,  and will be higher  than,  the  portion of the  Tax-Exempt
Portfolio's yield that is tax-exempt.

The  performance  of a Portfolio  may be compared to that of other money  market
mutual  funds or mutual  fund  indexes as reported  by  independent  mutual fund
reporting  services  such as Lipper  Analytical  Services,  Inc.  A  Portfolio's
performance  and its  relative  size also may be compared to other money  market
mutual funds as reported by IBC Financial Data, Inc.'s or Money Market Insightr,
reporting  services  on money  market  funds.  Investors  may want to  compare a
Portfolio's  performance  to that of various  bank  products as reported by BANK
RATE  MONITOR(TM),  a financial  reporting service that weekly publishes average
rates of bank and thrift  institution money market deposit accounts and interest
bearing  checking  accounts  or  various  certificate  of deposit  indexes.  The
performance of a Portfolio  also may be compared to that of U.S.  Treasury bills
and notes.  Certain of these  alternative  investments  may offer fixed rates of
return and guaranteed  principal and may be insured. In addition,  investors may
want to compare a  Portfolio's  performance  to the Consumer  Price Index either
directly or by calculating  its "real rate of return," which is adjusted for the
effects of inflation.

Information may be quoted from publications such as Morningstar,  Inc., The Wall
Street Journal, Money Magazine, Forbes, Barron's,  Fortune, The Chicago Tribune,
USA Today,  Institutional Investor and Registered  Representative.  The Fund may
also  describe  its  portfolio  holdings  and depict its size or  relative  size
compared to other mutual funds,  the number and make-up of its shareholder  base
and other descriptive factors concerning the Fund.

                                       18
<PAGE>

Each  Portfolio's  yield  will  fluctuate.  Shares of the Fund are not  insured.
Additional  information  concerning each Portfolio's  performance appears in the
Statement of Additional Information.

CAPITAL STRUCTURE

The Fund is an open-end,  diversified,  management investment company, organized
as a business trust under the laws of Massachusetts on August 9, 1985. Effective
November  29,  1985,  the Money  Market  and  Government  Securities  Portfolios
pursuant to a reorganization  succeeded to the assets and liabilities of the two
Portfolios of Cash Equivalent  Fund, Inc., a Maryland  corporation  organized on
February  2,  1979.  The  Money  Market  and  Government  Securities  Portfolios
commenced  operations  on March 16,  1979 and  December  1, 1981,  respectively.
Effective October 14, 1988, the Tax-Exempt Portfolio succeeded to the assets and
liabilities  of Tax-Exempt  Money Market Fund, a  Massachusetts  business  trust
organized October 25, 1985. Effective January 31, 1986,  Tax-Exempt Money Market
Fund succeeded to the assets and  liabilities  of Tax-Exempt  Money Market Fund,
Inc., a Maryland  corporation that was organized  January 27, 1982 and commenced
operations on July 9, 1982. The Fund may issue an unlimited  number of shares of
beneficial  interest  in one or more  series  ("Portfolios"),  all having no par
value.  While  only  shares of the three  previously  described  Portfolios  are
presently  being  offered,  the Board of Trustees may  authorize the issuance of
additional  Portfolios  if  deemed  desirable.  Since the Fund  offers  multiple
Portfolios,  it is known as a "series  company."  Shares of each  Portfolio have
equal  noncumulative  voting  rights and equal rights with respect to dividends,
assets  and   liquidation  of  such   Portfolio.   Shares  are  fully  paid  and
nonassessable  when issued,  are  transferable  without  restriction and have no
preemptive  or  conversion  rights.  The  Fund is not  required  to hold  annual
shareholders'  meetings  and does not  intend  to do so.  However,  it will hold
special  meetings as required or deemed  desirable for such purposes as electing
trustees,  changing fundamental  policies or approving an investment  management
agreement.  Subject  to the  Agreement  and  Declaration  of Trust of the  Fund,
shareholders may remove trustees. Shareholders will vote by Portfolio and not in
the  aggregate  except when voting in the  aggregate is required  under the 1940
Act, such as for the election of trustees.

The  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio  may in the  future  seek to achieve  its  investment
objective by pooling its assets with assets of other mutual funds for investment
in  another  investment  company  having  the  same  investment   objective  and
substantially  the same investment  policies and  restrictions as the Portfolio.
The  purpose  of  such  an  arrangement  is  to  achieve   greater   operational
efficiencies  and to  reduce  costs.  It is  expected  that any such  investment
company will be managed by the Adviser in  substantially  the same manner as the
Portfolio.  Shareholders  of the Portfolio will be given at least 30 days' prior
notice of any such investment, although they will not be entitled to vote on the
action. Such investment would be made only if the Trustees determine it to be in
the best interests of the Portfolio and its shareholders.

                                       19
<PAGE>

Cash Equivalent
Fund

Prospectus
November 30, 1998


<PAGE>

                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
                                November 30, 1998

                              CASH EQUIVALENT FUND
               222 South Riverside Plaza, Chicago, Illinois 60606
                                 1-800-231-8568

This Statement of Additional  Information is not a prospectus and should be read
in conjunction  with the prospectus of Cash  Equivalent  Fund (the "Fund") dated
November 30, 1998. The prospectus may be obtained without charge from the Fund.

                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS .......................................................2
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES ..........................................................5
INVESTMENT MANAGER AND SHAREHOLDER SERVICES....................................6
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS ........................................................9
PURCHASE AND REDEMPTION OF SHARES.............................................10
DIVIDENDS, NET ASSET VALUE AND TAXES..........................................10
PERFORMANCE...................................................................11
OFFICERS AND TRUSTEES ........................................................13
SPECIAL FEATURES..............................................................15
SHAREHOLDER RIGHTS ...........................................................17
APPENDIX -- RATINGS OF INVESTMENTS............................................19

The  financial  statements  appearing  in  the  Fund's  1998  Annual  Report  to
Shareholders  are  incorporated  herein by  reference.  The Fund's Annual Report
accompanies this Statement of Additional Information.

<PAGE>

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

The Fund has adopted for the Money Market Portfolio,  the Government  Securities
Portfolio and the Tax-Exempt  Portfolio certain investment  restrictions  which,
together with the investment objective and policies of each Portfolio, cannot be
changed  for a  Portfolio  without  approval  by holders  of a  majority  of its
outstanding  voting shares.  As defined in the  Investment  Company Act of 1940,
this  means  the  lesser of the vote of (a) 67% of the  shares of the  Portfolio
present at a meeting where more than 50% of the  outstanding  shares are present
in  person  or by proxy or (b) more  than 50% of the  outstanding  shares of the
Portfolio.

The Money Market Portfolio and the Government Securities Portfolio  individually
may not:

         (1)      Purchase   securities  or  make  investments   other  than  in
                  accordance with its investment objective and policies.

         (2)      Purchase  securities of any issuer (other than obligations of,
                  or guaranteed by, the United States  Government,  its agencies
                  or  instrumentalities)  if, as a  result,  more than 5% of the
                  value  of  the   Portfolio's   assets  would  be  invested  in
                  securities of that issuer

         (3)      Purchase,  in the aggregate  with all other  Portfolios,  more
                  than 10% of any class of  securities  of any issuer.  All debt
                  securities and all preferred stocks are each considered as one
                  class.

         (4)      Invest  more  than  5% of  the  Portfolio's  total  assets  in
                  securities  of  issuers   (other  than   obligations   of,  or
                  guaranteed by, the United States  Government,  its agencies or
                  instrumentalities) which with their predecessors have a record
                  of less than three years continuous operation.

         (5)      Enter into repurchase agreements if, as a result thereof, more
                  than 10% of the Portfolio's total assets valued at the time of
                  the  transaction  would be  subject to  repurchase  agreements
                  maturing in more than seven days.

         (6)      Make loans to others  (except  through  the  purchase  of debt
                  obligations  or repurchase  agreements in accordance  with its
                  investment objective and policies).

         (7)      Borrow money except as a temporary  measure for  extraordinary
                  or  emergency  purposes  and  then  only  in an  amount  up to
                  one-third of the value of its total  assets,  in order to meet
                  redemption  requests  without  immediately  selling  any money
                  market  instruments  (any such  borrowings  under this section
                  will not be  collateralized).  If, for any reason, the current
                  value of the  Portfolio's  total  assets falls below an amount
                  equal to three times the amount of its indebtedness from money
                  borrowed,  the Portfolio  will,  within three  business  days,
                  reduce its indebtedness to the extent necessary. The Portfolio
                  will not borrow for leverage purposes. 

         (8)      Make short sales of securities,  or purchase any securities on
                  margin  except to obtain  such  short-term  credits  as may be
                  necessary for the clearance of transactions.

         (9)      Write, purchase or sell puts, calls or combinations thereof.

         (10)     Concentrate  more  than 25% of the  value  of the  Portfolio's
                  assets  in any  one  industry;  provided,  however,  that  the
                  Portfolio  reserves  freedom of action to invest up to 100% of
                  its assets in certificates of deposit or bankers'  acceptances
                  or  U.S.   Government   securities  in  accordance   with  its
                  investment objective and policies.

         (11)     Purchase or retain the  securities of any issuer if any of the
                  officers,  trustees or directors of the Fund or its investment
                  adviser  owns   beneficially  more  than  1/2  of  1%  of  the
                  securities of such issuer and together own more than 5% of the
                  securities of such issuer.

                                       2
<PAGE>

         (12)     Invest  more  than  5% of  the  Portfolio's  total  assets  in
                  securities  restricted  as to  disposition  under the  federal
                  securities laws (except  commercial paper issued under Section
                  4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933).

         (13)     Invest for the purpose of exercising  control or management of
                  another issuer.

         (14)     Invest in  commodities  or commodity  futures  contracts or in
                  real estate,  although it may invest in  securities  which are
                  secured by real estate and  securities of issuers which invest
                  or deal in real estate.

         (15)     Invest in interests in oil, gas or other  mineral  exploration
                  or  development  programs,  although  it  may  invest  in  the
                  securities   of  issuers  which  invest  in  or  sponsor  such
                  programs.

