1ST SOURCE CORP
10-K, 2000-03-16
STATE COMMERCIAL BANKS
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                                  UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549
                                    FORM 10-K

[X]       ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES
          EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

          For the fiscal year ended    December 31, 1999
                                       -----------------
                                       OR

[ ]       TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
          SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

          For the transition period from       to
          Commission file number  0-6233
                                  ------

                             1st SOURCE CORPORATION
                             ----------------------
             (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

           Indiana                                        35-1068133
           -------                                        ----------
(State of other jurisdiction of                        (I.R.S. Employer
incorporation or organization)                         Identification No.)

100 N. Michigan Street, South Bend, Indiana                  46601
- -------------------------------------------                  -----
  (Address of principal executive offices)                 (Zip Code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code:        219/235-2000
                                                           ------------
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:       None
                                                                 ------
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:
9% Cumulative Trust Preferred Securities and related  guarantee - $25 par value
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                (Title of Class)

Floating Rate Cumulative Trust Preferred Securities and related  guarantee -
$25 par value
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                (Title of Class)

                        Common Stock - without par value
                        --------------------------------
                                (Title of Class)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required
to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during
the  preceding 12 months,  and (2) has been subject to such filing  requirements
for the past 90 days.  Yes  X   No
                          -----    -----

Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent  filers  pursuant to Item 405
of Regulation  S-K is not contained  herein,  and will not be contained,  to the
best of registrant's  knowledge,  in definitive proxy or information  statements
incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this
Form 10-K. [ ]

The  aggregate  market value of the voting stock held by  non-affiliates  of the
registrant  as  of  February  14,  2000.  Common  Stock,  without  par  value  -
$197,728,604.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The number of shares outstanding of each of the registrant's classes of stock as
of February 14, 2000. Common Stock, without par value - 19,043,741 shares.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
9% Cumulative Trust Preferred Securities and related guarantee,  $25 par value -
1,100,000 shares.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Floating Rate Cumulative Trust Preferred  Securities and related guarantee,  $25
par value - 690,000 shares.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
Portions of the annual shareholders report for the year ended December 31, 1999,
are  incorporated  by  reference  into Part II.  Portions  of the  annual  proxy
statement  for the 2000  annual  meeting of  shareholders  are  incorporated  by
reference into Parts II and III.
<PAGE>
                     1ST SOURCE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
                                    FORM 10-K

                                      Index

                                      Part I                              Page
                                      ------                              ----
Item  1.    Business ....................................................   3
Item  2.    Properties ..................................................  21
Item  3.    Legal Proceedings ...........................................  21
Item  4.    Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders .........  21

                                      Part II
                                      -------
Item  5.    Market for Registrant's Common Equity and Related
            Stockholder Matters .........................................  21
Item  6.    Selected Financial Data .....................................  21
Item  7.    Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
            Condition and Results of Operations .........................  21
Item 7A.    Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk ..  22
Item  8.    Financial Statements and Supplementary Data .................  22
Item  9.    Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting
            and Financial Disclosure ....................................  22

                                     Part III
                                     --------
Item 10.    Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant ..........  22
Item 11.    Executive Compensation ......................................  22
Item 12.    Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial
            Owners and Management .......................................  22
Item 13.    Certain Relationships and Related Transactions ..............  22

                                    Part IV
                                    -------
Item 14.    Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules, and Reports
            on Form 8-K .................................................  23


Signatures  .............................................................  24


                                       2

<PAGE>
PART I

ITEM 1.  BUSINESS

GENERAL

         1st Source  Corporation is an Indiana  corporation  and registered bank
holding company  headquartered in South Bend, Indiana which commenced operations
as a bank holding company in 1971. As used herein,  unless the context otherwise
requires,  the term  "1st  Source"  refers  to 1st  Source  Corporation  and its
subsidiaries.  At December  31,  1999,  1st Source had assets of $2.87  billion,
deposits of $2.13  billion  and total  shareholders'  equity of $238.8  million.
Pages 20 through 41 of 1st Source's Annual Report to  Shareholders  for the year
ended December 31, 1999 are incorporated herein by reference.

         1st  Source,  through  its  principal  subsidiary  1st Source Bank (the
"Bank"),  delivers a  comprehensive  range of consumer  and  commercial  banking
services to individual and business  customers  through 50 banking  locations in
the northern  Indiana/southwestern  Michigan market area. The Bank also competes
for business  nationwide  by offering  specialized  financing  services for used
private aircraft, automobiles for leasing and rental agencies, heavy duty trucks
and  construction  equipment.  The Bank, which was chartered as an Indiana state
bank in 1922,  is a member of the Federal  Reserve  System and its  deposits are
insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance  Corporation (the "FDIC") to the extent
provided by law. The Bank is headquartered in South Bend,  Indiana,  which is in
northern Indiana,  approximately 95 miles east of Chicago and 140 miles north of
Indianapolis.  Its  principal  market area consists of nine counties in northern
Indiana and three counties in southwestern  lower  Michigan.  South Bend, in St.
Joseph County,  is the largest city in its market area, and is a regional center
for  educational  institutions,  health care,  financial,  accounting  and legal
services and retailing.

         1st Source's other  subsidiaries  include 1st Source Leasing,  Inc., an
originator and servicer of personal  property  leases to businesses  nationwide,
1st Source Insurance,  Inc., a general property and casualty insurance agency in
South Bend, 1st Source Capital Corporation, a licensed small business investment
company, 1st Source Capital Trust I and II, subsidiaries created to issue $44.75
million  of  Trust  Preferred  Securities,   Michigan   Transportation   Finance
Corporation,  a company  which  manages the  non-Indiana  assets of our national
niche lending businesses,  1st Source Funding  Corporation,  a qualified special
purpose  entity   established  for  purposes  of  administering   securitization
activity,  and Trustcorp Mortgage Company, a mortgage banking company with eight
offices in  Indiana,  Ohio and  Kentucky.  1st  Source's  inactive  subsidiaries
include 1st Source Travel, Inc., 1st Source Auto Leasing,  Inc., and FBT Capital
Corporation.

         The  principal  executive  office of 1st Source is located at 100 North
Michigan  Street,  South Bend,  Indiana 46601 and its telephone  number is (219)
235-2000.

BUSINESS STRATEGY AND OBJECTIVES

         1st Source,  as part of its "Vision 2000"  strategic  planning  process
commenced in 1995, has  identified  several  business  objectives and strategies
which focus on growth and customer  service.  The  principal  objectives  of 1st
Source  under Vision 2000 have been to (i) increase  financial  performance  and
market share, (ii) provide  exceptional  customer service,  (iii) enhance credit
quality, and (iv) maintain cost controls.

         1st Source has employed the following  strategies to further its Vision
2000 objectives:

         1.  Increase  market share in each market served and as a percentage of
each  customer's  relationship.  1st Source has opened 17 new banking  locations
from 1995 through 1999 as part of its banking center expansion  program designed
to maintain its position as one of the dominant  financial  institutions  in its
market area -- which

                                       3

<PAGE>
includes nine counties in northern  Indiana and three  counties in  southwestern
lower  Michigan.  Management  believes  that  such a  strategy  allows  the most
effective and efficient use of 1st Source's marketing resources and assures that
1st Source's banking offices are accessible to a majority of the people residing
in the markets  served.  1st  Source's  goal is to deliver  highly  personal and
superior customer services through each of its banking  facilities and to meet a
higher   percentage  of  each  customer's   financial  needs  through   personal
relationship management.

         2. Expand fee-based businesses.  1st Source currently provides a number
of fee-based services to its clients,  the major services being trust,  mortgage
banking,  and  insurance.  1st Source  believes that  additional  sources of fee
income are available  from existing  relationships  and that existing  fee-based
product lines can be used  effectively  in  developing  new  relationships  with
customers. 1st Source also believes that customers are more loyal and responsive
to its products and services when a large  percentage of a customer's  financial
services are provided directly by 1st Source. 1st Source's fee-based  businesses
are  designed  to  strengthen  the  relationship  between  1st  Source  and  its
customers.

         3. Expand the national niche businesses across the United States taking
advantage  of  specialized  opportunities.  1st  Source  caters  to  specialized
national  market  niches that  management  believes are not being well served by
either  the  credit   subsidiaries  of   manufacturers  or  by  other  financial
institutions.  Asset-based lending and personal  relationship  management of the
customer base,  together with an efficient method of operation,  is the focus of
the Bank's  Specialty  Finance Group,  which provides such services.  Additional
experienced sales people have been and will be added to ensure better geographic
coverage  in areas of  opportunity.  1st Source has also  pursued a strategy  of
securitizing  loan  receivables  so that  this  Group's  business  growth is not
totally dependent on deposit funding.

         4. Actively managing credit quality. 1st Source has adopted a proactive
credit management process with loan officers maintaining  responsibility for the
quality of the credits they originate and manage.  The credit management process
is supported by a collective and  collaborative  review and approval process and
is  balanced  by a review,  evaluation  and  grading  process  undertaken  by an
objective third party.  Senior management is actively involved in the management
of the process  and  incentive  compensation  is based on 1st  Source's  overall
credit experience.

BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES

         The  organization  offers a broad  range  of  consumer  and  commercial
         banking  services through its lending  operations,  retail branches and
         fee based businesses.

         Loans and Leases

         -        1st Source's  commercial and agriculture loans at December 31,
                  1999, were  approximately $441 million and were 21.4% of total
                  loans  outstanding.  The primary focus of this lending area is
                  with  privately-held  or   closely-controlled   firms  in  1st
                  Source's   regional  market  area  of  Northern   Indiana  and
                  Southwest Michigan.

         -        Commercial  loans secured by  transportation  and construction
                  equipment  totaled  $897  million,  or 43.5%  of  total  loans
                  outstanding, at December 31, 1999. This loan area concentrates
                  on specialty finance lending for automobile leasing and rental
                  companies, truck leasing companies,  privately- owned aircraft
                  for businesses and individuals and heavy duty trucks and other
                  equipment used in the construction  business.  Currently,  1st
                  Source has 15 locations  nationwide  supporting  these lending
                  activities. Loan sale and servicing income resulting from loan
                  securitizations   from   these   specialty   finance   lending
                  activities  totaled  $12.07  million in 1999.  1st Source also
                  generates equipment rental

                                       4

<PAGE>
                  income   through   the   leasing   of   various   automobiles,
                  construction   equipment  and  other  equipment  to  customers
                  through operating  leases,  where 1st Source retains ownership
                  of the property being leased.  Total  equipment  rental income
                  for 1999  totaled  $17.4  million  with  depreciation  on this
                  equipment amounting to $13.0 million.

         -        Loans secured by real estate  amounted to $591 million,  which
                  was  approximately  28.6%  of  total  loans  outstanding,   at
                  December 31, 1999.  The primary  focus of this lending area is
                  commercial real estate and residential mortgage lending in the
                  regional  market  area  of  Northern   Indiana  and  Southwest
                  Michigan.  Most of the residential mortgages are sold into the
                  secondary  market  and  serviced  by  1st  Source's   mortgage
                  subsidiary, Trustcorp Mortgage Company.

         -        1st Source's consumer loans at December 31, 1999,  amounted to
                  $134  million  and 6.5% of total loans  outstanding.  Consumer
                  loans  are  primarily  all  other  non-real  estate  loans  to
                  individuals in 1st Source's regional market area.

         Deposits

         Through  its  network of 50  branches  in 12  counties  in Indiana  and
         Michigan, 1st Source generates deposits to fund its lending activities.
         Total  deposits at  December  31,  1999 were $2.13  billion.  Enhancing
         customer service,  1st Source offers banking  services,  in addition to
         its traditional  branches,  through its network of 52 automatic  teller
         machines,  bank by phone  services  and through the  internet.  Service
         charges on deposit accounts totaled $6.90 million for 1999.

         Fee Based Businesses

         1st Source  maintains  various fee based  businesses to complement  net
         interest income.

         -        Trust  fees are  generated  from  employee  benefit  services,
                  personal and agency trusts and estate planning. In 1999, trust
                  fees were approximately $8.95 million.

         -        Mortgage loan sale and  servicing  income for 1999 amounted to
                  $7.42  million.   Income  from  loan  sale  and  servicing  is
                  generated  from the mortgage  banking  operations of Trustcorp
                  Mortgage  Company.   Trustcorp  serviced  approximately  $2.21
                  billion of mortgage loans at December 31, 1999.

         -        Insurance  commissions from 1st Source's property and casualty
                  insurance agency totaled $1.51 million for 1999.

COMPETITION

         The  activities  in which 1st  Source  and the Bank  engage  are highly
competitive.   Those  activities  and  the  geographic  markets  served  involve
primarily  competition with other banks, some of which are affiliated with large
bank holding companies  headquartered  outside of 1st Source's principal market.
Larger financial  institutions  competing within 1st Source's  principal market,
but headquartered elsewhere, include Key Bank, Wells Fargo Bank, Banc One, Fifth
Third Bank,  Standard Federal Bank, Old Kent Bank and National City Corporation.
Competition among financial institutions is based upon interest rates offered on
deposit  accounts,  interest rates charged on loans and other credit and service
charges, the quality of services rendered, the convenience of banking facilities
and,  in the  case of  loans to large  commercial  borrowers,  relative  lending
limits.

         In addition to competing  with other banks  within its primary  service
areas, the Bank also competes with

                                       5

<PAGE>
other  financial   intermediaries,   such  as  credit  unions,  industrial  loan
associations,  securities  firms,  insurance  companies,  small loan  companies,
finance companies,  mortgage companies,  real estate investment trusts,  certain
governmental  agencies,  credit organizations and other enterprises.  Additional
competition   for  depositors'   funds  comes  from  United  States   Government
securities,   private  issuers  of  debt  obligations  and  suppliers  of  other
investment   alternatives  for  depositors.   Many  of  1st  Source's   non-bank
competitors  are not  subject to the same  extensive  federal  regulations  that
govern bank holding  companies and banks.  Such non-bank  competitors  may, as a
result, have certain advantages over 1st Source in providing some services.

         1st Source competes  against these  financial  institutions by offering
innovative products and highly personalized  services. 1st Source also relies on
a history  in the  market  dating  back to 1863,  relationships  that long- term
employees  have  with  their  customers,   and  the  capacity  for  quick  local
decision-making.

EMPLOYEES

         1st  Source  employs   approximately   1,083  persons  on  a  full-time
equivalent  basis.  1st Source  provides a wide range of employee  benefits  and
considers employee relations to be good.

REGULATION AND SUPERVISION

         GENERAL.  1st  Source  and the Bank  are  extensively  regulated  under
federal  and state  law.  These laws and  regulations  are  intended  to protect
depositors,  not  shareholders.  To the extent  that the  following  information
describes statutory or regulatory provisions, it is qualified in its entirety by
reference to the particular statutory and regulatory  provisions.  Any change in
applicable  laws or regulations  may have a material  effect on the business and
prospects  of 1st  Source.  The  operations  of 1st  Source may be  affected  by
legislative changes and by the policies of various regulatory  authorities.  1st
Source is unable to  predict  the  nature or the  extent of the  effects  on its
business and earnings that fiscal or monetary policies, economic controls or new
federal or state legislation may have in the future.

         1st Source is a registered  bank holding company under the Bank Holding
Company  Act of 1956 (the  "BHCA")  and,  as such,  is  subject  to  regulation,
supervision  and  examination  by the Board of Governors of the Federal  Reserve
System (the "Federal  Reserve").  1st Source is required to file annual  reports
with the Federal  Reserve and to provide the  Federal  Reserve  such  additional
information as it may require.

         The Bank,  as an Indiana  state  bank,  is  supervised  by the  Indiana
Department of Financial  Institutions  (the "DFI") and the Federal  Reserve.  As
such, the Bank is regularly  examined by and subject to regulations  promulgated
by the DFI and the Federal Reserve.  Because the FDIC provides deposit insurance
to the Bank, the Bank is also subject to supervision  and regulation by the FDIC
(even though the FDIC is not its primary federal regulator).

         BANK AND BANK HOLDING  COMPANY  REGULATION.  As noted  above,  both 1st
Source and the Bank are subject to extensive regulation and supervision.

         Bank Holding Company Act. Under the BHCA, as amended, the activities of
a bank holding company,  such as 1st Source,  are limited to business so closely
related to banking,  managing or  controlling  banks as to be a proper  incident
thereto.  1st  Source is also  subject  to  capital  requirements  applied  on a
consolidated  basis in a form  substantially  similar to those  required  of the
Bank. The BHCA also requires a bank holding  company to obtain approval from the
Federal Reserve before (i) acquiring, or holding more than 5% voting interest in
any bank or bank holding company, (ii) acquiring all or substantially all of the
assets  of  another  bank  or  bank  holding   company,   or  (iii)  merging  or
consolidating with another bank holding company.

                                       6

<PAGE>
         The BHCA also restricts non-bank  activities to those which, by statute
or by Federal  Reserve  regulation or order,  have been identified as activities
closely related to the business of banking or of managing or controlling banks.

         Financial  Institutions Reform,  Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989.
The  Financial  Institutions  Reform,  Recovery,  and  Enforcement  Act of  1989
("FIRREA")  reorganized  and reformed the  regulatory  structure  applicable  to
financial institutions generally.

         The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation  Improvement Act of 1991. The
Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation  Improvement Act of 1991 ("FDICIA") was
adopted to supervise and regulate a wide variety of banking issues.  In general,
FDICIA  provides for the  recapitalization  of the Bank  Insurance Fund ("BIF"),
deposit insurance  reform,  including the  implementation of risk-based  deposit
insurance  premiums,  the  establishment  of five capital  levels for  financial
institutions ("well capitalized," "adequately capitalized,"  "undercapitalized,"
"significantly  undercapitalized" and "critically  undercapitalized") that would
impose more scrutiny and  restrictions on less capitalized  institutions,  along
with a number of other supervisory and regulatory issues.

         Riegle-Neal  Interstate  Banking and Branching  Efficiency Act of 1994.
Congress enacted the Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act
of 1994 (the "Interstate  Act") in September 1994.  Beginning in September 1995,
bank holding  companies have the right to expand,  by acquiring  existing banks,
into all  states,  even  those  which  had  theretofore  restricted  entry.  The
legislation also provides that, subject to future action by individual states, a
holding  company has the right to convert the banks which its owns in  different
states to branches of a single  bank.  The states of Indiana and  Michigan  have
adopted the interstate branching provisions of the Interstate Act.

         Economic  Growth and  Regulatory  Paperwork  Reduction Act of 1996. The
Economic  Growth and Regulatory  Paperwork  Reduction Act of 1996 (the "EGRPRA")
was signed into law on September 30, 1996.  EGRPRA  streamlined  the non-banking
activities  application  process  for  well-capitalized  and  well-managed  bank
holding companies.

         Gramm-Leach-Bliley  Act of 1999.  The Act is intended to modernize  the
banking  industry by removing  barriers to  affiliation  among banks,  insurance
companies,  the securities  industry and other financial service  providers.  It
permits  financial  organizations  flexibility in structuring such  affiliations
through a holding  company  structure  or a financial  subsidiary,  with certain
limitations  on  activities  and  appropriate  safeguards.  The Act sets forth a
system of functional regulation that makes the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve  System (the "Board) the  "umbrella  supervisor"  for holding  companies
while providing for  supervision by other federal and state agencies.  The Board
and the Secretary of the treasury must coordinate  their  supervision  regarding
approval of new financial activities. Banks may not participate in new financial
affiliations unless they are well-capitalized and well- managed.  Further a bank
must have received at least a satisfactory  Community  Reinvestment  Act ("CRA")
rating.  The Act addresses state  regulation of insurance,  generally  prohibits
unitary thrifts from participating in new financial activities, provides privacy
protection  for  nonpublic  customer  information  of  financial   institutions,
modernizes the Federal Home Loan Bank system and makes miscellaneous  regulatory
improvements.  While much of the Act is directed to national banks,  state banks
will  generally be able to  undertake  the  activities  permitted by the Act. In
addition,  the provisions for  securities  transactions,  CRA, and privacy apply
whether or not a national  or state bank  elects to become a  financial  holding
company or form or acquire a financial  subsidiary.  The Act  becomes  effective
March  11,  2000  for  the  affiliation  provisions  and  provides  for  various
subsequent effective dates for other sections. Regulations will be issued by the
regulatory authorities pursuant to a schedule of effective dates under the Act.

         Regulations  Governing  Capital  Adequacy.  The federal bank regulatory
agencies use capital adequacy  guidelines in their examination and regulation of
bank holding  companies and banks. If the capital falls below the minimum levels
established by these guidelines,  the bank holding company or bank may be denied
approval to acquire or establish  additional  banks or nonbank  businesses or to
open facilities.  The various regulatory capital requirements that 1st Source is
subject to are  disclosed on page 38 in Footnote "O" of the annual  shareholders
report  for  year  ended  December  31,  1999,  and is  incorporated  herein  by
reference.  Management of 1st Source believes that the  risk-weighting of assets
and the risk-based  capital  guidelines do not have a material adverse impact on
1st Source's operations or on the operations of the Bank.

                                       7
<PAGE>
         Community  Reinvestment  Act. The  Community  Reinvestment  Act of 1977
requires that, in connection with examinations of financial  institutions within
their  jurisdiction,  the federal banking regulators must evaluate the record of
the  financial   institutions  in  meeting  the  credit  needs  of  their  local
communities,  including low and moderate income  neighborhoods,  consistent with
the safe and sound  operation of those banks.  These factors are also considered
in  evaluating  mergers,  acquisitions  and  applications  to open a  branch  or
facility.

     Regulations  Governing Extensions of Credit. The Bank is subject to certain
restrictions  imposed by the Federal  Reserve Act on extensions of credit to the
bank holding company or its subsidiaries, or investments in their securities and
on the use of their  securities as collateral for loans to any borrowers.  These
regulations and restrictions may limit the ability of 1st Source to obtain funds
from the Bank for its cash  needs,  including  funds  for  acquisitions  and for
payment of dividends,  interest and operating expenses.  Further, under the BHCA
and certain  regulations of the Federal Reserve,  a bank holding company and its
subsidiaries  are  prohibited  from  engaging in certain tying  arrangements  in
connection with any extension of credit, lease or sale of property or furnishing
of services.

         The Bank is also subject to certain restrictions imposed by the Federal
Reserve Act on extensions of credit to executive officers, directors,  principal
shareholders or any related  interest of such persons.  Extensions of credit (i)
must be made on  substantially  the same  terms,  including  interest-rates  and
collateral,  and  following  credit  underwriting  procedures  that are not less
stringent than, as those prevailing at the time for comparable transactions with
persons not covered above and who are not  employees,  and (ii) must not involve
more than the normal risk of repayment or present  other  unfavorable  features.
The  Bank  is also  subject  to  certain  lending  limits  and  restrictions  on
overdrafts to such persons.

         Reserve  Requirements.  The Federal  Reserve  requires  all  depository
institutions  to  maintain  reserves  against  their  transaction  accounts  and
non-personal  time  deposits.  Reserves of 3% must be  maintained  against total
transaction  accounts of $46.5  million or less  (subject to  adjustment  by the
Federal  Reserve)  and 10% must be  maintained  against  that  portion  of total
transaction accounts in excess of such amount.

         Dividends. The ability of the Bank to pay dividends and management fees
is limited by various state and federal laws, by the regulations  promulgated by
its primary regulators and by the principles of prudent bank management.

         Monetary Policy and Economic Control.  The commercial  banking business
in which 1st Source engages is affected not only by general economic conditions,
but  also by the  monetary  policies  of the  Federal  Reserve.  Changes  in the
discount  rate on  member  bank  borrowing,  availability  of  borrowing  at the
"discount window," open market operations,  the imposition of changes in reserve
requirements  against member banks deposits and assets of foreign branches,  and
the imposition of and changes in reserve requirements against certain borrowings
by banks and their  affiliates are some of the  instruments  of monetary  policy
available to the Federal  Reserve.  These monetary  policies are used in varying
combinations  to  influence  overall  growth and  distributions  of bank  loans,
investments  and  deposits,  and such use may affect  interest  rates charged on
loans or paid on deposits. The monetary policies of the Federal Reserve have had
a  significant  effect on the  operating  results  of  commercial  banks and are
expected to do so in the future.  The monetary  policies of the Federal  Reserve
are influenced by various factors, including inflation, unemployment, short-term
and  long-term  changes in the  international  trade  balance  and in the fiscal
policies of the U.S. Government. Future monetary policies and the effect of such
policies on the future  business  and earnings of 1st Source and the Bank cannot
be predicted.

         Pending  Legislation.  Because of concerns relating to  competitiveness
and the safety and soundness of the banking industry, Congress often considers a
number of  wide-ranging  proposals for altering the  structure,  regulation  and
competitive  relationships of the nation's financial institutions.  It cannot be
predicted whether or in what form any proposals will be adopted or the extent to
which the business of 1st Source may be affected thereby.

FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS

         The information regarding "forward-looking statements" on page 7 of the
annual shareholders report for the year ended December 31, 1999, is incorporated
herein by reference.

