<PAGE>
AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION FEBRUARY 28, 1997.
File Nos. 2/10658
811-92
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM N-1A
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
Pre-Effective Amendment No. [ ]
Post-Effective Amendment No. 97 [X]
and
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
Amendment No. 30 [X]
[ ]
KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
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(Exact name of Registrant as specified in Charter)
200 Berkeley Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02116-5034
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(Address of Principal Executive Offices) (Zip Code)
Registrant's Telephone Number, including Area Code:
(617) 338-3200
Rosemary D. Van Antwerp, Esq., 200 Berkeley Street,
Boston, Massachusetts 02116-5034
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(Name and Address of Agent for Service)
It is proposed that this filing will become effective
[X] immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
[ ] on (date) pursuant to paragraph (b)
[ ] 60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
[ ] on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
[ ] 75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)
[ ] on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of Rule 485.
Pursuant to Rule 24f-2 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, the
Registrant has elected to register an indefinite number of shares under the
Securities Act of 1933. A Rule 24f-2 Notice for Registrant's fiscal year ended
October 31, 1996 was filed on December 13, 1996.
<PAGE>
KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
CONTENTS OF
POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 97
to
REGISTRATION STATEMENT
This Post-Effective Amendment No. 97 to Registrant's Registration Statement No.
2-10658/811-92 consists of the following pages, items of information, and
documents:
The Facing Sheet
The Contents Page
The Cross-Reference Sheet
PART A
Prospectus
PART B
Statement of Additional Information
PART C
PART C - OTHER INFORMATION - ITEMS 24(a) and 24(b)
Financial Statements
Listing of Exhibits
PART C - OTHER INFORMATION - ITEMS 25-32 - and SIGNATURE PAGES
Number of Holders of Securities
Indemnification
Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser
Principal Underwriter
Location of Accounts and Records
Undertakings
Signatures
Exhibits (including Powers of Attorney)
<PAGE>
KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
Cross-Reference Sheet pursuant to Rules 404 and 495 under the Securities Act of
1933.
Items in
Part A of
Form N-1A Prospectus Caption
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1 Cover Page
2 Expense Information
3 Financial Highlights
Performance Data
4 Additional Investment Information
Cover Page
Fund Description
Investment Objective and Policies
Investment Restrictions
Risk Factors
5 Fund Management and Expenses
5A Not applicable
6 Dividends and Taxes
Fund Description
Fund Shares
Shareholder Services
7 Distribution Plan
How to Buy Shares
Pricing Shares
Shareholder Services
8 How to Redeem Shares
9 Not applicable
<PAGE>
KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
Cross-Reference Sheet continued.
Items in
Part B of
Form N-1A Statement of Additional Information Caption
- --------- -------------------------------------------
10 Cover Page
11 Table of Contents
12 Not applicable
13 The Fund
Investment Restrictions
Appendix
14 Trustees and Officers
15 Additional Information
16 Additional Information
Distribution Plan
Expenses
Investment Adviser
Principal Underwriter
Sales Charges
17 Brokerage
18 Declaration of Trust
19 Distribution Plan
Additional Information
Valuation of Securities
20 Distributions and Taxes
21 Principal Underwriter
22 Standardized Total Return and Yield
Quotations
23 Financial Statements
<PAGE>
KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
PART A
PROSPECTUS
<PAGE>
<PAGE>
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PROSPECTUS FEBRUARY 28, 1997
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KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
200 BERKELEY STREET, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02116-5034
CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-343-2898
Keystone Quality Bond Fund (B-1) (the "Fund") is a mutual fund that seeks the
highest possible income consistent with preservation of principal. The Fund
invests primarily in high and investment grade corporate bonds, which possess a
high degree of dependability of interest payments.
Your purchase payment is fully invested. There is no sales charge when you buy
the Fund's shares. With certain exceptions, the Fund imposes a deferred sales
charge, which declines from 4.00% to 1.00%, if you redeem your shares within
four years of purchase.
The Fund has adopted a Distribution Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act") under which it bears some of the
costs of selling its shares to the public.
This prospectus sets forth concisely the information about the Fund that you
should know before investing. Please read it and retain it for future reference.
Additional information about the Fund is contained in a statement of
additional information dated February 28, 1997, which has been filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission and is incorporated by reference into this
prospectus. For a free copy, or for other information about the Fund, write to
the address or call the telephone number listed above.
SHARES OF THE FUND ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OBLIGATIONS OF, OR GUARANTEED OR
ENDORSED BY, ANY BANK, AND SHARES ARE NOT INSURED OR OTHERWISE PROTECTED BY THE
U.S. GOVERNMENT, THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION, THE FEDERAL RESERVE
BOARD, OR ANY OTHER GOVERNMENT AGENCY AND INVOLVE RISK INCLUDING THE POSSIBLE
LOSS OF PRINCIPAL.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Page Page
<S> <C> <C>
Expense Information ................................ 2 Distribution Plan .............................. 10
Financial Highlights ............................... 3 How to Buy Shares .............................. 12
Fund Description ................................... 4 How to Redeem Shares ........................... 13
Investment Objective and Policies .................. 4 Shareholder Services ........................... 15
Investment Restrictions ............................ 5 Performance Data ............................... 16
Risk Factors ....................................... 6 Fund Shares .................................... 16
Pricing Shares ..................................... 7 Additional Information ......................... 17
Dividends and Taxes ................................ 8 Additional Investment Information .............. (i)
Fund Management and Expenses ....................... 8
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</TABLE>
THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND
EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION NOR HAS THE SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE
ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS
A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
EXPENSE INFORMATION
KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
The purpose of the fee table is to assist investors in understanding the
costs and expenses that an investor in the Fund will bear directly or
indirectly. For more complete descriptions of the various costs and expenses,
see the following sections of this prospectus: "Fund Management and Expenses";
"How to Buy Shares"; "Distribution Plan"; and "Shareholder Services."
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES
Maximum Deferred Sales Charge(1) ............................... 4.00%
(as a percentage of the lesser of original purchase
price or redemption proceeds, as applicable)
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES(2)
(as a percentage of average net assets)
Management Fees ............................................... 0.60%
12b-1 Fees(3) ................................................. 1.00%
Other Expenses ................................................ 0.35%
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Total Fund Operating Expenses ................................. 1.95%
=====
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXAMPLE(4) 1 YEAR 3 YEARS 5 YEARS 10 YEARS
------ ------- ------- --------
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C>
You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment,
assuming (1) a 5% annual return and (2) redemption at the
end of each period ................................... $60 $81 $105 $227
You would pay the following expenses on the same
investment, assuming no redemption ................... $20 $61 $105 $227
</TABLE>
AMOUNTS SHOWN IN THE EXAMPLE SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED A REPRESENTATION OF PAST
OR FUTURE EXPENSES; ACTUAL EXPENSES MAY BE GREATER OR LESS THAN THOSE SHOWN.
- ----------
(1) The deferred sales charge declines from 4% to 1% of amounts redeemed within
four calendar years after purchase. No deferred sales charge is imposed
thereafter.
(2) Expense ratios are for the Fund's fiscal year ended October 31, 1996. Total
Fund Operating Expenses include indirectly paid expenses.
(3) Long-term shareholders may pay more than the economic equivalent of the
maximum front-end sales charge permitted by rules adopted by the National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. (the "NASD").
(4) The Securities and Exchange Commission requires use of a 5% annual return
figure for purposes of this example. Actual return for the Fund may be
greater or less than 5%.
<PAGE>
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
(For a share outstanding throughout each year)
The following table contains important financial information relating to the
Fund and has been audited by KPMG Peat Marwick LLP, the Fund's independent
auditors. The table appears in the Fund's Annual Report and should be read in
conjunction with the Fund's financial statements and related notes, which also
appear, together with the independent auditors' report, in the Fund's Annual
Report. The Fund's financial statements, related notes and independent auditors'
report are incorporated by reference into the statement of additional
information. Additional information about the Fund's performance is contained in
its Annual Report, which will be made available upon request and without charge.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 31,
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987
----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- -----
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
NET ASSET VALUE
BEGINNING OF YEAR ............. $15.42 $14.44 $16.40 $15.92 $15.92 $15.11 $15.85 $15.71 $15.52 $17.30
------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS:
Net investment income .......... 0.75 0.87 0.76 0.96 1.04 1.08 1.11 1.21 1.19 1.20
Net realized and unrealized gain
(loss) on investments, closed
futures contracts and foreign
currency related
transactions .................. (0.16) 1.05 (1.76) 0.66 0.15 0.99 (0.53) 0.25 0.32 (1.59)
------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Total from investment
operations .................... 0.59 1.92 (1.00) 1.62 1.19 2.07 0.58 1.46 1.51 (0.39)
------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
LESS DISTRIBUTIONS FROM:
Net investment income .......... (0.76) (0.87) (0.76) (0.96) (1.04) (1.08) (1.18) (1.32) (1.32) (1.39)
In excess of net investment
income ....................... 0 (0.05) (0.09) (0.18) (0.15) (0.18) (0.14) 0 0 0
Tax basis return of capital .... (0.06) (0.02) (0.11) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Total distributions ............ (0.82) (0.94) (0.96) (1.14) (1.19) (1.26) (1.32) (1.32) (1.32) (1.39)
NET ASSET VALUE END OF YEAR .... $15.19 $15.42 $14.44 $16.40 $15.92 $15.92 $15.11 $15.85 $15.71 $15.52
====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
TOTAL RETURN(A) ................ 3.99% 13.69% (6.27%) 10.50% 7.71% 14.09% 3.93% 9.82% 10.09% (2.44%)
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Ratios to average net assets:
Total expenses ............... 1.95%(b) 1.96%(b) 1.86% 1.94% 2.01% 2.04% 1.95% 1.82% 1.64% 1.56%
Net investment income ........ 5.06% 5.86% 5.05% 5.85% 6.40% 6.95% 7.45% 7.61% 7.49% 7.32%
Portfolio turnover rate ........ 231% 244% 169% 190% 102% 158% 117% 116% 153% 127%
NET ASSETS END OF YEAR
(THOUSANDS) ................... $228,649 $310,791 $327,276 $458,925 $456,912 $453,528 $408,330 $462,425 $447,454 $440,836
</TABLE>
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(a) Excluding applicable sales charges.
(b) The ratio of total expenses to average net assets includes indirectly paid
expenses. Excluding indirectly paid expenses, the expense ratios would have
been 1.93% and 1.94% for the years ended October 31, 1996 and 1995,
respectively.
<PAGE>
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FUND DESCRIPTION
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Fund is an open-end, diversified, management investment company, commonly
known as a mutual fund. The Fund was created under Pennsylvania law as a common
law trust and has been offering its shares continuously since September 11,
1935. The Fund is one of more than thirty funds advised and managed by Keystone
Investment Management Company ("Keystone"), the Fund's investment adviser.
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INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES
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INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE
The Fund's investment objective is to provide shareholders with the highest
possible income consistent with preservation of principal.
The investment objective of the Fund cannot be changed without a vote of the
holders of a majority of the Fund's outstanding shares (as defined in the 1940
Act), which means the lesser of (1) 67% of the shares represented at a meeting
at which more than 50% of the outstanding shares are represented or (2) more
than 50% of the outstanding shares (a "1940 Act Majority").
Any investment involves risk, and there is no assurance that the Fund will
achieve its investment objective.
INVESTMENTS AND INVESTMENT POLICIES
The Fund invests at least 65% of its assets in high grade bonds (bonds rated A
or better by Moody's Investors Service ("Moody's") or by Standard & Poor's
Corporation ("S&P")). In addition, the Fund invests in investment grade bonds
and short-term investments at such times and in such proportions as seem
appropriate to best achieve its objective.
Bonds will include obligations of the United States ("U.S.") government or its
agencies (e.g., Government National Mortgage Association ("GNMA") certificates,
U.S. Treasury securities and such other securities as are issued by or
guaranteed as to principal and interest by the full faith and credit of the U.S.
government) and other bond issues of high or investment grade, including high
grade municipal bonds. The Fund invests in municipal bonds when the spreads
between municipal and taxable bonds have narrowed. Such bonds possess a high
degree of dependability of interest payments with price action affected almost
exclusively by the trend and level of money rates.
The Fund has a fundamental policy that allows it to invest up to 25% of its
assets in investment grade convertible bonds.
In addition, the Fund may invest a limited portion of its assets in bonds
rated Baa by Moody's or BBB by S&P or, if unrated, deemed to be of comparable
quality by Keystone. These are the lowest rated bonds in which the Fund will
invest.
Bonds rated Baa by Moody's are considered to be medium grade obligations,
i.e., they are neither highly protected nor poorly secured. Interest payments
and principal security appear adequate for the present, but certain protective
elements may be lacking or may be characteristically unreliable over any
extended time. Such bonds lack outstanding investment characteristics and have
speculative characteristics as well. Debt rated BBB by S&P is regarded as having
an adequate capacity to pay interest and repay principal. While it normally
exhibits adequate protection parameters, adverse economic conditions or changing
circumstances are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity to pay interest and
repay principal for debt in this category than in higher rated categories.
Short-term investments in which the Fund may invest, which must mature within
one year of their purchase, consist of U.S. government securities; instruments
of banks having assets of at least $500 million, including U.S. branches of
foreign banks and foreign branches of U.S. banks, such as certificates of
deposit, demand and time deposits and bankers' acceptances; high grade
commercial paper; and repurchase agreements secured by U.S. government
securities.
The Fund may invest up to 25% of its assets in foreign securities issued by
issuers located in developing countries as well as certain countries with
emerging markets. For this purpose, countries with emerging markets are
generally those where the per capita income is in the low to middle ranges, as
determined by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
The Fund may invest in restricted securities, including securities eligible
for resale pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of 1933 (the "1933
Act"). Generally, Rule 144A establishes a safe harbor from the registration
requirements of the 1933 Act for resale by large institutional investors of
securities not publicly traded in the U.S. The Fund may purchase Rule 144A
securities when such securities present an attractive investment opportunity and
otherwise meet the Fund's selection criteria. The Board of Trustees has adopted
guidelines and procedures pursuant to which the liquidity of the Fund's Rule
144A securities is determined by Keystone and the Board of Trustees monitors
Keystone's implementation of such guidelines and procedures.
At the present time, the Fund cannot accurately predict exactly how the market
for Rule 144A securities will develop. A Rule 144A security that was readily
marketable upon purchase may subsequently become illiquid. In such an event, the
Board of Trustees will consider what action, if any, is appropriate.
The Fund may also (1) write covered call options; (2) purchase put and call
options to close out existing positions; (3) enter into reverse repurchase
agreements and firm commitment and when-issued transactions for securities and
currencies; (4) enter into currency and other financial futures contracts and
related options transactions for hedging purposes and not for speculation; (5)
invest in limited partnerships, including master limited partnerships; (6)
employ new investment techniques with respect to options and futures contracts
and related options. The Fund will supplement its prospectus as appropriate in
the event that the employment of such techniques is determined to constitute a
material change in investment policy for the Fund.
In addition to the options, futures contracts and forwards mentioned above,
the Fund may also invest in certain other types of derivative instruments,
including collateralized mortgage obligations, structured notes, interest rate
swaps, index swaps, currency swaps and caps and floors. These basic vehicles can
also be combined to create more complex products called hybrid derivatives or
structured securities.
For further information about the types of investments and investment
techniques available to the Fund, including the associated risks, see the "Risk
Factors" and "Additional Investment Information" sections of this prospectus as
well as the statement of additional information.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Fund has adopted the fundamental restrictions summarized below, which may
not be changed without the vote of a 1940 Act Majority of the Fund's outstanding
shares. These restrictions and certain other fundamental and non- fundamental
restrictions are set forth in the statement of additional information.
The Fund may not do the following: (1) with respect to 75% of its total
assets; invest more than 5% of the value of its total assets determined at
market or other fair value at the time of purchase, in the securities of any one
issuer or invest in more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of any
one issuer, all as determined immediately after such investment; provided that
these limitations do not apply to investments in securities issued or guaranteed
by the U.S. government or its agencies or instrumentalities; (2) borrow money,
except that the Fund may borrow money from banks for temporary or emergency
purposes in aggregate amounts up to 10% of the value of the Fund's net assets
(computed at cost) or enter into reverse repurchase agreements, provided that
bank borrowings and reverse repurchase agreements, in the aggregate, shall not
exceed 10% of the value of the Fund's net assets; and (3) invest more than 25%
of its total assets in securities of issuers in the same industry other than
securities issued by banks and savings and loan associations or securities
issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government, its agencies or instrumentalities.
The Fund intends to follow policies of the Securities and Exchange Commission
as they are adopted from time to time with respect to illiquid securities,
including, at this time, (1) treating as illiquid, securities that may not be
sold or disposed of in the ordinary course of business within seven days at
approximately the value at which the Fund has valued the investment on its books
and (2) limiting its holdings of such securities to 15% of net assets.
In addition, the Fund may, notwithstanding any other investment policy or
restriction, invest all of its assets in the securities of a single open-end
management investment company with substantially the same fundamental investment
objective, policies and restrictions as the Fund. The Fund does not currently
intend to implement this policy and would do so only if the Board of Trustees of
the Fund were to determine such action to be in the best interest of the Fund
and its shareholders. In the event of such implementation, the Fund will comply
with such requirements as to written notice to shareholders as are then in
effect.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RISK FACTORS
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Like any investment, your investment in the Fund involves an element of risk.
Before you invest in the Fund, you should carefully evaluate your ability to
assume the risks your investment in the Fund poses. You can lose money by
investing in the Fund. Your investment is not guaranteed. A decrease in the
value of the Fund's portfolio securities can result in a decrease in the value
of your investment.
Certain risks related to the Fund are discussed below. To the extent not
discussed in this section, specific risks relating to individual securities or
investment practices are discussed in "Additional Investment Information" and
the statement of additional information.
Should the Fund need to raise cash to meet a large number of redemptions, it
might have to sell portfolio securities at a time when it would be
disadvantageous to do so.
By itself, the Fund does not constitute a balanced investment plan. You should
take into account your own investment objectives as well as your other
investments when considering an investment in the Fund.
FIXED-INCOME RISKS. The Fund stresses earning income by investing in
fixed-income securities, which are generally considered to be interest rate
sensitive. Specifically, the market value (and the Fund's price per share) of
fixed-income securities generally varies inversely with changes in interest
rates (i.e., decreasing when interest rates rise and increasing when interest
rates fall). For example, if interest rates increase after the security is
purchased, the security, if sold prior to maturity, may return less than its
cost.
When choosing among bond funds, you should consider the anticipated yield
together with potential changes in share price, as these two factors determine
each fund's total return. Generally the yield and potential price changes of a
fund depend on the quality and maturity of the obligations in its portfolio, as
well as on market conditions. The Fund is for investors who seek the highest
possible income, but who want a portfolio of primarily high and investment grade
bonds.
To the extent that investments are made in debt securities (other than U.S.
government securities), derivatives or structured securities, such investments,
despite favorable credit ratings, are subject to some risk of default.
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. While certain of the securities in which the Fund
may invest are issued by or guaranteed as to principal and interest by the
full faith and credit of the U.S. government, the market value of such
securities is not guaranteed.
DERIVATIVES. The market value of derivatives or structured securities may
vary depending upon the manner in which the investments have been structured. As
a result, the value of such investments may change at a more rapid rate than
that of traditional fixed-income securities.
For more detailed information on derivatives and other investment techniques,
see "Additional Investment Information" and the statement of additional
information.
FOREIGN RISK. The Fund may invest up to 25% of its assets in securities that
are principally traded in securities markets outside the U.S. While investing in
foreign securities is intended to reduce risk by providing further
diversification, such investments do involve the following risks: publicly
available information on issuers and securities may be scarce; many foreign
countries do not follow the same accounting, auditing, and financial reporting
standards as are used in the U.S.; market trading volumes may be smaller,
resulting in less liquidity and more price volatility compared to U.S.
securities of comparable quality; there may be less regulation of securities
trading and its participants; the possibility may exist for expropriation,
confiscatory taxation, nationalization, establishment of exchange controls,
political or social instability or negative diplomatic developments; and
dividend or interest withholding may be imposed at the source.
Investing in securities of issuers in emerging markets countries involves
exposure to economic systems that are generally less mature and political
systems that are generally less stable than those of developed countries. In
addition, investing in companies in emerging markets countries may also involve
exposure to national policies that may restrict investment by foreigners and
undeveloped legal systems governing private and foreign investments and private
property. The typically small size of the markets for securities issued by
companies in emerging markets countries and the possibility of a low or
nonexistent volume of trading in those securities may also result in a lack of
liquidity and in price volatility of those securities.
Fluctuations in foreign exchange rates impose an additional level of risk,
possibly affecting the value of the Fund's foreign investments and earnings, as
well as gains and losses realized through trades, and the unrealized
appreciation or depreciation of investments. The Fund may also incur costs when
it shifts assets from one country to another.
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PRICING SHARES
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Fund computes its net asset value as of the close of trading (currently
4:00 p.m. eastern time) on each day that the New York Stock Exchange (the
"Exchange") is open. However, the Fund does not compute its net asset value on
days when changes in the value of the Fund's securities do not affect the
current net asset value of its shares. The Exchange is currently closed on New
Year's Day, Presidents' Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor
Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day. The net asset value per share is
arrived at by determining the value of all of the Fund's assets, subtracting all
liabilities and dividing the result by the number of shares outstanding.
Current values for the Fund's portfolio securities are determined as follows:
(1) short-term investments purchased with maturities of sixty days or less are
valued at amortized cost (original purchase price as adjusted for amortization
of premium or accretion of discount), which, when combined with accrued
interest, approximates market;
(2) short-term investments maturing in more than sixty days for which market
quotations are readily available are valued at market value; and
(3) short-term investments maturing in more than sixty days when purchased
that are held on the sixtieth day prior to maturity are valued at amortized cost
(market value on the sixtieth day adjusted for amortization of premium or
accretion of discount), which, when combined with accrued interest, approximates
market.
All other investments are valued at market value or, where market quotations
are not readily available, at fair value as determined in good faith by the
Fund's Board of Trustees.
The Fund believes that reliable market quotations are generally not readily
available for purposes of valuing fixed income securities. As a result, it is
likely that most of the valuations for such securities will be based upon their
fair value determined under procedures that have been approved by the Fund's
Board of Trustees. The Board of Trustees has authorized the use of a pricing
service to determine the fair value of the Fund's fixed income securities and
certain other securities.
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DIVIDENDS AND TAXES
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Fund has qualified and intends to continue to qualify as a regulated
investment company (a "RIC") under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended
(the "Code"). The Fund qualifies if, among other things, it distributes to its
shareholders at least 90% of its net investment income for its fiscal year. The
Fund also intends to make timely distributions, if necessary, sufficient in
amount to avoid the nondeductible 4% excise tax imposed on a RIC when it fails
to distribute, with respect to each calendar year, at least 98% of its ordinary
income for such calendar year and 98% of its net capital gains for the one-year
period ending on October 31 of such calendar year.
If the Fund qualifies as a RIC and if it distributes all of its net investment
income and net capital gains, if any, to shareholders, it will be relieved of
any federal income tax liability.
The Fund will make distributions from its net investment income to its
shareholders by the 15th day of each month and net capital gains, if any, at
least annually. Shareholders receive Fund distributions in the form of
additional shares of the Fund or, at the shareholder's election (which must be
made before the record date for the distribution), in cash. Fund distributions
in the form of additional shares are made at net asset value without the
imposition of a sales charge.
Dividends and distributions are taxable whether they are received in cash or
in shares. Income dividends and net short-term gains distributions are taxable
as ordinary income. Net long-term gains distributions are taxable as capital
gains regardless of how long the Fund's shares are held. If Fund shares held for
less than six months are sold at a loss, however, such loss will be treated for
tax purposes as a long-term capital loss to the extent of any long-term capital
gains dividends received. Any taxable dividend declared in October, November, or
December to shareholders of record in such a month and paid by the following
January 31 will be includable in the taxable income of the shareholders as if
paid on December 31 of the year in which the dividend was declared.
The Fund advises its shareholders annually as to the federal tax status of all
distributions made during the year. Dividends and distributions may also be
subject to state and local taxes. Any income from tax free bonds is not expected
to be tax-exempt to the shareholder.
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FUND MANAGEMENT AND EXPENSES
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FUND MANAGEMENT
The Fund's Board of Trustees has absolute and exclusive control over the
management and disposition of all assets of the Fund. Subject to the authority
of the Fund's Board of Trustees, Keystone provides investment advice, management
and administrative services to the Fund.
INVESTMENT ADVISER
Keystone has provided investment advisory and management services to
investment companies and private accounts since 1932. Keystone is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of First Union Keystone, Inc. ("First Union Keystone"). First Union
Keystone provides accounting, bookkeeping, legal, personnel and general
corporate services to Keystone, its affiliates and the Keystone Families of
Funds. Both Keystone and First Union Keystone are located at 200 Berkeley
Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02116-5034.
On December 11, 1996, First Union Keystone succeeded to the business of a
corporation under different ownership. First Union Keystone is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of First Union National Bank of North Carolina ("FUNB"). FUNB is a
subsidiary of First Union Corporation ("First Union"), the sixth largest bank
holding company in the U.S. based on total assets as of December 31, 1996.
First Union is headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, and had $140
billion in consolidated assets as of December 31, 1996. First Union and its
subsidiaries provide a broad range of financial services to individuals and
businesses throughout the U.S. The Capital Management Group of FUNB and
Evergreen Asset Management Corp., wholly-owned subsidiaries of FUNB, manage or
otherwise oversee the investment of over $60 billion in assets as of December
31, 1996 belonging to a wide range of clients, including the Evergreen Family of
Funds.
Pursuant to its Investment Advisory and Management Agreement with the Fund
(the "Advisory Agreement"), Keystone manages the investment and reinvestment of
the Fund's assets, supervises the operation of the Fund and provides all
necessary office space, facilities and equipment.
The Fund pays Keystone a fee for its services at the annual rate set forth
below
AGGREGATE
NET ASSET VALUE
OF THE SHARES
MANAGEMENT FEE INCOME OF THE FUND
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2.0% of
gross dividend and
interest income, plus
0.50% of the first $100,000,000, plus
0.45% of the next $100,000,000, plus
0.40% of the next $100,000,000, plus
0.35% of the next $100,000,000, plus
0.30% of the next $100,000,000, plus
0.25% of amounts over $500,000,000
Keystone's fee is computed as of the close of business on each business day and
payable monthly.
The Advisory Agreement continues in effect for two years from its effective
date and, thereafter, from year to year only so long as such continuance is
specifically approved at least annually by the Board of Trustees or by the vote
of shareholders of the Fund. In addition, the terms and annual continuance of
the Advisory Agreement must be approved by the vote of a majority of the
Independent Trustees (Trustees who are not interested persons (as defined in the
1940 Act) of the Fund cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of
voting on such approval. The Advisory Agreement may be terminated, without
penalty, on 60 days' written notice by the Fund or Keystone or may be terminated
by a vote of shareholders of the Fund. The Advisory Agreement will terminate
automatically upon its "assignment," as defined in the 1940 Act.
PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITER
Evergreen Keystone Distributor, Inc. (formerly Evergreen Funds Distributor,
Inc.) ("EKD"), an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of The BISYS Group, Inc.,
("BISYS") which is not affiliated with First Union, is the Fund's principal
underwriter (the "Principal Underwriter"). EKD replaced Evergreen Keystone
Investment Services, Inc. (formerly Keystone Investment Distributors Company)
("EKIS") as the Fund's principal underwriter. EKIS may no longer act as
principal underwriter of the Fund due to regulatory restrictions imposed by the
Glass-Steagall Act upon national banks such as FUNB and their affiliates, that
prohibit such entities from acting as the underwriters or distributors of mutual
fund shares. While EKIS may no longer act as principal underwriter of the Fund
as discussed above, EKIS may continue to receive compensation from the Fund or
the Principal Underwriter in respect of underwriting and distribution services
performed prior to the termination of EKIS as principal underwriter. In
addition, EKIS may also be compensated by the Principal Underwriter for the
provision of certain marketing support services to the Principal Underwriter at
an annual rate of up to 0.75% of the average daily net assets of the Fund,
subject to certain restrictions. EKD is located at 125 W. 55th Street, New York
10019.
SUB-ADMINISTRATOR
BISYS provides officers and certain administrative services to the Fund
pursuant to a sub-administrator agreement. For its services under that
agreement, receives a fee from Keystone at the maximum annual rate of 0.01% of
the average daily net assets of the Fund. BISYS is located at 3435 Stelzer Road,
Columbus, Ohio 43219.
CODE OF ETHICS
The Fund has adopted a Code of Ethics incorporating policies on personal
securities trading as recommended by the Investment Company Institute.
PORTFOLIO MANAGER
Richard A. Wisentaner, a Vice President of Keystone, has been the Fund's
Portfolio Manager since September, 1996. He has more than six years of
experience in fixed income research and analysis. Prior to joining Keystone in
1994, Mr. Wisentaner was an analyst with State Street Research and Management
Co. in Boston, Massachusetts.
FUND EXPENSES
The Fund will pay all of its expenses. In addition to the investment advisory
and distribution plan fees described in this prospectus, the principal expenses
that the Fund is expected to pay include, but are not limited to, transfer,
dividend disbursing, and shareholder servicing agent expenses; custodian
expenses; fees of its independent auditors; fees of its Independent Trustees;
fees of legal counsel to the Fund and to its Independent Trustees; fees payable
to government agencies, including registration and qualification fees
attributable to the Fund and its shares under federal and state securities laws;
and certain extraordinary expenses. In addition to such expenses, the Fund pays
its brokerage commissions, interest charges and taxes. For the fiscal year ended
October 31, 1996, the Fund paid expenses, including indirectly paid expenses,
equal to 1.95% of its average net assets.
During the fiscal year ended October 31, 1996, the Fund paid or accrued to
Keystone Management, Inc., the Fund's former investment manager, investment
management and administrative services fees of $1,578,211 (0.60% of the Fund's
average daily net assets). Of such amount, $1,341,479 was paid to Keystone for
its investment advisory services to the Fund. During the same period, the Fund
paid or accrued $23,191 to Keystone for certain accounting services and $627,068
to Evergreen Keystone Service Company (formerly Keystone Investor Resource
Center, Inc.) ("EKSC"), for services rendered as the Fund's transfer and
dividend disbursing agent. EKSC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Keystone, is
located at 200 Berkeley Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02116-5034.
SECURITIES TRANSACTIONS
Under policies established by the Board of Trustees, Keystone selects
broker-dealers to execute transactions subject to the receipt of best execution.