         (16)     Purchase securities of other investment  companies,  except in
                  connection  with a merger,  consolidation,  reorganization  or
                  acquisition of assets.

         (17)     Underwrite  securities  issued by others  except to the extent
                  the  Portfolio may be deemed to be an  underwriter,  under the
                  federal securities laws, in connection with the disposition of
                  portfolio securities.

         (18)     Issue senior  securities as defined in the Investment  Company
                  Act of 1940.

The Tax-Exempt Portfolio may not:

         (1)      Purchase   securities  or  make  investments   other  than  in
                  accordance with its investment objective and policies,  except
                  that all or  substantially  all of the assets of the Portfolio
                  may be  invested  in  another  registered  investment  company
                  having the same investment objective and substantially similar
                  investment policies as the Portfolio.

   
         (2)      Purchase   securities  (other  than  securities  of  the  U.S.
                  Government,  its agencies or instrumentalities) if as a result
                  of such purchase more than 25% of the Portfolio's total assets
                  would be invested in any industry or in any one state,  except
                  that all or  substantially  all of the assets of the Portfolio
                  may be  invested  in  another  registered  investment  company
                  having the same investment objective and substantially similar
                  investment policies as the Portfolio,  nor may it enter into a
                  repurchase  agreement  if more than 10% of its assets would be
                  subject to repurchase  agreements  maturing in more than seven
                  days.

         (3)      Purchase  securities of any issuer (other than obligations of,
                  or  guaranteed  by,  the  U.S.  Government,  its  agencies  or
                  instrumentalities) if as a result more than 5% of the value of
                  the Portfolio's  assets would be invested in the securities of
                  such  issuer,  except  that  all or  substantially  all of the
                  assets of the Portfolio may be invested in another  registered
                  investment  company having the same  investment  objective and
                  substantially  similar  investment  policies as the Portfolio.
                  For purposes of this limitation, the Portfolio will regard the
                  entity which has the primary responsibility for the payment of
                  interest and principal as the issuer.
    

         (4)      Invest  more  than  5% of  the  Portfolio's  total  assets  in
                  industrial development bonds sponsored by companies which with
                  their  predecessors  have less than  three  years'  continuous
                  operation.

         (5)      Make loans to others  (except  through  the  purchase  of debt
                  obligations  or repurchase  agreements in accordance  with its
                  investment objective and policies).

         (6)      Borrow money except from banks for temporary purposes (but not
                  for the purpose of purchase of  investments)  and then only in
                  an  amount  not  to  exceed  one-third  of  the  value  of the
                  Portfolio's  total assets  (including the amount  borrowed) in
                  order to meet redemption requests which otherwise might result
                  in the  untimely  disposition  of  securities;  or pledge  the
                  Portfolio's securities or receivables or transfer or assign or
                  otherwise  encumber  them in an amount  to  exceed  10% of the
                  Portfolio's   net   assets  to  secure   borrowings.   Reverse
                  repurchase  agreements  made by the  Portfolio  are  permitted
                  within the limitations of this

                                       3
<PAGE>

                  paragraph.  The Portfolio will not purchase securities or make
                  investments while reverse repurchase  agreements or borrowings
                  are outstanding.

         (7)      Make short  sales of  securities  or  purchase  securities  on
                  margin,  except to obtain  such  short-term  credits as may be
                  necessary for the clearance of transactions.

         (8)      Write,  purchase or sell puts, calls or combinations  thereof,
                  although  the  Portfolio  may  purchase  Municipal  Securities
                  subject to Standby Commitments,  Variable Rate Demand Notes or
                  Repurchase   Agreements  in  accordance  with  its  investment
                  objective and policies.

         (9)      Purchase or retain the  securities of any issuer if any of the
                  officers,  trustees or directors of the Fund or its investment
                  adviser  owns   beneficially  more  than  1/2  of  1%  of  the
                  securities of such issuer and together own more than 5% of the
                  securities  of such issuer,  except that all or  substantially
                  all of the assets of the  Portfolio may be invested in another
                  registered  investment  company  having  the  same  investment
                  objective and substantially similar investment policies as the
                  Portfolio.

   
         (10)     Invest  more  than  5% of  the  Portfolio's  total  assets  in
                  securities  restricted  as to  disposition  under the  federal
                  securities laws,  except that all or substantially  all of the
                  assets of the Portfolio may be invested in another  registered
                  investment  company having the same  investment  objective and
                  substantially similar investment policies as the Portfolio.
    

         (11)     Invest for the purpose of exercising  control or management of
                  another issuer.

         (12)     Invest in  commodities  or commodity  futures  contracts or in
                  real estate  except that the Portfolio may invest in Municipal
                  Securities secured by real estate or interests therein.

         (13)     Invest in interests in oil, gas or other  mineral  exploration
                  or development  programs,  although it may invest in Municipal
                  Securities   of  issuers  which  invest  in  or  sponsor  such
                  programs.

         (14)     Purchase securities of other investment  companies,  except in
                  connection  with a merger,  consolidation,  reorganization  or
                  acquisition  of assets,  and except that all or  substantially
                  all of the assets of the  Portfolio may be invested in another
                  registered  investment  company  having  the  same  investment
                  objective and substantially similar investment policies as the
                  Portfolio.

         (15)     Underwrite  securities  issued by others  except to the extent
                  the  Portfolio may be deemed to be an  underwriter,  under the
                  federal securities laws, in connection with the disposition of
                  portfolio securities, and except that all or substantially all
                  of the  assets of the  Portfolio  may be  invested  in another
                  registered  investment  company  having  the  same  investment
                  objective and substantially similar investment policies as the
                  Portfolio.

         (16)     Issue senior  securities as defined in the Investment  Company
                  Act of 1940.

If a percentage  restriction  is adhered to at the time of  investment,  a later
increase or decrease in percentage  beyond the specified  limit resulting from a
change  in  values  or net  assets  will  not be  considered  a  violation.  The
Portfolios did not borrow money as permitted by investment  restriction number 7
(Money Market and  Government  Securities  Portfolios)  and number 6 (Tax-Exempt
Portfolio),  in the  latest  fiscal  year of the Fund,  and they have no present
intention of borrowing  during the coming year. In any event,  borrowings  would
only be made as permitted by such  restrictions.  The  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio may
invest more than 25% of its total assets in industrial development bonds.

Master/Feeder Fund Structure.  At a special meeting of shareholders,  a majority
of the shareholders of the Tax-Exempt  Portfolio approved a proposal which gives
the  Board of  Trustees  the  discretion  to  retain  the  current  distribution
arrangement   for  the  Portfolio   while  investing  in  a  master  fund  in  a
master/feeder fund structure as described below.

                                       4
<PAGE>

A master/feeder fund structure is one in which a fund (a "feeder fund"), instead
of investing  directly in a portfolio of securities,  invests most or all of its
investment  assets in a separate  registered  investment  company  (the  "master
fund") with  substantially  the same  investment  objective  and policies as the
feeder  fund.  Such a  structure  permits  the  pooling of assets of two or more
feeder funds,  preserving  separate  identities or distribution  channels at the
feeder  fund  level.  Based on the  premise  that  certain  of the  expenses  of
operating an investment  portfolio are  relatively  fixed,  a larger  investment
portfolio may eventually  achieve a lower ratio of operating expenses to average
net assets. An existing  investment  company is able to convert to a feeder fund
by  selling  all  of  its  investments,   which  involves  brokerage  and  other
transaction  costs and realization of a taxable gain or loss, or by contributing
its assets to the master  fund and  avoiding  transaction  costs and,  if proper
procedures are followed, the realization of taxable gain or loss.

MUNICIPAL SECURITIES

Municipal Securities that the Tax-Exempt Portfolio may purchase include, without
limitation, debt obligations issued to obtain funds for various public purposes,
including  the  construction  of a wide  range  of  public  facilities  such  as
airports,  bridges, highways,  housing,  hospitals, mass transportation,  public
utilities,  schools,  streets,  and water and sewer works. Other public purposes
for which  Municipal  Securities  may be issued  include  refunding  outstanding
obligations,  obtaining funds for general operating expenses and obtaining funds
to loan to other public institutions and facilities.

Municipal Securities,  such as industrial development bonds, are issued by or on
behalf of public  authorities to obtain funds for purposes  including  privately
operated airports, housing, conventions,  trade shows, ports, sports, parking or
pollution control  facilities or for facilities for water,  gas,  electricity or
sewage and solid waste  disposal.  Such  obligations,  which may  include  lease
arrangements,  are included within the term Municipal Securities if the interest
paid  thereon  qualifies  as exempt  from  federal  income  tax.  Other types of
industrial   development   bonds,  the  proceeds  of  which  are  used  for  the
construction,  equipment, repair or improvement of privately operated industrial
or commercial facilities, may constitute Municipal Securities,  although current
federal tax laws place substantial limitations on the size of such issues.

Municipal  Securities  generally  are  classified  as  "general  obligation"  or
"revenue."  General  obligation  notes are secured by the issuer's pledge of its
full credit and taxing power for the payment of principal and interest.  Revenue
notes are payable only from the revenues  derived from a particular  facility or
class of facilities or, in some cases,  from the proceeds of a special excise or
other specific revenue source.  Industrial development bonds which are Municipal
Securities  are in most cases revenue bonds and generally do not  constitute the
pledge of the credit of the issuer of such bonds.

Examples of Municipal Securities that are issued with original maturities of one
year or less are short-term tax anticipation  notes,  bond  anticipation  notes,
revenue  anticipation  notes,  construction loan notes,  pre-refunded  municipal
bonds, warrants and tax-free commercial paper.