                                       8

<PAGE>
ITEM 1.  BUSINESS (Continued)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                        SELECTED STATISTICAL INFORMATION
          Distribution of Assets, Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity
                    Interest Rates and Interest Differential
                             (Dollars in Thousands)

Year ended December 31,                     1999                               1998                               1997
                              ----------------------------------   --------------------------------   ------------------------------
                                              Interest                           Interest                           Interest
                                   Average    Income/   Yield/        Average    Income/   Yield/        Average    Income/   Yield/
                                   Balance    Expense   Rate          Balance    Expense   Rate          Balance    Expense   Rate
                              ----------------------------------   --------------------------------  -------------------------------
ASSETS:
<S>                            <C>          <C>          <C>      <C>          <C>          <C>      <C>          <C>         <C>
   Investment securities:
       Taxable                  $  348,944   $ 20,049    5.75%     $  294,632   $ 17,419    5.91%     $  272,400   $ 16,638    6.11%
       Tax-exempt (1)              161,712     11,336    7.01%        150,678     11,327    7.52%        151,686     11,723    7.73%
   Net loans (2 & 3)             1,949,172    171,770    8.81%      1,853,537    168,664    9.10%      1,610,889    148,061    9.19%
   Other investments                18,354        911    4.96%         45,708      2,348    5.14%         11,662        592    5.09%
                                 ---------    -------    -----      ---------    -------    -----      ---------    -------    -----
Total Earning Assets             2,478,182    204,066    8.23%      2,344,555    199,758    8.52%      2,046,637    177,014    8.65%

   Cash and due from banks         113,099                             86,452                             73,246
   Reserve for loan losses         (39,105)                           (38,050)                           (31,966)
   Other assets                    187,868                            157,968                            110,383
                                ----------                         ----------                         ----------
Total                           $2,740,044                         $2,550,925                         $2,198,300
                                ==========                         ==========                         ==========


LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY:
   Interest bearing deposits    $1,843,692   $ 84,839    4.60%     $1,748,759   $ 86,264    4.93%     $1,488,287   $ 73,150    4.92%
   Short-term borrowings           283,035     14,995    5.30%        243,431     15,034    6.18%        227,757     13,014    5.71%
   Long-term debt                   12,492        892    7.14%         13,036        929    7.13%         16,527      1,160    7.02%
                                 ---------    -------    -----      ---------    -------    -----      ---------    -------    -----
Total Interest Bearing
  Liabilities                    2,139,219    100,726    4.71%      2,005,226    102,227    5.10%      1,732,571     87,324    5.04%

   Noninterest bearing deposits    283,479                            250,755                            210,686
   Other liabilities                90,152                             89,343                             72,500
   Shareholders' equity            227,194                            205,601                            182,543
                                ----------                         ----------                         ----------
Total                           $2,740,044                         $2,550,925                         $2,198,300
                                ==========                         ==========                         ==========
Net Interest Income                          $103,340                            $97,531                            $89,690
                                             ========                            =======                            =======
Net Yield on Earning Assets on
   a Taxable Equivalent Basis                            4.17%                              4.16%                              4.38%
                                                         =====                              =====                              =====
</TABLE>

(1)    Interest income including the effects of taxable equivalent  adjustments,
       using a 40.525% rate.  Tax  equivalent  adjustments  were $3,441 in 1999,
       $3,408 in 1998 and $3,536 in 1997.

(2)    Loan income includes fees on loans of $5,745 in 1999,  $4,889 in 1998 and
       $4,097  in 1997.  Loan  income  also  includes  the  effects  of  taxable
       equivalent adjustments,  using a 40.525% rate. Tax equivalent adjustments
       were $196 in 1999, $202 in 1998 and $162 in 1997.

(3)    For purposes of this  computation,  nonaccruing loans are included in the
       daily average loan amounts outstanding.

                                       9

<PAGE>
ITEM 1.  BUSINESS (Continued)

The  following  table  sets  forth for the  periods  indicated  a summary of the
changes in interest  earned and interest paid,  resulting from changes in volume
and changes in rates:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  Increase (Decrease) Due to (1)
                                                  Volume       Rate         Net
                                                 --------    --------    --------
                                                           (In Thousands)
<S>                                              <C>         <C>         <C>
1999 compared to 1998
   Interest earned on:
     Loans ...................................   $  8,041    $ (4,935)   $  3,106
     Investment securities:
       Taxable ...............................      3,086        (456)      2,630
       Tax-exempt ............................        126        (116)         10
     Interest-bearing deposits with
        other banks ..........................       --           (18)        (18)
     Federal funds sold and other
        money market investments .............     (1,416)         (4)     (1,420)
                                                 --------    --------    --------
            Total Earning Assets .............   $  9,837    $ (5,529)   $  4,308

   Interest paid on:
     Savings deposits ........................      4,829       2,073       6,902
     Other time deposits .....................     (3,580)     (4,747)     (8,327)
     Short-term borrowings ...................       (308)        269         (39)
     Long-term debt ..........................        (38)          1         (37)
                                                 --------    --------    --------
            Total Interest-Bearing Liabilities        903      (2,404)     (1,501)
                                                 --------    --------    --------
   Net Interest Income .......................   $  8,934    $ (3,125)   $  5,809
                                                 ========    ========    ========


1998 compared to 1997
   Interest earned on:
     Loans ...................................   $ 22,038    $ (1,435)   $ 20,603
     Investment securities:
       Taxable ...............................      1,297        (516)        781
       Tax-exempt ............................        (80)       (317)       (397)
     Interest-bearing deposits with
       other banks ...........................         (1)         27          26
     Federal funds sold and other
       money market investments ..............      1,764         (33)      1,731
                                                 --------    --------    --------
            Total Earning Assets .............     25,018      (2,274)     22,744

   Interest paid on:
     Savings deposits ........................      2,084       1,113       3,197
     Other time deposits .....................     10,463        (546)      9,917
     Short-term borrowings ...................        909       1,111       2,020
     Long-term debt ..........................       (249)         18        (231)
                                                 --------    --------    --------
            Total Interest-Bearing Liabilities     13,207       1,696      14,903
                                                 --------    --------    --------
   Net Interest Income .......................   $ 11,811    $ (3,970)   $  7,841
                                                 ========    ========    ========
</TABLE>

(1)    The change in interest due to both rate and volume has been  allocated to
       volume and rate changes in proportion to the relationship of the absolute
       dollar amounts of the change in each.

                                       10

<PAGE>
ITEM 1.  BUSINESS (Continued)

INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO

The  carrying  amounts  of  investment  securities  at the dates  indicated  are
summarized as follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                              December 31
                                                                --------------------------------------
                                                                  1999           1998           1997
                                                                --------       --------       --------
                                                                            (In Thousands)
<S>                                                             <C>            <C>            <C>
U.S. Treasury and government agencies and corporations          $282,313       $284,327       $228,884
States and political subdivisions                                161,125        154,473        148,228
Other                                                            103,792        100,899         37,796
                                                                --------       --------       --------
                   Total                                        $547,230       $539,699       $414,908
</TABLE>


The following  table shows the  maturities of investment  securities at December
31,  1999,  at the  carrying  amounts  and  the  weighted  average  yields  (for
tax-exempt  obligations on a fully taxable basis assuming a 40.525% tax rate) of
such securities.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                             Maturing
                                  -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                After One                  After Five
                                        Within                  But Within                 But Within                   After
                                       One Year                 Five Years                 Ten Years                  Ten Years
                                  -----------------          ----------------           ----------------          ----------------
                                    Amount    Yield           Amount    Yield            Amount    Yield           Amount    Yield
                                  --------    -----          --------   -----           -------    -----          -------    -----
                                                                        (Dollars in Thousands)
<S>                               <C>         <C>            <C>        <C>             <C>        <C>            <C>        <C>
U.S. Treasury and
     government agencies
     and corporations             $ 89,949    5.33%          $162,112   5.62%           $12,474    6.08%          $17,778    6.39%

States and political

     subdivisions                   12,177    6.30%           110,530   6.56%            30,303    7.77%            8,115    6.63%

Other                               30,445    6.29%            22,277   5.86%               223    5.41%           50,847    6.37%
                                ----------    -----        ----------   -----           -------    -----          -------    -----
              Total               $132,571    5.64%          $294,919   5.99%           $43,000    7.28%          $76,740    6.40%
</TABLE>

Weighted  average  yields  on  tax-exempt  obligations  have  been  computed  by
adjusting  tax-exempt income to a fully taxable equivalent basis,  excluding the
effect of the tax preference interest expense adjustments.

                                       11

<PAGE>
ITEM 1.  BUSINESS (Continued)


LOAN PORTFOLIO

The following  table shows 1st Source's loan  distribution at the end of each of
the last five years for December 31:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                           1999                1998                1997               1996               1995
                                        ----------          ----------          ----------         ----------         ----------
                                                                          (Dollars in Thousands)
Loans:
<S>                                     <C>                 <C>                 <C>                <C>                 <C>
     Commercial and agricultural        $  440,909          $  399,013          $  364,391         $  335,192         $  314,421

     Commercial loans secured
        by transportation and
        construction equipment             896,848             732,488             752,677            561,042            457,930

     Loans secured by real estate          591,401             630,915             568,136            468,109            408,028

     Consumer loans                        134,031             119,280             111,577             91,220             79,036
                                        ----------          ----------          ----------         ----------         ----------

         Total Loans                    $2,063,189          $1,881,696          $1,796,781         $1,455,563         $1,259,415
                                        ==========          ==========          ==========         ==========         ==========
</TABLE>

                                       12

<PAGE>
ITEM 1.  BUSINESS (Continued)

LOAN PORTFOLIO (Continued)

The following table shows the rate sensitivity of loans  (excluding  residential
mortgages  for 1-4  family  residences,  consumer  loans  and  lease  financing)
outstanding  as of December  31,  1999.  The amounts due after one year are also
classified according to the sensitivity to changes in interest rates.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                   Rate Sensitivity
                                           ----------------------------------------------------------------
                                            Within          After One But         After
                                           One Year       Within Five Years     Five Years          Total
                                           --------       -----------------     ----------        ---------
                                                                     (In Thousands)
<S>                                        <C>               <C>                 <C>            <C>
Commercial loans secured
    by transportation and
    construction equipment                 $454,355          $398,127            $25,943        $  878,425

Commercial and agricultural                 306,824            69,540             11,916           388,280

Loans secured by real estate                219,540            67,533              9,722           296,795
                                           --------          --------            -------        ----------

              Total                        $980,719          $535,200            $47,581        $1,563,500
                                           ========          ========            =======        ==========


                                                                                     Rate Sensitivity
                                                                                     ----------------
                                                                                 Fixed             Variable
                                                                                 Rate                Rate
                                                                                --------           -------
Due after one year but within five years                                        $517,510           $17,690

Due after five years                                                              44,892             2,689
                                                                                --------           -------

              Total                                                             $562,402           $20,379
                                                                                ========           =======
</TABLE>


The following table summarizes the nonaccrual, past due and restructured loans:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   December 31
                                             ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                               1999                1998                1997               1996                1995
                                             --------            --------            --------           --------            --------
                                                                              (Dollars in Thousands)
<S>                                          <C>                  <C>                <C>                <C>                 <C>
Nonaccrual Loans                             $11,967              $9,266             $10,030             $6,678              $4,893

Accruing loans past

     due 90 days or more                         254                 275                 730                557                 274

Restructured loans                                --                  --                  --                 --                  --
                                             -------              ------             -------             ------              ------

     Total Nonperforming Loans               $12,221              $9,541             $10,760             $7,235              $5,167
                                             =======              ======             =======             ======              ======
</TABLE>


                                       13

<PAGE>
ITEM 1.  BUSINESS (Continued)

LOAN PORTFOLIO (Concluded)

Information  with respect to nonaccrual and  restructured  loans at December 31,
1999 and 1998 is as follows:

                                                         December 31
                                                  1999                1998
                                                --------            --------
                                                        (In Thousands)

Nonaccrual loans                                $11,967              $9,266

Interest income which would have been
     recorded under original terms                1,237               1,129

Interest income recorded during the period          371                 410


At December 31, 1999, $11,179,000 of the nonaccrual loans are collateralized.

Potential Problem Loans

At December 31, 1999,  management  was monitoring  two large  potential  problem
loans, both of which are secured by capital  equipment.  In February 2000, these
loans, with total outstanding balances of approximately $18 million, were placed
into nonaccrual  status.  The collateral on these loans, if sold in liquidation,
is estimated to cover 75% of outstandings.  Loans are subject to constant review
and are given management's  attention whenever a problem situation appears to be
developing.

Loan Concentrations

At December 31,  1999,  15.7% of total  business  loans were  concentrated  with
borrowers  in air  transportation  and  aircraft  dealers.  Loans to  truck  and
automobile  leasing  companies  accounted  for  14.2% of all  business  loans at
December 31, 1999.

                                       14

<PAGE>
ITEM 1.  BUSINESS (Continued)

SUMMARY OF LOAN LOSS EXPERIENCE

The following  table  summarizes the Company's loan loss  experience for each of
the last five years:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        December 31
                                        --------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            1999            1998            1997           1996            1995
                                        -----------     -----------     -----------    -----------     -----------
                                                                       (In Thousands)
<S>                                     <C>             <C>             <C>            <C>             <C>
Amount of loans outstanding
     at end of period ...............   $ 2,063,189     $ 1,881,696     $ 1,796,781    $ 1,455,563     $ 1,259,415
                                        ===========     ===========     ===========    ===========     ===========

Average amount of net loans
     outstanding during period ......   $ 1,949,172     $ 1,853,537     $ 1,610,889    $ 1,348,489     $ 1,172,438
                                        ===========     ===========     ===========    ===========     ===========

Balance of reserve for loan
     losses at beginning of period ..   $    38,629     $    35,424     $    29,516    $    27,470     $    23,868

Charge-offs:
     Commercial and agricultural ....           879           1,295             293          2,385             985
     Commercial loans secured
         by transportation and
         construction equipment .....           519           1,671             317            347              36
     Loans secured by real estate ...           148             323             157            230             597
     Consumer loans .................         1,481           1,510             643            324             372
                                        -----------     -----------     -----------    -----------     -----------
         Total charge-offs ..........         3,027           4,799           1,410          3,286           1,990
                                        -----------     -----------     -----------    -----------     -----------

Recoveries:
     Commercial and agricultural ....            84             255             101            383             287
     Commercial loans secured
         by transportation and
         construction equipment .....            87             419             917            593           2,224
     Loans secured by real estate ...            50              47              87            359             122
     Consumer loans .................           418             427             161            172             202
                                        -----------     -----------     -----------    -----------     -----------
         Total recoveries ...........           639           1,148           1,266          1,507           2,835
                                        -----------     -----------     -----------    -----------     -----------

Net charge-offs (recoveries) ........         2,388           3,651             144          1,779            (845)

Additions charged to

     operating expense ..............         7,442           9,156           6,052          4,649           2,757

Recaptured reserve due

     to loan securitizations ........        (3,473)         (2,300)             --           (824)             --
                                        -----------     -----------     -----------    -----------     -----------

Balance at end of period ............   $    40,210     $    38,629     $    35,424    $    29,516     $    27,470
                                        ===========     ===========     ===========    ===========     ===========

Ratio of net charge-offs (recoveries)
     to average net loans outstanding          0.12%           0.20%           0.01%          0.13%          (0.07%)
</TABLE>


                                       15

<PAGE>
1st  Source's  reserve  for loan  losses is  provided  for by direct  charges to
operations.  Losses on loans are  charged  against  the  reserve  and  likewise,
recoveries  during the period for prior losses are credited to the reserve.  The
loss reserve is maintained at a level considered by management to be adequate to
absorb anticipated losses from loans presently  outstanding.  The provision made
to this  reserve is  determined  by  management  based on the risk  factors  and
general economic conditions  affecting the loan portfolio,  including changes in
the  portfolio  mix and past loan loss  experience.  Management of 1st Source is
constantly reviewing the status of the loan portfolio to identify borrowers that
might develop financial  problems,  in order to aid borrowers in the handling of
their accounts and to prevent sizable unexpected losses.

In 1999, after management's assessment of loan quality, 1st Source made a charge
of $7.44 million to  operations as a provision for loan losses.  At December 31,
1999,  the  reserve  for  loan  losses  was  $40.21  million,  or 1.95% of loans
outstanding, net of unearned discount.

                                       16

<PAGE>
ITEM 1.  BUSINESS (Continued)

SUMMARY OF LOAN LOSS EXPERIENCE (Concluded)

The reserve for loan losses has been  allocated  according to the amount  deemed
necessary to provide for the  possibility  of losses being  incurred  within the
categories of loans set forth in the table below.  The amount of such components
of the reserve at December  31, and the ratio of such loan  categories  to total
outstanding loan balances, are as follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 (Dollars in Thousands)
                                 1999                 1998               1997               1996               1995
                         --------------------   -----------------  -----------------  -----------------  -----------------
                                     Percent             Percent            Percent            Percent            Percent
                                     Of Loans            Of Loans           Of Loans           Of Loans           Of Loans
                                     In Each             In Each            In Each            In Each            In Each
                                     Category            Category           Category           Category           Category
                            Reserve  to Total   Reserve  to Total  Reserve  to Total  Reserve  to Total  Reserve  to Total
                             Amount  Loans       Amount  Loans      Amount  Loans      Amount  Loans      Amount  Loans
                            -------  --------   -------  --------  -------  --------  -------  --------  -------  --------
<S>                          <C>      <C>       <C>      <C>       <C>      <C>       <C>      <C>       <C>      <C>
Commercial and
     agricultural            $ 7,698   21.4%    $ 7,566   21.2%    $ 6,325   20.3%    $ 8,011   19.5%    $ 8,250   25.0%

Commercial loans secured
     by transportation
     and construction
     equipment                25,473   43.5%     21,822   38.9%     18,188   41.9%     12,867   38.0%     10,258   36.4%

Loans secured
     by real estate            4,659   28.6%      6,460   33.5%      7,177   31.6%      5,535   28.5%      6,185   32.4%

Consumer loans                 2,380    6.5%      2,781    6.4%      3,734    6.2%      3,103   14.0%      2,777    6.2%
                             -------  ------    -------  ------    -------  ------    -------  ------    -------  ------
     Total                   $40,210  100.0%    $38,629  100.0%    $35,424  100.0%    $29,516  100.0%    $27,470  100.0%
                             =======  ======    =======  ======    =======  ======    =======  ======    =======  ======
</TABLE>


Allowance for potential losses not specifically identified is allocated on a pro
rata basis to all loan categories.

                                       17

<PAGE>
ITEM 1.  BUSINESS (Continued)

DEPOSITS

The  average  daily  amounts of  deposits  and rates paid on such  deposits  are
summarized as follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            Year Ended December 31
                             ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                       1999                          1998                           1997
                             ------------------------      ------------------------       -----------------------
                                 Amount         Rate           Amount         Rate            Amount         Rate
                                 ------         ----           ------         ----            ------         ----
<S>                           <C>              <C>          <C>              <C>           <C>              <C>
Noninterest bearing
     demand deposits         $  283,479         -- %       $  250,755         -- %        $  210,685         -- %

Interest bearing
      demand deposits           218,631        4.19%          123,571        3.27%            75,765        2.30%

Savings deposits                440,047        2.57%          373,495        2.55%           341,777        2.52%

Other time deposits           1,185,014        5.43%        1,251,693        5.81%         1,070,746        5.86%
                             ----------                    ----------                     ----------

     Total                   $2,127,171                    $1,999,514                     $1,698,973
                             ==========                    ==========                     ==========
</TABLE>


The amount of time  certificates  of deposit of  $100,000 or more and other time
deposits of $100,000 or more outstanding at December 31, 1999, by time remaining
until maturity is as follows (in thousands):

              Under 3 months                                   $206,277
              4   -     6 months                                 37,495
              7   -   12 months                                  62,078
              Over 12 months                                     61,673
                                                             ----------
                     Total                                     $367,523
                                                               ========




                                       18

<PAGE>
ITEM 1.  BUSINESS (Continued)

RETURN ON EQUITY AND ASSETS

The ratio of net  income to  average  shareholders'  equity  and  average  total
assets, and certain other ratios, are presented below:

                                                  Year Ended December 31
                                                1999       1998       1997
                                               ------     ------     ------
Percentage of net income to:

Average shareholders' equity                   15.74%     15.30%     14.51%

Average total assets                            1.31%      1.23%      1.21%

Percentage of dividends declared
  per common share to diluted net income
    per common share                           16.83%     17.16%     18.38%

Percentage of average shareholders'
     equity to average total assets             8.29%      8.06%      8.30%




                                       19

<PAGE>
ITEM 1.  BUSINESS (Concluded)

SHORT-TERM BORROWINGS

The following table shows the distribution of 1st Source's short-term borrowings
and the weighted  average  interest rates thereon at the end of each of the last
three years.  Also provided are the maximum amount of borrowings and the average
amount of borrowings in thousands,  as well as weighted  average  interest rates
for the last three years.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         Federal Funds
                                         Purchased and
                                            Security                       Other
                                           Repurchase      Commercial    Short-Term        Total
            1999                           Agreements        Paper       Borrowings      Borrowings
- --------------------------------         --------------    ----------   ------------    -----------
<S>                 <C> <C>                  <C>              <C>          <C>            <C>
Balance at December 31, 1999                 $263,253         $8,635       $137,854       $409,742
Maximum amount outstanding
     at any month-end                         263,253         10,325        142,143        415,721
Average amount outstanding                    191,265          7,846         83,924        283,035
Weighted average interest
     rate during the year                        4.51%          4.95%          7.13%          5.30%
Weighted average interest rate
     for outstanding amounts at
     December 31, 1999                           5.20%          5.35%          5.87%          5.43%


            1998
- --------------------------------
Balance at December 31, 1998                 $159,478         $5,856        $76,825       $242,159
Maximum amount outstanding
     at any month-end                         181,364          6,556        141,030        328,950
Average amount outstanding                    149,794          4,646         88,991        243,431
Weighted average interest
     rate during the year                        4.84%          5.29%          8.48%          6.18%
Weighted average interest rate
     for outstanding amounts at
     December 31, 1998                           4.34%          4.63%          5.33%          4.66%


            1997
- --------------------------------
Balance at December 31, 1997                 $117,987         $3,892       $113,127       $235,006
Maximum amount outstanding
     at any month-end                         217,039          6,641        113,127        336,807
Average amount outstanding                    136,208          5,321         86,228        227,757
Weighted average interest
     rate during the year                        5.12%          5.46%          6.66%          5.71%
Weighted average interest rate
     for outstanding amounts at
     December 31, 1997                           5.00%          5.39%          6.08%          5.53%

</TABLE>

Federal  funds  purchased  and  securities  sold under  agreements to repurchase
generally mature within 1 to 30 days of the transaction  date.  Commercial paper
and other short-term borrowings generally mature within 30 to 180 days.

                                       20

<PAGE>
ITEM 2.  PROPERTIES

1st Source's  headquarters  building is located in downtown South Bend. In 1982,
the land was  leased  from the City of South  Bend on a  49-year  lease,  with a
50-year  renewal option.  The building is part of a larger complex,  including a
300-room hotel and a 500-car  parking  garage.  1st Source sold the building and
entered into a leaseback  agreement  with the  purchaser for a term of 30 years.
The bank building is a structure of approximately  160,000 square feet, with 1st
Source and its subsidiaries occupying  approximately 70% of the available office
space, and approximately 30% presently subleased to unrelated tenants.

1st  Source  also  owns  property  and/or  buildings  on  which  29 of the  bank
subsidiary's  50 banking  offices  are  located,  including  the  facilities  in
Elkhart, LaPorte,  Marshall, Porter, St. Joseph and Starke Counties in the state
of  Indiana,  as well as a parking  facility,  two  buildings  housing  drive-in
banking plazas, a records retention facility,  and a computer operations center.
In  1995,  1st  Source  reacquired  its  former  headquarters  building  through
foreclosure.  It is being refurbished for additional tenants and 1st Source use.
The remaining  properties  utilized by the  subsidiary are leased from unrelated
parties.

ITEM 3.  LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

None.

ITEM 4.  SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS

None.


PART II

ITEM 5.  MARKET FOR REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER  MATTERS

The  information  regarding  common stock prices and dividends on page 18 of the
annual shareholders report for the year ended December 31, 1999, is incorporated
herein by reference. There were 1,146 shareholders of 1st Source Common Stock as
of December 31, 1999.

ITEM 6.  SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

The information under the caption "Selected Consolidated Financial Data" on page
8 of the annual  shareholders  report for the year ended  December 31, 1999,  is
incorporated herein by reference.

ITEM 7.  MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS
              OF OPERATIONS

The  information  under the caption  "Management's  Discussion  and  Analysis of
Financial  Condition  and  Results of  Operations"  on pages 7 through 19 of the
annual shareholders report for the year ended December 31, 1999, is incorporated
herein by reference.

1st Source  cautions  that any  forward  looking  statements  contained  in this
report,  in a report  incorporated  by  reference  into  this  report or made by
management  of 1st Source  involve  risks and  uncertainties  and are subject to
change based on various  factors.  Actual results could differ  materially  from
those expressed or implied.

                                       21

<PAGE>
ITEM 7A. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK

The information  under the caption  "Quantitative  and  Qualitative  Disclosures
about Market Risk" on pages 11 and 12 of the annual  shareholders report for the
year ended December 31, 1999, is incorporated herein by reference.

ITEM 8.  FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

The report of independent  accountants and the consolidated financial statements
of 1st Source and its  subsidiaries  are  included on pages 20 through 41 in the
annual  shareholders  report  for the year  ended  December  31,  1999,  and are
incorporated herein by reference.

ITEM 9.  CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND
              FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

None.


PART  III

ITEM 10. DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT

The information under the caption "Directors and Executive  Officers" on pages 3
through 6 and under the caption  "Section 16(a) Beneficial  Ownership  Reporting
Compliance"  on  page  15 of the  proxy  statement  dated  March  15,  2000,  is
incorporated herein by reference with respect to Directors.

ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

The information under the caption  "Renumeration of Executive Officers" on pages
7 through 14 of the proxy statement dated March 15, 2000, is incorporated herein
by reference.

ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

The  information  under the caption  "Voting  Securities  and Principal  Holders
Thereof" on page 2 and under the caption  "Directors and Executive  Officers" on
pages 3 through 6 of the proxy  statement  dated March 15, 2000, is incorporated
herein by reference.

ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

The  information  on page 6 of the proxy  statement  dated  March 15,  2000,  is
incorporated herein by reference.

                                       22

<PAGE>
PART IV

ITEM 14. EXHIBITS, FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES, AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K

(a) (1) and (2)  -- The  response to this portion of Item 14 is  submitted as a
                    separate section of this report.
    (3)          -- The  response to this portion of Item 14 is  submitted as a
                    separate section of this report.