When selecting broker-dealers to execute portfolio transactions for the Fund,
Keystone may consider the number of shares of the Fund sold by such
broker-dealers. In addition, broker-dealers executing portfolio transactions
may, from time to time, be affiliated with the Fund, Keystone, the Principal
Underwriter or their affiliates.
PORTFOLIO TURNOVER
The Fund's portfolio turnover rates for the fiscal years ended October 31,
1996 and 1995 were 231% and 244%, respectively. High portfolio turnover may
involve correspondingly greater brokerage commissions and other transaction
costs, which will be borne directly by the Fund, as well as additional realized
gains and/or losses to shareholders. For further information on the tax
consequences of such realized gains and/or losses. See the "Dividends and Taxes"
section of this prospectus. For further information about brokerage and
distributions, see the statement of additional information.
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DISTRIBUTION PLAN
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The Fund bears some of the costs of selling its shares under a Distribution
Plan adopted pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act. The Fund's Distribution
Plan provides that the Fund may expend up to 0.3125% quarterly (1.25% annually)
of the average daily net asset value of its shares to pay distribution costs for
sales of its shares and to pay shareholder service fees. The NASD currently
limits such annual expenditures to 1.00% of the aggregate average daily net
asset value of its shares, of which 0.75% may be used to pay distribution costs
and 0.25% may be used to pay shareholder service fees. The NASD also limits the
aggregate amount that the Fund may pay for such distribution costs to 6.25% of
gross share sales since the inception of the Fund's Distribution Plan plus
interest at the prime rate plus 1% on such amounts (less any contingent deferred
sales charges ("CDSCs") paid by shareholders to the Principal Underwriter or its
predecessor) remaining unpaid from time to time.
Payments under the Distribution Plan are currently made to the Principal
Underwriter (which may reallow all or part to others, such as broker-dealers) or
its predecessor, (1) as commissions for Fund shares sold, (2) as shareholder
service fees in respect of shares maintained by the recipient and outstanding on
the Fund's books for specified periods and (3) as interest. Amounts paid or
accrued to the Principal Underwriter and its predecessor in the aggregate may
not exceed the annual limitations referred to above.
The Principal Underwriter generally reallows to broker-dealers or others a
commission equal to 4.00% of the price paid for each Fund share sold. In
addition, the Principal Underwriter generally reallows to broker-dealers or
others a shareholder service fee at a rate of 0.25% per annum of the net asset
value of shares maintained by such recipient and outstanding on the books of the
Fund for specified periods. See also "Arrangements with Broker-Dealers and
Others" below.
The financing of payments made by the Principal Underwriter to compensate
broker-dealers or other persons for distributing shares of the Fund will be
provided by FUNB or its affiliates.
If the Fund is unable to pay the Principal Underwriter a commission on a new
sale because the annual maximum (0.75% of average daily net assets) has been
reached, the Principal Underwriter intends, but is not obligated, to continue to
accept new orders for the purchase of Fund shares and to pay or accrue
commissions and service fees to broker-dealers in excess of the amount it
currently receives from the Fund ("Advances"). While the Fund is under no
contractual obligation to reimburse the Principal Underwriter or its predecessor
for Advances, the Principal Underwriter and its predecessor intend to seek full
payment for such Advances from the Fund (together with interest at the rate of
prime plus 1.00%) at such time in the future as, and to the extent that, payment
thereof by the Fund would be within permitted limits. EKIS, the predecessor to
the Principal Underwriter currently intends to seek payment of interest only on
such Advances paid or accrued by EKIS subsequent to July 7, 1992. If the Fund's
Independent Trustees authorize such payments, the effect will be to extend the
period of time during which the Fund incurs the maximum amount of costs allowed
by the Distribution Plan.
As of October 31, 1996, the maximum uncollected amounts for which EKIS, the
predecessor to the Principal Underwriter, may seek payment from the Fund under
its Distribution Plan was $9,151,321 (4.0% of the Fund's net asset value).
The amounts and purposes of expenditures under the Distribution Plan must be
reported to the Independent Trustees quarterly. The Independent Trustees may
require or approve changes in the operation of the Distribution Plan, and may
require that total expenditures by the Fund under the Distribution Plan be kept
within limits lower than the maximum amount permitted by the Distribution Plan
as stated above. Unless limited by the Independent Trustees, such costs could,
for some period of time, be higher than such costs permitted by most other plans
presently adopted by other investment companies.
The Distribution Plan may be terminated at any time by vote of the Fund's
Independent Trustees, or by vote of a majority of the outstanding voting shares
of the Fund. If the Distribution Plan is terminated, the Principal Underwriter
will ask the Independent Trustees to take whatever action they deem appropriate
under the circumstances with respect to payment of Advances.
Any change in the Distribution Plan that would materially increase the
distribution expenses of the Fund provided for in the Distribution Plan requires
shareholder approval. Otherwise, the Distribution Plan may be amended by votes
of the majority of both (1) the Fund's Trustees and (2) the Independent Trustees
cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such amendment.
While the Distribution Plan is in effect, the Fund is required to commit the
selection and nomination of candidates for Independent Trustees to the
discretion of the Independent Trustees.
ARRANGEMENTS WITH BROKER-DEALERS AND OTHERS
Upon written notice to broker-dealers, the Principal Underwriter may, at its
own expense periodically sponsor programs that offer additional compensation in
connection with sales of Fund shares. Participation in such programs may be
available to all broker-dealers or to selected broker-dealers who have sold or
are expected to sell significant amounts of shares. Additional compensation may
also include financial assistance to broker-dealers in connection with
preapproved seminars, conferences and advertising. No such programs or
additional compensation will be offered to the extent they are prohibited by the
laws of any state or any self-regulatory agency, such as the NASD.
The Principal Underwriter may, at its own expense, pay concessions in addition
to those described above to broker-dealers that satisfy certain criteria
established from time to time by the Principal Underwriter. These conditions
relate to increasing sales of shares of the Keystone funds over specified
periods and certain other factors. Such payments, depending on the
broker-dealer's satisfaction of the required conditions, may be periodic and may
be up to 1.00% of the value of shares sold by such broker-dealer.
The Principal Underwriter also may pay banks and other financial services
firms that facilitate transations in shares of the Fund for their clients a
transaction fee up to the level of payments made allowable to broker-dealers for
the sale of such shares as described above.
The Glass-Steagall Act and other banking laws and regulations presently
prohibit member banks of the Federal Reserve System ("Member Banks") or their
non-bank affiliates from sponsoring, organizing, controlling or distributing the
shares of registered open-end investment companies such as the Fund. Such laws
and regulations also prohibit banks from issuing, underwriting or distributing
securities in general. However, under the Glass-Steagall Act and such other laws
and regulations, a Member Bank or an affiliate thereof may act as investment
adviser, transfer agent or custodian to a registered open-end investment company
and may also act as agent in connection with the purchase of shares of such an
investment company upon the order of its customer. Keystone and its affiliates,
since they are direct or indirect subsidiaries of FUNB, are subject to and in
compliance with the aforementioned laws and regulations. In the event the
Glass-Steagall Act is deemed to prohibit depository institutions from accepting
certain payments from the Fund, or should Congress relax current restrictions on
depository institutions, the Board of Trustees will consider what action, if
any, is appropriate.
In addition, state securities laws on this issue may differ from the
interpretations of federal law expressed herein, and banks and financial
institutions may be required to register as dealers pursuant to state law.
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HOW TO BUY SHARES
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You may purchase shares of the Fund from any broker-dealer that has a selling
agreement with the Principal Underwriter.
In addition, you may purchase Fund shares by mailing to the Fund, c/o
Evergreen Keystone Service Company, P.O. Box 2121, Boston, Massachusetts
02106-2121, a completed account application and a check payable to the Fund. You
may also telephone 1-800-343-2898 to obtain the number of an account to which
you can wire or electronically transfer funds and then send in a completed
account application. Subsequent investments in the Fund's shares in any amount
may be made by check, by wiring Federal funds, by direct deposit or by
electronic funds transfer ("EFT").
The Fund's shares are sold at the public offering price, which is equal to the
net asset value per share next computed after the Fund receives the purchase
order. The initial purchase must be at least $1,000 except for purchases by
participants in certain retirement plans for which the minimum is waived. There
is no minimum for subsequent purchases. Purchase payments are fully invested at
net asset value. There are no sales charges on purchases of Fund shares at the
time of purchase.
CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE
With certain exceptions, when shares of the Fund are redeemed within four
calendar years after their purchase, the Fund may charge a CDSC as follows:
During the calendar year of purchase ................................... 4.00%
During the first calendar year after the year of
purchase ............................................................. 3.00%
During the second calendar year after the year of
purchase ............................................................. 2.00%
During the third calendar year after the year of
purchase ............................................................. 1.00%
Thereafter ............................................................. 0.00%
If imposed, the CDSC is deducted from the redemption proceeds otherwise
payable to you. CDSCs are, to the extent permitted by the NASD, paid to the
Principal Underwriter or its predecessor.
The CDSC is a declining percentage of the lesser of (1) the net asset value of
the shares redeemed or (2) the total cost of such shares. With respect to shares
purchased after January 1, 1997, no CDSC is imposed on amounts derived from (1)
increases in the value of the shares redeemed above the total cost of such
shares due to increases in the net asset value per share of the Fund; (2)
certain shares with respect to which the Fund did not pay a commission on
issuance, including shares acquired through reinvestment of dividend income and
capital gains distributions; or (3) shares held in all or part of more than four
consecutive calendar years.
Upon request for redemption, shares not subject to a CDSC will be redeemed
first. Thereafter, shares held the longest will be the first to be redeemed. No
CDSC is payable on permitted exchanges of shares between funds in the Keystone
Fund Family that have adopted distribution plans pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under
the 1940 Act. For purposes of computing CDSCs, when shares of one fund are
exchanged for shares of another fund, the date of purchase of the shares being
acquired by exchange is deemed to be the date the shares being tendered for
exchange were originally purchased.
WAIVER OF DEFERRED SALES CHARGE
No CDSC is imposed on a redemption of shares of the Fund in the event of (1)
death or disability of the shareholder; (2) a lump-sum distribution from a 401
(k) plan or other benefit plan qualified under the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974 ("ERISA"); (3) automatic withdrawals from ERISA plans if
the shareholder is at least 59 1/2 years old; (4) involuntary redemptions of
accounts having an aggregate net asset value of less than $1,000; (5) automatic
withdrawals under a Systematic Income Plan of up to 1% per month of the
shareholder's initial account balance; (6) withdrawals consisting of loan
proceeds to a retirement plan participant; (7) financial hardship withdrawals
made by a retirement plan participant; or (8) withdrawals consisting of returns
of excess contributions or excess deferral amounts made to a retirement plan
participant.
Shares also may be sold, to the extent permitted by applicable law, at net
asset value without the payment of commissions or the imposition of a CDSC to
(1) certain officers, Directors, Trustees, officers and employees of the Fund,
First Union Keystone, Keystone and certain of their affiliates; (2) registered
representatives of firms with dealer agreements with the Principal Underwriter;
and (3) a bank or trust company acting as trustee for a single account. See the
statement of additional information for more details.
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HOW TO REDEEM SHARES
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You may redeem Fund shares for cash at the redemption value by the writing to
the Fund, c/o Evergreen Keystone Service Company, Box 2121, Boston,
Massachusetts 02106-2121 and presenting a properly endorsed share certificate
(if certificates have been issued) to the Fund. Your signature(s) on the written
order and certificates must be guaranteed as described below.
You may also redeem your shares through your broker-dealer. The Principal
Underwriter, acting as agent for the Fund, stands ready to repurchase Fund
shares upon orders from broker-dealers and will calculate the net asset value on
the same terms as those orders for the purchase of shares received from
broker-dealers and described under "How to Buy Shares." If the Principal
Underwriter has received proper documentation, it will pay the redemption
proceeds, less any applicable CDSC, to the broker-dealer placing the order
within seven days thereafter. The Principal Underwriter charges no fee for this
service. Your broker-dealer, however, may charge a service fee.
The redemption value equals the net asset value adjusted for fractions of a
cent and may be more or less than your cost depending upon changes in the value
of the Fund's portfolio securities between purchase and redemption. The Fund may
impose a CDSC at the time of redemption of certain shares as explained in "How
to Buy Shares." If imposed, the Fund deducts the CDSC from the redemption
proceeds otherwise payable to you.
REDEMPTION OF SHARES IN GENERAL
At various times, the Fund may be requested to redeem shares for which it has
not yet received good payment. In such a case, the Fund will mail the redemption
proceeds upon clearance of the purchase check, which may take up to 15 days or
more. Any delay may be avoided by purchasing shares with a certified check, by
Federal Reserve or bank wire of funds, by direct deposit or by EFT. Although the
mailing of a redemption check may be delayed, the redemption value will be
determined and the redemption processed in the ordinary course of business upon
receipt of proper documentation. In such a case, after the redemption and prior
to the release of the proceeds, no appreciation or depreciation will occur in
the value of the redeemed shares, and no interest will be paid on the redemption
proceeds. If the payment of a redemption has been delayed, the check will be
mailed or the proceeds wired or sent EFT promptly after good payment has been
collected.
The Fund computes the amount due you at the close of the Exchange at the end
of the day on which it has received all proper documentation from you. Payment
of the amount due on redemption, less any applicable CDSC, will be made within
seven days thereafter, except as discussed herein.
For your protection, SIGNATURES ON CERTIFICATES, STOCK POWERS AND ALL WRITTEN
ORDERS OR AUTHORIZATIONS MUST BE GUARANTEED BY A U.S. STOCK EXCHANGE MEMBER, A
BANK OR OTHER PERSONS ELIGIBLE TO GUARANTEE SIGNATURES UNDER THE SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 AND EKSC'S POLICIES. The Fund and EKSC may waive this
requirement or may require additional documents in certain cases. Currently, the
requirement for a signature guarantee has been waived on redemptions of $50,000
or less when the account address of record has been the same for a minimum
period of 30 days. The Fund and EKSC reserve the right to withdraw this waiver
at any time.
If the Fund receives a redemption or repurchase order, but you have not
clearly indicated the amount of money or number of shares involved, the Fund
cannot execute the order. In such cases, the Fund will request the missing
information from the shareholder and process the order the day it receives such
information.
TELEPHONE REDEMPTIONS
Under ordinary circumstances, you may redeem up to $50,000 from your account
by telephone by calling toll free 1-800-343-2898. As mentioned above, to engage
in telephone transactions generally, you must complete the appropriate sections
of the Fund's application.
In order to insure that instructions received by EKSC are genuine when you
initiate a telephone transaction, you will be asked to verify certain criteria
specific to your account. At the conclusion of the transaction, you will be
given a transaction number confirming your request. Written confirmation of your
transaction will be mailed the next business day. Your telephone instructions
will be recorded. Redemptions by telephone are allowed only if the address and
bank account of record have been the same for a minimum period of 30 days.
If you cannot reach the Fund by telephone, you should follow the procedures
for redeeming by mail or through a broker-dealer as set forth above.
SMALL ACCOUNTS
Because of the high cost of maintaining small accounts, the Fund reserves the
right to redeem your account if its value has fallen below $1,000, the current
minimum investment level, as a result of your redemptions (but not as a result
of market action). You will be notified in writing and allowed 60 days to
increase the value of your account to the minimum investment level. No CDSCs are
applied to such redemptions.
GENERAL
The Fund reserves the right at any time to terminate, suspend or change the
terms of any redemption method described in this prospectus, except redemption
by mail, and to impose fees.
Except as otherwise noted, neither the Fund, EKSC nor the Principal
Underwriter assumes responsibility for the authenticity of any instructions
received by any of them from a shareholder over the Keystone Automated Response
Line ("KARL") or by telephone. EKSC will employ reasonable procedures to confirm
that instructions received over KARL or by telephone are genuine. Neither the
Fund, EKSC nor the Principal Underwriter will be liable when following
instructions received over KARL or by telephone that EKSC reasonably believes to
be genuine.
The Fund may temporarily suspend the right to redeem its shares when (1) the
Exchange is closed, other than customary weekend and holiday closings; (2)
trading on the Exchange is restricted; (3) the Fund cannot dispose of its
investments or fairly determine their value; or (4) the Securities and Exchange
Commission so orders.
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SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
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Details on all shareholder services may be obtained by writing to EKSC or
calling toll free 1-800-343-2898.
KEYSTONE AUTOMATED RESPONSE LINE
The Keystone Automated Response Line offers shareholders specific fund account
information and price and yield quotations as well as the ability to do account
transactions, including investments, exchanges and redemptions. Shareholders may
access KARL by dialing toll free 1-800-346-3858 on any touch-tone telephone, 24
hours a day, seven days a week.
EXCHANGES
If you have obtained the appropriate prospectus, you may exchange shares of
the Fund for shares of any other fund in the Keystone Fund Family on the basis
of their respective net asset values by calling toll free 1-800-343-2898 or by
writing Evergreen Keystone Service Company, P.O. Box 2121, Boston, Massachusetts
02106-2121. (See "How to Redeem Shares" for additional information with respect
to telephone transactions.)
Fund shares purchased by check may be exchanged for shares of any of the funds
in the Keystone Classic Fund Family, other than Keystone Precious Metals
Holdings, Inc. ("KPMH"). In order to exchange Fund shares for shares of KPMH, a
shareholder must have held such Fund shares for a period of at least six months.
All exchanges may be made without a fee. If the shares being tendered for
exchange have been held for less than four years and are still subject to a
CDSC, such charge will carry over to the shares being acquired in the exchange
transaction. The Fund reserves the right to terminate this exchange offer or to
change its terms, including the right to charge for any exchange, upon notice to
shareholders pursuant to applicable law.
Orders to exchange shares of the Fund for shares of Keystone Liquid Trust
("KLT") will be executed by redeeming the shares of the Fund and purchasing
shares of KLT at the net asset value of KLT shares determined after the proceeds
from such redemption become available, which may be up to seven days after such
redemption. In all other cases, orders for exchanges received by the Fund prior
to 4:00 p.m. eastern time on any day the funds are open for business will be
executed at the respective net asset values determined as of the close of
business that day. Orders for exchanges received after 4:00 p.m. eastern time on
any business day will be executed at the respective net asset values determined
at the close of the next business day.
An excessive number of exchanges may be disadvantageous to the Fund.
Therefore, the Fund, in addition to its right to reject any exchange, reserves
the right to terminate the exchange privilege of any shareholder who makes more
than five exchanges of shares in a year or three in a calendar quarter.
An exchange order must comply with the requirements for a redemption or
repurchase order and must specify the dollar value or number of shares to be
exchanged. Exchanges are subject to the minimum initial purchase requirements of
the fund being acquired. An exchange constitutes a sale for federal income tax
purposes.
The exchange privilege is available only in states where shares of the fund
being acquired may legally be sold.
RETIREMENT PLANS
The Fund has various retirement plans available to you, including: Individual
Retirement Accounts (IRAs); Rollover IRAs; Simplified Employee Pension Plans
(SEPs); Salary Reduction Plans (SARSEPs); Tax Sheltered Annuity Plans (TSAs);
403(b)(7) Plans; 401(k) Plans; Keogh Plans; Corporate Profit-Sharing Plans;
Pension and Target Benefit Plans; and Money Purchase Plans. For details,
including fees and application forms, call EKSC toll free at 1-800-247-4075 or
write to EKSC at P.O. Box 2121, Boston, Massachusetts 02106-2121.
AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN
With a Keystone Automatic Investment Plan, you can automatically transfer as
little as $100 per month or quarter from your bank account or KLT to the
Keystone fund of your choice. Your bank account will be debited for each
transfer. You will receive confirmation with your next bank account statement.
To establish or terminate an Automatic Investment Plan or to change the amount
or schedule of your automatic investments, you may write to or call EKSC. Please
include your account number(s). Termination of an Automatic Investment Plan may
take up to 30 days.
SYSTEMATIC INCOME PLAN
Under a Systematic Income Plan, you may arrange for regular monthly or
quarterly fixed withdrawal payments. Each payment must be at least $100 and may
be as much as 1% per month or 3% per quarter of the total net asset value of the
Fund shares in your account when a Systematic Income Plan is opened. Fixed
withdrawal payments are not subject to a CDSC. Excessive withdrawals may
decrease or deplete the value of your account.
OTHER SERVICES
Under certain circumstances, shareholders may, within 30 days after a
redemption, reinstate their accounts at current net asset value.
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PERFORMANCE DATA
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From time to time, the Fund may advertise "total return" and "current yield."
BOTH FIGURES ARE BASED ON HISTORICAL RESULTS. PAST PERFORMANCE SHOULD NOT BE
CONSIDERED REPRESENTATIVE OF RESULTS FOR ANY FUTURE PERIOD OF TIME. Total return
refers to the Fund's average annual compounded rates of return over specified
periods determined by comparing the initial amount invested to the ending
redeemable value of that amount. The resulting equation assumes reinvestment of
all dividends and distributions and deduction of all recurring charges, if any,
applicable to all shareholder accounts. The deduction of the CDSC is reflected
in the applicable years.
Current yield quotations represent the yield on an investment for a stated
30-day period computed by dividing net investment income earned per share during
the base period by the maximum offering price per share on the last day of the
base period.
The Fund may include comparative performance information in advertising or
marketing the Fund's shares, such as data from Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.,
Morningstar, Inc., CDS-Weisenberger and Value Line, or other industry
publications.
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FUND SHARES
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The Fund currently issues one class of shares, which participate equally in
dividends and distributions and have equal voting, liquidation and other rights.
When issued and paid for, the shares will be fully paid and nonassessable by the
Fund. Shares may be exchanged as explained under "Shareholder Services," but
will have no other preference, conversion, exchange or preemptive rights.
Shareholders are entitled to one vote for each full share owned and fractional
votes for fractional shares. Shares are redeemable, transferable and freely
assignable as collateral. There are no sinking fund provisions. The Fund may
establish additional classes or series of shares.
The Fund does not have annual meetings. The Fund will have special meetings
from time to time as required under its Restatement of Trust Agreement (the
"Trust Agreement") and under the 1940 Act. As provided in the Trust Agreement,
shareholders have the right to remove Trustees by an affirmative vote of
two-thirds of the outstanding shares. A special meeting of the shareholders will
be held when holders of 10% of the outstanding shares request a meeting for the
purpose of removing a Trustee. The Fund is prepared to assist shareholders in
communications with one another for the purpose of convening such a meeting as
prescribed by Section 16(c) of the 1940 Act.
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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
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When the Fund determines from its records that more than one account in the
Fund is registered in the name of a shareholder or shareholders having the same
address, upon written notice to those shareholders, the Fund intends, when an
annual report or semi-annual report of the Fund is required to be furnished, to
mail one copy of such report to that address.
Except as otherwise stated in this prospectus or required by law, the Fund
reserves the right to change the terms of the offer stated in this prospectus
without shareholder approval, including the right to impose or change fees for
services provided.
<PAGE>
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ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT INFORMATION
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DESCRIPTIONS OF CERTAIN TYPES OF INVESTMENTS AND
INVESTMENT TECHNIQUES AVAILABLE TO THE FUND
The Fund may engage in the following investment practices to the extent
described in the prospectus and the statement of additional information.
OBLIGATIONS OF FOREIGN BRANCHES OF UNITED STATES BANKS
The obligations of foreign branches of U.S. banks may be general obligations
of the parent bank in addition to the issuing branch or may be limited by the
terms of a specific obligation and by government regulation. Payment of interest
and principal upon these obligations may also be affected by governmental action
in the country of domicile of the branch (generally referred to as sovereign
risk). In addition, evidences of ownership of such securities may be held
outside the U.S., and the Fund may be subject to the risks associated with the
holding of such property overseas. Examples of governmental actions would be the
imposition of currency controls, interest limitations, withholding taxes,
seizure of assets or the declaration of a moratorium. Various provisions of
federal law governing domestic branches do not apply to foreign branches of
domestic banks.
OBLIGATIONS OF UNITED STATES BRANCHES OF FOREIGN BANKS
Obligations of U.S. branches of foreign banks may be general obligations of
the parent bank in addition to the issuing branch or may be limited by the terms
of a specific obligation and by federal and state regulation as well as by
governmental action in the country in which the foreign bank has its head
office. In addition, there may be less publicly available information about a
U.S. branch of a foreign bank than about a domestic bank.
MASTER DEMAND NOTES
Master demand notes are unsecured obligations that permit the investment of
fluctuating amounts by the Fund at varying rates of interest pursuant to direct
arrangements between the Fund, as lender, and the issuer, as borrower. Master
demand notes may permit daily fluctuations in the interest rate and daily
changes in the amounts borrowed. The Fund has the right to increase the amount
under the note at any time up to the full amount provided by the note agreement
or to decrease the amount. The borrower may repay up to the full amount of the
note without penalty. Notes purchased by the Fund permit the Fund to demand
payment of principal and accrued interest at any time (on not more than seven
days' notice). Notes acquired by the Fund may have maturities of more than one
year, provided that (1) the Fund is entitled to payment of principal and accrued
interest upon not more than seven days' notice, and (2) the rate of interest on
such notes is adjusted automatically at periodic intervals which normally will
not exceed 31 days, but may extend up to one year. The notes are deemed to have
a maturity equal to the longer of the period remaining to the next interest rate
adjustment or the demand notice period. Because these types of notes are direct
lending arrangements between the lender and borrower, such instruments are not
normally traded, and there is no secondary market for these notes, although they
are redeemable and thus repayable by the borrower at face value plus accrued
interest at any time. Accordingly, the Fund's right to redeem is dependent on
the ability of the borrower to pay principal and interest on demand. In
connection with master demand note arrangements, Keystone considers, under
standards established by the Board of Trustees, earning power, cash flow and
other liquidity ratios of the borrower and will monitor the ability of the
borrower to pay principal and interest on demand. These notes are not typically
rated by credit rating agencies. Unless rated, the Fund will invest in them only
if at the time of an investment the issuer meets the criteria established for
commercial paper discussed in the statement of additional information (which
limits such investments to commercial paper rated A-1 by S&P, Prime-1 by Moody's
or F-1 by Fitch Investors Service, Inc.).
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS
The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements with member banks of the Federal
Reserve System having at least $1 billion in assets, primary dealers in U.S.
government securities or other financial institutions believed by Keystone to be
credit-worthy. Such persons must be registered as U.S. government securities
dealers with an appropriate regulatory organization. Under such agreements, the
bank, primary dealer or other financial institution agrees, upon entering into
the contract, to repurchase the security at a mutually agreed upon date and
price, thereby determining the yield during the term of the agreement. This
results in a fixed rate of return insulated from market fluctuations during such
period. Under a repurchase agreement, the seller must maintain the value of the
securities subject to the agreement at not less than the repurchase price, such
value being determined on a daily basis by marking the underlying securities to
their market value. Although the securities subject to the repurchase agreement
might bear maturities exceeding a year, the Fund only intends to enter into
repurchase agreements that provide for settlement within a year and usually
within seven days. Securities subject to repurchase agreements will be held by
the Fund's custodian or in the Federal Reserve book entry system. The Fund does
not bear the risk of a decline in the value of the underlying security unless
the seller defaults under its repurchase obligation. In the event of a
bankruptcy or other default of a seller of a repurchase agreement, the Fund
could experience both delays in liquidating the underlying securities and
losses, including (1) possible declines in the value of the underlying
securities during the period while the Fund seeks to enforce its rights thereto;
(2) possible subnormal levels of income and lack of access to income during this
period; and (3) expenses of enforcing its rights. The Board of Trustees has
established procedures to evaluate the creditworthiness of each party with whom
the Fund enters into repurchase agreements by setting guidelines and standards
of review for Keystone and monitoring Keystone's actions with regard to
repurchase agreements.
REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS
Under a reverse repurchase agreement, the Fund would sell securities and agree
to repurchase them at a mutually agreed upon date and price. The Fund intends to
enter into reverse repurchase agreements to avoid otherwise having to sell
securities during unfavorable market conditions in order to meet redemptions. At
the time the Fund enters into a reverse repurchase agreement, it will establish
a segregated account with the Fund's custodian containing liquid assets such as
U.S. government securities or other high grade debt securities, having a value
not less than the repurchase price (including accrued interest) and will
subsequently monitor the account to ensure such value is maintained. Reverse
repurchase agreements involve the risk that the market value of the securities
the Fund is obligated to repurchase may decline below the repurchase price.
"WHEN ISSUED" AND "FORWARD COMMITMENT"
TRANSACTIONS
The Fund may also purchase securities and currencies on a when issued and
delayed delivery basis and may purchase or sell securities on a forward
commitment basis. When issued and delayed delivery transactions arise when
securities are purchased or sold by the Fund with payment and delivery taking
place in the future in order to secure what is considered to be an advantageous
price and yield to the Fund at the time of purchase. A forward commitment
transaction is an agreement by the Fund to purchase or sell securities at a
specified future date. The Fund may also enter into foreign currency forward
contracts which are described in more detail in the section of the Exhibit
entitled "Foreign Currency Transactions." When the Fund engages in these
transactions, the Fund relies on the buyer or seller, as the case may be, to
consummate the sale. Failure to do so may result in the Fund missing the
opportunity to obtain a price or yield considered to be advantageous. When
issued, delayed delivery and forward commitment transactions may be expected to
occur a month or more before delivery is due. However, no payment or delivery is
made by the Fund, however, until it receives payment or delivery from the other
party to the transaction. The Securities and Exchange Commission has established
certain requirements to assure that the Fund is able to meet its obligations
under these contracts, for example, a separate account of liquid assets equal to
the value of such purchase commitments may be maintained until payment is made.
When issued, delayed delivery and forward commitment transactions are subject to
risks from changes in value based upon changes in the level of interest rates,
currency rates and other market factors, both before and after delivery. The
Fund does not accrue any income on such securities or currencies prior to their
delivery. To the extent the Fund engages in any of these transactions, it will
do so consistent with its investment objective and policies and not for the
purpose of investment leverage. The Fund currently does not intend to invest
more than 5% of its assets in when issued or delayed delivery transactions.
LOANS OF SECURITIES TO BROKER-DEALERS
The Fund may lend securities to brokers and dealers pursuant to agreements
requiring that the loans be continuously secured by cash or securities of the
U.S. government, its agencies or instrumentalities, or any combination of cash
and such securities, as collateral equal at all times in value to at least the
market value of the securities loaned. Such securities loans will not be made
with respect to the Fund if as a result the aggregate of all outstanding
securities loans exceeds 15% of the value of the Fund's total assets taken at
their current value. The Fund continues to receive interest or dividends on the
securities loaned and simultaneously earns interest on the investment of the
cash loan collateral in U.S. Treasury notes, certificates of deposit, other
high-grade, short-term obligations or interest bearing cash equivalents.