Tax  anticipation  notes  typically are sold to finance working capital needs of
municipalities  in  anticipation  of receiving  property taxes on a future date.
Bond  anticipation  notes  are sold on an  interim  basis in  anticipation  of a
municipality  issuing a longer  term bond in the  future.  Revenue  anticipation
notes are issued in  expectation  of receipt of other  types of revenue  such as
those available under the Federal Revenue  Sharing  Program.  Construction  loan
notes  are  instruments  insured  by the  Federal  Housing  Administration  with
permanent financing by "Fannie Mae" (the Federal National Mortgage  Association)
or "Ginnie Mae" (the Government National Mortgage Association) at the end of the
project construction period. Pre-refunded municipal bonds are bonds that are not
yet refundable, but for which securities have been placed in escrow to refund an
original municipal bond issue when it becomes  refundable.  Tax-free  commercial
paper is an unsecured promissory  obligation issued or guaranteed by a municipal
issuer. The Tax-Exempt Portfolio may purchase other Municipal Securities similar
to the foregoing, that are or may become available,  including securities issued
to pre-refund other outstanding obligations of municipal issuers.

The  federal  bankruptcy  statutes  relating  to the  adjustments  of  debts  of
political  subdivisions  and  authorities of states of the United States provide
that,  in  certain  circumstances,  such  subdivisions  or  authorities  may  be
authorized to initiate bankruptcy proceedings without prior notice to or consent
of creditors,  which proceedings could result in material adverse changes in the
rights of holders of obligations issued by such subdivisions or authorities.

                                       5
<PAGE>

Litigation challenging the validity under state constitutions of present systems
of financing  public  education has been initiated or adjudicated in a number of
states,  and  legislation has been introduced to effect changes in public school
finances  in  some  states.   In  other  instances  there  has  been  litigation
challenging  the issuance of pollution  control revenue bonds or the validity of
their  issuance  under state or federal law which  ultimately  could  affect the
validity of those  Municipal  Securities or the tax-free  nature of the interest
thereon.

INVESTMENT MANAGER AND SHAREHOLDER SERVICES

Investment Manager.  Scudder Kemper  Investments,  Inc. ("Scudder Kemper" or the
"Adviser"),  345 Park  Avenue,  New York,  New York,  is the  Fund's  investment
manager.  The Adviser is approximately  70% owned by Zurich Financial  Services,
Inc., a newly formed  global  insurance  and  financial  services  company.  The
balance of the Adviser is owned by its  officers and  employees.  Pursuant to an
investment management agreement, Scudder Kemper Adviser acts as each Portfolio's
investment adviser,  manages its investments,  administers its business affairs,
furnishes office facilities and equipment, provides clerical, and administrative
services,  and  permits  any of its  officers  or  employees  to  serve  without
compensation  as trustees or officers of the Fund if elected to such  positions.
The Fund pays the expenses of its operations, including the fees and expenses of
independent  auditors,  counsel,  custodian  and transfer  agent and the cost of
share  certificates,  reports and notices to shareholders,  costs of calculating
net asset  value and  maintaining  all  accounting  records  thereto,  brokerage
commissions  or  transaction  costs,  taxes,  registration  fees,  the  fees and
expenses of qualifying  the Fund and its shares for  distribution  under federal
and  state  securities  laws  and  membership  dues  in the  Investment  Company
Institute or any similar  organization.  Fund  expenses  generally are allocated
among the  Portfolios on the basis of net assets at the time of the  allocation,
except that expenses directly attributable to a particular Portfolio are charged
to that Portfolio.

There is one investment  management agreement for the Money Market Portfolio and
the  Government  Securities  Portfolio  and  a  separate  investment  management
agreement for the Tax-Exempt  Portfolio.  These agreements are substantially the
same except that the  graduated  fee schedule  under a  particular  agreement is
applied only to the  Portfolio or Portfolios  subject to that  agreement and the
expense  limitations  contained in the  agreements  are  different.  Each of the
investment  management agreements continues in effect from year to year for each
Portfolio  subject  thereto so long as its  continuation  is  approved  at least
annually  by a  majority  vote  of the  trustees  who are  not  parties  to such
agreement or  interested  persons of any such party except in their  capacity as
trustees of the Fund,  cast in person at a meeting called for such purpose,  and
by the shareholders of each Portfolio  subject thereto or the Board of Trustees.
If  continuation  is not  approved  for a Portfolio,  an  investment  management
agreement  nevertheless may continue in effect for any Portfolio for which it is
approved  and the Adviser may  continue to serve as  investment  manager for the
Portfolio for which it is not approved to the extent permitted by the Investment
Company Act of 1940.  Each  agreement may be terminated at any time upon 60 days
notice by either  party,  or by a majority vote of the  outstanding  shares of a
Portfolio  subject  thereto with respect to that  Portfolio,  and will terminate
automatically upon assignment. Additional Portfolios may be subject to different
agreements.

The  investment  management  agreements  provide  that the Adviser  shall not be
liable for any error of judgment or of law, or for any loss suffered by the Fund
in connection  with the matters to which the  agreements  relate,  except a loss
resulting from willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence on the part of
the Adviser in the performance of its  obligations  and duties,  or by reason of
its reckless disregard of its obligations and duties under the agreements.

At December 31, 1997, pursuant to the terms of an agreement,  Scudder, Stevens &
Clark,  Inc.  ("Scudder") and Zurich Insurance  Company  ("Zurich") formed a new
global organization by combining Scudder with Zurich Kemper Investments, Inc., a
former subsidiary of Zurich and the former investment  manager to each Fund, and
Scudder changed its name to Scudder Kemper Investments,  Inc. As a result of the
transaction,  Zurich owned  approximately  70% of the Adviser,  with the balance
owned by the Adviser's officers and employees.

On September 7, 1998, the businesses of Zurich (including  Zurich's 70% interest
in Scudder  Kemper) and the financial  services  businesses of B.A.T  Industries
p.l.c.  ("B.A.T")  were  combined to form a new global  insurance  and financial
services  company  known as Zurich  Financial  Services,  Inc.  By way of a dual
holding  company   structure,   former  Zurich   shareholders   initially  owned
approximately 57% of Zurich Financial Services, Inc., with the balance initially
owned by former B.A.T shareholders.

                                       6
<PAGE>

Upon  consummation  of this  transaction,  the Portfolios'  existing  investment
management agreements with Scudder Kemper were deemed to have been assigned and,
therefore,   terminated.  The  Board  has  approved  new  investment  management
agreements with Scudder Kemper, which are substantially identical to the current
investment   management  agreements  except  for  the  dates  of  execution  and
termination.  These agreements became effective upon the termination of the then
current investment  management  agreements and will be submitted for shareholder
approval at a special meeting currently scheduled to conclude in December 1998.

For the services  and  facilities  furnished to the Money Market and  Government
Securities  Portfolios,  such Portfolios pay an annual investment management fee
monthly,  on a graduated  basis at the following  rate:  0.22% of the first $500
million of combined  average daily net assets of such  Portfolios,  0.20% of the
next $500 million,  0.175% of the next $1 billion,  0.16% of the next $1 billion
and 0.15% of  combined  average  daily net  assets  of such  Portfolios  over $3
billion.  The Adviser has agreed to reimburse  the Money  Market and  Government
Securities  Portfolios  should all  operating  expenses of the Money  Market and
Government Securities Portfolios, including the investment management fee of the
Adviser  but  excluding  taxes,   interest,   the  distribution  fee  of  Kemper
Distributors,  Inc. ("KDI"),  extraordinary expenses (as determined by the Board
of Trustees) and brokerage commissions or transaction costs, exceed 0.90% of the
first $500 million, 0.80% of the next $500 million, 0.75% of the next $1 billion
and 0.70% of  average  daily  net  assets of the  Money  Market  and  Government
Securities Portfolios in excess of $2 billion on an annual basis. The investment
management  fee and the expense  limitation  for the Money Market and Government
Securities  Portfolios  are computed  based on average  daily net assets of such
Portfolios and are allocated among such  Portfolios  based upon the relative net
assets of each.

For the services and  facilities  furnished to the  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio,  such
Portfolio pays an annual investment management fee monthly, on a graduated basis
at the following  annual rate:  0.22% of the first $500 million of average daily
net assets, 0.20% of the next $500 million, 0.175% of the next $1 billion, 0.16%
on the next $1 billion and 0.15% of average  daily net assets of such  Portfolio
over $3 billion.  The Adviser has agreed to reimburse the  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio
should all operating expenses of such Portfolio,  1including the compensation of
the Adviser but excluding taxes, interest,  extraordinary expenses and brokerage
commissions  or  transaction  costs  exceed 1 1/2% of the first $30  million  of
average  daily net assets and 1% of average  daily net assets of the  Tax-Exempt
Portfolio over $30 million on an annual basis.

For its services as investment adviser and manager and for facilities  furnished
the Fund  during  the  fiscal  year  ended  July  31,  1998,  the Fund  incurred
investment   management  fees  aggregating   $1,868,000  for  the  Money  Market
Portfolio, $834,000 for the Government Securities Portfolio and $945,000 for the
Tax-Exempt  Portfolio.  During the fiscal  year  ended July 31,  1997,  the Fund
incurred investment management fees aggregating  $2,795,000 for the Money Market
Portfolio, $1,393,000 for the Government Securities Portfolio and $1,377,000 for
the  Tax-Exempt   Portfolio.   The  Fund  incurred  investment  management  fees
aggregating  $5,401,000  for the  Money  Market  Portfolio,  $2,163,000  for the
Government  Securities  Portfolio and $2,953,000  for the  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio
during the fiscal year ended July 31, 1996.

Fund  Accounting  Agent.  Scudder  Fund  Accounting   Corporation   ("SFAC"),  a
subsidiary of the Adviser,  is responsible  for  determining the net asset value
per share of the Fund and  maintaining all accounting  records related  thereto.
Currently,  SFAC receives no fee for its services to the Fund; however,  subject
to Board  approval,  at some time in the future,  SFAC may seek  payment for its
services under this agreement.