(b) Reports on Form 8-K -- None filed during the fourth quarter of 1999.

(c) Exhibits     -- The  response to this portion of Item 14 is  submitted as a
                    separate section of this report.

(d) Financial Statement Schedules -- None.

                                       23

<PAGE>
                                   SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the  requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities  Exchange
Act of 1934,  the  Registrant  has duly  caused  this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

1st SOURCE CORPORATION

Registrant

By:  /s/  CHRISTOPHER J. MURPHY III
   --------------------------------
   Christopher J. Murphy III
   Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer

Date:   February 17, 2000
     ------------------------

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report
has been signed below by the following  persons on behalf of the  registrant and
in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

 /s/  CHRISTOPHER J. MURPHY III
- ------------------------------------
Christopher J. Murphy III,             Chairman of the Board, President and
                                       Chief Executive Officer

Date:  February 17, 2000
     ---------------------


 /s/  WELLINGTON D. JONES III
- ------------------------------------
Wellington D. Jones III,               Executive Vice President and a Director

Date:  February 17, 2000
     ---------------------


 /s/  VINCENT A. TAMBURO
- ------------------------------------
Vincent A. Tamburo,                    Secretary and General Counsel

Date:  March 7, 2000
     ---------------------


 /s/  LARRY E. LENTYCH
- ------------------------------------
Larry E. Lentych,                      Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer

Date:  February 17, 2000
     ---------------------


 /s/  E. WILLIAM BEAUCHAMP, C.S.C.
- ------------------------------------
Reverend E. William Beauchamp,         Director

Date:  February 17, 2000
     ---------------------


                                       24

<PAGE>

 /s/  PAUL R. BOWLES
- ------------------------------------
Paul R. Bowles,                        Director

Date:  February 17, 2000
     ---------------------


 /s/  PHILIP J. FACCENDA
- ------------------------------------
Philip J. Faccenda,                    Director

Date:  February 18, 2000
     ---------------------


 /s/  DANIEL B. FITZPATRICK
- ------------------------------------
Daniel B. Fitzpatrick,                 Director

Date:  February 18, 2000
     ---------------------


 /s/  LAWRENCE E. HILER
- ------------------------------------
Lawrence E. Hiler,                     Director

Date:  February 17, 2000
     ---------------------


 /s/  WILLIAM P. JOHNSON
- ------------------------------------
William P. Johnson,                    Director

Date:  February 17, 2000
     ---------------------


 /s/  REX MARTIN
- ------------------------------------
Rex Martin,                            Director

Date:  February 17, 2000
     ---------------------


 /s/  DANE A. MILLER
- ------------------------------------
Dane A. Miller,                        Director

Date:  February 17, 2000
     ---------------------


 /s/  RICHARD J. PFEIL
- ------------------------------------
Richard J. Pfeil,                      Director

Date:  February 17, 2000
     ---------------------


 /s/  TIMOTHY K. OZARK
- ------------------------------------
Timothy K. Ozark,                      Director

Date:  February 17, 2000
     ---------------------



                                       25

<PAGE>
                           ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K

                             ITEM 14(a) (1) and (2)

         LIST OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES

                          YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999

                             1st SOURCE CORPORATION

                              SOUTH BEND, INDIANA

                                      F-1

<PAGE>
FORM 10-K  --  ITEM 14(a)  (1) and (2)

1ST SOURCE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

LIST OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES

The following  report of  independent  accountants  and  consolidated  financial
statements of 1st Source  Corporation and  subsidiaries,  included in the annual
report of the  registrant to its  shareholders  for the year ended  December 31,
1999, are incorporated by reference in Item 8:

         Report of independent accountants

         Consolidated statements of financial condition --
               December 31, 1999 and 1998

         Consolidated statements of income --
               Years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997

         Consolidated statements of shareholders' equity -- Years ended
               December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997

         Consolidated  statements of cash flows -- Years ended December
               31, 1999, 1998 and 1997

         Notes to consolidated financial statements --
               December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997

Financial  statement  schedules  required by Article 9 of Regulation S-X are not
required under the related  instructions,  or are inapplicable  and,  therefore,
have been omitted.

                                      F-2

<PAGE>
                           ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K

                            ITEM 14(a) (3) and 14(c)

                                LIST OF EXHIBITS

                          YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999

                             1st SOURCE CORPORATION

                              SOUTH BEND, INDIANA

                                      E-1

<PAGE>
FORM 10-K  --  Item 14(a)  (3) and 14(c)

1ST SOURCE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

LIST OF EXHIBITS *

3(a)     -- Articles of Incorporation of Registrant,  as amended April 30, 1996,
         and filed as  exhibit  to Form  10-K,  dated  December  31,  1996,  and
         incorporated herein by reference.

3(b)     -- By-Laws of Registrant,  as amended April 16, 1998,  filed as exhibit
         to Form 10-K,  dated  December 31,  1998,  and  incorporated  herein by
         reference.

4(a)     -- Form of Common Stock  Certificates of Registrant filed as exhibit to
         Registration  Statement  2-40481 and incorporated  herein by reference.
         Note:  No  long-term  debt  of  the  Registrant   exceeds  10%  of  the
         consolidated  total assets of the Registrant and its  subsidiaries.  In
         accordance  with paragraph  (4)(iii) of Item 601(b) of Regulation  S-K,
         the  Registrant  will furnish the  Commission  upon  request  copies of
         long-term debt instruments and related agreements.

4(b)(1)  -- Form of 9% Cumulative Trust Preferred  Securities  Indenture,  dated
         March 21, 1997, filed as exhibit to Form 10-K, dated December 31, 1997,
         and incorporated herein by reference.

4(b)(2)  -- Form of 9% Cumulative  Trust Preferred  Securities  Trust Agreement,
         dated March 21, 1997, filed as exhibit to Form 10-K, dated December 31,
         1997, and incorporated herein by reference.

4(b)(3)  --  Form  of  9%  Cumulative  Trust  Preferred   Securities   Guarantee
         Agreement,  dated March 21, 1997,  filed as exhibit to Form 10-K, dated
         December 31, 1997, and incorporated herein by reference.

4(c)(1)  --  Form  of  Floating  Rate  Cumulative  Trust  Preferred   Securities
         Indenture,  dated March 21, 1997,  filed as exhibit to Form 10-K, dated
         December 31, 1997, and incorporated herein by reference.

4(c)(2)  -- Form of Floating Rate Cumulative  Trust Preferred  Securities  Trust
         Agreement,  dated March 21, 1997,  filed as exhibit to Form 10-K, dated
         December 31, 1997, and incorporated herein by reference.

4(c)(3)  --  Form  of  Floating  Rate  Cumulative  Trust  Preferred   Securities
         Guarantee  Agreement,  dated March 21,  1997,  filed as exhibit to Form
         10-K, dated December 31, 1997, and incorporated herein by reference.

10(a)(1) -- Employment  Agreement of  Christopher J. Murphy III, dated April 16,
         1998,  filed as exhibit to Form 10-K,  dated  December  31,  1998,  and
         incorporated herein by reference.

                                      E-2

<PAGE>

10(a)(2) -- Employment  Agreement of  Wellington  D. Jones III,  dated April 16,
         1998,  filed as exhibit to Form 10-K,  dated  December  31,  1998,  and
         incorporated herein by reference.

10(a)(3) -- Employment Agreement of Allen R. Qualey, dated April 16, 1998, filed
         as exhibit to Form 10-K,  dated  December  31, 1998,  and  incorporated
         herein by reference.

10(a)(4) --  Employment  Agreement  of Larry E.  Lentych,  dated April 16, 1998,
         filed  as  exhibit  to  Form  10-K,   dated   December  31,  1998,  and
         incorporated herein by reference.

10(a)(5) --  Employment  Agreement of Richard Q.  Stifel,  dated April 16, 1998,
         filed  as  exhibit  to  Form  10-K,   dated   December  31,  1998,  and
         incorporated herein by reference.

10(b)(1) -- Form of Company's  Employees'  Money Purchase Pension Plan and Trust
         Agreement  dated  January  1,  1989,  and  amendment  to the  Company's
         Employees'  Money Purchase  Pension Plan and Trust dated April 1, 1994,
         filed as exhibit to Form 10-K dated December 31, 1994, and incorporated
         herein by reference.

10(b)(2) -- An amendment to Company's Employees' Money Purchase Pension Plan and
         Trust  Agreement dated July 20, 1999, and filed as exhibit to Form 10-K
         dated December 31, 1999, and attached hereto.

10(c)(1) -- Form of Company's Employees' Profit Sharing Plan and Trust Agreement
         dated January 1, 1989,  amendment to the Company's  Profit Sharing Plan
         and Trust Agreement dated April 1, 1994,  filed as exhibit to Form 10-K
         dated December 31, 1994, and incorporated herein by reference.

10(c)(2) -- An amendment to 1st Source  Corporation  Employees'  Profit  Sharing
         Plan and Trust Agreement dated September 30, 1996, and filed as exhibit
         to Form 10-K,  dated  December 31,  1996,  and  incorporated  herein by
         reference.

10(c)(3) -- An amendment to 1st Source  Corporation  Employees'  Profit  Sharing
         Plan and Trust  Agreement  dated July 20, 1999, and filed as exhibit to
         Form 10-K dated December 31, 1999, and attached hereto.

10(d)    -- 1st Source Corporation  Employee Stock Purchase Plan dated April 17,
         1997,  filed as exhibit to Form 10-K,  dated  December  31,  1997,  and
         incorporated herein by reference.

10(e)    -- 1st Source Corporation 1982 Executive  Incentive Plan, amended April
         19, 1988,  and filed as exhibit to Form 10-K,  dated December 31, 1988,
         and incorporated herein by reference.

10(f)    -- 1st Source  Corporation 1982 Restricted Stock Award Plan, as amended
         February 19, 1997,  filed as exhibit to Form 10-K,  dated  December 31,
         1997, and incorporated herein by reference.

                                      E-3

<PAGE>
10(h)    -- 1st Source  Corporation  Non-Qualified  Stock Option  Agreement with
         Christopher J. Murphy III,  dated January 1, 1992, as amended  December
         11, 1997,  filed as exhibit to Form 10-K,  dated December 31, 1997, and
         incorporated herein by reference.

10(i)    -- 1st Source Corporation 1992 Stock Option Plan, dated April 23, 1992,
         as amended  December  11,  1997,  filed as exhibit to Form 10-K,  dated
         December 31, 1997, and incorporated herein by reference.

10(j)    -- 1st Source  Corporation  1998 Performance  Compensation  Plan, dated
         February 19, 1998,  filed as exhibit to Form 10-K,  dated  December 31,
         1998, and incorporated herein by reference.

10(k)    -- Consulting  Agreement of Ernestine M. Raclin,  dated April 14, 1998,
         filed  as  exhibit  to  Form  10-K,   dated   December  31,  1998,  and
         incorporated herein by reference.

13       --  Portions of Annual  Report to  Security  Holders for the year ended
         December 31, 1999, attached hereto.

21       -- Subsidiaries of Registrant, attached hereto.

23       -- Consent of Independent Accountants, attached hereto.

27       -- Financial Data Schedule, attached hereto.

         *    The exhibits  included  under exhibit 10 constitute all management
              contracts,  compensatory  plans and  arrangements  required  to be
              filed as an  exhibit to this form  pursuant  to Item 14(c) of this
              report.

                                      E-4


<PAGE>
                                                                EXHIBIT 10(b)(2)

                    AMENDMENT TO THE 1ST SOURCE CORPORATION
                EMPLOYEES' MONEY PURCHASE PENSION PLAN AND TRUST
               AS AMENDED AND RESTATED EFFECTIVE JANUARY 1, 1989


     WHEREAS,   1ST  SOURCE  CORPORATION,   (hereinafter   referred  to  as  the
"Sponsoring  Employer") previously adopted the 1st Source Corporation Employees'
Money Purchase Pension Plan and Trust  (hereinafter  referred to as the "Plan");
and

     WHEREAS, the Plan allows for its amendment under Section 12.03 of the Plan;
and

     WHEREAS,  the  Sponsoring  Employer  desires to amend the Plan as indicated
herein.

     NOW,  THEREFORE,  the Employer  hereby amends the Plan  effective as of the
dates indicated as follows:

1.   Effective  January 1, 1998, all references in the Plan  (including  Section
     4.03F and 6.03A) which mention a $3,500 dollar amount in regard to making a
     distribution of  Participants'  Accrued Benefits without the consent of the
     Participant or the Participant's spouse shall be changed to $5,000 (or such
     other  dollar  amount as may be  provided  from time to time under Code 411
     (a)(11)(A)).

2.   Section 4.02B(1) is amended by restating such paragraph as follows:

     4.02B(1)   Commencement  of  Benefits:   Except  as  provided  below,   and
     notwithstanding  anything contained herein to the contrary, any benefits to
     which a  Participant  is entitled  shall be  distributed  or commence to be
     distributed,  no later than the first day of April  following  the calendar
     year in which the later of the following two events occur:

     (a)  Such individual attains age 70-1/2, or

     (b)  If later, date of actual retirement (termination of employment) by the
          Participant. Provided, further, if a Participant who is still employed
          by the  Employer  has  begun  to  receive  his or her  benefits,  such
          Participant if not currently or previously a "five percent (5%) owner"
          (as  defined  in  Section   416(I)  of  the  Code)   while   receiving
          distributions  (and subject to  reasonable  procedures  adopted by the
          Plan  Administrator  from  time to  time)  may  elect  to  discontinue
          distribution until actual retirement (termination of employment).

     Provided,  however,  any five  percent  (5%)  owner (as  defined in Section
     416(I)  of the  Code)  shall  be  required  to  have  his  or her  benefits
     distributed  or commenced to be  distributed no later than the first day of
     April  following  the calendar  year in which such  individual  attains age
     70-1/2  without  regard to the actual date of retirement and without regard
     to anything in this Plan to the contrary.

                                     - 1 -
<PAGE>
     The  distribution  rules contained in this Section 4.02B(1) shall not apply
     to a Participant  who has executed a designation  prior to January 1, 1984,
     in   accordance   with  Section   242(b)  of  the  Tax  Equity  and  Fiscal
     Responsibility Act of 1982.

     All  distributions  hereunder  shall be in  accordance  with  Code  section
     401(a)(9)(C),   as  amended  from  time  to  time,  and  valid  regulations
     thereunder, which are incorporated hereby by this reference.

3.  Effective December 12, 1994, Section 13.07 is added as follows:

13.07 MILITARY SERVICE CREDIT.

     a.   Notwithstanding   any   provision  of  this  Plan  to  the   contrary,
          contributions,  benefits and service  credit with respect to qualified
          military service will be provided in accordance with Section 414(u) of
          the Internal Revenue Code.

     b.   With respect to Participants who have loans  outstanding under Article
          VII hereof who join the military  service,  loan  repayments  for such
          Participants  may be  suspended by the Plan  Administrator  under this
          Plan to the extent  permitted  under  Section  414(u) of the  Internal
          Revenue Code.

4.   Except as hereby  amended,  the Plan as  currently  in  existence is hereby
     reaffirmed in its entirety.  However,  these  amendments shall be effective
     only to the extent that each one is in compliance with the  requirements of
     the Code and ERISA. To the extent that any of the foregoing  amendments are
     determined to cause the Plan not to qualify under  applicable Code or ERISA
     provisions, then any such amendment causing such disqualifications shall be
     considered  void to the extent  necessary to have this Plan  continue to be
     qualified under applicable Code and ERISA requirements.

1ST SOURCE CORPORATION - "Sponsoring Employer"

By:        /s/ Larry E. Lentych
         -------------------------------------

Title:     C.F.O.
         -------------------------------------

Date:      7/20/99
         -------------------------------------


                                     - 2 -

<PAGE>
                                                                EXHIBIT 10(c)(3)

                    AMENDMENT TO THE 1ST SOURCE CORPORATION
                    EMPLOYEES' PROFIT SHARING PLAN AND TRUST
               AS AMENDED AND RESTATED EFFECTIVE JANUARY 1, 1989


     WHEREAS,   1ST  SOURCE  CORPORATION,   (hereinafter   referred  to  as  the
"Sponsoring  Employer") previously adopted the 1st Source Corporation Employees'
Profit Sharing Plan and Trust (hereinafter referred to as the "Plan"); and

     WHEREAS, the Plan allows for its amendment under Section 12.03 of the Plan;
and

     WHEREAS,  the  Sponsoring  Employer  desires to amend the Plan as indicated
herein.

     NOW, THEREFORE, the Sponsoring Employer hereby amends the Plan effective as
of the dates indicated as follows:

1.   Effective  January 1, 1998, all references in the Plan  (including  Section
     6.03A)  which  mention  a  $3,500  dollar  amount  in  regard  to  making a
     distribution of  Participants'  Accrued Benefits without the consent of the
     Participant or the Participant's spouse shall be changed to $5,000 (or such
     other  dollar  amount as may be  provided  from time to time under Code 411
     (a)(11)(A)).

2.   Effective  January 1, 1998,  Section  4.02B(1) is amended by restating such
     paragraph as follows:

     4.02B(1)   Commencement  of  Benefits:   Except  as  provided  below,   and
     notwithstanding  anything contained herein to the contrary, any benefits to
     which a  Participant  is entitled  shall be  distributed  or commence to be
     distributed,  no later than the first day of April  following  the calendar
     year in which the later of the following two events occur:

     (a)  Such individual attains age 70-1/2, or

     (b)  If later, date of actual retirement (termination of employment) by the
          Participant. Provided, further, if a Participant who is still employed
          by the  Employer  has  begun  to  receive  his or her  benefits,  such
          Participant if not currently or previously a "five percent (5%) owner"
          (as  defined  in  Section   416(I)  of  the  Code)   while   receiving
          distributions  (and subject to  reasonable  procedures  adopted by the
          Plan  Administrator  from  time to  time)  may  elect  to  discontinue
          distribution until actual retirement (termination of employment).

     Provided,  however,  any five  percent  (5%)  owner (as  defined in Section
     416(I)  of the  Code)  shall  be  required  to  have  his  or her  benefits
     distributed  or commenced to be  distributed no later than the first day of
     April  following  the calendar  year in which such  individual  attains age
     70-1/2  without  regard to the actual date of retirement and without regard
     to anything in this Plan to the contrary.

                                     - 1 -
<PAGE>
     The  distribution  rules contained in this Section 4.02B(1) shall not apply
     to a Participant  who has executed a designation  prior to January 1, 1984,
     in   accordance   with  Section   242(b)  of  the  Tax  Equity  and  Fiscal
     Responsibility Act of 1982.

     All  distributions  hereunder  shall be in  accordance  with  Code  section
     401(a)(9)(C),   as  amended  from  time  to  time,  and  valid  regulations
     thereunder, which are incorporated hereby by this reference.

3.   Effective December 12, 1994, Section 13.07 is added as follows:

13.07 MILITARY SERVICE CREDIT.

     a.   Notwithstanding   any   provision  of  this  Plan  to  the   contrary,
          contributions,  benefits and service  credit with respect to qualified
          military service will be provided in accordance with Section 414(u) of
          the Internal Revenue Code.

     b.   With respect to Participants who have loans  outstanding under Article
          VII hereof who join the military  service,  loan  repayments  for such
          Participants  may be  suspended by the Plan  Administrator  under this
          Plan to the extent  permitted  under  Section  414(u) of the  Internal
          Revenue Code.

4.   Except as hereby  amended,  the Plan as  currently  in  existence is hereby
     reaffirmed in its entirety.  However,  these  amendments shall be effective
     only to the extent that each one is in compliance with the  requirements of
     the Code and ERISA. To the extent that any of the foregoing  amendments are
     determined to cause the Plan not to qualify under  applicable Code or ERISA
     provisions, then any such amendment causing such disqualifications shall be
     considered  void to the extent  necessary to have this Plan  continue to be
     qualified under applicable Code and ERISA requirements.

1ST SOURCE CORPORATION - "Sponsoring Employer"

By:        /s/ Larry E. Lentych
         -------------------------------------

Title:     C.F.O.
         -------------------------------------

Date:      7/20/99
         -------------------------------------


                                     - 2 -

<PAGE> 1
                                                                      EXHIBIT 13

1999 ANNUAL REPORT

CONTENTS

Corporate Description                               1
1999 in Brief                                       1
Financial Highlights                                2
Letter to Shareholders                              3
Financial Report                                    7
Banking Center Locations                           42
Officers and Directors                             43
Shareholders 'Information                          44


[1ST SOURCE CORPORATION LOGO]

The body of this annual report is printed on recycled paper.


<PAGE> 2
CORPORATE DESCRIPTION

1st  Source  Corporation  is the  largest  locally-owned  financial  institution
headquartered  in  the  Northern   Indiana-Southwestern   Michigan  area.  While
delivering a comprehensive  range of consumer and commercial  banking  services,
1st  Source  has  distinguished  itself  with  innovative  products  and  highly
personalized  services.  1st Source also  competes  for business  nationally  by
offering specialized  financing services for used private aircraft,  automobiles
for leasing and rental agencies, heavy duty trucks, and construction equipment.

The corporation's principal subsidiary,  1st Source Bank, has 50 banking centers
in 12 counties in Indiana and Michigan and 15  locations  nationwide  supporting
its  Specialty  Finance  Group.  1st  Source's   wholly-owned  mortgage  banking
subsidiary,  Trustcorp Mortgage Company, has eight offices in Indiana,  Ohio and
Kentucky.  With a  history  dating  back to  1863,  1st  Source  is proud of its
tradition of providing  superior service to customers while playing a leadership
role in the continued development of the communities in which it serves.

1999 IN BRIEF

1999 net income of $35.8 million was the highest in 1st Source history and 13.7%
higher  than the $31.5  million  earned in 1998.  Diluted  net income per common
share for 1999 was $1.86, up 14.8% from the $1.62 for 1998.

Return on average total assets was 1.31% compared to 1.23% a year ago. Return on
average  common  equity was 15.74% for 1999  compared  to 15.30 % for 1998.  The
average common  equity-to-assets ratio for 1999 was 8.29% compared to 8.06% last
year.

At year-end 1999, total assets were $2.87 billion,  up 5.1% from a year earlier.
Loans were up 9.6%,  deposits were down 2.3% and shareholders'  equity increased
from $216.8 million at the end of 1998 to $238.8 million at the end of 1999.

The reserve for loan losses at  year-end  1999 was 1.95% of total  loans,  while
nonperforming assets amounted to 0.74% of total loans.


                            NET INCOME (In Millions)
                                     [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                   95        96       97       98       99
                 <S>       <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>
                 (21.0)    (23.2)   (26.5)   (31.5)   (35.8)
</TABLE>

                       DILUTED NET INCOME PRE COMMON SHARE
                                     [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                   95        96       97       98       99
                 <S>       <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>
                 (1.08)    (1.20)   (1.36)   (1.62)   (1.86)
</TABLE>

                 RETURN ON AVERAGE COMMON EQUITY (As a Percent)
                                     [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                    95        96        97        98        99
                 <S>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
                 (14.75)   (14.38)   (14.51)   (15.30)   (15.74)
</TABLE>

                  RETURN ON AVERAGE TOTAL ASSETS (As a Percent)
                                     [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                   95        96       97       98       99
                 <S>       <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>
                 (1.25)    (1.22)   (1.21)   (1.23)   (1.31)
</TABLE>



                                    (page 1)
<PAGE> 3
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

EARNINGS AND DIVIDENDS
(Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      1999          1998          1997          1996          1995
                                      ----          ----          ----          ----          ----
<S>                               <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
Operating income ..............   $  263,689    $  248,404    $  208,972    $  174,299    $  154,607
Operating expense .............      207,191       196,883       166,353       138,700       122,564
Net income ....................       35,768        31,457        26,489        23,203        21,042
Cash dividends ................        5,922         5,296         4,723         4,123         3,594
Per Common Share *
   Diluted net income .........   $     1.86    $     1.62    $     1.36    $     1.20    $     1.08
   Cash dividends .............         .313          .278          .250          .218          .189
   Book value .................        12.64         11.48         10.24          9.11          8.10
Return on average common equity        15.74%        15.30%        14.51%        14.38%        14.75%
Return on average total assets          1.31%         1.23%         1.21%         1.22%         1.25%

Statement of Condition
Average Balances:
   Assets .....................   $2,740,044    $2,550,925    $2,198,300    $1,895,214    $1,686,560
   Earning assets .............    2,478,182     2,344,555     2,046,637     1,767,055     1,569,703
   Loans ......................    1,949,172     1,853,537     1,610,889     1,348,089     1,172,438
   Reserve for loan losses ....       39,105        38,050        31,966        28,482        26,081
   Investment securities ......      510,656       445,310       424,086       400,209       373,976
   Deposits ...................    2,127,171     1,999,514     1,698,973     1,524,149     1,354,453
   Shareholders' equity .......      227,194       205,601       182,543       161,324       142,667
</TABLE>

*The computation of per common share data gives retroactive recognition to a 10%
stock dividend  declared January 14,1999;  a 10% stock dividend declared January
20,1998;  a five-for-four  stock split declared January 21, 1997; and a 5% stock
dividend declared January 22,1996.

                         [1ST SOURCE CORPORATION LOGO]

                                    (Page 2)
<PAGE> 4
TO OUR SHAREHOLDERS:

Shortly after midnight on January 1, 2000, I was standing at a 1st Source ATM in
our South Bend downtown  banking  facility ready to test the machine in front of
the local television and print news media. Cameras were rolling as I inserted my
card with  confidence  (my colleagues had called earlier to be sure I remembered
my PIN number!).  The  transaction  went  flawlessly and $20 slid neatly into my
hands.  1st Source was indeed Y2K  compliant,  and, as we had told our customers
for many months,  their money was safe, secure, and protected.  Y2K had come and
gone without a hitch.