Although voting rights attendant to securities loaned pass to the borrower, such
loans may be called at any time and will be called so that the securities may be
voted by the Fund if, in the opinion of the Fund, a material event affecting the
investment is to occur. There may be risks of delay in receiving additional
collateral or in recovering the securities loaned or even loss of rights in the
collateral should the borrower of the securities fail financially. Loans may be
made, however, to borrowers deemed to be of good standing, under standards
approved by the Board of Trustees, when the income to be earned from the loan
justifies the attendant risks.
DERIVATIVES
The Fund may only use derivatives in furtherance of its investment objective.
Derivatives are financial contracts whose value depends on, or is derived from,
the value of an underlying asset, reference rate or index. These assets, rates,
and indices may include bonds, stocks, mortgages, commodities, interest rates,
currency exchange rates, bond indices and stock indices. Derivatives can be used
to earn income or protect against risk, or both. For example, one party with
unwanted risk may agree to pass that risk to another party who is willing to
accept the risk, the second party being motivated, for example, by the desire
either to earn income in the form of a fee or premium from the first party, or
to reduce its own unwanted risk by attempting to pass all or part of that risk
to the first party.
Derivatives can be used by investors such as the Fund to earn income and
enhance returns, to hedge or adjust the risk profile of the portfolio, and
either in place of more traditional direct investments or to obtain exposure to
otherwise inaccessible markets. The use of derivatives for non-hedging purposes
entails greater risks than if derivatives were used solely for hedging purposes.
The Fund uses futures contracts and related options as well as forwards for
hedging purposes. Derivatives are a valuable tool, which, when used properly,
can provide significant benefit to Fund shareholders. With respect to the Fund,
Keystone does not currently intend to aggressively use derivatives. The Fund may
take positions in those derivatives that are within its investment policies if,
in Keystone's judgement, this represents an effective response to current or
anticipated market conditions. Keystone's use of derivatives is subject to
continuous risk assessment and control from the standpoint of the Fund's
investment objective and policies.
Derivatives may be (1) standardized, exchange-traded contracts or (2)
customized, privately negotiated contracts. Exchange-traded derivatives tend to
be more liquid and subject to less credit risk than those that are privately
negotiated.
There are four principal types of derivative instruments--options, futures,
forwards and swaps--from which virtually any type of derivative transaction can
be created. Further information regarding options, futures, forwards and swaps
is provided later in this section and is provided in the Fund's statement of
additional information.
Debt instruments that incorporate one or more of these building blocks for the
purpose of determining the principal amount of and/or rate of interest payable
on the debt instruments are often referred to as "structured securities." An
example of this type of structured security is indexed commercial paper. The
term is also used to describe certain securities issued in connection with the
restructuring of certain foreign obligations. See "Indexed Commercial Paper" and
"Structured Securities" below. The term "derivative" is also sometimes used to
describe securities involving rights to a portion of the cash flows from an
underlying pool of mortgages or other assets from which payments are passed
through to the owner of, or that collateralize, the securities. See "Mortgage
Related Securities," "Collateralized Mortgage Obligations," "Adjustable Rate
Mortgage Securities," "Stripped Mortgage Securities," "Mortgage Securities --
Special Considerations," and "Other Asset-Backed Securities" and the Fund's
statement of additional information.
While the judicious use of derivatives by experienced investment managers such
as Keystone can be beneficial, derivatives also involve risks different from,
and, in certain cases, greater than, the risks presented by more traditional
investments. Following is a general discussion of important risk factors and
issues concerning the use of derivatives that investors should understand before
investing in the Fund.
o Market Risk -- This is the general risk attendant to all investments that the
value of a particular investment will decline or otherwise change in a way
detrimental to the Fund's interest.
o Management Risk -- Derivative products are highly specialized instruments
that require investment techniques and risk analyses different from those
associated with stocks and bonds. The use of a derivative requires an
understanding not only of the underlying instrument, but also of the
derivative itself, without the benefit of observing the performance of the
derivative under all possible market conditions. In particular, the use and
complexity of derivatives require the maintenance of adequate controls to
monitor the transactions entered into, the ability to assess the risk that a
derivative adds to the Fund's portfolio and the ability to forecast price,
interest rate or currency exchange rate movements correctly.
o Credit Risk -- This is the risk that a loss may be sustained by the Fund as a
result of the failure of another party to a derivative (usually referred to
as a "counterparty") to comply with the terms of the derivative contract. The
credit risk for exchange-traded derivatives is generally less than for
privately negotiated derivatives, since the clearing house, which is the
issuer or counterparty to each exchange-traded derivative, provides a
guarantee of performance. This guarantee is supported by a daily payment
system (i.e., margin requirements) operated by the clearing house in order to
reduce overall credit risk. For privately negotiated derivatives, there is no
similar clearing agency guarantee. Therefore, the Fund considers the
creditworthiness of each counterparty to a privately negotiated derivative in
evaluating potential credit risk.
o Liquidity Risk -- Liquidity risk exists when a particular instrument is
difficult to purchase or sell. If a derivative transaction is particularly
large or if the relevant market is illiquid (as is the case with many
privately negotiated derivatives), it may not be possible to initiate a
transaction or liquidate a position at an advantageous price.
o Leverage Risk -- Since many derivatives have a leverage component, adverse
changes in the value or level of the underlying asset, rate or index can
result in a loss substantially greater than the amount invested in the
derivative itself. In the case of swaps, the risk of loss generally is
related to a notional principal amount, even if the parties have not made any
initial investment. Certain derivatives have the potential for unlimited
loss, regardless of the size of the initial investment.
o Other Risks -- Other risks in using derivatives include the risk of
mispricing or improper valuation and the inability of derivatives to
correlate perfectly with underlying assets, rates and indices. Many
derivatives, in particular privately negotiated derivatives, are complex and
often valued subjectively. Improper valuations can result in increased cash
payment requirements to counterparties or a loss of value to the Fund.
Derivatives do not always perfectly or even highly correlate or track the
value of the assets, rates or indices they are designed to closely track.
Consequently, the Fund's use of derivatives may not always be an effective
means of, and sometimes could be counterproductive to, furthering the Fund's
investment objective.
OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS
WRITING COVERED OPTIONS. The Fund may write (i.e., sell) covered call and put
options. By writing a call option, the Fund becomes obligated during the term of
the option to deliver the securities underlying the option upon payment of the
exercise price. By writing a put option, the Fund becomes obligated during the
term of the option to purchase the securities underlying the option at the
exercise price if the option is exercised. The Fund also may write straddles
(combinations of covered puts and calls on the same underlying security).
The Fund may only write "covered" options. This means that so long as the Fund
is obligated as the writer of a call option it will own the underlying
securities subject to the option or, in the case of call options on U.S.
Treasury bills, the Fund might own substantially similar U.S. Treasury bills. If
the Fund has written options against all of its securities that are available
for writing options, the Fund may be unable to write additional options unless
it sells a portion of its portfolio holdings to obtain new securities against
which it can write options. If this were to occur, higher portfolio turnover and
correspondingly greater brokerage commissions and other transaction costs may
result. The Fund does not expect, however, that this will occur.
The Fund will be considered "covered" with respect to a put option it writes
if, so long as it is obligated as the writer of the put option, it deposits and
maintains with its custodian in a segregated account liquid assets having a
value equal to or greater than the exercise price of the option.
The principal reason for writing call or put options is to obtain, through a
receipt of premiums, a greater current return than would be realized on the
underlying securities alone. The Fund receives a premium from writing a call or
put option, which it retains whether or not the option is exercised. By writing
a call option, the Fund might lose the potential for gain on the underlying
security while the option is open, and, by writing a put option, the Fund might
become obligated to purchase the underlying security for more than its current
market price upon exercise.
PURCHASING OPTIONS. The Fund may purchase put or call options, including put
or call options for the purpose of offsetting previously written put or call
options of the same series.
If the Fund is unable to effect a closing purchase transaction with respect to
covered options it has written, the Fund will not be able to sell the underlying
securities or dispose of assets held in a segregated account until the options
expire or are exercised.
An option position may be closed out only in a secondary market for an option
of the same series. Although the Fund generally will write only those options
for which there appears to be an active secondary market, there is no assurance
that a liquid secondary market will exist for any particular option at any
particular time, and, for some options, no secondary market may exist. In such
event, it might not be possible to effect a closing transaction in a particular
option.
Options on some securities are relatively new, and it is impossible to predict
the amount of trading interest that will exist in such options. There can be no
assurance that viable markets will develop or continue. The failure of such
markets to develop or continue could significantly impair the Fund's ability to
use such options to achieve its investment objective.
OPTIONS TRADING MARKETS. Options in which the Fund will trade are generally
listed on national securities exchanges. Exchanges on which such options
currently are traded include the Chicago Board Options Exchange and the New
York, American, Pacific and Philadelphia Stock Exchanges. Options on some
securities may not be listed on any exchange, but traded in the over-the-counter
market. Options traded in the over-the-counter market involve the additional
risk that securities dealers participating in such transactions could fail to
meet their obligations to the Fund. The use of options traded in the
over-the-counter market may be subject to limitations imposed by certain state
securities authorities. In addition to the limits on its use of options
discussed herein, the Fund is subject to the investment restrictions described
in this prospectus and in the statement of additional information.
The staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission is of the view that the
premiums that the Fund pays for the purchase of unlisted options and the value
of securities used to cover unlisted options written by the Fund are considered
to be invested in illiquid securities or assets for the purpose of calculating
whether the Fund is in compliance with its policies on illiquid securities.
FUTURES TRANSACTIONS
The Fund may enter into currency and other financial futures contracts and
write options on such contracts. The Fund intends to enter into such contracts
and related options for hedging purposes. The Fund will enter into securities,
currency or index-based futures contracts in order to hedge against changes in
interest or exchange rates or securities prices. A futures contract on
securities or currencies is an agreement to buy or sell securities or currencies
at a specified price during a designated month. A futures contract on a
securities index does not involve the actual delivery of securities, but merely
requires the payment of a cash settlement based on changes in the securities
index. The Fund does not make payment or deliver securities upon entering into a
futures contract. Instead, it puts down a margin deposit, which is adjusted to
reflect changes in the value of the contract and which continues until the
contract is terminated.
The Fund may sell or purchase futures contracts. When a futures contract is
sold by the Fund, the value of the contract will tend to rise when the value of
the underlying securities or currencies declines and to fall when the value of
such securities or currencies increases. Thus, the Fund sells futures contracts
in order to offset a possible decline in the value of its securities or
currencies. If a futures contract is purchased by the Fund, the value of the
contract will tend to rise when the value of the underlying securities or
currencies increases and to fall when the value of such securities or currencies
declines. The Fund intends to purchase futures contracts in order to fix what is
believed by Keystone to be a favorable price and rate of return for securities
or favorable exchange rate for currencies the Fund intends to purchase.
The Fund also intends to purchase put and call options on futures contracts
for hedging purposes. A put option purchased by the Fund would give it the right
to assume a position as the seller of a futures contract. A call option
purchased by the Fund would give it the right to assume a position as the
purchaser of a futures contract. The purchase of an option on a futures contract
requires the Fund to pay a premium. In exchange for the premium, the Fund
becomes entitled to exercise the benefits, if any, provided by the futures
contract, but is not required to take any action under the contract. If the
option cannot be exercised profitably before it expires, the Fund's loss will be
limited to the amount of the premium and any transaction costs.
The Fund may enter into closing purchase and sale transactions in order to
terminate a futures contract and may sell put and call options for the purpose
of closing out its options positions. The Fund's ability to enter into closing
transactions depends on the development and maintenance of a liquid secondary
market. There is no assurance that a liquid secondary market will exist for any
particular contract or at any particular time. As a result, there can be no
assurance that the Fund will be able to enter into an offsetting transaction
with respect to a particular contract at a particular time. If the Fund is not
able to enter into an offsetting transaction, the Fund will continue to be
required to maintain the margin deposits on the contract and to complete the
contract according to its terms, in which case, it would continue to bear market
risk on the transaction.
Although futures and related options transactions are intended to enable the
Fund to manage market, interest rate or exchange rate risk, unanticipated
changes in interest rates, exchange rates or market prices could result in
poorer performance than if it had not entered into these transactions. Even if
Keystone correctly predicts interest or exchange rate movements, a hedge could
be unsuccessful if changes in the value of the Fund's futures position did not
correspond to changes in the value of its investments. This lack of correlation
between the Fund's futures and securities or currencies positions may be caused
by differences between the futures and securities or currencies markets or by
differences between the securities or currencies underlying the Fund's futures
position and the securities or currencies held by or to be purchased for the
Fund. Keystone will attempt to minimize these risks through careful selection
and monitoring of the Fund's futures and options positions.
The Fund does not intend to use futures transactions for speculation or
leverage. The Fund has the ability to write options on futures, but intends to
write such options only to close out options purchased by the Fund. The Fund
will not change these policies without supplementing the information in its
prospectus and statement of additional information.
FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSACTIONS
As discussed above, the Fund may invest in securities of foreign issuers. When
the Fund invests in foreign securities, they usually will be denominated in
foreign currencies, and the Fund temporarily may hold funds in foreign
currencies. Thus, the value of Fund shares will be affected by changes in
exchange rates.
As one way of managing exchange rate risk, in addition to entering into
currency futures contracts, the Fund may enter into forward currency exchange
contracts (agreements to purchase or sell currencies at a specified price and
date). The exchange rate for the transaction (the amount of currency the Fund
will deliver or receive when the contract is completed) is fixed when the Fund
enters into the contract. The Fund usually will enter into these contracts to
stabilize the U.S. dollar value of a security it has agreed to buy or sell. The
Fund intends to use these contracts to hedge the U.S. dollar value of a security
it already owns, particularly if the Fund expects a decrease in the value of the
currency in which the foreign security is denominated. Although the Fund will
attempt to benefit from using forward contracts, the success of its hedging
strategy will depend on Keystone's ability to predict accurately the future
exchange rates between foreign currencies and the U.S. dollar. The value of the
Fund's investments denominated in foreign currencies will depend on the relative
strength of those currencies and the U.S. dollar, and the Fund may be affected
favorably or unfavorably by changes in the exchange rates or exchange control
regulations between foreign currencies and the dollar. Changes in foreign
currency exchange rates also may affect the value of dividends and interest
earned, gains and losses realized on the sale of securities and net investment
income and gains, if any, to be distributed to shareholders by the Fund.
Although the Fund does not currently intend to do so, the Fund may also purchase
and sell options related to foreign currencies. The Fund does not intend to
enter into foreign currency transactions for speculation or leverage.
INTEREST RATE TRANSACTIONS (SWAPS, CAPS AND FLOORS). If the Fund enters into
interest rate swap, cap or floor transactions, it expects to do so primarily for
hedging purposes, which may include preserving a return or spread on a
particular investment or portion of its portfolio or protecting against an
increase in the price of securities the Fund anticipates purchasing at a later
date. The Fund does not currently intend to use these transactions in a
speculative manner.
Interest rate swaps involve the exchange by the Fund with another party of
their respective commitments to pay or receive interest (e.g., an exchange of
floating rate payments for fixed rate payments). Interest rate caps and floors
are similar to options in that the purchase of an interest rate cap or floor
entitles the purchaser, to the extent that a specified index exceeds (in the
case of a cap) or falls below (in the case of a floor) a predetermined interest
rate, to receive payments of interest on a contractually-based principal
("notional") amount from the party selling the interest rate cap or floor. The
Fund may enter into interest rate swaps, caps and floors on either an
asset-based or liability-based basis, depending upon whether it is hedging its
assets or liabilities, and will usually enter into interest rate swaps on a net
basis (i.e., the two payment streams are netted out, with the Fund receiving or
paying, as the case may be, only the net amount of the two payments).
The swap market has grown substantially in recent years, with a large number
of banks and investment banking firms acting as principals and as agents
utilizing standardized swap documentation. As a result, the swap market has
become more established and relatively liquid. Caps and floors are less liquid
than swaps. These transactions also involve the delivery of securities or other
underlying assets and principal. Accordingly, the risk of loss to the Fund from
interest rate transactions is limited to the net amount of interest payments
that the Fund is contractually obligated to make.
INDEXED COMMERCIAL PAPER. Indexed commercial paper may have its principal linked
to changes in foreign currency exchange rates whereby its principal amount is
adjusted upwards or downwards (but not below zero) at maturity to reflect
changes in the referenced exchange rate. If permitted by its investment
policies, the Fund will purchase such commercial paper with the currency in
which it is denominated and, at maturity, will receive interest and principal
payments thereon in that currency, but the amount of principal payable by the
issuer at maturity will change in proportion to the change (if any) in the
exchange rate between the two specified currencies between the date the
instrument is issued and the date the instrument matures. While such commercial
paper entails the risk of loss of principal, the potential for realizing gains
as a result of changes in foreign currency exchange rates enables the Fund to
hedge (or cross-hedge) against a decline in the U.S. dollar value of investments
denominated in foreign currencies while providing an attractive money market
rate of return.
MORTGAGE-RELATED SECURITIES. The mortgage-related securities in which the Fund
may invest typically are securities representing interests in pools of mortgage
loans made to home owners. Mortgage-related securities bear interest at either a
fixed rate or an adjustable rate determined by reference to an index rate. The
mortgage loan pools may be assembled for sale to investors (such as the Fund) by
governmental or private organizations. Mortgage-related securities issued by the
Government National Mortgage Association ("GNMA") are backed by the full faith
and credit of the U.S. government; those issued by Federal National Mortgage
Association ("FNMA") and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("FHLMC") are
not so backed.
Securities representing interests in pools created by private issuers
generally offer a higher rate of interest than securities representing interests
in pools created by governmental issuers because there are no direct or indirect
governmental guarantees of the underlying mortgage payments. However, private
issuers sometimes obtain committed loan facilities, lines of credit, letters of
credit, surety bonds or other forms of liquidity and credit enhancement to
support the timely payment of interest and principal with respect to their
securities if the borrowers on the underlying mortgages fail to make their
mortgage payments. The ratings of such non-governmental securities are generally
dependent upon the ratings of the providers of such liquidity and credit support
and would be adversely affected if the rating of such an enhancer were
downgraded. The Fund may buy mortgage-related securities without credit
enhancement if the securities meet the Fund's investment standards. Although the
market for mortgage-related securities is becoming increasingly liquid, those of
certain private organizations may not be readily marketable.
One type of mortgage-related security is of the "pass-through" variety. The
holder of a pass-through security is considered to own an undivided beneficial
interest in the underlying pool of mortgage loans and receives a pro rata share
of the monthly payments made by the borrowers on their mortgage loans, net of
any fees paid to the issuer or guarantor of the securities. Prepayments of
mortgages resulting from the sale, refinancing or foreclosure of the underlying
properties are also paid to the holders of these securities. Some
mortgage-related securities, such as securities issued by GNMA, are referred to
as "modified pass-through" securities. The holders of these securities are
entitled to the full and timely payment of principal and interest, net of
certain fees, regardless of whether payments are actually made on the underlying
mortgages. Another form of mortgage-related security is a "pay- through"
security, which is a debt obligation of the issuer secured by a pool of mortgage
loans pledged as collateral that is legally required to be paid by the issuer
regardless of whether payments are actually made on the underlying mortgages.
COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS. ("CMOs") are the predominant type of
"pay-through" mortgage-related security. CMOs are designed to reduce the risk of
prepayment for investors by issuing multiple classes of securities, each having
different maturities, interest rates and payment schedules, and with the
principal and interest on the underlying mortgages allocated among the several
classes in various ways. The collateral securing the CMOs may consist of a pool
of mortgages, but may also consist of mortgage-backed bonds or pass-through
securities. CMOs may be issued by a U.S. government instrumentality or agency or
by a private issuer. Although payment of the principal of, and interest on, the
underlying collateral securing privately issued CMOs may be guaranteed by GNMA,
FNMA or FHLMC, these CMOs represent obligations solely of the private issuer and
are not insured or guaranteed by GNMA, FNMA, FHLMC, any other governmental
agency or any other person or entity.
INVERSE FLOATING RATE COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS. In addition to
investing in fixed rate and adjustable rate CMOs, if consistent with its
investment objective, the Fund may also invest in CMOs with rates that move
inversely to market rates ("inverse floaters").
An inverse floater bears an interest rate that resets in the opposite
direction of the change in a specified interest rate index. As market interest
rates rise, the interest rate on the inverse floater goes down, and vice versa.
Inverse floaters tend to exhibit greater price volatility than fixed-rate bonds
of similar maturity and credit quality. The interest rates on inverse floaters
may be significantly reduced, even to zero, if interest rates rise. Moreover,
the secondary market for inverse floaters may be limited in rising interest rate
environments.
ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGE SECURITIES. Another type of mortgage-related security,
known as adjustable-rate mortgage securities ("ARMS"), bears interest at a rate
determined by reference to a predetermined interest rate or index. There are two
main categories of rates or indices: (1) rates based on the yield on U.S.
Treasury securities and (2) indices derived from a calculated measure such as a
cost of funds index or a moving average of mortgage rates. Some rates and
indices closely mirror changes in market interest rate levels, while others tend
to lag changes in market rate levels and tend to be somewhat less volatile.
ARMS may be secured by adjustable-rate mortgages or fixed-rate mortgages. ARMS
secured by fixed-rate mortgages generally have lifetime caps on the coupon rates
of the securities. To the extent that general interest rates increase faster
than the interest rates on the ARMS, these ARMS will decline in value. The
adjustable-rate mortgages that secure ARMS will frequently have caps that limit
the maximum amount by which the interest rate or the monthly principal and
interest payments on the mortgages may increase. These payment caps can result
in negative amortization (i.e., an increase in the balance of the mortgage
loan). Furthermore, since many adjustable-rate mortgages only reset on an annual
basis, the values of ARMS tend to fluctuate to the extent that changes in
prevailing interest rates are not immediately reflected in the interest rates
payable on the underlying adjustable-rate mortgages.
STRIPPED MORTGAGE SECURITIES. Stripped mortgage-related securities ("SMRS") are
mortgage-related securities that are usually structured with two classes of
securities collateralized by a pool of mortgages or a pool of mortgaged-backed
bonds or pass-through securities, with each class receiving different
proportions of the principal and interest payments from the underlying assets. A
common type of SMRS has one class of interest-only securities ("IOs") receiving
all of the interest payments from the underlying assets, while the other class
of securities, principal-only securities ("POs"), receives all of the principal
payments from the underlying assets. IOs and POs are extremely sensitive to
interest rate changes and are more volatile than mortgage-related securities
that are not stripped. IOs tend to decrease in value as interest rates decrease,
while POs generally increase in value as interest rates decrease. If prepayments
of the underlying mortgages are greater than anticipated, the amount of interest
earned on the overall pool will decrease due to the decreasing principal balance
of the assets. Changes in the values of IOs and POs can be substantial and occur
quickly, such as occurred in the first half of 1994 when the value of many POs
dropped precipitously due to increase in interest rates. For this reason the
Fund does not rely on IOs and POs as the principal means of furthering its
investment objective.
MORTGAGE-RELATED SECURITIES -- SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS. The value of
mortgage-related securities is affected by a number of factors. Unlike
traditional debt securities, which have fixed maturity dates, mortgage-related
securities may be paid earlier than expected as a result of prepayment of the
underlying mortgages. If property owners make unscheduled prepayments of their
mortgage loans, these prepayments will result in the early payment of the
applicable mortgage-related securities. In that event the Fund may be unable to
invest the proceeds from the early payment of the mortgage-related securities in
an investment that provides as high a yield as the mortgage-related securities.
Consequently, early payment associated with mortgage-related securities causes
these securities to experience significantly greater price and yield volatility
than experienced by traditional fixed-income securities. The occurrence of
mortgage prepayments is affected by the level of general interest rates, general
economic conditions and other social and demographic factors. During periods of
falling interest rates, the rate of mortgage prepayments tends to increase,
thereby tending to decrease the life of mortgage-related securities. During
periods of rising interest rates, the rate of mortgage prepayments usually
decreases, thereby tending to increase the life of mortgage-related securities.
If the life of a mortgage-related security is inaccurately predicted, the Fund
may not be able to realize the rate of return it expected.
As with fixed-income securities generally, the value of mortgage-related
securities can also be adversely affected by increases in general interest rates
relative to the yield provided by such securities. Such adverse effect is
especially possible with fixed-rate mortgage securities. If the yield available
on other investments rises above the yield of the fixed-rate mortgage securities
as a result of general increases in interest rate levels, the value of the
mortgage-related securities will decline. Although the negative effect could be
lessened if the mortgage-related securities were to be paid earlier (thus
permitting the Fund to reinvest the prepayment proceeds in investments yielding
the higher current interest rate), as described above the rate of mortgage
prepayments and earlier payment of mortgage-related securities generally tends
to decline during a period of rising interest rates.
Although the value of ARMS may not be affected by rising interest rates as
much as the value of fixed-rate mortgage securities is affected by rising
interest rates, ARMS may still decline in value as a result of rising interest
rates. Although, as described above, the yield on ARMS varies with changes in
the applicable interest rate or index, there is often a lag between increases in
general interest rates and increases in the yield on ARMS as a result of
relatively infrequent interest rate reset dates. In addition, adjustable-rate
mortgages and ARMS often have interest rate or payment caps that limit the
ability of the adjustable-rate mortgages or ARMS to fully reflect increases in
the general level of interest rates.
OTHER ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES. The securitization techniques used to develop
mortgage-related securities are being applied to a broad range of financial
assets. Through the use of trusts and special purpose corporations, various
types of assets, including automobile loans and leases, credit card receivables,
home equity loans, equipment leases and trade receivables, are being securitized
in structures similar to the structures used in mortgage securitizations. These
asset-backed securities are subject to risks associated with changes in interest
rates and prepayment of underlying obligations similar to the risks of
investment in mortgage-related securities discussed above.
Each type of asset-backed security also entails unique risks depending on the
type of assets involved and the legal structure used. For example, credit card
receivables are generally unsecured obligations of the credit card holder and
the debtors are entitled to the protection of a number of state and federal
consumer credit laws, many of which give such debtors the right to set off
certain amounts owed on the credit cards, thereby reducing the balance due.
There have also been proposals to cap the interest rate that a credit card
issuer may charge. In some transactions, the value of the asset-backed security
is dependent on the performance of a third party acting as credit enhancer or
servicer. Furthermore, in some transactions (such as those involving the
securitization of vehicle loans or leases) it may be administratively burdensome
to perfect the interest of the security issuer in the underlying collateral and
the underlying collateral may become damaged or stolen.
VARIABLE, FLOATING AND LEVERAGED INVERSE FLOATING RATE INSTRUMENTS. Fixed-
income securities may have fixed, variable or floating rates of interest.
Variable and floating rate securities pay interest at rates that are adjusted
periodically, according to a specified formula. A "variable" interest rate
adjusts at predetermined intervals (e.g., daily, weekly or monthly), while a
"floating" interest rate adjusts whenever a specified benchmark rate (such as
the bank prime lending rate) changes.
If permitted by its investment policies, the Fund may invest in fixed-income
securities that pay interest at a coupon rate equal to a base rate, plus
additional interest for a certain period of time if short-term interest rates
rise above a predetermined level or "cap." The amount of such an additional
interest payment typically is calculated under a formula based on a short-term
interest rate index multiplied by a designated factor.
An inverse floater may be considered to be leveraged to the extent that its
interest rate varies by a magnitude that exceeds the magnitude of the change in
the index rate of interest. The higher degree of leverage inherent in inverse
floaters is associated with greater volatility in market value.
STRUCTURED SECURITIES. Structured securities represent interests in entities
organized and operated solely for the purpose of restructuring the investment
characteristics of sovereign debt obligations or foreign government securities.
This type of restructuring involves the deposit with or purchase by an entity,
such as a corporation or trust, of specified instruments (such as commercial
bank loans or Brady Bonds) and the issuance by that entity of one or more
classes of structured securities backed by, or representing interests in, the
underlying instruments. The cash flow on the underlying instruments may be
apportioned among the newly issued structured securities to create securities
with different investment characteristics such as varying maturities, payment
priorities and interest rate provisions, and the extent of the payments made
with respect to structured securities is dependent on the extent of the cash
flow on the underlying instruments. Because structured securities typically
involve no credit enhancement, their credit risk generally will be equivalent to
that of the underlying instruments. Structured securities of a given class may
be either subordinated or unsubordinated to the right of payment of another
class. Subordinated structured securities typically have higher yields and
present greater risks than unsubordinated structured securities.
<PAGE>
---------------------------------------
KEYSTONE
FUND FAMILY
()
Quality Bond Fund (B-1)
Diversified Bond Fund (B-2)
High Income Bond Fund (B-4)
Balanced Fund (K-1)
Strategic Growth Fund (K-2)
Growth and Income Fund (S-1)
Mid-Cap Growth Fund (S-3)
Small Company Growth Fund (S-4)
International Fund Inc.
Precious Metals Holdings, Inc.
Tax Free Fund
Liquid Trust
---------------------------------------
- ---------------------------------
Evergreen Keystone
[logo] FUNDS [logo]
- ---------------------------------
Evergreen Keystone Distributor, Inc.
125 W. 55th Street
New York, New York 10019
B1-P 2/97 [recycle logo]
18M
540110
---------------------------------------
KEYSTONE
[graphic omitted]
QUALITY
BOND FUND (B-1)
---------------------------------------
---------------------------------
Evergreen Keystone
[logo] FUNDS [logo]
---------------------------------
PROSPECTUS AND
APPLICATION
<PAGE>
KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
PART B
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
<PAGE>
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
FEBRUARY 28, 1997
This statement of additional information is not a prospectus but
relates to, and should be read in conjunction with, the prospectus of Keystone
Quality Bond Fund (B-1) (the "Fund") dated February 28, 1997. You may obtain a
copy of the prospectus from the Fund's principal underwriter, Evergreen Keystone
Distributor, Inc. or your broker-dealer. See "Service Providers" below.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Page
The Fund ....................................................2
Service Providers............................................2
Investment Restrictions......................................3
Distributions and Taxes......................................4
Valuation of Securities......................................5
Brokerage....................................................5
Sales Charge.................................................7
Distribution Plan............................................8
Trustees and Officers.......................................10
Investment Adviser..........................................13
Principal Underwriter.......................................15
Sub-administrator...........................................16
The Trust Agreement.........................................16
Expenses ...................................................17
Standardized Total Return and Yield Quotations..............18
Financial Statements........................................19
Additional Information......................................19
<PAGE>
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THE FUND
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The Fund is an open-end, diversified management investment company. The
Fund's investment objective is to provide shareholders with the highest possible
income consistent with preservation of principal.