Distributor  and  Administrator.  Pursuant  to  an  administration,  shareholder
services and distribution agreement and an underwriting agreement  (collectively
"distribution agreement"), KDI serves as primary administrator,  distributor and
principal  underwriter  to the Fund to  provide  information  and  services  for
existing and potential  shareholders.  The distribution  agreement provides that
KDI shall appoint various firms to provide a cash  management  service for their
customers  or clients  through  the Fund.  The firms are to provide  such office
space and equipment, telephone facilities, personnel and literature distribution
as is necessary or  appropriate  for providing  information  and services to the
firms' clients. The Fund has adopted a plan in accordance with Rule 12b-1 of the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "12b-1 Plan"). The rule regulates the manner
in which an investment company may, directly or indirectly, bear the expenses of
distributing  shares. The distribution  agreement and the 12b-1 Plan continue in
effect  from  year to year so long as such  continuance  is  approved  at  least
annually by a vote of the Board of Trustees of the Fund,  including the Trustees
who are not  interested  persons of the Fund and who have no direct or  indirect
financial interest in the agreement.  The distribution  agreement  automatically
terminates  in the event of its  assignment  and may be  terminated  at any time
without penalty by the Fund or by KDI upon 60 days' written notice.  Termination
by the Fund may be by vote of a majority of the Board of Trustees, or a majority
of the

                                       7
<PAGE>

Trustees  who are not  interested  persons of the Fund and who have no direct or
indirect financial interest in the agreement,  or a "majority of the outstanding
voting  securities" of the Fund as defined under the  Investment  Company Act of
1940.  The 12b-1 Plan may not be amended to  increase  the fee to be paid by the
Fund without approval by a majority of the outstanding  voting securities of the
Fund and all material  amendments  must in any event be approved by the Board of
Trustees in the manner  described above with respect to the  continuation of the
12b-1 Plan. The Portfolios of the Fund will vote  separately with respect to the
12b-1Plan.  For its services under the distribution  agreement,  and pursuant to
the 12b-1 Plan, the Fund pays KDI an annual  distribution  fee, payable monthly,
of 0.38% of  average  daily net  assets  with  respect  to the Money  Market and
Government  Securities  Portfolios  and 0.33% of average  daily net assets  with
respect to the Tax-Exempt Portfolio.

KDI is the principal underwriter for shares of the Fund and acts as agent of the
Fund in the sale of its shares.  The Fund pays the cost for the  prospectus  and
shareholder reports to be set in type and printed for existing shareholders, and
KDI pays for the printing and  distribution of copies thereof used in connection
with the  offering  of  shares  to  prospective  investors.  KDI  also  pays for
supplementary sales literature and advertising costs.

KDI has related services agreements with various  broker-dealer firms to provide
cash management and other services for the Fund shareholders.  Such services and
assistance may include, but may not be limited to, establishment and maintenance
of  shareholder  accounts  and  records,   processing  purchase  and  redemption
transactions,  providing  automatic  investment in Fund shares of client account
balances,  answering routine inquiries regarding the Fund,  assisting clients in
changing account options, designations and addresses, and such other services as
may be  agreed  upon  from time to time and as may be  permitted  by  applicable
statute, rule or regulation. KDI also has services agreements with banking firms
to provide the above listed services,  except for certain distribution  services
that the banks may be prohibited from  providing,  for their clients who wish to
invest in the Fund.  KDI also may  provide  some of the above  services  for the
Fund. KDI normally pays such firms at an annual rate ranging from 0.15% to 0.40%
of  average  net assets of those  accounts  in the Money  Market and  Government
Securities  Portfolios  that they maintain and service and ranging from 0.15% to
0.33% of average daily net assets of those accounts in the Tax-Exempt  Portfolio
that they  maintain and service.  KDI in its  discretion  may pay certain  firms
additional  amounts.  KDI may elect to keep a portion of the total  distribution
fee to  compensate  itself for  functions  performed  for the Fund or to pay for
sales materials or other promotional activities.

   
For the fiscal year ended July 31, 1998, the Fund incurred  distribution fees in
the  Money  Market  Portfolio,  the  Government  Securities  Portfolio  and  the
Tax-Exempt Portfolio of $3,530,000, $1,577,000 and $1,416,000, respectively, for
a total amount of $6,523,00. KDI remitted $3,443,000, $1,561,000 and $1,252,000,
respectively, to various firms, pursuant to the related services agreements. For
the fiscal year ended July 31,  1998,  KDI incurred  expenses for  underwriting,
distribution and administration in the approximate  amounts noted: fees to firms
$6,256,000;  advertising and literature $0; prospectus printing $0 and marketing
and  sales  expenses  $573,000,  for a total of  $6,829,000.  A  portion  of the
aforesaid  marketing,  sales and operating expenses could be considered overhead
expense; however, KDI has made no attempt to differentiate between expenses that
are overhead and those that are not.
    

Certain  officers or trustees of the Fund are also  directors or officers of the
Adviser and KDI as indicated under "Officers and Trustees."

Custodian,  Transfer Agent and Shareholder  Service Agent.  Investors  Fiduciary
Trust Company ("IFTC"), 801 Pennsylvania Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri 64105, as
custodian, and State Street Bank and Trust Company, 225 Franklin Street, Boston,
Massachusetts  02110, as sub-custodian,  have custody of all securities and cash
of the Fund. They attend to the collection of principal and income,  and payment
for and  collection  of  proceeds  of  securities  bought  and sold by the Fund.
Pursuant to a services agreement with IFTC, Kemper Service Company ("KSvC"),  an
affiliate of the Adviser,  serves as  "Shareholder  Service Agent" and, as such,
performs all of IFTC's duties as transfer agent and dividend paying agent.  IFTC
receives,  as transfer agent,  and pays to KSvC annual account fees of a maximum
of $13 per account plus out-of-pocket expense  reimbursement.  During the fiscal
year ended July 31, 1998, IFTC remitted  shareholder  service fees in the amount
of $2,948,000 to KSvC as Shareholder Service Agent.

Independent  Auditors  and  Reports  to  Shareholders.  The  Fund's  independent
auditors,  Ernst & Young LLP, 233 South Wacker Drive,  Chicago,  Illinois 60606,
audit and report on the  Fund's  annual  financial  statements,  review  certain
regulatory  reports and the Fund's federal income tax return,  and perform other
professional accounting,  auditing, tax and advisory

                                       8
<PAGE>

services  when engaged to do so by the Fund.  Shareholders  will receive  annual
audited financial statements and semi-annual unaudited financial statements.

Legal Counsel.  Vedder,  Price,  Kaufman & Kammholz,  222 North LaSalle  Street,
Chicago, Illinois 60601, serves as legal counsel to the Fund.

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

Portfolio  transactions  are  undertaken  principally to pursue the objective of
each Portfolio in relation to movements in the general level of interest  rates,
to invest money obtained from the sale of Fund shares, to reinvest proceeds from
maturing portfolio  securities and to meet redemptions of Fund shares.  This may
increase  or  decrease  the yield of a  Portfolio  depending  upon  management's
ability to correctly  time and execute such  transactions.  Since a  Portfolio's
assets are invested in securities with short maturities, its portfolio will turn
over several times a year.  Securities with maturities of less than one year are
excluded from required  portfolio turnover rate  calculations,  therefore,  each
Portfolio's portfolio turnover rate for reporting purposes will be zero.

The primary objective of the Adviser in placing orders for the purchase and sale
of securities for a Fund's portfolio is to obtain the most favorable net results
taking into account such factors as price, commission where applicable,  size of
order,   difficulty   of  execution   and  skill   required  of  the   executing
broker/dealer.  The Adviser  seeks to evaluate  the  overall  reasonableness  of
brokerage  commissions paid (to the extent  applicable)  through its familiarity
with  commissions  charged on comparable  transactions,  as well as by comparing
commissions paid by a Fund to reported  commissions paid by others.  The Adviser
reviews on a routine basis commission rates,  execution and settlement  services
performed, making internal and external comparisons.

When it can be done consistently with the policy of obtaining the most favorable
net  results,   it  is  the  Adviser's   practice  to  place  such  orders  with
broker/dealers  who supply  research,  market and  statistical  information to a
Fund. The term "research, market and statistical information" includes advice as
to the value of  securities:  the  advisability  of investing in,  purchasing or
selling  securities;  the availability of securities or purchasers or sellers of
securities; and analyses and reports concerning issuers, industries, securities,
economic factors and trends, portfolio strategy and the performance of accounts.
The Adviser is authorized when placing portfolio  transactions for a Fund to pay
a brokerage  commission in excess of that which another  broker might charge for
executing  the same  transaction  solely on account of the receipt of  research,
market or statistical information. In effecting transactions in over-the-counter
securities,  orders are placed with the principal market makers for the security
being traded  unless,  after  exercising  care,  it appears that more  favorable
results are available elsewhere.

In selecting among firms believed to meet the criteria for handling a particular
transaction, the Adviser may give consideration to those firms that have sold or
are selling shares of a Fund managed by the Adviser.

To the  maximum  extent  feasible,  it is expected  that the Adviser  will place
orders for  portfolio  transactions  through  Scudder  Investor  Services,  Inc.
("SIS"),  a corporation  registered as a  broker-dealer  and a subsidiary of the
Adviser. SIS will place orders on behalf of the Fund with issuers,  underwriters
or other brokers and dealers. SIS will not receive any commission,  fee or other
remuneration from the Fund for this service.

Although   certain   research,   market   and   statistical   information   from
broker/dealers may be useful to a Fund and to the Adviser,  it is the opinion of
the Adviser that such information only supplements its own research effort since
the  information  must still be analyzed,  weighed and reviewed by the Adviser's
staff.  Such  information may be useful to the Adviser in providing  services to
clients other than the Fund and not all such  information is used by the Adviser
in  connection  with the Fund.  Conversely,  such  information  provided  to the
Adviser by  broker/dealers  through  whom other  clients of the  Adviser  effect
securities  transactions may be useful to the Adviser in providing services to a
Fund.

The Board  members for a Fund review from time to time whether the recapture for
the benefit of a Fund of some portion of the  brokerage  commissions  or similar
fees  paid  by a Fund on  portfolio  transactions  is  legally  permissible  and
advisable.