As one commentator said, "Y2K was a nonevent." Yes, it was, but only because all
of 1st Source 's operations  and systems  personnel  worked very hard to make it
so, along with the rest of the banking industry and the utility companies.

GROWTH

Our Y2K efforts typified our 1999  performance as well. In a word,  "Excellent!"
The Company had its fourteenth consecutive year of record earnings, because many
good  people -- my  colleagues  throughout  1st  Source -- were  personally  and
professionally focused on serving our customers one at a time. The $35.8 million
earned  for 1999 was up 13.7%  from the  $31.5  million  earned  in 1998.  These
earnings were driven by increases in all our major loan  categories:  commercial
and  agricultural  lending,  consumer and mortgage  lending,  and our  specialty
finance businesses consisting of lending services for aircraft, auto, truck, and
construction machinery.


                                    [PHOTO]
                           Christopher J. Murphy III
                Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

                                    (page 3)
<PAGE> 5
Earnings  were  also  driven by  increased  fees in asset  management,  mortgage
banking, securitization, insurance, and deposits.

We were blessed with the  continuation of a strong national  economy and growing
local communities. This has enabled us to forge ahead with our five-year "Vision
2000 "plan,  now in its fourth year.  In pursuit of that plan,  our efforts have
focused on aggressively  growing our businesses.  In Asset Management,  we added
two new offices -- in Warsaw and Elkhart -- to serve trust and asset  management
customers  with on-site full  service.  Our strategy has been to provide  strong
asset management,  highly personal and responsive  service,  and local access to
investment  managers.  By doing so, we  achieved  the largest  asset  management
growth in our history,  as more than $200 million of new customers'  assets were
transferred  to us.  Furthermore,  the  quality  of our  investment  performance
improved  substantially.  In fact,  our  investment  management  staff  received
national recognition for the management of our income equity fund in 1999.

Our national  specialty  finance  businesses  continued to grow. We expanded the
sales force devoted to financing rental car companies and construction equipment
by adding people in Fort Lauderdale, Nashville, Dallas, Phoenix, and South Bend.
We  installed  a new  lease  accounting  and  financial  system to  improve  our
productivity and control in the management of our growing lease  portfolios.  We
also  continued to create loans and fund them in the  national  capital  markets
through a  securitization  program.  This program  allows our specialty  finance
businesses to grow without having to rely solely on deposits.

Five years ago, we decided that 1st Source  needed to grow its consumer loan and
deposit  businesses  across a wider  geographic  area.  At that time,  we had 33
banking  centers  -- all in  Indiana.  To grow  our  deposit  base  and to serve
customers  throughout the South  Bend-Elkhart  television  market, we launched a
project we called "Quantum  Leap." Last year, we added two new branches  (Niles,
Michigan and Warsaw,  Indiana),  which  brought our total to 50 banking  centers
spread over twelve counties in two states.

As part of our long term  strategy,  1st Source had entered the on-line  banking
market.  In 1999, we intensified our Internet  presence by expanding our on-line
Certificate of Deposit (CD) program and by offering an improved checking account
and bill  paying  services.  To ensure  better  customer  ease of use in on-line
banking,  we selected a new vendor to provide the system and software support to
this important  growth and service  opportunity.  We will continue to expand and
improve our Internet offerings,  making them increasingly attractive to both new
and existing customers.

People  recognized  and  rewarded  our  efforts in 1999 by choosing to make "the
Smart Switch" to 1st Source and by becoming our customers.  Similarly, the State
of Indiana  recognized  1st Source by awarding  us the State of Indiana  Quality
Award for outstanding efforts to improve customer service. The Federal Home Loan
Bank also  honored  1st  Source  this past year for our  support  of  affordable
housing and neighborhood rejuvenation,  including our efforts to provide funding
for the expansion of a residential  center for the homeless.  They  presented us
with their 1999 President's  Community  Support Award. At the close of the year,
the Small Business Administration designated us as a Preferred Lender due to the
number and quality of the small  business  loans  originated by 1st Source Bank.
This designation allows us to directly  underwrite small business loans with the
SBA.

Our  training  efforts in 1999 were focused  primarily on building  relationship
management  capabilities  which  allow us to  develop  true  relationships  with
customers by using dialogue, information gathering,

                                    (Page 4)
<PAGE> 6
listening,  analysis,  advising,  caring and action. It's a very proactive, team
oriented approach to banking.  Our Business Banking Group introduced a Certified
Relationship  Manager  training  course  with  classroom  exercises,   extensive
homework and formal testing.  By the close of the year, fifteen business bankers
had become  Certified  Relationship  Managers.  They had completed the requisite
number and quality of  customer  profiles,  embraced  the  planning  process and
demonstrated a capability to serve the customer proactively.

Similarly,  profiling and planning occurred  throughout the branches as customer
service representatives  learned and began to apply the process.  Templates have
been developed  defining service in demonstrable ways for our colleagues and are
being  written  into the customer  calling and  management  process.  The entire
organization is ready to embrace and master Relationship  Management.  It is the
cornerstone  of our  Vision  2000 Plan and we  believe  it is  essential  to our
long-term success.

                                    [PHOTO]
                        1st Source Bank Policy Committee
         Seated, from left to right: Richard Q. Stifel, Allen R. Qualey,
                       Larry A. Gardner and Dan L. Craft.
   Standing, from left to right: Wellington D. Jones III, Steven J. Wessell,
        James S. Jackson, Christopher J. Murphy, III, Maggie M. Kernan,
                    Larry E. Lentych and Vincent A. Tamburo.


                                    (Page 5)
<PAGE> 7
Rather  than go into a detailed  explanation  of the  numbers or a review of the
financials,  I invite you to read Management's Discussion and Analysis beginning
on page 7. There, Larry Lentych, our Chief Financial Officer, Tom Flournoy,  our
Controller,  and their  colleagues  in our finance  and  accounting  area,  have
explained our performance in detail.

COMMUNITY LEADERSHIP

Superior  leadership  . . .  strong  commitment  of time and  energy . . . and a
passion for helping people -- these are the qualities that distinguish the first
winners of the Ernestine M. Raclin  Community  Leadership Award presented by 1st
Source Bank.  Five 1st Source  employees  and four  employees  of locally  owned
businesses  were  awarded the Bank's  highest  honor for  outstanding  volunteer
contributions  to our community.  Each winner  received a $1,000 award, a $1,000
donation to the charity of their choice,  and a Globe of  Leadership  signifying
their  accomplishments.  Our winners gave of their time and talents in a variety
of creative undertakings.

One such program was "Where Have My Eyebrows  Gone" which  provides  support for
cancer  patients.  Other winners helped  rehabilitate  homes for the elderly and
disabled,  restored  hope to  inner-city  neighborhoods,  aided the mentally and
physically challenged,  and even established a county emergency medical response
team.  Their  accomplishments  are  truly  remarkable,  when you  consider  that
volunteerism must be mixed well with family and profession.

As we close the year, I want to thank two directors retiring from our Boards who
have given us many years of advice and service.  Anne Hillman, a quiet leader in
our community who has been involved in everything from the Historical Society to
Junior  League and the South  Bend  Symphony.  She and her family  have built an
important  business  in our  community  and are now  passing  it unto the  third
generation. As a family business person, a community activist, woman and mother,
she has brought wise counsel and  perspective to the 1st Source Bank Board.  She
joined  the  Board in 1972,  and we thank  her for her many  years of  dedicated
service.

Philip Faccenda has served on the Bank Board,  the Holding Company Board and the
Executive  Committee since 1972. He has been involved in our strategic direction
and corporate  structure for all the years he has served on the Board.  He has a
quiet and strong  presence and has assisted us in many roles.  We will always be
indebted to him for the role he has played in the success of 1st Source.

In closing, let me thank and acknowledge all the men and women at 1st Source who
make this such a special place.  All of them gave up their vacations in December
and  January  to  assure  our  customers  of the  Bank's  readiness  for the Y2K
millennium change. They did so willingly knowing that our customers needed them.
This is the kind of dedication that builds successful companies. To all of them,
"thank you."

Lastly,  our collective  thanks go to our  shareholders for their support of our
efforts.

/s/  Christopher J. Murphy
Christopher J. Murphy III
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

                                    (page 6)
<PAGE> 8
Management's  Discussion  and  Analysis of  Financial  Condition  and Results of
Operations

ABOUT OUR BUSINESS

1st Source  Corporation (1st Source) is an  Indiana-based,  bank holding company
with $2.87  billion in total  assets,  $2.13  billion in total  deposits,  $2.06
billion in total loans, and $238.8 million in total  shareholders'  equity.  1st
Source's  principal  subsidiary is 1st Source Bank with its main office in South
Bend, Indiana.  The assets of the bank account for 97% of the total consolidated
assets of 1st Source.

The bank offers a broad range of commercial banking,  personal banking and trust
services.  As part of its commercial banking services,  1st Source also provides
highly  specialized  financing  services for automobile fleets in the rental and
leasing industries; privately owned aircraft used by businesses and individuals;
and heavy duty trucks and construction equipment.

This section of the Annual Report  provides a narrative  discussion and analysis
of 1st Source's financial condition and results of operations for the last three
years. All tables,  graphs,  financial  statements and notes to the consolidated
financial statements should be considered an integral part of this analysis.

Except for historical  information  contained  herein,  the matters discussed in
this document,  and other information contained in 1st Source's SEC filings, may
express  "forward-looking  statements."  Those  statements  may involve risk and
uncertainties,  including statements  concerning future events,  performance and
assumptions  and other  statements  that are other than statements of historical
facts.  1st  Source  cautions  readers  not  to  place  undue  reliance  on  any
forward-looking  statements,  which speak only as of the date made.  Readers are
advised that various factors -- including,  but not limited to, changes in laws,
regulations  or  generally   accepted   accounting   principles;   1st  Source's
competitive position within its markets served;  increasing consolidation within
the  banking  industry;  customers  and  vendors'  critical  systems or services
failing to comply with ongoing Year 2000 programming issues;  unforeseen changes
in  interest  rates;  unforeseen  downturns  in the local,  regional or national
economies -- could cause 1st Source's actual results or circumstances for future
periods to differ materially from those anticipated or projected.

                          AVERAGE ASSETS (In Millions)
                                    [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                    95        96        97        98        99
                 <S>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
                 (1,687)   (1,895)   (2,198)   (2,551)   (2,740)
</TABLE>

                         AVERAGE DEPOSITS (In Millions)
                                    [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                    95        96        97        98        99
                 <S>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
                 (1,354)   (1,524)   (1,699)   (2,000)   (2,127)
</TABLE>

                          AVERAGE LOANS (In Millions)
                                    [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                    95        96        97        98        99
                 <S>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
                 (1,172)   (1,348)   (1,611)   (1,854)   (1,949)
</TABLE>

                   AVERAGE SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (In Millions)
                                    [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                    95        96        97        98        99
                  <S>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
                  (127)     (143)     (161)     (183)     (206)
</TABLE>
                                    (page 7)

<PAGE> 9
SELECTED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL DATA
(Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                   1999          1998          1997          1996          1995
                                                   ----          ----          ----          ----          ----
<S>                                            <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
Interest income ............................   $  200,429    $  196,148    $  173,316    $  148,820    $  135,115
Interest expense ...........................      100,726       102,227        87,324        73,429        64,946
Net interest income ........................       99,703        93,921        85,992        75,391        70,169
Provision for loan losses ..................        7,442         9,156         6,052         4,649         2,757
Net interest income after
   provision for loan losses ...............       92,261        84,765        79,940        70,742        67,412
Noninterest income .........................       63,260        52,256        35,656        25,479        19,492
Noninterest expense ........................       99,023        85,500        72,977        60,622        54,861
Income before income taxes .................       56,498        51,521        42,619        35,599        32,043
Income taxes ...............................       18,471        17,843        14,392        12,396        11,001
Distribution on preferred securities of
subsidiary trusts, net of income tax benefit        2,259         2,221         1,738            --            --
Net income .................................   $   35,768    $   31,457    $   26,489    $   23,203    $   21,042

Assets .....................................   $2,872,945    $2,733,592    $2,418,154    $2,079,767    $1,799,257
Long-term debt .............................       12,174        13,189        16,656        18,596        21,819
Shareholders' equity .......................      238,820       216,793       194,953       171,833       152,601
Basic net income per common share* .........         1.89          1.66          1.40          1.23          1.11
Diluted net income per common share* .......         1.86          1.62          1.36          1.20          1.08
Cash dividends per common share* ...........         .313          .278          .250          .218          .189
Return on average common equity ............        15.74%        15.30%        14.51%        14.38%        14.75%
Return on average total assets .............         1.31%         1.23%         1.21%         1.22%         1.25%
</TABLE>

*The computation of per common share data gives retroactive recognition to a 10%
stock dividend  declared January 14, 1999; a 10% stock dividend declared January
20, 1998; a five-for-four  stock split declared January 21, 1997; and a 5% stock
dividend declared January 22, 1996.

                                    (page 8)
<PAGE> 10
1st Source Corporation and Subsidiaries

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

Net income in 1999 was $35.8  million,  up from $31.5  million in 1998 and $26.5
million in 1997. Diluted net income per common share was $1.86 in 1999, $1.62 in
1998 and $1.36 in 1997 after giving retroactive  recognition to stock splits and
stock dividends.

Return on average total assets was 1.31% in 1999,  compared to 1.23% in 1998 and
1.21% in 1997.  Return on average common equity was 15.74% in 1999 versus 15.30%
in 1998 and 14.51% in 1997.

Net income in 1999 was favorably  affected by strong  noninterest income growth.
By leveraging internal  resources,  1st Source has been successful in generating
additional  noninterest income as a way to mitigate the competitive pressures on
the interest margin.  Offsetting the increase in noninterest income were expense
increases in salaries, leased equipment depreciation and other expense.

Dividends declared on common stock in 1999 amounted to $.313 per share, compared
to $.278  in 1998  and  $.250 in 1997.  The  level of  earnings  reinvested  and
dividend  payouts  are  based  on  management's   assessment  of  future  growth
opportunities and the level of capital necessary to support them.

The quarterly  results of operations  for the years ended  December 31, 1999 and
1998 are summarized below.

QUARTERLY RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
(Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      Three Months Ended
                                       March 31    June 30    September 30  December 31
                                       --------    -------    ------------  -----------
<S>                                    <C>          <C>          <C>         <C>
1999
Interest income ....................   $ 47,898     $ 49,872     $ 50,598    $ 52,061
Net interest income ................     23,579       24,783       25,626      25,715
Provision for loan losses ..........      1,293        1,443        2,232       2,474
Investment securities and other
      investment gains (losses) ....        (77)        (400)          --         630
Income before income taxes and
      subsidiary trust distributions     13,927       12,754       14,057      15,760
Net income .........................      8,528        7,874        8,613      10,753
Diluted net income per common share         .44          .41          .45         .56

1998
Interest income ....................   $ 47,892     $ 49,318     $ 49,355    $ 49,583
Net interest income ................     23,244       23,611       23,512      23,554
Provision for loan losses ..........      2,401        2,689        2,042       2,024
Investment securities and other
    investment gains (losses) ......       (122)        (584)          --          94
Income before income taxes and
    subsidiary trust distributions .     11,651       12,211       13,931      13,728
Net income .........................      7,160        7,342        8,336       8,619
Diluted net income per common share         .36          .38          .43         .45
</TABLE>


                                    (Page 9)
<PAGE> 11
BALANCE SHEET COMPOSITION AND MANAGEMENT

Changes in interest  income and interest  expense are affected by the allocation
of funds throughout the Statement of Financial Condition. The following sections
discuss the sources from which 1st Source  obtains funds and the manner in which
management has chosen to invest these funds.

SOURCES OF FUNDS

CORE DEPOSITS -- 1st Source's  major source of  investable  funds is provided by
stable core deposits consisting of all interest bearing and non-interest bearing
deposits, excluding brokered certificates of deposit and certain certificates of
deposit of $100,000 and over. In 1999,  average core deposits  equaled 65.47% of
average  total  assets,  compared  to  62.49% in 1998 and  63.36%  in 1997.  The
effective  cost rate of core  deposits  in 1999 was 3.74%,  compared to 3.94% in
1998 and 3.97% in 1997.

Average demand deposits (non-interest bearing core deposits) increased 13.05% in
1999,  compared  to an increase of 19.02% in 1998.  They  represented  15.80% of
total core deposits in 1999 compared to 15.73% in 1998 and 15.13% in 1997.

PURCHASED  FUNDS -- 1st Source's  purchased  funds are used to  supplement  core
deposits  and include  certain  certificates  of deposit of  $100,000  and over,
brokered  certificates  of  deposit,   federal  funds,   securities  sold  under
agreements to  repurchase,  commercial  paper and other  short-term  borrowings.
Purchased funds are raised from customers seeking short-term investments and are
used to balance the bank's interest rate sensitivity.  During 1999, 1st Source's
reliance on purchased  funds  decreased  to 22.49% of average  total assets from
25.43% in 1998.

LOAN  SECURITIZATIONS -- 1st Source sells many of the aircraft and auto loans it
originates  through  the  issuance  of  securities  backed  by  those  loans  in
securitization transactions. In a securitization, 1st Source sells and transfers
pools of loans to a qualified special-purpose entity. The special-purpose entity
simultaneously  sells and transfers its total  interest in the loans to a trust,
which issues  beneficial  interests in the loans in the form of securities which
are sold through private  placement  transactions.  The  special-purpose  entity
generally  retains the right to receive any excess cash flows of the trust.  1st
Source sold $276  million of loans in 1999 and $346  million of loans in 1998 in
conjunction  with  aircraft  and  auto  loan  securitization  transactions,  and
revolving agreements related to all current and previous years' securitizations.

SHAREHOLDERS'  EQUITY --  Management  continues  to emphasize  profitable  asset
growth and retention of equity in the  business.  Average  shareholders'  equity
equates  to 8.29% of average  total  assets in 1999  compared  to 8.06% in 1998.
Shareholders'  equity was 8.31% of total  assets at year-end  1999,  compared to
7.93% at year-end 1998.

INVESTMENT OF FUNDS

INVESTMENT  SECURITIES -- Investment securities at year-end 1999 increased 1.40%
from 1998,  following a 30.08% increase from year-end 1997 to year-end 1998. The
increase in 1998 was attributed to deposit growth.

LOANS -- Average  loans,  net of  unearned  discount,  increased  5.16% in 1999,
following  a 15.06%  increase  in 1998.  Loans,  net of  unearned  discount,  at
December 31, 1999, were $2.06 billion and were 71.81% of total assets,  compared
to $1.88 billion or 68.84% of total assets at December 31, 1998.

Commercial and  agricultural  lending  outstandings,  excluding those secured by
real estate,  increased  10.50% during 1999. 1st Source  continues to experience
success in its market as customers seek professional personal service with local
decision-making authority.

Commercial  loans  secured  by  transportation  and  construction  equipment  at
year-end 1999 increased  22.44% from year-end 1998. The increase in 1999 was the
result of further  expansion of our customer base and increased  penetration  in
all of our niche

                                   (Page 10)
<PAGE> 12
MATURITIES OF INVESTMENT SECURITIES AT DECEMBER 31, 1999
(Dollars in thousands)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                      U.S. Treasury        States and Political
                       and Agencies            Subdivisions          Other Securities               Total
                     ---------------         ---------------         ----------------         ----------------
                     Amount    Yield         Amount    Yield         Amount     Yield         Amount     Yield
                     ------    -----         ------    -----         ------     -----         ------     -----
<S>                 <C>        <C>          <C>        <C>          <C>         <C>          <C>          <C>
0 - 1  Year         $89,949    5.33%        $12,177    6.30%        $30,445     6.29%        $132,571     5.64%
1 - 5  Years        162,112    5.62         110,530    6.56          22,277     5.86          294,919     5.99
5 - 10  Years        12,474    6.08          30,303    7.77             223     5.41           43,000     7.28
Over 10  Years       17,778    6.39           8,115    6.63          50,847     6.37           76,740     6.40
Total              $282,313    5.60%       $161,125    6.77%       $103,792     6.23%        $547,230     6.06%
</TABLE>
Weighted  average  yields  on  tax-exempt  obligations  have  been  computed  by
adjusting  tax-exempt income to a fully taxable equivalent basis,  excluding the
effect of the tax preference interest expense adjustment.


markets:  construction  equipment,  auto fleet  rental and  leasing  franchises,
aircraft and heavy duty truck  financings.  Also,  fewer loans were sold in 1999
through loan  securitizations.  In 1999, loans originated net of loans sold were
$781  million  compared  to $633  million in 1998,  equating  to an  increase of
23.43%.

Real  estate  loans  decreased  6.26%  during  1999.  This  decrease  was due to
residential  mortgage  loans  held  for sale  decreasing  55.86%,  offset  by an
increase of 16.69% in commercial  real estate  lending and an increase of 13.12%
in portfolio  residential  mortgage loans. The decrease in residential  mortgage
loans held for sale is attributed to less refinancing activity occurring in 1999
due to a higher interest rate environment.

Consumer  loans grew 12.37% in 1999.  This  growth is  attributed  to  increased
consumer  lending at the new retail banking centers as well as slower payoffs of
consumer loans during 1999 due to rising interest rates.

LIQUIDITY RISK MANAGEMENT -- The Asset/Liability management process incorporates
overall bank liquidity and interest rate  sensitivity.  The purpose of liquidity
management  is to match the  sources and uses of funds to  anticipated  customer
deposits,  withdrawals and borrowing requirements, as well as to provide for the
cash flow needs of 1st Source. The primary source of liquidity is the investment
portfolio.  At December 31, 1999,  securities  maturing in one year  amounted to
$132.6 million which represented 24.23% of the investment  portfolio as compared
to  27.34%  at  year-end  1998.  Other  alternative  sources  of funds  are loan
repayments  and loan  securitizations.  The  liquidity  of 1st Source is further
enhanced by a significant  concentration of core deposits and  $100,000-and-over
certificates of deposit. Both provide a relatively stable funding base.

INTEREST RATE RISK MANAGEMENT -- The Asset/Liability Management Committee of 1st
Source  monitors  and manages  the  relationship  of earning  assets to interest
bearing liabilities and the responsiveness of asset yields, interest expense and
interest  margins to changes in market  interest  rates. In the normal course of
business,  1st Source faces ongoing interest rate risks and  uncertainties.  1st
Source occasionally utilizes interest rate swaps to partially manage the primary
market  exposures  associated  with the interest rate risk related to underlying
assets,  liabilities,  and anticipated transactions.  Under the current interest
rate swaps,  1st Source entered into  agreements with another party to exchange,
at specific  intervals,  the difference  between  fixed-rate  and  floating-rate
interest amounts as calculated by reference to a notional amount as

                                   (page 11)
<PAGE> 13
a means to convert  floating  rate loans to a fixed rate.  The notional  amounts
total  $49.6  million at  December  31,  1999.  The  current  positions  are not
leveraged and are not held for trading.

A  hypothetical  change in earnings was modeled by  calculating an immediate 100
basis  point  (1.00%)  change in  interest  rates  across all  maturities.  This
analysis  presents the  hypothetical  change in earnings of those rate sensitive
financial  instruments  and  interest  rate swaps held by 1st Source  (excluding
Trustcorp Mortgage) at December 31, 1999. The aggregate hypothetical decrease in
pre-tax  earnings is estimated to be $1.39 million on an annualized basis on all
rate  sensitive  financial  instruments  and the interest  rate swaps based on a
hypothetical  increase  of a 100 basis  point  change  in  interest  rates.  The
aggregate  hypothetical  increase in pre-tax  earnings is  estimated to be $8.14
million on an annualized basis on all rate sensitive  financial  instruments and
the interest  rate swaps based on a  hypothetical  decrease of a 100 basis point
change in  interest  rates.  Actual  results  may differ  materially  from those
projected.  The use of this  methodology  to  quantify  the  market  risk of the
balance sheet should not be construed as an  endorsement  of its accuracy or the
accuracy of the related assumptions.

Due to the nature of the  mortgage  banking  business,  1st Source  manages  the
earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities of Trustcorp Mortgage Company on
a separate  basis.  The  predominant  assets on  Trustcorp's  balance  sheet are
mortgage  loans  held for  sale,  which  are  funded  by  short-term  borrowings
(normally less than 30 days) from  non-affiliated  banks.  These  borrowings are
managed on a daily basis.  Trustcorp's  other borrowings for working capital and
purchases  of  servicing  assets  are  funded  by  1st  Source  Corporation  and
non-affiliated banks.

Trustcorp manages the interest rate risk related to loan commitments by entering
into  contracts  for  future  delivery  of  loans.  (See  Note  M  of  Notes  to
Consolidated Financial Statements.)

                COMPOSITION OF AVERAGE ASSETS (In millions)
                                   [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        95          96          97          98          99
<S>                                  <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
Loans (net of unearned
 discount and loss reserve)          1,146.3     1,323.6     1,578.9     1,815.5     1,910.1
Investments                            396.2       411.9       434.1       489.3       527.3
Other earning assets                     1.4        12.3        25.0        47.4        64.8
Other assets                           142.7       147.4       160.3       198.7       237.8
Total                                1,686.6     1,895.2     2,198.3     2,550.9     2,740.0
</TABLE>

                      COMPOSITION OF AVERAGE LIABILITIES
                    AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (In millions)
                                    [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        95          96          97          98          99
<S>                                  <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
Noninterest bearing deposits           173.2       186.8       210.7       250.8       283.5
Interest bearing core deposits       1,034.3     1,108.0     1,182.2     1,343.3     1,510.5
Purchased funds & long-term debt       305.7       405.2       585.3       706.6       673.4
Other liabilities                       30.7        33.9        37.6        44.6        45.4
Shareholders' equity                   142.7       161.3       182.5       205.6       227.2
Total                                1,686.6     1,895.2     2,198.3     2,550.9     2,740.0
</TABLE>


                                   (page 12)
<PAGE> 14
EARNING RESULTS

Net interest income,  the difference  between income from earning assets and the
interest  cost of  funding  those  assets,  is 1st  Source's  primary  source of
earnings.  Net interest income, on a fully taxable  equivalent basis,  increased
5.96% in 1999, following an 8.74% increase in 1998.