Certain information about the Fund is contained in its prospectus. This
statement of additional information provides additional information about the
Fund that may be of interest to some investors.
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SERVICE PROVIDERS
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<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
SERVICE PROVIDER
- ----------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
<S> <C>
Investment adviser (referred to Keystone Investment Management Company, 200
in this SAI as "Keystone") Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02116
(Keystone is a wholly-
owned subsidiary of First Union Keystone, Inc., ("First
Union Keystone") also located at 200 Berkeley Street,
Boston, Massachusetts 02116)
Principal underwriter ( referred Evergreen Keystone Distributor, Inc. (formerly Evergreen
to in this SAI as "EKD") Funds Distributor, Inc.), 125 W. 55th Street, New York,
New York 10019.
Marketing services agent and Evergreen Keystone Investment Services, Inc. (formerly
predecessor to EKD (referred to Keystone Investment Distributors Company), 200 Berkeley
in this SAI as "EKIS") Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02116
Sub-administrator (referred to in The BISYS Group, Inc., 3435 Stelzer Road, Columbus, Ohio
this SAI as "BISYS") 43219
Transfer and dividend Evergreen Keystone Service Company, 200 Berkeley
disbursing agent (referred to in Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02116 (EKSC is a wholly-
this SAI as "EKSC") owned subsidiary of Keystone)
Independent auditors KPMG Peat Marwick LLP, 99 High Street, Boston,
Massachusetts 02110, Certified Public Accountants
Custodian State Street Bank and Trust Company, 225 Franklin
Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110,
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
3
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INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
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FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
The Fund has adopted the fundamental investment restrictions set forth
below, which may not be changed without a vote of the majority of the Fund's
outstanding shares (as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "1940
Act")). Unless otherwise stated, all references to Fund assets are in terms of
current market value.
The Fund may not do the following:
(1) with respect to 75% of its total assets, invest more than 5% of the
value of its total assets, determined at market or other fair value at the time
of purchase, in the securities of any one issuer, or invest in more than 10% of
the outstanding voting securities of any one issuer, all as determined
immediately after such investment; provided that these limitations do not apply
to investments in securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or its
agencies or instrumentalities;
(2) borrow money, except that the Fund may (a) borrow money from banks
for temporary or emergency purposes in aggregate amounts up to 10% of the value
of the Fund's net assets (computed at cost), or (b) enter into reverse
repurchase agreements, provided that bank borrowings and reverse repurchase
agreements, in aggregate, shall not exceed 10% of the value of the Fund's net
assets;
(3) underwrite securities, except that the Fund may purchase securities
from issuers thereof or others and dispose of such securities in a manner
consistent with its other investment policies; in the disposition of restricted
securities the Fund may be deemed to be an underwriter, as defined in the
Securities Act of 1933 (the "1933 Act");
(4) purchase or sell real estate or interests in real estate, except
that it may purchase and sell securities secured by real estate and securities
of companies which invest in real estate, and will not purchase or sell
commodities or commodity contracts, except that the Fund may engage in currency
or other financial futures contracts and related options transactions;
(5) invest for the primary purpose of exercising control over or
management of any one issuer;
(6) make margin purchases or short sales of securities;
(7) make loans, except that the Fund may purchase money market
securities, enter into repurchase agreements, buy publicly and privately
distributed debt securities and lend limited amounts of its portfolio securities
to broker-dealers; all such investments must be consistent with the Fund's
investment objective and policies;
(8) invest more than 25% of its assets in the securities of issuers in
any single industry other than securities issued by banks and savings and loan
associations or securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government, its
agencies or instrumentalities; and
(9) purchase the securities of any other investment company except in
the open market and at customary brokerage rates and in no event more than 3% of
the voting securities of any investment company.
In addition, the Fund will not issue senior securities, except as
appropriate to evidence indebtedness which the portfolio is permitted to incur
pursuant to Investment Restriction (2) above and except for shares of any
additional series or portfolios which may be established by the Trustees.
If a percentage limit is satisfied at the time of investment or
borrowing, a later increase or decrease resulting from a change in the value of
a security or a decrease in Fund assets is not a violation of the limit.
The Fund has no current intention of attempting to increase its net
income by borrowing and intends to repay any borrowings made in accordance with
the fourth investment restriction enumerated above before it makes any
additional investments.
NON-FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
With respect to illiquid securities, the Fund intends to follow the
policies of the Securities and Exchange Commission. Currently, the Fund will not
invest more than 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities. Also, the Fund
will treat securities as illiquid if it may not sell or dispose of the security
in the ordinary course of business within seven days at approximately the value
at which the Fund has valued such securities on its books.
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DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
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You will ordinarily receive distributions in shares, unless you elect
before the record date to receive them as cash. Unless the Fund receives
instructions to the contrary, it will assume that you wish to receive that
distribution and future gains and income distributions in shares. Your
instructions continue in effect until changed in writing. If you have not opted
to receive cash, the Fund will determine the number of shares that you should
receive based on its net asset value per share as computed at the close of
business on the ex-dividend date after adjustment for the distribution.
Capital gains distributions that reduce the net asset value of your
shares below your cost are, to the extent of the reduction, a return of your
investment. Since distributions of capital gains depend upon profits realized
from the sale of the Fund's portfolio securities, they may or may not occur.
Distributions are taxable whether you receive them in cash or
additional shares. Long-term capital gains distributions are taxable as such
regardless of how long you have held the shares. If, however, you hold the
Fund's shares for less than six months and redeem them at a loss, you will
recognize a long-term capital loss to the extent of the long-term capital gain
distribution received in connection with such shares. The Fund intends to
distribute only such net capital gains and income as it has predetermined, to
the best of its ability, to be taxable as ordinary income. Since the Fund's
income distributions are largely derived from interest on bonds they are not to
any significant degree eligible for the corporate 70% dividends received
deduction. Distributions designated by the Fund as capital gains are not
eligible for the corporate 70% dividends received deduction
The Fund will advise you annually as to the federal income tax status
of your distributions. These comments relating to the taxation of dividends and
distributions paid on the Fund's shares relate solely to federal income
taxation. Your dividends and distributions may also be subject to state and
local taxes.
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VALUATION OF SECURITIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current values for the Fund's portfolio securities are determined in
the following manner:
(1) securities traded on the established exchanges are valued on the
basis of the last sales price on the exchange where the securities are primarily
traded prior to the time of the valuation;
(2) securities traded in the over-the-counter market, for which
complete quotations are readily available, are valued at the mean of the bid and
asked prices at the time of valuation;
(3) short-term investments maturing in sixty days or less are valued at
amortized cost (original purchase cost as adjusted for amortization of premium
or accretion of discount), which, when combined with accrued interest,
approximates market;
(4) short-term investments maturing in more than sixty days for which
market quotations are readily available are valued at market value;
(5) short-term investments maturing in more than sixty days when
purchased that are held on the sixtieth day prior to maturity are valued at
amortized cost (market value on the sixtieth day adjusted for amortization of
premium or accretion of discount), which, when combined with accrued interest,
approximates market; and
(6) the Board of Trustees values the following at prices it deems in
good faith to be fair: (a) securities, including restricted securities, for
which complete quotations are not readily available, (b) listed securities if in
the Fund's opinion the last sales price does not reflect a current market value
or if no sale occurred, and (c) other assets.
The Fund believes that reliable market quotations are generally not
readily available for purposes of valuing fixed income securities. As a result,
depending on the particular securities owned by the Fund, it is likely that most
of the valuations for such securities will be based upon their fair value
determined under procedures that have been approved by the Fund's Board of
Trustees. The Fund's Board of Trustees has authorized the use of a pricing
service to determine the fair value of the Fund's fixed income securities and
certain other securities.
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BROKERAGE
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SELECTION OF BROKERS
In effecting transactions in portfolio securities for the Fund,
Keystone seeks the best execution of orders at the most favorable prices.
Keystone determines whether a broker has provided the Fund with best execution
and price in the execution of a securities transaction by evaluating, among
other things:
1. overall direct net economic result to the Fund,
2. the efficiency with which the transaction is effected,
3. the broker's ability to effect the transaction where a large
block is involved,
4. the broker's readiness to execute potentially difficult
transactions in the future,
5. the financial strength and stability of the broker, and
6. the receipt of research services, such as analyses and reports
concerning issuers, industries, securities, economic factors
and trends and other statistical and factual information
("research services").
The Fund's management weighs these considerations in determining the
overall reasonableness of the brokerage commissions paid.
Should the Fund or Keystone receive services from a broker, the Fund
would consider such services to be in addition to, and not in lieu of, the
services Keystone is required to perform under the Advisory Agreement. Keystone
believes that the cost, value and specific application of such services are
indeterminable and cannot be practically allocated between the Fund and its
other clients who may indirectly benefit from the availability of such
information. Similarly, the Fund may indirectly benefit from information made
available as a result of transactions effected for Keystone's other clients.
Under the Advisory Agreement, Keystone is permitted to pay higher brokerage
commissions for brokerage and research services in accordance with Section 28(e)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. In the event Keystone follows such a
practice, it will do so on a basis that is fair and equitable to the Fund.
Neither the Fund nor Keystone intends on placing securities
transactions with any particular broker. The Fund's Board of Trustees has
determined, however, that the Fund may consider sales of Fund shares as a factor
when selecting brokers to execute portfolio transactions, subject to the
requirements of best execution described above.
BROKERAGE COMMISSIONS
The Fund expects to purchase and sell its securities and temporary
instruments through principal transactions. Bonds and money market instruments
are normally purchased directly from the issuer or from an underwriter or market
maker for the securities. In general, the Fund will not pay brokerage
commissions for such purchases. Purchases from underwriters will include the
underwriting commission or concession, and purchases from dealers serving as
market makers will include a dealer's mark-up or reflect a dealer's mark-down.
Where transactions are made in the over-the-counter market, the Fund will deal
with primary market makers unless more favorable prices are otherwise
obtainable.
GENERAL BROKERAGE POLICIES
In order to take advantage of the availability of lower purchase
prices, the Fund may participate, if and when practicable, in group bidding for
the direct purchase from an issuer of certain securities.
Keystone makes investment decisions for the Fund independently from
those of its other clients. It may frequently develop, however, that Keystone
will make the same investment decision for more than one client. Simultaneous
transactions are inevitable when the same security is suitable for the
investment objective of more than one account. When two or more of its clients
are engaged in the purchase or sale of the same security, Keystone will allocate
the transactions according to a formula that is equitable to each of its
clients. Although, in some cases, this system could have a detrimental effect on
the price or volume of the Fund's securities, the Fund believes that in other
cases its ability to participate in volume transactions will produce better
executions.
The Fund does not purchase portfolio securities from or sell portfolio
securities to Keystone, EKD, or any of their affiliated persons, as defined in
the 1940 Act.
The Board of Trustees periodically reviews the Fund's brokerage policy.
In the event of further regulatory developments affecting the securities
exchanges and brokerage practices generally, the Board of Trustees may change,
modify or eliminate any of the foregoing practices.
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SALES CHARGE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Fund may charge a contingent deferred sales charge (a "CDSC") when
you redeem certain of its shares within four calendar years after the month in
which you purchase the shares. The Fund charges a CDSC as reimbursement for
certain expenses, such as commissions or shareholder servicing fees, that it has
incurred in connection with the sale of its shares (see "Distribution Plan"). If
imposed, the Fund deducts the CDSC from the redemption proceeds you would
otherwise receive. CDSCs attributable to your shares are, to the extent
permitted by the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD"), paid
to EKD or its predecessor.
CALCULATING THE CDSC
The CDSC is a declining percentage of the lesser of (1) the net asset
value of the shares you redeemed, or (2) the total cost of such shares. The CDSC
is calculated according to the following schedule:
Redemption Timing CDSC
During the calendar year of purchase..................4.00%
During the calendar year after the
year of purchase....................................3.00%
During the second calendar
year after the year of purchase.....................2.00%
During the third calendar year
after the year of purchase..........................1.00%
Thereafter............................................0.00%
In determining whether a CDSC is payable and, if so, the percentage
charge applicable, the Fund will first redeem shares not subject to a CDSC and
will then redeem shares you have held the longest.
SHARES THAT ARE NOT SUBJECT TO A SALES CHARGE OR CDSC
SALES CHARGE WAIVERS. The Fund may sell shares at the public offering
price, which is equal to net asset value, without the imposition of a sales
charge to:
1. any Director, Trustee, officer, full-time employee or sales
representative of the Fund, Keystone, First Union Keystone,
EKD or their affiliates, who has held such position for at
least ninety days; and
2. the pension and profit-sharing plans established by such
companies and their affiliates, for the benefit of their
Directors, Trustees, officers, full-time employees and sales
representatives.
However, the Fund will only sell shares to these parties upon the
purchaser's written assurance that he or she is buying the shares for investment
purposes only. Such purchasers may not resell the securities except through
redemption by the Fund.
CDSC WAIVERS. The Fund does not impose a CDSC when the amount you are
redeeming represents:
1. an increase in the value of the shares redeemed (the value of
your account with respect to shares purchased prior to January
1, 1997) above the total cost of such shares due to increases
in the net asset value per share of the Fund;
2. certain shares for which the Fund did not pay a commission on
issuance, including shares acquired through reinvestment of
dividend income and capital gains distributions;
3. shares you have held for all or part of more than four
consecutive calendar years;
4. shares that are held in the accounts of a shareholder who has
died or become disabled;
5. a lump-sum distribution from a 401(k) plan or other benefit
plan qualified under the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 ("ERISA");
6. automatic withdrawals from the ERISA plan of a shareholder who
is a least 59 1/2 years old;
7. shares in an account that the Fund has closed because the
account has an aggregate net asset value of less than $1,000;
8. automatic withdrawals under a Systematic Income Plan of up to
1% per month of your initial account balance;
9. withdrawals consisting of loan proceeds to a retirement plan
participant;
10. financial hardship withdrawals made by a retirement plan
participant;
11. withdrawals consisting of returns of excess contributions or
excess deferral amounts made to a retirement plan; or
12. shares purchased by a bank or trust company in a single
account in the name of such bank or trust company as trustee
if the initial investment in shares of the Fund, any other
Fund in the Keystone Classic Fund Family, Keystone Precious
Metals Holdings, Inc., Keystone International Fund Inc.,
Keystone Tax Free Fund, Keystone Liquid Trust and/or any
Keystone America Fund, is at least $500,000 and any commission
paid by the Fund and such other fund at the time of such
purchase is not more than 1% of the amount invested.
EXCHANGES. The Fund does not charge a CDSC on exchanges of shares
between funds in the Keystone Fund Family that have adopted distribution plans
pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act. If you do exchange shares of one such
fund for shares of another such fund, the Fund will deem the calendar year of
the exchange, for purposes of any future CDSC, to be the year the shares
tendered for exchange were originally purchased.
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DISTRIBUTION PLAN
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act permits investment companies, such as the
Fund, to use their assets to bear the expenses of distributing their shares if
they comply with various conditions, including the adoption of a distribution
plan containing certain provisions set forth in Rule 12b-1. The Fund bears some
of the costs of selling its shares under a distribution plan adopted pursuant to
Rule 12b-1 (the "Distribution Plan").
The Fund's Distribution Plan provides that the Fund may expend up to
0.3125% quarterly (approximately 1.25% annually) of the average daily net asset
value of its shares to pay distribution costs for sales of its shares and to pay
shareholder service fees. The NASD limits such annual expenditures
to 1.00%, of which 0.75% may be used to pay such distribution costs and 0.25%
may be used to pay shareholder service fees. The NASD also limits the aggregate
amount that the Fund may pay for such distribution costs to 6.25% of gross share
sales since the inception of the Fund's Distribution Plan plus interest at the
prime rate plus 1.00% on unpaid amounts thereof (less any CDSCs paid by
shareholders to EKD or EKIS).
Payments under the Distribution Plan are currently made to EKD (which
may reallow all or part to others, such as broker-dealers) (1) as commissions
for Fund shares sold; (2) as shareholder service fees in respect of shares
maintained by the recipient and outstanding on the Fund's books for specific
periods; and (3) as interest. Amounts paid or accrued to EKD and EKIS in the
aggregate may not exceed the annual limitation referred to above. EKD generally
reallows to broker-dealers or others a commission equal to 4.00% of the price
paid for each Fund share sold. In addition, EKD generally reallows to
broker-dealers or others a shareholder service fee at a rate of 0.25% per annum
of the net asset value of shares maintained by such recipient and outstanding on
the books of the Fund for specified periods.
If the Fund is unable to pay EKD a commission on a new sale because the
annual maximum (0.75% of average daily net assets) has been reached, EKD
intends, but is not obligated, to continue to accept new orders for the purchase
of Fund shares and to pay commissions and service fees to broker-dealers in
excess of the amount it currently receives from the Fund ("Advances"). While the
Fund is under no contractual obligation to reimburse such Advances, EKD and
EKIS, its predecessor, intend to seek full reimbursement for Advances from the
Fund (together with interest at the prime rate plus 1.00%) at such time in the
future as, and to the extent that, payment thereof by the Fund would be within
permitted limits. If the Fund's Independent Trustees (Trustees who are not
interested persons, as defined in the 1940 Act, and who have no direct or
indirect financial interest in the operation of the Fund's Distribution Plan or
any agreement related thereto) authorize such payments, the effect will be to
extend the period of time during which the Fund incurs the maximum amount of
costs allowed by the Distribution Plan.
The total amounts paid by the Fund under the foregoing arrangements may
not exceed the maximum Distribution Plan limit specified above, and the amounts
and purposes of expenditures under the Distribution Plan must be reported to the
Independent Trustees quarterly. The Independent Trustees may require or approve
changes in the implementation or operation of the Distribution Plan, and may
require that total expenditures by the Fund under the Distribution Plan be kept
within limits lower than the maximum amount permitted by the Distribution Plan
as stated above. If such costs are not limited by the Independent Trustees, such
costs could, for some period of time, be higher than such costs permitted by
most other plans presently adopted by other investment companies.
The Distribution Plan may be terminated at any time by vote of the
Independent Trustees, or by vote of a majority of the outstanding shares of the
Fund. If the Distribution Plan is terminated, EKD will ask the Independent
Trustees to take whatever action they deem appropriate under the circumstances
with respect to payment of Advances.
Any change in the Distribution Plan that would materially increase the
distribution expenses of the Fund provided for in the Distribution Plan requires
shareholder approval. Otherwise, the Distribution Plan may be amended by votes
of both (1) the Fund's Trustees and (2) the Independent Trustees cast in person
at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such amendment.
While the Distribution Plan is in effect, the Fund is required to
commit the selection and nomination of candidates for Independent Trustees to
the discretion of the Independent Trustees.
The Independent Trustees of the Fund have determined that the sales of
the Fund's shares resulting from payments under the Distribution Plan have
benefitted the Fund.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Trustees and officers of the Fund, their addresses, their principal
occupations and some of their affiliations over the last five years are as
follows:
<TABLE>
<S> <C>
FREDERICK AMLING: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Professor, Finance Department,
George Washington University; President, Amling & Company
(investment advice); and former Member, Board of Advisers, Cre
dito Emilano (banking).
LAURENCE B. ASHKIN: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Trustee of all funds in the Evergreen
Family of Funds other than Evergreen Investment Trust; real
estate developer and construction consultant; and President of
Centrum Equities and Centrum Properties, Inc.
CHARLES A. AUSTIN III: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Investment Counselor to Appleton Partners, Inc.;
and former Managing Director, Seaward Management Corporation investment advice).
*FOSTER BAM: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Trustee or Director of all the funds in the
Evergreen Family of Funds other than Evergreen Investment
Trust; Partner in the law firm of Cummings & Lockwood; Director,
Symmetrix, Inc. (sulphur company) and Pet Practice, Inc.
(veterinary services); and former Director, Chartwell Group Ltd.
(Manufacturer of office furnishings and accessories), Waste
Disposal Equipment Acquisition Corporation and Rehabilitation
Corporation of America (rehabilitation hospitals).
*GEORGE S. BISSELL: Chief Executive Officer of the Fund and each of the other funds in
the Keystone Families of Funds; Chairman of the Board and
Trustee of the Fund; Chairman of the Board and Trustee or
Director of all other funds in the Keystone Families of Funds;
Chairman of the Board and Trustee of Anatolia College; Trustee
of University Hospital (and Chairman of its Investment
Committee); former Director and Chairman of the Board of
Hartwell Keystone; and former Chairman of the Board, Director
and Chief Executive Officer of Keystone Investments.
EDWIN D. CAMPBELL: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Principal, Padanaram Associates,
Inc.; and former Executive Director, Coalition of Essential Schools,
Brown University.
CHARLES F. CHAPIN: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; and former Director, Peoples Bank
(Charlotte, NC).
K. DUN GIFFORD: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Trustee, Treasurer and Chairman of
the Finance Committee, Cambridge College; Chairman Emeritus
and Director, American Institute of Food and Wine; Chairman
and President, Oldways Preservation and Exchange Trust (educa
tion); former Chairman of the Board, Director, and Executive Vice
President, The London Harness Company; former Managing Part
ner, Roscommon Capital Corp.; former Chief Executive Officer,
Gifford Gifts of Fine Foods; former Chairman, Gifford, Drescher
& Associates (environmental consulting); and former Director,
Keystone Investments and Keystone.
JAMES S. HOWELL: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Chairman and Trustee or Director of all the
funds in the Evergreen Family of Funds; former Chairman of the
Distribution Foundation for the Carolinas; and former Vice
President of Lance Inc. (food manufacturing).
LEROY KEITH, JR.: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Chairman of the Board and Chief
Executive Officer, Carson Products Company; Director of Phoenix
Total Return Fund and Equifax, Inc.; Trustee of Phoenix Series
Fund, Phoenix Multi-Portfolio Fund, and The Phoenix Big Edge
Series Fund; and former President, Morehouse College.
F. RAY KEYSER, JR.: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Chairman and Of Counsel, Keyser,
Crowley & Meub, P.C.; Member, Governor's (VT) Council of Eco
nomic Advisers; Chairman of the Board and Director, Central
Vermont Public Service Corporation and Lahey Hitchcock Clinic;
Director, Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corporation, Grand
Trunk Corporation, Grand Trunk Western Railroad, Union
Mutual Fire Insurance Company, New England Guaranty
Insurance Company, Inc., and the Investment Company Institute;
former Director and President, Associated Industries of Vermont;
former Director of Keystone, Central Vermont Railway, Inc., S.K.I.
Ltd., and Arrow Financial Corp.; and former Director and
Chairman of the Board, Proctor Bank and Green Mountain Bank.
GERALD M. MCDONNELL: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Trustee or Director of the Evergreen funds; and
Sales Representative with Nucor-Yamoto, Inc. (Steel producer).
THOMAS L. MCVERRY: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Trustee or Director of the Evergreen funds;
former Vice President and Director of Rexham Corporation; and
former Director of Carolina Cooperative Federal Credit Union.
*WILLIAM WALT PETTIT: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Trustee or Director of all the funds in the
Evergreen Family of Funds; and Partner in the law firm of
Holcomb and Pettit, P.A.
DAVID M. RICHARDSON: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Vice Chair and former Executive Vice
President, DHR International, Inc. (executive recruitment);
former Senior Vice President, Boyden International Inc. (executive
recruitment); and Director, Commerce and Industry Association
of New Jersey, 411 International, Inc., and J&M Cumming Paper
Co.
RUSSELL A. SALTON, III MD: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Trustee or Director of all the funds in the
Evergreen Family of Funds; Medical Director, U.S. Health
Care/Aetna Health Services; and former Managed Health Care
Consultant; former President, Primary Physician Care.
MICHAEL S. SCOFIELD: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Trustee or Director of all the funds in the
Evergreen Family of Funds; and Attorney, Law Offices of Michael
S. Scofield.
RICHARD J. SHIMA: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Chairman, Environmental Warranty,
Inc. (insurance agency); Executive Consultant, Drake Beam
Morin, Inc. (executive outplacement); Director of Connecticut
Natural Gas Corporation, Hartford Hospital, Old State House
Association, Middlesex Mutual Assurance Company, and Enhance
Financial Services, Inc.; Chairman, Board of Trustees, Hartford
Graduate Center; Trustee, Greater Hartford YMCA; former
Director, Vice Chairman and Chief Investment Officer, The
Travelers Corporation; former Trustee, Kingswood-Oxford School;
and former Managing Director and Consultant, Russell Miller,
Inc.
ANDREW J. SIMONS: Trustee of the Fund; Trustee or Director of all other funds in the
Keystone Families of Funds; Partner, Farrell, Fritz, Caemmerer,
Cleary, Barnosky & Armentano, P.C.; Adjunct Professor of Law
and former Associate Dean, St. John's University School of Law;
Adjunct Professor of Law, Touro College School of Law; and
former President, Nassau County Bar Association.
JOHN J. PILEGGI: President and Treasurer of the Fund; President and Treasurer of
all other funds in the Keystone Families of Funds; President and
Treasurer of all the funds in the Evergreen Family of Funds;
Senior Managing Director, Furman Selz LLC since 1992;
Managing Director from 1984 to 1992; Consultant to BISYS Fund
Services since 1996; 230 Park Avenue, Suite 910, New York, NY.
GEORGE O. MARTINEZ: Secretary of the Fund; Secretary of all other funds in the Keystone
Families of Funds; Secretary of all other funds in the Evergreen Family of Funds;
Senior Vice President and Director of Administration and Regulatory Services,
BISYS Fund Services since 1995; Vice President/Assistant General Counsel, Alliance
Capital Management from 1988 to 1995; 3435 Stelzer Road, Columbus, Ohio.
</TABLE>
* This Trustee may be considered an "interested person" of the Fund within the
meaning of the 1940 Act.
The Fund does not pay any direct remuneration to any officer or Trustee
who is an "affiliated person" of Keystone or any of its affiliates. See
"Investment Adviser." During the fiscal year ended October 31, 1996, the
unaffiliated Trustees (who numbered 10 during that period) received retainers or
fees totaling $31,867 from the Fund. Annual retainers and meeting fees paid by
all funds in the Keystone Families of Funds (which includes over 30 mutual
funds) for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1996 totaled approximately $411,000
. As of January 31, 1997, the Trustees and officers beneficially owned less than
1% of each of the Fund's then outstanding shares.
Except as set forth above, the address of all of the Fund's Trustees
and the address of the Fund is 200 Berkeley Street, Boston, Massachusetts
02116-5034.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESTMENT ADVISER
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subject to the general supervision of the Fund's Board of Trustees,
Keystone provides investment advice, management and administrative services to
the Fund.
On December 11, 1996, the predecessor corporation to First Union
Keystone, Keystone Investments, Inc. ("Keystone Investments") and indirectly
each subsidiary of Keystone Investments, including Keystone, were acquired (the
"Acquisition") by First Union National Bank of North Carolina ("FUNB"), a
wholly-owned subsidiary of First Union. Keystone Investments was acquired by
FUNB by merger into a wholly-owned subsidiary of FUNB, which entity then assumed
the First Union Keystone name and succeeded to the business of the predecessor
corporation. Contemporaneously with the Acquisition, the Fund entered into a new
investment advisory agreement with Keystone and into a principal underwriting
agreement with EKD, an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of The BISYS Group, Inc.
("BISYS"). The new investment advisory agreement (the "Advisory Agreement") was
approved by the shareholders of the Fund on December 9, 1996, and became
effective on December 11, 1996. As a result of the above transactions, Keystone
Management, Inc. ("Keystone Management"), which, prior to the Acquisition, acted
as the Fund's investment manager, no longer acts as such to the Fund. Keystone
currently provides the Fund with all the services that may previously have been
provided by Keystone Management.
<PAGE>
14
First Union Keystone and each of its subsidiaries, including Keystone,
are now indirectly owned by First Union. First Union is headquartered in
Charlotte, North Carolina, and had $140 billion in consolidated assets as of
December 31, 1996. First Union and its subsidiaries provide a broad range of
financial services to individuals and businesses throughout the United States.
The Capital Management Group of FUNB and Evergreen Asset Management Corp.,
wholly-owned subsidiaries of FUNB, manage or otherwise oversee the investment of
over $60 billion in assets belonging to a wide range of clients, including the
Evergreen Family of Funds.
Pursuant to the Advisory Agreement and subject to the supervision of
the Fund's Board of Trustees, Keystone furnishes to the Fund investment
advisory, management and administrative services, office facilities, and
equipment in connection with its services for managing the investment and
reinvestment of the Fund's assets. Keystone pays for all of the expenses
incurred in connection with the provision of its services.
All charges and expenses, other than those specifically referred to as
being borne by Keystone, will be paid by the Fund, including, but not limited
to, (1) custodian charges and expenses; (2) bookkeeping and auditors' charges
and expenses; (3) transfer agent charges and expenses; (4) fees and expenses of
Independent Trustees; (5) brokerage commissions, brokers' fees and expenses; (6)
issue and transfer taxes; (7) costs and expenses under the Distribution Plans;
(8) taxes and trust fees payable to governmental agencies; (9) the cost of share
certificates; (10) fees and expenses of the registration and qualification of
the Fund and its shares with the Commission or under state or other securities
laws; (11) expenses of preparing, printing and mailing prospectuses, statements
of additional information, notices, reports and proxy materials to shareholders
of the Fund; (12) expenses of shareholders' and Trustees' meetings; (13) charges
and expenses of legal counsel for the Fund and for the Independent Trustees of
the Fund on matters relating to the Fund; and (14) charges and expenses of
filing annual and other reports with the Commission and other authorities, and
all extraordinary charges and expenses of the Fund.
The Fund pays Keystone a fee for its services at the annual rate set
forth below:
Aggregate Net
Asset Value of the
Management Fee Income Shares of the Fund
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
2% of gross dividend and
interest income plus
0.50% of the first $ 100,000,000 plus
0.45% of the next $ 100,000,000 plus
0.40% of the next $ 100,000,000 plus
0.35% of the next $ 100,000,000 plus
0.30% of the next $ 100,000,000 plus
0.25% of amounts over $ 500,000,000.
Keystone's fee is computed as of the close of business each business day and
payable monthly.
Under the Advisory Agreement, any liability of Keystone in connection
with rendering services thereunder is limited to situations involving its
willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of its
duties.
The Advisory Agreement continues in effect for two years from its
effective date and, thereafter, from year to year only if approved at least
annually by the Board of Trustees of the Fund or by a vote of a majority of the
Fund's outstanding shares (as defined in the 1940 Act). In either case, the
terms of the Advisory Agreement and continuance thereof must be approved by the
vote of a majority of the Independent Trustees cast in person at a meeting
called for the purpose of voting on such approval. The Advisory Agreement may be
terminated, without penalty, on 60 days' written notice by the Fund's Board of
Trustees or by a vote of a majority of outstanding shares. The Advisory
Agreement will terminate automatically upon its assignment.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITER
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Fund has entered into a Principal Underwriting Agreement (the
"Underwriting Agreement") with EKD. EKD, which is not affiliated with First
Union, replaces EKIS as the Funds' principal underwriter. EKIS may no longer act
as principal underwriter of the Funds due to regulatory restrictions imposed by
the Glass-Steagall Act upon national banks such as FUNB and their affiliates,
that prohibit such entities from acting as the underwriters of mutual fund
shares. While EKIS may no longer act as principal underwriter of the Funds as
discussed above, EKIS may continue to receive compensation from the Fund or EKD
in respect of underwriting and distribution services performed prior to the
termination of EKIS as principal underwriter. In addition, EKIS may also be
compensated by EKD for the provision of certain marketing support services to
EKD at an annual rate of up to .75% of the average daily net assets of the Fund,
subject to certain restrictions.
EKD, as agent, has agreed to use its best efforts to find purchasers
for the shares. EKD may retain and employ representatives to promote
distribution of the shares and may obtain orders from broker-dealers, and
others, acting as principals, for sales of shares to them. The Underwriting
Agreement provides that EKD will bear the expense of preparing, printing, and
distributing advertising and sales literature and prospectuses used by it. In
its capacity as principal underwriter, EKD or EKIS, its predecessor, may receive
payments from the Fund pursuant to the Fund's Distribution Plan.
The Underwriting Agreement provides that it will remain in effect as
long as its terms and continuance are approved annually (i) by a vote of a
majority of the Independent Trustees, and (ii) by vote of a majority of the
Trustees, in each case, cast in person at a meeting called for that purpose.
The Underwriting Agreement may be terminated, without penalty, on 60
days' written notice by the Board of Trustees or by a vote of a majority of
outstanding shares. The Underwriting Agreement will terminate automatically upon
its assignment.
From time to time, if, in EKD's judgment, it could benefit the sales of
Fund shares, EKD may provide to selected broker-dealers promotional materials
and selling aids, including, but not limited to, personal computers, related
software, and Fund data files.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUB-ADMINISTRATOR
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BISYS provides personnel to serve as officers of the Funds, and certain
administrative services to the Funds pursuant to a sub-administration agreement
for its services under that agreement, BISYS receives a fee from Keystone at the
maximum annual rate of .01% of the average daily net assets of the Fund.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THE TRUST AGREEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRUST AGREEMENT
The Fund is a Pennsylvania common law trust established under a Trust
Agreement dated July 15, 1935, restated and amended as of December 19, 1989 (the
"Trust Agreement"). The Trust Agreement provides for a Board of Trustees, and
enables the Fund to enter into an agreement with an investment manager and/or
adviser to provide the Fund with investment advisory, management and
administrative services. A copy of the Trust Agreement is filed as an exhibit to
the Fund's Registration Statement, of which this statement of additional
information is a part. This summary is qualified in its entirety by reference to
the Trust Agreement.
DESCRIPTION OF SHARES
The Trust Agreement authorizes the issuance of an unlimited number of
shares of beneficial interest and the creation of additional series and/or
classes of series of Fund shares. Each share represents an equal proportionate
interest in the Fund with each other share of that class. Upon liquidation,
shares are entitled to a pro rata share in the net assets of their class of Fund
shares. Shareholders shall have no preemptive or conversion rights. Shares are
transferable. The Fund currently intends to issue only one class of shares.
SHAREHOLDER LIABILITY
Pursuant to court decisions or other theories of law, shareholders of a
Pennsylvania common law trust, could possibly be held personally liable for the
obligations of the trust. The possibility of the Fund's shareholders incurring
financial loss under such circumstances appears to be remote, however, because
the Trust Agreement (1) contains an express disclaimer of shareholder liability
for obligations of the Fund; (2) requires that notice of such disclaimer be
given in each agreement, obligation or instrument entered into or executed by
the Fund or the Trustees; and (3) provides for indemnification out of Fund
property for any shareholder held personally liable for the obligations of the
Fund.
VOTING RIGHTS
Under the terms of the Trust Agreement, the Fund does not hold annual
meetings. At meetings called for the initial election of Trustees or to consider
other matters, shares are entitled to one vote per share. Shares generally vote
together as one class on all matters. No amendment may be made to the Trust
Agreement that adversely affects any class of shares without the approval of a
majority of the shares of that class. There shall be no cumulative voting in the
election of Trustees.
After a meeting as described above, no further meetings of shareholders
for the purpose of electing Trustees will be held, unless required by law until
such time as less than a majority of the Trustees holding office have been
elected by shareholders, at which time the Trustees then in office will call a
shareholders' meeting for the election of Trustees.
Except as set forth above, the Trustees shall continue to hold office
indefinitely unless otherwise required by law and may appoint successor
Trustees. A Trustee may cease to hold office or may be removed from office (as
the case may be) (1) at any time by a two-thirds vote of the remaining Trustees;
(2) when such Trustee becomes mentally or physically incapacitated; or (3) at a
special meeting of shareholders by a two-thirds vote of the outstanding shares.
Any Trustee may voluntarily resign from office.
LIMITATION OF TRUSTEES' LIABILITY
The Trust Agreement provides that a Trustee shall be liable only for
his own willful defaults and, if reasonable care has been exercised in the
selection of officers, agents, employees or investment advisers, shall not be
liable for any neglect or wrongdoing of any such person; provided, however, that
nothing in the Trust Agreement shall protect a Trustee against any liability for
his willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of
his duties.
The Trustees have absolute and exclusive control over the management
and disposition of all assets of the Fund and may perform such acts as in their
sole judgment and discretion are necessary and proper for conducting the
business and affairs of the Fund or promoting the interests of the Fund and the
shareholders.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EXPENSES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INVESTMENT ADVISORY FEES
For each of the Fund's last three fiscal years, the table below lists
the total dollar amounts paid by (1) the Fund to Keystone Management, the Fund's
former investment manager, for investment management and administrative services
rendered and (2) by Keystone Management to Keystone for investment advisory
services rendered. For more information, see "Investment Adviser."
Percent of Fund's
Fee Paid to Keystone Average Net Assets Fee Paid to
Management under represented by Keystone under
Fiscal Year Ended the Management Keystone the Advisory
October 31, Agreement Management's Fee Agreement
- ------------------ -------------------- ------------------- --------------
1996 $1,578,211 0.60% $1,341,479
1995 $1,876,672 0.60% $1,595,171
1994 $2,193,546 0.56% $1,864,514
DISTRIBUTION PLAN EXPENSES
For the fiscal year ended October 31, 1996, the Fund paid $2,645,899 to
EKIS under its Distribution Plan. For more information, see "Distribution
Plans."
UNDERWRITING COMMISSIONS
For each of the Fund's last three fiscal years, the table below lists
the aggregate dollar amounts of underwriting commissions (front-end sales
charges, plus distribution fees, plus CDSCs) paid with respect to the public
distribution of the Fund's shares. The table also indicates the aggregate dollar
amount of underwriting commissions retained by EKIS. For more information, see
"Principal Underwriter" and "Sales Charges."
Aggregate Dollar Amount of
Fiscal Year Ended Aggregate Dollar Amount of Underwriting Commissions
October 31, Underwriting Commissions Retained by EKD or EKIS
- ----------------- --------------------------- --------------------------
1996 $2,235,405 $1,897,428
1995 $2,719,026 $2,221,208
1994 $3,526,112 $2,363,825
BROKERAGE COMMISSIONS
The Fund paid no brokerage commissions for the fiscal years ended
October 31, 1994, 1995 and 1996.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
STANDARDIZED TOTAL RETURN AND YIELD QUOTATIONS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total return quotations for the Fund as they may appear from time to
time in advertisements are calculated by finding the average annual compounded
rates of return over the one, five and ten year periods on a hypothetical $1,000
investment which would equate the initial amount invested to the ending
redeemable value. To the initial investment all dividends and distributions are
added, and all recurring fees charged to all shareholder accounts are deducted.
The ending redeemable value assumes a complete redemption at the end of the one,
five or ten year periods.
The annual total return for the one year period ended October 31, 1996
was 1.03% (including applicable sales charge). The average annual total return
for the five and ten year periods ended October 31, 1996 were 5.69% and 6.31%,
respectively (including applicable sales charge).
Current yield quotations as they may appear from time to time in
advertisements will consist of a quotation based on a 30-day period ended on the
date of the most recent balance sheet of the Fund, computed by dividing the net
investment income per share earned during the period by the maximum offering
price per share on the last day of the base period. The Fund's current yield for
the 30-day period ended October 31, 1996 was 5.23%.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The following financial statements of the Fund are incorporated by
reference herein from the Fund's Annual Report, as filed with the SEC:
Schedule of Investments as of October 31, 1996;
Financial Highlights for each of the years in the ten-year period ended
October 31, 1996;
Statement of Assets and Liabilities as of October 31, 1996;
Statement of Operations for the year ended October 31, 1996;
Statements of Changes in Net Assets for each of the years in the
two-year period ended October 31, 1996;
Notes to Financial Statements; and
Independent Auditors' Report dated November 29, 1996.
A copy of the Fund's Annual Report will be furnished upon request and
without charge. Requests may be made in writing to EKSC, P.O. Box 2121, Boston,
Massachusetts 02106-2121, or by calling EKSC toll free at 1-800-343-2898.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To the best of the Fund's knowledge, as of January 31, 1997, the
following was the only shareholder of record who owned 5% or more the Fund's
outstanding shares:
% of Fund
Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith 12.503%
For Sole Benefit of Its Customers
Attn: Fund Administration
4800 Deer Lake Drive East, 3rd Floor
Jacksonville, FL 32246-6484
Except as otherwise stated in its prospectus or required by law, the
Fund reserves the right to change the terms of the offer stated in its
prospectus without shareholder approval, including the right to impose or change
fees for services provided.
If conditions arise that would make it undesirable for the Fund to pay
for all redemptions in cash, the Fund may authorize payment to be made in
portfolio securities or other property. The Fund has obligated itself, however,
under the 1040 Act, to redeem for cash all shares presented for redemption by
any one shareholder up to the lesser of $250,000 or 1.00% of the Fund's net
assets in any 90-day period. Securities delivered in payment of redemptions
would be valued at the same value assigned to them in computing the net asset
value per share and would, to the extent permitted by law, be readily
marketable. Shareholders receiving such securities would incur brokerage costs
upon the securities' sale.
No dealer, salesman or other person is authorized to give any
information or to make any representation not contained in the Fund's
prospectus, this statement of additional information or in supplemental sales
literature issued by the Fund or EKD, and no person is entitled to rely on any
information or representation not contained therein.
The Fund's prospectus and this statement of additional information omit
certain information contained in the registration statement filed with the SEC,
which may be obtained from the SEC's principal office in Washington, D.C. upon
payment of the fee prescribed by the rules and regulations promulgated by the
SEC.
<PAGE>
APPENDIX
CORPORATE BOND RATINGS
S&P CORPORATE BOND RATINGS
An S&P corporate bond rating is a current assessment of the
creditworthiness of an obligor, including obligors outside the United States,
with respect to a specific obligation. This assessment may take into
consideration obligors such as guarantors, insurers, or lessees. Ratings of
foreign obligors do not take into account currency exchange and related
uncertainties. The ratings are based on current information furnished by the
issuer or obtained by S&P from other sources it considers reliable.
The ratings are based, in varying degrees, on the following
considerations:
a. Likelihood of default - capacity and willingness of the
obligor as to the timely payment of interest and repayment of
principal in accordance with the terms of the obligation;
b. Nature of and provisions of the obligation; and
c. Protection afforded by and relative position of the obligation in
the event of bankruptcy, reorganization or other arrangement under the laws of
bankruptcy and other laws affecting creditors' rights.
PLUS (+) OR MINUS (-): To provide more detailed indications of credit
quality, ratings from AA to BBB may be modified by the addition of a plus or
minus sign to show relative standing within the major rating categories.
Bond ratings are as follows:
1. AAA - Debt rated AAA has the highest rating assigned by S&P.
Capacity to pay interest and repay principal is extremely
strong.
2. AA - Debt rated AA has a very strong capacity to pay interest and
repay principal and differs from the higher rated issues only in a small degree.
3. A - Debt rated A has a strong capacity to pay interest and repay
principal although it is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of
changes in circumstances and economic conditions than debt in higher rated
categories.
4. BBB - Debt rated BBB is regarded as having an adequate capacity to
pay interest and repay principal. Whereas it normally exhibits adequate
protection parameters, adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are
more likely to lead to a weakened capacity to pay interest and repay principal
for debt in this category than in higher rated categories.
5. BB, B, CCC, CC AND C - Debt rated BB, B, CCC, CC and C is regarded,
on balance, as predominantly speculative with respect to capacity to pay
interest and repay principal in accordance with the terms of the obligation. BB
indicates the lowest degree of speculation and C the highest degree of
speculation. While such debt will likely have some quality and protective
characteristics, these are outweighed by large uncertainties or major risk
exposures to adverse conditions.
MOODY'S CORPORATE BOND RATINGS
Moody's ratings are as follows:
1. AAA - Bonds that are rated AAA are judged to be of the best quality.
They carry the smallest degree of investment risk and are generally referred to
as "gilt-edge." Interest payments are protected by a large or by an
exceptionally stable margin and principal is secure. While the various
protective elements are likely to change, such changes as can be visualized are
most unlikely to impair the fundamentally strong position of such issues.
2. AA - Bonds that are rated AA are judged to be of high quality by all
standards. Together with the AAA group they comprise what are generally known as
high grade bonds. They are rated lower than the best bonds because margins of
protection may not be as large as in Aaa securities or fluctuation of protective
elements may be of greater amplitude or there may be other elements present that
make the long term risks appear somewhat larger than in AAA securities.
3. A - Bonds that are rated A possess many favorable investment
attributes and are to be considered as upper medium grade obligations. Factors
giving security to principal and interest are considered adequate but elements
may be present that suggest a susceptibility to impairment sometime in the
future.
4. BAA - Bonds that are rated BAA are considered as medium grade
obligations, i.e., they are neither highly protected nor poorly secured.
Interest payments and principal security appear adequate for the present but
certain protective elements may be lacking or may be characteristically
unreliable over any great length of time. Such bonds lack outstanding investment
characteristics and in fact have speculative characteristics as well.
5. BA - Bonds that are rated BA are judged to have speculative
elements. Their future cannot be considered as well assured. Often the
protection of interest and principal payments may be very moderate and thereby
not well safeguarded during both good and bad times over the future.
Uncertainty of position characterizes bonds in this class.
6. B - Bonds that are rated B generally lack characteristics of the
desirable investment. Assurance of interest and principal payments or of
maintenance of other terms of the contract over any long period of time may be
small.
Moody's applies numerical modifiers, 1, 2 and 3 in each generic rating
classification from AA through B in its corporate bond rating system. The
modifier 1 indicates that the security ranks in the higher end of its generic
rating category; the modifier 2 indicates a mid-range ranking; and the modifier
3 indicates that the issue ranks in the lower end of its generic rating
category.
COMMON AND PREFERRED STOCK RATINGS
S&P'S EARNINGS AND DIVIDEND RANKINGS FOR COMMON STOCKS
Because the investment process involves assessment of various factors,
such as product and industry position, corporate resources and financial policy,
with results that make some common stocks more highly esteemed than others, S&P
believes that earnings and dividend performance is the end result of the
interplay of these factors and that, over the long run, the record of this
performance has a considerable bearing on relative quality. S&P rankings,
however, do not reflect all of the factors, tangible or intangible, that bear on
stock quality.
Growth and stability of earnings and dividends are deemed key elements
in establishing S&P earnings and dividend rankings for common stocks, which
capsulize the nature of this record in a single symbol.
S&P has established a computerized scoring system based on per-share
earnings and dividend records of the most recent ten years, a period deemed long
enough to measure a company's performance under varying economic conditions. S&P
measures growth, stability within the trend line and cyclicity. The ranking
system also makes allowances for company size, since large companies have
certain inherent advantages over small ones. From these scores for earnings and
dividends are determined.
The final score for each stock is measured against a scoring matrix
determined by analysis of the scores of a large and representative sample which
is reviewed and sometimes modified with the following ladder of rankings:
A+ Highest B+ Average C Lowest
A High B Below Average D In Reorganization
A- Above Average B- Lower
S&P believes its rankings are not a forecast of future market price
performance but are basically an appraisal of past performance of earnings and
dividends and relative current standing.
MOODY'S COMMON STOCK RANKINGS
Moody's presents a concise statement of the important characteristics
of a company and an evaluation of the grade (quality) of its common stock. Data
presented includes: (a) capsule stock information which reveals short and long
term growth and yield afforded by the indicated dividend, based on a recent
price; (b) a long term price chart which shows patterns of monthly stock price
movements and monthly trading volumes; (c) a breakdown of a company's capital
account which aids in determining the degree of conservatism or financial
leverage in a company's balance sheet; (d) interim earnings for the current year
to date, plus three previous years; (e) dividend information; (f) company
background; (g) recent corporate developments; (h) prospects for a company in
the immediate future and the next few years; and (i) a ten year comparative
statistical analysis.
This information provides investors with information on what a company
does, how it has performed in the past, how it is performing currently and what
its future performance prospects appear to be.
These characteristics are then evaluated and result in a grading, or
indication of quality. The grade is based on an analysis of each company's
financial strength, stability of earnings and record of dividend payments. Other
considerations include conservativeness of capitalization, depth and caliber of
management, accounting practices, technological capabilities and industry
position. Evaluation is represented by the following grades:
(1) High Grade
(2) Investment Grade
(3) Medium Grade
(4) Speculative Grade
MOODY'S PREFERRED STOCK RATINGS
Preferred stock ratings and their definitions are as follows:
1. AAA: An issue that is rated AAA is considered to be a
top-quality preferred stock. This rating indicates good asset
protection and the least risk of dividend impairment within
the universe of preferred stocks.
2. AA: An issue that is rated AA is considered a high-grade
preferred stock. This rating indicates that there is a
reasonable assurance that earnings and asset protection will
remain relatively well maintained in the foreseeable future.
3. A: An issue that is rated A is considered to be an
upper-medium grade preferred stock. While risks are judged to
be somewhat greater then in the AAA and AA classification,
earnings and asset protection are, nevertheless, expected to
be maintained at adequate levels.
4. BAA: An issue that is rated BAA is considered to be a
medium-grade preferred stock,neither highly protected nor
poorly secured. Earnings and asset protection appear adequate
at present but may be questionable over any great length of
time.
5. BA: An issue that is rated BA is considered to have
speculative elements and its future cannot be considered well
assured. Earnings and asset protection may be very moderate
and not well- safeguarded during adverse periods. Uncertainty
of position characterizes preferred stocks in this class.
6. B: An issue that is rated B generally lacks the
characteristics of a desirable investment. Assurance of
dividend payments and maintenance of other terms of the issue
over any long period of time may be small.
7. CAA: An issue that is rated CAA is likely to be in arrears on
dividend payments. This rating designation does not purport to
indicate the future status of payments.
8. CA: An issue that is rated CA is speculative in a high degree
and is likely to be in arrears on dividends with little
likelihood of eventual payments.
9. C: This is the lowest rated class of preferred or preference
stock. Issues so rated can be regarded as having extremely
poor prospects of ever attaining any real investment standing.
Moody's applies numerical modifiers 1, 2 and 3 in each rating
classification: the modifier 1 indicates that the security ranks in the higher
end of its generic rating category, the modifier 2 indicates a mid-range ranking
and the modifier 3 indicates that the issue ranks in the lower end of its
generic rating category.
LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS
The Fund may invest in limited and master limited partnerships. A
limited partnership is a partnership consisting of one or more general partners,
jointly and severally responsible as ordinary partners, and by whom the business
is conducted, and one or more limited partners who contribute cash as capital to
the partnership and who generally are not liable for the debts of the
partnership beyond the amounts contributed. Limited partners are not involved in
the day-to-day management of the partnership. They receive income, capital gains
and other tax benefits associated with the partnership project in accordance
with terms established in the partnership agreement. Typical limited
partnerships are in real estate, oil and gas and equipment leasing, but they
also finance movies, research and development and other projects.
For an organization classified as a partnership under the Internal
Revenue Code, each item of income, gain, loss, deduction and credit is not taxed
at the partnership level but flows through to the holder of the partnership
unit. This allows the partnership to avoid taxation and to pass through income
to the holder of the partnership unit at lower individual rates.
A master limited partnership is a publicly traded limited partnership.
The partnership units are registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission
and are freely exchanged on a securities exchange or in the over-the-counter
market.
MONEY MARKET INSTRUMENTS
The Fund's investments in commercial paper are limited to those rated
A-1 by Standard & Poor's Corporation, PRIME-1 by Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
or F-1 by Fitch Investors Service, Inc. These ratings and other money market
instruments are described as follows:
COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS
Commercial paper rated A-1 by Standard & Poor's has the following
characteristics: Liquidity ratios are adequate to meet cash requirements. The
issuer's long-term senior debt is rated A or better, although in some cases BBB
credits may be allowed. The issuer has access to at least two additional
channels of borrowing. Basic earnings and cash flow have an upward trend with
allowance made for unusual circumstances. Typically, the issuer's industry is
well established and the issuer has a strong position within the industry.
The rating PRIME-1 is the highest commercial paper rating assigned by
Moody's. Among the factors considered by Moody's in assigning ratings are the
following: (1) evaluation of the management of the issuer; (2) economic
evaluation of the issuer's industry or industries and an appraisal of
speculative-type risks which may be inherent in certain areas; (3) evaluation of
the issuer's products in relation to competition and customer acceptance; (4)
liquidity; (5) amount and quality of long-term debt; (6) trend of earnings over
a period of ten years; (7) financial strength of a parent company and the
relationships that exist with the issuer; and (8) recognition by the management
of obligations which may be present or may arise as a result of public
preparations to meet such obligations. Relative strength or weakness of the
above factors determines how the issuer's commercial paper is rated within
various categories.
The rating F-1 is the highest rating assigned by Fitch. Among the
factors considered by Fitch in assigning this rating are: (1) the issuer's
liquidity; (2) its standing in the industry; (3) the size of its debt; (4) its
ability to service its debt; (5) its profitability; (6) its return on equity;
(7) its alternative sources of financing; and (8) its ability to access the
capital markets. Analysis of the relative strength or weakness of these factors
and others determines whether an issuer's commercial paper is rated F-1.
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
Securities issued or guaranteed by the United States Government include
a variety of Treasury securities that differ only in their interest rates,
maturities and dates of issuance. Treasury bills have maturities of one year or
less. Treasury notes have maturities of one to ten years and Treasury bonds
generally have maturities of greater than ten years at the date of issuance.
Securities issued or guaranteed by the United States ("U.S.")
Government or its agencies or instrumentalities include direct obligations of
the United States Treasury and securities issued or guaranteed by the Federal
Housing Administration, Farmers Home Administration, Export-Import Bank of the
United States, Small Business Administration, Government National Mortgage
Association, General Services Administration, Central Bank for Cooperatives,
Federal Home Loan Banks, Federal Loan Mortgage Corporation, Federal Intermediate
Credit Banks, Federal Land Banks, Maritime Administration, The Tennessee Valley
Authority, District of Columbia Armory Board and Federal National Mortgage
Association.
Some obligations of United States Government agencies and
instrumentalities, such as Treasury bills and Government National Mortgage
Association pass-through certificates, are supported by the full faith and
credit of the United States; others, such as securities of Federal Home Loan
Banks, by the right of the issuer to borrow from the Treasury; still others,
such as bonds issued by the Federal National Mortgage Association, a private
corporation, are supported only by the credit of the instrumentality. Because
the United States Government is not obligated by law to provide support to an
instrumentality it sponsors, the Fund will invest in the securities issued by
such an instrumentality only when Keystone determines that the credit risk with
respect to the instrumentality does not make its securities unsuitable
investments. United States Government securities will not include international
agencies or instrumentalities in which the United States Government, its
agencies or instrumentalities participate, such as the World Bank, the Asian
Development Bank or the InterAmerican Development Bank, or issues insured by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT
Certificates of deposit are receipts issued by a bank in exchange for
the deposit of funds. The issuer agrees to pay the amount deposited plus
interest to the bearer of the receipt on the date specified on the certificate.
The certificate usually can be traded in the secondary market prior to maturity.
Certificates of deposit will be limited to U.S. dollar-denominated
certificates of United States banks, including their branches abroad, and of
U.S. branches of foreign banks that are members of the Federal Reserve System or
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and have at least $1 billion in
deposits as of the date of their most recently published financial statements.
BANKERS' ACCEPTANCES
Bankers' acceptances typically arise from short term credit
arrangements designed to enable businesses to obtain funds to finance commercial
transactions. Generally, an acceptance is a time draft drawn on a bank by an
exporter or an importer to obtain a stated amount of funds to pay for specific
merchandise. The draft is then "accepted" by the bank that, in effect,
unconditionally guarantees to pay the face value of the instrument on its
maturity date. The acceptance may then be held by the accepting bank as an
earning asset or it may be sold in the secondary market at the going rate of
discount for a specific maturity. Although maturities for acceptances can be as
long as 270 days, most acceptances have maturities of six months or less.
Bankers' acceptances acquired by the Fund must have been accepted by U.S.
commercial banks, including foreign branches of U.S. commercial banks, having
total deposits at the time of purchase in excess of $1 billion and must be
payable in U.S. dollars.
OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS
The Fund is authorized to write (i.e., sell) covered call options and
to purchase call options to close out covered call options previously written. A
call option obligates a writer to sell, and gives a purchaser the right to buy,
the underlying security at the stated exercise price at any time until the
stated expiration date.
The Fund will only write call options that are covered, which means
that the Fund will own the underlying security (or other securities, such as
convertible securities, that are acceptable for escrow) when it writes the call
option and until the Fund's obligation to sell the underlying security is
extinguished by exercise or expiration of the call option or the purchase of a
call option covering the same underlying security and having the same exercise
price and expiration date. The Fund will receive a premium for writing a call
option, but will give up, until the expiration date, the opportunity to profit
from an increase in the underlying security's price above the exercise price.
The Fund will retain the risk of loss from a decrease in the price of the
underlying security. The writing of covered call options is a conservative
investment technique believed to involve relatively little risk (in contrast to
the writing of naked options which the Fund will not do) but capable of
enhancing the Fund's total return.
The premium received by the Fund for writing a covered call option will
be recorded as a liability in the Fund's statement of assets and liabilities.
This liability will be adjusted daily to the option's current market value,
which will be the latest sale price at the time as of which the net asset value
per share of the Fund is computed (the close of the New York Stock Exchange),
or, in the absence of such sale, at the latest bid quotation. The liability will
be extinguished upon expiration of the option, the purchase of an identical
option in a closing transaction or delivery of the underlying security upon
exercise of the option.
Many options are traded on registered securities exchanges. Options
traded on such exchanges are issued by the Options Clearing Corporation, a
clearing corporation which assumes responsibility for the completion of options
transactions.
The Fund will purchase call options only to close out a covered call
option it has written. When it appears that a covered call option written by the
Fund is likely to be exercised, the Fund may consider it appropriate to avoid
having to sell the underlying security. Or, the Fund may wish to extinguish a
covered call option which it has written in order to be free to sell the
underlying security to realize a profit on the previously written call option or
to write another covered call option on the underlying security. In all such
instances, the Fund can close out the previously written call option by
purchasing a call option on the same underlying security with the same exercise
price and expiration date. (The Fund may, under certain circumstances, also be
able to transfer a previously written call option.) The Fund will realize a
short-term capital gain if the amount paid to purchase the call option plus
transaction costs is less than the premium received for writing the covered call
option. The Fund will realize a short-term capital loss if the amount paid to
purchase the call option plus transaction costs is greater than the premium
received for writing the covered call option.
A previously written call option can be closed out by purchasing an
identical call option only in a secondary market for the call option. Although
the Fund will generally write only those options for which there appears to be
an active secondary market, there is no assurance that a liquid secondary market
will exist for any particular option at any particular time, and for some
options no secondary market may exist. In such event it might not be possible to
effect a closing transaction in a particular option. If the Fund as a covered
call option writer is unable to effect a closing purchase transaction, it will
not be able to sell the underlying securities until the option expires or it
delivers the underlying securities upon exercise.
If a substantial number of the call options written by the Fund are
exercised, the Fund's rate of portfolio turnover may exceed historical levels.
This would result in higher transaction costs, including brokerage commissions.
The Fund will pay brokerage commissions in connection with the writing of
covered call options and the purchase of call options to close out previously
written options. Such brokerage commissions are normally higher than those
applicable to purchases and sales of portfolio securities.
In the past the Fund has qualified for, and elected to receive, the
special tax treatment afforded regulated investment companies under Subchapter M
of the Internal Revenue Code. Although the Fund intends to continue to qualify
for such tax treatment, in order to do so it must, among other things, derive
less than 30% of its gross income from gains from the sale or other disposition
of securities held for less than three months. Because of this, the Fund may be
restricted in the writing of call options where the underlying securities have
been held less than three months, in the writing of covered call options that
expire in less than three months, and in effecting closing purchases with
respect to options that were written less than three months earlier. As a
result, the Fund may elect to forego otherwise favorable investment
opportunities and may elect to avoid or delay effecting closing purchases or
selling portfolio securities, with the risk that a potential loss may be
increased or a potential gain may be reduced or turned into a loss.
Under the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended, gain or loss
attributable to a closing transaction and premiums received by the Fund for
writing a covered call option that is not exercised may constitute short-term
capital gain or loss. Under provisions of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, effective
for taxable years beginning after October 22, 1986, a gain on an option
transaction that qualifies as a "designated hedge" transaction under Treasury
regulations may be offset by realized or unrealized losses on such designated
transaction. The netting of gain against such losses could result in a reduction
in gross income from options transactions for purposes of the 30 percent test.
FUTURES CONTRACTS AND RELATED OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS
The Fund intends to enter into currency and other financial futures
contracts as a hedge against changes in prevailing levels of interest or
currency exchange rates to seek relative stability of principal and to establish
more definitely the effective return on securities held or intended to be
acquired by the Fund or as a hedge against changes in the prices of securities
or currencies held by the Fund or to be acquired by the Fund. The Fund's hedging
may include sales of futures as an offset against the effect of expected
increases in interest or currency exchange rates or securities prices and
purchases of futures as an offset against the effect of expected declines in
interest or currency exchange rates.
For example, when the Fund anticipates a significant market or market
sector advance, it will purchase a stock index futures contract as a hedge
against not participating in such advance at a time when the Fund is not fully
invested. The purchase of a futures contract serves as a temporary substitute
for the purchase of individual securities which may then be purchased in an
orderly fashion. As such purchases are made, an equivalent amount of index based
futures contracts would be terminated by offsetting sales. In contrast, the Fund
would sell stock index futures contracts in anticipation of or in a general
market or market sector decline that may adversely affect the market value of
the Fund's portfolio. To the extent that the Fund's portfolio changes in value
in correlation with a given index, the sale of futures contracts on that index
would substantially reduce the risk to the portfolio of a market decline or
change in interest rates, and, by so doing, provide an alternative to the
liquidation of the Fund's securities positions and the resulting transaction
costs.
The Fund intends to engage in options transactions that are related to
commodity futures contracts for hedging purposes and in connection with the
hedging strategies described above.
Although techniques other than sales and purchases of futures contracts
and related options transactions could be used to reduce the Fund's exposure to
interest rate and/or market fluctuations, the Fund may be able to hedge its
exposure more effectively and perhaps at a lower cost through using futures
contracts and related options transactions. While the Fund does not intend to
take delivery of the instruments underlying futures contracts it holds, the Fund
does not intend to engage in such futures contracts for speculation.
FUTURES CONTRACTS
Futures contracts are transactions in the commodities markets rather
than in the securities markets. A futures contract creates an obligation by the
seller to deliver to the buyer the commodity specified in the contract at a
specified future time for a specified price. The futures contract creates an
obligation by the buyer to accept delivery from the seller of the commodity
specified at the specified future time for the specified price. In contrast, a
spot transaction creates an immediate obligation for the seller to deliver and
the buyer to accept delivery of and pay for an identified commodity. In general,
futures contracts involve transactions in fungible goods such as wheat, coffee
and soybeans. However, in the last decade an increasing number of futures
contracts have been developed that specify currencies, financial instruments or
financially based indexes as the underlying commodity.
U.S. futures contracts are traded only on national futures exchanges
and are standardized as to maturity date and underlying financial instrument.
The principal financial futures exchanges in the United States are The Board of
Trade of the City of Chicago, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, the International
Monetary Market (a division of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange), the New York
Futures Exchange and the Kansas City Board of Trade. Each exchange guarantees
performance under contract provisions through a clearing corporation, a
nonprofit organization managed by the exchange membership, which is also
responsible for handling daily accounting of deposits or withdrawals of margin.
A futures commission merchant (Broker) effects each transaction in connection
with futures contracts for a commission. Futures exchanges and trading are
regulated under the Commodity Exchange Act by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (CFTC) and National Futures Association (NFA).
INTEREST RATE FUTURES CONTRACTS
The sale of an interest rate futures contract creates an obligation by
the Fund, as seller, to deliver the type of financial instrument specified in
the contract at a specified future time for a specified price. The purchase of
an interest rate futures contract creates an obligation by the Fund, as
purchaser, to accept delivery of the type of financial instrument specified at a
specified future time for a specified price. The specific securities delivered
or accepted, respectively, at settlement date, are not determined until at or
near that date. The determination is in accordance with the rules of the
exchange on which the futures contract sale or purchase was made.
Currently, interest rate futures contracts can be purchased or sold on
90-day U.S. Treasury bills, U.S. Treasury bonds, U.S. Treasury notes with
maturities between 6 1/2 and 10 years, Government National Mortgage Association
(GNMA) certificates, 90-day domestic bank certificates of deposit, 90-day
commercial paper, and 90-day Eurodollar certificates of deposit. It is expected
that futures contracts trading in additional financial instruments will be
authorized. The standard contract size is $100,000 for futures contracts in U.S.
Treasury bonds, U.S. Treasury notes and GNMA certificates, and $1,000,000 for
the other designated contracts. While U.S. Treasury bonds, U.S. Treasury bills
and U.S. Treasury notes are backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S.
government and GNMA certificates are guaranteed by a U.S. government agency, the
futures contracts in U.S. government securities are not obligations of the U.S.
Treasury.
INDEX BASED FUTURES CONTRACTS
STOCK INDEX FUTURES CONTRACTS
A stock index assigns relative values to the common stocks included in
the index. The index fluctuates with changes in the market values of the common
stocks so included. stock index futures contract is a bilateral agreement by
which two parties agree to take or make delivery of an amount of cash equal to a
specified dollar amount times the difference between the closing value of the
stock index on the expiration date of the contract and the price at which the
futures contract is originally made. No physical delivery of the underlying
stocks in the index is made.
Currently, stock index futures contracts can be purchased or sold on
the Standard and Poor's Corporation (S&P) Index of 500 Stocks, the S&P Index of
100 Stocks, the New York Stock Exchange Composite Index, the Value Line Index
and the Major Market Index. It is expected that futures contracts trading in
additional stock indices will be authorized. The standard contract size is $500
times the value of the index.
The Fund does not believe that differences between existing stock
indices will create any differences in the price movements of the stock index
futures contracts in relation to the movements in such indices. However, such
differences in the indices may result in differences in correlation of the
futures with movements in the value of the securities being hedged.
OTHER INDEX BASED FUTURES CONTRACTS
It is expected that bond index and other financially based index
futures contracts will be developed in the future. It is anticipated that such
index based futures contracts will be structured in the same way as stock index
futures contracts but will be measured by changes in interest rates, related
indexes or other measures, such as the consumer price index. In the event that
such futures contracts are developed the Fund will sell interest rate index and
other index based futures contracts to hedge against changes which are expected
to affect the Fund's portfolio.
The purchase or sale of a futures contract differs from the purchase or
sale of a security, in that no price or premium is paid or received. Instead, to
initiate trading an amount of cash, cash equivalents,
money market instruments, or U.S. Treasury bills equal to approximately 1 1/2%
(up to 5%) of the contract amount must be deposited by the Fund with the Broker.
This amount is known as the initial margin. The nature of the initial margin in
futures transactions is different from that of a margin in security
transactions. Futures contract margin does not involve the borrowing of funds by
the customer to finance the transactions. Rather, the initial margin is in the
nature of a performance bond or good faith deposit on the contract which is
returned to the Fund upon termination of the futures contract assuming all
contractual obligations have been satisfied. The margin required for a
particular futures contract is set by the exchange on which the contract is
traded, and may be significantly modified from time to time by the exchange
during the term of the contract.
Subsequent payments, called a variation margin, to the Broker and from
the Broker, are made on a daily basis as the value of the underlying instrument
or index fluctuates making the long and short positions in the futures contract
more or less valuable, a process known as mark-to-market. For example, when the
Fund has purchased a futures contract and the price of the underlying financial
instrument or index has risen, that position will have increased in value and
the Fund will receive from the Broker a variation margin payment equal to that
increase in value. Conversely, where the Fund has purchased a futures contract
and the price of the underlying financial instrument or index has declined, the
position would be less valuable and the Fund would be required to make a
variation margin payment to the Broker. At any time prior to expiration of the
futures contract, the Fund may elect to close the position. A final
determination of variation margin is then made, additional cash is required to
be paid to or released by the Broker, and the Fund realizes a loss or gain.
The Fund intends to enter into arrangements with its Custodian and with
Brokers to enable its initial margin and any variation margin to be held in a
segregated account by its Custodian on behalf of the Broker.
Although interest rate futures contracts by their terms call for actual
delivery or acceptance of financial instruments, and index based futures
contracts call for the delivery of cash equal to the difference between the
closing value of the index on the expiration date of the contract and the price
at which the futures contract is originally made, in most cases such futures
contracts are closed out before the settlement date without the making or taking
of delivery. Closing out a futures contract sale is effected by an offsetting
transaction in which the Fund enters into a futures contract purchase for the
same aggregate amount of the specific type of financial instrument or index and
same delivery date. If the price in the sale exceeds the price in the offsetting
purchase, the Fund is paid the difference and thus realizes a gain. If the
offsetting purchase price exceeds the sale price, the Fund pays the difference
and realizes a loss. Similarly, the closing out of a futures contract purchase
is effected by an offsetting transaction in which the Fund enters into a futures
contract sale. If the offsetting sale price exceeds the purchase price, the Fund
realizes a gain. If the purchase price exceeds the offsetting sale price the
Fund realizes a loss. The amount of the Fund's gain or loss on any transaction
is reduced or increased, respectively, by the amount of any transaction costs
incurred by the Fund.
As an example of an offsetting transaction, the contractual obligations
arising from the sale of one contract of September U.S. Treasury bills on an
exchange may be fulfilled at any time before delivery of the contract is
required (i.e., on a specified date in September, the "delivery month") by the
purchase of one contract of September U.S. Treasury bills on the same exchange.
In such instance the difference between the price at which the futures contract
was sold and the price paid for the offsetting purchase after allowance for
transaction costs represents the profit or loss to the Fund.
There can be no assurance, however, that the Fund will be able to enter
into an offsetting transaction with respect to a particular contract at a
particular time. If the Fund is not able to enter into an offsetting
transaction, the Fund will continue to be required to maintain the margin
deposits on the contract and to complete the contract according to its terms.
OPTIONS ON CURRENCY AND OTHER FINANCIAL FUTURES
The Fund intends to purchase call and put options on currency and other
financial futures contracts and sell such options to terminate an existing
position. Options on currency and other financial futures contracts are similar
to options on stocks except that an option on a currency or other financial
futures contract gives the purchaser the right, in return for the premium paid,
to assume a position in a futures contract (a long position if the option is a
call and a short position if the option is a put) rather than to purchase or
sell stock, currency or other financial instruments at a specified exercise
price at any time during the period of the option. Upon exercise of the option,
the delivery of the futures position by the writer of the option to the holder
of the option will be accompanied by delivery of the accumulated balance in the
writer's futures margin account. This amount represents the amount by which the
market price of the futures contract at exercise exceeds, in the case of a call,
or is less than, in the case of a put, the exercise price of the option on the
futures contract. If an option is exercised on the last trading day prior to the
expiration date of the option, the settlement will be made entirely in cash
equal to the difference between the exercise price of the option and value of
the futures contract.
The Fund intends to use options on currency and other financial futures
contracts in connection with hedging strategies. In the future the Fund may use
such options for other purposes.
PURCHASE OF PUT OPTIONS ON FUTURES CONTRACTS
The purchase of protective put options on commodity futures contracts
is analogous to the purchase of protective puts on individual stocks, where an
absolute level of protection is sought below which no additional economic loss
would be incurred by the Fund. Put options may be purchased to hedge a portfolio
of stocks or debt instruments or a position in the futures contract upon which
the put option is based.
PURCHASE OF CALL OPTIONS ON FUTURES CONTRACTS
The purchase of a call option on a commodity futures contract
represents a means of obtaining temporary exposure to market appreciation at
limited risk. It is analogous to the purchase of a call option on an individual
stock which can be used as a substitute for a position in the stock itself.
Depending on the pricing of the option compared to either the futures contract
upon which it is based, or upon the price of the underlying financial instrument
or index itself, the purchase of a call option may be less risky than the
ownership of the interest rate or index based futures contract or the underlying
securities. Call options on commodity futures contracts may be purchased to
hedge against an interest rate increase or a market advance when the Fund is not
fully invested.
USE OF NEW INVESTMENT TECHNIQUES INVOLVING CURRENCY OR OTHER FINANCIAL FUTURES
CONTRACTS OR RELATED OPTIONS
The Fund may employ new investment techniques involving currency and
other financial futures contracts and related options. The Fund intends to take
advantage of new techniques in these areas which may be developed from time to
time and which are consistent with the Fund's investment objective. The Fund
believes that no additional techniques have been identified for employment by
the Fund in the foreseeable future other than those described above.
LIMITATIONS ON PURCHASE AND SALE OF FUTURES CONTRACTS AND RELATED OPTIONS ON
SUCH FUTURES CONTRACTS
The Fund will not enter into a futures contract if, as a result
thereof, more than 5% of the Fund's total assets (taken at market value at the
time of entering into the contract) would be committed to margin deposits on
such futures contracts.
The Fund intends that its futures contracts and related options
transactions will be entered into for traditional hedging purposes. That is,
futures contracts will be sold to protect against a decline in the price of
securities that the Fund owns or futures contracts will be purchased to protect
the Fund against an increase in the price of securities it intends to purchase.
The Fund does not intend to enter into futures contracts for speculation.
In instances involving the purchase of futures contracts by the Fund,
an amount of cash and cash equivalents, equal to the market value of the futures
contracts will be deposited in a segregated account with the Fund's Custodian
and/or in a margin account with a Broker to collateralize the position and
thereby insure that the use of such futures is unleveraged.
FEDERAL INCOME TAX TREATMENT
For federal income tax purposes, the Fund is required to recognize as
income for each taxable year its net unrealized gains and losses on futures
contracts as of the end of the year as well as those actually realized during
the year. Any gain or loss recognized with respect to a futures contract is
considered to be 60% long term and 40% short term, without regard to the holding
period of the contract. In the case of a futures transaction classified as a
"mixed straddle," the recognition of losses may be deferred to a later taxable
year. The federal income tax treatment of gains or losses from transactions in
options on futures is unclear.
In order for the Fund to continue to qualify for federal income tax
treatment as a regulated investment company, at least 90% of its gross income
for a taxable year must be derived from qualifying income. Any net gain realized
from the closing out of futures contracts, for purposes of the 90% requirement,
will be qualifying income. In addition, gains realized on the sale or other
disposition of securities held for less than three months must be limited to
less than 30% of the Fund's annual gross income. The 1986 Tax Act added a
provision that effectively treats both positions in certain hedging transactions
as a single transaction for the purpose of the 30% requirement. The provision
provides that, in the case of any "designated hedge," increases and decreases in
the value of positions of the hedge are to be netted for the purposes of the 30%
requirement. However, in certain situations, in order to avoid realizing a gain
within a three month period, the Fund may be required to defer the closing out
of a contract beyond the time when it would otherwise be advantageous to do so.
RISKS OF FUTURES CONTRACTS
Currency and other financial futures contracts prices are volatile and
are influenced, among other things, by changes in stock prices, market
conditions, prevailing interest rates and anticipation of future stock prices,
market movements or interest rate changes, all of which in turn are affected by
economic conditions, such as government fiscal and monetary policies and
actions, and national and international political and economic events.
At best, the correlation between changes in prices of futures contracts
and of the securities being hedged can be only approximate. The degree of
imperfection of correlation depends upon circumstances, such as variations in
speculative market demand for futures contracts and for securities, including
technical influences in futures contracts trading; differences between the
securities being hedged and the financial instruments and indexes underlying the
standard futures contracts available for trading, in such respects as interest
rate levels, maturities and creditworthiness of issuers, or identities of
securities comprising the index and those in the Fund's portfolio. A decision of
whether, when and how to hedge involves the exercise of skill and judgment, and
even a well-conceived hedge may be unsuccessful to some degree because of market
behavior or unexpected interest rate trends.
Because of the low margin deposits required, futures trading involves
an extremely high degree of leverage. As a result, a relatively small price
movement in a futures contract may result in immediate and substantial loss, as
well as gain, to the investor. For example, if at the time of purchase, 10% of
the value of the futures contract is deposited as margin, a 10% decrease in the
value of the futures contract would result in a total loss of the margin
deposit, before any deduction for the transaction costs, if the account were
then closed out, and a 15% decrease would result in a loss equal to 150% of the
original margin deposit. Thus, a purchase or sale of a futures contract may
result in losses in excess of the amount invested in the futures contract.
However, the Fund would presumably have sustained comparable losses if, instead
of entering into the futures contract, it had invested in the underlying
financial instrument. Furthermore, in order to be certain that the Fund has
sufficient assets to satisfy its obligations under a futures contract, the Fund
will establish a segregated account in connection with its futures contracts
which will hold cash or cash equivalents equal in value to the current value of
the underlying instruments or indices less the margins on deposit.
Most U.S. futures exchanges limit the amount of fluctuation permitted
in futures contract prices during a single trading day. The daily limit
establishes the maximum amount that the price of a futures contract may vary
either up or down from the previous day's settlement price at the end of a
trading session. Once the daily limit has been reached in a particular type of
contract, no trades may be made on that day at a price beyond that limit. The
daily limit governs only price movement during a particular trading day and
therefore does not limit potential losses because the limit may prevent the
liquidation of unfavorable positions. Futures contract prices have occasionally
moved to the daily limit for several consecutive trading days with little or no
trading, thereby preventing prompt liquidation of futures positions and
subjecting some futures traders to substantial losses.
RISKS OF OPTIONS ON FUTURES CONTRACTS
In addition to the risks described above for currency and other
financial futures contracts, there are several special risks relating to options
on futures contracts. The ability to establish and close out positions on such
options will be subject to the development and maintenance of a liquid secondary
market. There is no assurance that a liquid secondary market will exist for any
particular contract or at any particular time. The Fund will not purchase
options on any futures contract unless and until it believes that the market for
such options has developed sufficiently that the risks in connection with such
options are not greater than the risks in connection with the futures contracts.
Compared to the use of futures contracts, the purchase of options on such
futures contracts involves less potential risk to the Fund because the maximum
amount at risk is the premium paid for the options (plus transaction costs).
However, there may be circumstances when the use of an option on a futures
contract would result in a loss to the Fund, even though the use of a futures
contract would not, such as when there is no movement in the level of the
futures contract.
FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSACTIONS
The Fund may invest in securities of foreign issuers. When the Fund
invests in foreign securities they usually will be denominated in foreign
currencies and the Fund temporarily may hold funds in foreign currencies. Thus,
the Fund's share value will be affected by changes in exchange rates.
FORWARD CURRENCY CONTRACTS
As one way of managing exchange rate risk, the Fund may engage in
forward currency exchange contracts (agreements to purchase or sell currencies
at a specified price and date). Under the contract, the exchange rate for the
transaction (the amount of currency the Fund will deliver or receive when the
contract is completed) is fixed when the Fund enters into the contract. The Fund
usually will enter into these contracts to stabilize the U.S. dollar value of a
security it has agreed to buy or sell. The Fund also may use these contracts to
hedge the U.S. dollar value of a security it already owns, particularly if the
Fund expects a decrease in the value of the currency in which the foreign
security is denominated. Although the Fund will attempt to benefit from using
forward contracts, the success of its hedging strategy will depend on Keystone's
ability to predict accurately the future exchange rate between foreign
currencies and the U.S. dollar. The value of the Fund's investments denominated
in foreign currencies will depend on the relative strength of those currencies
and the U.S. dollar, and the Fund may be affected favorably or unfavorably by
changes in the exchange rates or exchange control regulations between foreign
currencies and the dollar. Changes in foreign currency exchange rates also may
affect the value of dividends and interest earned, gains and losses realized on
the sale of securities and net investment income and gains, if any, to be
distributed to shareholders by the Fund.
CURRENCY FUTURES CONTRACTS
Currency futures contracts are bilateral agreements under which two
parties agree to take or make delivery of a specified amount of a currency at a
specified future time for a specified price. Trading of currency futures
contracts in the United States is regulated under the Commodity Exchange Act by
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and National Futures Association
(NFA). Currently the only national futures exchange on which currency futures
are traded is the International Monetary Market of the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange. Foreign currency futures trading is conducted in the same manner and
subject to the same regulations as trading in interest rate and index based
futures. The Fund intends to engage in currency futures contracts for hedging
purposes, and not for speculation. The Fund may engage in currency futures
contracts for other purposes if authorized to do so by the Board. The hedging
strategies that will be used by the Fund in connection with foreign currency
futures contracts are similar to those described above for forward foreign
currency exchange contracts.
Currently, currency futures contracts for the British Pound Sterling,
Canadian Dollar, Dutch Guilder, Deutsche Mark, Japanese Yen, Mexican Peso, Swiss
Franc and French Franc can be purchased or sold for U.S. dollars through the
International Monetary Market. It is expected that futures contracts trading in
additional currencies will be authorized. The standard contract sizes are
L125,000 for the Pound, 125,000 for the Guilder, Mark, Swiss and French Francs,
C$100,000 for the Canadian Dollar, Y12,500,000 for the Yen, and 1,000,000 for
the Peso. In contrast to Forward Currency Exchange Contracts which can be traded
at any time, only four value dates per year are available, the third Wednesday
of March, June, September and December.
FOREIGN CURRENCY OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS
Foreign currency options (as opposed to futures) are traded in a
variety of currencies in both the United States and Europe. On the Philadelphia
Stock Exchange, for example, contracts for half the size of the corresponding
futures contracts on the Chicago Board Options Exchange are traded with up to
nine months maturity in Marks, Sterling, Yen, Swiss francs and Canadian dollars.
Options can be exercised at any time during the contract life and require a
deposit subject to normal margin requirements. Since a futures contract must be
exercised, the Fund must continually make up the margin balance. As a result, a
wrong price move could result in the Fund losing more than the original
investment as it cannot walk away from the futures contract as it can an option
contract.
The Fund will purchase call and put options and sell such options to
terminate an existing position. Options on foreign currency are similar to
options on stocks except that an option on an interest rate and/or index based
futures contract gives the purchaser the right, in return for the premium paid,
to purchase or sell foreign currency, rather than to purchase or sell stock, at
a specified exercise price at any time during the period of the option.
The Fund intends to use foreign currency option transactions in
connection with hedging strategies.
PURCHASE OF PUT OPTIONS ON FOREIGN CURRENCIES
The purchase of protective put options on a foreign currency is
analogous to the purchase of protective puts on individual stocks, where an
absolute level of protection is sought below which no additional economic loss
would be incurred by the Fund. Put options may be purchased to hedge a portfolio
of foreign stocks or foreign debt instruments or a position in the foreign
currency upon which the put option is based.
PURCHASE OF CALL OPTIONS ON FOREIGN CURRENCIES
The purchase of a call option on foreign currency represents a means of
obtaining temporary exposure to market appreciation at limited risk. It is
analogous to the purchase of a call option on an individual stock which can be
used as a substitute for a position in the stock itself. Depending on the
pricing of the option compared to either the foreign currency upon which it is
based, or upon the price of the foreign stock or foreign debt instruments, the
purchase of a call option may be less risky than the ownership of the foreign
currency or the foreign securities. The Fund would purchase a call option on a
foreign currency to hedge against an increase in the foreign currency or a
foreign market advance when the Fund is not fully invested.
The Fund may employ new investment techniques involving forward foreign
currency exchange contracts, foreign currency futures contracts and options on
foreign currencies in order to take advantage of new techniques in these areas
which may be developed from time to time and which are consistent with the
Fund's investment objective. The Fund believes that no additional techniques
have been identified for employment by the Fund in the foreseeable future other
than those described above.
CURRENCY TRADING RISKS
Currency exchange trading may involve significant risks. The four major
types of risk the Fund faces are exchange rate risk, interest rate risk, credit
risk and country risk.
EXCHANGE RATE RISK
Exchange rate risk results from the movement up and down of foreign
currency values in response to shifting market supply and demand. When the Fund
buys or sells a foreign currency, an exposure called an open position is
created. Until the time that position can be "covered" by selling or buying an
equivalent amount of the same currency, the Fund is exposed to the risk that the
exchange rate might move against it. Since exchange rate changes can readily
move in one direction, a position carried overnight or over a number of days
involves greater risk than one carried a few minutes or hours. Techniques such
as foreign currency forward and futures contracts and options on foreign
currency are intended to be used by the Fund to reduce exchange rate risk.
MATURITY GAPS AND INTEREST RATE RISK
Interest rate risk arises whenever there are mismatches or gaps in the
maturity structure of the Fund's foreign exchange currency holdings, which is
the total of its outstanding spot and forward or futures contracts.
Foreign currency transactions often involve borrowing short term and
lending longer term to benefit from the normal tendency of interest rates to be
higher for longer maturities. However in foreign exchange trading, while the
maturity pattern of interest rates for one currency is important, it is the
differential between interest rates for two currencies that is decisive.
CREDIT RISK
Whenever the Fund enters into a foreign exchange contract, it faces a
risk, however small, that the counterparty will not perform under the contract.
As a result there is a credit risk, although no extension of "credit" is
intended. To limit credit risk, the Fund intends to evaluate the
creditworthiness of each other party. The Fund does not intend to trade more
than 5% of its net assets under foreign exchange contracts with one party.
Credit risk exists because the Fund's counterparty may be unable or
unwilling to fulfill its contractual obligations as a result of bankruptcy or
insolvency or when foreign exchange controls prohibit payment. In any foreign
exchange transaction, each party agrees to deliver a certain amount of currency
to the other on a particular date. In establishing its hedges a Fund relies on
each contract being completed. If the contract is not performed, then the Fund's
hedge is eliminated, and the Fund is exposed to any changes in exchange rates
since the contract was originated. To put itself in the same position it would
have been in had the contract been performed, the Fund must arrange a new
transaction. However, the new transaction may have to be arranged at an adverse
exchange rate. The trustee for a bankrupt company may elect to perform those
contracts which are advantageous to the company but disclaim those contracts
which are disadvantageous, resulting in losses to the Fund.
Another form of credit risk stems from the time zone differences
between the U.S. and foreign nations. If the Fund sells sterling it generally
must pay pounds to a counterparty earlier in the day than it will be credited
with dollars in New York. In the intervening hours, the buyer can go into
bankruptcy or can be declared insolvent. Thus, the dollars may never be credited
to the Fund.
COUNTRY RISK
At one time or another, virtually every country has interfered with
international transactions in its currency. Interference has taken the form of
regulation of the local exchange market, restrictions on foreign investment by
residents or limits on inflows of investment funds from abroad. Governments take
such measures for example to improve control over the domestic banking system or
to influence the pattern of receipts and payments between residents and
foreigners. In those cases, restrictions on the exchange market or on
international transactions are intended to affect the level or movement of the
exchange rate. Occasionally a serious foreign exchange shortage may lead to
payment interruptions or debt servicing delays, as well as interference in the
exchange market. It has become increasingly difficult to distinguish foreign
exchange or credit risk from country risk.
Changes in regulations or restrictions usually do have an important
exchange market impact. Most disruptive are changes in rules which interfere
with the normal payments mechanism. If government regulations change and a
counterparty is either forbidden to perform or is required to do something
extra, then the Fund might be left with an unintended open position or an
unintended maturity mismatch. Dealing with such unintended long or short
positions could result in unanticipated costs to the Fund.
Other changes in official regulations influence international
investment transactions. If one of the factors affecting the buying or selling
of a currency changes, the exchange rate is likely to respond. Changes in such
controls often are unpredictable and can create a significant exchange rate
response.
Many major countries have moved toward liberalization of exchange and
payments restrictions in recent years or accepted the principle that
restrictions should be relaxed. A few industrial countries have moved in the
other direction. Important liberalizations were carried out by Switzerland, the
United Kingdom and Japan. They dismantled mechanisms for restricting either
foreign exchange inflows (Switzerland), outflows (Britain) or elements of both
(Japan). By contrast, France and Mexico have tightened foreign exchange
controls.
Overall, many exchange markets are still heavily restricted. Several
countries limit access to the forward market to companies financing documented
export or import transactions in an effort to insulate the market from purely
speculative activities. Some of these countries permit local traders to enter
into forward contracts with residents but prohibit certain forward transactions
with nonresidents. By comparison, other countries have strict controls on
exchange transactions by residents, but permit free exchange transactions
between local traders and non-residents. A few countries have established tiered
markets, funneling commercial transactions through one market and financial
transactions through another. Outside the major industrial countries, relatively
free foreign exchange markets are rare and controls on foreign currency
transactions are extensive.
Another aspect of country risk has to do with the possibility that the
Fund may be dealing with a foreign trader whose home country is facing a
payments problem. Even though the foreign trader intends to perform on its
foreign exchange contracts, the contracts are tied to other external liabilities
the country has incurred. As a result performance may be delayed, and can result
in unanticipated cost to the Fund. This aspect of country risk is a major
element in the Fund's credit judgment as to with whom it will deal and in what
amounts.
<PAGE>
KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
PART C
OTHER INFORMATION
ITEM 24. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND EXHIBITS
ITEM 24(A). FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The audited financial statements listed below are incorporated by reference to
Registrant's Annual Report dated October 31, 1996:
Schedule of Investments October 31, 1996
Financial Highlights For each of the years in
the ten-year period
ended October 31, 1996
Statement of Assets and Liabilities October 31, 1996
Statement of Operations Year ended
October 31, 1996
Statements of Changes in Net Assets Two years ended
October 31, 1996
Notes to Financial Statements
Independent Auditors' Report November 29, 1996
ITEM 24(B). EXHIBITS
(1) Restatement of Trust Agreement, as amended (the "Trust Agreement")(1)
(2) By-Laws(1)
(3) Not applicable.
(4)(a) The Trust Agreement, Articles III, V, VI, and VIII(1)
(b) By-Laws, Article 2, Section 2.5(1)
(5)(a) Investment Advisory Agreement between Registrant and Keystone
Investment Management Company (the "Advisory Agreement")(2)
(6)(a) Form of Principal Underwriting Agreement with Evergreen Keystone
Distributor, Inc. (the "Principal Underwriting Agreement")(2)
(b) Form of Dealer Agreement(2)
(7) Not applicable.
(8) Custodian, Fund Accounting and Recordkeeping Agreement, as amended(1)
(9)(a) Form of Marketing Services Agreement between Evergreen Keystone
Distibutor, Inc. and Keystone Investment Management Company(2)
(b) Form of Sub-Administrator Agreement between Keystone Investment
Management Company and The BISYS Group, Inc.(3)
(c) Principal Underwriting Agreement with Evergreen Keystone Investment
Services, Inc., Registrant's former principal underwriter (the
"Continuation Agreement")(3)
(10) Opinion and Consent of Counsel(2)
(11) Consent as to use of the Independent Auditors' Report(3)
(12) Not applicable.
(13) Not applicable.
(14) Copies of model plans used in the establishment of retirement plans(4)
(15) Distribution Plan adopted pursuant to Rule 12b-1(1)
(16) Schedule for computation of total return and current yield(3)
(17) Financial data schedule(3)
(18) Not applicable.
(19) Powers of Attorney(3)
- --------------------
(1) Filed with Post-Effective Amendment No. 95 ("Post-Effective Amendment
No. 95") to the Registration Statement No. 2-10658/811-92 (the
"Registration Statement") and incorporated by reference herein.
(2) Filed with Post-Effective Amendment No. 96 ("Post-Effective Amendment
No. 96") to the Registration Statement and incorporated by reference
herein.
(3) Filed herewith.
(4) Filed with Post-Effective Amendment No. 66 to the Registration
Statement No 2-10527/811-96 for Keystone Diversified Bond Fund (B-2)
and incorporated by reference herein.
ITEM 25. PERSONS CONTROLLED BY OR UNDER COMMON CONTROL WITH REGISTRANT
Not applicable.
ITEM 26. NUMBER OF HOLDERS OF SECURITIES
Number of Record
Title of Class Holders as of January 31, 1997
-------------- -------------------------------
Shares of $1.00 17,233
Par Value
ITEM 27. INDEMNIFICATION
Provisions for the indemnification of Registrant's Trustees and
officers are contained in Article VIII of the Trust Agreement, which was
filed with Post-Effective Amendment No. 95 and incorporated by reference herein.
Provisions for the indemnification of Evergreen Keystone Distributor,
Inc., Registrant's principal underwriter, are contained in Item 9 of the
Principal Underwriting Agreement, a copy of which was filed with Post-Effective
Amendment No. 96 and incorporated by reference herein.
Provisions for the indemnification of Keystone Investment Management
Company, Registrant's investment adviser is contained in Section 6 of the
Advisory Agreement, a copy of which was filed with Post-Effective Amendment
No. 96 and incorporated by reference herein.
Provisions for the indemnification of Evergreen Keystone Investment
Services, Inc., are contained in Item 5 of the Continuation Agreement, a copy
of which is filed herewith.
ITEM 28. BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS OF INVESTMENT ADVISER
The following tables list the names of the various officers and
directors of Keystone Investment Management Company, Registrant's investment
adviser, and their respective positions. For each named individual, the table
lists, for at least the past two years, (i) any other organizations
(excluding investment advisory clients) with which the officer and/or
director has had or has substantial involvement; and (ii) positions held
with such organizations.
LIST OF OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS OF
KEYSTONE INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT COMPANY
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Position with
Keystone
Investment
Name Management Company Other Business Affiliations
- ---- ------------------ ---------------------------
<S> <C> <C>
Albert H. Chairman of Chairman of the Board,
Elfner, III the Board, Chief Executive Officer,
Chief Executive President and Director:
Officer First Union Keystone
Investments, Inc.
Keystone Asset Corporation
Keystone Capital Corporation
Chairman of the Board and Director:
Keystone Fixed Income Advisers, Inc.
Keystone Institutional Company, Inc.
President and Director:
Keystone Trust Company
Director or Trustee:
Evergreen Keystone Investment Services, Inc.
Evergreen Keystone Service Company
Boston Children's Services Associates
Middlesex School
Middlebury College
Formerly:
Chairman of the Board,
Chief Executive Officer,
President and Director:
Keystone Management, Inc.
Keystone Software, Inc.
Trustee or Director:
Neworld Bank
Robert Van Partners, Inc.
Fiduciary Investment Company, Inc.
Philip M. Byrne Senior Vice Senior Vice President:
President First Union Keystone Investments, Inc.
Formerly:
President and Director:
Keystone Institutional Company, Inc.
Herbert L. Senior Vice None
Bishop, Jr. President
Donald C. Dates Senior Vice None
President
Gilman Gunn Senior Vice None
President
Edward F. Chief Operating Officer Director, Senior Vice President,
Godfrey Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer:
First Union Keystone Investments, Inc.
Evergreen Keystone Investment Services, Inc.
Formerly:
Treasurer:
Keystone Institutional Company, Inc.
Keystone Management, Inc.
Keystone Software, Inc.
Fiduciary Investment Company, Inc.
Treasurer and Director:
Hartwell Keystone Advisers, Inc.
Rosemary D. Senior Vice General Counsel, Senior Vice President and Secretary:
Van Antwerp President, First Union Keystone Investments, Inc.
General Counsel Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Director:
and Secretary Evergreen Keystone Service Company
Evergreen Keystone Investment Services, Inc.
Formerly:
Senior Vice President and General Counsel:
Keystone Institutional Company, Inc.
Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Director:
Fiduciary Investment Company, Inc.
Senior Vice President, General Counsel, Director and Secretary:
Keystone Management, Inc.
Keystone Software, Inc.
Senior Vice President and Secretary:
Hartwell Keystone Advisers, Inc.
Vice President and Secretary:
Keystone Fixed Income Advisers, Inc.
J. Kevin Kenely Vice President Vice President:
First Union Keystone Investments, Inc.
Evergreen Keystone Investment Services, Inc.
Formerly:
Controller
Keystone Investments, Inc.
Keystone Investment Management Company
Keystone Investment Distributors Company
Keystone Institutional Company, Inc.
Keystone Management, Inc.
Keystone Software, Inc.
Fiduciary Investment Company, Inc.
Vice President:
Keystone Institutional Company, Inc.
Keystone Management, Inc.
Keystone Software, Inc.
Fiduciary Investment Company, Inc.
John D. Rogol Vice President Vice President and
Controller:
First Union Keystone Investments, Inc.
Evergreem Keystone Investment Services, Inc.
Formerly:
Controller:
Keystone Institutional Company, Inc.
Keystone Management, Inc.
Keystone Software, Inc.
Fiduciary Investment Company, Inc.
John Addeo Vice President None
Andrew Baldassarre Vice President None
David Benhaim Vice President None
Donald Bisson Vice President None
Francis X. Claro Vice President None
Kristine R. Vice President None
Cloyes
Christopher P. Senior Vice None
Conkey President
J. Gary Craven Senior Vice None
President
Richard Cryan Senior Vice None
President
Maureen E. Senior Vice None
Cullinane President
Betsy Hutchings Sr. Vice President None
Walter T. Senior Vice None
McCormick President
George F. Wilkins Senior Vice None
President
Andrew G. Baldassare Vice President None
George E. Dlugos Vice President None
Antonio T. Docal Vice President None
Dana E. Erikson Vice President None
Sami J. Karam Vice President None
George J. Kimball Vice President None
JoAnn L. Lyndon Vice President None
John C. Vice President None
Madden, Jr.
Eleanor H. Marsh Vice President None
James D. Medredeff Vice President None
Stanley M. Niksa Vice President None
Jonathan A. Noonan Vice President None
Robert E. O'Brien Vice President None
Margery C. Parker Vice President None
Joyce W. Petkovich Vice President None
Daniel A. Rabasco Vice President None
Harlen R. Sanderling Vice President None
Kathy K. Wang Vice President None
Judith A. Warners Vice President None
Peter Willis Vice President None
Richard A. Wisentaner Vice President None
Cheryle E. Wanble Vice President None
Walter Zagrobski Vice President None
</TABLE>
ITEM 29. PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITER
(a) Evergreen Keystone Distributor, Inc., which acts as
Registrant's principal underwriter, also acts as principal
underwriter for the following entities:
Keystone Diversified Bond Fund (B-2)
Keystone High Income Bond Fund (B-4)
Keystone Balanced Fund (K-1)
Keystone Strategic Growth Fund (K-2)
Keystone Growth and Income Fund (S-1)
Keystone Mid-Cap Growth Fund (S-3)
Keystone Small Company Growth Fund (S-4)
Keystone Balanced Fund II
Keystone Capital Preservation and Income Fund
Keystone Fund for Total Return
Keystone Fund of the Americas
Keystone Global Opportunities Fund
Keystone Global Resources and Development Fund
Keystone Government Securities Fund
Keystone America Hartwell Emerging Growth Fund, Inc.
Keystone Institutional Adjustable Rate Fund
Keystone Institutional Trust
Keystone Intermediate Term Bond Fund
Keystone International Fund Inc.
Keystone Liquid Trust
Keystone Omega Fund
Keystone Precious Metals Holdings, Inc.
Keystone Small Company Growth Fund II
Keystone State Tax Free Fund
Keystone State Tax Free Fund - Series II
Keystone Strategic Income Fund
Keystone Tax Free Fund
Keystone Tax Free Income Fund
Keystone World Bond Fund
Evergreen Trust
The Evergreen Equity Trust
The Evergreen Limited Market Fund, Inc.
Evergreen Growth and Income Fund
The Evergreen Growth and Income Fund
The Evergreen American Retirement Trust
The Evergreen Foundation Trust
The Evergreen Municipal Trust
The Evergreen Money Market Fund
Evergreen Investment Trust
Evergreen Lexicon Trust
Evergreen Tax Free Trust
Evergreen Variable Trust
(b) Information with respect to each officer and director of
Registrant's principal underwriter follows.
POSITION WITH POSITION WITH
NAME EVERGREEN KEYSTONE REGISTRANT
- --------------- ------------------ ---------------
Robert A. Hering* President None
Michael C. Petrycki* Vice President None
Gordon M. Forrester* Vice President None
Lawrence Wagner* Vice President,
Chief Financial Officer None
Steven D. Blecher* Vice President,
Treasurer, Secretary None
Elizabeth Q. Solazzo* Assistant Secretary None
Thalia M. Cody* Assistant Secretary None
* Located at 125 W. 55th Street, New York, New York 10019
ITEM 29(C). - Not Applicable
ITEM 30. LOCATION OF ACCOUNTS AND RECORDS
First Union Keystone, Inc.
200 Berkeley Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02116-5034
State Street Bank and Trust Company
1776 Heritage Drive
Quincy, Massachusetts 02171
Iron Mountain
3431 Sharpslot Road
Swansea, Massachusetts 02277
ITEM 31. MANAGEMENT SERVICES
Not applicable.
ITEM 32. UNDERTAKINGS
Upon request and without charge, Registrant hereby undertakes to
furnish to each person to whom a copy of the Registrant's prospectus is
delivered with a copy of the Registrant's latest annual report to
shareholders.
<PAGE>
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the Investment
Company Act of 1940, the Registrant certifies that it meets all of the
requirements for the effectiveness of this Amendment to its Registration
Statement pursuant to Rule 485(b) under the Securities Act of 1933 and has duly
caused this Amendment to its Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf
by the undersigned, thereto duly authorized in the City of Boston, and The
Commonwealth of Massachusetts, on the 28th day of February, 1997.
KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
By: /s/ George S. Bissell
-----------------------------
George S. Bissell
Chief Executive Officer
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Amendment to
Registrant's Registration Statement has been signed below by the following
persons in the capacities indicated on the 28th day of February, 1997.
<TABLE>
<S> <C> <C>
/s/ George S. Bissell /s/ Charles F. Chapin
- ------------------------ ------------------------- -------------------------
George S. Bissell Charles F. Chapin* William Walt Pettit
Chairman of the Board of Trustees Trustee Trustee
and Chief Executive Officer
/s/ John J. Pileggi /s/ K. Dun Gifford /s/ David M. Richardson
- ------------------------- ------------------------- -------------------------
John J. Pileggi K. Dun Gifford* David M. Richardson*
President amd Treasurer (Principal Trustee Trustee
Financial and Accounting Officer)
/s/ Frederick Amling
- ------------------------- ------------------------- -------------------------
Frederick Amling* James S. Howell Russell A. Salton, III MD
Trustee Trustee Trustee
/s/ Laurence B. Ashkin /s/ Leroy Keith, Jr.
- ------------------------- ------------------------- -------------------------
Laurence B. Ashkin Leroy Keith, Jr.* Michael S. Scofield
Trustee Trustee Trustee
/s/ Charles A. Austin, III /s/ F. Ray Keyser, Jr. /s/ Richard J. Shima
- ------------------------- ------------------------- -------------------------
Charles A. Austin, III* F. Ray Keyser, Jr.* Richard J. Shima*
Trustee Trustee Trustee
/s/ Andrew J. Simons
- ------------------------- ------------------------- -------------------------
Foster Bam Gerald M. McDonnell Andrew J. Simons*
Trustee Trustee Trustee
/s/ Edwin D. Campbell
- ------------------------- -------------------------
Edwin D. Campbell* Thomas L. McVerry
Trustee Trustee
</TABLE>
*By:/s/ James M. Wall
- -----------------------------
James M. Wall**
Attorney-in-Fact
** James M. Wall, by signing his name hereto, does hereby sign this document
on behalf of each of the above-named individuals pursuant to powers of attorney
duly executed by such persons and attached hereto as Exhibit 24(b)(19).
<PAGE>
INDEX TO EXHIBITS
Exhibit Number Exhibit
1 Trust Agreement(1)
2 By-Laws(1)
5(b) Advisory Agreement(2)
6(a) Form of Principal Underwriting Agreement(2)
(b) Form of Dealer Agreement(2)
8 Custodian, Fund Accounting and
Recordkeeping Agreement(1)
9(a) Form of Marketing Services Agreement(2)
(b) Form of Sub-administrator Agreement(3)
(c) Continuation Agreement(3)
10 Opinion and Consent of Counsel(2)
11 Independent Auditors' Consent(3)
14 Model Retirement Plans(4)
15 Distribution Plan adopted pursuant to Rule 12b-1(1)
16 Performance Data Schedules(3)
17 Financial Data Schedule (filed as Exhibit 27)(3)
19 Powers of Attorney(3)
- ----------------------------------
(1) Filed with Post-Effective Amendment No. 95 and incorporated by
reference herein.
(2) Filed with Post-Effective Amendment No.96 and incorporated by
reference herein.
(3) Filed herewith.
(4) Filed with Post-Effective Amendment No. 66 to the Registration
Statement No. 2-10527/811-96 for Keystone Diversified Bond Fund (K-1)
and incorporated by reference herein.
FORM OF
SUB-ADMINISTRATOR AGREEMENT
This Sub-Administrator Agreement is made as of this ___st day
of January, 1997 between Keystone Investment Management Company, a Delaware
corporation (herein called "KIMCO"), and The BISYS Group, Inc., a Delaware
limited liability corporation (herein called "BISYS").
WHEREAS, KIMCO has been appointed as investment adviser to
certain open-end management investment companies, or to one or more separate
investment series thereof, listed on Schedule A, as the same may be amended from
time to time to reflect additions or deletions of such companies or series,
which are registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "Funds");
WHEREAS, in its capacity as investment adviser to the Funds,
KIMCO has the obligation to provide, or engage others to provide, certain
administrative services to the Funds; and
WHEREAS, KIMCO desires to retain BISYS as Sub-Administrator to
the Funds for the purpose of providing the Funds with personnel to act as
officers of the Funds and to provide certain administrative services in addition
to those provided by KIMCO ("Sub-Administrative Services"), and Furman Selz is
willing to render such services;
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and mutual
covenants set forth herein, the parties hereto agree as follows:
1. Appointment of Sub-Administrator. KIMCO hereby appoints BISYS as
Sub-Administrator for the Funds on the terms and conditions set forth in this
Agreement and BISYS hereby accepts such appointment and agrees to perform
the services and duties set forth in Section 2 of this Agreement in
consideration of the compensation provided for in Section 4 hereof.
2. Services and Duties. As Sub-Administrator, and subject to the supervision and
control of KIMCO and the Trustees or Directors of the Funds, BISYS will
hereafter provide facilities, equipment and personnel to carry out the following
Sub-Administrative services to assist in the operation of the business and
affairs of the Funds:
(a) provide individuals reasonably acceptable to the Funds for
nomination, appointment or election as officers of the Funds and who
will be responsible for the management of certain of each Fund's
affairs as determined from time to time by the Trustees or Directors of
the Funds;
(b) review filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission and
state securities authorities that have been prepared on behalf of the
Funds by the administrator and take such actions as may be reasonably
requested by the administrator to effect such filings;
(c) verify, authorize and transmit to the custodian, transfer agent and
dividend disbursing agent of each Fund all necessary instructions for
the disbursement of cash, issuance of
D:\JPW\LIEBER\AGREMENT\SUBADMIN\SUBADM1.KEY
1
<PAGE>
shares, tender and receipt of portfolio securities, payment of expenses
and payment of dividends; and
(d) advise the Trustees or Directors of the Funds on matters
concerning the Funds and their affairs.
BISYS may, in addition, agree in writing to perform additional
Sub-Administrative Services for the Funds. Sub-Administrative Services shall not
include investment advisory services or any duties, functions, or services to be
performed for the Funds by their distributor, custodian or transfer agent
pursuant to their agreements with the Funds.
3. Expenses. BISYS shall be responsible for expenses incurred in providing
office space, equipment and personnel as may be necessary or convenient to
provide the Sub-Administrative Services to the Funds. KIMCO and/or the Funds
shall be responsible for all other expenses incurred by BISYS on behalf of the
Funds pursuant to this Agreement at the direction of KIMCO, including without
limitation postage and courier expenses, printing expenses, registration fees,
filing fees, fees of outside counsel and independent auditors, insurance
premiums, fees payable to Trustees or Directors who are not Furman Selz
employees, and trade association dues.
4. Compensation. For the Sub-Administrative Services provided, KIMCO hereby
agrees to pay and BISYS hereby agrees to accept as full compensation for its
services rendered hereunder a sub-administrative fee,calculated daily and
payable monthly at an annual rate based on the aggregate average daily net
assets of the Funds, or separate series thereof, set forth on Schedule A and
determined in accordance with the table below.
Aggregate Daily Net Assets of Funds For
Which KIMCO, Evergreen Asset Management
Sub-Administrative Corp., First Union National Bank of North
Fee as a % of Carolina or any Affiliates Thereof Serve as
Average Annual Investment Adviser or Administrator And For
Daily Net Assets Which BISYS Serves as Sub-Administrator
.0100% on the first $7 billion
.0075% on the next $3 billion
.0050% on the next $15 billion
.0040% on assets in excess of $25 billion
5. Indemnification and Limitation of Liability of BISYS. The duties of BISYS
shall be limited to those expressly set forth herein or later agreed to in
writing by BISYS, and no implied duties are assumed by or may be asserted
against BISYS hereunder. BISYS shall not be liable for any error of judgment or
mistake of law or for any loss arising out of any act or omission in carrying
out its duties hereunder, except a loss resulting from willful misfeasance, bad
faith or negligence in the performance of its duties, or by reason of reckless
disregard of its obligations and duties hereunder, except as may otherwise be
provided under provisions of applicable law which cannot be waived or
D:\JPW\LIEBER\AGREMENT\SUBADMIN\SUBADM1.KEY
2
<PAGE>
modified hereby. (As used in this Section, the term "BISYS" shall include
partners, officers, employees and other agents of BISYS as well as Furman
Selz itself)
So long as BISYS acts in good faith and with due diligence and without
negligence, KIMCO shall indemnify BISYS and hold it harmless from any and all
actions, suits and claims, and from any and all losses, damages, costs, charges,
reasonable counsel fees and disbursements, payments, expenses and liabilities
(including reasonable investigation expenses) arising directly or indirectly out
of BISYS' actions taken or nonactions with respect to the performance of
services hereunder. The indemnity and defense provisions set forth herein shall
survive the termination of this Agreement for a period of three years.
The rights hereunder shall include the right to reasonable advances of
defense expenses in the event of any pending or threatened litigation with
respect to which indemnification hereunder may ultimately be merited. In order
that the indemnification provision contained herein shall apply, however, it is
understood that if in any case KIMCO may be asked to indemnify or hold Furman
Selz harmless, KIMCO shall be fully and promptly advised of all pertinent facts
concerning the situation in question, and it is further understood that Furman
Selz will use all reasonable care to identify and notify KIMCO promptly
concerning any situation which presents or appears likely to present the
probability of such a claim for indemnification against KIMCO.
KIMCO shall be entitled to participate at its own expense or, if it so
elects, to assume the defense of any suit brought to enforce any claims subject
to this indemnity provision. If KIMCO elects to assume the defense of any such
claim, the defense shall be conducted by counsel chosen by KIMCO and
satisfactory to BISYS, whose approval shall not be unreasonably withheld. In the
event that KIMCO elects to assume the defense of any suit and retain counsel,
BISYS shall bear the fees and expenses of any additional counsel retained by it.
If KIMCO does not elect to assume the defense of a suit, it will reimburse
Furman Selz for the reasonable fees and expenses of any counsel retained by
BISYS.
BISYS may apply to KIMCO at any time for instructions and may consult
counsel for KIMCO or its own counsel and with accountants and other experts with
respect to any matter arising in connection with BISYS' duties, and BISYS shall
not be liable or accountable for any action taken or omitted by it in good faith
in accordance with such instruction or with the opinion of such counsel,
accountants or other experts.
Any person, even though also an officer, director, partner, employee or
agent of Furman Selz, who may be or become an officer, trustee, employee or
agent of the Funds, shall be deemed, when rendering services to a Fund or acting
on any business of a Fund (other than services or business in connection with
the duties of BISYS hereunder) to be rendering such services to or acting solely
for the Fund and not as an officer, director, partner, employee or agent or one
under the control or direction of BISYS even though paid by BISYS.
D:\JPW\LIEBER\AGREMENT\SUBADMIN\SUBADM1.KEY
3
<PAGE>
6. Duration and Termination.
(a) The initial term of this Agreement (the "Initial Term") shall
commence on the date this Agreement is executed by both parties, shall continue
until April 30, 1998, and shall continue in effect for a Fund from year to year
thereafter, provided it is approved, at least annually, by a vote of a majority
of Directors/Trustees of the Funds, including a majority of the disinterested
Directors/Trustees. Notwithstanding the foregoing, this Agreement shall only
become effective if (i) Keystone Investments, the parent of KIMCO, has
previously been acquired by First Union National Bank of North Carolina, and
(ii) the Funds have appointed Evergreen Funds Distributor, Inc. as their
Principal Underwriter. In the event of any breach of this Agreement by either
party, the non-breaching party shall notify the breaching party in writing of
such breach and upon receipt of such notice, the breaching party shall have 45
days to remedy the breach except in the case of a breach resulting from fraud or
other acts which materially and adversely affects the operations or financial
position of the Funds. In the event any material breach is not remedied within
such time period, the nonbreaching party may immediately terminate this
Agreement.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, after such termination for so long as
BISYS, with the written consent of KIMCO, in fact continues to perform any one
or more of the services contemplated by this Agreement or any schedule or
exhibit hereto, the provisions of this Agreement, including without limitation
the provisions dealing with indemnification, shall continue in full force and
effect. Compensation due BISYS and unpaid by KIMCO upon such termination shall
be immediately due and payable upon and notwithstanding such termination. BISYS
shall be entitled to collect from KIMCO, in addition to the compensation
described herein, all costs reasonably incurred in connection with BISYS'
activities in effecting such termination, including without limitation, the
delivery to the Funds and/or their designees of each Fund's property, records,
instruments and documents, or any copies thereof. To the extent that BISYS may
retain in its possession copies of any Fund documents or records subsequent to
such termination which copies had not been requested by or on behalf of a Fund
in connection with the termination process described above, BISYS will provide
such Fund with reasonable access to such copies; provided, however, that, in
exchange therefor, KIMCO shall reimburse BISYS for all costs reasonably incurred
in connection therewith.
(b) Subject to (c) below, this Agreement may be terminated at any time,
without payment of any penalty, on sixty (60) day's prior written notice by
KIMCO, or by BISYS and, with respect to one or more of the Funds a vote of
a majority of such Fund's or Funds' Directors/Trustees.
(c) If, during the first six months this Agreement is in effect it is
terminated for a Fund or Funds in accordance with (b) above, for any reason
other than a material breach of this Agreement, the merger of a Fund or Funds
for which KIMCO, Evergreen Asset Management Corp., First Union National Bank of
North Carolina or any affiliates thereof act as investment adviser, or any other
event that leads to the termination of the existence of a Fund or Funds, and
BISYS is replaced as sub-administrator, then KIMCO shall make a one-time cash
payment to BISYS equal to the unpaid balance due BISYS for the first six-months
this Agreement in effect, assuming for
D:\JPW\LIEBER\AGREMENT\SUBADMIN\SUBADM1.KEY
4
<PAGE>
purposes of calculation of the payment that the asset level of each
Fund on the date BISYS is replaced will remain constant for the balance of such
term. Once this Agreement has been in effect for more than six months from the
commencement date, this paragraph (c) shall be null, void and of no further
effect.
7. Amendment. No provision of this Agreement may be changed, waived, discharged
or terminated orally, but only by an instrument in writing signed by the party
against which an enforcement of the change, waiver, discharge or termination is
sought.
8. Notices. Notices of any kind to be given to KIMCO hereunder by BISYS shall be
in writing and shall be duly given if delivered to KIMCO at the following
address: Keystone Investment Management Company, 200 Berkeley Street, Boston,
Massachusetts 02116 ATT: General Counsel. Notices of any kind to be given to
Furman Selz hereunder by EAMC or the Funds shall be in writing and shall be duly
given if delivered to BISYS at 3435 Stelzer Road, Columbus, Ohio 43219
Attention: George O. Martinez, Senior Vice President.
9. Limitation of Liability. BISYS is hereby expressly put on notice of the
limitations of liability as set forth in the Declarations of Trust of the Funds
that are Massachusetts business trusts or series thereof and agrees that the
obligations pursuant to this Agreement of a particular Fund be limited solely to
the assets of that particular Fund, and BISYS shall not seek satisfaction of any
such obligation from the assets of any other Fund, the shareholders of any Fund,
the Trustees, officers, employees or agents of any Fund, or any of them.
10. Miscellaneous. The captions in this Agreement are included for convenience
of reference only and in no way define or delimit any of the provisions hereof
or otherwise affect their construction or effect. If any provision of this
Agreement shall be held or made invalid by a court or regulatory agency
decision, statute, rule or otherwise, the remainder of this Agreement shall not
be affected thereby. Subject to the provisions of Section 5 hereof, this
Agreement shall be binding upon and shall inure to the benefit of the parties
hereto and their respective successors and shall be governed by New York law;
provided, however, that nothing herein shall be construed in a manner
inconsistent with the Investment Company Act of 1940 or any rule or regulation
promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission thereunder.
D:\JPW\LIEBER\AGREMENT\SUBADMIN\SUBADM1.KEY
5
<PAGE>
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this instrument to
be executed by their officers designated below as of the day and year first
above written.
KEYSTONE INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT COMPANY
By______________________________________
Its:____________________________________
Attest:________________________
THE BISYS GROUP, INC.
By______________________________________
its_____________________________________
Attest:________________________
D:\JPW\LIEBER\AGREMENT\SUBADMIN\SUBADM1.KEY
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<PAGE>
SCHEDULE A
SUB-ADMINISTRATOR AGREEMENT
Keystone America Hartwell Emerging Growth Fund ("Emerging Growth")
Keystone Balanced Fund II ("Balanced Fund")
Keystone Capital Preservation and
Income Fund ("Capital Preservation and Income")
Keystone Emerging Markets Fund ("Emerging Markets")
Keystone Fund For Total Return ("Total Return")
Keystone Fund of the Americas ("Fund of the Americas")
Keystone Global Opportunities Fund ("GlobalOpportunities")
Keystone Global Resources and Development Fund ("GlobalResources")
Keystone Government Securities Fund ("Government Securities")
Keystone Intermediate Term Bond Fund ("Intermediate Term")
Keystone Liquid Trust("Liquid Trust")
Keystone Omega Fund ("Omega")
Keystone Small Company Growth Fund II ("Small Company Growth")
Keystone State Tax Free Fund ("State Tax Free")
- Florida Tax Free Fund ("Florida Tax Free")
- Massachusetts Tax Free Fund ("Massachusetts Tax Free")
- Pennsylvania Tax Free Fund ("Pennsylvania Tax Free")
- New York Insured Tax Free Fund ("New York Insured")
Keystone State Tax Free Fund-Series II ("State Tax Free II")
- California Insured Tax Free Fund ("California Insured")
- Missouri Tax Free Fund ("Missouri Tax Free")
Keystone Strategic Income Fund ("Strategic Income")
Keystone Tax Free Income Fund ("Tax Free Income")
Keystone Quality Bond Fund (B-1) ("B-1") Keystone
Diversified Bond Fund (B-2) ("B-2")
Keystone High Income Bond Fund (B-4) ("B-4")
Keystone Balanced Fund (K-1) ("K-1")
Keystone Strategic Growth Fund (K-2)("K-2")
Keystone Growth and Income Fund (S-1) ("S-1")
Keystone Mid-Cap Growth Fund (S-3) ("S-3")
Keystone Small Company Growth Fund (S-4) ("S-4")
Keystone Institutional Adjustable Rate Fund ("Adjustable Rate")
Keystone Institutional Trust ("Institutional")
Keystone International Fund Inc. ("International")
Keystone Precious Metals Holdings, Inc. ("Precious Metals")
Keystone Tax Free Fund ("Tax Free")
D:\JPW\LIEBER\AGREMENT\SUBADMIN\SUBADM1.KEY
PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITING AGREEMENT
KEYSTONE FAMILY OF FUNDS
AGREEMENT made this 11th day of December, 1996 by and between each of
the parties listed on Exhibit A attached hereto and made a part hereof, each for
itself and not jointly (each a "Fund"), and Evergreen Keystone Investment
Services, Inc., a Delaware corporation ("Principal Underwriter").
It is hereby mutually agreed as follows:
1. The Fund hereby appoints Principal Underwriter a principal
underwriter of the shares of beneficial interest of the Fund sold prior to
December 11, 1996 (the "Shares") as an independent contractor upon the terms and
conditions hereinafter set forth. Except as the Fund may from time to time
agree, Principal Underwriter will act as agent for the Fund and not as
principal.
2. Having assigned all rights to commission payments for Shares sold on
or after December 1, 1996 but before December 11, 1996 to Evergreen Keystone
Distributor, Inc., Principal Underwriter will not be entitled to commissions on
such Shares. Principal Underwriter shall be entitled to commissions on Shares
outstanding prior to December 1, 1996 and as set forth on Exhibit B attached
hereto and made a part hereof and in the then current prospectus and/or
statement of additional information of the Fund. Principal Underwriter may
reallow all or a part of such commissions to such of its representatives, or to
such brokers or dealers, as Principal Underwriter may determine.
3. Principal Underwriter shall not make, or permit any representative,
broker or dealer to make, any representations concerning the Shares except those
contained in the then current prospectus and/or statement of additional
information covering the Shares and in printed information approved by the Fund
as information supplemental to such prospectus and statement of additional
information.
4. Principal Underwriter agrees to comply with the Business Conduct
Rules of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.
5. The Fund agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Principal
Underwriter, its officers and Directors and each person, if any, who controls
the Principal Underwriter within the meaning of Section 15 of the Securities Act
of 1933 ("1933 Act"), against any losses, claims, damages, liabilities and
expenses (including the cost of any legal fees incurred in connection therewith)
which the Principal Underwriter, its officers, Directors or any such controlling
person may incur under the 1933 Act, under any other statute, at common law or
otherwise, arising out of or based upon
a) any untrue statement or alleged untrue statement of a
material fact contained in the Fund's registration statement,
prospectus or statement of additional information (including
amendments and supplements thereto), or
b) any omission or alleged omission to state a material fact
required to be stated in the Fund's registration statement, prospectus
or statement of additional information necessary to make the statements
therein not misleading, provided, however, that insofar as losses,
claims, damages, liabilities or expenses arise out of or are based upon
any such untrue statement or omission or alleged untrue statement or
omission made in reliance and in conformity with information furnished
to the Fund by the Principal Underwriter for use in the Fund's
registration statement, prospectus or statement of additional
information, such indemnification is not applicable. In no case shall
the Fund indemnify the Principal Underwriter or its controlling person
as to any amounts incurred for any liability arising out of or based
upon any action for which the Principal Underwriter, its officers and
Directors or any controlling person would otherwise be subject to
liability by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross
negligence in the performance of its duties or by reason of the
reckless disregard of its obligations and duties under this Agreement.
6. The Principal Underwriter agrees to indemnify and hold harm less the
Fund, its officers, Trustees and each person, if any, who controls the Fund
within the meaning of Section 15 of the 1933 Act against any loss, claims,
damages, liabilities and expenses (including the cost of any legal fees incurred
in connection therewith) which the Fund, its officers, Directors or any such
controlling person may incur under the 1933 Act, under any other statute, at
common law or otherwise arising out of the acquisition of any Shares by any
person which
a) may be based upon any wrongful act by the Principal
Underwriter or any of its employees or representatives, or
b) may be based upon any untrue statement or alleged untrue
statement of a material fact contained in the Fund's registration
statement, prospectus or statement of additional information (including
amendments and supplements thereto), or any omission or alleged
omission to state a material fact required to be stated therein or
necessary to make the statements therein not misleading, if such
statement or omission was made in reliance upon information furnished
or confirmed in writing to the Fund by the Principal Underwriter.
7. To the extent required by the Fund's 12b-1 Plan, Principal
Underwriter shall provide to the Board of Trustees of the Fund in connection
with such 12b-1 Plan, not less than quarterly, a written report of the amounts
expended pursuant to such 12b-1 Plan and the purpose for which such expenditures
were made.
8. The term of this Agreement shall begin on the date hereof and,
unless sooner terminated or continued as provided below, shall expire after two
years. This Agreement shall continue in effect after such term if its
continuance is specifically approved by a majority of the Trustees of the Fund
and a majority of the 12b-1 Trustees referred to in the 12b-1 Plans of the Fund
("Rule 12b-1 Trustees") at least annually in accordance with the 1940 Act and
the rules and regulations thereunder.
This Agreement may be terminated at any time, without payment of any
penalty, by vote of a majority of any Rule 12b-1 Trustees or by a vote of a
majority of the Fund's outstanding Shares on not more than sixty (60) days
written notice to any other party to the Agreement; and shall terminate
automatically in the event of its assignment (as defined in the 1940 Act).
9. This Agreement shall be construed in accordance with the laws of The
Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Agreement to be
executed by their respective officers thereunto duly authorized at Boston,
Massachusetts, on the day and year first written above.
KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
KEYSTONE DIVERSIFIED BOND FUND (B-2)
KEYSTONE HIGH INCOME BOND FUND (B-4)
KEYSTONE BALANCED FUND (K-1)
KEYSTONE STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND (K-2)
KEYSTONE GROWTH AND INCOME FUND (S-1)
KEYSTONE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND (S-3)
KEYSTONE SMALL COMPANY GROWTH FUND (S-4)
each for itself and not jointly
By: /s/ George S. Bissell
________________________________
George S. Bissell, Chairman
EVERGREEN KEYSTONE INVESTMENT
SERVICES, INC.
By: /s/ Rosemary D. Van Antwerp
________________________________
Rosemary D. Van Antwerp
Senior Vice President
<PAGE>
EXHIBIT A
TO
PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITING AGREEMENT
DATED DECEMBER 11, 1996
BETWEEN EVERGREEN KEYSTONE INVESTMENT SERVICES, INC.
AND
KEYSTONE FAMILY OF FUNDS
KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1)
KEYSTONE DIVERSIFIED BOND FUND (B-2)
KEYSTONE HIGH INCOME BOND FUND (B-4)
KEYSTONE BALANCED FUND (K-1)
KEYSTONE STRATEGIC GROWTH FUND (K-2)
KEYSTONE AND INCOME FUND (S-1)
KEYSTONE MID-CAP GROWTH FUND (S-3)
KEYSTONE SMALL COMPNAY GROWTH FUND (S-4)
<PAGE>
EXHIBIT B
TO
PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITING AGREEMENT
DATED DECEMBER 11, 1996
BETWEEN EVERGREEN KEYSTONE INVESTMENT SERVICES, INC.
AND
KEYSTONE FAMILY OF FUNDS
Until such time as each Fund has paid to the Principal Underwriter an
amount equal to the aggregate amount set forth for such Fund in the table
entitled "KID Receivables," the calculation of the distribution fees and
contingent deferred sales charges (collectively the "Fees") that the Principal
Underwriter is entitled to receive hereunder with respect to such Fund pursuant
to Paragraph 2 in respect of the Shares sold before December 1, 1996 shall be
based upon only those assets of that Fund that are attributable to Shares sold
before December 1, 1996 (the "Pre-Acquisition Shares"). The Fees calculated in
accordance with the foregoing sentence will be used to pay amounts in respect of
KID Receivables or, to the extent for any month amounts are payable by the
Principal Underwriter with respect to Travelers/KID Receivables in respect of
the amounts set forth for each Fund in the table entitled "Travelers/KID
Receivables," amounts in respect of Travelers/KID Receivables.
Once a Fund has paid the aggregate amount of KID Receivables
attributable to such Fund, or in the event there are no KID Receivables
attributable to such Fund at the time this Agreement is entered into, the
Principal Underwriter shall no longer be entitled to payment of any Fees
hereunder so long as any amounts remain payable with respect to the Fund to
Evergreen Keystone Distributor, Inc. ("EKDI") under the Principal Underwriting
Agreement between EKDI and the Fund dated as of December 11, 1996 (the
"Post-Acquisition Underwriting Agreement"). To the extent that no amounts are
payable to EKDI with respect to a Fund as provided for in subparagraph (a) of
Exhibit B of the Post-Acquisition Underwriting Agreement as of any month end,
for that month and that month only, the Principal Underwriter will be entitled
to the payment of Fees hereunder, such payment to be payable from the Fees
calculated with respect to the entire net assets of the Fund and not just those
assets attributable to Pre-Acquisition Shares, up to an amount equal to the
aggregate amount set forth for such Fund in the table entitled "Travelers/KID
Receivables," if any. Once a Fund has made payments hereunder in an aggregate
amount equal to the sum of the KID Receivables and the Travelers/KID
Receivables, no further amounts shall be payable under this Principal
Underwriting Agreement for such Fund and it shall terminate.
For purposes of this Principal Underwriting Agreement and Exhibit B,
Pre-Acquisition Shares shall be such shares which are defined in Schedule I
attached hereto as "Distributor Shares" calculated as though the Distributor
Last Sale Cut-off Date, as such term is defined in said Schedule I, was November
30, 1996.
KID Receivables
Keystone Quality Bond Fund (B-1) $ 1,417,312.63
Keystone Diversified Bond Fund (B-2) $ 5,538,666.38
Keystone High Income Bond Fund (B-4) $ 3,303,927.43
Keystone Balanced Fund (K-1) $ 4,102,973.74
Keystone Strategic Growth Fund (K-2) None
Keystone Growth and Income Fund (S-1) None
Keystone Mid-Cap Growth Fund (S-3) None
Keystone Small Company Growth Fund (S-4) $11,000,687.71
Travelers/KID Receivables
Keystone Quality Bond Fund (B-1) $ 7,603,267.21
Keystone Diversified Bond Fund (B-2) $11,894,293.78
Keystone High Income Bond Fund (B-4) $ 974,711.00
Keystone Balanced Fund (K-1) None
Keystone Strategic Growth Fund (K-2) None
Keystone Growth and Income Fund (S-1) None
Keystone Mid-Cap Growth Fund (S-3) None
Keystone Small Company Growth Fund (S-4) None
The Trustees and Shareholders
Keystone Quality Bond Fund (B-1)
We consent to the use of our report dated November 29, 1996 incorporated by
reference herein and to the reference to our firm under the caption "Financial
Highlights" in the prospectus.
/s/ KPMG Peat Marwick LLP
KPMG Peat Marwick LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
February 28, 1997
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
B-1 MTD YTD ONE YEAR THREE YEAR THREE YEAR FIVE YEAR FIVE YEAR
31-Oct-96 TOTAL RETURN COMPOUNDED TOTAL RETURN COMPOUNDED
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
with cdsc N/A -1.91% 1.03% 9.89% 3.19% 31.89% 5.69%
W/O CDSC 2.52% 0.99% 3.99% 10.81% 3.48% 31.89% 5.69%
Beg dates 30-Sep-96 29-Dec-95 31-Oct-95 29-Oct-93 29-Oct-93 31-Oct-91 31-Oct-91
Beg Value (no load) 41,750 42,385 41,162 38,628 38,628 32,455 32,455
End Value (W/O CDSC) 42,804 42,804 42,804 42,804 42,804 42,804 42,804
End Value (with cdsc) 41,576 41,588 42,447 42,447 42,804 42,804
beg nav 14.88 15.72 15.42 16.40 16.4 16.02 16.02
end nav 15.19 15.19 15.19 15.19 15.19 15.19 15.19
shares originally purhased 2,805.80 2,696.25 2,669.39 2,355.36 2,355.36 2,025.89 2,025.89
3 5
TEN YEAR TEN YEAR
TOTAL RETURN COMPOUNDED
<S> <C> <C>
with cdsc 84.47% 6.31%
W/O CDSC 84.47% 6.31%
Beg dates 31-Oct-86 31-Oct-86
Beg Value (no load) 23,205 23,205
End Value (W/O CDSC) 42,804 42,804
End Value (with cdsc) 42,804 42,804
beg nav 17.49 17.49
end nav 15.19 15.19
shares originally purhased 1,326.73 1,326.73
10
</TABLE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
STATE STREET BANK & TRUST COMPANY SEC STANDARDIZED ADVERTISING YIELD
K EYSTONE SERIES B-1
PRICING DATE 10/28/96
TOTAL INCOME FOR PERIOD 1,344,416.54
TOTAL EXPENSES FOR PERIOD 352,993.99
30 DAY YTM 5.22847% AVERAGE SHARES OUTSTANDING 15,303,412.561
LAST PRICE DURING PERIOD 15.03
PRICE ZERO MORTGAGE PAYDOWN GAIN/LOSS ST FIXED ST VAR LONG TERM TOTAL 12B-1+SER FEE CDSC
DATE COUPON INCOME ADJ ADJ INCOME INCOME INCOME INCOME EXPENSE
7.056 602,079 (2,545) 8.107 0 729,719 1,344,417 182,500
0.03761% 3.18 -0.04321% 0.04321% 0% 3.85923% -0.97475%
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
09/28/96 236.52 19791.91 247.48 $25,682.38 45,958.30 0 0
09/29/96 236.52 19791.92 247.48 25,682.38 45,958.30 0 0
09/30/96 237.23 19792.79 225.47 26,221.28 46,476.77 6,334.29 0
10/01/96 236.31 19782.86 0 24,963/03 44,983.03 6,303.71 0
10/02/96 235.38 19782.57 0 24,878.48 44,896.43 6,316.12 0
10/03/96 235.53 19782.83 263.79 24,321.02 44.603/17 6,330.96 0
10/04/96 233.52 19781.50 256.65 24,732.06 45,003.73 18,960.63 0
10/05/96 233.52 19781.50 256.65 24,732.06 45,003.73 0 0
10/06/96 234.4 19781.50 256.65 24,732.06 45,003.73 0 0
10/07/96 234.75 19782.31 214.59 24,788.62 45,019.92 6,368.4 0
10/08/96 235.02 19782.05 188.30 24,856.97 45,062.07 6,350.47 0
10/09/96 235.99 19762.50 169.86 24,878.39 45,045.77 6,344.17 0
10/10/96 235.14 19763.19 468.22 24,538.47 45,005.87 6,322.53 0
10/11/96 235.14 19756.98 369.18 24,451.46 44,812.76 18,881.16 0
10/12/96 235.14 19756.98 369.18 24,451.46 44,812.76 0 0
10/13/96 235.14 19756.98 369.18 24,451.46 44,812.76 0 0
10/14/96 235.46 19757.40 369.18 24,474.29 44,836.01 6,294.63 0
10/15/96 235.55 19828.84 192.04 24,379.36 44,635.70 6.263/81 0
10/16/96 234.67 19801.19 273.65 24,387.71 44,698.10 6,266.84 0
10/17/96 234.45 20402.24 218.43 23,844.67 44,700.01 6,256.47 0
10/18/96 234.45 20402.63 200.98 23,825.77 44,663.83 18,823.92 0
10/19/96 234.45 20402.63 200.98 23,825.77 44,663.83 0 0
10/20/96 235.04 20402.63 200.98 23,825.77 44,663.83 0 0
10/21/96 235.04 20402.97 716.84 23,070.23 44,425.08 6,281.35 0
10/22/96 235.84 20400.97 691.07 23,065.35 44,393,23 6,281.35 0
10/23/96 235.72 20701.79 79.99 23,673.48 44,690.98 6,237.58 0
10/24/96 236.01 20701.92 58.08 23,705.86 44,701.87 6,250.09 0
10/25/96 235.35 20558.82 320.57 23,728.97 44,843.71 18,789.71 0
10/26/96 235.35 20558.82 320.57 23,728.97 44,843.71 0 0
10/27/96 235.35 20558.82 320.57 23,728.97 44,843.71 0 0
10/28/96 235.96 20559.37 320.57 23,773.74 42,312.12 6,242.00 0
DAILY DAILY DAILY 30 DAY 30 DAY 30 DAY
EXPENSES SHARES PRICE ACCUMULATED ACCUMULATED ACCUMULATED
352,994 15,303,413 INCOME EXPENSES SHARES
<C> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
12,315.33 15,515,689.528 14.89 0 0 0
12,315.33 15,515,689.528 14.89 45,958.30 12,315.33 15,515,689.53
12,338.66 15,509,420,708 14.88 92,435.07 24,653.99 31,025,110.24
11,613.24 15,480,620.546 14.93 137.418.10 36,267.23 46,505,730.78
11,608.38 15,476,632.348 14.97 182,314.53 47,875.61 61.982.363/13
11,621.83 15,448,322.754 14.97 226,917.70 59,497.44 77,430,685.88
11,003.07 15,442,811.326 15.09 271,921.43 70,500.51 92,873,497.21
11,003.07 15,448,811.326 15.09 316.925.16 81,503.58 108,316,308.54
11,003.07 15,448,811.326 15.09 406.948.81 92,506.65 123,759,119.86
13,509.51 15,431,073.476 15.06 452,010.88 106,016.16 139,190,193.34
11,655.28 15,423,174.870 15.06 497,056.65 117,671.44 154,613,368.21
11,645.76 15,389,349.800 15.04 542,062.52 129,317.20 170,002,718.01
11,611.42 15,366,011.358 14.99 586.875.28 140,928.62 185,368,729.37
10,965.08 15,316,169.774 15.04 631,688.04 151,893.70 200,684,899.14
10,965.08 15,316,169.774 15.04 676.500.80 162,858.78 216,001,068.91
10,965.08 15,316,169.774 15.04 721.336.81 173,823.86 231,317,238.69
13,384.60 15,239.609,721 15.04 765,972.51 187,208.46 246,556,848.41
11,527.58 15,236,114.456 15.05 810,670/61 198,736.04 261,792,962.87
11,528.35 15,218,402.957 15.10 855.370.62 210,264.39 277,011,365.82
11,507.44 15,209,345.552 15.12 900,034.45 221,771.83 292,220,711.37
10,934.01 15,200,860.013 15.12 944,698.28 232,705.85 307,421,571.39
10,934.01 15,200.860.013 15.12 989,362.11 243,639.86 322,622,431.40
10,934.01 15,200,860.013 15.12 1,033,787.19 254,573.87 337,823,291.41
13,366.91 15,173,877.921 15.09 1,078.180.42 267,940.78 352,997,169.33
13,366.91 15,157.485.933 15.09 1,122,871.40 281,307.69 368,154,655.27
9,454.43 15,126,411.508 15.08 1.167.573.27 290,762.12 383,281,066.78
15,940.46 15,207.089/979 15.11 1,212,416.98 306,702.58 398,488,156.75
10,994.00 15,180,242.303 15.11 1,257,260.69 317,696.58 413,668,399.06
10.994.00 15,180,242.303 15.11 1,302,104.40 328,690.58 428,848,641.36
13,309.41 15,180,242.303 15.03 1.344.416.54 339,684.58 444,028,883.66
</TABLE>
<TABLE> <S> <C>
<ARTICLE> 6
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL INFORMATION EXTRACTED
FROM ACCOUNTING
RECORDS AND IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH
ACCOUNTING
RECORDS.
</LEGEND>
<SERIES>
<NUMBER> 101
<NAME> KEYSTONE QUALITY BOND FUND (B-1) CLASS A
<S> <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE> 12-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END> OCT-31-1996
<PERIOD-START> NOV-01-1995
<PERIOD-END> OCT-31-1996
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST> 221,647,709
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE> 226,433,309
<RECEIVABLES> 2,920,851
<ASSETS-OTHER> 586,851
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS> 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS> 229,941,011
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES> 0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT> 0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES> 1,291,852
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES> 1,291,852
<SENIOR-EQUITY> 0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON> 255,530,019
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK> 15,055,747
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR> 20,148,901
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT> 0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII> (399,985)
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS> 0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS> (31,308,109)
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC> 4,827,234
<NET-ASSETS> 228,649,159
<DIVIDEND-INCOME> 0
<INTEREST-INCOME> 18,504,392
<OTHER-INCOME> 0
<EXPENSES-NET> (5,114,331)
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME> 13,390,061
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT> (2,183,664)
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT> (1,936,653)
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS> 9,269,744
<EQUALIZATION> 0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME> (13,289,851)
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS> 0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER> (950,184)
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD> 2,902,677
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED> (8,577,419)
<SHARES-REINVESTED> 581,588
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS> (82,142,329)
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR> 0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR> 0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR> (575,212)
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR> (29,049,428)
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES> (1,578,211)
<INTEREST-EXPENSE> 0
<GROSS-EXPENSE> (5,114,331)
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS> 264,449,336
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN> 15.42
<PER-SHARE-NII> 0.75
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC> (0.16)
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND> (0.76)
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS> 0.00
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL> (0.06)
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END> 15.19
<EXPENSE-RATIO> 1.95
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING> 0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE> 0
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
EXHIBIT 99.19
POWER OF ATTORNEY
I, the undersigned, hereby constitute Roger T. Wickers, Rosemary D. Van
Antwerp, Jean S. Loewenberg, Dorothy E. Bourassa, James M. Wall and Melina M. T.
Murphy, each of them singly, my true and lawful attorneys, with full power to
them and each of them to sign for me and in my name in the capacity indicated
below any and all registration statements, including, but not limited to, Forms
N-8A, N-8B-1, S-5, N-1 and N-1A, as amended from time to time, and any and all
amendments thereto to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for
the purpose of registering from time to time all investment companies of which I
am now or hereafter a Director or Trustee and/or Chairman of the Board and Chief
Executive Officer and for which Keystone Custodian Funds, Inc. serves as Adviser
or Manager and registering from time to time the shares of such companies, and
generally to do all such things in my name and in my behalf to enable such
investment companies to comply with the provisions of the Securities Act of
1933, as amended, the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, and all
requirements and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission
thereunder, hereby ratifying and confirming my signature as it may be signed by
my said attorneys to any and all registration statements and amendments thereto.
/s/ George S. Bissell
George S. Bissell
Director/Trustee,
Chairman of the Board
Dated: December 14, 1994
<PAGE>
`
POWER OF ATTORNEY
I, the undersigned, hereby constitute Roger T. Wickers, Rosemary D. Van
Antwerp, Jean S. Loewenberg, Dorothy E. Bourassa, James M. Wall and Melina M. T.
Murphy, each of them singly, my true and lawful attorneys, with full power to
them and each of them to sign for me and in my name in the capacity indicated
below any and all registration statements, including, but not limited to, Forms
N-8A, N-8B-1, S-5, N-1 and N-1A, as amended from time to time, and any and all
amendments thereto to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for
the purpose of registering from time to time all investment companies of which I
am now or hereafter a Director or Trustee and for which Keystone Custodian
Funds, Inc. serves as Adviser or Manager and registering from time to time the
shares of such companies, and generally to do all such things in my name and in
my behalf to enable such investment companies to comply with the provisions of
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, and all requirements and regulations of the Securities and Exchange
Commission thereunder, hereby ratifying and confirming my signature as it may be
signed by my said attorneys to any and all registration statements and
amendments thereto.
/s/ Frederick Amling
Frederick Amling
Director/Trustee
Dated: December 14, 1994
<PAGE>
POWER OF ATTORNEY
I, the undersigned, hereby constitute Roger T. Wickers, Rosemary D. Van
Antwerp, Jean S. Loewenberg, Dorothy E. Bourassa, James M. Wall and Melina M. T.
Murphy, each of them singly, my true and lawful attorneys, with full power to
them and each of them to sign for me and in my name in the capacity indicated
below any and all registration statements, including, but not limited to, Forms
N-8A, N-8B-1, S-5, N-1 and N-1A, as amended from time to time, and any and all
amendments thereto to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for
the purpose of registering from time to time all investment companies of which I
am now or hereafter a Director or Trustee and for which Keystone Custodian
Funds, Inc. serves as Adviser or Manager and registering from time to time the
shares of such companies, and generally to do all such things in my name and in
my behalf to enable such investment companies to comply with the provisions of
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, and all requirements and regulations of the Securities and Exchange
Commission thereunder, hereby ratifying and confirming my signature as it may be
signed by my said attorneys to any and all registration statements and
amendments thereto.
/s/ Charles A. Austin III
Charles A. Austin III
Director/Trustee
Dated: December 14, 1994
<PAGE>
POWER OF ATTORNEY
I, the undersigned, hereby constitute Roger T. Wickers, Rosemary D. Van
Antwerp, Jean S. Loewenberg, Dorothy E. Bourassa, James M. Wall and Melina M. T.
Murphy, each of them singly, my true and lawful attorneys, with full power to
them and each of them to sign for me and in my name in the capacity indicated
below any and all registration statements, including, but not limited to, Forms
N-8A, N-8B-1, S-5, N-1 and N-1A, as amended from time to time, and any and all
amendments thereto to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for
the purpose of registering from time to time all investment companies of which I
am now or hereafter a Director or Trustee and for which Keystone Custodian
Funds, Inc. serves as Adviser or Manager and registering from time to time the
shares of such companies, and generally to do all such things in my name and in
my behalf to enable such investment companies to comply with the provisions of
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, and all requirements and regulations of the Securities and Exchange
Commission thereunder, hereby ratifying and confirming my signature as it may be
signed by my said attorneys to any and all registration statements and
amendments thereto.
/s/ Edwin D. Campbell
Edwin D. Campbell
Director/Trustee
Dated: December 14, 1994
<PAGE>
POWER OF ATTORNEY
I, the undersigned, hereby constitute Roger T. Wickers, Rosemary D. Van
Antwerp, Jean S. Loewenberg, Dorothy E. Bourassa, James M. Wall and Melina M. T.
Murphy, each of them singly, my true and lawful attorneys, with full power to
them and each of them to sign for me and in my name in the capacity indicated
below any and all registration statements, including, but not limited to, Forms
N-8A, N-8B-1, S-5, N-1 and N-1A, as amended from time to time, and any and all
amendments thereto to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for
the purpose of registering from time to time all investment companies of which I
am now or hereafter a Director or Trustee and for which Keystone Custodian
Funds, Inc. serves as Adviser or Manager and registering from time to time the
shares of such companies, and generally to do all such things in my name and in
my behalf to enable such investment companies to comply with the provisions of
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, and all requirements and regulations of the Securities and Exchange
Commission thereunder, hereby ratifying and confirming my signature as it may be
signed by my said attorneys to any and all registration statements and
amendments thereto.
/s/ Charles F. Chapin
Charles F. Chapin
Director/Trustee
Dated: December 14, 1994
<PAGE>
POWER OF ATTORNEY
I, the undersigned, hereby constitute Roger T. Wickers, Rosemary D. Van
Antwerp, Jean S. Loewenberg, Dorothy E. Bourassa, James M. Wall and Melina M. T.
Murphy, each of them singly, my true and lawful attorneys, with full power to
them and each of them to sign for me and in my name in the capacity indicated
below any and all registration statements, including, but not limited to, Forms
N-8A, N-8B-1, S-5, N-1 and N-1A, as amended from time to time, and any and all
amendments thereto to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for
the purpose of registering from time to time all investment companies of which I
am now or hereafter a Director or Trustee and for which Keystone Custodian
Funds, Inc. serves as Adviser or Manager and registering from time to time the
shares of such companies, and generally to do all such things in my name and in
my behalf to enable such investment companies to comply with the provisions of
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, and all requirements and regulations of the Securities and Exchange
Commission thereunder, hereby ratifying and confirming my signature as it may be
signed by my said attorneys to any and all registration statements and
amendments thereto.
/s/ K. Dun Gifford
K. Dun Gifford
Director/Trustee
Dated: December 14, 1994
<PAGE>
POWER OF ATTORNEY
I, the undersigned, hereby constitute Roger T. Wickers, Rosemary D. Van
Antwerp, Jean S. Loewenberg, Dorothy E. Bourassa, James M. Wall and Melina M. T.
Murphy, each of them singly, my true and lawful attorneys, with full power to
them and each of them to sign for me and in my name in the capacity indicated
below any and all registration statements, including, but not limited to, Forms
N-8A, N-8B-1, S-5, N-1 and N-1A, as amended from time to time, and any and all
amendments thereto to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for
the purpose of registering from time to time all investment companies of which I
am now or hereafter a Director or Trustee and for which Keystone Custodian
Funds, Inc. serves as Adviser or Manager and registering from time to time the
shares of such companies, and generally to do all such things in my name and in
my behalf to enable such investment companies to comply with the provisions of
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, and all requirements and regulations of the Securities and Exchange
Commission thereunder, hereby ratifying and confirming my signature as it may be
signed by my said attorneys to any and all registration statements and
amendments thereto.
/s/ Leroy Keith, Jr.
Leroy Keith, Jr.
Director/Trustee
Dated: December 14, 1994
<PAGE>
POWER OF ATTORNEY
I, the undersigned, hereby constitute Roger T. Wickers, Rosemary D. Van
Antwerp, Jean S. Loewenberg, Dorothy E. Bourassa, James M. Wall and Melina M. T.
Murphy, each of them singly, my true and lawful attorneys, with full power to
them and each of them to sign for me and in my name in the capacity indicated
below any and all registration statements, including, but not limited to, Forms
N-8A, N-8B-1, S-5, N-1 and N-1A, as amended from time to time, and any and all
amendments thereto to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for
the purpose of registering from time to time all investment companies of which I
am now or hereafter a Director or Trustee and for which Keystone Custodian
Funds, Inc. serves as Adviser or Manager and registering from time to time the
shares of such companies, and generally to do all such things in my name and in
my behalf to enable such investment companies to comply with the provisions of
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, and all requirements and regulations of the Securities and Exchange
Commission thereunder, hereby ratifying and confirming my signature as it may be
signed by my said attorneys to any and all registration statements and
amendments thereto.
/s/ F. Ray Keyser,Jr.
F. Ray Keyser, Jr.
Director/Trustee
Dated: December 14, 1994
<PAGE>
POWER OF ATTORNEY
I, the undersigned, hereby constitute Roger T. Wickers, Rosemary D. Van
Antwerp, Jean S. Loewenberg, Dorothy E. Bourassa, James M. Wall and Melina M. T.
Murphy, each of them singly, my true and lawful attorneys, with full power to
them and each of them to sign for me and in my name in the capacity indicated
below any and all registration statements, including, but not limited to, Forms
N-8A, N-8B-1, S-5, N-1 and N-1A, as amended from time to time, and any and all
amendments thereto to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for
the purpose of registering from time to time all investment companies of which I
am now or hereafter a Director or Trustee and for which Keystone Custodian
Funds, Inc. serves as Adviser or Manager and registering from time to time the
shares of such companies, and generally to do all such things in my name and in
my behalf to enable such investment companies to comply with the provisions of
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, and all requirements and regulations of the Securities and Exchange
Commission thereunder, hereby ratifying and confirming my signature as it may be
signed by my said attorneys to any and all registration statements and
amendments thereto.
/s/ David M. Richardson
David M. Richardson
Director/Trustee
Dated: December 14, 1994
<PAGE>
POWER OF ATTORNEY
I, the undersigned, hereby constitute Roger T. Wickers, Rosemary D. Van
Antwerp, Jean S. Loewenberg, Dorothy E. Bourassa, James M. Wall and Melina M. T.
Murphy, each of them singly, my true and lawful attorneys, with full power to
them and each of them to sign for me and in my name in the capacity indicated
below any and all registration statements, including, but not limited to, Forms
N-8A, N-8B-1, S-5, N-1 and N-1A, as amended from time to time, and any and all
amendments thereto to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for
the purpose of registering from time to time all investment companies of which I
am now or hereafter a Director or Trustee and for which Keystone Custodian
Funds, Inc. serves as Adviser or Manager and registering from time to time the
shares of such companies, and generally to do all such things in my name and in
my behalf to enable such investment companies to comply with the provisions of
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, and all requirements and regulations of the Securities and Exchange
Commission thereunder, hereby ratifying and confirming my signature as it may be
signed by my said attorneys to any and all registration statements and
amendments thereto.
/s/ Richard J. Shima
Richard J. Shima
Director/Trustee
Dated: December 14, 1994
<PAGE>
POWER OF ATTORNEY
I, the undersigned, hereby constitute Roger T. Wickers, Rosemary D. Van
Antwerp, Jean S. Loewenberg, Dorothy E. Bourassa, James M. Wall and Melina M. T.
Murphy, each of them singly, my true and lawful attorneys, with full power to
them and each of them to sign for me and in my name in the capacity indicated
below any and all registration statements, including, but not limited to, Forms
N-8A, N-8B-1, S-5, N-1 and N-1A, as amended from time to time, and any and all
amendments thereto to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for
the purpose of registering from time to time all investment companies of which I
am now or hereafter a Director or Trustee and for which Keystone Custodian
Funds, Inc. serves as Adviser or Manager and registering from time to time the
shares of such companies, and generally to do all such things in my name and in
my behalf to enable such investment companies to comply with the provisions of
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, and all requirements and regulations of the Securities and Exchange
Commission thereunder, hereby ratifying and confirming my signature as it may be
signed by my said attorneys to any and all registration statements and
amendments thereto.
/s/ Andrew J. Simons
Andrew J. Simons
Director/Trustee
Dated: December 14, 1994