Money  market  instruments  are normally  purchased  in  principal  transactions
directly from the issuer or from an underwriter  or market maker.  There usually
are no brokerage  commissions  paid by the Fund for such  purchases.  During the
last  three

                                       9
<PAGE>

fiscal years the Fund paid no portfolio  brokerage  commissions.  Purchases from
underwriters  will include a commission or concession  paid by the issuer to the
underwriter,  and purchases  from dealers  serving as market makers will include
the spread between the bid and asked prices.

PURCHASE AND REDEMPTION OF SHARES

Shares of a Portfolio are sold at their net asset value next determined after an
order and payment are received in the form  described in the Fund's  prospectus.
The minimum initial investment is $1,000 and the minimum  subsequent  investment
is $100 but such minimum  amounts may be changed at any time. The Fund may waive
the minimum for purchases by trustees,  directors,  officers or employees of the
Fund or the Adviser and its affiliates.  An investor  wishing to open an account
should use the Account  Information  Form  available  from the Fund or financial
services  firms.  Orders for the  purchase of shares that are  accompanied  by a
check drawn on a foreign  bank  (other than a check drawn on a Canadian  bank in
U.S.  Dollars)  will not be  considered in proper form and will not be processed
unless  and  until  the Fund  determines  that it has  received  payment  of the
proceeds of the check. The time required for such a determination  will vary and
cannot be determined in advance.

Upon receipt by the Fund's  Shareholder  Service Agent (see "Purchase of Shares"
in the  prospectus) of a request for  redemption in proper form,  shares will be
redeemed  by the Fund at the  applicable  net asset  value as  described  in the
Fund's  prospectus.  A  shareholder  may  elect to use  either  the  regular  or
expedited redemption procedures.

The Fund may suspend the right of  redemption  or delay  payment more than seven
days (a) during any period  when the New York  Stock  Exchange  ("Exchange")  is
closed other than customary weekend and holiday closings or during any period in
which  trading on the  Exchange  is  restricted,  (b) during any period  when an
emergency exists as a result of which (i) disposal of a Portfolio's  investments
is not reasonably practicable,  or (ii) it is not reasonably practicable for the
Portfolio  to  determine  the  value of its net  assets,  or (c) for such  other
periods as the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission may by order permit for the
protection of the Fund's shareholders.

Although  it is the  Fund's  present  policy to redeem in cash,  if the Board of
Trustees  determines that a material  adverse effect would be experienced by the
remaining  shareholders  if payment were made wholly in cash,  the Fund will pay
the  redemption  price  in  whole  or in part  by a  distribution  of  portfolio
securities  in lieu of cash,  in  conformity  with the  applicable  rules of the
Securities  and Exchange  Commission,  taking such  securities at the same value
used to determine net asset value,  and selecting the  securities in such manner
as the Board of Trustees  may deem fair and  equitable.  If such a  distribution
occurred,  shareholders receiving securities and selling them could receive less
than the redemption value of such securities and in addition could incur certain
transaction  costs.  Such a  redemption  would not be so liquid as a  redemption
entirely  in cash.  The Fund has  elected to be governed by Rule 18f-1 under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 pursuant to which the Fund is obligated to redeem
shares of a  Portfolio  solely in cash up to the lesser of $250,000 or 1% of the
net assets of the Portfolio  during any 90-day period for any one shareholder of
record.

DIVIDENDS, NET ASSET VALUE AND TAXES

Dividends.  Dividends  are declared  daily and paid monthly.  Shareholders  will
receive  dividends  in  additional  shares  unless  they elect to receive  cash.
Dividends will be reinvested monthly in shares of the Portfolio at the net asset
value  normally on the fifteenth day of each month if a business day,  otherwise
on the next business day. The Fund will pay shareholders who redeem their entire
accounts all unpaid  dividends at the time of the  redemption not later than the
next dividend  payment date.  Upon written  request to the  Shareholder  Service
Agent,  a shareholder  may elect to have Fund dividends  invested  without sales
charge in shares of another  Kemper Mutual Fund  offering this  privilege at the
net asset value of such other fund. See "Special Features -- Exchange Privilege"
for a list of such other Kemper Mutual Funds. To use this privilege of investing
Fund  dividends  in shares of another  Kemper  Mutual  Fund,  shareholders  must
maintain a minimum account value of $1,000 in this Fund.

Each  Portfolio  calculates  its  dividends  based on its daily  net  investment
income. For this purpose, the net investment income of the Portfolio consists of
(a)  accrued  interest  income  plus or  minus  amortized  discount  or  premium
(excluding market discount for the Tax-Exempt Portfolio),  (b) plus or minus all
short-term  realized  gains and  losses  on  investments  and (c) minus  accrued
expenses allocated to the Portfolio.  Expenses of the Fund are accrued each day.
While each  Portfolio's  investments are valued at amortized cost, there will be
no unrealized gains or losses on such investments. However, should

                                       10
<PAGE>

the net asset value of a Portfolio deviate  significantly from market value, the
Board of Trustees could decide to value the investments at market value and then
unrealized gains and losses would be included in net investment income above.

Net Asset Value.  As  described in the  prospectus,  each  Portfolio  values its
portfolio  instruments  at  amortized  cost,  which  does not take into  account
unrealized  capital  gains  or  losses.   This  involves  initially  valuing  an
instrument  at its cost and  thereafter  assuming  a  constant  amortization  to
maturity of any  discount or premium,  regardless  of the impact of  fluctuating
interest rates on the market value of the instrument. While this method provides
certainty  in  valuation,  it may  result in  periods  during  which  value,  as
determined  by amortized  cost,  is higher or lower than the price the Portfolio
would receive if it sold the  instrument.  Calculations  are made to compare the
value of a Portfolio's  investments valued at amortized cost with market values.
Market  valuations  are obtained by using actual  quotations  provided by market
makers,  estimates of market value,  or values obtained from yield data relating
to classes of money market  instruments  published  by reputable  sources at the
mean between the bid and asked prices for the instruments. If a deviation of 1/2
of 1% or more were to occur between the net asset value per share  calculated by
reference to market values and a Portfolio's $1.00 per share net asset value, or
if there  were any  other  deviation  which the  Board of  Trustees  of the Fund
believed would result in a material dilution to shareholders or purchasers,  the
Board of  Trustees  would  promptly  consider  what  action,  if any,  should be
initiated.  If a Portfolio's  net asset value per share  (computed  using market
values)  declined,  or were  expected to decline,  below $1.00  (computed  using
amortized cost), the Board of Trustees of the Fund might  temporarily  reduce or
suspend dividend  payments in an effort to maintain the net asset value at $1.00
per share.  As a result of such  reduction or  suspension  of dividends or other
action by the Board of Trustees,  an investor would receive less income during a
given period than if such a reduction or  suspension  had not taken place.  Such
action  could result in  investors  receiving no dividend for the period  during
which they hold their shares and receiving,  upon redemption,  a price per share
lower than that which they paid. On the other hand,  if a Portfolio's  net asset
value per  share  (computed  using  market  values)  were to  increase,  or were
anticipated to increase above $1.00 (computed using amortized  cost),  the Board
of Trustees of the Fund might supplement  dividends in an effort to maintain the
net asset value at $1.00 per share.

Taxes.  Interest on indebtedness that is incurred to purchase or carry shares of
a mutual fund portfolio which distributes  exempt-interest  dividends during the
year is not deductible for federal income tax purposes.  Further, the Tax-Exempt
Portfolio may not be an appropriate  investment for persons who are "substantial
users" of  facilities  financed  by  industrial  development  bonds  held by the
Tax-Exempt Portfolio or are "related persons" to such users; such persons should
consult their tax advisers before investing in the Tax-Exempt Portfolio.

The  "Superfund  Act of 1986" (the  "Superfund  Act")  imposes a separate tax on
corporations  at a rate of 0.12  percent  of the  excess  of such  corporation's
"modified  alternative  minimum  taxable  income" over $2 million.  A portion of
tax-exempt  interest,  including  exempt-interest  dividends from the Tax-Exempt
Portfolio,  may be includible in modified  alternative  minimum  taxable income.
Corporate shareholders are advised to consult their tax advisers with respect to
the consequences of the Superfund Act.

PERFORMANCE

As reflected in the  prospectus,  the historical  performance  calculation for a
Portfolio  may be shown in the form of "yield,"  "effective  yield" and, for the
Tax-Exempt  Portfolio only, "tax  equivalent  yield." These various  measures of
performance are described below.

Each  Portfolio's  yield is computed in accordance  with a  standardized  method
prescribed  by rules of the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission.  Under  that
method,  the yield quotation is based on a seven-day  period and is computed for
each Portfolio as follows.  The first  calculation is net investment  income per
share,  which  is  accrued  interest  on  portfolio  securities,  plus or  minus
amortized  discount or premium  (excluding  market  discount for the  Tax-Exempt
Portfolio),  less accrued expenses. This number is then divided by the price per
share  (expected  to remain  constant at $1.00) at the  beginning  of the period
("base period  return").  The result is then divided by 7 and  multiplied by 365
and the resulting  yield figure is carried to the nearest  one-hundredth  of one
percent.  Realized  capital  gains or  losses  and  unrealized  appreciation  or
depreciation  of  investments  are  not  included  in the  calculation.  For the
seven-day  period ended July 31, 1998,  the Money Market  Portfolio's  yield was
4.79%, the Government Securities Portfolio's yield was 4.79%, and the Tax-Exempt
Portfolio's yield was 3.06%.

                                       11
<PAGE>

Each Portfolio's  effective yield is determined by taking the base period return
(computed as described above) and calculating the effect of assumed compounding.
The formula for the effective  yield is: (base period  return  +1)365/7 - 1. For
the seven-day period ended July 31, 1998, the Money Market Portfolio's effective
yield was 4.90%,  the  Government  Securities  Portfolio's  effective  yield was
4.90%, and the Tax-Exempt Portfolio's effective yield was 3.11%.