Net interest margin, the ratio of net interest income to average earning assets,
is affected  by  movements  in interest  rates and changes in the mix of earning
assets and the  liabilities  that fund those  assets.  Net interest  margin on a
fully taxable  equivalent  basis was 4.17% in 1999 compared to 4.16% in 1998 and
4.38% in 1997.  The interest  margin  leveled out in 1999 after  decreasing  the
previous year due to competitive pricing pressures.

The yield on  earning  assets in 1999 was 8.23%,  compared  to 8.52% in 1998 and
8.65% in 1997.  Average  earning  assets in 1999  increased  5.70%,  following a
14.56% increase in 1998. The effective rate on interest bearing  liabilities was
4.71% in 1999,  compared to 5.10% for 1998 and 5.04% for 1997. Compared to 1998,
interest  rates  were  predominantly  down as  reflected  in the lower  yield on
earning  assets and the  effective  rate on  interest  bearing  liabilities.  As
evidenced by only a slightly  higher  interest  margin in 1999,  the above rates
changed in correlation to each other.

NONINTEREST  INCOME --  Supplementing  the growth in net interest  income was an
increase in noninterest income of 21.06% over 1998. The factors  influencing the
growth were increased aircraft and auto loan securitization and servicing income
and  revenues  generated  from  operating  leases.  Noninterest  income  in 1998
increased  46.56%  over 1997  primarily  for the same  reasons as in the current
year.  In  addition,  the  increase in 1998  reflected  greater  fees related to
mortgage origination, which tapered off in 1999.

Trust fees in 1999 were $8.95  million,  compared  to $8.26  million in 1998 and
$7.31 million in 1997.  Trust fees increased 8.44% in 1999,  following an 12.92%
increase in 1998.

Service  charges on deposit  accounts  increased  by 18.00%  resulting  in $6.90
million of income for 1999.  The $5.84 million  recorded in 1998 was an increase
of 8.64% from the $5.38 million of service charges on deposit accounts generated
in 1997.

Loan  servicing and sale income  generated  from 1st Source's  aircraft and auto
loan  securitization and mortgage banking activities  increased 22.95% to $19.49
million in 1999.  The  $15.85  million  recorded  in 1998  represented  a 64.51%
increase over 1997.

1st Source  recognized loan  securitization  gains of $6.70 million during 1999,
compared  to  $1.98  million   during  1998.   Other   aircraft  and  auto  loan
securitization  income,  including  servicing income, in 1999 was $5.37 million,
compared  to $7.32  million in 1998.  The  outstanding  servicing  portfolio  of
aircraft and auto loans grew to $344 million at year-end 1999,  compared to $321
million at the end of 1998.

Gains of $5.07 million were  recognized on the  origination and sale of mortgage
loans and  servicing  in 1999,  compared to gains of $4.86  million in 1998.  In
addition,  net servicing fees on mortgages  increased to $2.34 million for 1999,
from $1.69 million for 1998. As of year-end 1999,  Trustcorp  Mortgage Company's
mortgage  servicing  portfolio  aggregates  $2.21 billion,  as compared to $1.87
billion one year ago.

Equipment  rental income  generated  from operating  leases  increased to $17.41
million in 1999, a 38.62%  increase over 1998.  The $12.56  million  recorded in
1998 was an 80.68%  increase  over  1997.  Revenues  from  operating  leases for
construction  equipment,  automobiles  and  other  equipment,  and  the  related
depreciation  on the  equipment,  have increased  significantly  in the past few
years as 1st Source has focused on increasing this line of business.

Other  income was flat  during  1999,  experiencing  an  increase of only 0.02%,
following  an  increase  of 51.42%  in 1998.  The  growth in 1998 was  generated
primarily by an increase in mortgage loan fees as homeowners  took  advantage of
lower interest rates to refinance their mortgages.  In addition,  increases were
realized  in  insurance   commissions,   standby   letter  of  credit  fees  and
appreciation in the cash surrender value of bank-owned life insurance (BOLI).

The 1999 net gains and 1998 net losses  recorded for  investment  securities and
other  are  the  result  of  disposals  and   adjustments  on  venture   capital
investments.

                                   (page 13)
<PAGE> 15
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
SELECTED STATISTICAL INFORMATION
Distribution of Assets, Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity
Interest Rates and Interest Differential
(Dollars in Thousands)

Year ended December 31,                     1999                               1998                               1997
                              ----------------------------------   --------------------------------   ------------------------------
                                              Interest                           Interest                           Interest
                                   Average    Income/   Yield/        Average    Income/   Yield/        Average    Income/   Yield/
                                   Balance    Expense   Rate          Balance    Expense   Rate          Balance    Expense   Rate
                              ----------------------------------   --------------------------------  -------------------------------
ASSETS:
<S>                            <C>          <C>          <C>      <C>          <C>          <C>      <C>          <C>         <C>
   Investment securities:
       Taxable                  $  348,944   $ 20,049    5.75%     $  294,632   $ 17,419    5.91%     $  272,400   $ 16,638    6.11%
       Tax-exempt (1)              161,712     11,336    7.01%        150,678     11,327    7.52%        151,686     11,723    7.73%
   Net loans (2 & 3)             1,949,172    171,770    8.81%      1,853,537    168,664    9.10%      1,610,889    148,061    9.19%
   Other investments                18,354        911    4.96%         45,708      2,348    5.14%         11,662        592    5.09%
                                 ---------    -------    -----      ---------    -------    -----      ---------    -------    -----
Total Earning Assets             2,478,182    204,066    8.23%      2,344,555    199,758    8.52%      2,046,637    177,014    8.65%

   Cash and due from banks         113,099                             86,452                             73,246
   Reserve for loan losses         (39,105)                           (38,050)                           (31,966)
   Other assets                    187,868                            157,968                            110,383
                                ----------                         ----------                         ----------
Total                           $2,740,044                         $2,550,925                         $2,198,300
                                ==========                         ==========                         ==========


LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY:
   Interest bearing deposits    $1,843,692   $ 84,839    4.60%     $1,748,759   $ 86,264    4.93%     $1,488,287   $ 73,150    4.92%
   Short-term borrowings           283,035     14,995    5.30%        243,431     15,034    6.18%        227,757     13,014    5.71%
   Long-term debt                   12,492        892    7.14%         13,036        929    7.13%         16,527      1,160    7.02%
                                 ---------    -------    -----      ---------    -------    -----      ---------    -------    -----
Total Interest Bearing
  Liabilities                    2,139,219    100,726    4.71%      2,005,226    102,227    5.10%      1,732,571     87,324    5.04%

   Noninterest bearing deposits    283,479                            250,755                            210,686
   Other liabilities                90,152                             89,343                             72,500
   Shareholders' equity            227,194                            205,601                            182,543
                                ----------                         ----------                         ----------
Total                           $2,740,044                         $2,550,925                         $2,198,300
                                ==========                         ==========                         ==========
Net Interest Income                          $103,340                            $97,531                            $89,690
                                             ========                            =======                            =======
Net Yield on Earning Assets on
   a Taxable Equivalent Basis                            4.17%                              4.16%                              4.38%
                                                         =====                              =====                              =====
</TABLE>

(1)    Interest income including the effects of taxable equivalent  adjustments,
       using a 40.525% rate.  Tax  equivalent  adjustments  were $3,441 in 1999,
       $3,408 in 1998 and $3,536 in 1997.

(2)    Loan income includes fees on loans of $5,745 in 1999,  $4,889 in 1998 and
       $4,097  in 1997.  Loan  income  also  includes  the  effects  of  taxable
       equivalent adjustments,  using a 40.525% rate. Tax equivalent adjustments
       were $196 in 1999, $202 in 1998 and $162 in 1997.

(3)    For purposes of this  computation,  nonaccruing loans are included in the
       daily average loan amounts outstanding.

                                 (pages 14 & 15)
<PAGE> 16
EARNING RESULTS (continued)

NONINTEREST  EXPENSE -- 1st Source experienced  increases in noninterest expense
of 15.82%  and  17.16% for 1999 and 1998,  respectively.  Costs to  attract  and
retain  quality  people and the  depreciation  on our  growing  operating  lease
portfolio were the leading  contributors  to expense  growth for both years.  In
addition,  1999 experienced an increase in non-credit losses, whereas 1998 had a
significant increase in professional  consulting  expenses.  Cost control across
all business units and better  utilization of resources  continues to be a major
focus at 1st Source.

Salaries and employee benefits comprised  approximately 53% of total noninterest
expense  in  1999  compared  to 55% in  1998.  Salaries  and  employee  benefits
increased  11.02% in 1999,  following a 13.20%  increase in 1998.  Salaries  and
wages  increased  10.70% in 1999 and  15.61% in 1998.  The  number of  full-time
equivalent  employees  stood at 1,083 at the end of 1999,  compared to 1,036 and
966 at the end of 1998  and  1997,  respectively.  Employee  benefits  increased
12.15% in 1999,  following a 5.34%  increase in 1998.  The higher  percentage of
increase in employee  benefits  for 1999 was  primarily  the result of increased
payroll tax,  pension,  and group insurance  expense.  Group  insurance  expense
increased 17.84% in 1999, following a 20.13% increase in 1998.

Occupancy expense in 1999 increased 6.79% from 1998,  following a 9.26% increase
in 1998.  The higher  percentage  of increase in  occupancy  expense in 1998 was
primarily due to the full year impact of the previous year's branch expansion.

Furniture and equipment expense,  including  depreciation,  increased in 1999 by
12.56%,  following a 7.14%  increase in 1998. The increase in 1999 is attributed
primarily to the upgrade in computer systems and hardware.

Depreciation on operating leases  increased  45.15% in 1999,  following a 79.86%
increase in 1998 due to the increased volume of operating leases.

Supplies and communications  expense increased 11.83% in 1999, following a 7.54%
increase in 1998.  The greater  increase in 1999 is primarily the result of Year
2000 (Y2K) expenses.

Business  development and marketing expense increased 21.97% in 1999,  following
an  increase  of 2.98%  in  1998.  Charitable  contributions  increased  in 1999
compared to 1998.

An increase of 19.26%  occurred in other  expenses  during  1999,  compared to a
24.11% increase in 1998. Professional consulting expenses increased in both 1999
and 1998 as the  result of Y2K  readiness  preparations.  The 1998  professional
consulting   expenses  were  also  impacted  by  increased  loan  securitization
activity. Finally, check forgery losses also increased in 1999.

YEAR 2000 -- In 1997, a  comprehensive  project plan to address the Y2K computer
system issue as it relates to 1st Source's operations was developed, approved by
the Board of  Directors  and  implemented.  As part of the  project,  1st Source
identified and prioritized  those systems deemed to be mission critical or those
that have a significant impact on normal operations.  Formal communications with
third party data-processing vendors and service providers were also initiated in
1997 to assess the Y2K readiness of their  products and services.  Additionally,
1st Source  implemented  and completed a plan to manage the potential risk posed
by the impact of the Y2K issue on its major borrowing customers.

Based upon  current  information  related to 1st  Source's  own  systems and the
progress of its major vendors, service providers, and major borrowing customers,
management  has  determined  that  the  Y2K  issue  has  not  posed  significant
operational or credit problems

                                   (page 16)
<PAGE> 17
EARNING RESULTS (concluded)

for 1st Source.  This  determination is based on the assertion of those vendors,
service  providers and major borrowing  customers that they were and continue to
be Y2K compliant.  However, 1st Source can give no guarantee that the systems of
these parties will continue to operate without error.

1st  Source's  total cost for the Y2K project was  approximately  $2.6  million.
Funds were provided from our normal  operating budget and costs were expensed as
they were incurred. Any additional cost is not anticipated to be material to its
financial position or results of operations in any given year.

1st Source cautions that this Y2K disclosure  includes certain  "forward-looking
statements."  The  reader  should  refer  to  the  "forward-looking  statements"
disclosure on page 7 for further discussion.

INCOME  TAXES -- Federal  income taxes were $15.26  million and $13.50  million,
prior  to  the  tax  benefit  of  $1,216,000  and  $1,196,000  relating  to  the
distribution  on preferred  securities of  subsidiary  trusts for 1999 and 1998,
respectively. After this benefit, 1999 federal income taxes were $14.04 million,
or 28.19% of income after state taxes,  compared to $12.30  million or 28.11% in
1998 and $9.86 million or 27.12% in 1997. A settlement with the Internal Revenue
Service was reached during 1997 over a dispute arising from the 1983 purchase of
the First  National  Bank of  Mishawaka  relating to  deduction  of core deposit
intangibles.  Interest of $955,000 related to the settlement was paid to the IRS
in 1998.

State  income  taxes  were  $3.21  million  and $4.34  million in 1999 and 1998,
respectively,  prior to the tax benefit of $200,000 and $318,000 relating to the
distribution  on preferred  securities of  subsidiary  trusts for 1999 and 1998,
respectively.  After this benefit,  1999 state income taxes were $3.01  million,
compared to $4.02  million in 1998 and $3.35  million in 1997.  State income tax
declined  in 1999 due  primarily  to a change in Indiana  tax law  effective  to
January 1, 1999,  allowing resident banks to apportion their income to the state
of its source.

CREDIT EXPERIENCE

PROVISION  FOR LOAN LOSSES -- The  ability of a bank to identify  and assess the
risk  factors  affecting  its  loan  portfolio  is  crucial  for  profitability.
Management  follows a credit  policy that  balances the risk and return on loans
and  monitors  potential  credit  problems  to ensure  that they are  adequately
managed and reserved.

The  provision  made to the reserve for loan losses is  determined by management
based on the risk factors and general  economic  conditions  affecting  the loan
portfolio, including changes to the portfolio mix and past loan loss experience.

The  provision  for loan  losses for 1999 was $7.44  million,  compared to $9.16
million in 1998 and $6.05  million in 1997.  The decrease in the  provision  for
loan losses in 1999 compared to 1998 reflects the lower net charge-offs in 1999.
Net charge-offs of $2.39 million,  $3.65 million,  and $144,000 were recorded in
1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

The reserve for loan losses at December 31, 1999 totaled  $40.21 million and was
1.95% of loans,  compared to $38.63  million or 2.05% of loans at  December  31,
1998,  and $35.42  million or 1.97% of loans at December 31, 1997. The reduction
in the  reserve  for loan  losses  to net loan  percentage  from 1998 to 1999 is
primarily  attributable to securitization loan sales. It is management's opinion
that the reserve for loan losses is adequate to absorb anticipated losses in the
loan portfolio as of December 31, 1999.

NONPERFORMING  ASSETS -- 1st Source's  policy is to  discontinue  the accrual of
interest on loans on which  principal or interest is past due and remains unpaid
for 90 days or more, unless the loan is well  collateralized  and in the process
of collection.

                                   (page 17)
<PAGE> 18
CREDIT EXPERIENCE (concluded)

Nonperforming  assets amounted to $15.36 million at December 31, 1999,  compared
to $10.57 million at December 31, 1998, and $11.44 million at December 31, 1997.
Impaired  loans  totaled  $31.57  million,  $13.30  million and $9.39 million at
December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

The overall increase in nonperforming assets for 1999 is the result of increases
in  nonaccrual  loans and other  assets.  The  increase in  nonaccrual  loans is
primarily attributed to one commercial loan secured by real estate. The increase
in other  assets is due  primarily to the return of vehicles and one aircraft at
the termination of their leases.

NONPERFORMING ASSETS AT DECEMBER 31
(Dollars in thousands)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                   1999              1998             1997              1996            1995
                                  ------            ------           ------            ------          ------
<S>                 <C>          <C>               <C>              <C>                <C>             <C>
Loans past due over 90 days      $   254           $   275          $   730            $  557          $  274
Nonaccrual loans                  11,967             9,266           10,030             6,678           4,893
TOTAL NONPERFORMING LOANS         12,221             9,541           10,760             7,235           5,167
Other real estate                  1,167               424              335               445           1,359
Other assets                       1,967               606              341                93              58
TOTAL NONPERFORMING ASSETS       $15,355           $10,571          $11,436            $7,773          $6,584

Nonperforming assets to loans,
net of unearned discount             .74%              .56%             .64%              .54%            .52%
</TABLE>


CAPITAL RESOURCES

1st Source  manages its capital  resources to serve its  customers,  protect its
depositors,  support  growth and  provide a fair return to  shareholders.  As of
December  31,  1999,  there  were 1,146  holders of record of 1st Source  common
stock.

1st Source's  leverage  capital ratio increased from 9.51% at December 31, 1998,
to 10.01% at December 31, 1999.

1st  Source's  common  stock is  traded on the  Nasdaq  Stock  Market  under the
National Market symbol "SRCE." High and low stock prices and cash dividends paid
for the last two years by quarter were:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                               Cash                                  Cash
                        1999 SALES PRICE     Dividends        1998 Sales Price     Dividends
Common Stock Prices     High        Low        Paid           High        Low        Paid
- -------------------     ----        ---        ----           ----        ---        ----
<S>                   <C>         <C>         <C>           <C>         <C>         <C>
Quarter Ended:
March 31              $35 3/4     $29 3/4     $.073         $33 3/4     $25 1/4     $.066
June 30                33 1/4      29 1/2      .080          36 3/4      30 3/4      .066
September 30           32 7/8      23 7/8      .080          36          27 1/2      .073
December 31            29 7/8      24 7/8      .080          32          25 3/4      .073
</TABLE>

 At  December  31,  1999,  the total  market  capitalization  of 1st  Source was
approximately $473 million.

                                   (page 18)
<PAGE> 19
CAPITAL RESOURCES (concluded)

EFFECTS OF  INFLATION  -- The  results of  operations  can also be  affected  by
inflation, although it is difficult to measure the precise impact on the various
types of income and expense.  Interest rates, in particular,  are  significantly
affected by  inflation,  but neither the timing nor the magnitude of the changes
coincide  with  changes  in the  consumer  price  index  nor other  measures  of
inflation. Additionally,  increases in interest rates, such as those on consumer
deposits,  lag behind  increases in overall  rates.  This, in turn,  affects the
composition  of sources of funds by reducing core deposit  growth and increasing
the need for  purchased  funds.  Another  significant  effect of inflation is on
noninterest expenses, which tend to rise during periods of general inflation.

                     LEVERAGE CAPITAL RATIO (As a Percent)
                                    [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
              95          96          97          98          99
            <S>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
            (8.44)      (8.48)      (9.98)      (9.51)      (10.01)
</TABLE>

                     COMMON STOCK PRICE RANGE (In Dollars)
                                    [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                     1998                                            1999
                     1st        2nd        3rd        4th           1st        2nd        3rd        4th
                   -----------------------------------------      -----------------------------------------
<S>                 <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>           <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
High                33 3/4     36 3/4     36         32            35 3/4     33 1/4     32 7/8     29 7/8
Low                 25 1/4     30 3/4     27 1/2     25 3/4        29 3/4     29 1/2     23 7/8     24 7/8
Quarter Ending      33         32 1/2     29 1/4     30 1/2        29 3/4     32         24         25
</TABLE>

                         BOOK VALUE PER COMMON SHARE *
                                    [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
              95          96          97          98          99
            <S>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
            (8.10)     (9.11)       (10.24)     (11.48)     (12.64)
</TABLE>

* Book value is not  necessarily  indicative  of the value of 1st Source  common
stock.


                        CASH DIVIDENDS PER COMMON SHARE
                                     [GRAPH]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
              95          96          97          98          99
            <S>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
            (.189)      (.218)      (.250)      (.278)      (.313)
</TABLE>


                                   (page 19)
<PAGE> 20
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
(Dollars in thousands)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         December 31
                                                                         -----------
                                                                     1999           1998
                                                                     ----           ----
<S>                                                              <C>            <C>
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks ......................................   $   101,911    $   132,514
Federal funds sold and interest
   bearing deposits with other banks .........................         1,399         41,951
Investment securities, available-for-sale
   (amortized cost of $475,390 and $440,147 at
   December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively) .................       470,040        443,691
Investment securities, held-to-maturity
   (fair value of $78,462 and $99,734 at
   December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively) .................        77,190         96,008
Loans, net of unearned discount:
   Commercial and agricultural loans .........................       440,909        399,013
   Commercial loans secured by
   transportation and construction equipment .................       896,848        732,488
   Loans secured by real estate ..............................       591,401        630,915
   Consumer loans ............................................       134,031        119,280
                                                                 -----------    -----------
Total loans ..................................................     2,063,189      1,881,696
    Less, reserve for loan losses ............................       (40,210)       (38,629)
                                                                 -----------    -----------
Net Loans ....................................................     2,022,979      1,843,067
Equipment owned under operating leases,
   net of accumulated depreciation of $20,284 and
   $12,997 at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively .......        65,956         54,170
Premises and equipment
   Land ......................................................         4,509          4,130
   Buildings and improvements ................................        32,302         28,948
   Furniture and equipment ...................................        23,748         21,996
   Construction in progress ..................................           116          1,322
Total premises and equipment .................................        60,675         56,396
   Less, Accumulated depreciation ............................        26,930         25,169
Net Premises and Equipment ...................................        33,745         31,227
Other Assets .................................................        99,725         90,964
                                                                 -----------    -----------
Total Assets .................................................   $ 2,872,945    $ 2,733,592
                                                                 ===========    ===========
LIABILITIES
Deposits:
   Noninterest bearing .......................................   $   268,825    $   294,810
   Interest bearing ..........................................     1,858,627      1,882,297
                                                                 -----------    -----------
Total Deposits ...............................................     2,127,452      2,177,107
Short-term borrowings
   Federal funds purchased and securities
   sold under agreements to repurchase .......................       263,253        159,478
   Other .....................................................       146,489         82,681
Total Short-term Borrowings ..................................       409,742        242,159
Other Liabilities ............................................        40,007         39,594
Long-term Debt ...............................................        12,174         13,189
                                                                 -----------    -----------
Total Liabilities ............................................     2,589,375      2,472,049
Commitments and contingencies (Notes L, M, and P)
Guaranteed preferred beneficial interests
in the Company's subordinated debentures .....................        44,750         44,750

SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Common stock; no par value
   Authorized 40,000,000 shares; issued 19,531,519  shares
   in 1999 and 17,756,636 shares in 1998, less unearned shares         6,883          6,270
Capital surplus ..............................................       179,905        121,456
Retained earnings ............................................        68,309         98,300
Cost of common stock in treasury
(1999 - 492,704 shares and 1998 - 465,405 shares) ............       (14,382)       (12,723)
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)
of securities available-for-sale .............................        (1,895)         3,490
                                                                 -----------    -----------
Total Shareholders' Equity ...................................       238,820        216,793
                                                                 -----------    -----------
Total Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity ...................   $ 2,872,945    $ 2,733,592
                                                                 ===========    ===========
</TABLE>

The accompanying notes are a part of the consolidated financial statements.

                                 (page 20 & 21)
<PAGE> 21
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
1st Source Corporation and Subsidiaries
(Dollars in thousands, except per share data)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        Year Ended December 31
                                                                        ----------------------
                                                                     1999        1998         1997
                                                                    ------      ------       ------
<S>                                                               <C>         <C>          <C>
Interest income:
   Loans ......................................................   $ 171,575   $ 168,462    $ 147,899
   Investment securities, taxable .............................      20,049      17,419       16,638
   Investment securities, tax-exempt ..........................       7,895       7,919        8,187
                                                                  ---------   ---------    ---------
     Total Investment Securities ..............................      27,944      25,338       24,825
   Other ......................................................         910       2,348          592
                                                                  ---------   ---------    ---------
Total Interest Income .........................................     200,429     196,148      173,316
Interest expense:
   Deposits ...................................................      84,839      86,264       73,150
   Short-term borrowings ......................................      14,995      15,034       13,014
   Long-term debt .............................................         892         929        1,160
                                                                  ---------   ---------    ---------
Total Interest Expense ........................................     100,726     102,227       87,324
                                                                  ---------   ---------    ---------
Net Interest Income ...........................................      99,703      93,921       85,992
   Provision for loan losses ..................................       7,442       9,156        6,052
                                                                  ---------   ---------    ---------
Net Interest Income After Provision for Loan Losses ...........      92,261      84,765       79,940
Noninterest income:
   Trust fees .................................................       8,954       8,257        7,312
   Service charges on deposit accounts ........................       6,897       5,845        5,380
   Loan servicing and sale income .............................      19,490      15,852        9,636
   Equipment rental income ....................................      17,407      12,557        6,950
   Other income ...............................................      10,359      10,357        6,840
   Investment securities and other investment gains (losses) ..         153        (612)        (462)
                                                                  ---------   ---------    ---------
Total Noninterest Income ......................................      63,260      52,256       35,656
Noninterest expense:
   Salaries and employee benefits .............................      52,472      47,265       41,755
   Net occupancy expense ......................................       5,303       4,966        4,545
   Furniture and equipment expense ............................       8,150       7,241        6,758
   Depreciation - leased equipment ............................      12,978       8,941        4,971
   Supplies and communications ................................       5,331       4,767        4,433
   Business development and marketing expense .................       4,346       3,564        3,461
   Other expense ..............................................      10,443       8,756        7,054
                                                                  ---------   ---------    ---------
Total Noninterest Expense .....................................      99,023      85,500       72,977
                                                                  ---------   ---------    ---------
Income Before Income Taxes and
Subsidiary Trust Distributions ................................      56,498      51,521       42,619
Income taxes ..................................................      18,471      17,843       14,392
Distribution on preferred securities of subsidiary trusts
net of income tax benefit of  $1,416 in 1999 and $1,514 in 1998       2,259       2,221        1,738
                                                                  ---------   ---------    ---------
Net Income ....................................................   $  35,768   $  31,457    $  26,489
                                                                  =========   =========    =========
Basic Net Income Per Common Share .............................   $    1.89   $    1.66    $    1.40

Diluted Net Income Per Common Share ...........................   $    1.86   $    1.62    $    1.36
</TABLE>

The accompanying notes are a part of the consolidated financial statements.