The tax  equivalent  yield of the  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio is computed by dividing
that portion of the  Portfolio's  yield  (computed  as described  above) that is
tax-exempt  by (one  minus the  stated  federal  income tax rate) and adding the
product  to that  portion,  if any,  of the yield of the  Portfolio  that is not
tax-exempt.  Based  upon a  marginal  federal  income  tax rate of 37.1% and the
Tax-Exempt  Portfolio's  yield  computed as  described  above for the  seven-day
period ended July 31, 1998, the Tax-Exempt Portfolio's  tax-equivalent yield was
4.86%. For additional  information concerning tax-exempt yields, see "Tax-Exempt
versus Taxable Yield" below.

Each Portfolio's  yield  fluctuates,  and the publication of an annualized yield
quotation is not a representation as to what an investment in the Portfolio will
actually yield for any given future  period.  Actual yields will depend not only
on changes in interest  rates on money market  instruments  during the period in
which the  investment  in the  Portfolio  is held,  but also on such  matters as
Portfolio expenses.

Investors  have an  extensive  choice of money  market  funds  and money  market
deposit  accounts and the information  below may be useful to investors who wish
to compare the past  performance of the Money Market  Portfolio,  the Government
Securities   Portfolio  and  the   Tax-Exempt   Portfolio  with  that  of  their
competitors. Past performance cannot be a guarantee of future results.

As indicated in the  prospectus  (see  "Performance"),  the  performance  of the
Fund's  Portfolios  may be compared to that of other money  market  mutual funds
tracked by Lipper  Analytical  Services,  Inc.  ("Lipper").  Lipper  performance
calculations  include the  reinvestment of all capital gain and income dividends
for the periods covered by the calculations.  A Portfolio's performance also may
be compared to other money market funds reported by IBC Financial Data,  Inc.'s,
or Money Market Insight+,  reporting services on money market funds. As reported
by IBC, all  investment  results  represent  yield  (annualized  results for the
period net of management fees and expenses) and one year investment  results are
effective annual yields assuming reinvestment of dividends.

Investors  may also want to compare a  Portfolio's  performance  to that of U.S.
Treasury bills or notes because such instruments  represent  alternative  income
producing products.  Treasury obligations are issued in selected  denominations.
Rates of U.S. Treasury obligations are fixed at the time of issuance and payment
of  principal  and  interest  is backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S.
Treasury.  The  market  value  of  such  instruments  will  generally  fluctuate
inversely  with  interest  rates prior to  maturity  and will equal par value at
maturity.  Generally,  the values of obligations  with shorter  maturities  will
fluctuate  less than those with  longer  maturities.  A  Portfolio's  yield will
fluctuate.  Also,  while each Portfolio  seeks to maintain a net asset value per
share of $1.00, there is no assurance that it will be able to do so.

From time to time the Fund may include in its sales communications,  ranking and
rating information  received from various  organizations,  to include but not be
limited to, ratings from  Morningstar,  Inc. and rankings from Lipper Analytical
Services, Inc.

Tax-Exempt  versus Taxable Yield.  You may want to determine which investment --
tax-exempt  or taxable -- will provide you with a higher  after-tax  return.  To
determine the tax equivalent yield,  simply divide the yield from the tax-exempt
investment  by the sum of [1 minus your  marginal tax rate].  The table below is
provided for your convenience in making this calculation for selected tax-exempt
yields and taxable  income  levels.  These yields are  presented for purposes of
illustration  only and are not  representative  of any yield that the Tax-Exempt
Portfolio  may  generate.  Both tables are based upon current law as to the 1998
federal tax rate schedules.

                                       12
<PAGE>

Taxable  Equivalent Yield Table for Persons Whose Adjusted Gross Income is Under
$124,500

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                              A Tax-Exempt Yield of:
             Taxable Income                  Your Marginal        2%       3%       4%      5%       6%       7%
       Single               Joint           Federal Tax Rate                 Is Equivalent to a Taxable Yield of:
       ------               -----           ----------------                 ------------------------------------

<S>                   <C>                        <C>             <C>      <C>      <C>     <C>      <C>       <C>
$25,350-$61,400       $42,350-102,300            28.0%           2.78     4.17     5.56    6.94     8.33      9.72
   Over $61,400          Over $102,300           31.0            2.90     4.35     5.80    7.25     8.70     10.14
</TABLE>

Taxable  Equivalent  Yield Table for Persons Whose Adjusted Gross Income is Over
$124,500*

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                              A Tax-Exempt Yield of:
              Taxable Income                    Your Marginal        2%       3%       4%       5%       6%      7%
        Single                 Joint           Federal Tax Rate                 Is Equivalent to a Taxable Yield of:
        ------                 -----           ----------------                 ------------------------------------

<S>                     <C>                      <C>                <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>     <C>
$61,400-$128,100        $99,600-$151,750         31.9%              2.94     4.41     5.87     7.34     8.81    10.28
$128,100-$278,450       $151,750-$271,050        37.1               3.18     4.77     6.36     7.95     9.54    11.13
   Over $278,450           Over $271,050         40.8               3.38     5.07     6.76     8.45    10.14    11.82
</TABLE>

*        This table assumes a decrease of $3.00 of itemized  deductions for each
         $100 of adjusted gross income over $124,500.  For a married couple with
         adjusted gross income  between  $186,800 and $309,300  (single  between
         $124,500 and $247,000), add 0.7% to the above Marginal Federal Tax Rate
         for each  personal and  dependency  exemption.  The taxable  equivalent
         yield is the  tax-exempt  yield divided by: 100% minus the adjusted tax
         rate.  For example,  if the table tax rate is 37.1% and you are married
         with no  dependents,  the  adjusted  tax rate is 38.5%  (37.1% + 0.7% +
         0.7%).  For a tax-exempt  yield of 6%, the taxable  equivalent yield is
         about 9.8% (6% / (100% - 38.5%)).

OFFICERS AND TRUSTEES

The  officers  and  trustees  of the Fund,  their  birthdates,  their  principal
occupations and their  affiliations,  if any, with the Adviser are listed below.
All persons named as trustees also serve in similar  capacities  for other funds
advised by the Adviser.

DAVID W. BELIN (6/20/28),  Trustee,  2000 Financial Center,  7th and Walnut, Des
Moines, Iowa; Member, Belin Lamson McCormick Zumbach Flynn, P.C. (attorneys).

LEWIS A. BURNHAM  (1/8/33),  Trustee,  16410 Avila  Boulevard,  Tampa,  Florida;
Retired; formerly,  Partner, Business Resources Group; formerly,  Executive Vice
President, Anchor Glass Container Corporation.

DONALD L. DUNAWAY (3/8/37),  Trustee, 7515 Pelican Bay Boulevard,  #903, Naples,
Florida;  Retired;  formerly,  Executive Vice President, A. O. Smith Corporation
(diversified manufacturer).

ROBERT B. HOFFMAN (12/11/36), Trustee, 800 North Lindbergh Boulevard, St. Louis,
Missouri;   Vice  Chairman  and  Chief  Financial   Officer,   Monsanto  Company
(agricultural,  pharmaceutical  and nutritional  food  products);  formerly Vice
President and Head of International Operations, FMC corporation (manufacturer of
machinery and chemicals).

DONALD R. JONES  (1/17/30),  Trustee,  182 Old Wick Lane,  Inverness,  Illinois;
Retired;  Director,  Motorola,  Inc.  (manufacturer of electronic  equipment and
components);  formerly,  Executive Vice President and Chief  Financial  Officer,
Motorola, Inc.

SHIRLEY D. PETERSON (9/3/41), Trustee, 401 Rosemont Avenue, Frederick, Maryland;
President,  Hood  College,  Maryland;   formerly,  Partner,  Steptoe  &  Johnson
(attorneys);  prior  thereto,  Commissioner,  Internal  Revenue  Service;  prior
thereto,  Assistant  Attorney  General,  U.S.  Department of Justice;  Director,
Bethlehem Steel Corp.

                                       13
<PAGE>

DANIEL  PIERCE   (3/18/34),   Trustee*,   Two   International   Place,   Boston,
Massachusetts; Managing Director, Adviser.

WILLIAM P.  SOMMERS  (7/22/33),  Trustee,  333  Ravenswood  Avenue,  Menlo Park,
California;  President and Chief Executive Officer, SRI International  (research
and  development);   formerly,   Executive  Vice  President,   Iameter  (medical
information  and  educational  service  provider);  prior  thereto,  Senior Vice
President and Director,  Booz,  Allen & Hamilton,  Inc.  (management  consulting
firm) (retired);  Director,  Rohr, Inc.,  Therapeutic Discovery Corp. and Litton
Industries.

EDMOND  VILLANI  (3/4/47),  Trustee*,  345 Park  Avenue,  New  York,  New  York;
President, Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director, Adviser.

MARK S. CASADY  (9/21/60),  President*,  345 Park  Avenue,  New York,  New York;
Managing  Director,  Adviser;  formerly,   Institutional  Sales  Manager  of  an
unaffiliated mutual fund distributor.

PHILIP J. COLLORA (11/15/45), Vice President and Secretary*, 222 South Riverside
Plaza,  Chicago,  Illinois;   Attorney,  Senior  Vice  President  and  Assistant
Secretary, Adviser.

THOMAS W. LITTAUER (4/26/55), Vice President*,  Two International Place, Boston,
Massachusetts;  Managing  Director,  Adviser;  formerly,  Head of Broker  Dealer
Division  of an  unaffiliated  investment  management  firm during  1997;  prior
thereto,  President of Client Management Services of an unaffiliated  investment
management firm from 1991 to 1996.

ANN M. McCREARY (11/6/56), Vice President*, 345 Park Avenue, New York, New York;
Managing Director, Adviser.

ROBERT C. PECK, JR.  (10/1/46),  Vice  President*,  222 South  Riverside  Plaza,
Chicago,  Illinois;  Managing  Director,   Adviser;  formerly,   Executive  Vice
President  and  Chief  Investment   Officer  with  an  unaffiliated   investment
management firm from 1988 to June 1997.

KATHRYN L. QUIRK  (12/3/52),  Vice  President*,  345 Park Avenue,  New York, New
York; Managing Director, Adviser.

FRANK J. RACHWALSKI,  JR. (3/26/45), Vice President*, 222 South Riverside Plaza,
Chicago, Illinois; Senior Vice President, Adviser.

LINDA J. WONDRACK (9/12/64),  Vice President*,  Two International Place, Boston,
Massachusetts; Senior Vice President, Adviser.

JOHN  R.  HEBBLE  (6/27/58),   Treasurer*,   Two  International  Place,  Boston,
Massachusetts; Senior Vice President, Adviser.

BRENDA LYONS (2/21/63),  Assistant Treasurer*,  Two International Place, Boston,
Massachusetts; Senior Vice President, Adviser

CAROLINE  PEARSON  (4/1/62),  Assistant  Secretary*,  Two  International  Place,
Boston,  Massachusetts;  Senior Vice President,  Adviser;  formerly,  Associate,
Dechert Price & Rhoads (law firm) 1989 to 1997.

MAUREEN  E. KANE  (2/14/62),  Assistant  Secretary*,  Two  International  Place,
Boston,  Massachusetts;   Vice  President,  Adviser;  formerly,  Assistant  Vice
President  of  an  unaffiliated   investment  management  firm;  prior  thereto,
Associate  Staff  Attorney  of  an  unaffiliated   investment  management  firm;
Associate, Peabody & Arnold (law firm).

JOHN W. STUEBE (1/7/49),  Vice President*,  222 South Riverside Plaza,  Chicago,
Illinois; First Vice President, Adviser.

ELIZABETH C. WERTH (10/1/47),  Assistant Secretary*,  222 South Riverside Plaza,
Chicago, Illinois; Vice President, Adviser and KDI.

*    Interested persons as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940.

                                       14
<PAGE>

The  trustees  and officers who are  "interested  persons" as  designated  above
receive no  compensation  from the Fund.  The table below shows  amounts paid or
accrued to those trustees who are not designated "interested persons" during the
Fund's 1998 fiscal  year except that the  information  in the last column is for
calendar year 1997.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                              Total Compensation from
                                                                                                  Fund and Kemper
Name of Trustee                                 Aggregate Compensation From Fund          Fund Complex Paid to Trustees**
- ---------------                                 --------------------------------          -------------------------------

<S>                                                         <C>                                       <C>
David W. Belin*                                             $15,400                                   $168,100
Lewis A. Burnham                                              7,200                                    117,800
Donald L. Dunaway*                                           12,100                                    162,700
Robert B. Hoffman                                             6,800                                    109,400
Donald R. Jones                                               7,300                                    114,200
Shirley D. Peterson                                           6,400                                    114,000
William P. Sommers                                            6,400                                    109,400
</TABLE>

*        Includes  deferred  fees and  interest  thereon  pursuant  to  deferred
         compensation  agreements  with Kemper funds.  Deferred  amounts  accrue
         interest  monthly at a rate equal to the yield of Zurich Money Funds --
         Zurich Money Market Fund.  Total deferred  amounts and interest accrued
         through  July 31, 1998 are  $182,000  for Mr. Belin and $62,000 for Mr.
         Dunaway.

**       Includes  compensation for service on the boards of twenty-four  Kemper
         funds with forty-one fund portfolios.  Each trustee currently serves as
         a trustee of twenty-six  Kemper funds and forty-seven  fund portfolios.
         Total  compensation  does not reflect amounts paid by Scudder Kemper to
         the trustees for meetings regarding the combination of Scudder and ZKI.
         Such amounts  totaled  $21,900,  $25,400,  $21,900,  $17,300,  $20,800,
         $24,200  and  $21,900 for Messrs.  Belin,  Burnham,  Dunaway,  Hoffman,
         Jones, Peterson and Sommers, respectively.

On November 2, 1998,  the officers and trustees of the Fund,  as a group,  owned
less than 1% of the then outstanding  shares of each Portfolio and the following
persons owned of record 5% or more of the  outstanding  shares of the Portfolios
of the Fund: ABN AMRO Chicago  Corporation,  208 S. LaSalle Street,  Chicago, IL
60604 (9.88% of the Money Market Portfolio,  6.19% of the Government  Securities
Portfolio  and  6.26% of the  Tax-Exempt  Portfolio);  Custody  Account  for The
Exclusive  Benefit of Customers of Hilliard  Lyons,  4th Avenue and Muhammad Ali
Boulevard, Louisville, KY 40202 (36.75% of the Money Market Portfolio and 29.91%
of the Tax-Exempt  Portfolio);  D.A. Davidson & Co., P.O. Box 5015, Great Falls,
MT 59403 (29.32% of the Money Market  Portfolio) and IDEX Funds,  P.O. Box 9015,
Clearwater, FL 33758 (5.72% of the Money Market Portfolio).

SPECIAL FEATURES

Exchange Privilege.  Subject to the limitations  described below, Class A Shares
(or the  equivalent)  of the following  Kemper Mutual Funds may be exchanged for
each other at their relative net asset values:  Kemper  Technology Fund,  Kemper
Total Return Fund, Kemper Growth Fund, Kemper Small Capitalization  Equity Fund,
Kemper Income and Capital  Preservation Fund, Kemper Municipal Bond Fund, Kemper
Diversified  Income  Fund,  Kemper High Yield  Series,  Kemper  U.S.  Government
Securities Fund, Kemper International Fund, Kemper State Tax-Free Income Series,
Kemper  Adjustable  Rate U.S.  Government  Fund,  Kemper Blue Chip Fund,  Kemper
Global  Income Fund,  Kemper Target Equity Fund (series are subject to a limited
offering period),  Kemper Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund, Kemper Cash Reserves
Fund,  Kemper U.S.  Mortgage Fund,  Kemper  Short-Intermediate  Government Fund,
Kemper Value Series,  Inc., Kemper Value Plus Growth Fund,  Kemper  Quantitative
Equity Fund,  Kemper Horizon Fund, Kemper Europe Fund, Kemper Asian Growth Fund,
Kemper Aggressive Growth Fund, Kemper Global/International  Series, Inc., Kemper
Securities  Trust,  Kemper Value Fund, Kemper Classic Growth Fund, Kemper Global
Discovery  Fund,  Kemper  Equity Trust and Kemper Income Trust  ("Kemper  Mutual
Funds") and certain "Money Market Funds" (Zurich Money Funds,  Zurich  Yieldwise
Money Fund, Cash Equivalent Fund,  Tax-Exempt California Money Market Fund, Cash
Account Trust,  Investors Municipal Cash Fund and Investors Cash Trust).  Shares
of Money  Market  Funds and Kemper  Cash  Reserves  Fund that were  acquired  by
purchase (not including shares acquired by dividend reinvestment) are subject to
the applicable sales charge on exchange. In addition,  shares of a Kemper Mutual
Fund in excess of $1,000,000 (except Zurich Yieldwise Money Fund and Kemper Cash
Reserves  Fund)


                                       15
<PAGE>

acquired by exchange  from another Fund may not be  exchanged  thereafter  until
they have been owned for 15 days (the  "15-Day  Hold  Policy").  For purposes of
determining whether the 15-Day Hold Policy applies to a particular exchange, the
value of the shares to be exchanged  shall be computed by aggregating  the value
of shares being exchanged for all accounts under common  control,  discretion or
advice,  including  without  limitation  accounts  administered  by a  financial
services firm offering  market  timing,  asset  allocation or similar  services.
Series of Kemper  Target  Equity Fund will be available on exchange  only during
the  Offering  Period for such series as described  in the  prospectus  for such
series.  Cash Equivalent  Fund,  Tax-Exempt  California  Money Market Fund, Cash
Account  Trust,  Investors  Municipal  Cash Fund and  Investors  Cash  Trust are
available  on  exchange  but only  through a  financial  services  firm having a
services  agreement  with KDI with respect to such funds.  Exchanges may only be
made  for  funds  that are  available  for  sale in the  shareholder's  state of
residence.  Currently,  Tax-Exempt California Money Market Fund is available for
sale only in California and the portfolios of Investors  Municipal Cash Fund are
available for sale in certain states.

The total  value of  shares  being  exchanged  must at least  equal the  minimum
investment  requirement  of the  fund  into  which  they  are  being  exchanged.
Exchanges are made based on relative dollar values of the shares involved in the
exchange. There is no service fee for an exchange;  however,  financial services
firms may  charge  for  their  services  in  expediting  exchange  transactions.
Exchanges will be effected by redemption of shares of the fund held and purchase
of shares of the other fund. For federal income tax purposes,  any such exchange
constitutes  a sale upon which a gain or loss may be  realized,  depending  upon
whether  the  value  of the  shares  being  exchanged  is more or less  than the
shareholder's  adjusted cost basis.  Shareholders  interested in exercising  the
exchange  privilege  may obtain an exchange form and  prospectuses  of the other
funds from financial  services firms or KDI. Exchanges also may be authorized by
telephone if the shareholder has given authorization.  Once the authorization is
on file,  the  Shareholder  Service  Agent will honor  requests by  telephone at
1-800-231-8568 or in writing,  subject to the limitations on liability described
in the  prospectus.  Any  share  certificates  must be  deposited  prior  to any
exchange of such  shares.  During  periods  when it is  difficult to contact the
Shareholder  Service  Agent by  telephone,  it may be difficult to implement the
telephone exchange  privilege.  The exchange privilege is not a right and may be
suspended,  terminated or modified at any time. Except as otherwise permitted by
applicable  regulation,  60 days' prior  written  notice of any  termination  or
material change will be provided.

Systematic  Withdrawal  Program.  An owner of  $5,000  or more of a  Portfolio's
shares may  provide for the payment  from the owner's  account of any  requested
dollar  amount up to $50,000 to be paid to the owner or the  owner's  designated
payee monthly, quarterly,  semi-annually or annually. The $5,000 minimum account
size is not applicable to Individual Retirement Accounts. Dividend distributions
will be reinvested automatically at net asset value. A sufficient number of full
and fractional shares will be redeemed to make the designated payment. Depending
upon the size of the payments  requested,  redemptions for the purpose of making
such payments may reduce or even exhaust the account. The program may be amended
on  thirty  days  notice  by the Fund and may be  terminated  at any time by the
shareholder or the Fund. Firms provide varying arrangements for their clients to
redeem Fund shares on a periodic basis. Such firms may  independently  establish
minimums for such services.