                                    (page 22)
<PAGE> 22
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
(Dollars in thousands, except per share data)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                               Net Unrealized
                                                                                                  Cost of       Appreciation
                                                                                                   Common      (Depreciation)
                                                             Common      Capital     Retained      Stock        of Securities
                                                 Total        Stock      Surplus     Earnings    in Treasury  Available-for-Sale
                                               ---------    ---------   ---------    ---------   -----------  ------------------
<S>                                            <C>          <C>         <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Balance at January 1, 1997 .................   $ 171,833    $   5,700   $  69,947    $ 102,399    $  (6,670)   $     457
Comprehensive income, net of tax:
   Net income ..............................      26,489           --          --       26,489           --           --
      Change in unrealized
      appreciation of available-
      for-sale securities (net of
      $977 income tax) .....................       1,433           --          --           --           --        1,433
                                               ---------
Total comprehensive income .................      27,922
Cost of 179,025 shares of common
stock acquired for treasury ................      (5,023)          --          --           --       (5,023)          --
Cash dividends ($.250 per share) ...........      (4,723)          --          --       (4,723)          --           --
Five-for-four common stock split
($8 cash paid in lieu of fractional shares)           (8)          --          --           (8)          --           --
Other ......................................       4,952           --          --          237        4,715           --
                                               ---------    ---------   ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
Balance at December 31, 1997 ...............     194,953        5,700      69,947      124,394       (6,978)       1,890
Comprehensive income, net of tax:
   Net income ..............................      31,457           --          --       31,457           --           --
      Change in unrealized
      appreciation of available-
      for-sale securities (net of
      $751 income tax) .....................       1,600           --          --           --           --        1,600
                                               ---------
Total comprehensive income .................      33,057
Cost of 231,440 shares of common
stock acquired for treasury ................      (7,116)          --          --           --       (7,116)          --
Cash dividends ($.278 per share) ...........      (5,296)          --          --       (5,296)          --           --
10% common stock dividend
($13 cash paid in lieu of fractional shares)         (13)         570      51,509      (52,092)          --           --
Other ......................................       1,208           --          --         (163)       1,371           --
                                               ---------    ---------   ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
Balance at December 31, 1998 ...............     216,793        6,270     121,456       98,300      (12,723)       3,490
Comprehensive income, net of tax:
   Net income ..............................      35,768           --          --       35,768           --           --
      Change in unrealized
      appreciation of available-
      for-sale securities (net of
      $3,580 income tax) ...................      (5,385)          --          --           --           --       (5,385)
                                               ---------
Total comprehensive income .................      30,383           --          --           --           --           --
Cost of 210,966 shares of common
stock acquired for treasury ................      (6,646)          --          --           --       (6,646)          --
Cash dividends ($.313 per share) ...........      (5,922)          --          --       (5,922)          --           --
10% common stock dividend
($17 cash paid in lieu of fractional shares)         (17)         613      58,449      (59,079)          --           --
Other ......................................       4,229           --          --         (758)       4,987           --
                                               ---------    ---------   ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
Balance at December 31, 1999 ...............   $ 238,820    $   6,883   $ 179,905    $  68,309    $ (14,382)   $  (1,895)
                                               =========    =========   =========    =========    =========    =========
</TABLE>
The accompanying notes are a part of the consolidated financial statements.

                                   (page 23)
<PAGE> 23
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(Dollars in thousands)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                           Year Ended December 31
                                                                           ----------------------
                                                                        1999         1998         1997
                                                                     ---------    ---------    ---------
<S>                                                                  <C>          <C>          <C>
Operating Activities:
   Net income ....................................................   $  35,768    $  31,457    $  26,489
   Adjustments to reconcile net income to net
   cash provided by operating activities:
      Provision for loan losses ..................................       7,442        9,156        6,052
      Depreciation of premises and equipment .....................      17,099       12,638        8,372
      Amortization of investment security
         premiums and accretion of discounts, net ................       1,432        1,039          817
      Amortization of mortgage servicing rights ..................       5,787        4,086        2,724
      Deferred income taxes ......................................        (926)       8,133        4,839
      Realized investment securities (gains) losses ..............        (153)         612          462
      Realized (gains) on securitized loans ......................      (6,702)      (1,984)        (800)
      Increase in interest receivable ............................      (1,705)        (787)      (1,836)
      Increase (decrease) in interest payable ....................      (2,209)       2,023        3,660
      Other ......................................................         602          348       (3,303)
                                                                     ---------    ---------    ---------
Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities ........................      56,435       66,721       47,476
Investing Activities:
   Proceeds from sales and maturities of investment securities ...     253,736      249,012      159,564
   Purchases of investment securities ............................    (271,441)    (373,404)    (144,491)
   Net (increase) decrease in short-term investments .............      40,552      (30,274)     (11,077)
   Loans sold or participated to others ..........................     335,205      377,608      154,609
   Net increase in loans made to customers
      and principal collections on loans .........................    (522,499)    (468,670)    (495,632)
   Net increase in operating leases ..............................     (11,411)     (23,069)     (16,585)
   Funding of bank-owned life insurance policies .................        --           --        (20,000)
   Purchases of premises and equipment ...........................      (5,899)      (3,795)      (4,455)
   Increase in other assets ......................................      (8,584)     (19,794)      (4,132)
   Other .........................................................      (1,025)      (9,288)     (13,014)
                                                                     ---------    ---------    ---------
Net Cash Used in Investing Activities ............................    (191,366)    (301,674)    (395,213)
Financing Activities:
   Net increase (decrease) in demand deposits,
      NOW accounts and savings accounts ..........................     (66,741)     311,160       46,384
   Net increase (decrease) in certificates of deposit ............      17,086      (25,844)     211,429
   Net increase in short-term borrowings .........................     167,583        7,153       10,143
   Proceeds from issuance of long-term debt ......................       2,211          747        1,559
   Payments on long-term debt ....................................      (3,226)      (4,214)      (3,499)
   Proceeds from issuance of cumulative trust preferred securities        --           --         44,750
   Acquisition of treasury stock .................................      (6,646)      (7,116)      (5,023)
   Cash dividends ................................................      (5,922)      (5,296)      (4,723)
   Other .........................................................         (17)          13           (7)
                                                                     ---------    ---------    ---------
Net Cash Provided by Financing Activities ........................     104,328      276,603      301,013
Increase (Decrease) in Cash and Cash Equivalents .................     (30,603)      41,650      (46,724)
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of year .....................     132,514       90,864      137,588
                                                                     ---------    ---------    ---------
Cash and Cash Equivalents, End of Year ...........................   $ 101,911    $ 132,514    $  90,864
                                                                     =========    =========    =========
</TABLE>
The accompanying notes are a part of the consolidated financial statements.

                                   (page 24)
<PAGE> 24
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
1st Source Corporation and Subsidiaries

NOTE A -- ACCOUNTING POLICIES

The  principal  line of business of 1st Source  Corporation  ("1st  Source") and
subsidiaries  is banking and closely  related  activities.  The  following  is a
summary of significant  accounting  policies  followed in the preparation of the
consolidated financial statements.

PRINCIPLES OF CONSOLIDATION -- The financial  statements  consolidate 1st Source
and its  subsidiaries  (principally  1st  Source  Bank  and  Trustcorp  Mortgage
Company).  All  significant  intercompany  balances and  transactions  have been
eliminated.  For  purposes  of the parent  company  only  financial  information
presented in Note Q,  investments  in  subsidiaries  are carried at 1st Source's
equity in the underlying net assets.

USE OF ESTIMATES IN THE  PREPARATION OF FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS -- The preparation
of  financial  statements  in  conformity  with  generally  accepted  accounting
principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the
reported  amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent  assets
and  liabilities  at the  date of the  financial  statements,  and the  reported
amounts of income and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could
differ from those estimates.

INVESTMENT  SECURITIES  --  Securities  that may be sold as part of 1st Source's
asset/liability or liquidity  management or in response to or in anticipation of
changes in interest  rates and resulting  prepayment  risk, or for other similar
factors, are classified as available-for-sale  and carried at fair market value.
Unrealized  holding  gains  and  losses  on  securities  available-for-sale  are
reported  net of  related  deferred  income  taxes as a  separate  component  of
shareholders'   equity,  and  the  change  in  such  items  is  a  component  of
comprehensive  income.  Securities  that 1st Source has the ability and positive
intent to hold to maturity are  classified  as  held-to-maturity  and carried at
amortized  cost.  Trading  securities  are  carried  at fair  market  value with
unrealized holding gains and losses included in earnings.  There were no trading
securities at December 31, 1999 or 1998.  Realized gains and losses on the sales
of all  securities  are  reported in earnings  and  computed  using the specific
identification cost basis.

LOANS -- Loans are reported at the principal amount outstanding, net of unearned
income.  Loans identified as  held-for-sale  are carried at the lower of cost or
market determined on an aggregate basis. Included in real estate loans are loans
held for sale totaling $83.1 million and $188.2 million at December 31, 1999 and
1998, respectively.

SECURITIZED  ASSETS  -- The  guidelines  set  forth in  Statement  of  Financial
Accounting  Standards (SFAS) No. 125, "Accounting for Transfers and Servicing of
Financial  Assets  and   Extinguishment   of  Liabilities,"  are  followed  when
accounting for securitizations.  When 1st Source sells loans in securitizations,
it retains servicing rights and interest-only  strips. The interest-only  strips
are capitalized as retained interests in the securitized assets. Gain or loss on
sale of the  loans  depends  in  part on the  previous  carrying  amount  of all
retained  interests,  allocated in  proportion  to their fair value.  1st Source
generally  estimates  fair value based on the present value of future cash flows
expected  under  management's  best  estimates of certain key  assumptions.  Key
assumptions  used  by 1st  Source  in 1999 in its  securitization  model  are as
follows:  discount  rate  (15%),  loan loss  assumption  for cash flow  purposes
(0.50%), interest earned on the reserve account (4.75%) and prepayment curve for
cash  flow  purposes  (based  on  asset  type  and  ranges  up to 12%  CPR).  In
conjunction with its securitization  activities, 1st Source sold $276 million of
aircraft and auto loans in 1999 resulting in a recognized gain of $6.70 million.

<PAGE> 25
Approximately  $1.1  million of cash and $16.4  million of other assets shown on
the December 31, 1999 consolidated  statement of financial  condition are assets
of 1st Source  Funding  Corporation  ("Funding"),  a  qualified  special-purpose
entity of 1st Source Bank, and represent Funding's  beneficial (i.e.,  retained)
interests in certain  assets of the 1st Source Master Trust in  accordance  with
1st Source's loan securitization  transactions.  Funding was established in 1998
as a qualified  special-purpose entity for purposes of SFAS No. 125 and has been
structured to be bankruptcy-remote from 1st Source and its other affiliates.

MORTGAGE  SERVICING  RIGHTS -- The costs of  purchasing  the  rights to  service
mortgage loans  originated by others are deferred and amortized as reductions of
mortgage servicing fee income over the estimated  servicing period in proportion
to the estimated  servicing income to be received.  Gains and losses on the sale
of mortgage servicing rights are recognized as non-interest income in the period
in which such rights are sold on a servicing released basis.

SFAS No. 125 allows  companies that intend to sell originated or purchased loans
and retain the  related  servicing  rights,  to  allocate a portion of the total
costs of the loans to  servicing  rights,  based on estimated  fair value.  Fair
value is estimated based on market prices, when available,  or the present value
of future net  servicing  income,  adjusted  for such  factors as  discount  and
prepayment  rates.  As of December 31, 1999,  and 1998,  $23.6 million and $20.5
million, respectively, of mortgage servicing rights have been capitalized. As of
these dates,  the  servicing  rights had a fair value of $40.0 million and $35.0
million respectively.

Mortgage  servicing rights are being amortized using a method which approximates
the effective  yield method and for the years ended December 31, 1999,  1998 and
1997, $5.79 million, $4.09 million and $2.72 million of amortization expense has
been recognized.

SFAS No. 125 also requires 1st Source to assess its capitalized servicing rights
for impairment based on their current fair value. 1st Source  disaggregates  its
servicing  portfolio  based on loan type and interest rate, and the  predominant
risk characteristics of the

                                   (page 25)

NOTE A -- ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued)

underlying loans. There were no valuation allowances associated with capitalized
mortgage servicing rights at December 31, 1999 and 1998.

REVENUE  RECOGNITION -- Interest on loans is included in interest  income on the
accrual  method  over the  terms of the  loans  based  upon  principal  balances
outstanding.

The  accrual  of  interest  on  loans  is  discontinued   when  a  loan  becomes
contractually  delinquent  for 90  days,  except  for  installment  loans  where
payments are being received  regularly and mortgage  loans,  which are placed on
nonaccrual at the time the loan is placed in foreclosure. When interest accruals
are  discontinued,  interest credited to income in the current year is reversed,
and  interest  accrued  in the prior year is  charged  to the  reserve  for loan
losses.  Management  may elect to continue the accrual of interest  when the net
realizable  value of collateral is sufficient to cover the principal and accrued
interest.

Certain loan origination and commitment fees and certain direct loan origination
costs are deferred and the net amount  amortized  to interest  income  generally
over the contractual life of the related loan or commitment.

RESERVE  FOR LOAN  LOSSES -- A loan is  considered  impaired,  based on  current
information  and  events,  if it is  probable  that 1st Source will be unable to
collect the  scheduled  payments of principal or interest  when due according to
the contractual  terms of the loan agreement.  The measurement of impaired loans
is generally based on the present value of expected future cash flows discounted
at the historical effective interest rate, except that all  collateral-dependent
loans are measured for impairment based on the fair value of the collateral.

<PAGE> 26
The  provision  for loan losses  charged to expense is based upon the actual net
loan losses incurred as determined by credit loss experience,  the evaluation of
potential  losses in the portfolio and the evaluation of impaired  loans.  Loans
are charged against the reserve for loan losses when deemed uncollectible.

PREMISES  AND  EQUIPMENT  -- Premises  and  equipment  are stated at cost,  less
accumulated  depreciation.  The provision for depreciation is computed generally
by the straight-line method,  primarily with useful lives of 5, 7, 15 and 31-1/2
years.

LEASED ASSETS -- 1st Source finances  various types of equipment and automobiles
under leases principally  classified as operating leases. These assets are being
depreciated on a straight-line method over the life of the lease.

TRUST FEES -- Trust fees are recognized on the accrual basis.

INCOME TAXES -- Deferred income taxes are determined under the liability method.
The net  deferred tax assets are  comprised  of the tax effect of net  temporary
differences  related  principally  to differing  methods of accounting  for loan
losses offset by differing  methods of accounting for  depreciation  on premises
and leased equipment and amortization of mortgage servicing rights.

NET INCOME PER COMMON  SHARE -- Net  income  per  common  share is  computed  in
accordance with SFAS No. 128,  "Earnings per Share." Basic earnings per share is
computed  by dividing  net income by the  weighted  average  number of shares of
common stock  outstanding  which were as follows (in thousands):  1999,  18,936;
1998,  18,995;  and 1997,  18,935.  Diluted  earnings  per share is  computed by
dividing  net income by the  weighted  average  number of shares of common stock
outstanding plus the dilutive effect of outstanding stock options.  The weighted
average  number of common  shares,  increased  for the dilutive  effect of stock
options,  used in the computation of diluted  earnings per share were as follows
(in thousands): 1999, 19,239; 1998, 19,371; and 1997, 19,543.

FUNDS HELD IN TRUST FOR INVESTORS AND  MORTGAGORS -- As of December 31, 1999 and
1998, serviced loans which were owned by investors  aggregated $2.21 billion and
$1.87 billion,  respectively.  Funds held in trust at 1st Source for the payment
of  principal,  interest,  taxes and insurance  premiums  applicable to mortgage
loans being  serviced for others,  aggregated  approximately  $29.2  million and
$50.8 million at December 31, 1999 and December 31, 1998, respectively.

CASH FLOW  INFORMATION  -- For purposes of the  consolidated  and parent company
only statements of cash flows,  1st Source  considers cash and due from banks as
cash and cash  equivalents.  Cash paid during the years ended December 31, 1999,
1998 and 1997,  for interest  and for income taxes was $102.9  million and $11.0
million,  $100.2 million and $7.8 million,  and $83.7 million and $10.7 million,
respectively.

OFF-BALANCE SHEET FINANCIAL  INVESTMENTS -- 1st Source enters into interest rate
swap agreements as part of its interest rate risk management  strategies.  These
instruments are accounted for under the accrual basis of accounting, whereby the
income or expense is recorded as a component  of interest  income.  If a swap is
terminated,  the  resulting  gain or loss is  deferred  and  amortized  over the
remaining life of the off-balance sheet investment product.

SEGMENT  INFORMATION -- In June 1997, the Financial  Accounting  Standards Board
(FASB) issued SFAS No. 131,  "Disclosure  about  Segments of an  Enterprise  and
Related  Information."  This  Statement  changes  the  manner  in  which  public
companies report segment information in annual reports and requires companies to
report selected segment information in interim financial reports.  Companies are
now required to report financial and descriptive information about the company's
operating segments. 1st Source's principal business is banking, and management

                                   (page 26)

NOTE A -- ACCOUNTING POLICIES (concluded)

has not separately organized the business beyond commercial banking and mortgage
banking.  Its wholly owned  mortgage  subsidiary,  Trustcorp  Mortgage  Company,
constitutes a segment by definition of SFAS No. 131,  however,  it does not meet
the  quantitative  thresholds  for  separate  disclosure  as set  forth  by this
Statement.  Trustcorp  Mortgage  Company's  revenue  is less than 10  percent of
consolidated revenue, the absolute amount of its reported income is less than 10
percent of the  absolute  amount of the  consolidated  net income of 1st Source,
and, finally, its assets are less than 10 percent of consolidated assets.

<PAGE> 27
RECENT ACCOUNTING  PRONOUNCEMENTS -- In June 1998, the FASB issued SFAS No. 133,
"Accounting for Derivative  Instruments and Hedging Activities." SFAS No. 133 is
effective for all fiscal  quarters of all fiscal years  beginning after June 15,
2000 (January 1, 2001, for 1st Source).  That  implementation  date was recently
established  by SFAS  No.  137.  SFAS  No.  133  requires  that  all  derivative
instruments be recorded on the balance sheet at their fair value. Changes in the
fair value of derivatives are recorded each period in current  earnings or other
comprehensive  income,  depending on the intended use of the  derivative and its
resulting  designation.  1st Source  anticipates  that due to its limited use of
derivative instruments, the adoption of SFAS No. 133 will not have a significant
effect on 1st Source's results of operations or its financial position.

RECLASSIFICATIONS -- Certain amounts in the 1997 and 1998 consolidated financial
statements have been reclassified to conform with the 1999  presentation.  These
reclassifications  had no effect on total  assets,  shareholders'  equity or net
income as previously reported.

NOTE B -- FAIR VALUES OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

The fair values of 1st Source's  financial  instruments  as of December 31, 1999
and 1998, are summarized in the following table.

The following  methods and assumptions were used by 1st Source in estimating the
fair value of its financial instruments:

CASH AND CASH  EQUIVALENTS -- The carrying values  reported in the  consolidated
statements  of financial  condition  for cash and due from banks,  federal funds
sold and  interest  bearing  deposits  with other banks  approximate  their fair
values.

INVESTMENT  SECURITIES  -- Fair values for  investment  securities  are based on
quoted  market  prices,  where  available.  If  quoted  market  prices  are  not
available, fair values are estimated based on quoted market prices of comparable
investments.

LOANS -- For variable rate loans that reprice frequently and with no significant
change in credit risk, fair values are based on carrying values. The fair values
for certain real estate  loans  (e.g.,  one-to-four  single  family  residential
mortgage  loans)  are based on quoted  market  prices of  similar  loans sold in
conjunction with securitization  transactions,  adjusted for differences in loan
characteristics.  The  fair  values  of all  other  loans  are  estimated  using
discounted cash flow analyses,  using interest rates currently being offered for
loans with similar terms to borrowers of similar credit quality.

DEPOSITS -- The fair values for all deposits  other than time deposits are equal
to the amounts payable on demand (the carrying  value).  Fair values of variable
rate time  deposits are equal to their  carrying  values.  Fair values for fixed
rate time  deposits are estimated  using  discounted  cash flow  analyses  using
interest  rates  currently  being  offered for deposits  with similar  remaining
maturities.

SHORT-TERM  BORROWINGS  -- The  carrying  values  of  federal  funds  purchased,
securities  sold under  repurchase  agreements and other  short-term  borrowings
approximate their fair values.

LONG-TERM  DEBT -- The fair values of 1st Source's  long-term debt are estimated
using  discounted cash flow analyses,  based on 1st Source's  current  estimated
incremental borrowing rates for similar types of borrowing arrangements.

GUARANTEED  PREFERRED   BENEFICIAL  INTERESTS  IN  THE  COMPANY'S   SUBORDINATED
DEBENTURES  (CUMULATIVE TRUST PREFERRED  SECURITIES) -- Fair values are based on
quoted market prices.

GUARANTEES  AND LOAN  COMMITMENTS -- Contract and fair values for certain of 1st
Source's   off-balance-sheet   financial   instruments   (guarantees   and  loan
commitments) are estimated based on fees currently charged to enter into similar
agreements,  taking into account the remaining  terms of the  agreements and the
counterparties' credit standing.

INTEREST  RATE SWAPS -- Fair values for interest rate swaps are based on the net
amount necessary to currently settle the transaction.

LIMITATIONS  -- Fair value  estimates are made at a discrete point in time based
on relevant market information and information about the financial  instruments.
Because no market  exists for a  significant  portion of 1st Source's  financial
instruments, fair value

                                   (page 27)
<PAGE> 28
NOTE B -- FAIR VALUES OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS (concluded)

estimates are based on judgments  regarding  future  expected  loss  experience,
current  economic   conditions,   risk   characteristics  of  various  financial
instruments and other such factors.

These estimates are subjective in nature and involve  uncertainties  and matters
of  significant  judgment and  therefore  cannot be determined  with  precision.
Changes in assumptions could  significantly  affect the estimates.  In addition,
the  fair  value  estimates  are  based  on  existing  on and  off-balance-sheet
financial  instruments  without  attempting to estimate the value of anticipated
future business and the value of assets and liabilities  that are not considered
financial  instruments.  For example,  1st Source has a substantial annual trust
net fee income. The trust business is not considered a financial  instrument and
its value has not been incorporated into the fair value estimates.

Other  significant  assets and  liabilities  that are not  considered  financial
instruments  include the mortgage banking operation,  premises and equipment and
other assets. In addition,  for investment and mortgage-backed  securities,  the
income tax  ramifications  related to the  realization  of unrealized  gains and
losses can have a significant  effect on fair value  estimates and have not been
considered in many of the estimates. Also, the fair value estimates for deposits
do not include the bent that results from the low-cost  funding  provided by the
deposit liabilities compared to the cost of borrowing funds in the market.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       Carrying or                   Carrying or
                                                     Contract Value   Fair Value   Contract Value   Fair Value
                                                     --------------   ----------   --------------   ----------
(Dollars in thousands)                                           1999                          1998
<S>                                                    <C>             <C>            <C>           <C>
ASSETS:
Cash and due from banks ............................. $  101,911      $  101,911     $  132,514    $  132,514
Federal funds sold and interest
bearing deposits with other banks ...................      1,399           1,399         41,951        41,951
Investment securities, available-for-sale ...........    470,040         470,040        443,691       443,691
Investment securities, held-to-maturity .............     77,190          78,462         96,008        99,734
Loans, net of reserve for loan losses ...............  2,022,979       2,030,450      1,843,067     1,905,335
LIABILITIES:
Deposits ............................................  2,127,452       2,126,901      2,177,107     2,189,910
Short-term borrowings ...............................    409,742         409,742        242,159       242,159
Long-term debt ......................................     12,174          12,317         13,189        13,755
Guaranteed preferred beneficial interests
in the Company's subordinated debentures ............     44,750          42,993         44,750        47,036
OFF-BALANCE-SHEET INSTRUMENTS* ......................         --         (1,622)             --         (351)
</TABLE>

*Represents estimated cash outflows required to currently settle the obligations
at current market rates.

NOTE C -- RESTRICTIONS ON CASH DUE FROM BANKS

1st Source  Bank is  required  to  maintain  reserve  balances  with the Federal
Reserve Bank.  The average  amount of those reserve  balances for the year ended
December 31, 1999 was approximately $17.6 million.

Under  available  line of credit  agreements,  1st  Source  may  borrow up to $3
million. At December 31, 1999, there were no outstanding  borrowings under these
lines, which were assigned to support commercial paper borrowings.

                                   (page 28)
<PAGE> 29
NOTE D -- INVESTMENT SECURITIES

The amortized cost and estimated  aggregate fair value of securities  classified
as available-for-sale and held-to-maturity at December 31, 1999, are as follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    Available-For-Sale
                                                                    ------------------
                                                                   Gross        Gross
                                                                 Unrealized   Unrealized   Estimated
(Dollars in thousands)                               Amortized    Holding      Holding     Aggregate
                                                       Cost        Gains       Losses      Fair Value
                                                      --------    --------    --------     ----------
<S>                                                   <C>         <C>         <C>          <C>
Equity Securities:
   Marketable securities ..........................   $ 20,694    $    534    $ (1,556)    $ 19,672
   Other equity securities ........................      3,975          --          --        3,975
                                                      --------    --------    --------     --------
Total equity securities ...........................     24,669         534      (1,556)      23,647
Debt Securities:
   United States Treasury and agency securities ...    264,982          36      (2,632)     262,386
   Obligations of states and political subdivisions     97,033          55        (920)      96,168
   Debt securities issued by foreign governments ..      2,265       1,548          (1)       3,812
   Corporate securities ...........................     20,137           8        (222)      19,923
   Mortgage-backed securities .....................     20,331          51        (455)      19,927
   Other debt securities ..........................     17,593          24        (272)      17,345
   Commercial paper ...............................     29,970          --          --       29,970
                                                      --------    --------    --------     --------
Total debt securities .............................    452,311       1,722      (4,502)     449,531
                                                      --------    --------    --------     --------
Total Investment Securities .......................   $476,980    $  2,256    $ (6,058)    $473,178
                                                      ========    ========    ========     ========

                                                                     Held-To-Maturity
                                                                    ------------------
                                                                   Gross        Gross
                                                                 Unrealized   Unrealized   Estimated
                                                     Amortized    Holding      Holding     Aggregate
                                                       Cost        Gains       Losses      Fair Value
                                                      --------    --------    --------     ----------
Equity Securities:
   Other equity securities                            $ 12,233          --          --     $ 12,233
Debt Securities:
   Obligations of states and political subdivisions     64,957       1,280          (8)      66,229
                                                      --------    --------    --------     --------
Total Investment Securities                           $ 77,190    $  1,280    $     (8)    $ 78,462
                                                      ========    ========    ========     ========
</TABLE>

The  amortized  cost and  estimated  aggregate  fair  value  of debt  securities
classified as  available-for-sale  and held-to-maturity at December 31, 1999, by
contractual maturity (except for mortgage-backed  securities),  are shown at the
top of page 30.

Expected  maturities will differ from contractual  maturities  because borrowers
may have  the  right  to call or  prepay  obligations  with or  without  call or
prepayment penalties.

                                   (page 29)
<PAGE> 30
NOTE D -- INVESTMENT SECURITIES (continued)
(Dollars in thousands)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       Available-For-Sale         Held-To-Maturity
                                                       ------------------         ----------------
                                                                    Estimated               Estimated
                                                                    Aggregate               Aggregate
                                                     Amortized         Fair      Amortized     Fair
                                                       Cost           Value        Cost       Value
                                                     ---------      ---------    ---------  ---------
<S>                                                  <C>            <C>          <C>        <C>
Due in one year or less                              $126,610       $126,273     $  6,262   $  6,287
Due after one year through five years                 263,573        260,245       33,975     34,645
Due after five years through ten years                 19,642         19,585       22,149     22,698
Due after ten years                                    25,024         26,306        2,571      2,599
Mortgage-backed securities                             17,462         17,122           --         --
                                                     --------       --------     --------   --------
Total                                                $452,311       $449,531     $ 64,957   $ 66,229
                                                     ========       ========     ========   ========
</TABLE>

The amortized cost and estimated  aggregate fair value of securities  classified
as  available-for-sale  and  held-to-maturity  at  December  31,  1998,  were as
follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    Available-For-Sale
                                                                    ------------------
                                                                   Gross        Gross
                                                                 Unrealized   Unrealized   Estimated
(Dollars in thousands)                               Amortized    Holding      Holding     Aggregate
                                                       Cost        Gains       Losses      Fair Value
                                                      --------    --------    --------     ----------
<S>                                                   <C>         <C>         <C>          <C>
Equity Securities:
   Marketable securities                              $ 14,315    $  1,304    $    (91)    $ 15,528
   Other equity securities                               3,465          17          --        3,482
                                                      --------    --------    --------     --------
Total equity securities                                 17,780       1,321         (91)      19,010
Debt Securities:
   United States Treasury and agency securities        243,003       1,019         (85)     243,937
   Obligations of states and political subdivisions     69,115       1,007         (24)      70,098
   Debt securities issued by foreign governments         2,205       1,492          --        3,697
   Corporate securities                                 20,276         394         (31)      20,639
   Mortgage-backed securities                           40,681         172        (211)      40,642
   Other debt securities                                20,549         105         (36)      20,618
   Commercial paper                                     28,128          --          --       28,128
                                                      --------    --------    --------     --------
Total debt securities                                  423,957       4,189        (387)     427,759
                                                      --------    --------    --------     --------
Total Investment Securities                           $441,737    $  5,510    $   (478)    $446,769
                                                      ========    ========    ========     ========

                                                                     Held-To-Maturity
                                                                    ------------------
                                                                   Gross        Gross
                                                                 Unrealized   Unrealized   Estimated
                                                     Amortized    Holding      Holding     Aggregate
                                                       Cost        Gains       Losses      Fair Value
                                                      --------    --------    --------     ----------
Equity Securities:
   Other equity securities                            $ 11,633    $     --    $     --     $ 11,633
Debt Securities:
   Obligations of states and political subdivisions     84,375       3,726          --       88,101
                                                      --------    --------    --------     --------
Total Investment Securities                           $ 96,008    $  3,726    $     --     $ 99,734
                                                      ========    ========    ========     ========
</TABLE>

                                   (page 30)
<PAGE> 31
NOTE D -- INVESTMENT SECURITIES (concluded)

Other equity securities  classified as held-to-maturity at December 31, 1999 and
1998 include  securities such as Federal Reserve Bank and Federal Home Loan Bank
stock,  which are not traded on established  exchanges and have only  redemption
capabilities.   Fair  values  for  such  equity  securities  are  considered  to
approximate cost. Debt securities issued by foreign  governments  (classified as
available-for-sale)  with an  amortized  cost of  $1.59  million  and  estimated
aggregate  fair values of $3.14  million and $3.08  million at December 31, 1999
and 1998,  respectively,  are  included  in the above debt  securities,  but are
classified as loans in the accompanying 1999 and 1998 consolidated statements of
financial  condition.  1st Source had no trading  securities  as of December 31,
1999 and 1998. The following  represents  the  segregation of cash flows between
securities available-for-sale and held-to-maturity:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      1999                            1998                           1997
                                      ----                            ----                           ----
                         Available-  Held-To-            Available-  Held-To-           Available-  Held-To-
                          For-Sale   Maturity    Total    For-Sale   Maturity   Total    For-Sale   Maturity  Total
                          --------   --------    -----    --------   --------   -----    --------   --------  -----
(Dollars in thousands)
<S>                       <C>        <C>       <C>        <C>        <C>      <C>        <C>        <C>      <C>
Purchase of securities    $270,835   $   606   $271,441   $372,883   $   521  $373,404   $139,534   $ 4,957  $144,491
Proceeds from sales
 of securities               3,315        --      3,315     13,437        --    13,437     16,684        --    16,684
Proceeds from maturities
and prepayments of
securities                 231,121    19,300    250,421    216,752    18,823   235,575    133,051     9,829   142,880
</TABLE>

Gross  gains of $630,000  were  realized  during 1999 on the sale of  securities
available-for-sale.  There  was a loss  of  $199,135  in  1998  on the  sale  of
securities  available-for-sale.  During  1999,  1998 and 1997,  gross  losses of
$400,000,  $300,000 and  $324,037,  respectively,  were  realized on the sale of
securities  held-to-maturity.  These gross  losses were due to the  write-off of
venture capital investments.

At December 31, 1999 and 1998,  investment  securities  with carrying  values of
$279.2 million and $237.9 million,  respectively,  were pledged as collateral to
secure government, public and trust deposits and for other purposes.

The  mortgage-backed  securities  held by 1st Source consist  primarily of FNMA,
GNMA  and  FHLMC  pass-through   certificates  which  are  guaranteed  by  those
respective agencies of the United States government.

NOTE E -- LOANS TO RELATED PARTIES

1st Source and its subsidiaries have extended loans to officers and directors of
1st Source and its  subsidiaries and to their  associates.  The aggregate dollar
amount of these loans was $20.83 million and $15.74 million at December 31, 1999
and 1998,  respectively.  During 1999, $12.59 million of new loans were made and
repayments and other reductions totaled $7.50 million.

NOTE F -- RESERVE FOR LOAN LOSSES

At  December  31, 1999 and 1998,  loans  amounting  to $11.97  million and $9.27
million,  respectively,  substantially  all of  which  are  collateralized,  are
considered to be nonaccrual or restructured loans. Interest income for the years
ended  December 31, 1999,  1998 and 1997 would have  increased by  approximately
$866,000, $719,000, and $786,000,  respectively,  if these loans earned interest
at their full contract rate.

As of December 31, 1999 and 1998,  impaired  loans  totaled  $31.57  million and
$13.30  million,  respectively,  of which $20.71  million and $3.73  million had
corresponding specific reserves for loan losses totaling $5.59 million and $1.18
million,  respectively. The remaining balances of impaired loans had no specific
reserves for loan losses  associated with them. A total of $11.09 million of the
impaired loans are nonaccrual loans; interest is not recognized

                                   (page 31)
<PAGE> 32
NOTE F-- RESERVE FOR LOAN LOSSES (concluded)

on  nonaccrual  loans  subsequent  to the date the loan is placed in  nonaccrual
status.  While a loan is classified as nonaccrual and the future  collectibility
of the recorded loan balance is doubtful,  collections on interest and principal
are generally applied as a reduction to principal  outstanding.  Interest on the
remainder of the impaired loans is recognized on the accrual basis. For 1999 and
1998, the average  recorded  investment in impaired loans was $19.32 million and
$13.28 million,  respectively,  and interest income recognized on impaired loans
totaled $2.18 million and $1.23 million, respectively.

Changes  in the  reserve  for loan  losses  for each of the  three  years  ended
December 31 were as follows:

(Dollars in thousands)                1999           1998           1997
                                    -------        -------        -------
Balance,beginning of year           $38,629        $35,424        $29,516
Provision for loan losses             7,442          9,156          6,052
Charge-offs, net of recoveries
  of $639 in 1999, $1,148 in 1998
  and $1,266 in 1997                 (2,388)        (3,651)          (144)
Recaptured reserve due to
  loan securitizations               (3,473)        (2,300)            --
                                    -------        -------        -------
Balance, end of year                $40,210        $38,629        $35,424
                                    =======        =======        =======


NOTE G -- LONG-TERM DEBT

Details of long-term debt are as follows:
                                           December 31
(Dollars in thousands)                 1999           1998
                                     -------        -------
Term loan (7.40%)                    $10,000        $10,000
Subordinated capital notes (4.47%)        --          1,145
Federal Home Loan Bank
  borrowings (5.54%-6.98%)             1,029          1,037
Other                                  1,145          1,007
                                     -------        -------
Total Long-Term Debt                 $12,174        $13,189
                                     =======        =======


Annual  maturities  of  long-term  debt at December  31, 1999 are as follows (in
thousands): 2000, $360; 2001, $315; 2002, $10,226; 2003, $358; and, 2004, $18.

The $10.0 million term loan has a fixed interest rate of 7.40% payable quarterly
with  principal  due at  maturity,  October  1,  2002.  The Term Loan  Agreement
contains,   among  other   provisions,   a   make-whole   provision   for  early
extinguishment of debt, and certain covenants relating to existence and mergers,
capital structure and financial requirements.

During 1999,  $572,000 of the  subordinated  capital  notes matured and $573,000
were redeemed at par value.

At December 31, 1999, the Federal Home Loan Bank  borrowings  represent a source
of funding for certain residential mortgage activities and consist of five fixed
rate  notes  with  maturities  ranging  from  2003  to  2018.  These  notes  are
collateralized by $1.65 million of certain real estate loans.

NOTE H -- COMMON STOCK

Effective  January 1, 1996,  1st Source  adopted SFAS No. 123,  "Accounting  for
Stock-Based   Compensation,"   on  a  disclosure   basis  only.  The  disclosure
requirements include reporting the pro forma effect on net income and net income
per share of  compensation  expense  that is  attributable  to the fair value of
stock  options  and other  stock-based  compensation  that  have been  issued to
employees under the Stock Option Plans and the Employee Stock Purchase Plan. 1st
Source will  continue to apply APB No. 25 in  accounting  for these  plans.  The
Executive  Incentive  Plan, the Special  Long-Term  Incentive Award Plan and the
Restricted  Stock Award Plan are already  being  accounted  for as  compensatory
plans in accordance with the provisions of SFAS No. 123.  Compensation cost that
has been  charged  against  income  for these  plans was  $3.22  million,  $3.05
million, and $1.83 million for the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997,
respectively.

                                   (page 32)
<PAGE> 33
NOTE H -- COMMON STOCK (continued)

STOCK OPTION PLANS -- 1st Source's incentive stock option plans include the 1992
Stock Option Plan (the "1992 Plan") and a certain  other stock option  agreement
which became  effective  January 1, 1992.  As of December 31, 1999, an aggregate
1,957,654  shares of common  stock are  reserved  for  issuance  under the above
plans.  Under the 1992 Plan, the exercise price of each option equals the market
price of 1st Source stock on the date of grant and an option's term is 10 years.
Options  under the 1992 Plan  generally  vest in one to five  years from date of
grant.   Options  are  granted  on  a  discretionary   basis  by  the  Executive
Compensation Committee (the "Committee") of the 1st Source Board of Directors.

The fair value of each option  grant is estimated on the date of grant using the
Black-Scholes   option   pricing  model  with  the  following   weighted-average
assumptions  used  for  grants  in  1999:  dividend  yield  of  1.16%;  expected
volatility of 20.54%;  risk-free  interest  rate of 6.42%;  and expected life of
6.25 years.

The  following is a summary of the activity  with respect to 1st Source's  stock
option plans for the years ended December 31, 1997, 1998 and 1999:

                                                               Weighted
                                                Number of       Average
                                                 Shares     Exercise Price

Options oustanding, January 1, 1997             1,009,126        $ 8.13
Options granted                                    12,100         17.98
Options exercised                                (259,649)         4.82
Options forfeited                                  (8,701)         9.86
Options outstanding, December 31, 1997            752,876          9.36

Options granted                                   332,750         34.25
Options exercised                                 (44,287)         9.88
Options forfeited                                    (378)        13.72
Options outstanding, December 31, 1998          1,040,961         17.29

Options granted                                    10,000         25.50
Options exercised                                (132,965)         7.06
Options forfeited                                  (1,100)        35.45
Options outstanding, December 31, 1999            916,896         18.84

Options exercisable, December 31, 1999            822,481        $18.59

The following table summarizes  information  about stock options  outstanding at
December 31, 1999:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                             OPTIONS OUTSTANDING
                             -------------------
                                            Weighted-
                                             Average         Weighted-
     Range of             Number            Remaining         Average
     Exercise           Outstanding        Contractual        Exercise
      Prices            at 12/31/99       Life (Years)         Price
      ------            -----------       ------------         -----
<S>                       <C>                 <C>             <C>
$ 6.00  to  $12.99        404,604             3.41            $ 8.09
 13.00  to   29.99        180,642             6.82             14.66
 30.00  to   35.99        331,650             8.55             34.24
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                              OPTIONS EXERCISABLE
                              -------------------
                                                             Weighted-
     Range of                       Number                    Average
     Exercise                     Exercisable                 Exercise
      Prices                      at 12/31/99                  Price
      ------                      -----------                  -----
<S>                                 <C>                       <C>
$ 6.00  to  $12.99                  404,604                   $ 8.09
 13.00  to   29.99                  113,287                    13.90
 30.00  to   35.99                  304,590                    34.29
</TABLE>

<PAGE> 34
EMPLOYEE  STOCK  PURCHASE PLAN -- 1st Source also has an employee stock purchase
plan for  substantially  all employees with at least two years of service on the
effective  date of an offering under the plan.  Eligible  employees may elect to
purchase  any dollar  amount of stock so long as such amount does not exceed 25%
of their base rate of pay and the aggregate stock accrual rate for all offerings
does not exceed  $25,000 in any  calendar  year.  Payment  for the stock is made
through  payroll   deductions  over  the  offering  period,  and  employees  may
discontinue the deductions at any time and exercise the option or take the funds
out of the  program.  The most  recent  offering  began June 1,  1999,  and runs
through May 31, 2001, with $424,786 in stock value to be purchased at $32.13 per
share.  The fair value of the employees'  purchase  rights for the 1999 offering
was estimated  using the  Black-Scholes  model with the  following  assumptions:
dividend yield of 1.08%; expected volatility of 18.23%;  risk-free interest rate
of 5.54%; and expected life of two years.

Pro forma net income and  diluted  net income per common  share,  reported as if
compensation expense had been recognized under the fair value provisions of SFAS
No. 123 for the stock option and employee stock purchase plans, are as follows:

                                          1999           1998           1997
                                        -------        -------        -------
Net income (000s):
   As reported                          $35,768        $31,457        $26,489
   Pro forma                             34,376         30,345         26,146
Diluted net income per common share:
   As reported                            $1.86          $1.62          $1.36
   Pro forma                               1.80           1.58           1.35


                                   (page 33)
<PAGE> 35
NOTE H -- COMMON STOCK (concluded)

EXECUTIVE  INCENTIVE PLAN -- 1st Source has an Executive Incentive Plan which is
administered by the Committee. Awards under the plan include "Book Value" shares
of common stock. These shares are awarded annually based on weighted performance
criteria and vest over a period of five years.  The plan shares may only be sold
to 1st Source,  and such sale is  mandatory  in the event of death,  retirement,
disability or termination of  employment.  Grants under the plan for 1999,  1998
and 1997 are summarized below:
                                           1999           1998           1997
                                          ------         ------         ------
Number of shares                          54,804         47,996         39,491
Weighted-average grant-date fair value    $11.27         $10.14          $9.07


SPECIAL  LONG-TERM  INCENTIVE  AWARD -- During February 1996 and March 1991, 1st
Source granted special long-term  incentive awards,  including 1st Source common
stock, to participants in the Executive Incentive Plan. Shares granted under the
plan vest over a period of ten  years.  The first 10% was  vested at the time of
the  grants.  Subsequent  vesting  requires  (i) the  participant  to  remain an
employee of 1st Source and (ii) that 1st Source be profitable on an annual basis
based on the determination of the Committee.

RESTRICTED STOCK AWARD PLAN -- 1st Source also has a restricted stock award plan
for key  employees.  Awards under the plan are made to employees  recommended by
the Chief Executive Officer and approved by the Committee.  Shares granted under
the plan vest over a five to ten-year period,  and vesting is based upon meeting
certain criteria, including continued employment by 1st Source. Grants under the
plan for 1999, 1998 and 1997 are summarized below:

                                          1999           1998           1997
                                        -------        -------        -------
Number of shares                          1,165          4,805          1,915
Weighted-average grant-date fair value   $29.75         $32.04         $19.01


NOTE I -- PREFERRED STOCK AND CUMULATIVE PREFERRED SECURITIES

As of December  31, 1999,  1st Source has 10 million  shares of  authorized  but
unissued  preferred stock. The Board of Directors of 1st Source is authorized to
determine  the  terms,  preferences,  limitations,  voting  rights and number of
shares of each series it elects to issue.

In 1997,  1st Source  raised $44.75  million  through the issuance of Cumulative
Trust Preferred  Securities.  1st Source Capital Trust I issued $27.5 million of
9.00% Cumulative Trust Preferred Securities.  1st Source Capital Trust II issued
$17.25  million of floating rate  Cumulative  Trust  Preferred  Securities.  1st
Source  Capital  Trust I and 1st  Source  Capital  Trust  II are  wholly  owned,
consolidated subsidiaries of 1st Source.

The holders of the fixed rate Cumulative Trust Preferred Securities are entitled
to receive  preferential  cumulative cash  distributions from 1st Source Capital
Trust  I, at the  annual  rate of  9.00% of the  liquidation  amount  of $25 per
Preferred  Security,  accruing  from the date of original  issuance  and payable
quarterly in arrears on the last day of March,  June,  September and December of
each year.  Holders of the floating rate Cumulative  Trust Preferred  Securities
are entitled to receive  preferential  cumulative  cash  distributions  from 1st
Source  Capital Trust II, at an annual rate equal to the sum of the  three-month
Treasury adjusted to a constant maturity, plus 2.25%, applied to the liquidation
amount of $25 per Floating  Rate  Preferred  Security  accruing from the date of
original  issuance  and payable  quarterly  in arrears on the last day of March,
June, September and December of each year.

NOTE J -- EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS

1st Source maintains a defined contribution money purchase pension plan covering
the  majority  of its  employees.  Contributions  to the plan are based on 2% of
participants' eligible compensation. For the years ended December 31, 1999, 1998
and 1997,  total pension  expense for this plan amounted to $445,000,  $422,000,
and $433,000, respectively.

1st Source also maintains a defined contribution profit sharing and savings plan
covering the majority of its employees.  The plan allows  eligible  employees to
make  contributions  by  salary  reduction  pursuant  to  Section  401(k) of the
Internal  Revenue Code.  1st Source is required  under the plan to match 100% of
participant  contributions  up  to  4%  of  compensation  and  one-half  of  any
additional participant  contributions up to 6% of compensation provided that 1st
Source is  profitable  for the  respective  plan year.  1st Source may also make
discretionary  contributions  to  the  plan,  depending  on  its  profitability.
Contribution  expense for this plan for the years ended December 31, 1999,  1998
and  1997,  amounted  to  $1.58  million,  $1.34  million,  and  $1.29  million,
respectively.

                                   (page 34)
<PAGE> 36
NOTE J -- EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS (concluded)

Trustcorp Mortgage Company contributes to a defined contribution plan for all of
its employees who meet the general  eligibility  requirements  of the plan.  The
contributions,  which in part are based on amounts of  compensation  deferred by
the participants in the plan, were $94,000 in 1999,  $78,000 in 1998 and $54,000
in  1997.   In  addition,   Trustcorp   Mortgage   Company  made   discretionary
contributions of $115,000 in 1999, $145,000 in 1998, and $103,000 in 1997.

In addition to the pension and profit sharing plans, 1st Source provides certain
health care and life insurance  benefits for  substantially all of their retired
employees.  All of 1st Source's  full-time  employees  become eligible for these
retiree  benefits  upon  reaching  age 55 with 20  years  of  credited  service.
Generally,  the  medical  plan  pays a stated  percentage  of  eligible  medical
expenses  reduced for any deductibles  and payments made by government  programs
and other group coverage. The lifetime maximum benefit payable under the medical
plan is $15,000 and $3,000 for life insurance.

1st Source's accrued postretirement benefit cost and net periodic postretirement
benefit cost recognized in the consolidated  financial  statements for the years
ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997 were not material.

NOTE K -- INCOME TAXES

Income tax expense is comprised of the following:

(Dollars in thousands)         1999           1998           1997
                             -------        -------        -------
Current: Federal             $15,897        $ 7,171        $ 6,969
   State                       3,500          2,539          2,584
                             -------        -------        -------
Total Current                 19,397          9,710          9,553
Deferred:
   Federal                      (637)         6,328          3,824
   State                        (289)         1,805          1,015
                             -------        -------        -------
Total Deferred                  (926)         8,133          4,839
                             -------        -------        -------
Total Provision              $18,471        $17,843        $14,392
                             =======        =======        =======

Deferred tax assets as of December 31, 1999 and 1998 consisted of the following:

(Dollars in thousands)                   1999           1998
                                       -------        -------
Deferred tax assets:
   Reserve for loan losses             $19,480        $17,303
   Accruals for employee benefits        3,064          3,323
   Net unrealized (appreciation)
   depreciation of securities
   available-for-sale                    1,541         (2,039)
   Asset securitization                  1,432          1,627
   Deferred income                         292            376
   Excess servicing                        171            249
   Mortgage loans-- Section 475              4            416
   Other                                   913            792
                                       -------        -------
Total                                  $26,897        $22,047
                                       =======        =======

Deferred  tax  liabilities  as of December  31, 1999 and 1998  consisted  of the
following:

(Dollars in thousands)                   1999           1998
                                       -------        -------
Deferred tax liabilities:
   Differing depreciable
     bases in premises and
     leased equipment                  $13,426        $10,597
   Purchased servicing                   6,360          5,259
   Originated mortgage
     servicing rights                    3,090          2,456
   Differing bases in assets
     related to acquisitions               737          1,000
   Discounts accreted on
     investment securities                 182            157
   Other                                   234            636
                                       -------        -------
Total                                  $24,029        $20,105
                                       =======        =======

There was no valuation allowance at December 31, 1999 or 1998.

                                   (page 35)
<PAGE> 37
NOTE K -- INCOME TAXES (concluded)

The  reasons  for the  difference  between  income  tax  expense  and the amount
computed by  applying  the  statutory  federal  income tax rate (35  percent) to
income before income taxes are as follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    Year Ended December 31
                                                                    ----------------------
                                                 1999                      1998                      1997
                                                 ----                      ----                      ----
                                                    Percent of                Percent of                Percent of
                                                      Pretax                    Pretax                    Pretax
                                           Amount     Income         Amount     Income         Amount     Income
                                           ------     ------         ------     ------         ------     ------
(Dollars in thousands)
<S>                                        <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Statutory federal income tax               $19,774      35.0%        $18,032      35.0%        $14,917      35.0%
Increase (decrease) in income
taxes resulting from:
   Tax-exempt interest income               (2,892)     (5.1)         (2,894)     (5.6)         (2,968)     (7.0)
   State taxes, net of federal
   income tax benefit                        2,087       3.7           2,823       5.4           2,339       5.5
   Interest expense incurred to
   carry tax-exempt securities                 406       0.7             403       0.8             417       1.0
   Contributions of appreciated stock           --        --            (150)     (0.3)           (358)     (0.8)
   Other                                      (904)     (1.6)           (371)     (0.7)             45       0.1
Total                                      $18,471      32.7%        $17,843      34.6%        $14,392      33.8%
</TABLE>

NOTE L -- LEASES

1st Source and its subsidiaries are obligated under operating leases for certain
office  premises  and  equipment.  The  headquarters  building  is leased  for a
remaining term of 12 years with options to renew for up to 15 additional  years.
Approximately 30% of the facility is subleased to other tenants.

At December 31, 1999, future minimum rental  commitments for all  noncancellable
operating  leases,  reduced by future  minimum  rentals from  subleases of $1.52
million,  aggregate  $15.14  million.  Annual  rental  commitments  and sublease
rentals for noncancellable  operating leases (excluding operating costs) for the
five years succeeding December 31, 1999, are as follows:

                                 Rental         Sublease
(Dollars in thousands)         Commitments       Rentals
                               -----------      --------
2000                             $2,092           $388
2001                              1,698            386
2002                              1,464            382
2003                              1,351             76
2004                              1,245             76
Thereafter                       $8,818           $216

Rental expense of office premises and equipment and related sublease income were
as follows:

                                             Year Ended December 31
(Dollars in thousands)                 1999           1998           1997
                                      ------         ------         ------
Gross rental expense                  $2,596         $2,243         $2,190
Sublease rental income                  (700)          (672)          (677)
Net Rental Expense                    $1,896         $1,571         $1,513


NOTE M -- FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS WITH OFF-BALANCE-SHEET RISK

1st Source  and its  subsidiaries  are  parties to  financial  instruments  with
off-balance-sheet  risk in the normal  course of business to meet the  financing
needs of its customers.  These  off-balance-sheet  financial instruments include
commitments to originate, purchase and sell loans, standby letters of credit and
interest rate swaps. The instruments involve, to varying degrees, elements of

                                   (page 36)
<PAGE> 38
NOTE M-- FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS WITH OFF-BALANCE-SHEET RISK  (concluded)

credit  and  interest  rate  risk in  excess  of the  amount  recognized  in the
consolidated statements of financial condition.

1st Source's exposure to credit loss in the event of nonperformance by the other
party to the financial  instrument for loan  commitments  and standby letters of
credit is represented by the dollar amount of those instruments. 1st Source uses
the same credit policies and collateral  requirements in making  commitments and
conditional obligations as it does for on-balance-sheet instruments.

Loan  commitments  generally have fixed  expiration  dates or other  termination
clauses  and may require  payment of a fee.  Since many of the  commitments  are
expected to expire without being drawn upon, the total commitment amounts do not
necessarily represent future cash requirements.

Trustcorp  Mortgage  Company  grants  mortgage  loan  commitments  to borrowers,
subject to normal loan underwriting standards. The interest rate risk associated
with these loan  commitments  is managed by entering  into  contracts for future
deliveries of loans.

Letters of credit are conditional  commitments issued by 1st Source to guarantee
the  performance  of a customer to a third party.  The credit risk  involved and
collateral obtained in issuing letters of credit is essentially the same as that
involved in extending loan commitments to customers.

As of December 1999 and 1998, 1st Source and its  subsidiaries  had  commitments
outstanding  to originate and purchase loans  aggregating  $142 million and $362
million,  respectively.  Outstanding  commitments  to sell loans  aggregated $76
million at December 31, 1999 and $198  million at December 31, 1998.  Commercial
and  standby  letters of credit  totaled $92 million and $82 million at December
31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.

1st Source Bank  participates  in interest  rate swap  agreements as part of its
program to manage the impact of fluctuating  interest rates, namely with respect
to floating rate loans.

Interest  rate swaps  generally  involve the exchange of fixed and floating rate
interest  payments  without the  exchange  of the  underlying  notional  amount.
Notional amounts represent agreed upon amounts on which calculations of interest
payments to be exchanged are based.  Notional  amounts do not  represent  direct
credit exposures. The actual market or credit exposure of this type of financial
instrument is significantly  less than the notional amount.  1st Source's direct
credit  exposure is limited to the net difference  between the calculated "to be
paid" and "to be  received"  amounts  on each  transaction,  which is  generally
netted and paid or received  monthly,  and the inability of the  counterparty to
meet the terms of the contract.  This risk is normally a small percentage of the
notional  amount and fluctuates as interest rates move up and down.  Market risk
to 1st Source is more directly  measured by the fair values of the interest rate
swap agreements.

At December 31, 1999, 1st Source had three outstanding  amortizing interest rate
swap  agreements  with  an  aggregate  notional  value  of  $49.6  million.  The
agreements  have  maturities of March 25, 2001,  January 25, 2002, and April 10,
2003. The notional amounts and lives of amortizing swaps change based on certain
interest  rate  indices.  Generally,  as rates  fall,  the  notional  amounts of
amortizing  swaps decline more rapidly and as rates  increase  notional  amounts
decline more slowly.  Unrealized gains/(losses) based on fair value approximated
$(1,110,000) at December 31, 1999 and $70,000 at December 31, 1998.

NOTE N -- CONCENTRATION OF CREDIT RISK

Most of 1st Source's commercial and agricultural,  real estate and consumer loan
activity is with customers located in north-central  Indiana and southwest lower
Michigan.   1st  Source's   commercial  loans  secured  by  transportation   and
construction  equipment are with customers located throughout the United States.
Included  in loans as of  December  31,  1999 and 1998,  are  business  loans to
companies in the following industries:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                          Percentage of Total
                                                                Amount                      Business Loans
                                                                ------                      --------------
(Dollars in thousands)                                    1999            1998            1999           1998
                                                        --------        --------         ------         ------
<S>                                                     <C>             <C>               <C>            <C>
Air transportation and aircraft dealers                 $258,460        $199,459          15.7%          13.9%
Truck and automobile leasing                             233,404         200,005          14.2           13.9
Construction equipment and contractors                   153,550         149,288           9.4           10.4
Real estate operators, managers and developers            93,601          64,381           5.7            4.5
Agriculture                                               62,441          58,992           3.8            4.1
Van conversion, manufactured housing
  and recreational vehicle industries                     62,350          61,405           3.7            4.3
</TABLE>
                                   (page 37)
<PAGE> 39
NOTE N -- CONCENTRATION OF CREDIT RISK  (concluded)

Generally,  these loans are collateralized by assets of the borrower.  The loans
are  expected to be repaid from cash flow or proceeds  from the sale of selected
assets of the borrower.  1st Source  requires  collateral on  substantially  all
borrowings in these categories, which is typically the item being financed.

NOTE O -- CAPITAL ADEQUACY

1st Source is subject to various regulatory capital requirements administered by
the federal banking agencies.  Failure to meet minimum capital  requirements can
initiate certain mandatory,  and possibly  additional  discretionary  actions by
regulators  that,  if  undertaken,  could have a direct  material  effect on 1st
Source's  financial  statements.  Under  capital  adequacy  guidelines  and  the
regulatory framework for prompt corrective action, 1st Source must meet specific
capital  guidelines that involve  quantitative  measures of 1st Source's assets,
liabilities,  and certain off-balance-sheet items as calculated under regulatory
accounting  practices.  1st  Source's  capital  amounts and  classification  are
subject to  qualitative  judgments  by the  regulators  about  components,  risk
weightings, and other factors.

Quantitative  measures  established  by  regulation to ensure  capital  adequacy
require  1st Source to  maintain  minimum  amounts  and ratios (set forth in the
table below) of total and Tier I capital to risk-weighted  assets, and of Tier I
capital to average assets.  Management  believes,  as of December 31, 1999, that
1st Source meets all capital adequacy requirements to which it is subject.

As of December  31,  1999,  the most recent  notification  from the federal bank
regulators   categorized   1st  Source   Bank,   the  largest  of  1st  Source's
subsidiaries,  as "well capitalized"  under the regulatory  framework for prompt
corrective  action.  To be  categorized  as "well  capitalized"  1st Source must
maintain minimum total risk-based, Tier I risk-based, and Tier I leverage ratios
as set  forth in the  table.  There  are no  conditions  or  events  since  that
notification that management believes changed the institution's category.

1st Source and its largest subsidiary,  1st Source Bank's actual capital amounts
and ratios are presented in the table below:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     To Be Well
                                                               Minimum           Capitalized Under
                                                               Capital           Prompt Corrective
                                        Actual                Adequacy           Action Provisions
                                        ------                --------           -----------------
(Dollars in thousands)            $ Amount    Ratio       $ Amount   Ratio       $ Amount    Ratio
                                  --------    -----       --------   -----       --------    -----
As of December 31, 1999:
<S>                               <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>        <C>         <C>
Total Capital
(to Risk-Weighted Assets):
    Consolidated                  $312,704    13.20%      $189,531    8.00%      $236,914    10.00%
    1st Source Bank                286,986    12.45        184,476    8.00        230,596    10.00
Tier I Capital
(to Risk-Weighted Assets):
    Consolidated                   282,959    11.94         94,766    4.00        142,149     6.00
    1st Source Bank                258,021    11.19         92,238    4.00        138,357     6.00
Tier I Capital
(to Average Assets):
    Consolidated                   282,959    10.01        113,141    4.00        141,427     5.00
    1st Source Bank                258,021     9.42        109,522    4.00        136,903     5.00
</TABLE>

NOTE P -- COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENT LIABILITIES

1st Source and its  subsidiaries  are  defendants in various  legal  proceedings
arising in the normal course of business. In the opinion of management, based on
the advice of legal counsel,  the ultimate  resolution of these proceedings will
not have a material effect on 1st Source's  consolidated  financial  position or
results of operations.

The  consolidated  financial  statements do not reflect various  commitments and
contingent  liabilities,  such as  guarantees  and  liability for assets held in
trust, which arise in the normal course of business.

                                   (page 38)
<PAGE> 40
NOTE Q -- 1ST SOURCE CORPORATION (PARENT COMPANY ONLY) FINANCIAL INFORMATION
STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
(Dollars in thousands)

                                                  December 31
                                                1999       1998
                                              --------   --------
ASSETS
Cash ......................................   $      1   $      1
Short-term investments with bank subsidiary      3,988      3,402
Investment securities, available for sale
  (amortized cost of $18,942 and $20,341 at
  December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively)     18,892     20,999
Investments in:
  Bank Subsidiaries .......................    255,904    230,647
  Non-bank subsidiaries ...................     11,529     11,687
Loan receivables:
  Non-bank subsidiaries ...................      9,000      7,755
Premises and equipment, net ...............      4,757      3,150
Other assets ..............................      3,525      4,568
                                              --------   --------
Total Assets ..............................   $307,596   $282,209
                                              ========   ========
LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Commercial paper borrowings ...............   $  8,806   $  6,171
Other liabilities .........................      3,492      2,689
Long-term debt ............................     56,478     56,556
Total Liabilities .........................     68,776     65,416
Shareholders' Equity ......................    238,820    216,793
                                              --------   --------
Total Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity    $307,596   $282,209
                                              ========   ========


STATEMENTS OF INCOME
(Dollars in thousands)
                                                       Year Ended December 31
                                                      1999      1998      1997
                                                    -------   -------   -------
Income:
   Dividends from bank and non-bank subsidiaries    $ 7,439   $ 6,596   $ 5,725
   Rental income from subsidiaries ..............     2,422     2,363     2,273
   Other ........................................     2,814     2,883     3,447
                                                    -------   -------   -------
Total Income ....................................    12,675    11,842    11,445
Expenses:
   Interest on long-term debt ...................     4,556     4,612     3,810
   Interest on commercial paper
   and other short-term borrowings ..............       402       264       309
   Rent expense .................................     1,074     1,076     1,076
   Other ........................................     2,099     2,501     2,681
                                                    -------   -------   -------
Total Expenses ..................................     8,131     8,453     7,876
Income Before Income Tax Credits and
Equity in Undistributed Income of Subsidiaries ..     4,544     3,389     3,569
Income tax credits ..............................     1,162     1,556       925
                                                    -------   -------   -------
Income Before Equity in Undistributed
Income of Subsidiaries ..........................     5,706     4,945     4,494
Equity in undistributed income of subsidiaries:
   Bank subsidiaries ............................    27,817    23,631    19,736
   Non-bank subsidiaries ........................     2,245     2,881     2,259
                                                    -------   -------   -------
Net Income ......................................   $35,768   $31,457   $26,489
                                                    =======   =======   =======
                                   (page 39)
<PAGE> 41

NOTE Q-- 1ST SOURCE CORPORATION (PARENT COMPANY ONLY) FINANCIAL
         INFORMATION (concluded)

STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(Dollars in thousands)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          Year Ended December 31
                                                                       1999        1998        1997
                                                                     --------    --------    --------
<S>                                                                  <C>         <C>         <C>
Operating Activities:
Net income .......................................................   $ 35,768    $ 31,457    $ 26,489
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net
cash provided by  operating activities:
   Equity in undistributed income of subsidiaries ................    (30,062)    (26,512)    (21,995)
   Depreciation of premises and equipment ........................        264         225         201
   Realized and unrealized investment securities (gains) losses ..       (553)         99         176
   Other .........................................................      6,381       2,284       3,054
                                                                     --------    --------    --------
Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities ........................     11,798       7,553       7,925
Investing Activities:
   Proceeds from sales and maturities of investment securities ...      2,254       3,603       8,759
   Purchase of investment securities .............................       (321)     (6,195)    (15,788)
   Sale (purchase) or premises and equipment, net ................     (1,871)         23        (422)
   Contributed capital for new  non-bank subsidiary ..............         --          --      (1,384)
   Decrease (increase) in short-term investments
   with bank subsidiary ..........................................       (586)     (1,158)      3,593
   Decrease (increase) in loans made to subsidiaries, net ........     (1,245)      6,245     (34,000)
                                                                     --------    --------    --------
Net Cash Provided by (Used in) Investing Activities ..............     (1,769)      2,518     (39,242)
Financing Activities:
   Net increase (decrease) in commercial paper
   and other short-term borrowings ...............................      2,635       1,973      (2,269)
   Proceeds from issuance of cumulative trust preferred securities         --          --      44,750
   Proceeds from issuance of long-term debt ......................        112         434       1,452
   Payments on long-term debt ....................................       (191)       (107)     (2,834)
   Acquisition of treasury stock .................................     (6,646)     (7,116)     (5,023)
   Cash dividends ................................................     (5,922)     (5,296)     (4,723)
   Other .........................................................        (17)         12          (7)
                                                                     --------    --------    --------
Net Cash Provided by (Used in) Financing Activities ..............    (10,029)    (10,100)     31,346
                                                                     --------    --------    --------
Increase (Decrease) in Cash and Cash Equivalents .................          0         (29)         29
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of year .....................          1          30           1
                                                                     --------    --------    --------
Cash and Cash Equivalents, End of Year ...........................   $      1    $      1    $     30
                                                                     ========    ========    ========
</TABLE>

                                   (page 40)
<PAGE> 42
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP

To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of 1st Source Corporation:

In our opinion, the accompanying  consolidated statements of financial condition
and the related  consolidated  statements of income, of shareholders' equity and
of cash flows present fairly, in all material  respects,  the financial position
of 1st Source  Corporation  and its  subsidiaries at December 31, 1999 and 1998,
and the  consolidated  results of their operations and their cash flows for each
of the three years in the period ended  December 31, 1999,  in  conformity  with
accounting  principles  generally accepted in the United States. These financial
statements  are  the  responsibility  of  the  Corporation's   management;   our
responsibility  is to express an opinion on these financial  statements based on
our audits.  We conducted  our audits of these  statements  in  accordance  with
auditing standards  generally accepted in the United States,  which require that
we plan and perform the audit to obtain  reasonable  assurance about whether the
financial  statements  are free of  material  misstatement.  An  audit  includes
examining,  on a test basis,  evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in
the  financial   statements,   assessing  the  accounting  principles  used  and
significant  estimates made by management,  and evaluating the overall financial
statement  presentation.  We believe that our audits provide a reasonable  basis
for the opinion expressed above.


/s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

South Bend, Indiana
February 15, 2000

                                   (page 41)
<PAGE> 43
- --Full page graphic--

BANKING CENTER LOCATIONS - 1999

Visit 1st Source online at www.1stsource.com

[MAP OF BANKING CENTER LOCATIONS]

[1ST SOURCE BANK LOGO]

                                   (page 42)
<PAGE> 44
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS

[1ST SOURCE CORPORATION LOGO]

OFFICERS

Christopher J. Murphy III      Chairman of the Board, President
                               and Chief Executive Officer
Wellington D. Jones III        Executive Vice President
Larry E. Lentych               Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer
Vincent A. Tamburo             Secretary and General Counsel

DIRECTORS

Rev. E. William Beauchamp      Executive Vice President,
                               University of Notre Dame
Paul R. Bowles                 Former Vice President,
                               Corporate Development,
                               Clark Equipment Company
Philip J. Faccenda             General Counsel Emeritus
                               University of Notre Dame
Daniel B. Fitzpatrick          Chairman, President and
                               Chief Executive Officer,
                               Quality Dining, Inc.
Lawrence E. Hiler              Chairman, Hiler Industries
William P. Johnson             Chief Executive Officer,
                               Goshen Rubber Company, Inc.
Wellington D. Jones III        Executive Vice President
Rex Martin                     Chairman, President and
                               Chief Executive Officer
                               NIBCO INC.
Dane A. Miller                 President and Chief Executive
                               Officer, Biomet, Inc.
Christopher J. Murphy III      Chairman, President and
                               Chief Executive Officer
Timothy K. Ozark               Chairman and Chief Executive
                               Officer, Aim Financial Corporation
Richard J. Pfeil               Chairman and President,
                               Koontz-Wagner Electric
                               Company, Inc.
<PAGE> 45
[1ST SOURCE BANK LOGO]

OFFICERS

Christopher J. Murphy III      Chairman of the Board and
                               Chief Executive Officer
Wellington D. Jones III        President and Chief Operating Officer
Allen R. Qualey                President and Chief Operating
                               Officer, Specialty Finance Group
Richard Q. Stifel              Executive Vice President,
                               Business Banking Group
Larry E. Lentych               Senior Vice President, Treasurer
                               and Chief Financial Officer,
                               Finance and Administrative Services Group
James S. Jackson               Senior Vice President, Funds
                               Management Division
Larry A. Gardner               Senior Vice President,
                               Operations Group
Steven J. Wessell              Vice President,
                               Trust Operations Group
Vincent A. Tamburo             Senior Vice President and
                               Secretary, General Counsel
Maggie M. Kernan               Senior Vice President,
                               Marketing Division
Dan L. Craft                   Senior Vice President, Human
                               Resources Division

DIRECTORS

Rev. E. William Beauchamp      Executive Vice President,
                               University of Notre Dame
Paul R. Bowles                 Former Vice President,
                               Corporate Development,
                               Clark Equipment Company
Philip J. Faccenda             General Counsel Emeritus
                               University of Notre Dame
Daniel B. Fitzpatrick          Chairman, President and
                               Chief Executive Officer,
                               Quality Dining, Inc.
Terry L. Gerber                President and Chief Executive
                               Officer, Gerber Manufacturing
                               Company, Inc.
Lawrence E. Hiler              Chairman, Hiler Industries
Anne M. Hillman                Civic Leader
Hollis E. Hughes, Jr.          Executive Director, United
                               Way of St. Joseph County
H. Thomas Jackson              Chairman, Bornemann Coated
                               Fabrics, Bornemann Products
William P. Johnson             Chief Executive Officer,
                               Goshen Rubber Company, Inc.
Wellington D. Jones III        President
Craig A. Kapson                President, Jordan Ford, Toyota,
                               Volvo, Lincoln Mercury
David L. Lerman                President, Steel Warehouse Co. Inc.
Christopher J. Murphy III      Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Richard J. Pfeil               Chairman and President,
                               Koontz-Wagner Electric
                               Company, Inc.
John T. Phair                  President, Holladay Partners-
                               Midwest, Inc.
Mark D. Schwabero              President and Chief Executive
                               Officer, Hendrickson International
Elmer H. Tepe                  President, E.H. Tepe Co.

                                   (page 43)
<PAGE> 46
SHAREHOLDERS' INFORMATION

1999 STOCK PERFORMANCE AND DIVIDENDS

1st Source Corporation common stock is traded on the Over-The-Counter market and
is listed on the Nasdaq Stock Market under the symbol "SRCE." 1st Source is also
listed on the  National  Market  System  tables in many daily  papers  under the
symbol "1stSrc."

High and low common stock prices,  cash  dividends  paid for 1999 and book value
were:
                                                              Cash
                                                            Dividends
Quarter Ended            High              Low                Paid
- -------------           -------          -------             ------
March 31                $35-3/4          $29-3/4             $.073
June 30                  33-1/4           29-1/2              .080
September 30             32-7/8           23-7/8              .080
December 31              29-7/8           24-7/8              .080

Book value per common share at December 31, 1999: $12.64

ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

The Annual Meeting of Shareholders  has been called for 10:00 am, EST,  Tuesday,
April 18,  2000,  at 1st Source  Center,  100 N.  Michigan  Street,  South Bend,
Indiana.

All shareholders are invited to attend the meeting.

COMMON STOCK LISTING

The Nasdaq Stock Market National
Market Symbol: "SRCE"
CUSIP #336901 10 3

TRANSFER AGENT, REGISTRAR AND DIVIDEND DISBURSING AGENT

1st Source Bank
Post Office Box 1602
South Bend, IN 46634

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
P.O. Box 6877
South Bend, IN  46660-6877

SHAREHOLDER INQUIRIES

1st Source Corporation
Larry E. Lentych
Chief Financial Officer
Post Office Box 1602
South Bend, IN 46634
(219) 235-2702

FORM 10-K INQUIRIES

A copy of 1st Source Corporation's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December  31,  1999,  as required to be filed with the  Securities  and Exchange
Commission, is available upon request.

MARKET MAKERS (as of February 16, 2000)

The following firms make a market in the common shares
of 1st Source Corporation:

ABN-AMRO Securities (USA), Inc.
Howe, Barnes Investments, Inc.
Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc.
NatCity Investments, Inc.
Raymond James and Associates
Sandler, O'Neill and Partners
Sherwood Securities Corporation
Spear, Leeds and Kellogg
Stifel, Nicolaus & Company
                                   (page 44)

<PAGE>
                                                                      EXHIBIT 21

                         SUBSIDIARIES OF THE REGISTRANT

The following is a listing of all subsidiaries of 1st Source Corporation. Unless
otherwise  indicated,  each  subsidiary  does business  under its own name.  The
activities of each is described in Part I, Item I, of Form 10-K.

          NAME                     DATE OF INCORPORATION       JURISDICTION
- ------------------------------     ---------------------       ------------
1st Source Bank                       April 19, 1922             Indiana

1st Source Auto Leasing, Inc.*        October 29, 1973           Indiana
  (Inactive)

1st Source Insurance, Inc.*           July 12, 1978              Indiana

1st Source Travel, Inc.*              March 4, 1982              Indiana
  (Inactive)

FBT Capital Corporation               February 6, 1970           Indiana
  (Inactive)

1st Source Leasing, Inc.              November 29, 1979          Indiana

1st Source Capital Corporation*       November 16, 1983          Indiana

Trustcorp Mortgage Company            December 5, 1973           Indiana

1st Source Capital Trust I            February 20, 1997         Delaware

1st Source Capital Trust II           February 27, 1997         Delaware

Michigan Transportation

   Finance Corporation*               August 1, 1997            Michigan

1st Source Funding Corporation*       June 12, 1998             Delaware


* Wholly-owned subsidiaries of 1st Source Bank

                                       E-5

<PAGE>
                                                                      EXHIBIT 23

                       CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

We  hereby  consent  to the  incorporation  by  reference  in  the  registration
statements of 1st Source  Corporation  on Forms S-8 of our report dated February
15, 2000, on our audits of the consolidated  financial  statements of 1st Source
Corporation  and  subsidiaries as of December 31, 1999 and 1998, and for each of
the three years in the period ended  December 31, 1999,  which report appears in
the 1999 Annual Report to Shareholders  and is incorporated by reference in this
Annual Report on Form 10-K of 1st Source Corporation for the year ended December
31, 1999.


/s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

South Bend, Indiana
March 16, 2000


                                       E-6

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE>                                            9
<MULTIPLIER>                                     1,000

<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   12-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          DEC-31-1999
<PERIOD-END>                               DEC-31-1999
<CASH>                                         101,911
<INT-BEARING-DEPOSITS>                               0
<FED-FUNDS-SOLD>                                 1,399
<TRADING-ASSETS>                                     0
<INVESTMENTS-HELD-FOR-SALE>                    470,040
<INVESTMENTS-CARRYING>                          77,190
<INVESTMENTS-MARKET>                            78,461
<LOANS>                                      2,063,189
<ALLOWANCE>                                     40,210
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                               2,872,945
<DEPOSITS>                                   2,127,452
<SHORT-TERM>                                   409,742
<LIABILITIES-OTHER>                             40,007
<LONG-TERM>                                     56,924
                                0
                                          0
<COMMON>                                         6,883
<OTHER-SE>                                     231,937
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES-AND-EQUITY>               2,872,945
<INTEREST-LOAN>                                171,575
<INTEREST-INVEST>                               27,944
<INTEREST-OTHER>                                   910
<INTEREST-TOTAL>                               200,429
<INTEREST-DEPOSIT>                              84,839
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                             100,726
<INTEREST-INCOME-NET>                           99,703
<LOAN-LOSSES>                                    7,442
<SECURITIES-GAINS>                                 153
<EXPENSE-OTHER>                                 99,023
<INCOME-PRETAX>                                 56,498
<INCOME-PRE-EXTRAORDINARY>                      35,768
<EXTRAORDINARY>                                      0
<CHANGES>                                            0
<NET-INCOME>                                    35,768
<EPS-BASIC>                                       1.89
<EPS-DILUTED>                                     1.86
<YIELD-ACTUAL>                                    4.15
<LOANS-NON>                                      7,549
<LOANS-PAST>                                       843
<LOANS-TROUBLED>                                     0
<LOANS-PROBLEM>                                      0
<ALLOWANCE-OPEN>                                38,629
<CHARGE-OFFS>                                    3,027
<RECOVERIES>                                      (639)
<ALLOWANCE-CLOSE>                               40,210
<ALLOWANCE-DOMESTIC>                            25,565
<ALLOWANCE-FOREIGN>                                  0
<ALLOWANCE-UNALLOCATED>                         14,645


</TABLE>


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