Tax-Sheltered  Retirement  Programs.  The  Shareholder  Service  Agent  provides
retirement plan services and documents and KDI can establish your account in any
of the following  types of retirement  plans:

         o        Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) with Investors Fiduciary
                  Trust Company as custodian.  This includes  Savings  Incentive
                  Match Plan for Employees of Small  Employers  ("SIMPLE"),  IRA
                  accounts  and  Simplified  Employee  Pension  Plan  (SEP)  IRA
                  accounts and prototype documents.

         o        403(b) Custodial Accounts with IFTC as custodian. This type of
                  plan  is   available   to   employees   of   most   non-profit
                  organizations.

         o        Prototype money purchase pension and profit-sharing  plans may
                  be  adopted  by  employers.   The  maximum   contribution  per
                  participant is the lesser of 25% of compensation or $30,000.

Brochures  describing the above plans as well as providing model defined benefit
plans,  target benefit plans, 457 plans,  401(k) plans,  SIMPLE 401(k) plans and
materials for establishing them are available from the Shareholder Service Agent
upon  request.  The  brochures  for plans with IFTC as  custodian  describe  the
current  fees payable to IFTC for its services as  custodian.  Investors  should
consult with their own tax advisers before establishing a retirement plan.

                                       16
<PAGE>

Electronic  Funds  Transfer  Programs.  For  your  convenience,   the  Fund  has
established  several  investment and redemption  programs using electronic funds
transfer via the Automated Clearing House (ACH). There is currently no charge by
the Fund for these programs.  To use these features,  your financial institution
(your employer's  financial  institution in the case of payroll deposit) must be
affiliated with an Automated Clearing House (ACH). This ACH affiliation  permits
the Shareholder Service Agent to electronically transfer money between your bank
account, or employer's payroll bank in the case of Direct Deposit, and your Fund
account.  Your bank's crediting  policies of these  transferred  funds may vary.
These  features  may  be  amended  or  terminated  at  any  time  by  the  Fund.
Shareholders  should contact KSvC at  1-800-231-8568  or the financial  services
firm through which their account was  established  for more  information.  These
programs may not be available  through some firms that distribute  shares of the
Fund.

SHAREHOLDER RIGHTS

The Fund generally is not required to hold meetings of its  shareholders.  Under
the Agreement and  Declaration  of Trust of the Fund  ("Declaration  of Trust"),
however,  shareholder  meetings  will be held in  connection  with the following
matters: (a) the election or removal of trustees if a meeting is called for such
purpose;  (b) the  adoption of any contract  for which  shareholder  approval is
required by the Investment Company Act of 1940 ("1940 Act"); (c) any termination
of the Fund to the extent and as provided in the  Declaration of Trust;  (d) any
amendment of the Declaration of Trust (other than  amendments  changing the name
of the Fund or any Portfolio,  establishing a Portfolio, supplying any omission,
curing any  ambiguity or curing,  correcting or  supplementing  any defective or
inconsistent provision thereof); (e) as to whether a court action, proceeding or
claim should or should not be brought or maintained  derivatively  or as a class
action  on  behalf of the Fund or the  shareholders,  to the same  extent as the
stockholders of a Massachusetts  business  corporation;  and (f) such additional
matters as may be required by law, the Declaration of Trust,  the By-laws of the
Fund,  or  any  registration  of the  Fund  with  the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission or any state, or as the trustees may consider necessary or desirable.
The  shareholders  also  would  vote  upon  changes  in  fundamental  investment
objectives, policies or restrictions.

Each trustee serves until the next meeting of  shareholders,  if any, called for
the purpose of electing trustees and until the election and qualification of his
successor or until such trustee sooner dies, resigns, retires or is removed by a
majority vote of the shares entitled to vote (as described  below) or a majority
of the  trustees.  In  accordance  with the 1940  Act (a) the Fund  will  hold a
shareholder  meeting  for the  election  of trustees at such time as less than a
majority of the  trustees  have been elected by  shareholders,  and (b) if, as a
result  of a vacancy  in the Board of  Trustees,  less  than  two-thirds  of the
trustees have been elected by the shareholders, that vacancy will be filled only
by a vote of the shareholders.

Trustees  may be removed  from  office by a vote of the holders of a majority of
the outstanding shares at a meeting called for that purpose, which meeting shall
be held upon the  written  request  of the  holders  of not less than 10% of the
outstanding  shares.  Upon the written request of ten or more  shareholders  who
have been such for at least six months and who hold shares constituting at least
1% of the outstanding  shares of the Fund stating that such shareholders wish to
communicate  with the  other  shareholders  for the  purpose  of  obtaining  the
signatures  necessary to demand a meeting to consider removal of a trustee,  the
Fund has undertaken to disseminate  appropriate  materials at the expense of the
requesting shareholders.

The Declaration of Trust provides that the presence at a shareholder  meeting in
person or by proxy of at least 30% of the  shares  entitled  to vote on a matter
shall  constitute a quorum.  Thus, a meeting of  shareholders  of the Fund could
take place even if less than a majority of the shareholders  were represented on
its  scheduled  date.  Shareholders  would in such a case be  permitted  to take
action which does not require a larger vote than a majority of a quorum, such as
the election of trustees and  ratification  of the  selection of auditors.  Some
matters  requiring  a larger  vote  under  the  Declaration  of  Trust,  such as
termination  or  reorganization  of  the  Fund  and  certain  amendments  of the
Declaration of Trust, would not be affected by this provision; nor would matters
which  under the 1940 Act require  the vote of a  "majority  of the  outstanding
voting securities" as defined in the 1940 Act.

The  Declaration  of Trust  specifically  authorizes  the Board of  Trustees  to
terminate  the Fund (or any  Portfolio)  by notice to the  shareholders  without
shareholder approval.

Under Massachusetts law,  shareholders of a Massachusetts  business trust could,
under certain  circumstances,  be held personally  liable for obligations of the
Fund. The Declaration of Trust,  however,  disclaims  shareholder  liability for
acts or obligations  of the Fund and requires that notice of such  disclaimer be
given in each agreement,  obligation,  or instrument

                                       17
<PAGE>

entered into or executed by the Fund or the trustees.  Moreover, the Declaration
of Trust  provides for  indemnification  out of Fund property for all losses and
expenses of any shareholder  held  personally  liable for the obligations of the
Fund and the Fund will be  covered  by  insurance  which the  trustees  consider
adequate to cover  foreseeable  tort  claims.  Thus,  the risk of a  shareholder
incurring  financial loss on account of  shareholder  liability is considered by
the Adviser  remote and not material,  since it is limited to  circumstances  in
which a  disclaimer  is  inoperative  and the Fund  itself is unable to meet its
obligations.

                                       18
<PAGE>

APPENDIX -- RATINGS OF INVESTMENTS

                            COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS

A-1, A-2 and Prime-1, Prime-2 Commercial Paper Ratings

Commercial  paper  rated by  Standard  & Poor's  Corporation  has the  following
characteristics:  Liquidity  ratios  are  adequate  to meet  cash  requirements.
Long-term senior debt is rated "A" or better.  The issuer has access to at least
two  additional  channels of  borrowing.  Basic  earnings  and cash flow have an
upward  trend with  allowance  made for unusual  circumstances.  Typically,  the
issuer's  industry  is well  established  and the issuer  has a strong  position
within the industry. The reliability and quality of management are unquestioned.
Relative  strength  or  weakness  of the above  factors  determine  whether  the
issuer's commercial paper is rated A-1, A-2 or A-3.

The ratings  Prime-1 and Prime-2 are the two highest  commercial  paper  ratings
assigned by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. Among the factors considered by them
in assigning ratings are the following:  (1) evaluation of the management of the
issuer;  (2) economic  evaluation of the issuer's  industry or industries and an
appraisal of speculative-type  risks which may be inherent in certain areas; (3)
evaluation  of the  issuer's  products in relation to  competition  and customer
acceptance;  (4) liquidity;  (5) amount and quality of long-term debt; (6) trend
of  earnings  over a period of ten years;  (7)  financial  strength  of a parent
company and the relationships  which exist with the issuer;  and (8) recognition
by the management of  obligations  which may be present or may arise as a result
of public interest questions and preparations to meet such obligations. Relative
strength or  weakness  of the above  factors  determines  whether  the  issuer's
commercial paper is rated Prime-1, 2 or 3.

MIG-1 and MIG-2 Municipal Notes

Moody's  Investors  Service,  Inc.'s  ratings for state and municipal  notes and
other short-term loans will be designated  Moody's  Investment Grade (MIG). This
distinction is in recognition of the differences  between short-term credit risk
and  long-term  risk.  Factors  affecting  the  liquidity  of the  borrower  are
uppermost in importance in short- term  borrowing,  while various factors of the
first  importance in bond risk are of lesser  importance in the short run. Loans
designated  MIG-1  are of the best  quality,  enjoying  strong  protection  from
established  cash flows of funds for their  servicing  or from  established  and
broad-based  access to the market for  refinancing,  or both.  Loans  designated
MIG-2 are of high  quality,  with margins of  protection  ample  although not so
large as in the preceding group.

           STANDARD & POOR'S CORPORATION BOND RATINGS, CORPORATE BONDS

AAA. This is the highest rating  assigned by Standard & Poor's  Corporation to a
debt obligation and indicates an extremely  strong capacity to pay principal and
interest.

AA. Bonds rated AA also qualify as high-quality  debt  obligations.  Capacity to
pay principal and interest is very strong, and in the majority of instances they
differ from AAA issues only in small degree.

A. Bonds rated A have a strong capacity to pay principal and interest,  although
they are  somewhat  more  susceptible  to the  adverse  effects  of  changes  in
circumstances and economic conditions.

                                       19
<PAGE>

                  MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC. BOND RATINGS

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

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

                                       20


© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission