FIDELITY
(registered trademark)
NEW YORK
MUNICIPAL
FUNDS
ANNUAL REPORT
JANUARY 31, 1997
CONTENTS
CHECK PAGE NUMBERS !!!
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PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE 3 NED JOHNSON ON INVESTING
STRATEGIES
FIDELITY NEW YORK MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
4 PERFORMANCE
7 FUND TALK: THE MANAGER'S OVERVI
EW
10 INVESTMENT CHANGES
11 INVESTMENTS
18 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FIDELITY NEW YORK INSURED MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
22 PERFORMANCE
25 FUND TALK: THE MANAGER'S OVERVI
EW
28 INVESTMENT CHANGES
29 INVESTMENTS
35 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FIDELITY NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
39 PERFORMANCE
41 FUND TALK: THE MANAGER'S OVERVI
EW
43 INVESTMENT CHANGES
44 INVESTMENTS
52 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
NOTES 56 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT 60 THE AUDITORS' OPINION.
ACCOUNTANTS
DISTRIBUTIONS 61
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THIS REPORT AND THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTAINED HEREIN ARE SUBMITTED FOR
THE GENERAL
INFORMATION OF THE SHAREHOLDERS OF THE FUNDS. THIS REPORT IS NOT AUTHORIZED
FOR
DISTRIBUTION TO PROSPECTIVE INVESTORS IN THE FUNDS UNLESS PRECEDED OR
ACCOMPANIED BY
AN EFFECTIVE PROSPECTUS.
MUTUAL FUND SHARES ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OBLIGATIONS OF, OR GUARANTEED
BY, ANY DEPOSITORY INSTITUTION. SHARES ARE NOT INSURED BY THE FDIC,
FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD OR ANY OTHER AGENCY, AND ARE SUBJECT TO
INVESTMENT RISKS, INCLUDING POSSIBLE LOSS OF PRINCIPAL AMOUNT INVESTED.
NEITHER THE FUNDS NOR FIDELITY DISTRIBUTORS CORPORATION IS A BANK.
FOR MORE INFORMATION ON ANY FIDELITY FUND, INCLUDING CHARGES AND EXPENSES,
CALL
1-800-544-8888 FOR A FREE PROSPECTUS. READ IT CAREFULLY BEFORE YOU INVEST
OR SEND
MONEY.
PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE
(PHOTO_OF_EDWARD_C_JOHNSON_3D)DEAR SHAREHOLDER:
As 1997 begins, the stock and bond markets generally have continued on the
course they followed during the past year. Through January, stocks
maintained their unprecedented climb, with the large companies still
setting the pace. With low, stable interest rates, the bond market has
tended to mirror its historical returns in the mid-single digits.
While it's impossible to predict the future direction of the markets with
any degree of certainty, there are certain basic principles that can help
investors plan for their future needs.
The longer your investment time frame, the more likely it is that you will
be affected by short-term market volatility. A 10-year investment horizon
appropriate for saving for a college education, for example, enables you to
weather market cycles in a long-term fund, which may have a higher risk
potential, but also has a higher potential rate of return.
An intermediate-length fund could make sense if your investment horizon is
two to four years, while a short-term bond fund could be the right choice
if you need your money in one or two years.
If your time horizon is less than a year, you might want to consider moving
some of your bond investment into a money market fund. These funds seek
income and a stable share price by investing in high-quality, short-term
investments. Of course, it's important to remember that there is no
assurance that a money market fund will achieve its goal of maintaining a
stable net asset value of $1.00 per share, and that these types of funds
are neither insured nor guaranteed by any agency of the U.S. government.
Finally, no matter what your time horizon or portfolio diversity, it makes
good sense to follow a regular investment plan, investing a certain amount
of money in a fund at the same time each month or quarter and periodically
reviewing your overall portfolio. By doing so, you won't get caught up in
the excitement of a rapidly rising market, nor will you buy all your shares
at market highs. While this strategy - known as dollar cost averaging -
won't assure a profit or protect you from a loss in a declining market, it
should help you lower the average cost of your purchases.
If you have questions, please call us at 1-800-544-8888. We are available
24 hours a day, seven days a week to provide you the information you need
to make the investments that are right for you.
Best regards,
Edward C. Johnson 3d
FIDELITY NEW YORK MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
PERFORMANCE: THE BOTTOM LINE
There are several ways to evaluate historical performance. You can look at
the total percentage change in value, the average annual percentage change,
or the growth of a hypothetical $10,000 investment. Total return reflects
the change in value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of the fund's
dividend income and capital gains (the profits earned upon the sale of
securities that have grown in value). You can also look at the fund's
income, as reflected in the fund's yield, to measure performance. If
Fidelity had not reimbursed certain fund expenses, the past 10 years total
returns would have been lower.
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST 1 PAST 5 PAST 10
YEAR YEARS YEARS
Fidelity New York Municipal Income 3.22% 41.84% 95.27%
Lehman Brothers New York 4 Plus Year 4.17% n/a n/a
Municipal Bond Index
New York Municipal Debt Funds Average 2.62% 39.22% 90.52%
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS show the fund's performance in percentage terms
over a set period - in this case, one year, five years, or 10 years. For
example, if you invested $1,000 in a fund that had a 5% return over the
past year, the value of your investment would be $1,050. You can compare
the fund's returns to the performance of the Lehman Brothers New York 4
Plus Year Municipal Bond Index, which is a total return performance
benchmark for New York investment-grade municipal bonds with maturities of
at least four years. To measure how the fund's performance stacked up
against its peers, you can compare it to the New York municipal debt funds
average, which reflects the performance of 94 mutual funds with similar
objectives tracked by Lipper Analytical Services, Inc. over the past one
year. Both benchmarks reflect reinvestment of dividends and capital gains,
if any, and exclude the effect of sales charges.
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST 1 PAST 5 PAST 10
YEAR YEARS YEARS
Fidelity New York Municipal Income 3.22% 7.24% 6.92%
Lehman Brothers New York 4 Plus Year 4.17% n/a n/a
Municipal Bond Index
New York Municipal Debt Funds Average 2.62% 6.83% 6.62%
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS take the fund's cumulative return and show you
what would have happened if the fund had performed at a constant rate each
year. (Note: Lipper calculates average annual total returns by annualizing
each fund's total return, then taking an arithmetic average. This may
produce a slightly different figure than that obtained by averaging the
cumulative total returns and annualizing the result.)
$10,000 OVER 10 YEARS
IMAHDR PRASUN SHR__CHT 19970131 19970212 091906 S00000000000001
NY Muni Income LB Municipal Bond
00071 LB015
1987/01/31 10000.00 10000.00
1987/02/28 10085.60 10049.20
1987/03/31 10010.23 9942.68
1987/04/30 9349.04 9443.75
1987/05/31 9265.40 9396.91
1987/06/30 9416.65 9672.81
1987/07/31 9537.47 9771.47
1987/08/31 9568.17 9793.46
1987/09/30 9029.29 9432.37
1987/10/31 9146.00 9465.76
1987/11/30 9327.89 9712.91
1987/12/31 9528.80 9853.85
1988/01/31 9956.86 10204.84
1988/02/29 10064.73 10312.71
1988/03/31 9801.15 10193.08
1988/04/30 9840.69 10270.55
1988/05/31 9889.46 10240.86
1988/06/30 10061.86 10390.69
1988/07/31 10128.28 10458.44
1988/08/31 10159.68 10467.64
1988/09/30 10372.07 10657.10
1988/10/31 10614.67 10844.67
1988/11/30 10502.02 10745.33
1988/12/31 10664.51 10855.26
1989/01/31 10791.63 11079.74
1989/02/28 10706.05 10953.32
1989/03/31 10685.75 10927.14
1989/04/30 11002.64 11186.55
1989/05/31 11198.03 11418.90
1989/06/30 11356.22 11573.97
1989/07/31 11458.20 11731.49
1989/08/31 11397.51 11616.64
1989/09/30 11348.99 11582.02
1989/10/31 11412.22 11723.67
1989/11/30 11576.24 11928.83
1989/12/31 11654.39 12026.41
1990/01/31 11589.86 11969.53
1990/02/28 11666.37 12076.05
1990/03/31 11636.25 12079.68
1990/04/30 11511.10 11992.22
1990/05/31 11770.17 12254.01
1990/06/30 11927.84 12361.72
1990/07/31 12127.39 12543.44
1990/08/31 11927.52 12361.31
1990/09/30 11925.46 12368.36
1990/10/31 11995.72 12592.72
1990/11/30 12210.02 12845.96
1990/12/31 12247.81 12901.84
1991/01/31 12413.98 13074.98
1991/02/28 12492.60 13188.73
1991/03/31 12551.88 13193.48
1991/04/30 12730.23 13368.95
1991/05/31 12821.69 13487.80
1991/06/30 12859.31 13474.45
1991/07/31 13061.09 13638.57
1991/08/31 13220.84 13818.19
1991/09/30 13447.97 13998.10
1991/10/31 13586.04 14124.09
1991/11/30 13645.57 14163.49
1991/12/31 13886.88 14467.44
1992/01/31 13766.73 14500.43
1992/02/29 13825.61 14505.07
1992/03/31 13845.52 14510.43
1992/04/30 13977.76 14639.58
1992/05/31 14192.65 14811.88
1992/06/30 14474.24 15060.43
1992/07/31 14923.80 15511.94
1992/08/31 14731.31 15360.70
1992/09/30 14818.83 15461.16
1992/10/31 14588.10 15309.17
1992/11/30 14924.84 15583.36
1992/12/31 15133.66 15742.47
1993/01/31 15319.68 15925.55
1993/02/28 15918.62 16501.58
1993/03/31 15748.33 16327.16
1993/04/30 15907.48 16491.90
1993/05/31 16008.65 16584.58
1993/06/30 16280.29 16861.38
1993/07/31 16294.94 16883.47
1993/08/31 16669.38 17234.98
1993/09/30 16842.94 17431.29
1993/10/31 16856.24 17464.93
1993/11/30 16676.93 17311.06
1993/12/31 17085.19 17676.50
1994/01/31 17265.88 17878.37
1994/02/28 16752.87 17415.32
1994/03/31 15893.99 16706.16
1994/04/30 16023.15 16847.83
1994/05/31 16196.68 16993.90
1994/06/30 15998.84 16890.07
1994/07/31 16336.64 17199.67
1994/08/31 16400.37 17259.18
1994/09/30 16073.77 17005.81
1994/10/31 15692.92 16703.79
1994/11/30 15211.08 16401.78
1994/12/31 15715.91 16762.79
1995/01/31 16267.96 17241.87
1995/02/28 16826.01 17743.26
1995/03/31 17019.24 17947.13
1995/04/30 17052.54 17968.31
1995/05/31 17668.57 18541.68
1995/06/30 17452.78 18380.37
1995/07/31 17558.19 18554.61
1995/08/31 17812.20 18789.88
1995/09/30 17904.64 18908.82
1995/10/31 18237.38 19183.76
1995/11/30 18581.39 19502.02
1995/12/31 18791.66 19689.43
1996/01/31 18917.74 19838.09
1996/02/29 18721.57 19704.18
1996/03/31 18442.17 19452.36
1996/04/30 18384.34 19397.31
1996/05/31 18374.97 19389.55
1996/06/30 18607.31 19600.70
1996/07/31 18767.13 19779.07
1996/08/31 18710.02 19774.32
1996/09/30 19022.67 20051.16
1996/10/31 19262.52 20277.94
1996/11/30 19626.35 20649.03
1996/12/31 19505.16 20562.30
1997/01/31 19527.10 20601.16
IMATRL PRASUN SHR__CHT 19970131 19970212 091909 R00000000000123
$10,000 OVER 10 YEARS: Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested
in Fidelity New York Municipal Income Fund on January 31, 1987. As the
chart shows, by January 31, 1997, the value of the investment would have
grown to $19,527- a 95.27% increase on the initial investment. For
comparison, look at how the Lehman Brothers Municipal Bond Index, which
reflects the performance of the investment-grade municipal bond market, did
over the same period. With dividends reinvested, the same $10,000 would
have grown to $20,601- a 106.01% increase.
UNDERSTANDING
PERFORMANCE
How a fund did yesterday is
no guarantee of how it will do
tomorrow. Bond prices, for
example, generally move in
the opposite direction of
interest rates. In turn, the
share price, return, and yield of
a fund that invests in bonds
will vary. That means if you
sell your shares during a
market downturn, you might
lose money. But if you can ride
out the market's ups and
downs, you may have a gain.
(checkmark)
TOTAL RETURN COMPONENTS
YEARS ENDED JANUARY 31,
1997 1996 1995 1994 1993
Dividend returns 5.20% 5.93% 5.27% 5.78% 6.74%
Capital appreciation returns -1.98% 10.36% -11.05% 6.92% 4.54%
Total returns 3.22% 16.29% -5.78% 12.70% 11.28%
TOTAL RETURN COMPONENTS include both dividend returns and capital
appreciation returns. A dividend return reflects the actual dividends paid
by the fund. A capital appreciation return reflects both the amount paid by
the fund to shareholders as capital gain distributions and changes in the
fund's share price. Both returns assume the dividends or capital gains paid
by the fund are reinvested.
DIVIDENDS AND YIELD
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PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST PAST 6 PAST 1
MONTH MONTHS YEAR
Dividends per share 5.39(cents) 31.66(cents) 63.10(cents)
Annualized dividend rate 5.18% 5.13% 5.18%
30-day annualized yield 4.91% - -
30-day annualized tax-equivalent yield 8.59% - -
</TABLE>
DIVIDENDS per share show the income paid by the fund for a set period. If
you annualize this number, based on an average share price of $12.25 over
the past month, $12.24 over the past six months and $12.18 over the past
year, you can compare the fund's income over these three periods. Dividends
per share show the income paid by the fund for a set period and do not
reflect any tax reclassifications. The 30-day annualized YIELD is a
standard formula for all funds based on the yields of the bonds in the
fund, averaged over the past 30 days. This figure shows you the yield
characteristics of the fund's investments at the end of the period. It also
helps you compare funds from different companies on an equal basis. The
tax-equivalent yield shows what you would have to earn on a taxable
investment to equal the fund's tax-free yield, if you're in the 42.86%
combined effective 1997 federal, state and New York City tax bracket, but
does not reflect the payment of the alternative minimum tax, if applicable.
FIDELITY NEW YORK MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
FUND TALK: THE MANAGER'S OVERVIEW
MARKET RECAP
Stable demand helped municipal
bonds perform better than their
investment-grade taxable
counterparts in the 12 months
ending January 31, 1997.
However, uncertainty over the
direction of the economy and
Federal Reserve Board monetary
policy affected all bonds. For the
period, the Lehman Brothers
Municipal Bond Index - a broad
measure of the municipal bond
market - had a total return of
3.85%. In comparison, the
Lehman Brothers Aggregate
Bond Index - a broad measure
of the performance of the U.S.
taxable bond market - returned
3.26%. New issue supply was
strong through most of the
period, but insurance companies
and individual investors helped
sustain demand. The diminishing
likelihood of significant tax reform
in the near future also helped
support the muni market. Like
most domestic bonds, munis
were affected by signs of strength
in the economy early in 1996.
Nevertheless, the market
conditions that supported the
muni market helped munis enter
the fall trading at expensive
levels relative to taxable
counterparts. However, demand
declined in October and munis
stalled because their rich
valuations made them less
attractive buy candidates, and
those investors who owned munis
sought to sell them to take profits.
Munis outperformed comparable
Treasuries in November and
December, but lagged in January.
From December on, munis and
the rest of the bond market
stalled as a result of conflicting
economic data and fears that
inflation might encourage the Fed
to raise short-term rates.
An interview with Norm Lind, Portfolio Manager of Fidelity New York
Municipal Income Fund
Q. HOW DID THE FUND PERFORM, NORM?
A. For the year that ended January 31, 1997, the fund had a total return of
3.22%. That was better than the New York municipal debt funds average, as
tracked by Lipper Analytical Services, which had a total return of 2.62%.
The fund's benchmark - the Lehman Brothers New York 4 Plus Year Municipal
Bond Index - had a total return of 4.17% over the same period.
Q. BONDS ISSUED BY NEW YORK CITY PLAYED AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN THE FUND'S
PERFORMANCE DURING THE PERIOD. CAN YOU TELL US ABOUT THAT?
A. Sure. Uninsured intermediate-maturity bonds - those with maturities
between three and 10 years - issued by New York City were among the best
performers in the New York municipal market, and they were a key reason why
the fund fared better than many of its competitors. Their strong
performance was triggered, in part, by the strength of Wall Street and its
contribution to New York City's rising revenues. Tightening credit spreads
were another reason for the strong performance of uninsured New York City
bonds. Credit spreads - which measure the difference in yields between
bonds with various credit ratings - tightened throughout the year, and
lower-quality bonds provided a smaller yield advantage over higher-quality
bonds than they had previously.
Q. WHILE THE FUND BEAT THE AVERAGE FUND OF ITS TYPE, IT LAGGED ITS
BENCHMARK. WHY WAS THAT?
A. While New York City bonds held by the fund helped performance, the fund
had a much lighter weighting in those bonds than its benchmark. These bonds
comprise roughly one-quarter of the benchmark, while the fund had about 10%
of its investments in them at the end of the period. As a general rule, I
try to avoid having the fund's performance overly dependent on the fortunes
of one issuer. That's one reason why I kept the fund's stake in New York
City bonds low relative to the benchmark. I held off buying a lot of these
bonds early on because I was worried that the city's budget process might
prove to be difficult and because I thought their prices were relatively
high. But in hindsight, I didn't build up the fund's stake in these bonds
fast enough, and that was probably my biggest disappointment during this
period.
Q. WERE THERE OTHER TYPES OF BONDS THAT BENEFITED FROM TIGHTER CREDIT
SPREADS?
A. State-appropriated bonds were another beneficiary of tighter credit
spreads. As I've mentioned in previous reports, the supply of
state-appropriated bonds varies a fair amount during the year, a function
of the state's budgetary process. I bought some state-appropriated bonds in
early 1996, correctly anticipating that supply would slow if the budget
were delayed, thereby constraining the state's ability to issue new debt.
Because of the lack of new issuance in the spring of 1996,
state-appropriated bonds began to
look relatively rich - or expensive compared to their historical value. So
I sold some to take advantage of their high prices. Late in the year,
supply was more normalized and state-appropriated bonds appeared to be
selling below what I felt their real value should be. So I bought back some
of these high-yielding bonds at attractive prices. Both the early strong
price performance of state-appropriated bonds and their high yields
benefited the fund's performance.
Q. THE FUND HAS A FAIR AMOUNT OF NON-CALLABLE PREMIUM BONDS. WHAT ARE THE
UPSIDE AND DOWNSIDE OF THESE BONDS?
A. First, the non-callability can provide the potential for price
appreciation when interest rates fall because the bond can't be redeemed by
its issuer before its stated maturity. Second, the premium - or above face
value - price gives the bond DE MINIMIS protection. This protects the
bond's gains from unfavorable tax treatment that can occur during
particular market environments. In periods when the market is strong,
non-callable premiums generally do well. In periods when the market is
flat, these bonds are at somewhat of a disadvantage since their yield is
not as high as other types of bonds.
Q. WHAT FACTORS DO YOU THINK WILL SHAPE THE NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MARKET IN
THE COMING MONTHS?
A. From a supply and demand standpoint, municipals in general appear to be
in pretty good shape, barring any unforeseen legislation that could
negatively affect them. I don't expect to see a tremendous amount of
supply, and what there is should be easily digested if demand remains firm.
As far as munis issued in New York state go, I'll be monitoring, among
other things, the state budget process. Last year, workmen's compensation
issues held up the budget. In 1997, the holdup could come from discussions
on welfare reform and/or the bailout of Long Island Lighting Company. If
that's the case, there may be less supply in the short term and New York
bonds may perform well.
THE VIEWS EXPRESSED IN THIS REPORT REFLECT THOSE OF THE PORTFOLIO MANAGER
ONLY THROUGH THE END OF THE PERIOD OF THE REPORT AS STATED ON THE COVER.
THE MANAGER'S VIEWS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT ANY TIME BASED ON MARKET AND
OTHER CONDITIONS.
FUND FACTS
GOAL: high current income
exempt from federal, state
and New York City income
taxes by investing primarily
in longer-term, investment
grade New York municipal
securities
FUND NUMBER: 071
TRADING SYMBOL: FTFMX
START DATE: July 10, 1984
SIZE: as of January 31,
1997, more than $401 million
MANAGER: Norm Lind, since
1993; manager, various
Fidelity and Spartan
Municipal Income funds;
joined Fidelity in 1986
(checkmark)
NORM LIND ON MUNICIPAL BOND
INSURANCE AND ITS EFFECT ON
THE NEW YORK MUNI MARKET:
"Roughly one-third of all new
municipal bonds issued in the
state of New York carry
insurance, compared to about
17% at the beginning of the
decade. One implication of this
development is the increasing
difficulty for this fund in finding
additional yield. Bonds that
might naturally carry an
A-rating, an Aa-rating or
even a Baa-rating are being
insured and offer lower yields
because they are insured. In
fact, the high incidence of
insurance helps to explain why
the difference in yield between
higher- and lower-quality bonds
has narrowed over the past
year. Many yield-hungry
investors gravitated toward
securities without insurance -
such as uninsured New York
City bonds - in order to find
extra income. In the process,
they sent some uninsured bond
yields closer to yields offered
by insured bonds. Even
though this situation has posed
a significant challenge, I look
for high-yielding opportunities
that might crop up as a
function of structure, demand
or other factors."
FIDELITY NEW YORK MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
INVESTMENT CHANGES
TOP FIVE SECTORS AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997
% OF FUND'S % OF FUND'S INVESTMENT
INVESTMENTS S
IN THESE SECTORS
6 MONTHS AGO
General Obligation 36.4 33.0
Transportation 15.6 16.4
Special Tax 12.6 13.1
Water & Sewer 9.8 8.9
Escrowed/Pre-Refunded 5.8 7.6
AVERAGE YEARS TO MATURITY AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997
6 MONTHS AGO
Years 15.0 15.5
AVERAGE YEARS TO MATURITY IS BASED ON THE AVERAGE TIME UNTIL PRINCIPAL
PAYMENTS ARE EXPECTED FROM EACH OF THE FUND'S BONDS, WEIGHTED BY DOLLAR
AMOUNT.
DURATION AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997
6 MONTHS AGO
Years 7.7 8.0
DURATION SHOWS HOW MUCH A BOND FUND'S PRICE FLUCTUATES WITH CHANGES IN
COMPARABLE INTEREST RATES. IF RATES RISE 1%, FOR EXAMPLE, A FUND WITH A
FIVE-YEAR DURATION IS LIKELY TO LOSE ABOUT 5% OF ITS VALUE. OTHER FACTORS
ALSO CAN INFLUENCE A BOND FUND'S PERFORMANCE AND SHARE PRICE. ACCORDINGLY,
A BOND FUND'S ACTUAL PERFORMANCE MAY DIFFER FROM THIS EXAMPLE. BEGINNING
WITH THE REPORTING CYCLE OF JUNE, 1996, THE MODEL USED TO CALCULATE
DURATIONS MAY BE SLIGHTLY MODIFIED IN ORDER TO FURTHER REFINE THIS
INFORMATION. THESE CHANGES IN METHODOLOGY MAY PRODUCE ADJUSTMENTS IN
HISTORICAL DURATION FIGURES.
QUALITY DIVERSIFICATION (MOODY'S RATINGS)
AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997 AS OF JULY 31, 1996
Aaa 29.6%
Aa, A 38.2%
Baa 31.3%
Non-rated 0.0%
Short-term
investments 0.9%
Aaa 31.2%
Aa, A 38.9%
Baa 27.9%
Non-rated 0.7%
Short-term
investments 1.3%
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 29.1
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 37.2
Row: 1, Col: 3, Value: 31.3
Row: 1, Col: 4, Value: 0.0
Row: 1, Col: 5, Value: 2.4
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 34.5
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 34.0
Row: 1, Col: 3, Value: 26.6
Row: 1, Col: 4, Value: 2.0
Row: 1, Col: 5, Value: 3.0
AMOUNTS SHOWN ARE AS A PERCENTAGE OF THE FUND'S INVESTMENTS. WHERE MOODY'S
RATINGS ARE NOT AVAILABLE, WE HAVE USED S&P RATINGS.
FIDELITY NEW YORK MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
INVESTMENTS JANUARY 31, 1997
Showing Percentage of Total Value of Investments in Securities
MUNICIPAL BONDS - 99.1%
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - 91.4%
Albany County Gen. Oblig. Unltd. Tax
5.85% 6/1/13 (FGIC Insured) Aaa $ 1,275,000 $ 1,300,500
Erie County Gen. Oblig. Series B,
5.50% 6/15/14 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 1,500,000 1,483,125
Erie County Wtr. Auth. Impt. & Extension Rev.
3rd Series, 6.10% 12/1/04
(Escrowed to Maturity) (d) A 2,000,000 2,112,500
Franklin County Ctfs. of Prtn.
(Court House Redev. Proj.) 8.125% 8/1/06 BBB- 800,000 872,000
Monroe County Gen. Oblig. Bond:
6% 6/1/05 Aa 2,155,000 2,330,094
6.50% 6/1/06 Aa 3,745,000 4,156,950
Nassau County Gen. Oblig.:
Series T, 5.20% 9/1/11 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 2,695,000 2,620,888
Series U, 5.25% 11/1/15 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 2,150,000 2,045,188
New York City Gen. Oblig.:
Rfdg.:
Series A, 7% 8/1/03 Baa1 2,000,000 2,180,000
Series B, 5.70% 8/15/02 Baa1 1,170,000 1,200,713
Series F, 6% 8/1/16 Baa1 7,750,000 7,604,688
Series B:
6.75% 8/15/03 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 10,000,000 11,075,000
7.50% 2/1/06 Baa1 5,000,000 5,450,000
Series B, Sub-Series B-1, 7.20% 8/15/08 Baa1 1,000,000 1,093,750
Series C, 6.40% 8/1/03 Baa1 6,000,000 6,345,000
Series H:
7% 2/1/05
(Pre-Refunded to 2/1/02 @ 101.50) (d) Aaa 55,000 61,600
7% 2/1/05 Baa1 1,945,000 2,093,306
7% 2/1/06 Baa1 3,500,000 3,753,750
New York City Hsg. Dev. Corp. Mtg. Rev.
(Multi-Family Hsg.) Series A, 8.125%
1/1/19 (GNMA Coll.) AA 4,085,000 4,188,677
New York City Ind. Dev. Agcy. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(Japan Airlines Co. Ltd. Proj.) Series 91, 6%
11/1/15 (FSA Insured)
LOC Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. (b) Aaa 1,000,000 1,026,250
New York City Ind. Dev. Agcy. Spl. Facs. Rev.
(American Airlines, Inc. Proj.)
6.90% 8/1/24 (b) Baa2 8,000,000 8,640,000
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York City Muni. Assistance Corp. Rfdg.:
Series D, 6% 7/1/05 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa $ 3,000,000 $ 3,251,250
Series E:
6% 7/1/03 Aa 1,000,000 1,076,250
6% 7/1/04 Aa 4,835,000 5,221,800
6% 7/1/05 Aa 4,215,000 4,562,738
6% 7/1/06 Aa 1,000,000 1,082,500
New York City Muni. Wtr. Fin. Auth. Wtr. &
Swr. Sys. Rev.:
Series A:
7.40% 6/15/04
(Pre-Refunded to 6/15/00 @101.50) (d) A 1,250,000 1,384,375
7% 6/15/09 (FGIC Insured)
(Pre-Refunded to 6/15/01 @101) (d) A 2,525,000 2,793,281
7.375% 6/15/09
(Pre-Refunded to 6/15/99 @101.50) (d) A 1,850,000 2,011,875
7% 6/15/16 (FGIC Insured)
(Pre-Refunded to 6/15/01 @101.50) (d) Aaa 500,000 556,250
5.50% 6/15/20 A 2,315,000 2,152,950
5.50% 6/15/23 A 8,000,000 7,560,000
Series B, 5.875% 6/15/26 A 10,485,000 10,367,037
New York Metropolitan Trans. Auth:
(Contract Commuter Facs.):
Series 3, 7.375% 7/1/08 Baa1 5,400,000 6,129,000
7.50% 7/1/19 (Escrowed to Maturity) (d) Aaa 1,250,000 1,389,063
(Contract Trans. Facs.):
Rfdg.:
Series 5, 6.90% 7/1/05 Baa1 2,600,000 2,788,500
Series 7, 5.45% 7/1/07 Baa1 1,700,000 1,683,000
Series K:
6.30% 7/1/06 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 5,000,000 5,550,000
6.30% 7/1/07 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 5,000,000 5,575,000
Series 3, 7.375% 7/1/08 Baa1 1,830,000 2,077,050
Series A, 6.10% 7/1/26 (FSA Insured) Aaa 3,250,000 3,359,688
6.10% 7/1/21 (FSA Insured) Aaa 3,500,000 3,631,250
New York State Dorm Auth. Lease Rev.
Rfdg. (State Univ. Dorm. Facs.) Series A:
6% 7/1/03 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 5,370,000 5,759,325
6% 7/1/05 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,000,000 1,076,250
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York State Dorm. Auth. Rev.:
Rfdg.:
(City Univ. Sys.):
Series 1988 D, 8.20% 7/1/12 Baa1 $ 1,260,000 $ 1,345,050
Series C, 8.20% 7/1/14 Baa1 1,000,000 1,067,500
Series D, 5.75% 7/1/12 Baa1 4,230,000 4,235,288
(Colgate Univ.):
6% 7/1/16 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,450,000 1,535,188
6% 7/1/21 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 2,500,000 2,650,000
(State Univ. Edl. Facs.):
Series A:
6.50% 5/15/05 Baa1 4,600,000 4,945,000
5.50% 5/15/13 Baa1 1,250,000 1,209,375
5.25% 5/15/15 Baa1 10,055,000 9,363,719
6% 5/15/16 Baa1 5,000,000 4,987,500
Series B:
5.25% 5/15/05 Baa1 2,250,000 2,230,313
7.50% 5/15/11 Baa1 1,445,000 1,690,650
7.375% 5/15/14 Baa1 275,000 298,375
(City Univ. Sys. Consolidated):
2nd Series A, 5.75% 7/1/07 Baa1 3,515,000 3,585,300
Series C, 6% 7/1/03 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 3,295,000 3,538,006
Series D, 7% 7/1/09 Baa1 6,000,000 6,697,500
(Columbia Univ.):
Series A, 4.75% 7/1/14 Aaa 6,190,000 5,555,525
5.75% 7/1/09 Aaa 3,100,000 3,293,750
(Judicial Facs. Lease) Series B, 7% 4/15/16 Baa1 2,000,000 2,127,500
New York State Energy Research & Dev. Auth.
Facs. Rev. Rfdg. (Consolidated Edison Co.)
Series A, 6.10% 8/15/20 A1 10,500,000 10,696,875
New York State Envir. Facs. Corp. Poll. Cont. Rev.
(State Wtr. Revolving Fund):
(City Proj.) Series A, 7% 6/15/12 Aa 3,000,000 3,288,750
Series D:
6.10% 5/15/03 Aaa 2,240,000 2,424,800
6.20% 11/15/04 Aaa 1,250,000 1,373,438
6.40% 11/15/06 Aaa 1,840,000 2,049,300
Series E, 6.50% 6/15/14 Aa 3,500,000 3,727,500
Pooled Loan B, 5.20% 5/15/14 Aaa 2,220,000 2,147,850
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York State Hsg. Fin. Agcy. Rev.
(St. John Village Proj.)
Section 8, 8.25% 5/1/09 A $ 5,180,000 $ 5,231,800
New York State Local Gov't. Assistance Corp.:
Rfdg. Series C, 5.50% 4/1/17 A 7,900,000 7,781,500
Rfdg. Series E:
5.25% 4/1/16 A 4,500,000 4,303,125
5% 4/1/21 A 7,440,000 6,789,000
Series A, 5.80% 4/1/10 A 2,585,000 2,652,856
Series B, 6% 4/1/18 A 7,000,000 7,070,000
New York State Med. Care Facs. Fin. Agcy. Rev.:
Rfdg. (Good Samaritan Hosp. Proj.)
Series A, 8% 11/1/13 A 3,500,000 3,640,455
Rfdg. (Mental Health Svcs. Facs):
Series A, 8.875% 8/15/07 Baa1 4,225,000 4,400,718
Series B, 7.875% 8/15/20
(Pre-Refunded to 8/15/00 @ 102) (d) Baa1 325,000 367,656
Rfdg. (Presbyterian Hosp.)
Series A, 5.25% 8/15/14 Aa 3,000,000 2,853,750
(Mental Health Facs.) Series A,
7.50% 2/15/21 Baa1 135,000 148,669
(Mental Health Svcs. Facs. Impt.)
Series B, 7.875% 8/15/20 Baa1 885,000 974,606
New York State Med. Care Facs. Fin. Agcy.
Special Oblig. (Mental Health Care Svcs.
Facs. Impt.) Series A, 8.40% 5/1/06
(Escrowed to Maturity) (d) Aaa 1,000,000 1,248,750
New York State Mtg. Agcy. Rev. (Homeowner Mtg.):
Rfdg. Series 60, 6.05% 4/1/26 (b) Aa 2,775,000 2,768,063
Series 53, 5.90% 10/1/17 Aa 2,000,000 1,992,500
5.50% 4/1/19 (AMBAC Insured) (b) Aaa 1,600,000 1,518,000
New York State Pwr. Auth. Rev. & Gen. Purp.
Series CC, 5.125% 1/1/11 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 4,000,000 3,960,000
New York State Thruway Auth. Gen. Rev.
Series A, 5.80% 1/1/06 A1 3,000,000 3,123,750
New York State Thruway Auth.
Hwy. & Bridge Trust Fund:
Series A, 6.25% 4/1/04 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 5,590,000 6,107,075
Series B:
6% 4/1/03 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 6,000,000 6,435,000
6% 4/1/04 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 2,000,000 2,155,000
5.125% 4/1/15 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 425,000 400,031
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York State Thruway Auth. Svc. Contract Rev.
(Local Hwy. & Bridge):
5.75% 4/1/08 Baa1 $ 1,000,000 $ 1,001,250
7.25% 1/1/10
(Pre-Refunded to 1/1/01 @102) (d) Baa1 2,500,000 2,781,250
New York State Urban Dev. Corp. Rev.:
(Correctional Cap. Facs.):
Series 1, 7.75% 1/1/14
(Pre-Refunded to 1/1/00 @ 102) (d) Aaa 1,000,000 1,110,000
Series 5, 5.90% 1/1/08 Baa1 1,455,000 1,485,919
Series 6, 5.375% 1/1/15 Baa1 4,000,000 3,765,000
(Onondaga County Convention Proj.)
7.875% 1/1/20
(Pre-Refunded to 1/1/00 @ 102) (d) Aaa 2,250,000 2,562,188
North Hemstead Rfdg. Series B, 6.10%
4/1/06 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 2,000,000 2,187,500
Onondaga County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Rev.
(Bristol-Meyers Squibb Co. Proj.)
5.75% 3/1/24 (b) Aaa 1,420,000 1,421,775
Suffolk County Unltd. Tax Series A,
6% 8/1/05 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 3,380,000 3,650,400
Suffolk County Wtr. Auth. Wtrwks. Rev.
5% 6/1/15 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 4,000,000 3,715,000
Syracuse Ind. Dev. Agcy. Civic Facs. Rev.
(St. Joseph's Hosp. Health Ctr. Proj.)
7.50% 6/1/18 Baa1 1,265,000 1,431,031
Syracuse Ind. Dev. Agcy. Parking Facs. Rev.
(Syracuse Econ. Dev. Corp.)
Series A, 7.70% 6/1/15
(Pre-Refunded to 6/1/99 @ 102) (d) A 2,445,000 2,683,388
Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Auth. Rev.:
Rfdg. (Gen. Purp.):
Series B, 5% 1/1/14 Aa 2,000,000 1,907,500
Series Y, 6% 1/1/12 Aa 7,410,000 7,863,863
(Convention Ctr. Proj.) Series E:
7.25% 1/1/10 Baa1 2,000,000 2,282,500
6% 1/1/11 Baa1 2,500,000 2,556,250
(Gen. Purp.):
Series A:
4.60% 1/1/04 Aa 1,000,000 997,500
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Auth. Rev.: - continued
(Gen. Purp.) - continued
Series A: - continued
4.75% 1/1/14 Aa $ 1,685,000 $ 1,543,881
Series R, 6% 1/1/20 Aaa 1,580,000 1,651,100
361,256,062
NEW YORK & NEW JERSEY - 4.8%
New York & New Jersey Port Auth.:
Consolidated 85th Series:
5.20% 9/1/15 A1 2,300,000 2,216,625
5.375% 3/1/28 A1 15,525,000 15,001,031
Consolidated 92nd Series, 4.75% 1/15/29 A1 2,075,000 1,779,313
18,996,969
PUERTO RICO - 2.9%
Puerto Rico Commonwealth Urban
Renewal & Hsg. Corp. Rfdg.
7.875% 10/1/04 Baa 6,270,000 6,834,300
Puerto Rico Tel. Auth. Rev. 7.219%
1/6/15 (MBIA Insured) INFL (e) Aaa 4,800,000 4,584,000
11,418,300
TOTAL MUNICIPAL BONDS
(Cost $378,981,624) 391,671,331
MUNICIPAL NOTES (A) - 0.9%
NEW YORK - 0.9%
New York State Energy Research & Dev. Auth.
Poll. Cont. Rev. (Niagara Mohawk Proj.), VRDN:
Series 1985 A, 3.75%,
LOC Toronto-Dominion Bank, Canada A-1+ 1,700,000 1,700,000
Series 1986 A, 3.75%,
LOC Toronto-Dominion Bank, Canada (b) P-1 200,000 200,000
Series 1987 A, 3.85%,
LOC Toronto-Dominion Bank, Canada - 1,600,000 1,600,000
TOTAL MUNICIPAL NOTES
(Cost $3,500,000) 3,500,000
TOTAL INVESTMENTS
(Cost $382,481,624) $ 395,171,331
SECURITY TYPE ABBREVIATIONS
INFL - Inverse Floating Rate Security
VRDN - Variable Rate Demand Notes
LEGEND
(a) The coupon rate shown on floating or adjustable rate securities
represents the rate at period end.
(b) Private activity obligations whose interest is subject to the federal
alternative minimum tax for individuals.
(c) Standard & Poor's Corporation credit ratings are used in the absence of
a rating by Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
(d) Security collateralized by an amount sufficient to pay interest and
principal.
(e) Coupon is inversely indexed to a floating interest rate. The price will
be more volatile than the price of a comparable fixed rate security. The
rate shown is the rate at period end.
OTHER INFORMATION
The composition of long-term debt holdings as a percentage of total value
of investment in securities, is as follows (ratings are unaudited):
MOODY'S RATINGS S&P RATINGS
Aaa, Aa, A 66.1% AAA, AA, A 65.7%
Baa 31.1% BBB 29.3%
Ba 0.0% BB 2.2%
B 0.0% B 0.0%
Caa 0.0% CCC 0.0%
Ca, C 0.0% CC, C 0.0%
The distribution of municipal securities by revenue source, as a percentage
of total value of investment in securities, is as follows:
General Obligation 36.4%
Transportation 15.6
Special Tax 12.6
Water & Sewer 9.8
Escrowed/Pre-Refunded 5.8
Industrial Development 5.5
Education 5.0
Others (individually less than 5%) 9.3
TOTAL 100.0%
INCOME TAX INFORMATION
At January 31, 1997, the aggregate cost of investment securities for income
tax purposes was $382,481,624. Net unrealized appreciation aggregated
$12,689,707, of which $14,637,002 related to appreciated investment
securities and $1,947,295 related to depreciated investment securities.
At January 31, 1997, the fund had a capital loss carryforward of
approximately $2,801,589 which will expire on January 31, 2004.
At January 31, 1997, the fund was required to defer $501,469 of losses on
futures contracts.
FIDELITY NEW YORK MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
JANUARY 31, 1997
ASSETS
Investment in securities, at value (cost $382,481,624) - $ 395,171,331
See accompanying schedule
Cash 42,987
Receivable for investments sold 1,299,709
Interest receivable 5,552,076
TOTAL ASSETS 402,066,103
LIABILITIES
Payable for fund shares redeemed $ 414,936
Distributions payable 351,687
Accrued management fee 132,002
Other payables and accrued expenses 96,670
TOTAL LIABILITIES 995,295
NET ASSETS $ 401,070,808
Net Assets consist of:
Paid in capital $ 391,658,490
Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) (3,277,389)
on investments
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on 12,689,707
investments
NET ASSETS, for 32,636,412 shares outstanding $ 401,070,808
NET ASSET VALUE, offering price and redemption price per $12.29
share ($401,070,808 (divided by) 32,636,412 shares)
</TABLE>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
YEAR ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997
INTEREST INCOME $ 23,566,473
EXPENSES
Management fee $ 1,618,491
Transfer agent, accounting and custodian fees 717,936
and expenses
Non-interested trustees' compensation 1,231
Registration fees 32,554
Audit 54,204
Legal 4,078
Reports to shareholders 510
Miscellaneous 4,497
Total expenses before reductions 2,433,501
Expense reductions (3,311) 2,430,190
NET INTEREST INCOME 21,136,283
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS)
Net realized gain (loss) on:
Investment securities 2,913,792
Futures contracts 72,129 2,985,921
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:
Investment securities (11,588,225)
Futures contracts (23,770) (11,611,995)
NET GAIN (LOSS) (8,626,074)
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING $ 12,510,209
FROM OPERATIONS
</TABLE>
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
YEAR ENDED YEAR ENDED
JANUARY 31, JANUARY 31,
1997 1996
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS
Operations $ 21,136,283 $ 22,095,138
Net interest income
Net realized gain (loss) 2,985,921 2,257,651
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) (11,611,995) 38,620,075
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING 12,510,209 62,972,864
FROM OPERATIONS
Distributions to shareholders (21,198,336) (22,337,978)
From net interest income
From net realized gain (68,591) -
TOTAL DISTRIBUTIONS (21,266,927) (22,337,978)
Share transactions 52,530,432 111,567,868
Net proceeds from sales of shares
Reinvestment of distributions 16,719,201 17,664,509
Cost of shares redeemed (93,100,425) (130,423,114)
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING (23,850,792) (1,190,737)
FROM SHARE TRANSACTIONS
TOTAL INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS (32,607,510) 39,444,149
NET ASSETS
Beginning of period 433,678,318 394,234,169
End of period (including undistributed net interest $ 401,070,808 $ 433,678,318
income of $0 and $62,053, respectively)
OTHER INFORMATION
Shares
Sold 4,305,312 9,306,254
Issued in reinvestment of distributions 1,372,180 1,460,706
Redeemed (7,633,180) (10,843,133)
Net increase (decrease) (1,955,688) (76,173)
</TABLE>
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
YEARS ENDED JANUARY 31, NINE MONTHS
ENDED
JANUARY 31,
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
1997 1996 1995 1994 C 1993
SELECTED PER-SHARE DATA
Net asset value, beginning $ 12.540 $ 11.370 $ 13.050 $ 12.660 $ 12.100
of period
Income from Investment .629 .635 .673 .714 .580
Operations
Net interest income
Net realized and unrealized (.246) 1.177 (1.440) .850 .560
gain (loss)
Total from investment .383 1.812 (.767) 1.564 1.140
operations
Less Distributions
From net interest income (.631) D (.642) D (.673) (.714) (.580)
From net realized gain (.002) - (.210) (.460) -
In excess of net realized - - (.030) - -
gain
Total distributions (.633) (.642) (.913) (1.174) (.580)
Net asset value, end of period $ 12.290 $ 12.540 $ 11.370 $ 13.050 $ 12.660
TOTAL RETURN B 3.22% 16.29% (5.78) 12.70% 9.60%
%
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL
DATA
Net assets, end of period $ 401,071 $ 433,678 $ 394,234 $ 491,421 $ 445,506
(000 omitted)
Ratio of expenses to average .59% .59% .58% .58% .61% A
net assets
Ratio of expenses to average .59% .58% .58% .58% .61% A
net assets after E
expense reductions
Ratio of net interest income to 5.15% 5.26% 5.77% 5.45% 6.08% A
average net assets
Portfolio turnover rate 44% 83% 34% 70% 45% A
</TABLE>
A ANNUALIZED
B TOTAL RETURNS FOR PERIODS OF LESS THAN ONE YEAR ARE NOT ANNUALIZED.
C EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 1, 1993, THE FUND ADOPTED STATEMENT OF POSITION 93-2,
"DETERMINATION, DISCLOSURE, AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT PRESENTATION OF INCOME,
CAPITAL GAIN, AND RETURN OF CAPITAL DISTRIBUTIONS BY INVESTMENT COMPANIES."
AS A RESULT, NET INTEREST INCOME PER SHARE MAY REFLECT CERTAIN
RECLASSIFICATIONS RELATED TO BOOK TO TAX DIFFERENCES.
D THE AMOUNT SHOWN REFLECTS CERTAIN RECLASSIFICATIONS RELATED TO BOOK TO
TAX DIFFERENCES (SEE NOTE 1 OF NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS).
E FMR OR THE FUND HAS ENTERED INTO VARYING ARRANGEMENTS WITH THIRD PARTIES
WHO EITHER PAID OR REDUCED A PORTION OF THE FUND'S EXPENSES.
FIDELITY NEW YORK INSURED MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
PERFORMANCE: THE BOTTOM LINE
There are several ways to evaluate historical performance. You can look at
the total percentage change in value, the average annual percentage change,
or the growth of a hypothetical $10,000 investment. Total return reflects
the change in value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of the fund's
dividend income and capital gains (the profits earned upon the sale of
securities that have grown in value). You can also look at the fund's
income, as reflected in the fund's yield, to measure performance. If
Fidelity had not reimbursed certain fund expenses, the past 10 years total
returns would have been lower.
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST 1 PAST 5 PAST 10
YEAR YEARS YEARS
Fidelity New York Insured Municipal Income 3.07% 39.07% 90.31%
Lehman Brothers New York Insured 3.75% n/a n/a
Municipal Bond Index
New York Insured Municipal Funds Average 2.04% 37.98% 91.92%
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS show the fund's performance in percentage terms
over a set period - in this case, one year, five years, or 10 years. For
example, if you invested $1,000 in a fund that had a 5% return over the
past year, the value of your investment would be $1,050. You can compare
the fund's returns to the performance of the Lehman Brothers New York
Insured Municipal Bond Index - a total return performance benchmark for
insured New York investment-grade municipal bonds with maturities of at
least one year. To measure how the fund's performance stacked up against
its peers, you can compare it to the New York insured municipal bond funds
average, which reflects the performance of 17 mutual funds with similar
objectives tracked by Lipper Analytical Services, Inc. over the past one
year. Both benchmarks reflect reinvestment of dividends and capital gains,
if any, and exclude the effect of sales charges.
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST 1 PAST 5 PAST 10
YEAR YEARS YEARS
Fidelity New York Insured Municipal Income 3.07% 6.82% 6.65%
Lehman Brothers New York Insured 3.75% n/a n/a
Municipal Bond Index
New York Insured Municipal Funds Average 2.04% 6.64% 6.73%
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS take the fund's cumulative return and show you
what would have happened if the fund had performed at a constant rate each
year. (Note: Lipper calculates average annual total returns by annualizing
each fund's total return, then taking an arithmetic average. This may
produce a slightly different figure than that obtained by averaging the
cumulative total returns and annualizing the result.)
$10,000 OVER 10 YEARS
IMAHDR PRASUN SHR__CHT 19970131 19970211 153701 S00000000000001
NY Insured Muni Income LB Municipal Bond
00095 LB015
1987/01/31 10000.00 10000.00
1987/02/28 10068.08 10049.20
1987/03/31 9951.71 9942.68
1987/04/30 9267.72 9443.75
1987/05/31 9160.44 9396.91
1987/06/30 9289.06 9672.81
1987/07/31 9392.24 9771.47
1987/08/31 9426.75 9793.46
1987/09/30 8902.33 9432.37
1987/10/31 9102.46 9465.76
1987/11/30 9309.48 9712.91
1987/12/31 9462.57 9853.85
1988/01/31 9924.40 10204.84
1988/02/29 9997.09 10312.71
1988/03/31 9696.33 10193.08
1988/04/30 9741.18 10270.55
1988/05/31 9756.00 10240.86
1988/06/30 9922.32 10390.69
1988/07/31 9975.36 10458.44
1988/08/31 10001.28 10467.64
1988/09/30 10211.39 10657.10
1988/10/31 10500.94 10844.67
1988/11/30 10332.88 10745.33
1988/12/31 10526.98 10855.26
1989/01/31 10663.56 11079.74
1989/02/28 10531.97 10953.32
1989/03/31 10509.42 10927.14
1989/04/30 10817.31 11186.55
1989/05/31 11048.36 11418.90
1989/06/30 11178.82 11573.97
1989/07/31 11268.18 11731.49
1989/08/31 11162.22 11616.64
1989/09/30 11111.25 11582.02
1989/10/31 11221.35 11723.67
1989/11/30 11428.66 11928.83
1989/12/31 11481.32 12026.41
1990/01/31 11414.46 11969.53
1990/02/28 11507.89 12076.05
1990/03/31 11530.73 12079.68
1990/04/30 11356.56 11992.22
1990/05/31 11655.98 12254.01
1990/06/30 11761.29 12361.72
1990/07/31 11965.86 12543.44
1990/08/31 11766.79 12361.31
1990/09/30 11777.06 12368.36
1990/10/31 11896.94 12592.72
1990/11/30 12138.45 12845.96
1990/12/31 12192.30 12901.84
1991/01/31 12336.64 13074.98
1991/02/28 12434.99 13188.73
1991/03/31 12455.61 13193.48
1991/04/30 12625.34 13368.95
1991/05/31 12748.00 13487.80
1991/06/30 12744.90 13474.45
1991/07/31 12915.61 13638.57
1991/08/31 13110.84 13818.19
1991/09/30 13260.18 13998.10
1991/10/31 13385.90 14124.09
1991/11/30 13417.93 14163.49
1991/12/31 13712.14 14467.44
1992/01/31 13684.07 14500.43
1992/02/29 13713.10 14505.07
1992/03/31 13712.06 14510.43
1992/04/30 13818.41 14639.58
1992/05/31 14037.76 14811.88
1992/06/30 14279.56 15060.43
1992/07/31 14720.96 15511.94
1992/08/31 14531.59 15360.70
1992/09/30 14599.75 15461.16
1992/10/31 14344.22 15309.17
1992/11/30 14700.67 15583.36
1992/12/31 14885.70 15742.47
1993/01/31 15084.03 15925.55
1993/02/28 15723.06 16501.58
1993/03/31 15536.75 16327.16
1993/04/30 15684.00 16491.90
1993/05/31 15767.94 16584.58
1993/06/30 16032.28 16861.38
1993/07/31 16051.63 16883.47
1993/08/31 16411.61 17234.98
1993/09/30 16613.21 17431.29
1993/10/31 16619.98 17464.93
1993/11/30 16438.14 17311.06
1993/12/31 16792.56 17676.50
1994/01/31 16948.91 17878.37
1994/02/28 16437.55 17415.32
1994/03/31 15612.16 16706.16
1994/04/30 15767.99 16847.83
1994/05/31 15955.30 16993.90
1994/06/30 15746.29 16890.07
1994/07/31 16090.53 17199.67
1994/08/31 16109.50 17259.18
1994/09/30 15797.40 17005.81
1994/10/31 15414.68 16703.79
1994/11/30 14970.93 16401.78
1994/12/31 15457.31 16762.79
1995/01/31 16019.88 17241.87
1995/02/28 16559.11 17743.26
1995/03/31 16692.68 17947.13
1995/04/30 16719.09 17968.31
1995/05/31 17271.60 18541.68
1995/06/30 17115.97 18380.37
1995/07/31 17247.05 18554.61
1995/08/31 17454.79 18789.88
1995/09/30 17554.01 18908.82
1995/10/31 17809.54 19183.76
1995/11/30 18124.58 19502.02
1995/12/31 18314.09 19689.43
1996/01/31 18463.65 19838.09
1996/02/29 18328.49 19704.18
1996/03/31 18041.43 19452.36
1996/04/30 17985.89 19397.31
1996/05/31 17948.54 19389.55
1996/06/30 18145.73 19600.70
1996/07/31 18314.34 19779.07
1996/08/31 18261.14 19774.32
1996/09/30 18509.55 20051.16
1996/10/31 18759.02 20277.94
1996/11/30 19120.22 20649.03
1996/12/31 19002.93 20562.30
1997/01/31 19030.86 20601.16
IMATRL PRASUN SHR__CHT 19970131 19970211 153705 R00000000000123
$10,000 OVER 10 YEARS: Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested
in Fidelity New York Insured Municipal Income Fund on January 31, 1987. As
the chart shows, by January 31, 1997, the value of the investment would
have grown to $19,031- a 90.31% increase on the initial investment. For
comparison, look at how the Lehman Brothers Municipal Bond Index, which
reflects the performance of the investment-grade municipal bond market, did
over the same period. With dividends and capital gains, if any, reinvested,
the same $10,000 would have grown to $20,601 - a 106.01% increase.
UNDERSTANDING
PERFORMANCE
How a fund did yesterday is
no guarantee of how it will
do tomorrow. Bond prices, for
example, generally move in
the opposite direction of
interest rates. In turn, the
share price, return, and yield of
a fund that invests in bonds
will vary. That means if you
sell your shares during a
market downturn, you might
lose money. But if you can ride
out the market's ups and
downs, you may have a gain.
(checkmark)
TOTAL RETURN COMPONENTS
YEARS ENDED JANUARY 31,
1997 1996 1995 1994 1993
Dividend returns 4.74% 5.50% 5.17% 5.63% 6.28%
Capital appreciation returns -1.67% 9.75% -10.65% 6.73% 3.95%
Total returns 3.07% 15.25% -5.48% 12.36% 10.23%
TOTAL RETURN COMPONENTS include both dividend returns and capital
appreciation returns. A dividend return reflects the actual dividends paid
by the fund. A capital appreciation return reflects both the amount paid by
the fund to shareholders as capital gain distributions and changes in the
fund's share price. Both returns assume the dividends or capital gains paid
by the fund are reinvested.
DIVIDENDS AND YIELD
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C> <C>
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST PAST 6 PAST 1
MONTH MONTHS YEAR
Dividends per share 4.72(cents) 27.55(cents) 54.66(cents)
Annualized dividend rate 4.78% 4.70% 4.73%
30-day annualized yield 4.60% - -
30-day annualized tax-equivalent yield 8.05% - -
</TABLE>
DIVIDENDS per share show the income paid by the fund for a set period. If
you annualize this number, based on an average share price of $11.63 over
the past month, $11.62 over the past six months and $11.56 over the past
year, you can compare the fund's income over these three periods. Dividends
per share show the income paid by the fund for a set period and do not
reflect any tax reclassifications. The 30-day annualized YIELD is a
standard formula for all funds based on the yields of the bonds in the
fund, averaged over the past 30 days. This figure shows you the yield
characteristics of the fund's investments at the end of the period. It also
helps you compare funds from different companies on an equal basis. The
tax-equivalent yield shows what you would have to earn on a taxable
investment to equal the fund's tax-free yield, if you're in the 42.86%
combined effective 1997 federal, state and New York City tax bracket, but
does not reflect the payment of the alternative minimum tax if applicable.
FIDELITY NEW YORK INSURED MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
FUND TALK: THE MANAGER'S OVERVIEW
MARKET RECAP
Stable demand helped municipal
bonds perform better than their
investment-grade taxable
counterparts in the 12 months
ending January 31, 1997.
However, uncertainty over the
direction of the economy and
Federal Reserve Board monetary
policy affected all bonds. For the
period, the Lehman Brothers
Municipal Bond Index - a broad
measure of the municipal bond
market - had a total return of
3.85%. In comparison, the
Lehman Brothers Aggregate
Bond Index - a broad measure
of the performance of the U.S.
taxable bond market - returned
3.26%. New issue supply was
strong through most of the
period, but insurance companies
and individual investors helped
sustain demand. The diminishing
likelihood of significant tax reform
in the near future also helped
support the muni market. Like
most domestic bonds, munis
were affected by signs of strength
in the economy early in 1996.
Nevertheless, the market
conditions that supported the
muni market helped munis enter
the fall trading at expensive
levels relative to taxable
counterparts. However, demand
declined in October and munis
stalled because their rich
valuations made them less
attractive buy candidates, and
those investors who owned munis
sought to sell them to take profits.
Munis outperformed comparable
Treasuries in November and
December, but lagged in January.
From December on, munis and
the rest of the bond market
stalled as a result of conflicting
economic data and fears that
inflation might encourage the Fed
to raise short-term rates.
An interview with Norm Lind, Portfolio Manager of Fidelity New York Insured
Municipal Income Fund
Q. HOW DID THE FUND PERFORM, NORM?
A. For the year that ended January 31, 1997, the fund had a total return of
3.07%. That was better than the New York insured municipal funds average,
as tracked by Lipper Analytical Services, which had a total return of
2.04%. The fund's benchmark - the Lehman Brothers New York Insured
Municipal Bond Index - had a total return of 3.75% over the same period.
Q. WHAT FACTORS HELPED THE FUND BEAT MANY OF ITS COMPETITORS?
A. One of the primary factors was the fund's stake in Aa-rated and A-rated
bonds, which stood at 18.5% at the end of the period. Credit spreads -
which measure the difference in yields between bonds with various credit
ratings - tightened throughout the year. As spreads tightened, bonds rated
A and Aa by Moody's Investors Service - provided a smaller amount of
additional yield over higher-quality bonds than they had previously. As the
yields on lower-quality bonds tightened, they generally fared better than
Aaa-rated bonds. What's more, the incremental yield offered by Aa and A
bonds - relative to insured bonds - also boosted the fund's income and
helped its total return.
Q. CAN YOU GIVE US A SPECIFIC EXAMPLE OF A LOWER-RATED BOND THAT BENEFITED
FROM TIGHTENING CREDIT SPREADS?
A. Sure. Bonds issued by the New York Local Government Assistance
Corporation - LGAC - were some of the prime beneficiaries of credit spread
tightening. LGAC is an authority established several years ago as a
financing vehicle for the state, which reached the end of its financing
program. Initially, the market was slow to recognize the value of these
relatively high-yielding A-rated bonds. But as credit spreads tightened,
these bonds performed well.
Q. OVER THE YEAR, YOU FAVORED NON-CALLABLE PREMIUM BONDS. WHAT'S THE UPSIDE
AND DOWNSIDE TO THESE BONDS?
A. The non-callability can provide upside potential when interest rates
fall since the bond can't be redeemed by its issuer, while the premium - or
above face value - price gives the bond DE MINIMIS protection. This
protects the bond's gains from unfavorable tax treatment that can occur
during particular market environments. In periods when the market is
strong, premium non-callables generally do well. In periods when the market
is flat, these bonds are at somewhat of a disadvantage since their yield is
not as high as other types of bonds.
Q. BONDS ISSUED BY NEW YORK CITY WERE SOME OF THE MARKET'S BEST PERFORMERS
DURING THE PAST YEAR. DID THE FUND BENEFIT FROM THEIR STRENGTH?
A. Not in the way you might think. I concentrated on New York City insured
bonds. But it was the uninsured debt issued by the city that enjoyed the
most price appreciation. Nonetheless, New York City insured bonds paid an
attractive yield relative to other insured bonds, and their
higher-than-average income benefited the fund.
Q. WHICH SECTORS DID YOU FAVOR AND WHICH DID YOU AVOID?
A. The top sectors throughout the period were general obligation bonds such
as those issued by New York City and the state, followed by bonds issued by
transportation entities such as the New York State Thruway Authority and
the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority. I generally avoided
electric utility bonds because of a potential bailout of Long Island
Lighting. There have been discussions that bailing out "LILCO" could bring
as much as $4 billion of additional municipal bonds into the muni market.
The fear is that a large amount of new supply could depress the bond prices
of other electric issuers. Although Brooklyn Union Gas announced a take
over of LILCO, there is still the feeling that some form of bail out will
be necessary.
Q. WHAT FACTORS DO YOU THINK WILL SHAPE THE NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MARKET IN
THE COMING MONTHS?
A. From a supply and demand standpoint, municipals in general appear to be
in pretty good shape, barring any unforeseen legislation that could
negatively affect them. I don't expect to see a tremendous amount of
supply, and what there is should be easily digested if demand remains firm.
As far as munis issued in New York state go, I'll be monitoring the state
budget process, among other things. Last year, workmen's compensation held
up the budget. In 1997, it's likely to be welfare reform and/or the bail
out of LILCO that delay a timely budget. If that's the case, there may be
less supply in the short term, and New York bonds may perform well.
THE VIEWS EXPRESSED IN THIS REPORT REFLECT THOSE OF THE PORTFOLIO MANAGER
ONLY THROUGH THE END OF THE PERIOD OF THE REPORT AS STATED ON THE COVER.
THE MANAGER'S VIEWS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT ANY TIME BASED ON MARKET AND
OTHER CONDITIONS.
FUND FACTS
GOAL: high current income
exempt from federal, state
and New York City income
taxes by investing primarily
in long-term, New York
municipal securities that are
covered by insurance
guaranteeing the timely
payment of principal and
interest
FUND NUMBER: 095
TRADING SYMBOL: FNTIX
START DATE: October 11, 1985
SIZE: as of January 31,
1997, more than $315 million
MANAGER: Norm Lind, since
1994; manager, various
Fidelity and Spartan
Municipal Income funds;
joined Fidelity in 1986
(checkmark)
NORM LIND ON MUNICIPAL BOND
INSURANCE AND ITS EFFECT ON
THE NEW YORK MUNI MARKET:
"Roughly one-third of all
new municipal bonds issued
in the state of New York carry
insurance, compared to 17%
at the beginning of the
decade. On one hand, that's
a positive development for this
fund because it expands my
investment options. On the
other hand, it makes it
increasingly difficult for me to
find additional yield among
lower investment-grade
bonds. Here's why: Bonds
that might naturally carry an
A-rating, Aa-rating or even a
Baa-rating are being insured
and now carry the highest
Aaa-rating - and lower yields
- - because they are insured. In
fact, the high incidence of
insurance helps to explain why
the difference in yield between
higher- and lower-quality
bonds has narrowed over the
past year. Many yield-hungry
investors gravitated toward
securities without insurance
- - such as uninsured New York
City bonds - in order to find
extra income. In the process,
they sent some uninsured bond
yields closer to yields offered
by insured bonds. Even though
this situation has posed
somewhat of a challenge, I
look for higher-yielding
opportunities that might crop
up as a function of a bond's
structure, popularity or other
factors."
FIDELITY NEW YORK INSURED MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
INVESTMENT CHANGES
TOP FIVE SECTORS AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997
% OF FUND'S % OF FUND'S INVESTMENT
INVESTMENTS S
IN THESE SECTORS
6 MONTHS AGO
General Obligation 37.2 30.0
Transportation 18.1 17.5
Water & Sewer 12.1 11.3
Special Tax 10.4 13.2
Health Care 9.6 7.9
AVERAGE YEARS TO MATURITY AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997
6 MONTHS AGO
Years 12.5 12.7
AVERAGE YEARS TO MATURITY IS BASED ON THE AVERAGE TIME UNTIL PRINCIPAL
PAYMENTS ARE EXPECTED FROM EACH OF THE FUND'S BONDS, WEIGHTED BY DOLLAR
AMOUNT.
DURATION AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997
6 MONTHS AGO
Years 7.5 7.7
DURATION SHOWS HOW MUCH A BOND FUND'S PRICE FLUCTUATES WITH CHANGES IN
COMPARABLE INTEREST RATES. IF RATES RISE 1%, FOR EXAMPLE, A FUND WITH A
FIVE-YEAR DURATION IS LIKELY TO LOSE ABOUT 5% OF ITS VALUE. OTHER FACTORS
ALSO CAN INFLUENCE A BOND FUND'S PERFORMANCE AND SHARE PRICE. ACCORDINGLY,
A BOND FUND'S ACTUAL PERFORMANCE MAY DIFFER FROM THIS EXAMPLE. BEGINNING
WITH THE REPORTING CYCLE OF JUNE, 1996, THE MODEL USED TO CALCULATE
DURATIONS MAY BE SLIGHTLY MODIFIED IN ORDER TO FURTHER REFINE THIS
INFORMATION. THESE CHANGES IN METHODOLOGY MAY PRODUCE ADJUSTMENTS IN
HISTORICAL DURATION FIGURES.
QUALITY DIVERSIFICATION (MOODY'S RATINGS)
AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997 AS OF JULY 31, 1996
Aaa 78.3%
Aa, A 18.5%
Baa 2.2%
Short-term
investments 1.0%
Aaa 77.6%
Aa, A 18.1%
Baa 2.2%
Short-term
investments 2.1%
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 50.0
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 17.6
Row: 1, Col: 3, Value: 18.1
Row: 1, Col: 4, Value: 2.2
Row: 1, Col: 5, Value: 2.1
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 50.0
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 30.6
Row: 1, Col: 3, Value: 12.5
Row: 1, Col: 4, Value: 3.9
Row: 1, Col: 5, Value: 3.0
AMOUNTS SHOWN ARE AS A PERCENTAGE OF THE FUND'S INVESTMENTS. WHERE MOODY'S
RATINGS ARE NOT AVAILABLE, WE HAVE USED S&P RATINGS.
FIDELITY NEW YORK INSURED MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
INVESTMENTS JANUARY 31, 1997
Showing Percentage of Total Value of Investments in Securities
MUNICIPAL BONDS - 99.0%
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - 97.2%
Albany County Rfdg. 5% 10/1/12
(FGIC Insured) Aaa $ 6,600,000 $ 6,253,500
Brookhaven 5.30% 10/1/04 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 1,075,000 1,104,563
Buffalo Swr. Auth. Swr. Sys. Rev. Series G,
5% 7/1/12 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 5,700,000 5,379,375
Cherry Valley Springfield Central School Dist.
Unltd. Tax:
7.80% 5/1/14 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 435,000 539,944
7.80% 5/1/15 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 435,000 540,488
7.80% 5/1/16 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 435,000 541,031
7.80% 5/1/17 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 435,000 543,750
7.80% 5/1/18 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 434,000 545,755
Clifton Park Wtr. Auth. Wtr. Sys. Rev. Rfdg.
5% 10/1/18 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 1,820,000 1,665,300
Erie County Gen. Oblig. Unltd. Tax Series A:
6% 2/1/04 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 1,100,000 1,182,500
6% 2/1/05 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 1,000,000 1,077,500
6% 2/1/06 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 1,030,000 1,111,113
Erie County Wtr. Auth. Wtr. Rev. Rfdg.
(Fourth Resolution) 0% 12/1/17
(AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,210,000 274,622
Monroe County Pub. Impt. Unltd. Tax:
7% 6/1/03 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 1,000,000 1,130,000
6.10% 3/1/04 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 2,000,000 2,135,000
7% 6/1/04 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 2,150,000 2,453,688
6.50% 6/1/05 Aa 3,450,000 3,825,188
6.50% 06/1/07 (AMBAC Insured)
(Escrowed to Maturity) (d) Aaa 95,000 105,806
6.50% 06/1/07 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 905,000 1,009,075
Monroe County Unltd. Tax:
6% 6/1/04 Aa 1,510,000 1,630,800
Nassau County Gen. Oblig.:
Series P, 6.30% 11/1/03 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 1,000,000 1,092,500
Series T, 5.20% 9/1/11 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 2,500,000 2,431,250
Series U, 5.25% 11/1/11 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,500,000 1,466,250
New York City Gen. Oblig.:
Rfdg. Series E, 6.20% 8/1/07 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,750,000 1,890,000
Rfdg. Series H, 6% 8/1/07 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 6,000,000 6,382,500
Series A-1, 6.25% 8/1/03 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 9,200,000 9,924,500
Series E, 6% 8/1/08 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 8,000,000 8,510,000
Series F, 3% 11/15/00 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,000,000 948,750
Series G, 6% 10/15/06 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 5,855,000 6,279,488
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York City Edl. Construction Fund
6.25% 10/1/03 (MBIA Insured) Aaa $ 1,895,000 $ 2,077,394
New York City Ind. Dev. Agcy. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(Japan Airlines Co. Ltd. Proj.) Series 91,
6% 11/1/15 (FSA Insured)
LOC Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. (b) Aaa 1,000,000 1,026,250
New York City Muni. Assistance Corp. Rfdg.:
Series D, 6% 7/1/05 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 2,000,000 2,167,500
Series E:
6% 7/1/04 Aa 4,830,000 5,216,400
6% 7/1/05 Aa 4,215,000 4,562,738
6% 7/1/06 Aa 1,000,000 1,082,500
New York City Trust Cultural Resources Rev.:
(Museum of Modern Art) Series One, 5% 1/1/00
(AMBAC Insured) Aaa 3,500,000 3,578,750
(New York Botanical Gardens)
5.75% 7/1/16 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,250,000 1,256,250
New York Metropolitan Trans. Auth. Trans. Facs. Rev.:
Rfdg.:
Series K:
6.30% 7/1/06 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 5,150,000 5,716,500
6.30% 7/1/07 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 2,600,000 2,899,000
Series N, 0% 7/1/11 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 5,980,000 2,720,900
Series A, 6% 7/1/16 (FSA Insured) Aaa 8,090,000 8,363,028
New York State Dorm. Auth. Lease Rev. Rfdg.
(State Univ. Dorm. Facs.) Series A,
6% 7/1/03 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,500,000 1,608,750
New York State Dorm. Auth. Rev.:
Rfdg. (City Univ. Sys. Consolidated)
5.50% 7/1/16 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 2,500,000 2,453,125
Rfdg. (Manhattanville) 0% 7/1/10
(MBIA Insured) Aaa 2,175,000 1,049,438
Rfdg. (New York Univ. Law School) 7.625%
7/1/09 (BIG Insured) Aaa 3,090,000 3,341,063
Rfdg. (State Univ. Edl. Facs.):
Series A:
6.50% 5/15/04 Baa1 3,000,000 3,221,250
5.50% 5/15/07 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 6,700,000 6,951,250
5.50% 5/15/09 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 6,000,000 6,150,000
Series B, 5.25% 5/15/11 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 2,950,000 2,935,250
(City Univ. Sys. Consolidated) Series C,
6.25% 7/1/05 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 6,320,000 6,928,300
(Columbia Univ.) 5.75% 7/1/09 Aaa 4,500,000 4,781,250
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York State Dorm. Auth. Rev.: - continued
(FIT Student Hsg.):
5.75% 7/1/03 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa $ 1,590,000 $ 1,679,438
5.75% 7/1/04 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,680,000 1,776,600
5.75% 7/1/05 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,650,000 1,742,813
5.75% 7/1/06 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,500,000 1,605,000
(Ideal Senior Living Hsg.) 7.625% 8/1/28
(MBIA Insured) Aaa 2,000,000 2,142,500
(New York Med. Center)
5.25% 2/1/07 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 5,500,000 5,534,375
(State Univ. Edl. Facs.) Series A, 6.80% 5/15/00
(FGIC Insured) Aaa 2,000,000 2,162,500
(St. Josephs Hosp. Health Ctr.):
6% 7/1/08 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,260,000 1,345,050
6% 7/1/09 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,500,000 1,599,375
(St. Vincent's Hosp. & Med. Ctr.):
6% 2/1/03 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,820,000 1,958,775
6% 8/1/03 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,875,000 2,027,344
New York State Energy Research & Dev. Auth. Poll.
Cont. Rev. (Central Hudson Gas)
Series B, 7.375% 10/1/14 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 2,250,000 2,460,938
New York State Envir. Facs. Corp.
Poll. Cont. Rev. (State Wtr.-Revolving Fund):
(New York City Wtr):
Series A, 7% 6/15/12 Aa 1,000,000 1,096,250
Series E, 6.25% 6/15/05 (AMBAC Insured) Aa 1,500,000 1,638,750
(Pooled Loan Prog. )
Series C, 5.85% 7/15/15 Aaa 3,060,000 3,121,200
Series D:
6.30% 5/15/05 Aaa 2,000,000 2,212,500
6.30% 11/15/05 Aaa 2,725,000 3,028,156
New York State Local Gov't. Assistance Corp.:
Rfdg. Series C, 5.50% 4/1/17 A 2,500,000 2,462,500
Rfdg. Series E:
5.25% 4/1/16 A 8,000,000 7,650,000
5% 4/1/21 A 4,100,000 3,741,250
Series B, 6% 4/1/18 A 4,425,000 4,469,250
New York State Hsg. Fin. Agcy. Svc. Contract
Oblig. Rev. Series A, 7.80% 9/15/11
(Pre-Refunded to 3/15/01 @ 102) (d) Aaa 5,000,000 5,706,250
New York State Med. Care Facs. Fin. Agcy. Rev.:
(Beth Israel Med. Ctr.) Series A, 7.50% 11/1/10
(MBIA Insured) Aaa 4,000,000 4,470,000
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York State Med. Care Facs. Fin. Agcy. Rev.: - continued
(Long-Term Health Care) Series A,
6.80% 11/1/14 (FSA Insured) Aaa $ 1,250,000 $ 1,339,063
(Mary Imogene Basset Hosp.) Series A,
7.125% 11/1/20 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 2,290,000 2,510,413
(Mental Health Scvs. Facs.) Series D:
7.40% 2/15/18
(Pre-Refunded to 2/15/02 @ 102) (d) Baa1 1,175,000 1,339,500
7.40% 2/15/18 Baa1 465,000 513,806
(North Shore Univ. Hosp. Mtg. Proj.) Series A:
7.25% 11/1/11 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,700,000 1,865,750
7.20% 11/1/20 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 6,000,000 6,570,000
New York State Mtg. Agcy. Rev.
(Homeowner Mtg.) (b):
Series 60, 6.05% 4/1/26 Aa 2,200,000 2,194,500
5.50% 4/1/19 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,400,000 1,328,250
New York State Thruway Auth. Gen. Rev.
Series C, 6.50% 1/1/01 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 3,620,000 3,896,025
New York State Thruway Auth.
Hwy. & Bridge Trust Fund,
Series B:
6% 4/1/03 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 3,240,000 3,474,900
6.40% 4/1/04 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 1,000,000 1,101,250
5.125% 4/1/15 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,475,000 1,388,344
New York State Urban Dev. Corp. Rev.
(Sports Fac. Assistance Prog.) Series A,
6.25% 4/1/06 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 2,515,000 2,769,644
Niagara Falls Bridge Commission Toll Rev.
Series B, 5.25% 10/1/15 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 10,000,000 9,762,500
Niagara Falls Pub. Impt.:
7.50% 3/1/08 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 995,000 1,197,731
7.50% 3/1/10 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,155,000 1,396,106
7.50% 3/1/11 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,245,000 1,504,894
7.50% 3/1/16 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,060,000 1,298,500
7.50% 3/1/17 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,200,000 1,477,500
Onondaga County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Rev.
(Bristol-Meyers Squibb Co. Proj.)
5.75% 3/1/24 (b) Aaa 1,410,000 1,411,763
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
Rockland County Gen. Oblig.:
6% 8/15/05 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa $ 1,475,000 $ 1,596,688
6% 8/15/06 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,550,000 1,677,875
Suffolk County Gen. Oblig. Series B,
5% 10/15/03 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,200,000 1,227,000
Suffolk County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Southwest
Swr. Sys. Rev. Rfdg.:
6% 2/1/07 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 1,500,000 1,629,375
6% 2/1/08 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 2,500,000 2,709,375
Suffolk County Southwest Swr. Dist. Rfdg.
6% 2/1/05 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,650,000 1,779,938
Suffolk County Wtr. Auth. Wtrwks. Rev. Rfdg.:
(Sr. Lien):
5.10% 6/1/09 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 2,000,000 1,995,000
5.10% 6/1/10 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 4,500,000 4,415,625
7.375% 6/1/12 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 30,000 32,025
(Sub. Lien) 6% 6/1/17 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 3,500,000 3,727,500
Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Auth. Rev.:
Rfdg. (Gen. Purp.):
Series B:
6% 1/1/03 Aa 1,250,000 1,343,750
6% 1/1/04 Aa 5,000,000 5,400,000
Series Y, 5.50% 1/1/17 Aa 6,000,000 6,000,000
(Convention Ctr. Proj.) Series E,
7.25% 1/1/10 Baa1 1,700,000 1,940,125
Yonkers Gen. Oblig. Rev.:
6% 8/1/04 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 1,020,000 1,091,400
6% 8/1/05 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 1,080,000 1,155,600
303,753,651
NEW YORK & NEW JERSEY - 1.8%
New York & New Jersey Port Auth.:
Rfdg. Consolidated 107th Series,
6% 10/15/06 A1 1,530,000 1,637,100
Consolidated 73rd Series,
6.75% 10/15/06 (b) A1 2,000,000 2,157,500
Consolidated 92nd Series,
4.75% 1/15/29 A1 2,075,000 1,779,313
5,573,913
TOTAL MUNICIPAL BONDS
(Cost $300,389,088) 309,327,564
MUNICIPAL NOTES (A) - 1.0%
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - 1.0%
New York City Muni. Wtr. Fin. Auth. Wtr. & Swr.
Sys. Rev., VRDN:
Series 1992-C, 3.65% (FGIC Insured) VMIG 1 $ 1,900,000 $ 1,900,000
Series 1994-C, 3.65% (FGIC Insured) VMIG 1 800,000 800,000
Series 1995-A, 3.75% (FGIC Insured) VMIG 1 300,000 300,000
TOTAL MUNICIPAL NOTES
(Cost $3,000,000) 3,000,000
TOTAL INVESTMENTS - 100%
(Cost $303,389,088) $ 312,327,564
SECURITY TYPE ABBREVIATIONS
VRDN - Variable Rate Demand Notes
LEGEND
(a) The coupon rate shown on floating or adjustable rate securities
represents the rate at period end.
(b) Private activity obligations whose interest is subject to the federal
alternative minimum tax for individuals.
(c) Standard & Poor's Corporation credit ratings are used in the absence of
a rating by Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
(d) Security collateralized by an amount sufficient to pay interest and
principal.
OTHER INFORMATION
The composition of long-term debt holdings as a percentage of total value
of investment in securities, is as follows (ratings are unaudited):
MOODY'S RATINGS S&P RATINGS
Aaa, Aa, A 96.8% AAA, AA, A 94.3%
Baa 2.2% BBB 4.1%
Ba 0.0% BB 0.0%
B 0.0% B 0.0%
Caa 0.0% CCC 0.0%
Ca, C 0.0% CC, C 0.0%
The distribution of municipal securities by revenue source, as a percentage
of total value of investment in securities, is as follows:
General Obligation 37.2%
Transportation 18.1
Water & Sewer 12.1
Special Tax 10.4
Health Care 9.6
Education 5.6
Others
(individually less than 5%) 7.0
TOTAL 100.0%
INCOME TAX INFORMATION
At January 31, 1997, the aggregate cost of investment securities for income
tax purposes was $303,389,088. Net unrealized appreciation aggregated
$8,938,476, of which $9,517,194 related to appreciated investment
securities and $578,718 related to depreciated investment securities.
The fund hereby designates approximately $269,368 as a capital gain
dividend for the purpose of the dividend paid deduction.
At January 31, 1997, the fund was required to defer $338,073 of losses on
futures contracts.
FIDELITY NEW YORK INSURED MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
JANUARY 31, 1997
ASSETS
Investment in securities, at value (cost $303,389,088) - $ 312,327,564
See accompanying schedule
Receivable for investments sold 10,173,573
Interest receivable 4,047,395
TOTAL ASSETS 326,548,532
LIABILITIES
Payable to custodian bank $ 35,415
Payable for investments purchased 10,324,533
Payable for fund shares redeemed 547,898
Distributions payable 301,904
Accrued management fee 103,166
Other payables and accrued expenses 83,622
TOTAL LIABILITIES 11,396,538
NET ASSETS $ 315,151,994
Net Assets consist of:
Paid in capital $ 306,014,875
Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) on 198,643
investments
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on 8,938,476
investments
NET ASSETS, for 26,989,355 shares outstanding $ 315,151,994
NET ASSET VALUE, offering price and redemption price per $11.68
share ($315,151,994 (divided by) 26,989,355 shares)
</TABLE>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
YEAR ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997
INTEREST INCOME $ 17,149,938
EXPENSES
Management fee $ 1,270,841
Transfer agent, accounting and custodian fees 573,616
and expenses
Non-interested trustees' compensation 1,119
Registration fees 31,544
Audit 39,910
Legal 3,189
Miscellaneous 3,901
Total expenses before reductions 1,924,120
Expense reductions (1,708) 1,922,412
NET INTEREST INCOME 15,227,526
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS)
Net realized gain (loss) on:
Investment securities 2,939,801
Futures contracts 401,538 3,341,339
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on (9,272,385)
investment securities
NET GAIN (LOSS) (5,931,046)
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING $ 9,296,480
FROM OPERATIONS
</TABLE>
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
YEAR ENDED YEAR ENDED
JANUARY 31, JANUARY 31,
1997 1996
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS
Operations $ 15,227,526 $ 16,005,923
Net interest income
Net realized gain (loss) 3,341,339 (113,500)
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) (9,272,385) 30,303,012
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING 9,296,480 46,195,435
FROM OPERATIONS
Distributions to shareholders (15,227,526) (16,176,302)
From net interest income
From net realized gain (27,217) -
TOTAL DISTRIBUTIONS (15,254,743) (16,176,302)
Share transactions 36,280,400 57,589,866
Net proceeds from sales of shares
Reinvestment of distributions 11,612,267 12,212,695
Cost of shares redeemed (64,952,917) (72,562,749)
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING (17,060,250) (2,760,188)
FROM SHARE TRANSACTIONS
TOTAL INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS (23,018,513) 27,258,945
NET ASSETS
Beginning of period 338,170,507 310,911,562
End of period $ 315,151,994 $ 338,170,507
OTHER INFORMATION
Shares
Sold 3,134,017 5,049,150
Issued in reinvestment of distributions 1,003,625 1,064,749
Redeemed (5,617,141) (6,354,786)
Net increase (decrease) (1,479,499) (240,887)
</TABLE>
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
YEARS ENDED JANUARY 31, NINE MONTHS
ENDED
JANUARY 31,
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
1997 1996 1995 1994 C 1993
SELECTED PER-SHARE DATA
Net asset value, beginning $ 11.880 $ 10.830 $ 12.300 $ 11.830 $ 11.320
of period
Income from Investment .547 .562 .629 .648 .509
Operations
Net interest income
Net realized and unrealized (.199) 1.056 (1.320) .780 .510
gain (loss)
Total from investment .348 1.618 (.691) 1.428 1.019
operations
Less Distributions
From net interest income (.547) (.568) D (.629) (.648) (.509)
From net realized gain (.001) - (.070) (.310) -
In excess of net realized - - (.080) - -
gain
Total distributions (.548) (.568) (.779) (.958) (.509)
Net asset value, end of period $ 11.680 $ 11.880 $ 10.830 $ 12.300 $ 11.830
TOTAL RETURN B 3.07% 15.25% (5.48) 12.36% 9.16%
%
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL
DATA
Net assets, end of period $ 315,152 $ 338,171 $ 310,912 $ 414,629 $ 359,305
(000 omitted)
Ratio of expenses to average .60% .60% .58% .58% .61% A
net assets
Ratio of expenses to average .60% .59% .58% .58% .61% A
net assets after E
expense reductions
Ratio of net interest income to 4.73% 4.91% 5.60% 5.31% 5.73% A
average net assets
Portfolio turnover rate 42% 74% 41% 48% 39% A
</TABLE>
A ANNUALIZED
B TOTAL RETURNS FOR PERIODS OF LESS THAN ONE YEAR ARE NOT ANNUALIZED.
C EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 1, 1993, THE FUND ADOPTED STATEMENT OF POSITION 93-2,
"DETERMINATION, DISCLOSURE, AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT PRESENTATION OF INCOME,
CAPITAL GAIN, AND RETURN OF CAPITAL DISTRIBUTIONS BY INVESTMENT COMPANIES."
AS A RESULT, NET INTEREST INCOME PER SHARE MAY REFLECT CERTAIN
RECLASSIFICATIONS RELATED TO BOOK TO TAX DIFFERENCES.
D THE AMOUNT SHOWN REFLECTS CERTAIN RECLASSIFICATIONS RELATED TO BOOK TO
TAX DIFFERENCES (SEE NOTE 1 OF NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS).
E FMR OR THE FUND HAS ENTERED INTO VARYING ARRANGEMENTS WITH THIRD PARTIES
WHO EITHER PAID OR REDUCED A PORTION OF THE FUND'S EXPENSES.
FIDELITY NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
PERFORMANCE: THE BOTTOM LINE
To measure a money market fund's performance, you can look at either total
return or yield. Total return reflects the change in value of an
investment, assuming reinvestment of the fund's dividend income. Yield
measures the income paid by a fund. Since a money market fund tries to
maintain a $1 share price, yield is an important measure of performance. If
Fidelity had not reimbursed certain fund expenses, the past 10 years total
returns would have been lower.
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST 1 PAST 5 PAST 10
YEAR YEARS YEARS
Fidelity New York Municipal Money Market 2.94% 13.59% 41.91%
New York Tax-Free Money Market Funds Averag 2.85% 13.10% 40.93%
e
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS show the fund's performance in percentage terms
over a set period - in this case, one year, five years or 10 years. For
example, if you invested $1,000 in a fund that had a 5% return over the
past year, the value of your investment would be $1,050. To measure how the
fund's performance stacked up against its peers, you can compare it to the
New York tax-free money market funds average, which reflects the
performance of 35 New York tax-free money market funds with similar
objectives tracked by IBC Financial Data, Inc. over the past one year.
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST 1 PAST 5 PAST 10
YEAR YEARS YEARS
Fidelity New York Municipal Money Market 2.94% 2.58% 3.56%
New York Tax-Free Money Market Funds Averag 2.85% 2.62% 4.09%
e
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS take the fund's cumulative return and show you
what would have happened if the fund had performed at a constant rate each
year.
YIELDS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
2/03/97 10/28/96 7/29/96 4/29/96 1/29/96
New York Municipal 2.88% 3.04% 2.91% 3.12% 2.77%
Money Market
New York Tax-Free Money 2.86% 2.91% 2.84% 3.10% 2.74%
Market Funds Average
New York Municipal 5.04% 5.32% 5.09% 5.46% 4.85%
Money Market Tax-equivalen
t
</TABLE>
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 2.88
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 2.86
Row: 2, Col: 1, Value: 3.04
Row: 2, Col: 2, Value: 2.91
Row: 3, Col: 1, Value: 2.91
Row: 3, Col: 2, Value: 2.84
Row: 4, Col: 1, Value: 3.12
Row: 4, Col: 2, Value: 3.1
Row: 5, Col: 1, Value: 2.77
Row: 5, Col: 2, Value: 2.74
New York
Municipal
Money Market
New York Tax-Free
Money Market
Funds Average
4% -
3% -
2% -
1% -
0%
YIELD refers to the income paid by the fund over a given period. Yields for
money market funds are usually for seven-day periods, expressed as annual
percentage rates. A yield that assumes income earned is reinvested or
compounded is called an effective yield. The chart above shows the fund's
current seven-day yield at quarterly intervals over the past year. You can
compare these yields to the New York tax-free money market funds average as
tracked by IBC Financial Data, Inc., or you can look at the fund's
tax-equivalent yield, which is based on a combined effective 1997 federal,
state and New York City income tax rate of 42.86%, but does not reflect the
payment of the alternative minimum tax.
A MONEY MARKET FUND'S TOTAL RETURNS AND YIELDS WILL VARY, AND REFLECT PAST
RESULTS RATHER THAN PREDICT FUTURE PERFORMANCE.
COMPARING
PERFORMANCE
Yields on tax-free investments
are usually lower than yields
on taxable investments.
However, a straight
comparison between the two
may be misleading because it
ignores the way taxes reduce
taxable returns. Tax-equivalent
yield - the yield you'd have to
earn on a similar taxable
investment to match the
tax-free yield - makes the
comparison more meaningful.
Keep in mind that the U.S.
government neither insures nor
guarantees a money market
fund. And there is no
assurance that a money fund
will maintain a $1 share price.
(checkmark)
FIDELITY NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
FUND TALK: THE MANAGER'S OVERVIEW
An interview with Janice Bradburn, Portfolio Manager of Fidelity New York
Municipal Money Market Fund
Q. JAN, WHAT HAS THE INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT BEEN LIKE OVER THE PAST YEAR?
A. At the beginning of 1996, the Federal Reserve Board was in the process
of lowering the interest rate banks charge each other - known as the
federal funds rate - in order to stimulate the economy, and the market was
anticipating that the Fed would continue to do so. Market sentiment changed
rapidly, however, when Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, in his testimony before
Congress, was surprisingly optimistic about the underlying strength of the
economy. Then the February 1996 employment report showed the economy was
generating new jobs at a faster rate than expected. A dramatic sell-off and
sharply rising interest rates ensued. Over the summer, the Treasury market
tended to trade within a narrow range, heading down just before the release
of economic data - fearing that signs of economic strength would lead to
Fed rate increases, known as tightening - then back up when the numbers
came out and weren't as strong as anticipated. As we moved toward the end
of the year and past the November elections, the economy appeared to
moderate, and most investors felt assured the Fed would take no action
until the first and possibly the second quarter of 1997. Even though
statistics emerged toward the end of the period showing
stronger-than-expected growth - causing fears of a Fed tightening to
resurface - the Fed chose to leave interest rates unchanged when it met
just after the end of the period.
Q. WHAT STRATEGIES DID YOU PURSUE IN THIS VARIED ENVIRONMENT?
A. At the beginning of February 1996, the average maturity of the fund was
in the 60-day range. During the next several months the maturity declined
for two reasons. First, as regularly happens, supply in the New York market
was extremely limited in the first quarter. As a result, many of the fund's
holdings reached maturity, and the fund's average maturity rolled down.
Second, with talk about the economy heating up and possible rate increases,
it made sense to keep the fund a bit shorter to take advantage of
potentially higher rates in the market. As we entered the spring, not only
did supply pick up significantly, but I also was able to find many
securities selling at very attractive prices; the market was anticipating a
tightening and priced the securities accordingly. When the tightening did
not occur, I raised the fund's average maturity to the low 60s in the fall.
Since December, the fund's average maturity has been in the mid-40s, a
position I consider more neutral.
Q. HOW DID THE FUND PERFORM?
A. Very well, largely because I was able to extend the fund's maturity,
buying longer-term securities at a time when the market had priced in
tightenings that never materialized. As a result, I was able to lock in
higher, more attractive yields. The fund's seven-day yield on January 31,
1997, was 2.86%, compared to 2.80% a year ago. The latest yield was the
equivalent of a 5.01% taxable rate of return for New York investors in the
42.86% combined state, federal and New York City income tax bracket.
Through January 31, 1997, the fund's total return was 2.94%, compared to
2.85% for the New York tax-free money market funds average, according to
IBC Financial Data, Inc.
Q. WHAT'S YOUR OUTLOOK?
A. I believe the Fed will wait until it can evaluate data from the first
quarter of 1997 before it takes any further action. The Fed probably will
look for consistent signs of an inflationary trend to justify a shift in
its policy. For now, I'll keep the fund positioned flexibly until we see
signs of movement one way or another.
THE VIEWS EXPRESSED IN THIS REPORT REFLECT THOSE OF THE PORTFOLIO MANAGER
ONLY THROUGH THE END OF THE PERIOD OF THE REPORT AS STATED ON THE COVER.
THE MANAGER'S VIEWS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT ANY TIME BASED ON MARKET AND
OTHER CONDITIONS.
FUND FACTS
GOAL: tax-free income by
investing in short-term municipal
money market securities of all
types
FUND NUMBER: 092
TRADING SYMBOL: FNYXX
START DATE: July 6, 1984
SIZE: as of January 31,
1997, more than $880 million
MANAGER: Janice Bradburn,
since 1989; manager,
various Fidelity and
Spartan state municipal money
market funds; joined Fidelity
in 1989
(checkmark)
WORDS TO KNOW
COMMERCIAL PAPER: A security
issued by a municipality to
finance capital or operating
needs.
FEDERAL FUNDS RATE: The interest
rate banks charge each other
for overnight loans.
MATURITY: The time remaining
before an issuer is scheduled
to repay the principal amount
on a debt security. When the
fund's average maturity -
weighted by dollar amount -
is short, the fund manager is
anticipating a rise in interest
rates. When the average
maturity is long, the manager
is expecting rates to fall.
When the average maturity is
neutral, the manager wants
the flexibility to respond to
rising rates, while still
capturing a portion of the
higher yields available from
issues with longer maturities.
MUNICIPAL NOTE: A security
issued in advance of future
tax or other revenues and
payable from those specific
sources.
TENDER BOND: A variable-rate,
usually long-term security that
gives the bond holder the
option to redeem the bond at
face value before maturity.
VARIABLE RATE DEMAND NOTE
(VRDN): A tender bond that
can be redeemed on short
notice, typically one or seven
days. VRDNs are useful in
managing the fund's average
maturity and liquidity.
FIDELITY NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
INVESTMENT CHANGES
MATURITY DIVERSIFICATION
DAYS % OF FUND ASSETS % OF FUND ASSETS % OF FUND ASSETS
1/31/97 7/31/96 1/31/96
0 - 30 73 69 62
31 - 90 8 14 8
91 - 180 12 5 19
181 - 397 7 12 11
WEIGHTED AVERAGE MATURITY
1/31/97 7/31/96 1/31/96
Fidelity New York Municipal
Money Market Fund 45 days 53 days 62 days
New York Tax-Free
Money Market Funds
Average* 51 days 55 days 49 days
ASSET ALLOCATION (% OF FUND'S INVESTMENTS)
AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997 AS OF JULY 31, 1996
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 57.5
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 11.0
Row: 1, Col: 3, Value: 3.5
Row: 1, Col: 4, Value: 26.0
Row: 1, Col: 5, Value: 2.0
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 59.0
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 12.0
Row: 1, Col: 3, Value: 3.5
Row: 1, Col: 4, Value: 21.0
Row: 1, Col: 5, Value: 4.5
Variable rate
demand notes
(VRDNs) 59%
Commercial
paper 11%
Tender bonds 3%
Municipal
notes 26%
Other 1%
Variable rate
demand notes
(VRDNs) 60%
Commercial
paper 12%
Tender bonds 3%
Municipal
notes 21%
Other 4%
* SOURCE: IBC'S MONEY FUND REPORT (registered trademark)
FIDELITY NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
INVESTMENTS JANUARY 31, 1997
Showing Percentage of Total Value of Investments in Securities
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - 100%
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - 96.9%
Albany County Ind. Dev. Auth. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(Campus Plaza 7 Inc. Proj.) 3.65%,
LOC Marine Midland Bank, VRDN (b) $ 875,000 $ 875,000
Albany County School Dist. BAN:
4% 5/2/97 3,000,000 3,002,064
4% 5/30/97 2,300,000 2,303,304
4.50% 6/20/97 685,000 686,252
Amherst Ind. Dev. Auth. Rev. (Maple Dev. Proj.)
Series 1986, 3.65%,
LOC Marine Midland Bank, VRDN (b) 1,000,000 1,000,000
Amsterdam Ind. Dev. Rev. (Longview Fiber Co.)
Series 1987, 3.65%, LOC ABN-AMRO Bank, VRDN 1,880,000 1,880,000
Babylon Ind. Dev. Rev. (Southern Container Corp.)
3.70%, LOC Fleet Bank, VRDN (b) 4,000,000 4,000,000
Broome County BAN 4.10% 4/18/97 13,200,000 13,211,379
Buffalo RAN 4.25% 7/15/97,
LOC Landesbank Hessen-Thuringen 8,700,000 8,724,940
Chautauqua County Ind. Dev. Auth. Rev.
(Red Wing Co. Inc. Proj.) Series 1985, 3.55%,
LOC Wachovia Bank of Georgia, VRDN 3,500,000 3,500,000
Chemung County Ind. Dev. Auth. Rev., VRDN (b):
(McWayne Inc. Proj.) Series 1992 A,
3.60%, LOC AmSouth Bank 2,840,000 2,840,000
(MMARS Second Prog./Thayer Products) Series A,
3.65%, LOC Marine Midland Bank 1,000,000 1,000,000
Columbia County Ind. Dev. Auth. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(Philip Morris Proj.) 3.45%, VRDN 1,800,000 1,800,000
Commack Unified Free School Dist. TAN 4.35% 6/27/97 800,000 800,924
Connetquot Central School Dist. TAN 4.50% 6/26/97 4,900,000 4,911,373
Dobbs Ferry Unified Free School Dist. TAN 4.25% 2/28/97 950,000 950,340
East Hampton BAN 4% 4/17/97 1,350,000 1,350,801
Elmira BAN 4.375% 7/10/97 1,900,000 1,904,183
Erie County Ind. Dev. Auth. Ind. Dev. Rev., VRDN (b):
(Nat'l. Wire Products) Series 1988 E,
3.65%, LOC Marine Midland Bank 180,000 180,000
(Niagara Envelope Co. Proj.)
3.65%, LOC Marine Midland Bank 1,800,000 1,800,000
(Uniland Dev./Buffalo Campus) Series 1986 D,
3.65%, LOC Marine Midland Bank 1,420,000 1,420,000
Freeport Unified Free School Dist. TAN Series B,
4.30% 6/30/97, LOC State Street Bank & Trust Co. 4,400,000 4,405,962
Greenwood Lake Unified Free School Dist. BAN
4.50% 6/27/97 2,700,000 2,706,227
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - CONTINUED
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
Hempstead Township BAN:
3.50% 2/28/97 $ 9,100,000 $ 9,099,033
4.10% 10/30/97 3,200,000 3,206,856
4.25% 10/30/97 7,881,000 7,907,686
Herricks Unified Free School Dist. TAN 4.25% 6/27/97 4,300,000 4,306,207
Huntington Unified Free School Dist. TAN 4.25% 6/24/97 4,300,000
4,307,152
Island Park Unified Free School Dist. BAN 4.50% 9/12/97 2,582,000
2,589,572
Islip Ind. Dev. Auth. Rev., VRDN:
(Brentwood Dist.) Series 1984,
3.30%, LOC Fleet Bank 2,000,000 2,000,000
(Interstate Litho Corp.) Series 1996 A,
3.65%, LOC Marine Midland Bank (b) 1,600,000 1,600,000
Jefferson County Ind. Dev. Auth. Ind. Dev. Rev., VRDN:
(Fisher Gauge Facs.) Series 1996,
3.60%, LOC Fleet Bank (b) 2,700,000 2,700,000
(Watertown-Carthage Television Corp. Proj.) Series 1982,
3.45%, LOC First Nat'l. Bank of Chicago 3,300,000 3,300,000
Monroe County Ind. Dev. Auth. Rev., VRDN (b):
(AJL Mfg.) Series 1996 A,
3.65%, LOC Marine Midland Bank 2,100,000 2,100,000
(Advent Tool & Mold) Series 1990 D,
3.65%, LOC Marine Midland Bank 880,000 880,000
Nassau County BAN:
4.25% 3/14/97 10,800,000 10,805,557
4% 8/15/97 4,300,000 4,309,017
4.25% 8/15/97 16,400,000 16,458,016
4.50% 8/15/97 5,400,000 5,413,905
Nassau County Ind. Dev. Auth. Rev. (CR/PL Inc. Proj.)
Series 1985, 3.65%,
LOC First Nat'l. Bank of Chicago, VRDN 4,930,000 4,930,000
New Rochelle BAN:
4.50% 9/12/97 2,500,000 2,507,332
4.50% 9/12/97 (b) 500,000 501,173
New York City Gen. Oblig. Participating VRDN,
Series 1994 C-3, 3.63% (Liquidity Facility Citibank) (c) 17,000,000
17,000,000
New York City Gen. Oblig. Rev., VRDN:
Series 1992 D,
3.45% (FGIC Insured) (BPA FGIC-SPI) 16,500,000 16,500,000
Series 1995 F-5, 3.55%, LOC Bayerische Landesbank 1,900,000 1,900,000
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - CONTINUED
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York City Hsg. Dev. Corp. Multi-Family Mtg. Rev., VRDN:
(100 Jane St. Dev. Proj.) Series 1995 A,
3.50%, LOC Fleet Bank (b) $ 4,000,000 $ 4,000,000
(400 W. 59th St. Proj.) (b):
3.50%, LOC Bayerische Hypothenken 33,200,000 33,200,000
3.55%, LOC Bayerische Hypothenken 17,600,000 17,600,000
(Tribeca Towers) Series 1994 A,
3.45% (FNMA Guaranteed) (b) 3,800,000 3,800,000
(West 43rd Street Dev.) Series 1996 B,
3.50%, LOC Fleet Bank 20,000,000 20,000,000
New York City Hsg. Dev. Corp. Rev. (Related-East 96th St. Proj.)
Series 1990 A, 3.45%,
LOC Bank of Tokyo - Mitsubishi Ltd., VRDN 1,700,000 1,700,000
New York City Ind. Dev. Agcy. Facs. Rev.
(Church of the Heavenly Rest Day School Proj.) Series 1991,
3.30%, LOC Barclays Bank, VRDN 6,325,000 6,325,000
New York City Ind. Dev. Agcy. Participating VRDN (b)(c):
Series 1996 H, 3.60%
(Liquidity Facility Caisse des Depots et Consignations) 1,900,000
1,900,000
Series PA-127, 3.65% (Liquidity Facility Merrill Lynch & Co.) 1,290,000
1,290,000
New York City Metropolitan Trans. Auth. Participating VRDN (c):
Series 96C3201, 3.63% (Liquidity Facility Citibank) 15,800,000
15,800,000
Series 1993 B, 3.70% (Liquidity Facility Citibank) 6,000,000 6,000,000
Series 1995 SG-36, 3.60%
(Liquidity Facility Societe Generale France) 5,000,000 5,000,000
New York City Muni. Assistance Corp. Bonds,
Series BT 225, 3.30%, tender 2/20/97
(Liquidity Facility Bankers Trust Co.) (c)(d) 10,000,000 10,000,000
New York City Muni. Wtr. Fin. Auth., CP:
Series 1:
3.55% 3/7/97,
LOC Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce 5,000,000 5,000,000
3.40% 3/20/97,
LOC Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce 2,000,000 2,000,000
Series 3:
3.45% 3/25/97, LOC Bank of Nova Scotia/
LOC Toronto Dominion Bank, Canada 1,600,000 1,600,000
3.45% 4/10/97, LOC Bank of Nova Scotia/
LOC Toronto-Dominion Bank, Canada 4,800,000 4,800,000
Series 4, 3.45% 2/27/97, LOC Credit Suisse, Switzerland 8,300,000
8,300,000
New York City Muni. Wtr. Fin. Auth. Participating VRDN,
Series PA-124, 3.60%
(Liquidity Facility Merrill Lynch & Co.) (c) 4,240,000 4,240,000
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - CONTINUED
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York City RAN Series 1996-B, 4.50% 6/30/97 $ 26,000,000 $ 26,083,030
New York City TAN Series 1996 A, 4.50% 2/12/97 11,100,000 11,102,488
New York City Trust for Cultural Resources
(The Jewish Museum) 3.65%,
BPA Sumitomo Bank Ltd., VRDN 4,400,000 4,400,000
New York State Dorm. Auth. Participating VRDN (c):
Series 97C3202, 3.63% (Liquidity Facility Citibank) 3,000,000 3,000,000
Series PA-60, 3.60% (Liquidity Facility Merrill Lynch & Co.) 4,500,000
4,500,000
New York State Dorm Auth. Bonds
(Sloan-Kettering Mem. Cancer Ctr.):
Series 1989-A:
3.50%, tender 2/26/97, LOC Chase Manhattan Bank 8,000,000 8,000,000
3.50%, tender 3/11/97, LOC Chase Manhattan Bank 4,200,000 4,200,000
3.45%, tender 3/18/97, LOC Chase Manhattan Bank 2,700,000 2,700,000
Series 1989-B
3.40%, tender 2/26/97, LOC Chase Manhattan Bank 7,500,000 7,500,000
3.45%, tender 3/18/97, LOC Chase Manhattan Bank 1,200,000 1,200,000
3.45%, tender 3/19/97, LOC Chase Manhattan Bank 1,000,000 1,000,000
Series 1989-D, 3.45%, tender 3/19/97,
LOC Chase Manhattan Bank 1,000,000 1,000,000
Series 1996, 3.30%, tender 2/21/97,
LOC Morgan Guaranty Trust, NY 4,400,000 4,400,000
New York State Energy Research & Dev. Auth. (c):
Bonds Series 943206, 3.25%, tender 2/1/97
(Liquidity Facility Citibank) (d) 8,000,000 8,000,000
Participating VRDN:
Series 943202, 3.63%
(Liquidity Facility Citibank) 15,400,000 15,400,000
Series 96C3202,
3.63% (Liquidity Facility Citibank) 8,700,000 8,700,000
New York State Energy Research & Dev. Auth. Poll. Cont. Rev.
(Niagara Mohawk Pwr. Corp.), VRDN
Series 1985 B, 3.70%,
LOC Toronto Dominion Bank, Canada 2,000,000 2,000,000
Series 1985 C, 3.70%,
LOC Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce 1,000,000 1,000,000
Series 1987 A, 3.85%,
LOC Toronto Dominion Bank, Canada 12,860,000 12,860,000
Series 1987 B, 3.80%,
LOC Morgan Guaranty Trust, NY (b) 11,300,000 11,300,000
Series 1988 A, 3.80%,
LOC Morgan Guaranty Trust, NY (b) 6,100,000 6,100,000
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - CONTINUED
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York State Energy Research & Dev. Auth. Rev., VRDN:
(Long Island Lighting Co.)(b):
Series 1993, 3.45%,
LOC Toronto Dominion Bank, Canada $ 11,300,000 $ 11,300,000
Series 1993 A, 3.50%,
LOC Toronto Dominion Bank, Canada 6,200,000 6,200,000
Series 1994 A, 3.45%, LOC Union Bank of Switzerland 11,800,000
11,800,000
Series 1995 A, 3.45%, LOC Union Bank of Switzerland 8,800,000 8,800,000
New York State Gen. Oblig., CP:
Series S:
3.55% 2/11/97
(Liquidity Facility Westdeutsche Landesbank) 6,600,000 6,600,000
3.55% 2/14/97
(Liquidity Facility Westdeutsche Landesbank) 17,300,000 17,300,000
Series T, 3.55% 2/25/97
(Liquidity Facility Westdeutsche Landesbank) 11,900,000 11,900,000
New York State Hsg. Dev. Corp. Mtg. Rev.
(York Ave. Proj.) Series 1994 A,
3.55%, LOC Midland Bank, PLC, VRDN (b) 14,950,000 14,950,000
New York State Hsg. Fin. Agcy. Hsg. Rev.
(Union Square South) Series 1996 A, 3.45%,
LOC Bayerische Hypothenken, VRDN (b) 12,600,000 12,600,000
New York State Local Gov't. Assistance Corp:
Bonds Series 1996 A, 4.25% 4/1/97 2,585,000 2,587,794
VRDN:
Series 1994 B, 3.40%, LOC Credit Suisse, Switzerland 8,000,000
8,000,000
Series 1995 B, 3.40%, LOC Bank of Nova Scotia 6,200,000 6,200,000
Series 1995 E, 3.45%,
LOC Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce 19,400,000 19,400,000
New York State Med. Care Facs. Fin. Agcy. Participating VRDN (c):
Series PA-89, 3.60%
(Liquidity Facility Merrill Lynch & Co.) 5,000,000 5,000,000
Series SG1, 3.60%
(Liquidity Facility Societe Generale, France) 7,600,000 7,600,000
New York State Mtg. Agcy. Participating VRDN (b)(c):
Series PA-87, 3.65% (Liquidity Facility Merrill Lynch & Co.) 3,700,000
3,700,000
Series PT-11, 3.65% (Liquidity Facility
Commerzbank, Germany) 10,760,000 10,760,000
Series PT-15 A, 3.65% (Liquidity Facility
Commerzbank, Germany) 6,880,000 6,880,000
Series PT-15 B, 3.65% (Liquidity Facility
Commerzbank, Germany) 2,960,000 2,960,000
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - CONTINUED
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York State Mtg. Agcy. Participating VRDN (b)(c): - continued
Series PT-26, 3.65% (Liquidity Facility Credit
Suisse, Switzerland) $ 3,935,000 $ 3,935,000
New York State Pwr. Auth., CP:
3.55% 2/26/97 2,800,000 2,800,000
3.55% 3/6/97 1,000,000 1,000,000
3.65% 3/10/97 2,000,000 2,000,000
3.50% 4/4/97 5,000,000 5,000,000
New York State Pwr. Auth. Bonds 3.70%, tender 3/1/97 5,500,000 5,500,000
New York State Urban Dev. Corp. Participating VRDN (c):
Series BT-113, 3.70% (Liquidity Facility Bankers Trust Co.) 7,854,000
7,854,000
Series PA-140 B, 3.60%,
(Liquidity Facility Merrill Lynch & Co.) 9,200,000 9,200,000
Series SG-33, 3.60%
(Liquidity Facility Societe Generale, France) 18,650,000 18,650,000
Niagara County BAN:
4.75% 7/18/97 2,000,000 2,006,148
4.25% 12/5/97 1,265,000 1,270,633
Northport-East Northport Unified Free School Dist.:
BAN 4.50% 6/30/97 1,500,000 1,502,944
TAN 4.50% 6/30/97 5,700,000 5,712,531
Oneida County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Ind. Dev. Rev. (Utica Corp.)
Series 1996, 3.60%, LOC Fleet Bank, VRDN (b) 2,800,000 2,800,000
Onondaga County BAN 4% 3/28/97 1,104,000 1,104,399
Oswego County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Poll. Cont. Rev.
Rfdg. (Philip Morris Co. Proj.) 3.45%, VRDN 9,500,000 9,500,000
Oyster Bay BAN 4.25% 7/11/97 10,900,000 10,910,918
Plainview-Old Bethpage County School Dist. TAN:
4.25% 6/30/97 500,000 500,289
4.50% 6/30/97 1,600,000 1,602,826
Rochester BAN Series 1996 III, 4.50% 10/30/97 500,000 503,033
St. Lawrence County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Envir. Impt. Rev.
(Reynolds Metals Proj.) 3.50%,
LOC Royal Bank of Canada, VRDN 6,400,000 6,400,000
Schenectady Ind. Dev. Agcy. Rev. (Super Steel Schenectady Proj.)
3.50%, LOC Key Bank Of New York, VRDN 2,700,000 2,700,000
South Huntington Unified Free School Dist. TAN
4.50% 6/30/97 4,800,000 4,810,448
Southampton BAN 3.75% 2/14/97 600,000 600,082
Southampton Unified Free School Dist. TAN
4.50% 6/26/97 4,200,000 4,209,676
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - CONTINUED
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
Southold Unified Free School Dist. TAN
4.50% 6/27/97 $ 700,000 $ 701,498
Spencerport Central School Dist. BAN
4.25% 11/26/97 5,200,000 5,223,329
Suffolk County Gen. Oblig. Bonds 5% 7/15/97 1,785,000 1,791,763
Suffolk County Ind. Dev. Agcy. (Suffolk Child Dev. Ctr. Proj.)
Series 1989, 3.40%,
LOC Barclays Bank, PLC, UK, VRDN 1,600,000 1,600,000
Suffolk County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(Nissequogue Cogeneration Partner Fac.) 3.55%,
LOC Toronto Dominion Bank, Canada, VRDN (b) 11,100,000 11,100,000
Suffolk County Pub. Impt. Bond Series C, 5% 10/15/97 810,000 816,346
Suffolk County TAN 4.50% 9/11/97 9,000,000 9,028,878
Tompkins BAN:
4% 4/11/97 (b) 1,200,000 1,200,655
4% 4/11/97 2,195,000 2,196,601
Tonawanda BAN:
3.75% 4/15/97 1,114,000 1,114,331
4.25% 5/8/97 1,000,000 1,001,316
Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Auth. (c):
Bonds Series 96C3203,
3.50%, tender 2/15/97 (Liquidity Facility Citibank) 5,900,000 5,900,000
Participating VRDN, Series BT-184, 3.55%
(Liquidity Facility Bankers Trust Co.) 4,100,000 4,100,000
Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Auth. Spl. Oblig. Rev.
Series 1994, 3.40% (FGIC Insured)
(BPA FGIC-SPI) VRDN 11,000,000 11,000,000
Ulster County TAN 4.25% 3/26/97,
LOC State Street Bank & Trust Co. 5,000,000 5,003,472
Uniondale Unified Free School Dist. TAN 4.50% 6/30/97 6,800,000 6,813,395
Washington County BAN 4.25% 4/25/97 2,000,000 2,001,969
Wyoming County Ind. Dev. Auth. Rev. (American Precision)
Series 1988 A, 3.65%,
LOC Marine Midland Bank, VRDN (b) 630,000 630,000
844,409,047
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - CONTINUED
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK & NEW JERSEY - 3.1%
New York & New Jersey Port Auth. Rev., VRDN:
Series 1992, 3.43% $ 9,700,000 $ 9,700,000
Series 1995, 3.43% (b) 16,900,000 16,900,000
26,600,000
TOTAL INVESTMENTS - 100% $ 871,009,047
Total Cost for Income Tax Purposes $ 871,006,648
SECURITY TYPE ABBREVIATIONS
BAN - Bond Anticipation Notes
CP - Commercial Paper
RAN - Revenue Anticipation Notes
TAN - Tax Anticipation Notes
VRDN - Variable Rate Demand Notes
LEGEND
(a) The coupon rate shown on floating or adjustable rate securities
represents the rate at period end.
(b) Private activity obligations whose interest is subject to the federal
alternative minimum tax for individuals.
(c) Provides evidence of ownership in one or more underlying municipal
bonds.
(d) Restricted securities - Investment in securities not registered under
the Securities Act of 1933 (see Note 2 of Notes to Financial Statements).
Additional information is as follows:
ACQUISITION ACQUISITION
SECURITY DATE COST
New York City Muni.
Assistance Corp. Bonds
Series BT 225, 3.30%,
tender 2/20/97
(Liquidity Facility
Bankers Trust Co.) 1/3/97 $10,000,000
New York State Energy
Research & Dev. Auth.
Bonds:Series 943206,
3.25%, tender 2/1/97
(Liquidity Facility
Citibank) 1/1/97 $8,000,000
INCOME TAX INFORMATION
At January 31, 1997, the fund had a capital loss carryforward of
approximately $73,900 of which $37,600 $3,000 and $33,300 will expire on
January 31, 2001, 2004 and 2005, respectively.
FIDELITY NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
JANUARY 31, 1997
ASSETS
Investment in securities, at value - $ 871,009,047
See accompanying schedule
Share transactions in process 10,127,256
Interest receivable 7,509,525
TOTAL ASSETS 888,645,828
LIABILITIES
Payable for investments purchased $ 8,000,000
Payable to custodian bank 71,412
Distributions payable 30,164
Accrued management fee 283,819
Other payables and accrued expenses 185,024
TOTAL LIABILITIES 8,570,419
NET ASSETS $ 880,075,409
Net Assets consist of:
Paid in capital $ 880,146,919
Accumulated net realized gain (loss) on investments (73,910)
Unrealized gain from accretion of discount 2,400
NET ASSETS, for 879,981,676 shares outstanding $ 880,075,409
NET ASSET VALUE, offering price and redemption price per $1.00
share ($880,075,409 (divided by) 879,981,676 shares)
</TABLE>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
YEAR ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997
INTEREST INCOME $ 28,915,686
EXPENSES
Management fee $ 3,261,467
Transfer agent, accounting and custodian fees 1,710,543
and expenses
Non-interested trustees' compensation 2,214
Registration fees 36,336
Audit 19,678
Legal 6,307
Miscellaneous 11,758
Total expenses before reductions 5,048,303
Expense reductions (13,044) 5,035,259
NET INTEREST INCOME 23,880,427
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS) (33,281)
Net realized gain (loss) on investment securities
Increase (decrease) in net unrealized gain from 2,400
accretion
of discount
NET GAIN (LOSS) (30,881)
NET INCREASE IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM OPERATIONS $ 23,849,546
</TABLE>
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
YEAR ENDED YEAR ENDED
JANUARY 31, JANUARY 31,
1997 1996
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS
Operations $ 23,880,427 $ 24,804,124
Net interest income
Net realized gain (loss) (33,281) (1,680)
Increase (decrease) in net unrealized gain from 2,400 (3)
accretion of discount
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING 23,849,546 24,802,441
FROM OPERATIONS
Distributions to shareholders from net interest income (23,880,427) (24,804,124)
Share transactions at net asset value of $1.00 per share 2,139,223,899 1,758,541,233
Proceeds from sales of shares
Reinvestment of distributions from net interest income 23,071,469 23,870,558
Cost of shares redeemed (2,105,054,985) (1,696,826,206)
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS AND SHARES 57,240,383 85,585,585
RESULTING FROM SHARE TRANSACTIONS
TOTAL INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS 57,209,502 85,583,902
NET ASSETS
Beginning of period 822,865,907 737,282,005
End of period $ 880,075,409 $ 822,865,907
</TABLE>
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
YEARS ENDED JANUARY 31, NINE MONTHS
ENDED
JANUARY 31,
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
1997 1996 1995 1994 1993
SELECTED PER-SHARE DATA
Net asset value, beginning $ 1.000 $ 1.000 $ 1.000 $ 1.000 $ 1.000
of period
Income from Investment .029 .033 .024 .018 .017
Operations
Net interest income
Less Distributions
From net interest income (.029) (.033) (.024) (.018) (.017)
Net asset value, end of period $ 1.000 $ 1.000 $ 1.000 $ 1.000 $ 1.000
TOTAL RETURN B 2.94% 3.32% 2.44% 1.84% 1.72%
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net assets, end of period $ 880,075 $ 822,866 $ 737,282 $ 608,444 $ 565,619
(000 omitted)
Ratio of expenses to average .61% .62% .60% .62% .62% A
net assets
Ratio of net interest income to 2.89% 3.26% 2.42% 1.83% 2.26% A
average net assets
</TABLE>
A ANNUALIZED
B TOTAL RETURNS FOR PERIODS OF LESS THAN ONE YEAR ARE NOT ANNUALIZED.
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
For the period ended January 31, 1997
1. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES.
Fidelity New York Municipal Income Fund (formerly Fidelity New York
Tax-Free High Yield Portfolio) (the income fund) and Fidelity New York
Insured Municipal Income Fund (formerly Fidelity New York Tax-Free Insured
Portfolio) (the insured fund) are funds of Fidelity New York Municipal
Trust. Fidelity New York Municipal Money Market Fund (formerly Fidelity New
York Tax-Free Money Market Portfolio) (the money market fund) is a fund of
Fidelity New York Municipal Trust II. Each trust is registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act), as an open-end
management investment company. Fidelity New York Municipal Trust and
Fidelity New York Municipal Trust II (the trusts) are organized as a
Massachusetts business trust and a Delaware business trust, respectively.
Each fund is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares. The
financial statements have been prepared in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles which permit management to make certain
estimates and assumptions at the date of the financial statements. The
following summarizes the significant accounting policies of the income
fund, insured fund and money market fund:
SECURITY VALUATION.
INCOME AND INSURED FUNDS. Securities are valued based upon a computerized
matrix system and/or appraisals by a pricing service, both of which
consider market transactions and dealer-supplied valuations. Short-term
securities maturing within sixty days of their purchase date are valued
either at amortized cost or original cost plus accrued interest, both of
which approximate current value. Securities for which quotations are not
readily available are valued at their fair value as determined in good
faith under consistently applied procedures under the general supervision
of the Board of Trustees.
MONEY MARKET FUND. As permitted under Rule 2a-7 of the 1940 Act, and
certain conditions therein, securities are valued initially at cost and
thereafter assume a constant amortization to maturity of any discount or
premium.
INCOME TAXES. As a qualified regulated investment company under Subchapter
M of the Internal Revenue Code, each fund is not subject to income taxes to
the extent that it distributes substantially all of its taxable income for
the fiscal year. The schedules of investments include information regarding
income taxes under the caption "Income Tax Information."
INTEREST INCOME. Interest income, which includes amortization of premium
and accretion of original issue discount, is accrued as earned. For the
money market fund, accretion of discount represents unrealized gain until
realized at the time of a security disposition or maturity.
EXPENSES. Most expenses of each trust can be directly attributed to a fund.
Expenses which cannot be directly attributed are apportioned between the
funds in the trust.
DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS. Dividends are declared daily and paid
monthly from net interest income. Distributions to shareholders from
realized capital gains on investments, if any, are recorded on the
ex-dividend date.
1. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING
POLICIES - CONTINUED
DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS - CONTINUED
Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with
income tax regulations which may differ from generally accepted accounting
principles. These differences, which may result in distribution
reclassifications, are primarily due to differing treatments for futures
and options transactions, market discount and losses deferred due to
futures and options.
Permanent book and tax basis differences relating to shareholder
distributions will result in reclassifications to paid in capital and may
affect the per-share allocation between net interest income and realized
and unrealized gain (loss). Any taxable gain remaining at fiscal year end
is distributed in the following year.
SECURITY TRANSACTIONS. Security transactions are accounted for as of trade
date. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of
identified cost.
2. OPERATING POLICIES.
FUTURES CONTRACTS. The income and insured funds may use futures contracts
to manage their exposure to the bond market and to fluctuations in interest
rates. Buying futures tends to increase a fund's exposure to the underlying
instrument, while selling futures tends to decrease a fund's exposure to
the underlying instrument or hedge other fund investments. Losses may arise
from changes in the value of the underlying instruments, if there is an
illiquid secondary market for the contracts, or if the counterparties do
not perform under the contracts' terms. Futures contracts are valued at the
settlement price established each day by the board of trade or exchange on
which they are traded.
RESTRICTED SECURITIES. Each fund is permitted to invest in securities that
are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale. These
securities generally may be resold in transactions exempt from registration
or to the public if the securities are registered. Disposal of these
securities may involve time-consuming negotiations and expense, and prompt
sale at an acceptable price may be difficult. At the end of the period,
restricted securities (excluding 144A issues) amounted to $18,000,000 or
2.1% of net assets for the money market fund.
3. PURCHASES AND SALES OF INVESTMENTS.
INCOME FUND. Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term
securities, aggregated $174,078,970 and $177,984,857, respectively.
The market value of futures contracts opened and closed during the period
amounted to $51,510,690 and $57,117,861, respectively.
INSURED FUND. Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term
securities, aggregated $131,268,302 and $140,726,688, respectively.
The market value of futures contracts opened and closed during the period
amounted to $18,461,497 and $18,863,035, respectively.
4. FEES AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES.
MANAGEMENT FEE. As each fund's investment adviser, Fidelity Management &
Research Company (FMR) receives a monthly fee that is calculated on the
basis of a group fee rate plus a fixed individual fund fee rate applied to
the average net assets of each fund. The group fee rate is the weighted
average of a series of rates and is based on the monthly average net assets
of all the mutual funds advised by FMR. The rates ranged from .1100% to
.3700% for the period. In the event that these rates were lower than the
contractual rates in effect during the period, FMR voluntarily implemented
the above rates, as they resulted in the same or a lower management fee.
The annual individual fund fee rate is .25%. For the period, the management
fees were equivalent to an annual rate of .40%, of average net assets for
the income, insured and money market funds.
SUB-ADVISER FEE. As the money market fund's investment sub-adviser, FMR
Texas Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of FMR, receives a fee from FMR of
50% of the management fee payable to FMR. The fee is paid prior to any
voluntary expense reimbursements which may be in effect.
DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLAN. Pursuant to the Distribution and Service
Plans (the Plans), and in accordance with Rule 12b-1 of the 1940 Act, FMR
or the funds' distributor, Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC), an
affiliate of FMR, may use their resources to pay administrative and
promotional expenses related to the sale of each fund's shares. Subject to
the approval of each Board of Trustees, the Plans also authorize payments
to third parties that assist in the sale of each fund's shares or render
shareholder support services. FMR or FDC has informed the funds that
payments made to third parties under the Plans amounted to $1,577 for the
income fund and that no payments were made to third parties under the Plans
during the period for the insured and money market funds.
TRANSFER AGENT AND ACCOUNTING FEES. UMB Bank, n.a. (UMB) is the custodian
and transfer and shareholder servicing agent for the funds. UMB has entered
into a sub-contract with Fidelity Service Company, Inc. (FSC), an affiliate
of FMR, under which FSC performs the activities associated with the funds'
transfer and shareholder servicing agent and accounting functions. The
funds pay account fees and asset-based fees that vary according to account
size and type of account. FSC pays for typesetting, printing and mailing of
all shareholder reports, except proxy statements. The accounting fee is
based on the level of average net assets for the month plus out-of-pocket
expenses. For the period, FSC received transfer agent and accounting fees
amounting to $514,937 and $173,496 for the income fund, $412,785 and
$137,057 for the insured fund, and $1,529,734 and $131,819 for the money
market fund, respectively.
For the period, the transfer agent fees were equivalent to annual rates of
.13%, .13% and .19% of average net assets for the income, insured and money
market funds, respectively.
Money market fund shareholders participating in the Fidelity Ultra Service
Account(registered trademark) Program (the Program) pay a $5.00 monthly fee
to Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc.
4. FEES AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES - CONTINUED
TRANSFER AGENT AND ACCOUNTING FEES - CONTINUED
(FBSI), an affiliate of FMR, for performing services associated with the
Program. For the period, fees paid to FBSI by shareholders participating in
the Program amounted to $79,305.
5. EXPENSE REDUCTIONS.
Each fund has entered into arrangements with its custodian and transfer
agent whereby interest earned on uninvested cash balances was used to
offset a portion of each fund's expenses. During the period, the fund's
custodian and transfer agent fees were reduced by $1,897 and $1,414, $0 and
$1,708, and $0 and $13,044 for the income, insured and money market funds,
respectively, under these arrangements.
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
To the Trustees of Fidelity New York Municipal Trust and Fidelity New York
Municipal Trust II and the Shareholders of Fidelity New York Municipal
Income Fund (formerly Fidelity New York Tax-Free High Yield Portfolio),
Fidelity New York Insured Municipal Income Fund (formerly Fidelity New York
Tax-Free Insured Portfolio) and Fidelity New York Municipal Money Market
Fund (formerly Fidelity New York Tax-Free Money Market Portfolio):
In our opinion, the accompanying statements of assets and liabilities,
including the schedules of investments (except for Moody's and Standard &
Poor's ratings), and the related statements of operations and of changes in
net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material
respects, the financial position of Fidelity New York Municipal Income Fund
and Fidelity New York Insured Municipal Income Fund (funds of Fidelity New
York Municipal Trust) and Fidelity New York Municipal Money Market Fund (a
fund of Fidelity New York Municipal Trust II) at January 31, 1997, the
results of each of their operations for the year then ended, the changes in
each of their net assets and the financial highlights for the periods
indicated, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to
as "financial statements") are the responsibility of Fidelity New York
Municipal Trust and Fidelity New York Municipal Trust II's management; our
responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based
on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in
accordance with generally accepted auditing standards which require that we
plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes
examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures
in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and
significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall
financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which
included confirmation of securities at January 31, 1997 by correspondence
with the custodian and brokers and the application of alternative auditing
procedures where confirmations from brokers were not received, provide a
reasonable basis for the opinion expressed above.
/s/PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
March 3, 1997
DISTRIBUTIONS
The Board of Trustees of Fidelity New York Insured Municipal Income Fund
voted to pay on March 10, 1997, to shareholders of record at the opening of
business on March 7, 1997, a distribution of $.01 per share derived from
capital gains realized from sales of portfolio securities.
During fiscal year ended January 31, 1997, 100% of each fund's income
dividends was free from federal income tax, and 2.5%, 1.2% and 19.6% of the
income, insured and money market fund's income dividends was subject to the
federal alternative minimum tax.
MANAGING YOUR INVESTMENTS
Fidelity offers several ways to conveniently manage your personal
investments via your telephone or PC. You can access your account
information, conduct trades and research your investments 24 hours a day.
BY PHONE
Fidelity TouchTone Xpressprovides a single toll-free number to access
account balances, positions, quotes and trading. It's easy to navigate the
service, and on your first call, the system will help you create a personal
identification number (PIN) for security.
SM
(PHONE_GRAPHIC)(PHONE_GRAPHIC)TOUCHTONE XPRESS
1-800-544-5555
PRESS
For mutual fund and brokerage trading.
1
For quotes.*
2
For account balances and holdings.
3
To review orders and mutual
fund activity.
4
To change your PIN.
5
To speak to a Fidelity representative.
*
0
BY PC
Fidelity's Web site on the Internet provides a wide range of information,
including daily financial news, fund performance, interactive planning
tools and news about Fidelity products and services.
(PHONE_GRAPHIC)(PHONE_GRAPHIC)FIDELITY'S WEB SITE
WWW.FIDELITY.COM
If you are not currently on the Internet, call Fidelity at 1-800-544-7272
for significant savings on Web access from internetMCI.
SM
(PHONE_GRAPHIC)(PHONE_GRAPHIC)
FIDELITY ON-LINE XPRESS+
TM
Fidelity On-line Xpress+ software for Windows combines comprehensive
portfolio management capabilities, securities trading and access to
research and analysis tools . . . all on your desktop. Call Fidelity at
1-800-544-7272 or visit our Web site for more information on how to manage
your investments via your PC.
* WHEN YOU CALL THE QUOTES LINE, PLEASE REMEMBER THAT A FUND'S YIELD AND
RETURN WILL
VARY AND, EXCEPT FOR MONEY MARKET FUNDS, SHARE PRICE WILL ALSO VARY. THIS
MEANS THAT
YOU MAY HAVE A GAIN OR LOSS WHEN YOU SELL YOUR SHARES. THERE IS NO
ASSURANCE THAT
MONEY MARKET FUNDS WILL BE ABLE TO MAINTAIN A STABLE $1 SHARE PRICE; AN
INVESTMENT
IN A MONEY MARKET FUND IS NOT INSURED OR GUARANTEED BY THE U.S. GOVERNMENT.
TOTAL
RETURNS ARE HISTORICAL AND INCLUDE CHANGES IN SHARE PRICE, REINVESTMENT OF
DIVIDENDS
AND CAPITAL GAINS, AND THE EFFECTS OF ANY SALES CHARGES.
TO WRITE FIDELITY
If more than one address is listed, please locate the address that is
closest to you. We'll give your correspondence immediate attention and send
you written confirmation upon completion of your request.
(LETTER_GRAPHIC)(LETTER_GRAPHIC)MAKING CHANGES
TO YOUR ACCOUNT
(such as changing name, address, bank, etc.)
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0002
(LETTER_GRAPHIC)(LETTER_GRAPHIC)FOR NON-RETIREMENT
ACCOUNTS
BUYING SHARES
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0003
OVERNIGHT EXPRESS
Fidelity Investments
100 Crosby Parkway - KP2C
Covington, KY 41015-4399
SELLING SHARES
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 660602
Dallas, TX 75266-0602
OVERNIGHT EXPRESS
Fidelity Investments
Attn: Redemptions - CP6I
400 East Las Colinas Blvd.
Irving, TX 75309-5517
GENERAL CORRESPONDENCE
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 193
Boston, MA 02210-0193
(LETTER_GRAPHIC)(LETTER_GRAPHIC)FOR RETIREMENT
ACCOUNTS
BUYING SHARES
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0003
SELLING SHARES
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 660602
Dallas, TX 75266-0602
OVERNIGHT EXPRESS
Fidelity Investments
Attn: Redemptions - CP6R
400 East Las Colinas Blvd.
Irving, TX 75309-5517
GENERAL CORRESPONDENCE
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 660602
Dallas, TX 75266-0602
INVESTMENT ADVISER
(registered trademark)
Fidelity Management & Research
Company
Boston, MA
INVESTMENT SUB-ADVISER,
MONEY MARKET FUND
FMR Texas Inc.
Irving, TX
OFFICERS
Edward C. Johnson 3d, President
J. Gary Burkhead, Senior Vice President
Fred L. Henning, Jr., Vice President -
INCOME AND INSURED FUNDS
Sarah H. Zenoble, Vice President -
MONEY MARKET FUND
Norman Lind, Vice President -
INCOME AND INSURED FUNDS
Janice Bradburn, Vice President -
MONEY MARKET FUND
Arthur S. Loring, Secretary
Kenneth A. Rathgeber, Treasurer
Thomas D. Maher, Assistant
Vice President
John H. Costello, Assistant Treasurer
Leonard M. Rush, Assistant Treasurer
Thomas J. Simpson, Assistant Treasurer
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
J. Gary Burkhead
Ralph F. Cox *
Phyllis Burke Davis *
Edward C. Johnson 3d
E. Bradley Jones *
Donald J. Kirk *
Peter S. Lynch
Marvin L. Mann *
William O. McCoy * (dagger)
Gerald C. McDonough *
Thomas R. Williams *
* INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES
(dagger) MEMBER OF ADVISORY BOARD FOR FIDELITY
NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
GENERAL DISTRIBUTOR
Fidelity Distributors Corporation
Boston, MA
TRANSFER AND SHAREHOLDER
SERVICING AGENTS
UMB Bank, n.a.
Kansas City, MO
and
Fidelity Service Company, Inc.
Boston, MA
CUSTODIAN
UMB Bank, n.a.
Kansas City, MO
THE FIDELITY TELEPHONE CONNECTION
MUTUAL FUND 24-HOUR SERVICE
Exchanges/Redemptions 1-800-544-7777
Account Assistance 1-800-544-6666
Product Information 1-800-544-8888
Retirement Accounts 1-800-544-4774 (8 a.m. - 9 p.m.)
TDD Service 1-800-544-0118
for the deaf and hearing impaired
(9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Eastern time)
TouchTone Xpress 1-800-544-5555
SM
AUTOMATED LINE FOR QUICKEST SERVICE
SPARTAN(registered trademark)
(registered trademark)
NEW YORK
MUNICIPAL
FUNDS
ANNUAL REPORT
JANUARY 31, 1997
CHECK PAGE NUMBERS !!!
CONTENTS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE 3 NED JOHNSON ON INVESTING STRATEG
IES
SPARTAN NEW YORK MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
4 PERFORMANCE
7 FUND TALK: THE MANAGER'S OVERVI
EW
10 INVESTMENT CHANGES
11 INVESTMENTS
17 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
SPARTAN NEW YORK INTERMEDIATE MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
21 PERFORMANCE
25 FUND TALK: THE MANAGER'S OVERVI
EW
28 INVESTMENT CHANGES
29 INVESTMENTS
34 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
SPARTAN NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
38 PERFORMANCE
40 FUND TALK: THE MANAGER'S OVERVI
EW
42 INVESTMENT CHANGES
43 INVESTMENTS
51 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
NOTES 55 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT 58 THE AUDITORS' OPINION
ACCOUNTANTS
DISTRIBUTIONS 59
</TABLE>
THIS REPORT AND THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTAINED HEREIN ARE SUBMITTED FOR
THE GENERAL
INFORMATION OF THE SHAREHOLDERS OF THE FUNDS. THIS REPORT IS NOT AUTHORIZED
FOR
DISTRIBUTION TO PROSPECTIVE INVESTORS IN THE FUNDS UNLESS PRECEDED OR
ACCOMPANIED BY
AN EFFECTIVE PROSPECTUS.
MUTUAL FUND SHARES ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OBLIGATIONS OF, OR GUARANTEED
BY, ANY DEPOSITORY INSTITUTION. SHARES ARE NOT INSURED BY THE FDIC,
FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD OR ANY OTHER AGENCY, AND ARE SUBJECT TO
INVESTMENT RISKS, INCLUDING POSSIBLE LOSS OF PRINCIPAL AMOUNT INVESTED.
NEITHER THE FUNDS NOR FIDELITY DISTRIBUTORS CORPORATION IS A BANK.
FOR MORE INFORMATION ON ANY FIDELITY FUND, INCLUDING CHARGES AND EXPENSES,
CALL
1-800-544-8888 FOR A FREE PROSPECTUS. READ IT CAREFULLY BEFORE YOU INVEST
OR SEND
MONEY.
PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE
(PHOTO_OF_EDWARD_C_JOHNSON_3D)DEAR SHAREHOLDER:
As 1997 begins, the stock and bond markets generally have continued on the
course they followed during the past year. Through January, stocks
maintained their unprecedented climb, with the large companies still
setting the pace. With low, stable interest rates, the bond market has
tended to mirror its historical returns in the mid-single digits.
While it's impossible to predict the future direction of the markets with
any degree of certainty, there are certain basic principles that can help
investors plan for their future needs.
The longer your investment time frame, the more likely it is that you will
be affected by short-term market volatility. A 10-year investment horizon
appropriate for saving for a college education, for example, enables you to
weather market cycles in a long-term fund, which may have a higher risk
potential, but also has a higher potential rate of return.
An intermediate-length fund could make sense if your investment horizon is
two to four years, while a short-term bond fund could be the right choice
if you need your money in one or two years.
If your time horizon is less than a year, you might want to consider moving
some of your bond investment into a money market fund. These funds seek
income and a stable share price by investing in high-quality, short-term
investments. Of course, it's important to remember that there is no
assurance that a money market fund will achieve its goal of maintaining a
stable net asset value of $1.00 per share, and that these types of funds
are neither insured nor guaranteed by any agency of the U.S. government.
Finally, no matter what your time horizon or portfolio diversity, it makes
good sense to follow a regular investment plan, investing a certain amount
of money in a fund at the same time each month or quarter and periodically
reviewing your overall portfolio. By doing so, you won't get caught up in
the excitement of a rapidly rising market, nor will you buy all your shares
at market highs. While this strategy - known as dollar cost averaging -
won't assure a profit or protect you from a loss in a declining market, it
should help you lower the average cost of your purchases.
If you have questions, please call us at 1-800-544-8888. We are available
24 hours a day, seven days a week to provide you the information you need
to make the investments that are right for you.
Best regards,
Edward C. Johnson 3d
SPARTAN NEW YORK MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
PERFORMANCE: THE BOTTOM LINE
There are several ways to evaluate a fund's historical performance. You can
look at the total percentage change in value, the average annual percentage
change, or the growth of a hypothetical $10,000 investment. Total return
reflects the change in the value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of
the fund's dividend income and capital gains (the profits earned upon the
sale of securities that have grown in value), and the effect of the $5
account closeout fee on an average sized account. You can also look at the
fund's income, as reflected in the fund's yield, to measure performance. If
Fidelity had not reimbursed certain fund expenses, the past five years and
life of fund total returns would have been lower.
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST 1 PAST 5 LIFE OF
YEAR YEARS FUND
Spartan New York Municipal Income 3.66% 42.76% 71.81%
Lehman Brothers New York 4 Plus Year 4.17% n/a n/a
Municipal Bond Index
New York Municipal Debt Funds Average 2.62% 39.22% n/a
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS show the fund's performance over a set period - in
this case, one year, five years, or since the fund started on February 3,
1990. For example, if you invested $1,000 in a fund that had a 5% return
over the past year, the value of your investment would be $1,050. You can
compare the fund's returns to the performance of the Lehman Brothers New
York 4 Plus Year Municipal Bond Index - a total performance benchmark for
New York investment-grade municipal bonds with maturities of at least four
years. To measure how the fund's performance stacked up against its peers,
you can compare it to the New York municipal debt funds average, which
reflects the performance of 94 mutual funds with similar objectives tracked
by Lipper Analytical Services, Inc. over the past one year. Both benchmarks
reflect reinvestment of dividends and capital gains, if any, and exclude
the effect of sales charges.
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST 1 PAST 5 LIFE OF
YEAR YEARS FUND
Spartan New York Municipal Income 3.66% 7.38% 8.04%
Lehman Brothers New York 4 Plus Year 4.17% n/a n/a
Municipal Bond Index
New York Municipal Debt Funds Average 2.62% 6.83% n/a
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS take the fund's cumulative return and show you
what would have happened if the fund had performed at a constant rate each
year. (Note: Lipper calculates average annual total returns by annualizing
each fund's total return, then taking an arithmetic average. This may
produce a slightly different figure than that obtained by averaging the
cumulative total returns and annualizing the result.)
$10,000 OVER LIFE OF FUND
IMAHDR PRASUN SHR__CHT 19960930 19961009 151627 S00000000000001
Spartan NY Muni Inc LB Muni Bond Index
00421 LB015
1990/02/28 10000.00 10000.00
1990/03/31 9983.21 10003.00
1990/04/30 9811.79 9930.58
1990/05/31 10117.08 10147.36
1990/06/30 10261.57 10236.56
1990/07/31 10478.70 10387.04
1990/08/31 10253.35 10236.22
1990/09/30 10224.00 10242.05
1990/10/31 10276.00 10427.84
1990/11/30 10527.66 10637.55
1990/12/31 10549.02 10683.82
1991/01/31 10686.28 10827.20
1991/02/28 10746.11 10921.39
1991/03/31 10807.20 10925.32
1991/04/30 10977.12 11070.63
1991/05/31 11092.42 11169.05
1991/06/30 11110.44 11157.99
1991/07/31 11303.75 11293.90
1991/08/31 11499.52 11442.64
1991/09/30 11673.94 11591.62
1991/10/31 11804.45 11695.94
1991/11/30 11845.12 11728.58
1991/12/31 12068.11 11980.27
1992/01/31 11973.64 12007.59
1992/02/29 12012.18 12011.43
1992/03/31 12043.36 12015.87
1992/04/30 12188.20 12122.81
1992/05/31 12392.71 12265.50
1992/06/30 12664.89 12471.31
1992/07/31 13129.04 12845.20
1992/08/31 12946.42 12719.96
1992/09/30 12998.19 12803.15
1992/10/31 12730.57 12677.30
1992/11/30 13058.40 12904.35
1992/12/31 13209.77 13036.10
1993/01/31 13386.37 13187.71
1993/02/28 13961.65 13664.71
1993/03/31 13839.11 13520.27
1993/04/30 13978.32 13656.69
1993/05/31 14082.45 13733.44
1993/06/30 14323.29 13962.66
1993/07/31 14339.75 13980.95
1993/08/31 14647.26 14272.03
1993/09/30 14814.05 14434.59
1993/10/31 14805.45 14462.45
1993/11/30 14653.30 14335.03
1993/12/31 14980.16 14637.65
1994/01/31 15142.62 14804.81
1994/02/28 14713.05 14421.36
1994/03/31 13989.29 13834.12
1994/04/30 14030.97 13951.44
1994/05/31 14169.93 14072.40
1994/06/30 13991.10 13986.41
1994/07/31 14310.60 14242.79
1994/08/31 14394.76 14292.07
1994/09/30 14086.75 14082.26
1994/10/31 13751.76 13832.16
1994/11/30 13286.81 13582.07
1994/12/31 13732.43 13881.01
1995/01/31 14209.60 14277.73
1995/02/28 14679.96 14692.93
1995/03/31 14809.27 14861.75
1995/04/30 14847.12 14879.29
1995/05/31 15388.29 15354.09
1995/06/30 15232.70 15220.51
1995/07/31 15330.23 15364.80
1995/08/31 15563.55 15559.62
1995/09/30 15644.96 15658.11
1995/10/31 15910.47 15885.78
1995/11/30 16189.55 16149.33
1995/12/31 16359.64 16304.52
1996/01/31 16490.47 16427.62
1996/02/29 16342.13 16316.74
1996/03/31 16090.07 16108.21
1996/04/30 16066.33 16062.62
1996/05/31 16060.30 16056.20
1996/06/30 16254.66 16231.05
1996/07/31 16404.76 16378.75
1996/08/31 16366.21 16374.82
1996/09/30 16656.80 16604.07
1996/10/31 16840.68 16791.86
1996/11/30 17167.13 17099.15
1996/12/31 17068.01 17027.33
1997/01/31 17094.41 17059.52
IMATRL PRASUN SHR__CHT 19960930 19961009 151629 R00000000000123
$10,000 OVER LIFE OF FUND: Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was
invested in Spartan New York Municipal Income Fund on February 28, 1990,
shortly after the fund started. As the chart shows, by January 31, 1997,
the value of the investment would have grown to $17,094 - a 70.94% increase
on the initial investment. This assumes you still own the fund on January
31, 1997 and therefore does not include the effect of the $5 account
closeout fee. For comparison, look at how the Lehman Brothers Municipal
Bond Index, which reflects the performance of the investment-grade
municipal bond market, did over the same period. With dividends and capital
gains, if any, reinvested, the same $10,000 would have grown to $17,060 - a
70.60% increase.
UNDERSTANDING
PERFORMANCE
How a fund did yesterday is
no guarantee of how it will do
tomorrow. Bond prices, for
example, generally move in
the opposite direction of
interest rates. In turn, the
share price, return, and yield
of a fund that invests in bonds
will vary. That means if you
sell your shares during a
market downturn, you might
lose money. But if you can
ride out the market's ups and
downs, you may have a gain.
(checkmark)
TOTAL RETURN COMPONENTS
YEARS ENDED JANUARY 31,
1997 1996 1995 1994 1993
Dividend returns 5.22% 5.97% 5.41% 5.91% 6.57%
Capital appreciation
returns -1.56% 10.08% -11.58% 7.20% 5.22%
Total returns 3.66% 16.05% -6.17% 13.11% 11.79%
TOTAL RETURN COMPONENTS include both dividend returns and capital
appreciation returns. A dividend return reflects the actual dividends paid
by the fund. A capital appreciation return reflects both the amount paid by
the fund to shareholders as capital gain distributions and changes in the
fund's share price. Both returns assume the dividends or capital gains paid
by the fund are reinvested. Capital appreciation and total returns include
the effect of the $5 account closeout fee on an average-sized account.
DIVIDENDS AND YIELD
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C> <C>
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST PAST 6 PAST 1
MONTH MONTHS YEAR
Dividends per share 4.64(cents) 27.27(cents) 54.34(cents)
Annualized dividend rate 5.18% 5.13% 5.19%
30-day annualized yield 4.98% - -
30-day annualized tax-equivalent yield 8.72% - -
</TABLE>
DIVIDENDS per share show the income paid by the fund for a set period. If
you annualize this number, based on an average share price of $10.55 over
the past month, $10.54 over the past six months and $10.48 over the past
year, you can compare the fund's income over these three periods. Dividends
per share show the income paid by the fund for a set period and do not
reflect any tax reclassifications. The 30-day annualized YIELD is a
standard formula for all funds based on the yields of the bonds in the
fund, averaged over the past 30 days. This figure shows you the yield
characteristics of the fund's investments at the end of the period. It also
helps you compare funds from different companies on an equal basis. The
tax-equivalent yield shows what you would have to earn on a taxable
investment to equal the fund's tax-free yield, if you're in the 42.86%
combined effective 1997 federal, state and New York City income tax
bracket, but does not reflect the payment of the Federal alternative
minimum tax, if applicable.
SPARTAN NEW YORK MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
FUND TALK: THE MANAGER'S OVERVIEW
MARKET RECAP
Stable demand helped municipal
bonds perform better than their
investment-grade taxable
counterparts in the 12 months
ending January 31, 1997.
However, uncertainty over the
direction of the economy and
Federal Reserve Board monetary
policy affected all bonds. For the
period, the Lehman Brothers
Municipal Bond Index - a broad
measure of the municipal bond
market - had a total return of
3.85%. In comparison, the
Lehman Brothers Aggregate
Bond Index - a broad measure
of the performance of the U.S.
taxable bond market - returned
3.26%. New issue supply was
strong through most of the
period, but insurance companies
and individual investors helped
sustain demand. The diminishing
likelihood of significant tax reform
in the near future also helped
support the muni market. Like
most domestic bonds, munis
were affected by signs of strength
in the economy early in 1996.
Nevertheless, the market
conditions that supported the
muni market helped munis enter
the fall trading at expensive
levels relative to taxable
counterparts. However, demand
declined in October and munis
stalled because their rich
valuations made them less
attractive buy candidates, and
those investors who owned munis
sought to sell them to take profits.
Munis outperformed comparable
Treasuries in November and
December, but lagged in January.
From December on, munis and
the rest of the bond market
stalled as a result of conflicting
economic data and fears that
inflation might encourage the Fed
to raise short-term rates.
An interview with Norm Lind, Portfolio Manager of Spartan
New York Municipal Income Fund
Q. HOW DID THE FUND PERFORM, NORM?
A. For the year ending January 31, 1997, the fund had a total return of
3.66%. That was better than the New York municipal debt funds average, as
tracked by Lipper Analytical Services, which had a total return of 2.62%.
The fund's benchmark - the Lehman Brothers New York 4 Plus Year Municipal
Bond Index - had a total return of 4.17% over the same period.
Q. BONDS ISSUED BY NEW YORK CITY PLAYED AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN THE FUND'S
PERFORMANCE DURING THE PERIOD. CAN YOU TELL US ABOUT THAT?
A. Sure. Uninsured intermediate-maturity bonds - those with maturities
between five and 15 years - issued by New York City were among the best
performers in the New York municipal market, and they were a key reason why
the fund fared better than many of its competitors. Their strong
performance was triggered, in part, by the strength of Wall Street and its
contribution to New York City's rising revenues. Tightening credit spreads
was another reason for the strong performance of uninsured New York City
bonds. Credit spreads - which measure the difference in yields between
bonds with various credit ratings - tightened throughout the year, and
lower-quality bonds provided a smaller yield advantage over higher-quality
bonds than they had previously.
Q. WHILE THE FUND BEAT THE AVERAGE FUND OF ITS TYPE, IT LAGGED ITS
BENCHMARK. WHY WAS THAT?
A. The fund had a much lighter weighting in New York City bonds than its
benchmark. These bonds comprise roughly one-quarter of the benchmark, while
the fund had about 10% of its investments in them at the end of the period.
As a general rule, I try to avoid having the fund's performance overly
dependent on the fortunes of one issuer. That's one reason why I kept the
fund's stake in New York City bonds low relative to the benchmark. I held
off buying a lot of these bonds early on because I was worried that the
city's budget process might prove to be difficult and because I thought
their prices were relatively high. But in hindsight, I didn't build up the
fund's stake in these bonds fast enough, and that was probably my biggest
disappointment during this period.
Q. WERE THERE OTHER TYPES OF BONDS THAT BENEFITED FROM TIGHTER CREDIT
SPREADS?
A. State-appropriated bonds were another beneficiary of tighter credit
spreads. As I've mentioned in previous reports, the supply of
state-appropriated bonds varies a fair amount during the year, a function
of the state's budgetary process. I bought some state-appropriated bonds in
early 1996, correctly anticipating that supply would slow if the budget
were delayed, thereby constraining the state's ability to issue new debt.
Because of the lack of new issuance in the spring of 1996,
state-appropriated bonds began to look relatively rich - or expensive
compared to their historical value. So I sold some to take advantage of
their high prices. Late in the year, supply normalized and
state-appropriated bonds appeared to be selling below what I felt their
real value should be. So I bought back some of these-high-yielding bonds at
attractive prices. Both the early strong price performance of
state-appropriated bonds and their high yields benefited the fund's
performance.
Q. THE FUND HAS A FAIR AMOUNT OF NON-CALLABLE PREMIUM BONDS. WHAT ARE THE
UPSIDE AND DOWNSIDE OF THESE BONDS?
A. First, the non-callability can provide the potential for price
appreciation when interest rates fall because the bond can't be redeemed by
its issuer before its stated maturity. Second, the premium - or above face
value - price gives the bond DE MINIMIS protection. This protects the
bond's gains from unfavorable tax treatment that can occur during
particular market environments. In periods when the market is strong,
non-callable premiums generally do well. In periods when the market is
flat, these bonds are at somewhat of a disadvantage since their yield is
not as high as other types of bonds.
Q. WHAT FACTORS DO YOU THINK WILL SHAPE THE NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MARKET IN
THE COMING MONTHS?
A. From a supply and demand standpoint, municipals in general appear to be
in pretty good shape, barring any unforeseen legislation that could
negatively affect them. I don't expect to see a tremendous amount of
supply, and what there is should be easily digested if demand remains firm.
As far as munis issued in New York state go, I'll be monitoring the state
budget process, among other things. Last year, workmen's compensation
issues held up the budget. In 1997, the hold up could come from discussions
on welfare reform and/or the bailout of Long Island Lighting Company. If
that's the case, there may be less supply in the short term and New York
securities may perform well.
THE VIEWS EXPRESSED IN THIS REPORT REFLECT THOSE OF THE PORTFOLIO MANAGER
ONLY THROUGH THE END OF THE PERIOD OF THE REPORT AS STATED ON THE COVER.
THE MANAGER'S VIEWS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT ANY TIME BASED ON MARKET AND
OTHER CONDITIONS.
FUND FACTS
GOAL: high current income
exempt from federal, state
and New York City income
taxes by investing primarily in
longer-term, investment
grade New York municipal
securities
FUND NUMBER: 421
TRADING SYMBOL: FSNYX
START DATE: February 3, 1990
SIZE: as of January 31,
1997, more than $312 million
MANAGER: Norm Lind, since
1993; manager, various
Fidelity and Spartan
municipal income funds;
joined Fidelity in 1986
(checkmark)
NORM LIND ON MUNICIPAL BOND
INSURANCE AND ITS EFFECT ON
THE NEW YORK MUNI MARKET:
"Roughly one-third of all
new municipal bonds issued
in the state of New York carry
insurance, compared to 17%
at the beginning of the
decade. One implication of
this development is the
increasing difficulty for this
fund in finding additional yield.
Bonds that might naturally
carry an A-rating, an
Aa-rating or even Baa-rating
are being insured and
offer lower yields because
they are insured. In fact, the
high incidence of insurance
helps to explain why the
difference in yield between
higher- and lower-quality
bonds has narrowed over the
past year. Many
yield-hungry investors
gravitated toward securities
without insurance - such as
uninsured New York City
bonds - in order to find extra
income. In the process, they
sent some uninsured bond
yields closer to yields offered
by insured bonds. Even though
this situation has posed a
significant challenge, I look for
high-yielding opportunities
that might crop up as a
function of structure, demand
or other factors."
SPARTAN NEW YORK MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
INVESTMENT CHANGES
TOP FIVE SECTORS AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997
% OF FUND'S % OF FUND'S INVESTMENT
INVESTMENTS S
IN THESE SECTORS
6 MONTHS AGO
General Obligation 36.4 34.2
Transportation 15.4 17.6
Industrial Development 14.1 13.1
Special Tax 12.8 12.1
Water & Sewer 7.0 7.1
AVERAGE YEARS TO MATURITY AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997
6 MONTHS AGO
Years 14.5 15.0
AVERAGE YEARS TO MATURITY IS BASED ON THE AVERAGE TIME UNTIL PRINCIPAL
PAYMENTS ARE EXPECTED FROM EACH OF THE FUND'S BONDS, WEIGHTED BY DOLLAR
AMOUNT.
DURATION AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997
6 MONTHS AGO
Years 7.7 8.1
DURATION SHOWS HOW MUCH A BOND FUND'S PRICE FLUCTUATES WITH CHANGES IN
COMPARABLE INTEREST RATES. IF RATES RISE 1%, FOR EXAMPLE, A FUND WITH A
FIVE-YEAR DURATION IS LIKELY TO LOSE ABOUT 5% OF ITS VALUE. OTHER FACTORS
ALSO CAN INFLUENCE A BOND FUND'S PERFORMANCE AND SHARE PRICE. ACCORDINGLY,
A BOND FUND'S ACTUAL PERFORMANCE MAY DIFFER FROM THIS EXAMPLE.
QUALITY DIVERSIFICATION (MOODY'S RATINGS)
AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997 AS OF JULY 31, 1996
Aaa 26.2%
Aa, A 34.8%
Baa 37.4%
Ba, B 0.0%
Non-rated 0.0%
Short-term
investments 1.6%
Aaa 26.7%
Aa, A 34.6%
Baa 36.6%
Ba, B 0.0%
Non-rated 0.0%
Short-term
investments 2.1%
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 25.7
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 34.3
Row: 1, Col: 3, Value: 37.5
Row: 1, Col: 4, Value: 0.0
Row: 1, Col: 5, Value: 0.0
Row: 1, Col: 6, Value: 2.5
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 28.2
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 34.0
Row: 1, Col: 3, Value: 34.8
Row: 1, Col: 4, Value: 0.0
Row: 1, Col: 5, Value: 0.0
Row: 1, Col: 6, Value: 3.0
SHOWN AS A PERCENTAGE OF THE FUND'S INVESTMENTS. WHERE MOODY'S RATINGS ARE
NOT AVAILABLE, WE HAVE USED S&P RATINGS.
SPARTAN NEW YORK MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
INVESTMENTS JANUARY 31, 1997
Showing Percentage of Total Value of Investments in Securities
MUNICIPAL BONDS - 98.4%
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - 91.0%
Franklin County Ctfs. of Prtn.
(Court House Redev. Proj.) 8.125% 8/1/06 BBB- $ 1,930,000 $ 2,103,700
Monroe County Pub. Impt.:
6.10% 3/1/04 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 3,300,000 3,522,750
6.50% 6/1/04 Aa 1,310,000 1,445,913
Monroe County Gen. Oblig. 6% 6/1/06 Aa 1,000,000 1,082,500
Nassau County Gen. Oblig.:
Rfdg. Series A, 6.50% 5/1/07
(FGIC Insured) Aaa 4,000,000 4,450,000
Series P, 6.30% 11/1/00 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 2,670,000 2,843,550
Series R, 5.125% 11/1/05 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 2,565,000 2,606,681
New York City Gen. Oblig.:
Rfdg.:
Series A, 7% 8/1/04 Baa1 5,000,000 5,468,750
Series B, 5.70% 8/15/02 Baa1 1,165,000 1,195,581
Series A, 8% 8/15/21 (Pre-Refunded to
8/15/01 @ 101.50) (d) Aaa 2,485,000 2,867,069
Series B:
7.50% 2/1/02 Baa1 1,000,000 1,102,500
7.50% 2/1/03 Baa1 5,000,000 5,525,000
7.50% 2/1/06 Baa1 5,000,000 5,450,000
7.50% 2/1/07 Baa1 5,500,000 6,118,750
Series H:
7% 2/1/05 (Pre-Refunded
to 2/1/02 @ 101.50) (d) Aaa 90,000 100,800
7% 2/1/05 Baa1 3,410,000 3,670,013
New York City Ind. Dev. Agcy. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(Japan Airlines Co. Ltd. Proj.) Series 91,
6% 11/1/15 (FSA Insured)
LOC Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. (b) Aaa 1,000,000 1,026,250
New York City Ind. Dev. Agcy. Spl. Facs. Rev.:
(American Airlines, Inc. Proj.):
Series 1990, 8% 7/1/20 (b) Baa2 4,325,000 4,595,313
6.90% 8/1/24 (b) Baa2 2,000,000 2,160,000
(Terminal One Group Assoc. Proj.) 6% 1/1/15 A 15,560,000 15,482,200
New York City Muni. Assistance Corp. Rfdg.:
Series D, 6% 7/1/05 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 3,000,000 3,251,250
6% 7/1/04 Aa 4,835,000 5,221,800
6% 7/1/05 Aa 4,215,000 4,562,738
6% 7/1/06 Aa 1,000,000 1,082,500
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York City Muni. Wtr. Fin. Auth.
Wtr. & Swr. Sys. Rev.:
Rfdg. Series A, 5.50% 6/15/20 A $ 2,320,000 $ 2,157,600
Series B, 5.875% 6/15/26 A 6,130,000 6,061,038
New York Metropolitan Trans. Auth. Facs. Rev.:
Series A:
6% 7/1/16 (FSA Insured) Aaa 1,000,000 1,033,750
6.10% 7/1/21 (FSA Insured) Aaa 5,490,000 5,695,875
New York Metropolitan Trans. Auth. Svc. Contract
Trans. Facs. Rfdg. Series 7:
5.45% 7/1/07 Baa1 3,230,000 3,197,700
0% 7/1/10 Baa1 9,500,000 4,393,750
New York State Dorm. Auth. Lease Rev.,
Rfdg. Series A:
6% 7/1/04 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 5,225,000 5,616,875
6% 7/1/05 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,240,000 1,334,550
New York State Dorm. Auth. Rev.:
Rfdg. (State Univ. Edl. Facs.):
Series A:
6.50% 5/15/05 Baa1 2,480,000 2,666,000
6.50% 5/15/06 Baa1 1,900,000 2,042,500
5.50% 5/15/10 Baa1 2,375,000 2,345,313
5.25% 5/15/15 Baa1 7,850,000 7,310,313
6% 5/15/16 Baa1 3,000,000 2,992,500
5.875% 5/15/17 Baa1 1,450,000 1,444,563
6% 5/15/25 Baa1 2,725,000 2,701,156
Series B:
5.25% 5/15/09 Baa1 2,475,000 2,379,094
5.25% 5/15/10 Baa1 2,290,000 2,206,988
7.50% 5/15/11 Baa1 2,000,000 2,340,000
(City Univ. Sys.) Series C, 7.50% 7/1/10 Baa1 4,000,000 4,680,000
(Consolidated City Univ. Sys.) 5.75% 7/1/09 Baa1 5,000,000 5,012,500
(Strong Memorial Hospital) 5.10% 7/1/04 A1 1,470,000 1,488,375
5.50% 5/15/26 Baa1 1,000,000 928,750
New York State Energy Research & Dev. Auth.
Gas Facs. Rev. (Brooklyn Union Gas):
Series A, 3.66% 7/1/26 (b) A1 3,500,000 3,500,000
8.82% 4/1/20 INFL (e) A1 3,500,000 3,850,000
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York State Envir. Facs. Corp. Poll. Cont. Rev.
(State Wtr. Revolving Fund):
Series A:
6.80% 6/15/01 Aa $ 4,000,000 $ 4,360,000
7% 6/15/12 Aa 1,000,000 1,096,250
Series D:
5.90% 5/15/01 Aaa 1,000,000 1,057,500
6.10% 5/15/03 Aaa 2,240,000 2,424,800
6.20% 11/15/04 Aaa 1,250,000 1,373,438
New York State Envir. Facs. Corp. Resource
Recovery Rev. (Huntington Proj.) Series A,
7.50% 10/1/12 (b) Baa 12,500,000 13,140,625
New York State Local Gov't. Assistance Corp.:
Rfdg.:
Series C, 5.50% 4/1/17 A 3,275,000 3,225,875
Series E, 5.25% 4/1/16 A 11,100,000 10,614,375
Series A, 5.80% 4/1/10 A 2,000,000 2,052,500
Series B, 6% 4/1/18 A 5,595,000 5,650,950
New York State Mtg. Agcy. Rev.
(Homeowner Mtg.) (b):
Series HH-3, 7.95% 4/1/22 Aa 2,500,000 2,643,750
Series SS, 7.95% 10/1/22 Aa 2,505,000 2,658,431
Series 60, 6.05% 4/1/26 Aa 2,200,000 2,194,500
5.50% 4/1/19 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,400,000 1,328,250
New York State Pwr. Auth. Rev. & Gen. Purp. Rfdg.
Series CC, 5.125% 1/1/11 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 7,000,000 6,930,000
New York State Thruway Auth. Svc. Contract Rev.
(Local Hwy. & Bridge):
7.25% 1/1/10 (Pre-Refunded to
1/1/01 @ 102) (d) Baa1 2,500,000 2,781,250
5.75% 4/1/16 Baa1 3,070,000 3,004,763
New York State Tollway Auth. (Hwy. & Bridge
Trust Fund):
Series A:
6% 4/1/00 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 2,000,000 2,100,000
6.25% 4/1/04 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,750,000 1,911,875
Series B, 6% 4/1/04 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 6,900,000 7,434,750
New York State Urban Dev. Corp. Rev.
(Correctional Cap. Facs.) Series 6,
5.375% 1/1/15 Baa1 1,750,000 1,647,188
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
Onondaga County Ind. Dev. Agy. Rev.
(Bristol-Meyers Squibb Co. Proj.)
5.75% 3/1/24 (b) Aaa $ 6,170,000 $ 6,177,713
Oyster Bay Pub. Impt. Rfdg. 5.50% 2/15/06 Aa 1,555,000 1,611,369
Suffolk County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Rev.
(Dowling College) 8.25% 12/1/20
(Pre-Refunded to 12/1/00 @ 102) (d) BBB 965,000 1,108,544
Suffolk County Southwest Swr. Dist. Rfdg.
6% 2/1/04 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 4,570,000 4,918,463
Suffolk County Wtr. Auth.Wtrwks. Rev. Rfdg.
6% 6/1/17 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 3,060,000 3,258,900
Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Auth. Rev.:
Rfdg.:
Series B, 6% 1/1/03 Aa 1,250,000 1,343,750
Series Y:
6% 1/1/12 Aa 7,600,000 8,065,500
5.50% 1/1/17 Aa 2,700,000 2,700,000
(Convention Ctr. Proj.) Series E:
7.25% 1/1/10 Baa1 6,170,000 7,041,513
6% 1/1/11 Baa1 1,500,000 1,533,750
281,705,370
NEW YORK & NEW JERSEY - 6.9%
New York & New Jersey Port Auth.:
Consolidated:
76th Series, 6.50% 11/1/26 (b) A1 3,000,000 3,138,750
85th Series:
5.20% 9/1/16 A1 2,000,000 1,925,000
5.20% 9/1/18 A1 1,675,000 1,599,625
5.375% 3/1/28 A1 7,000,000 6,763,750
99th Series, 7% 11/1/04 (FGIC Insured) (b) Aaa 5,040,000 5,745,600
Series 104-3rd, 4.75% 1/15/26
(AMBAC Insured) Aaa 2,420,000 2,102,368
21,275,093
PUERTO RICO - 0.5%
Puerto Rico Infrastructure Fing. Auth. Spl. Tax
Series 1988 A, 7.75% 7/1/08 Baa1 1,500,000 1,590,000
TOTAL MUNICIPAL BONDS
(Cost $295,169,836) 304,570,463
MUNICIPAL NOTES (A) - 1.6%
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - 1.6%
Chautauqua County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(Busch Industries, Inc. Proj.) Series 84,
4.15%, LOC Mellon Bank NA, VRDN - $ 900,000 $ 900,000
New York State Energy Research & Dev. Auth.
Poll. Cont. Rev. (Niagara Mohawk
Pwr. Corp.) VRDN:
Series 1985 C, 3.60%,
LOC Mitsubishi Trust & Banking P-1 1,200,000 1,200,000
Series 1986 A, 3.75%,
LOC Citibank (b) P-1 600,000 600,000
Series 1987 B, 3.75%,
LOC Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. (b) P-1+ 1,200,000 1,200,000
Series 1988 A, 3.75%,
LOC Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. (b) P-1+ 900,000 900,000
TOTAL MUNICIPAL NOTES
(Cost $4,800,000) 4,800,000
TOTAL INVESTMENTS - 100%
(Cost $299,969,836) $ 309,370,463
SECURITY TYPE ABBREVIATIONS
INFL - Inverse Floating Rate Security
VRDN - Variable Rate Demand Notes
LEGEND
(e) The coupon rate shown on floating or adjustable rate securities
represents the rate at period end.
(f) Private activity obligations whose interest is subject to the federal
alternative minimum tax for individuals.
(g) Standard & Poor's credit ratings are used in the absence of a rating
by Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
(h) Security collateralized by an amount sufficient to pay interest and
principal.
(i) Coupon is inversely indexed to a floating interest rate. The price
will be more volatile than the price of a comparable fixed rate security.
The rate shown is the rate at period end.
OTHER INFORMATION
The composition of long-term debt holdings as a percentage of total value
of investment in securities, is as follows (ratings are unaudited):
MOODY'S RATINGS S&P RATINGS
Aaa, Aa, A 61.0% AAA, AA, A 57.1%
Baa 36.4% BBB 32.0%
Ba 0.0% BB 2.2%
B 0.0% B 0.0%
Caa 0.0% CCC 0.0%
Ca, C 0.0% CC, C 0.0%
D 0.0%
The percentage not rated by either S&P or Moody's amounted to 0.0%.
The distribution of municipal securities by revenue source, as a percentage
of total value of investment in securities, is as follows:
General Obligation 36.4%
Transportation 15.4
Industrial Developement 14.1
Special Tax 12.8
Water and Sewer 7.0
Electric Revenue 5.5
Others (individually less than 5%) 8.8
TOTAL 100.0%
INCOME TAX INFORMATION
At January 31, 1997, the aggregate cost of investment securities for income
tax purposes was $300,486,555. Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)
aggregated $8,883,908 of which $10,013,490 related to appreciated
investment securities and $1,129,582 related to depreciated investment
securities.
At January 31,1997, the fund had a capital loss carryforward of
approximately $7,842,000 which will expire on January 31, 2004.
At January 31, 1997, the fund was required to defer approximately $181,362
of losses on futures contracts.
SPARTAN NEW YORK MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
JANUARY 31, 1997
ASSETS
Investment in securities, at value (cost $299,969,836) - $ 309,370,463
See accompanying schedule
Interest receivable 4,413,263
Receivable for fund shares sold 236,670
Receivable for daily variation on futures contracts 19,305
TOTAL ASSETS 314,039,701
LIABILITIES
Payable to custodian bank $ 16,800
Payable for fund shares redeemed 712,108
Distributions payable 250,333
Accrued management fee 145,081
Other payables and accrued expenses 3,817
TOTAL LIABILITIES 1,128,139
NET ASSETS $ 312,911,562
Net Assets consist of:
Paid in capital $ 312,035,750
Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) (8,524,815)
on investments
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) 9,400,627
on investments
NET ASSETS, for 29,552,371 shares outstanding $ 312,911,562
NET ASSET VALUE, offering price and redemption price per $10.59
share ($312,911,562 (divided by) 29,552,371 shares)
</TABLE>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
YEAR ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997
INTEREST INCOME $ 17,844,190
EXPENSES
Management fee $ 1,712,344
Non-interested trustees' compensation 4,348
Total expenses before reductions 1,716,692
Expense reductions (26,716) 1,689,976
NET INTEREST INCOME 16,154,214
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS)
Net realized gain (loss) on:
Investment securities 925,585
Futures contracts (227,218) 698,367
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:
Investment securities (6,007,799)
Futures contracts (7,677) (6,015,476)
NET GAIN (LOSS) (5,317,109)
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING $ 10,837,105
FROM OPERATIONS
</TABLE>
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
YEAR ENDED YEAR ENDED
JANUARY 31, JANUARY 31,
1997 1996
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS
Operations $ 16,154,214 $ 16,823,675
Net interest income
Net realized gain (loss) 698,367 367,447
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) (6,015,476) 29,786,657
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING 10,837,105 46,977,779
FROM OPERATIONS
Distributions to shareholders (16,154,214) (17,006,346)
From net interest income
From net realized gain (59,094) -
TOTAL DISTRIBUTIONS (16,213,308) (17,006,346)
Share transactions 38,102,667 45,657,560
Net proceeds from sales of shares
Reinvestment of distributions 13,289,653 14,016,045
Cost of shares redeemed (60,820,541) (57,063,043)
Redemption fees 18,279 10,681
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING (9,409,942) 2,621,243
FROM SHARE TRANSACTIONS
TOTAL INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS (14,786,145) 32,592,676
NET ASSETS
Beginning of period 327,697,707 295,105,031
End of period $ 312,911,562 $ 327,697,707
OTHER INFORMATION
Shares
Sold 3,631,818 4,435,483
Issued in reinvestment of distributions 1,267,326 1,350,510
Redeemed (5,802,803) (5,514,764)
Net increase (decrease) (903,659) 271,229
</TABLE>
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
YEARS ENDED JANUARY 31, NINE MONTHS
ENDED
JANUARY 31,
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
1997 1996 1995 1994 E 1993
SELECTED PER-SHARE DATA
Net asset value, beginning $ 10.760 $ 9.780 $ 11.380 $ 10.890 $ 10.480
of period
Income from Investment .543 .549 .607 .622 .491
Operations
Net interest income
Net realized and unrealized (.169) .986 (1.322) .768 .518
gain (loss)
Total from investment .374 1.535 (.715) 1.390 1.009
operations
Less Distributions
From net interest income (.543) (.555) F (.607) (.622) (.491)
From net realized gain (.002) - (.160) (.280) (.110)
In excess of net realized gain - - (.120) - -
Total distributions (.545) (.555) (.887) (.902) (.601)
Redemption fees added to paid .001 .000 .002 .002 .002
in capital
Net asset value, end of period $ 10.590 $ 10.760 $ 9.780 $ 11.380 $ 10.890
TOTAL RETURN B 3.66% 16.05% (6.16) 13.12% 9.83%
%
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net assets, end of period $ 312,912 $ 327,698 $ 295,105 $ 446,030 $ 366,840
(000 omitted)
Ratio of expenses to average .55% .55% .55% .55% .48% A,
net assets C
Ratio of expenses to average .54% .54% .55% .55% .48% A
net assets after expense D D
reductions
Ratio of net interest income to 5.18% 5.30% 5.98% 5.49% 6.03% A
average net assets
Portfolio turnover rate 39% 82% 38% 50% 35% A
</TABLE>
A ANNUALIZED
B TOTAL RETURNS DO NOT INCLUDE THE ACCOUNT CLOSEOUT FEE AND FOR PERIODS OF
LESS THAN ONE YEAR ARE NOT ANNUALIZED. THE TOTAL RETURNS WOULD HAVE BEEN
LOWER HAD CERTAIN EXPENSES NOT BEEN REDUCED DURING THE PERIODS SHOWN.
C FMR AGREED TO REIMBURSE A PORTION OF THE FUND'S EXPENSES DURING THE
PERIOD. WITHOUT THIS REIMBURSEMENT, THE FUND'S EXPENSE RATIO WOULD HAVE
BEEN HIGHER.
C FMR OR THE FUND HAS ENTERED INTO VARYING ARRANGEMENTS WITH THIRD PARTIES
WHO EITHER PAID OR REDUCED A PORTION OF THE FUND'S EXPENSES (SEE NOTE 5 OF
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS).
E EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 1, 1994, THE FUND ADOPTED STATEMENT OF POSITION 93-2,
"DETERMINATION, DISCLOSURE, AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT PRESENTATION OF INCOME,
CAPITAL GAIN, AND RETURN OF CAPITAL DISTRIBUTIONS BY INVESTMENT COMPANIES."
AS A RESULT, NET INTEREST INCOME PER SHARE MAY REFLECT CERTAIN
RECLASSIFICATIONS RELATED TO BOOK TO TAX DIFFERENCES.
F THE AMOUNTS SHOWN REFLECT CERTAIN RECLASSIFICATIONS RELATED TO BOOK TO
TAX DIFFERENCES.
SPARTAN NEW YORK INTERMEDIATE MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
PERFORMANCE: THE BOTTOM LINE
There are several ways to evaluate historical performance. You can look at
the total percentage change in value, the average annual percentage change,
or the growth of a hypothetical $10,000 investment. Total return reflects
the change in value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of the fund's
dividend income and capital gains (the profits earned upon the sale of
securities that have grown in value), and the effect of the $5 account
closeout fee on an average sized account. You can also look at the fund's
income, as reflected in the fund's yield, to measure performance. If
Fidelity had not reimbursed certain fund expenses during the periods shown,
the total returns and dividends would have been lower.
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST 1 LIFE OF
YEAR FUND
Spartan New York Intermediate Municipal Inco 3.26% 14.30%
me
Lehman Brothers New York 1-17 Year 4.39% n/a
Municipal Bond Index
New York Intermediate Municipal Debt 2.82% n/a
Funds Average
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS show the fund's performance over a set period - in
this case, one year or since the fund started on December 29, 1993. For
example, if you had invested $1,000 in a fund that had a 5% return over the
past year, the value of your investment would be $1,050. You can compare
the fund's returns to the performance of the Lehman Brothers New York 1-17
Year Municipal Bond Index, which is a total return performance benchmark
for New York investment-grade municipal bonds with maturities between one
and 17 years. To measure how the fund's performance stacked up against its
peers, you can also compare it to the New York intermediate municipal debt
funds average, which reflects the performance of 22 mutual funds with
similar objectives tracked by Lipper Analytical Services, Inc. over the
past one year. Both benchmarks reflect reinvestment of dividends and
capital gains, if any, and exclude the effect of sales charges.
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST 1 LIFE OF
YEAR FUND
Spartan New York Intermediate Municipal Inco 3.26% 4.41%
me
Lehman Brothers New York 1-17 Year 4.39% n/a
Municipal Bond Index
New York Intermediate Municipal Debt 2.82% n/a
Funds Average
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS take the fund's cumulative return and show you
what would have happened if the fund had performed at a constant rate each
year. (Note: Lipper calculates average annual total returns by annualizing
each fund's total return, then taking an arithmetic average. This may
produce a slightly different figure than that obtained by averaging the
cumulative total returns and annualizing the result.)
$10,000 OVER LIFE OF FUND
IMAHDR PRASUN SHR__CHT 19960930 19961009 151627 S00000000000001
Spartan NY Int Med LB Muni Bond Index
00431 LB015
1993/12/31 10000.00 10000.00
1994/01/31 10110.96 10114.20
1994/02/28 9874.47 9852.24
1994/03/31 9490.81 9451.06
1994/04/30 9590.31 9531.20
1994/05/31 9711.74 9613.84
1994/06/30 9671.17 9555.10
1994/07/31 9815.93 9730.24
1994/08/31 9837.50 9763.91
1994/09/30 9692.01 9620.58
1994/10/31 9538.05 9449.71
1994/11/30 9393.15 9278.86
1994/12/31 9574.33 9483.09
1995/01/31 9786.16 9754.12
1995/02/28 10014.76 10037.77
1995/03/31 10141.74 10153.10
1995/04/30 10141.88 10165.08
1995/05/31 10343.94 10489.45
1995/06/30 10287.06 10398.19
1995/07/31 10405.71 10496.77
1995/08/31 10525.03 10629.87
1995/09/30 10598.73 10697.15
1995/10/31 10728.92 10852.69
1995/11/30 10869.75 11032.74
1995/12/31 10956.93 11138.76
1996/01/31 11056.82 11222.86
1996/02/29 10997.40 11147.10
1996/03/31 10885.58 11004.64
1996/04/30 10848.66 10973.50
1996/05/31 10835.58 10969.11
1996/06/30 10932.80 11088.57
1996/07/31 11008.77 11189.47
1996/08/31 10994.89 11186.79
1996/09/30 11115.90 11343.40
1996/10/31 11228.38 11471.69
1996/11/30 11419.87 11681.63
1996/12/31 11383.89 11632.56
1997/01/31 11417.63 11654.55
IMATRL PRASUN SHR__CHT 19960930 19961009 151629 R00000000000123
$10,000 OVER LIFE OF FUND: Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was
invested in Spartan New York Intermediate Municipal Income Fund on December
31, 1993, shortly after the fund started. As the chart shows, by January
31, 1997, the value of the investment would have grown to $11,418 - a
14.18% increase on the initial investment. This assumes you still own the
fund on January 31, 1997 and therefore does not include the effect of the
$5 account closeout fee. For comparison, look at how the Lehman Brothers
Municipal Bond Index, which reflects the performance of the
investment-grade municipal bond market, did over the same period. With
dividends and capital gains, if any, reinvested, the same $10,000 would
have grown to $11,655 - a 16.55% increase.
UNDERSTANDING
PERFORMANCE
How a fund did yesterday is
no guarantee of how it will do
tomorrow. Bond prices, for
example, generally move in
the opposite direction of
interest rates. In turn, the
share price, return, and yield
of a fund that invests in bonds
will vary. That means if you
sell your shares during a
market downturn, you might
lose money. But if you can
ride out the market's ups and
downs, you may have a gain.
(checkmark)
TOTAL RETURN COMPONENTS
YEARS ENDED JANUARY 31, DECEMBER 29, 1993
(COMMENCEMENT
OF OPERATIONS) TO
JANUARY 31,
1997 1996 1995 1994
Dividend returns 4.67% 5.34% 4.82% 0.33%
Capital appreciation
returns -1.41% 7.64% -8.05% 0.88%
Total returns 3.26% 12.98% -3.23% 1.21%
TOTAL RETURN COMPONENTS include both dividend returns and capital
appreciation returns. A dividend return reflects the actual dividends paid
by the fund. A capital appreciation return reflects both the amount paid by
the fund to shareholders as capital gain distributions and changes in the
fund's share price. Both returns assume the dividends or capital gains paid
by the fund are reinvested. Capital appreciation and total returns include
the effect of the $5 account closeout fee on an average-sized account.
DIVIDENDS AND YIELD
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C> <C>
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST PAST 6 PAST 1
MONTH MONTHS YEAR
Dividends per share 3.92(cents) 22.74(cents) 45.22(cents)
Annualized dividend rate 4.70% 4.61% 4.63%
30-day annualized yield 4.63% - -
30-day annualized tax-equivalent yield 8.10% - -
</TABLE>
DIVIDENDS per share show the income paid by the fund for a set period. If
you annualize this number, based on an average share price of $9.82 over
the past month, $9.79 over the past six months, and $9.76 over the past
year, you can compare the fund's income over these three periods. Dividends
per share show the income paid by the fund for a set period of time and do
not reflect any tax reclassifications. The 30-day annualized YIELD is a
standard formula for all funds based on the yields of the bonds in the
fund, averaged over the past 30 days. This figure shows you the yield
characteristics of the fund's investments at the end of the period. It also
helps you compare funds from different companies on an equal basis. The
tax-equivalent yield shows what you would have to earn on a taxable
investment to equal the fund's tax-free yield, if you're in the 42.86%
combined effective 1997 federal, state and New York City income tax
bracket, but does not reflect payment of the Federal alternative minimum
tax, if applicable.
SPARTAN NEW YORK INTERMEDIATE MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
FUND TALK: THE MANAGER'S OVERVIEW
MARKET RECAP
Stable demand helped municipal
bonds perform better than their
investment-grade taxable
counterparts in the 12 months
ending January 31, 1997.
However, uncertainty over the
direction of the economy and
Federal Reserve Board monetary
policy affected all bonds. For the
period, the Lehman Brothers
Municipal Bond Index - a broad
measure of the municipal bond
market - had a total return of
3.85%. In comparison, the
Lehman Brothers Aggregate
Bond Index - a broad measure
of the performance of the U.S.
taxable bond market - returned
3.26%. New issue supply was
strong through most of the
period, but insurance companies
and individual investors helped
sustain demand. The diminishing
likelihood of significant tax reform
in the near future also helped
support the muni market. Like
most domestic bonds, munis
were affected by signs of strength
in the economy early in 1996.
Nevertheless, the market
conditions that supported the
muni market helped munis enter
the fall trading at expensive
levels relative to taxable
counterparts. However, demand
declined in October and munis
stalled because their rich
valuations made them less
attractive buy candidates, and
those investors who owned munis
sought to sell them to take profits.
Munis outperformed comparable
Treasuries in November and
December, but lagged in January.
From December on, munis and
the rest of the bond market
stalled as a result of conflicting
economic data and fears that
inflation might encourage the Fed
to raise short-term rates.
An interview with Norman Lind, Portfolio Manager of Spartan New York
Intermediate Municipal Income Fund
Q. HOW DID THE FUND PERFORM, NORM?
A. For the 12 months ending January 31, 1997, the fund returned 3.26%. That
beat the New York intermediate municipal debt funds average, as tracked by
Lipper Analytical Services, which had a total return of 2.82%. The Lehman
Brothers New York 1-17 Year Municipal Bond Index had a total return of
4.39% over the same period.
Q. WHAT WERE THE KEY REASONS WHY THE FUND PERFORMED WELL RELATIVE TO THE
AVERAGE FUND OF ITS TYPE?
A. I think that one of the most important keys to the fund's
better-than-average performance was its stake in intermediate-maturity New
York City bonds. Rising revenue collections at the city level - thanks in
part to the strength of Wall Street firms - caused investors to bid up the
prices of many New York City bonds. The price improvement was most evident
with intermediate-maturity bonds - those with maturities between five and
15 years. They benefited more than longer-term bonds because
longer-maturity bonds seemed to reflect investors' concern about the
future. Another factor that helped New York City bonds in general was that
credit spreads - which measure the difference in yields between bonds with
various credit ratings - tightened throughout the year, and lower-quality
bonds provided a smaller yield advantage over higher-quality bonds than
they had previously.
Q. WHAT CAUSED THE FUND TO LAG ITS BENCHMARK - THE LEHMAN BROTHERS NEW YORK
1-17 YEAR INDEX?
A. The fund had a smaller weighting than its benchmark in New York City
bonds, which were among the New York municipal's market best performers
during the year. In retrospect, it would have helped the fund's performance
to have weighted the portfolio more heavily in the city's bonds. But
because I had concerns about how the state's difficulty in passing a budget
might negatively affect the city's bonds, I was reluctant to take too large
a stake in the city's debt early on. But even so, I avoided building the
fund's New York City holdings to an index weighting because I didn't want
to make the fund's performance overly dependent on one type of bonds.
Q. ARE THERE OTHER FACTORS THAT YOU CAN POINT TO THAT EXPLAIN THE FUND'S
PERFORMANCE?
A. Yes. As I mentioned in the report to shareholders six months ago, the
fund's investments in New York Local Government Assistance Corporation -
LGAC - bonds helped the fund's performance. LGAC is a financing authority
that has reached the end of its financing program, and this helped its
bonds to gain more popularity with investors. Additionally, the fund's
structure played an important role. Throughout the year, the fund was
heavily weighted in non-callable bonds. The non-callability can provide
upside potential, since the bond can't be redeemed by the issuer when rates
fall - much as they did in the late summer and fall of 1996.
Q. DID YOU CHANGE THE WAY THE FUND WAS ALLOCATED AMONG VARIOUS SECTORS OF
THE MUNICIPAL MARKET SINCE THE LAST REPORT SIX MONTHS AGO?
A. Not really. That's because the fund specializes in municipal bonds with
intermediate maturities, and its sector allocation is a secondary concern.
Rather, I believe I add more value by trying to take advantage of price
inefficiencies along the intermediate portion of the yield curve.
Therefore, I look for bonds that are undervalued relative to those of other
maturities or that have investment characteristics that make them
well-suited for a particular bond environment.
Q. LOOKING AHEAD, NORM, WHAT DO YOU SEE ON THE HORIZON FOR THE MUNICIPAL
MARKET IN GENERAL AND THE NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MARKET IN PARTICULAR?
A. From a supply and demand standpoint, municipals in general appear to be
in pretty good shape, barring any unforeseen legislation that could
negatively affect them. I don't expect to see a tremendous amount of
supply, and what there is should be easily digested if demand remains firm.
As far as munis issued in New York state go, I'll be monitoring the state
budget process, among other things. Last year, workmen's compensation
issues held up the budget. In 1997, the holdup could come from discussions
on welfare reform and/or the bailout of Long Island Lighting Company. If
that's the case, there may be less supply in the short term and New York
bonds may perform well.
THE VIEWS EXPRESSED IN THIS REPORT REFLECT THOSE OF THE PORTFOLIO MANAGER
ONLY THROUGH THE END OF THE PERIOD OF THE REPORT AS STATED ON THE COVER.
THE MANAGER'S VIEWS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT ANY TIME BASED ON MARKET AND
OTHER CONDITIONS.
FUND FACTS
GOAL: high current income
exempt from federal, state
and New York City income
taxes by investing primarily
in investment grade New
York municipal securities
FUND NUMBER: 431
TRADING SYMBOL: FSNMX
START DATE: December 29,
1993
SIZE: as of January 31,
1997, more than $56 million
MANAGER: Norm Lind, since
1995; manager, various
Fidelity and Spartan municipal
income funds; joined Fidelity
in 1986
(checkmark)
NORM LIND ON MUNICIPAL BOND
INSURANCE AND ITS EFFECT ON THE
NEW YORK MUNI MARKET:
"Roughly one-third of all
new municipal bonds issued
in the state of New York carry
insurance, compared to17%
at the beginning of the
decade. One implication of
this development is the
increasing difficulty for this
fund in finding additional yield.
Bonds that might otherwise
carry an A-rating, an
Aa-rating or even Baa-rating
were they not insured
offer lower yields simply
because they are insured. In
fact, the high incidence of
insurance helps to explain
why the difference between
higher- and lower-quality
bonds has narrowed over the
past year. Many yield-hungry
investors gravitated toward
securities without insurance
- - such as uninsured New York
City bonds - in order to find
extra income. In the process,
they sent some uninsured bond
yields closer to yields offered by
insured bonds. Even though this
situation has posed a significant
challenge, I look for
high-yielding opportunities
that might crop up as a
function of structure, demand
or other factors."
SPARTAN NEW YORK INTERMEDIATE MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
INVESTMENT CHANGES
TOP FIVE SECTORS AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997
% OF FUND'S % OF FUND'S INVESTMENT
INVESTMENTS S
IN THESE SECTORS
6 MONTHS AGO
General Obligation 32.6 32.5
Water & Sewer 14.3 15.7
Education 13.1 9.6
Special Tax 10.5 11.0
Electric Revenue 6.9 3.4
AVERAGE YEARS TO MATURITY AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997
6 MONTHS AGO
Years 8.2 8.5
AVERAGE YEARS TO MATURITY IS BASED ON THE AVERAGE TIME UNTIL PRINCIPAL
PAYMENTS ARE EXPECTED FROM EACH OF THE FUND'S BONDS, WEIGHTED BY DOLLAR
AMOUNT.
DURATION AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997
6 MONTHS AGO
Years 5.8 5.9
DURATION SHOWS HOW MUCH A BOND FUND'S PRICE FLUCTUATES WITH CHANGES IN
COMPARABLE INTEREST RATES. IF RATES RISE 1%, FOR EXAMPLE, A FUND WITH A
FIVE-YEAR DURATION IS LIKELY TO LOSE ABOUT 5% OF ITS VALUE. OTHER FACTORS
ALSO CAN INFLUENCE A BOND FUND'S PERFORMANCE AND SHARE PRICE. ACCORDINGLY,
A BOND FUND'S ACTUAL PERFORMANCE MAY DIFFER FROM THIS EXAMPLE.
QUALITY DIVERSIFICATION (MOODY'S RATINGS)
AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997 AS OF JULY 31, 1996
Aaa 34.8%
Aa, A 27.8%
Baa 30.6%
Ba, B 0.0%
Non-rated 0.0%
Short-term
investments 6.8%
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 34.8
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 27.8
Row: 1, Col: 3, Value: 30.6
Row: 1, Col: 4, Value: 0.0
Row: 1, Col: 5, Value: 0.0
Row: 1, Col: 6, Value: 6.8
Aaa 40.2%
Aa, A 30.6%
Baa 22.5%
Ba, B 0.0%
Non-rated 0.0%
Short-term
investments 6.7%
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 46.4
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 27.7
Row: 1, Col: 3, Value: 19.6
Row: 1, Col: 4, Value: 0.0
Row: 1, Col: 5, Value: 0.0
Row: 1, Col: 6, Value: 6.3
SHOWN AS A PERCENTAGE OF THE FUND'S INVESTMENTS. WHERE MOODY'S RATINGS ARE
NOT AVAILABLE, WE HAVE USED S&P RATINGS.
SPARTAN NEW YORK INTERMEDIATE MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
INVESTMENTS JANUARY 31, 1997
Showing Percentage of Total Value of Investments in Securities
MUNICIPAL BONDS - 93.2%
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - 92.2%
Babylon Waste Facs. 9% 8/1/09 (FGIC Insured) Aaa $ 350,000 $ 467,250
Canandaigua School Dist. Rfdg.
5.25% 6/1/07 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 515,000 530,450
Hempstead Ind. Dev. Agcy. Resource
Recovery Rev. (American Ref. - Fuel Co.)
7.375% 12/1/05 Baa1 2,230,000 2,294,402
Monroe County Gen. Oblig. 6.50% 6/1/04 Aa 1,000,000 1,103,750
Monroe County Pub. Impt. Unltd. Tax 5% 6/1/07
(AMBAC Insured) Aaa 1,500,000 1,494,375
Nassau County Combined Swr. Dist. Rfdg.
Series E, 5.30% 7/1/07 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 350,000 356,125
New York City Gen. Oblig.:
Rfdg.:
Series A, 6.25% 8/1/08 Baa1 1,000,000 1,032,500
Series B, 6.20% 8/15/06 Baa1 945,000 982,800
Series C, 5.70% 8/15/02 Baa1 1,310,000 1,344,388
Series E, 6.50% 2/15/06 Baa1 1,000,000 1,062,500
Series D, 5.75% 2/15/08 Baa1 1,000,000 991,250
New York City Ind. Dev. Agcy. Civic Facs. Rev.
(USTA Nat'l. Tennis Ctr. Proj.)
6.40% 11/15/08 (FSA Insured) Aaa 1,000,000 1,106,250
New York City Ind. Dev. Agcy. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(Japan Airlines Co. Ltd. Proj.) Series 91,
6% 11/1/15 (FSA Insured)
LOC Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. (b) Aaa 100,000 102,625
New York City Ind. Dev. Agcy. Split Facs. Rev.
(Terminal One Group Assoc. Proj.)
5.70% 1/1/04 (b) A 1,500,000 1,546,875
New York City Ind. Dev. Agcy. Split. Facs. Rev.
(Terminal One Group Assoc. Proj.)
6% 1/1/08 (b) A 500,000 515,625
New York City Muni. Assistance Corp.
Series D, 6% 7/1/05 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa 2,000,000 2,167,500
New York City Muni. Wtr. Fin. Auth. Wtr. & Swr.
Sys. Rev. Series B, 5.375% 6/15/07
(AMBAC Insured) Aaa 500,000 510,625
New York Metropolitan Trans. Auth. Svc.
Contract Rfdg. (Transit Facs.) Series 5,
6.90% 7/1/05 Baa1 1,500,000 1,608,750
New York State Gen. Oblig. Crossover Rfdg.
7.50% 11/15/00 A 1,000,000 1,098,750
New York State Ctfs. of Prtn.
6.70% 9/1/97 Baa1 1,110,000 1,124,597
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York State Dorm. Auth. Lease Rev. Rfdg.
(State Univ. Dorm. Facs.) Series A,
6% 7/1/03 (AMBAC Insured) Aaa $ 500,000 $ 536,250
New York State Dorm. Auth. Rev.:
Rfdg.:
(New York City Univ.) 5.70% 7/1/05 Baa1 1,000,000 1,017,500
(State Univ. Edl. Facs.):
Series A:
6.50% 5/15/04 Baa1 1,000,000 1,073,750
6.50% 5/15/06 Baa1 1,500,000 1,612,500
Series B, 5.25% 5/15/10 Baa1 500,000 481,875
(Vassar College):
6% 7/1/03 Aa 300,000 323,625
6% 7/1/04 Aa 745,000 806,463
6% 7/1/06 Aa 850,000 922,250
(City Univ.) Series U, 6.25% 7/1/03 Baa1 525,000 554,531
(City Univ. Sys. Consolidated) Series A,
5.75% 7/1/07 Baa1 500,000 506,250
(Columbia Univ.) Series A:
5.75% 7/1/09 Aaa 2,100,000 2,231,250
4.75% 7/1/14 Aaa 1,800,000 1,615,500
(Univ. Rochester-Strong Memorial Hosp.)
5.20% 7/1/05 A1 1,000,000 1,015,000
New York State Energy Research & Dev. Auth. Poll.
Cont. Rev. Rfdg. Series E, 5.90% 12/1/06
(MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,000,000 1,083,750
New York State Envir. Facs. Corp. Poll. Cont. Rev.
(State Wtr. Revolving Fund):
Series A, 6.90% 6/15/02 Aa 1,100,000 1,207,250
Series D:
6.10% 5/15/03 Aaa 1,000,000 1,082,500
6.40% 11/15/06 Aaa 1,000,000 1,113,750
Series E, 6.25% 6/15/05 (AMBAC Insured) Aa 1,500,000 1,638,750
New York State Local Gov't. Assistance Corp.:
Rfdg. Series E, 6% 4/1/14 A 500,000 527,500
Series A, 7% 4/1/04 A 2,500,000 2,750,000
New York State Med. Care Facs. Fin. Agcy. Rev.
(North Shore Med. Ctr.) 7.25% 11/1/11
(MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,500,000 1,646,250
New York State Pwr. Auth. Rev. & Gen. Purp. Rfdg.
Series W, 6.50% 1/1/08 Aa 250,000 278,750
MUNICIPAL BONDS - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York State Thruway Auth. Hwy. & Bridge
Trust Fund Series A, 6.25%
4/1/04 (MBIA Insured) Aaa $ 500,000 $ 546,250
New York State Urban Dev. Corp. Rev. Rfdg.:
(Correctional Cap. Facs.) Series A,
6.30% 1/1/03 Baa1 700,000 741,125
(Syracuse Univ. Ctr.) 5.20% 1/1/03 Baa1 1,000,000 997,500
Niagara Falls Wtr. Treatment 7%
11/1/13 (MBIA Insured) Aaa 1,000,000 1,131,250
Suffolk County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Southwest Swr. Sys.
Rev. 6% 2/1/07 (FGIC Insured) Aaa 1,340,000 1,455,575
Suffolk County Wtr. Auth. Wtrwks. Rev. Rfdg.
Series C, 5.75% 6/1/10 (AMBAC Insured)
(Pre-Refunded to 6/1/02 @ 102) (d) Aaa 30,000 32,138
Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Auth. Rev. Gen. Purp.:
Rfdg. Series Y, 5.50% 1/1/03 Aa 1,500,000 1,573,125
Series A, 6% 1/1/11 Aa 500,000 537,500
Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Auth. Rev. Series R, 6%
1/1/20 (MBIA Insured)
(Pre-Refunded to 1/1/00 @ 100) (d) Aaa 90,000 94,050
52,575,144
PUERTO RICO - 1.0 %
Puerto Rico Commonwealth Pub. Impt. 6.80% 7/1/21
(Pre-Refunded to 7/1/02 @ 101.50) (d) AAA 500,000 561,874
TOTAL MUNICIPAL BONDS
(Cost $52,170,916) 53,137,018
MUNICIPAL NOTES (A) - 6.8%
NEW YORK - 5.9%
Erie County Ind. Dev. Auth. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(National Wire Prods.) Series 1988 E,
3.30%, LOC Marine Midland Bank, VRDN (b) A-1 280,000 280,000
New York State Energy Research & Dev. Auth.
Poll. Cont. Rev. VRDN:
(Elec. & Gas Corp.):
Series 1994 D, 3.65%,
LOC Union Bank of Switzerland VMIG 1 300,000 300,000
3.55%, LOC Westpac Banking Corp VMIG 1 400,000 400,000
MUNICIPAL NOTES (A) - CONTINUED
MOODY'S RATINGS PRINCIPAL VALUE
(UNAUDITED) (C) AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York State Energy Research & Dev. Auth.
Poll. Cont. Rev. VRDN: - continued
(Niagara Mohawk Pwr. Corp.):
Series 1985 B, 3.70%,
LOC Toronto-Dominion Bank Canada P-1 $ 300,000 $ 300,000
Series 1986 A, 3.75%,
LOC Toronto-Dominion Bank Canada (b) P-1 300,000 300,000
Series 1987 A, 3.85%,
LOC Toronto-Dominion Bank, Canada - 300,000 300,000
Series 1987 B, 3.75%,
LOC Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. (b) A-1+ 500,000 500,000
Series 1988 A, 3.75%,
LOC Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. (b) A-1+ 1,000,000 1,000,000
3,380,000
NEW YORK & NEW JERSEY - 0.9%
New York & New Jersey Port Auth. Series SS,
4.90% 9/1/97 (b) MIG 1 515,000 515,443
TOTAL MUNICIPAL NOTES
(Cost $3,895,000) 3,895,443
TOTAL INVESTMENTS - 100%
(Cost $56,065,916) $ 57,032,461
SECURITY TYPE ABBREVIATIONS
VRDN - Variable Rate Demand Notes
LEGEND
(a) The coupon rate shown on floating or adjustable rate securities
represents the rate at period end.
(b) Private activity obligations whose interest is subject to the federal
alternative minimum tax for individuals.
(c) Standard & Poor's credit ratings are used in the absence of a rating
by Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
(d) Security collateralized by an amount sufficient to pay interest and
principal.
OTHER INFORMATION
The composition of long-term debt holdings as a percentage of total value
of investment in securities, is as follows (ratings are unaudited):
MOODY'S RATINGS S&P RATINGS
Aaa, Aa, A 61.6% AAA, AA, A 66.6%
Baa 30.6% BBB 26.5%
Ba 0.0% BB 0.0%
B 0.0% B 0.0%
Caa 0.0% CCC 0.0%
Ca, C 0.0% CC, C 0.0%
D 0.0%
The percentage not rated by either S&P or Moody's amounted to 0.0%.
The distribution of municipal securities by revenue source, as a percentage
of total value of investment in securities, is as follows:
General Obligation 32.6%
Water and Sewer 14.3
Education 13.1
Special Tax 10.5
Electric Revenue 6.9
Resource Recovery 5.7
Others (individually less than 5%) 16.9
TOTAL 100.0%
INCOME TAX INFORMATION
At January 31, 1997, the aggregate cost of investment securities for income
tax purposes was $56,065,916. Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)
aggregated $966,545, of which $1,045,829 related to appreciated investment
securities and $79,284 related to depreciated investment securities.
At January 31, 1997, the fund had a capital loss carryforward of
approximately $217,000 which will expire on January 31, 2003.
At January 31,1997, the fund was required to defer approximately $1,280 of
losses on futures contracts.
SPARTAN NEW YORK INTERMEDIATE MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
JANUARY 31, 1997
ASSETS
Investment in securities, at value (cost $56,065,916) - $ 57,032,461
See accompanying schedule
Cash 347,620
Interest receivable 667,584
TOTAL ASSETS 58,047,665
LIABILITIES
Payable for investments purchased $ 1,671,912
Distributions payable 37,030
Accrued management fee 25,559
Other payables and accrued expenses 4,085
TOTAL LIABILITIES 1,738,586
NET ASSETS $ 56,309,079
Net Assets consist of:
Paid in capital $ 55,558,584
Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) (216,050)
on investments
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on 966,545
investments
NET ASSETS, for 5,721,853 shares outstanding $ 56,309,079
NET ASSET VALUE, offering price and redemption price per $9.84
share ($56,309,079 (divided by) 5,721,853 shares)
</TABLE>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
YEAR ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997
INTEREST INCOME $ 2,801,283
EXPENSES
Management fee $ 299,076
Non-interested trustees' compensation 179
Total expenses before reductions 299,255
Expense reductions (22,927) 276,328
NET INTEREST INCOME 2,524,955
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS)
Net realized gain (loss) on:
Investment securities 108,882
Futures contracts 19,208 128,090
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on (962,894)
investment securities
NET GAIN (LOSS) (834,804)
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING $ 1,690,151
FROM OPERATIONS
</TABLE>
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
YEAR ENDED YEAR ENDED
JANUARY 31, JANUARY 31,
1997 1996
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS
Operations $ 2,524,955 $ 2,399,673
Net interest income
Net realized gain (loss) 128,090 364,706
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) (962,894) 3,106,640
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING 1,690,151 5,871,019
FROM OPERATIONS
Distributions to shareholders (2,524,955) (2,448,025)
From net interest income
Share transactions 28,793,498 43,426,908
Net proceeds from sales of shares
Reinvestment of distributions 2,147,560 2,102,390
Cost of shares redeemed (29,826,626) (28,094,066)
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING 1,114,432 17,435,232
FROM SHARE TRANSACTIONS
TOTAL INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS 279,628 20,858,226
NET ASSETS
Beginning of period 56,029,451 35,171,225
End of period $ 56,309,079 $ 56,029,451
OTHER INFORMATION
Shares
Sold 2,941,767 4,497,855
Issued in reinvestment of distributions 220,019 216,479
Redeemed (3,056,144) (2,889,437)
Net increase (decrease) 105,642 1,824,897
</TABLE>
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
YEARS ENDED JANUARY 31, DECEMBER 29, 1993
(COMMENCEMENT
OF OPERATIONS) TO
JANUARY 31,
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C>
1997 1996 1995 1994
SELECTED PER-SHARE DATA
Net asset value, beginning of period $ 9.980 $ 9.280 $ 10.090 $ 10.000
Income from Investment Operations .452 .471 .480 .033
Net interest income
Net realized and unrealized (.140) .709 (.810) .090
gain (loss)
Total from investment operations .312 1.180 (.330) .123
Less Distributions
From net interest income (.452) (.480) E (.480) (.033)
Net asset value, end of period $ 9.840 $ 9.980 $ 9.280 $ 10.090
TOTAL RETURN B 3.26% 12.98% (3.21)% 1.23%
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net assets, end of period (000 $ 56,309 $ 56,029 $ 35,171 $ 9,273
omitted)
Ratio of expenses to average net .52% C .22% C .04% C 0.0% A,
assets C
Ratio of expenses to average net .51% D .22% .04% 0.0% A
assets after expense reductions
Ratio of net interest income to 4.64% 4.87% 5.18% 3.85% A
average net assets
Portfolio turnover rate 31% 77% 33% 0%
</TABLE>
A ANNUALIZED
B TOTAL RETURNS DO NOT INCLUDE THE ACCOUNT CLOSEOUT FEE AND FOR PERIODS OF
LESS THAN ONE YEAR ARE NOT ANNUALIZED. THE TOTAL RETURNS WOULD HAVE BEEN
LOWER HAD CERTAIN EXPENSES NOT BEEN REDUCED DURING THE PERIODS SHOWN.
C FMR AGREED TO REIMBURSE A PORTION OF THE FUND'S EXPENSES DURING THE
PERIOD. WITHOUT THIS REIMBURSEMENT, THE FUND'S EXPENSE RATIO WOULD HAVE
BEEN HIGHER (SEE NOTE 5 OF NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS).
D FMR OR THE FUND HAS ENTERED INTO VARYING ARRANGEMENTS WITH THIRD PARTIES
WHO EITHER PAID OR REDUCED A PORTION OF THE FUND'S EXPENSES (SEE NOTE 5 OF
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS).
E THE AMOUNTS SHOWN REFLECT CERTAIN RECLASSIFICATIONS RELATED TO BOOK TO
TAX DIFFERENCES.
SPARTAN NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
PERFORMANCE: THE BOTTOM LINE
To measure a money market fund's performance, you can look at either total
return or yield. Total return reflects the change in value of an
investment, assuming reinvestment of the fund's dividend income and the
effect of the fund's $5 account closeout fee. Yield measures the income
paid by a fund. Since a money market fund tries to maintain a $1 share
price, yield is an important measure of performance. If Fidelity had not
reimbursed certain fund expenses, the past five years and life of fund
total returns would have been lower.
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST 1 PAST 5 LIFE OF
YEAR YEARS FUND
Spartan New York Municipal Money Market 3.06% 14.43% 25.87%
New York Tax-Free 2.84% 13.10% 22.75%
Money Market Funds Average
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS show the fund's performance over a set period - in
this case, one year, five years or since the fund started on February 3,
1990. For example, if you invested $1,000 in a fund that had a 5% return
over the past year, the value of your investment would be $1,050. To
measure how the fund's performance stacked up against its peers, you can
compare it to the New York tax-free money market funds average, which
reflects the performance of 35 mutual funds with similar objectives tracked
by IBC Financial Data, Inc. over the past six months. (The periods covered
by the IBC Financial Data, Inc. numbers are the closest available match to
those covered by the fund.)
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS
PERIODS ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997 PAST 1 PAST 5 LIFE OF
YEAR YEARS FUND
Spartan New York Municipal Money Market 3.06% 2.73% 3.34%
New York Tax-Free 2.84% 2.62% 3.28%
Money Market Funds Average
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS take the fund's cumulative return and show you
what would have happened if the fund had performed at a constant rate each
year.
YIELDS
2/3/97 10/28/96 7/29/96 4/29/96 1/29/96
Spartan New York 3.08% 3.12% 3.05% 3.34% 2.90%
Municipal Money Market
New York Tax-Free Money 2.86% 2.91% 2.84% 3.10% 2.74%
Market Funds Average
Spartan New York 5.39% 5.46% 5.34% 5.85% 5.08%
Municipal Money Market -
Tax-equivalent
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 3.08
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 2.86
Row: 2, Col: 1, Value: 3.12
Row: 2, Col: 2, Value: 2.91
Row: 3, Col: 1, Value: 3.05
Row: 3, Col: 2, Value: 2.84
Row: 4, Col: 1, Value: 3.34
Row: 4, Col: 2, Value: 3.1
Row: 5, Col: 1, Value: 2.9
Row: 5, Col: 2, Value: 2.74
4% -
3% -
2% -
1% -
0%
Spartan New York
Municipal Money
Market
New York Tax-Free
Money Market
Funds Average
YIELD refers to the income paid by the fund over a given period. Yields for
money market funds are usually for seven-day periods, expressed as annual
percentage rates. A yield that assumes income earned is reinvested or
compounded is called an effective yield. The chart above shows the fund's
current seven-day yield at quarterly intervals over the past year. You can
compare these yields to the New York tax-free money market funds average as
tracked by IBC Financial Data, Inc. Or you can look at the fund's
tax-equivalent yield, which is based on a combined effective 1997 federal,
state and New York City income tax rate of 42.86%. A portion of the fund's
income may be subject to the Federal alternative minimum tax.
A MONEY MARKET FUND'S TOTAL RETURNS AND YIELDS WILL VARY, AND REFLECT PAST
RESULTS RATHER THAN PREDICT FUTURE PERFORMANCE.
COMPARING
PERFORMANCE
Yields on tax-free investments
are usually lower than yields
on taxable investments.
However, a straight
comparison between the two
may be misleading because it
ignores the way taxes reduce
taxable returns. Tax-equivalent
yield - the yield you'd have to
earn on a similar taxable
investment to match the
tax-free yield - makes the
comparison more meaningful.
Keep in mind that the U.S.
government neither insures
nor guarantees a money
market fund. In fact, there is
no assurance that a money
marketfund will maintain a $1
share price.
(checkmark)
SPARTAN NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
FUND TALK: THE MANAGER'S OVERVIEW
An interview with Janice Bradburn, Portfolio Manager of Spartan New York
Municipal Money Market Fund
Q. JAN, WHAT HAS THE INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT BEEN LIKE OVER THE PAST YEAR?
A. At the beginning of 1996, the Federal Reserve Board was in the process
of lowering the interest rate banks charge each other - known as the
federal funds rate - in order to stimulate the economy, and the market was
anticipating that the Fed would continue to do so. Market sentiment changed
rapidly, however, when Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, in his testimony before
Congress, was surprisingly optimistic about the underlying strength of the
economy. Then the February 1996 employment report showed the economy was
generating new jobs at a faster rate than expected. A dramatic sell-off and
sharply rising interest rates ensued. Over the summer, the Treasury market
tended to trade within a narrow range, heading down just before the release
of economic data - fearing that signs of economic strength would lead to
Fed rate increases, known as tightening - then back up when the numbers
came out and weren't as strong as anticipated. As we moved toward the end
of the year and past the November elections, the economy appeared to
moderate, and most investors felt assured the Fed would take no action
until the first and possibly the second quarter of 1997. Even though
statistics emerged toward the end of the period showing
stronger-than-expected growth - causing fears of a Fed tightening to
resurface - the Fed chose to leave interest rates unchanged when it met
just after the end of the period.
Q. WHAT STRATEGIES DID YOU PURSUE IN THIS VARIED ENVIRONMENT?
A. At the beginning of February 1996, the average maturity of the fund was
in the low 60-day range. During the next several months the maturity
declined for two reasons. First, as regularly happens, supply in the New
York market was extremely limited in the first quarter. As a result, many
of the fund's holdings reached maturity, and the fund's average maturity
rolled down. Second, with talk about the economy heating up and possible
rate increases, it made sense to keep the fund a bit shorter to take
advantage of potentially higher rates in the market. As we entered the
spring, not only did supply pick up significantly, but I also was able to
find many securities selling at very attractive prices; the market was
anticipating a tightening and priced the securities accordingly. When the
tightening did not occur, I raised the fund's average maturity to the low
60s in the fall. Since December, the fund's average maturity has been in
the mid-40s, a position I consider more neutral.
Q. HOW DID THE FUND PERFORM?
A. Very well, largely because I was able to extend the fund's maturity,
buying longer-term securities at a time when the market had priced in
tightenings that never materialized. As a result, I was able to lock in
higher, more attractive yields. The fund's seven-day yield on January 31,
1997, was 3.05%, compared to 2.92% a year ago. The latest yield was the
equivalent of a 5.34% taxable rate of return for New York investors in the
42.86% combined state and federal income tax bracket. Through January 31,
1997, the fund's total return was 3.06%, compared to 2.84% for the New York
tax-free money market funds average, according to IBC Financial Data, Inc.
Q. WHAT'S YOUR OUTLOOK?
A. I believe the Fed will wait until it can evaluate data from the first
quarter of 1997 before it takes any further action. The Fed probably will
look for consistent signs of an inflationary trend to justify a shift in
its policy. For now, I'll keep the fund positioned flexibly until we see
signs of movement one way or another.
THE VIEWS EXPRESSED IN THIS REPORT REFLECT THOSE OF THE PORTFOLIO MANAGER
ONLY THROUGH THE END OF THE PERIOD OF THE REPORT AS STATED ON THE COVER.
THE MANAGER'S VIEWS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT ANY TIME BASED ON MARKET AND
OTHER CONDITIONS.
FUND FACTS
GOAL: tax-free income by
investing in short-term
municipal money market
securities of all types
FUND NUMBER: 422
TRADING SYMBOL: FSNXX
START DATE: February 3, 1990
SIZE: as of January 31,
1997, more than $743 million
MANAGER: Janice Bradburn,
since 1990; manager,
various Fidelity and Spartan
state municipal money market
funds; joined Fidelity in 1989
(checkmark)
WORDS TO KNOW
COMMERCIAL PAPER: A security
issued by a municipality to
finance capital or operating
needs.
FEDERAL FUNDS RATE: The interest
rate banks charge each other
for overnight loans.
MATURITY: The time remaining
before an issuer is scheduled
to repay the principal amount
on a debt security. When the
fund's average maturity -
weighted by dollar amount -
is short, the fund manager is
anticipating a rise in interest
rates. When the average
maturity is long, the manager
is expecting rates to fall.
When the average maturity is
neutral, the manager wants
the flexibility to respond to
rising rates, while still
capturing a portion of the
higher yields available from
issues with longer maturities.
MUNICIPAL NOTE: A security
issued in advance of future
tax or other revenues and
payable from those specific
sources.
TENDER BOND: A variable-rate,
usually long-term security that
gives the bond holder the
option to redeem the bond at
face value before maturity.
VARIABLE RATE DEMAND NOTE
(VRDN): A tender bond that
can be redeemed on short
notice, typically one or seven
days. VRDNs are useful in
managing the fund's average
maturity and liquidity.
SPARTAN NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
INVESTMENT CHANGES
MATURITY DIVERSIFICATION
DAYS % OF FUND ASSETS % OF FUND ASSETS % OF FUND ASSETS
1/31/97 7/31/96 1/31/96
0 - 30 74 69 60
31 - 90 7 15 10
91 - 180 12 5 19
181 - 397 7 11 11
WEIGHTED AVERAGE MATURITY
1/31/97 7/31/96 1/31/96
Spartan New York
Municipal Money Market 45 days 52 days 62 days
New York Tax-Free
Money Market Funds 51 days 55 days 49 days
Average*
ASSET ALLOCATION
AS OF JANUARY 31, 1997 AS OF JULY 31, 1996
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 58.0
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 11.0
Row: 1, Col: 3, Value: 3.0
Row: 1, Col: 4, Value: 27.0
Row: 1, Col: 5, Value: 1.0
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 60.0
Row: 1, Col: 2, Value: 13.0
Row: 1, Col: 3, Value: 3.0
Row: 1, Col: 4, Value: 21.0
Row: 1, Col: 5, Value: 3.0
Variable rate
demand notes
(VRDNs) 58%
Commercial
paper 11%
Tender bonds 3%
Municipal
notes 27%
Other 1%
Variable rate
demand notes
(VRDNs) 60%
Commercial
paper 13%
Tender bonds 3%
Municipal
notes 21%
Other 3%
* SOURCE: IBC'S MONEY FUND REPORT(registered trademark)
SPARTAN NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
INVESTMENTS JANUARY 31, 1997
Showing Percentage of Total Value of Investments in Securities
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - 100%
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - 95.6 %
Albany Central School District BAN:
4% 5/2/97 $ 2,525,000 $ 2,526,737
4% 5/30/97 2,150,000 2,153,089
4.50% 6/20/97 575,000 576,051
Amherst Ind. Dev. Auth. Ind. Dev. Rev. (Maple Dev. Proj.)
Series 1986, 3.65%, LOC Marine Midland Bank,
VRDN (b) 5,220,000 5,220,000
Babylon Ind. Dev. Rev. (Southern Container Corp.) 3.70%,
LOC Fleet Bank, VRDN (b) 3,300,000 3,300,000
Broome County BAN 4.10% 4/18/97 10,800,000 10,809,310
Buffalo RAN 4.25% 7/15/97,
LOC Landesbank Hessen-Thuringen 7,700,000 7,722,073
Chautauqua County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Rev. (Red Wing
Co. Inc. Proj.) Series 1985, 3.55%,
LOC Wachovia Bank of Georgia, VRDN 100,000 100,000
Chemung County Ind. Dev. Board Ind. Dev. Rev.
(MMARS Second Prog.) Series A, 3.655%,
LOC Marine Midland Bank, VRDN 2,400,000 2,400,000
Commack Unified Free School Dist. TAN 4.35% 6/27/97 700,000 700,808
Connetquot Central School Dist. TAN 4.50% 6/26/97 4,100,000 4,109,516
Dobbs Ferry Unified Free School Dist. TAN 4.25% 2/28/97 800,000 800,286
Dutchess County Ind. Dev. Auth. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(Toys "R" Us/Nytex Inc. Proj.) 3.425%,
LOC Bankers Trust Co., VRDN 500,000 500,000
Eagle Participating VRDN, Series 96C3202,3.63%
(Liquidity Facility Citibank) (c) 5,700,000 5,700,000
East Hampton BAN 4% 4/17/97 1,000,000 1,000,593
Elmira BAN 4.375% 7/10/97 1,600,000 1,603,522
Erie County Ind. Dev. Auth. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(Uniland Dev./Buffalo Campus-B) Series 1986 D, 3.65%,
LOC Marine Midland Bank, VRDN (b) 1,230,000 1,230,000
Erie County Ind. Dev. Auth. Ind. Dev. Rev. (Niagara
Envelope Co. Proj.) 3.65%, LOC Marine Midland Bank,
VRDN (b) 1,800,000 1,800,000
Freeport Unified Free School Dist. TAN Series B,
4.30% 6/30/97, LOC State Street Bank
& Trust Company 3,600,000 3,604,878
Greenwood Lake Unified Free School Dist. BAN
4.50% 6/27/97 2,280,000 2,285,258
Hempstead BAN:
3.50% 2/28/97 8,200,000 8,199,129
4.10% 10/30/97 2,800,000 2,805,999
4.25% 10/30/97 6,900,000 6,923,387
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - CONTINUED
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
Herkimer County Ind. Rev. Agcy. (H.M. Quackenbush, Inc.)
Series 1988 A, 3.65%,
LOC Marine Midland Bank, VRDN (b) $ 1,000,000 $ 1,000,000
Herricks Unified Free School Dist. TAN 4.25% 6/27/97 3,700,000 3,705,341
Huntington Unified Free School Dist. TAN 4.25% 6/24/97 3,700,000
3,706,158
Island Park Unified School Dist. BAN 4.50% 9/12/97 2,200,000 2,206,452
Islip Ind. Dev. Agcy. Rev. (Interstate Litho Corp.)
Series 1996 A, 3.65%,
LOC Marine Midland Bank NA, VRDN (b) 1,400,000 1,400,000
Jefferson County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(Fisher Gauge Facs) Series 1996, 3.60%,
LOC Fleet Bank, VRDN (b) 2,300,000 2,300,000
Lewis County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(Philip Morris Proj.) 3.45%, VRDN 1,300,000 1,300,000
Monroe County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Rev. VRDN (b):
(AJL Mfg.) Series 1996 A, LOC Marine Midland Bank 1,900,000 1,900,000
(Advent Tool & Mold) Series 1990 D, 3.65%,
LOC Marine Midland Bank 950,000 950,000
(JMT Prop. Proj.) Series 1988 B, 3.65%,
LOC Marine Midland Bank 1,660,000 1,660,000
Nassau County BAN:
4.25% 3/14/97 9,200,000 9,204,734
4% 8/15/97 3,600,000 3,607,549
4.25% 8/15/97 13,600,000 13,648,107
4.50% 8/15/97 4,600,000 4,611,845
New Rochelle BAN:
4.50% 9/12/97 2,145,000 2,151,290
4.50% 9/12/97 (b) 500,000 501,173
New York City Gen. Oblig. VRDN:
Series 1992 D, 3.45% (FGIC Insured) 10,600,000 10,600,000
Series 1995 F-5, 3.55%, LOC Bayerische Landesbank 8,600,000 8,600,000
New York City Gen. Oblig. Participating VRDN,
Series 1994 C-3, 3.63% (Liquidity Facility Citibank) (c) 10,100,000
10,100,000
New York State Hsg. Dev. Corp. Mtg. Rev. (York Avenue Proj.)
Series 1994 A, 3.55%, LOC Midland Bank PLC,
VRDN (b) 13,250,000 13,250,000
New York City Hsg. Dev. Corp. Multi-Family Hsg. Rev. VRDN:
(100 Jane St. Dev. Proj.) Series 1995 A, 3.50%,
LOC Fleet Bank (b) 13,150,000 13,150,000
(400 W. 59th Str. Proj.):
3.50%, LOC Bayerische Hypothenken (b) 19,200,000 19,200,000
3.50%, LOC Bayerische Hypothenken (b) 6,100,000 6,100,000
3.55%, LOC Bayerische Hypothenken (b) 14,900,000 14,900,000
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - CONTINUED
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York City Hsg. Dev. Corp. Multi-Family Hsg. Rev. VRDN: - continued
(West 43rd Street Dev.) Series 1996 B, 3.50%,
LOC Fleet Bank $ 14,400,000 $ 14,400,000
New York City Hsg. Dev. Corp. Spl. Rev.
(Related-East 96th St. Proj.) Series 1990 A, 3.45%,
LOC Bank of Tokyo - Mitsubishi Bank Ltd., VRDN 1,400,000 1,400,000
New York City Ind. Dev. Auth. Ind. Dev. Rev. VRDN (b):
(Andin Int'l.) 3.55%, LOC ABN-Amro Bank 2,150,000 2,150,000
(Apache II Realty) 3.55%, LOC ABN-Amro Bank 1,150,000 1,150,000
(Bowe Industries, Inc.) 3.55%, LOC ABN-Amro Bank 1,700,000 1,700,000
(Display Sys., Inc.) Series 1990 E, 3.55%,
LOC ABN-Amro Bank 450,000 450,000
New York City Ind. Dev. Auth. Participating VRDN (c) (b):
Series PA-127, 3.65% (Liquidity Facility Merrill Lynch) 1,000,000
1,000,000
Series 1996 H, 3.60% (Liquidity Facility Caisse
Des Despots Et Consigns) 1,695,000 1,695,000
New York City Metropolitan Trans. Auth. Participating VRDN (c):
Series 1993 C, 3.70% (Liquidity Facility Midland Bank PLC)
(FGIC Insured) (c) 10,000,000 10,000,000
Series 1995 SG-36, 3.60% (Liquidity Facility Societe
Generale) 7,590,000 7,590,000
Series 96C3201, 3.63% (Liquidity Facility Citibank) 15,800,000
15,800,000
New York City Muni. Assistance Corp. Bonds,
Series BT - 225, 3.30%, tender 2/20/97 (Liquidity Facility
Bankers Trust) (c) (d) 8,800,000 8,800,000
New York City Muni. Fin. Auth. Participating VRDN,
Series 1992 A, 3.70% (MBIA Insured) (Liquidity Facility
Citibank) (c) 3,500,000 3,500,000
New York City Muni. Wtr. Fin. Auth. CP:
Series 1, 3.55% 3/7/97, LOC Canadian Imperial Bank 5,000,000 5,000,000
Series 3, 3.45% 3/25/97, LOC Bank of Nova
Scotia/Toronto-Dominion Bank 1,400,000 1,400,000
Series 3, 3.45% 4/10/97, LOC Bank of Nova
Scotia/Toronto-Dominion Bank 5,700,000 5,700,000
Series 4, 3.45% 2/27/97, LOC Credit Suisse 6,800,000 6,800,000
New York City Muni. Wtr. Fin. Auth. Participating VRDN,
Series PA-124, 3.60% (Liquidity Facility Merrill Lynch) (c) 3,750,000
3,750,000
New York City Muni. Wtr. Fin. Auth. Wtr. & Swr. Sys. Rev.
Series 1995 A, 3.75% (FGIC Insured) VRDN 4,600,000 4,600,000
New York City RAN Series 1996-B, 4.50% 6/30/97 24,000,000 24,075,798
New York City TAN Series 1996 A, 4.50% 2/12/97 15,910,000 15,913,600
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - CONTINUED
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York City Trust for Cultural Resources
(The Jewish Museum) 3.65%, LOC Sumitomo Bank,
VRDN $ 3,725,000 $ 3,725,000
New York Local Gov't Assistance Corp. Bond
Series 1996 A, 4.25% 4/1/97 2,000,000 2,002,162
New York Local Gov't. Dev. Assistance Corp. Rev.
Series 1994 B, 3.40%, LOC Credit Suisse, VRDN 7,000,000 7,000,000
New York State Dorm. Auth. Participating VRDN (c):
Series PA-60, 3.60% (Liquidity Facility Merrill
Lynch & Co.) 2,500,000 2,500,000
Series 97C3202, 3.63% (Liquidity Facility Citibank) 2,700,000 2,700,000
New York State Dorm. Auth. Rev. Bonds
(Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Ctr.):
Series 1989-A:
3.50%, tender 2/26/97, LOC Chase Manhattan Bank 10,400,000 10,400,000
3.50%, tender 3/11/97, LOC Chase Manhattan Bank 3,400,000 3,400,000
Series 1989-B, 3.40%, tender 2/26/97,
LOC Chase Manhattan Bank 8,400,000 8,400,000
Series 1989 C:
3.40%, tender 2/26/97, LOC Chase Manhattan Bank 2,000,000 2,000,000
3.45%, tender 2/27/97, LOC Chase Manhattan Bank 2,000,000 2,000,000
Series 1989-D, 3.45%, tender 3/19/97,
LOC Chase Manhattan Bank 1,665,000 1,665,000
Series 1996, 3.30%, tender 2/21/97, LOC Morgan
Guaranty Trust Co 3,800,000 3,800,000
New York State Energy Research & Dev. Auth.:
Bonds (Niagara Mohawk Pwr.) Series 943206, 3.25%,
tender 2/1/97 (Liquidity Facility Citibank) (c) (d) 6,200,000 6,200,000
Participating VRDN, Series 943202, 3.63%
(Liquidity Facility Citibank) (c) 11,600,000 11,600,000
New York State Energy Research and Dev. Auth. Rev.
(Long Island Lighting) VRDN (b):
Series 1993 A, 3.50%, LOC Toronto-Dominion Bank 23,800,000 23,800,000
Series 1994 A, 3.45%, LOC Union Bank of Switzerland 12,200,000
12,200,000
Series 1995 A, 3.45%, LOC Union Bank of Switzerland 16,200,000
16,200,000
New York State Energy Research & Dev. Auth. Poll. Cont. Rev.
(Niagra Mohawk Proj.) VRDN:
Series 1985 A, 3.75%, LOC Long-Term Cr. Bank of Japan 1,500,000
1,500,000
Series 1985 B, 3.70%, LOC Westpac Bank Corp 300,000 300,000
Series 1986 A, 3.75%, LOC Toronto-Dominion Bank (b) 2,000,000 2,000,000
Series 1987 A, 3.85%, LOC Toronto-Dominion Bank 5,700,000 5,700,000
Series 1987 B, 3.80%, LOC Morgan
Guaranty Trust Co (b) 15,300,000 15,300,000
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - CONTINUED
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
New York State Gen. Oblig. CP:
Series S, 3.55% 2/11/97 (Liquidity Facility
Westdeutsche Landesbanken) $ 5,400,000 $ 5,400,000
Series S, 3.55% 2/14/97 (Liquidity Facility
Westdeutsche Landesbanken) 14,500,000 14,500,000
Series T, 3.55% 2/25/97 (Liquidity Facility
Westdeutsche Landesbanken) 7,000,000 7,000,000
New York State Hsg. Fin. Agcy. Rev. VRDN (b):
(E. 48th St. Proj.) Series 1995 A, 3.55%,
LOC Fleet National Bank 10,000,000 10,000,000
(Normandie Court II Proj.) Series 1987 A, 3.55%,
LOC Fleet National Bank 7,400,000 7,400,000
(Union Square South) Series 1996 A, 3.45%,
LOC Bayerische Hypotheken 10,200,000 10,200,000
New York State Med. Care Facs. Fin. Agcy.
Participating VRDN, Series PA-89, 3.60%
(Liquidity Facility Merrill Lynch & Co.) (c) 4,000,000 4,000,000
New York State Mtg. Agcy. Homeowner Mtg. Rev.
Participating VRDN (b)(c):
Series PA-29, 3.65%, (Liquidity Facility Merrill
Lynch & Co.) 6,000,000 6,000,000
Series PA-87, 3.65% (Liquidity Facility Merrill
Lynch & Co.) 3,160,000 3,160,000
Series PT-11, 3.65% (Liquidity Facility Commerzbank) 2,280,000
2,280,000
Series PT-15 A, 3.65% (Liquidity Facility Commerzbank) 4,500,000
4,500,000
Series PT 15-B, 3.65% (Liquidity Facility Commerzbank) 3,040,000
3,040,000
Series PT-26, 3.65% (Liquidity Facility Credit Suisse) 2,490,000
2,490,000
New York State Pwr. Auth.:
CP:
3.55% 2/26/97 2,200,000 2,200,000
3.65% 3/10/97 1,800,000 1,800,000
Bonds 3.70%, tender 3/1/97 4,500,000 4,500,000
New York State Urban Dev. Corp. Participating VRDN,
3.60% Series PA-140B, 3.60% (Liquidity Facility
Merrill Lynch) (c) 7,800,000 7,800,000
Niagara County BAN:
4.75% 7/18/97 1,612,200 1,617,156
4.25% 12/5/97 1,100,000 1,104,899
Northport-East Northport Unified Free School Dist.:
BAN 4.50% 6/30/97 1,175,000 1,177,306
TAN 4.50% 6/30/97 4,700,000 4,710,333
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - CONTINUED
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
Oneida County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Ind. Dev. Rev. (Utica Corp.)
Series 1996, 3.60%, LOC Fleet National Bank, VRDN (b) $ 2,500,000 $
2,500,000
Onondaga County BAN 4% 3/28/97 900,000 900,326
Oswego County Ind. Dev. Auth. Ind. Dev. Rev.
(Engraph Inc. Proj.) Series 1989, 3.60%,
LOC Sun Trust Bank, VRDN (b) 5,620,000 5,620,000
Oswego County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Poll. Cont. Rev.
(Phillip Morris Co. Proj.) 3.45%, VRDN 5,200,000 5,200,000
Oyster Bay BAN 4.25% 7/11/97 9,100,000 9,109,115
Plainview-Old Bethpage County School Dist. TAN:
4.25% 6/30/97 500,000 500,289
4.50% 6/30/97 1,400,000 1,402,473
Rochester BAN Series III, 4.50% 10/30/97 500,000 503,033
Rockland County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Rev.
(INSL-X Prod. Corp. Proj.) Series 1990, 3.60%,
LOC Bank of New York, VRDN (b) 2,850,000 2,850,000
St. Lawrence County Ind. Dev. Agcy. Envir. Impt. Rev.
(Reynolds Metals Proj.) 3.50%,
LOC Royal Bank of Canada, VRDN 5,300,000 5,300,000
Schenectady Ind. Dev. Agcy. Rev. (Super Steel Schenectady Proj.)
3.50%, LOC Key Bank of New York, VRDN 2,300,000 2,300,000
South Huntington Unified Free School Dist. TAN
4.50% 6/30/97 3,950,000 3,958,595
Southampton Unified Free School Dist. TAN
4.50% 6/26/97 3,500,000 3,508,063
Southampton BAN 3.75% 2/14/97 500,000 500,069
Southold Unified Free School Dist. TAN 4.50% 6/27/97 600,000 601,284
Spencerport Central School Dist. BAN 4.25% 11/26/97 4,600,000 4,620,637
Suffolk County Gen. Oblig. Bonds 5% 7/15/97 1,500,000 1,505,683
Suffolk County Ind. Dev. Agcy. ):
(Nissequogue Cogen Partner Fac.) 3.55%,
LOC Toronto-Dominion Bank, VRDN (b) 10,000,000 10,000,000
(Suffolk Child Dev. Proj.) Series 1989, 3.40%,
LOC Barclays Bank, VRDN 900,000 900,000
Suffolk County Pub. Impt. Bonds Series C, 5% 10/15/97 700,000 705,485
Suffolk County TAN 4.50% 9/11/97 7,755,000 7,779,884
Tompkins BAN:
4% 4/11/97 (b) 1,000,000 1,000,546
4% 4/11/97 1,800,000 1,801,313
Tonawanda BAN:
3.75% 4/15/97 1,000,000 1,000,297
4.25% 5/8/97 800,000 801,053
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES (A) - CONTINUED
PRINCIPAL VALUE
AMOUNT (NOTE 1)
NEW YORK - CONTINUED
Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Auth. (c):
Bonds Series 96C3203, 3.50%, tender 2/15/97
(Liquidity Facility Citibank) $ 5,100,000 $ 5,100,000
Participating VRDN Series BT-184, 3.55%
(Liquidity Facility Bankers Trust Company) 3,420,000 3,420,000
Ulster County TAN 4.25% 3/26/97,
LOC State Street Bank & Trust Company 4,000,000 4,002,776
Uniondale Unified Free School Dist. TAN 4.50% 6/30/97 5,700,000 5,711,228
Washington County BAN 4.25% 4/25/97 1,574,000 1,575,550
706,647,238
NEW YORK & NEW JERSEY - 4.4 %
New York & New Jersey Port Auth. Rev. VRDN:
Series 1991, 3.844% (b) 9,800,000 9,800,000
Series 1992, 3.43% 9,600,000 9,600,000
Series 1995, 3.43% (b) 13,200,000 13,200,000
32,600,000
TOTAL INVESTMENTS - 100% $ 739,247,238
Total Cost for Income Tax Purposes $ 739,245,076
SECURITY TYPE ABBREVIATIONS
BAN - Bond Anticipation Notes
CP - Commercial Paper
RAN - Revenue Anticipation Notes
TAN - Tax Anticipation Notes
VRDN - Variable Rate Demand Notes
LEGEND
(a) The coupon rate shown on floating or adjustable rate securities
represents the rate at period end.
(b) Private activity obligations whose interest is subject to the federal
alternative minimum tax for individuals.
(c) Provides evidence of ownership in one or more underlying municipal
bonds.
(d) Restricted securities - investment in securities not registered under
the Securities Act of 1933 (see Note 2 of Notes to Financial Statements).
Additional information on each holding is as follows:
ACQUISITION ACQUISITION
SECURITY DATE COST
New York City Muni.
Assistance Corp. Bonds
Series BT - 225, 3.30%,
tender 2/20/97
(Liquidity Facility
Bankers Trust) 1/3/97 $ 8,800,000
New York State Energy
Research & Dev. Auth.
Bonds (Niagara Mohawk Pwr.)
Series 943206, 3.25%,
tender 2/1/97 (Liquidity
Facility Citibank) 1/1/97 $ 6,200,000
INCOME TAX INFORMATION
At January 31, 1997, the fund had a capital loss carryforward of
approximately $99,940 of which $20, $20,930 $50,780 and $28,210 will expire
on January 31, 2000, 2001, 2002, and 2005, respectively.
SPARTAN NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
JANUARY 31, 1997
ASSETS
Investment in securities, at value - $ 739,247,238
See accompanying schedule
Share transactions in process 5,803,455
Interest receivable 6,296,824
TOTAL ASSETS 751,347,517
LIABILITIES
Payable to custodian bank $ 64,195
Payable for investments purchased 7,000,000
Distributions payable 39,346
Accrued management fee 309,344
Other payables and accrued expenses 6,541
TOTAL LIABILITIES 7,419,426
NET ASSETS $ 743,928,091
Net Assets consist of:
Paid in capital $ 744,025,831
Accumulated net realized gain (loss) on investments (99,903)
Unrealized gain from accretion of discount 2,163
NET ASSETS, for 744,008,880 shares outstanding $ 743,928,091
NET ASSET VALUE, offering price and redemption price per $1.00
share ($743,928,091 (divided by) 744,008,880 shares)
</TABLE>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
YEAR ENDED JANUARY 31, 1997
INTEREST INCOME $ 24,761,794
EXPENSES
Management fee $ 3,508,579
Non-interested trustees' compensation 7,452
Total expenses before reductions 3,516,031
Expense reductions (47,178) 3,468,853
NET INTEREST INCOME 21,292,941
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS) (28,170)
Net realized gain (loss) on investment securities
Increase (decrease) in net unrealized gain from 2,163
accretion
of discount
NET GAIN (LOSS) (26,007)
NET INCREASE IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM OPERATIONS $ 21,266,934
</TABLE>
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C>
YEAR ENDED YEAR ENDED
JANUARY 31, JANUARY 31,
1997 1996
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS
Operations $ 21,292,941 $ 20,622,160
Net interest income
Net realized gain (loss) (28,170) 1,418
Increase (decrease) in net unrealized gain from 2,163 -
accretion of discount
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING 21,266,934 20,623,578
FROM OPERATIONS
Distributions to shareholders from net interest income (21,292,941) (20,622,160)
Share transactions at net asset value of $1.00 per share 706,921,287 645,609,341
Proceeds from sales of shares
Reinvestment of distributions from net interest income 20,914,495 20,129,073
Cost of shares redeemed (660,356,695) (559,973,142)
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING 67,479,087 105,765,272
FROM SHARE TRANSACTIONS
TOTAL INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS 67,453,080 105,766,690
NET ASSETS
Beginning of period 676,475,011 570,708,321
End of period $ 743,928,091 $ 676,475,011
</TABLE>
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
YEARS ENDED JANUARY 31, NINE MONTHS
ENDED
JANUARY 31,
1997 1996 1995 1994 1993
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S> <C> <C> <C> <C> <C>
SELECTED PER-SHARE DATA
Net asset value, beginning $ 1.000 $ 1.000 $ 1.000 $ 1.000 $ 1.000
of period
Income from Investment .030 .034 .025 .020 .018
Operations
Net interest income
Less Distributions
From net interest income (.030) (.034) (.025) (.020) (.018)
Net asset value, end of period $ 1.000 $ 1.000 $ 1.000 $ 1.000 $ 1.000
TOTAL RETURN B 3.07% 3.46% 2.56% 1.99% 1.85%
RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA
Net assets, end of period $ 743,928 $ 676,475 $ 570,708 $ 462,124 $ 453,812
(000 omitted)
Ratio of expenses to average .50% .50% .50% .50% .50%
net assets A
Ratio of expenses to average .49% .50% .50% .50% .50%
net assets after expense C A
reductions
Ratio of net interest income to 3.03% 3.41% 2.55% 1.97% 2.43%
average net assets A
</TABLE>
A ANNUALIZED
B TOTAL RETURNS DO NOT INCLUDE THE ACCOUNT CLOSEOUT FEE AND FOR PERIODS OF
LESS THAN ONE YEAR ARE NOT ANNUALIZED. THE TOTAL RETURNS WOULD HAVE BEEN
LOWER HAD CERTAIN EXPENSES NOT BEEN REDUCED DURING THE PERIODS SHOWN.
E FMR OR THE FUND HAS ENTERED INTO VARYING ARRANGEMENTS WITH THIRD PARTIES
WHO EITHER PAID OR REDUCED A PORTION OF THE FUND'S EXPENSES (SEE NOTE 5 OF
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS).
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
For the period ended January 31, 1997
1. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES.
Spartan New York Municipal Income Fund (formerly Spartan New York Municipal
High Yield Portfolio) (the income fund) and Spartan New York Intermediate
Municipal Income Fund (formerly Spartan New York Intermediate Municipal
Portfolio) (the intermediate fund) are funds of Fidelity New York Municipal
Trust. Spartan New York Municipal Money Market Fund (formerly Spartan New
York Municipal Money Market Portfolio) (the money market fund) is a fund of
Fidelity New York Municipal Trust II. Each trust is registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act), as an open-end
management investment company. Fidelity New York Municipal Trust and
Fidelity New York Municipal Trust II (the trusts) are organized as a
Massachusetts business trust and a Delaware business trust, respectively.
Each fund is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares. The
financial statements have been prepared in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles which permit management to make certain
estimates and assumptions at the date of the financial statements. The
following summarizes the significant accounting policies of the income
fund, the intermediate fund and the money market fund:
SECURITY VALUATION.
INCOME AND INTERMEDIATE FUNDS. Securities are valued based upon a
computerized matrix system and/or appraisals by a pricing service, both of
which consider market transactions and dealer-supplied valuations.
Short-term securities maturing within sixty days of their purchase date are
valued either at amortized cost or original cost plus accrued interest,
both of which approximate current value.
Securities for which quotations are not readily available are valued at
their fair value as determined in good faith under consistently applied
procedures under the general supervision of the Board of Trustees.
MONEY MARKET FUND. As permitted under Rule 2a-7 of the 1940 Act, and
certain conditions therein, securities are valued initially at cost and
thereafter assume a constant amortization to maturity of any discount or
premium.
INCOME TAXES. As a qualified regulated investment company under Subchapter
M of the Internal Revenue Code, each fund is not subject to income taxes to
the extent that it distributes substantially all of its taxable income for
the fiscal year. The schedules of investments include information regarding
income taxes under the caption "Income Tax Information."
INTEREST INCOME. Interest income, which includes amortization of premium
and accretion of original issue discount, is accrued as earned. For the
money market fund, accretion of discount represents unrealized gain until
realized at the time of a security disposition or maturity.
EXPENSES. Most expenses of each trust can be directly attributed to a fund.
Expenses which cannot be directly attributed are apportioned between the
funds in the trust.
1. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES - CONTINUED
DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS. Dividends are declared daily and paid
monthly from net interest income. Distributions to shareholders from
realized capital gains on investments, if any, are recorded on the
ex-dividend date.
Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with
income tax regulations which may differ from generally accepted accounting
principles. These differences, which may result in distribution
reclassifications, are primarily due to differing treatments for futures
transactions, market discount and losses deferred due to futures. Permanent
book and tax basis differences relating to shareholder distributions will
result in reclassifications to paid in capital and may affect the per-share
allocation between net interest income and realized and unrealized gain
(loss). Any taxable gain remaining at fiscal year end is distributed in the
following year.
REDEMPTION FEES. Shares held in the income fund less than 180 days are
subject to a redemption fee equal to .50% of the proceeds of the redeemed
shares. The fee, which is retained by the fund, is accounted for as an
addition to paid in capital.
SECURITY TRANSACTIONS. Security transactions are accounted for as of trade
date. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of
identified cost.
2. OPERATING POLICIES.
DELAYED DELIVERY TRANSACTIONS. Each fund may purchase or sell securities on
a when-issued or forward commitment
basis. Payment and delivery may take place a month or more after the date
of the transaction. The price of the underlying securities and the date
when the securities will be delivered and paid for are fixed at the time
the transaction is negotiated. Losses may arise due to changes in the
market value of the underlying securities or if the counterparty does not
perform under the contract.
FUTURES CONTRACTS. The income and intermediate funds may use futures
contracts to manage its exposure to the bond market and to fluctuations in
interest rates. Buying futures tends to increase the fund's exposure to the
underlying instrument, while selling futures tends to decrease the fund's
exposure to the underlying instrument or hedge other fund investments.
Losses may arise from changes in the value of the underlying instruments,
if there is an illiquid secondary market for the contracts, or if the
counterparties do not perform under the contracts' terms. Futures contracts
are valued at the settlement price established each day by the board of
trade or exchange on which they are traded.
RESTRICTED SECURITIES. Each fund is permitted to invest in securities that
are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale. These
securities generally may be resold in transactions exempt from registration
or to the public if the securities are registered. Disposal of these
securities may involve time-consuming negotiations and expense, and prompt
sale at an acceptable price may be difficult. At the end of the period,
restricted securities (excluding 144A issues) amounted to $15,000,000 or
2.0% of net assets for the money market fund.
3. PURCHASES AND SALES OF INVESTMENTS.
INCOME FUND. Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term
securities, aggregated $117,931,834 and $124,281,311, respectively.
The market value of futures contracts opened and closed during the period
amounted to $16,524,277 and $17,381,182, respectively.
INTERMEDIATE FUND. Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term
securities, aggregated $17,647,689 and $16,075,796, respectively.
The market value of futures contracts opened and closed during the period
amounted to $2,582,782 and $2,608,782, respectively.
4. FEES AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES.
MANAGEMENT FEE. As each fund's investment adviser, Fidelity Management &
Research Company (FMR) pays all expenses, except the compensation of the
non-interested Trustees and certain exceptions such as interest, taxes,
brokerage commissions and extraordinary expenses. FMR receives a fee that
is computed daily at an annual rate of .55%, .55% and .50% of average net
assets for the income, intermediate and money market funds, respectively.
FMR also bears the cost of providing shareholder services to each fund. To
offset the cost of providing these services, FMR or its affiliates
collected certain transaction fees from shareholders which amounted to
$2,605, $777 and $7,424 for the income, intermediate and money market
funds, respectively.
SUB-ADVISER FEE. As the money market fund's investment sub-adviser, FMR
Texas Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of FMR, receives a fee from FMR of
50% of the management fee payable to FMR. The fee is paid prior to any
voluntary expense reimbursements which may be in effect.
5. EXPENSE REDUCTIONS.
FMR voluntarily agreed to reimburse the intermediate fund's operating
expenses (excluding interest, taxes, brokerage commissions and
extraordinary expenses) above a specified percentage of average net assets.
During the period, this expense limitation ranged from .40% to .55% of
average net assets and the reimbursement reduced expenses by $13,790.
Effective April 1, 1996, the intermediate fund's expense limitation was
eliminated.
In addition, FMR has entered into arrangements on behalf of each fund with
the funds' custodian and transfer agent whereby interest earned on
uninvested cash balances was used to offset a portion of each fund's
expenses. During the period, each fund's custodian and transfer agent fees
were reduced by $26,716, $9,137 and $47,178 for the income, intermediate
and money market funds, respectively, under these arrangements.
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
To the Trustees of Fidelity New York Municipal Trust and Fidelity New York
Municipal Trust II and the Shareholders of Spartan New York Municipal
Income Fund (formerly Spartan New York Municipal High Yield Portfolio),
Spartan New York Intermediate Municipal Fund (formerly Spartan New York
Intermediate Portfolio), and Spartan New York Municipal Money Market Fund
(formerly Spartan New York Municipal Money Market Portfolio):
In our opinion, the accompanying statements of assets and liabilities,
including the schedules of investments (except for Moody's and Standard &
Poor's ratings), and the related statements of operations and of changes in
net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material
respects, the financial position of Spartan New York Municipal Income Fund,
Spartan New York Intermediate Municipal Fund , and Spartan New York
Municipal Money Market Fund, at January 31, 1997, the results of each of
their operations for the year then ended, the changes in each of their net
assets and their financial highlights for the periods indicated, in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles. These financial
statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as "financial
statements") are the responsibility of each fund's management; our
responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based
on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in
accordance with generally accepted auditing standards which require that we
plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes
examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures
in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and
significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall
financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which
included confirmation of securities at January 31, 1997 by correspondence
with the custodian and brokers and the application of alternative auditing
procedures where confirmations from brokers were not received, provide a
reasonable basis for the opinion expressed above.
/s/PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
March 3, 1997
DISTRIBUTIONS
DISTRIBUTIONS
During fiscal year ended January 31,1997, 100% of each fund's income
dividends was free from federal income tax, and 22.26%, 8.59% and 38.06%,
respectively, of the income, intermediate and money market funds' income
dividends was subject to the federal alternative minimum tax.
MANAGING YOUR INVESTMENTS
Fidelity offers several ways to conveniently manage your personal
investments via your telephone or PC. You can access your account
information, conduct trades and research your investments 24 hours a day.
BY PHONE
Fidelity TouchTone Xpressprovides a single toll-free number to access
account balances, positions, quotes and trading. It's easy to navigate the
service, and on your first call, the system will help you create a personal
identification number (PIN) for security.
SM
(PHONE_GRAPHIC)(PHONE_GRAPHIC)TOUCHTONE XPRESS
1-800-544-5555
PRESS
For mutual fund and brokerage trading.
1
For quotes.*
2
For account balances and holdings.
3
To review orders and mutual
fund activity.
4
To change your PIN.
5
To speak to a Fidelity representative.
*
0
BY PC
Fidelity's Web site on the Internet provides a wide range of information,
including daily financial news, fund performance, interactive planning
tools and news about Fidelity products and services.
(PHONE_GRAPHIC)(PHONE_GRAPHIC)FIDELITY'S WEB SITE
WWW.FIDELITY.COM
If you are not currently on the Internet, call Fidelity at 1-800-544-7272
for significant savings on Web access from internetMCI.
SM
(PHONE_GRAPHIC)(PHONE_GRAPHIC)
FIDELITY ON-LINE XPRESS+
TM
Fidelity On-line Xpress+ software for Windows combines comprehensive
portfolio management capabilities, securities trading and access to
research and analysis tools . . . all on your desktop. Call Fidelity at
1-800-544-7272 or visit our Web site for more information on how to manage
your investments via your PC.
* WHEN YOU CALL THE QUOTES LINE, PLEASE REMEMBER THAT A FUND'S YIELD AND
RETURN WILL
VARY AND, EXCEPT FOR MONEY MARKET FUNDS, SHARE PRICE WILL ALSO VARY. THIS
MEANS THAT
YOU MAY HAVE A GAIN OR LOSS WHEN YOU SELL YOUR SHARES. THERE IS NO
ASSURANCE THAT
MONEY MARKET FUNDS WILL BE ABLE TO MAINTAIN A STABLE $1 SHARE PRICE; AN
INVESTMENT
IN A MONEY MARKET FUND IS NOT INSURED OR GUARANTEED BY THE U.S. GOVERNMENT.
TOTAL
RETURNS ARE HISTORICAL AND INCLUDE CHANGES IN SHARE PRICE, REINVESTMENT OF
DIVIDENDS
AND CAPITAL GAINS, AND THE EFFECTS OF ANY SALES CHARGES.
TO WRITE FIDELITY
If more than one address is listed, please locate the address that is
closest to you. We'll give your correspondence immediate attention and send
you written confirmation upon completion of your request.
(LETTER_GRAPHIC)(LETTER_GRAPHIC)MAKING CHANGES
TO YOUR ACCOUNT
(such as changing name, address, bank, etc.)
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0002
(LETTER_GRAPHIC)(LETTER_GRAPHIC)FOR NON-RETIREMENT
ACCOUNTS
BUYING SHARES
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0003
OVERNIGHT EXPRESS
Fidelity Investments
100 Crosby Parkway - KP2C
Covington, KY 41015-4399
SELLING SHARES
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 660602
Dallas, TX 75266-0602
OVERNIGHT EXPRESS
Fidelity Investments
Attn: Redemptions - CP6I
400 East Las Colinas Blvd.
Irving, TX 75309-5517
GENERAL CORRESPONDENCE
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 193
Boston, MA 02210-0193
(LETTER_GRAPHIC)(LETTER_GRAPHIC)FOR RETIREMENT
ACCOUNTS
BUYING SHARES
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0003
SELLING SHARES
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 660602
Dallas, TX 75266-0602
OVERNIGHT EXPRESS
Fidelity Investments
Attn: Redemptions - CP6R
400 East Las Colinas Blvd.
Irving, TX 75309-5517
GENERAL CORRESPONDENCE
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 660602
Dallas, TX 75266-0602
TO VISIT FIDELITY
For directions and hours,
please call 1-800-544-9797.
ARIZONA
7373 N. Scottsdale Road
Scottsdale, AZ
CALIFORNIA
851 East Hamilton Avenue
Campbell, CA
527 North Brand Boulevard
Glendale, CA
19100 Von Karman Avenue
Irvine, CA
10100 Santa Monica Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA
811 Wilshire Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA
251 University Avenue
Palo Alto, CA
1760 Challenge Way
Sacramento, CA
7676 Hazard Center Drive
San Diego, CA
455 Market Street
San Francisco, CA
950 Northgate Drive
San Rafael, CA
1400 Civic Drive
Walnut Creek, CA
6300 Canoga Avenue
Woodland Hills, CA
COLORADO
1625 Broadway
Denver, CO
CONNECTICUT
265 Church Street
New Haven, CT
300 Atlantic Street
Stamford, CT
29 South Main Street
West Hartford, CT
DELAWARE
222 Delaware Avenue
Wilmington, DE
FLORIDA
4400 N. Federal Highway
Boca Raton, FL
90 Alhambra Plaza
Coral Gables, FL
4090 N. Ocean Boulevard
Ft. Lauderdale, FL
4001 Tamiami Trail, North
Naples, FL
1907 West State Road 434
Orlando, FL
2401 PGA Boulevard
Palm Beach Gardens, FL
8065 Beneva Road
Sarasota, FL
1502 N. Westshore Blvd.
Tampa, FL
GEORGIA
3525 Piedmont Road, N.E.
Atlanta, GA
1000 Abernathy Road
Atlanta, GA
HAWAII
700 Bishop Street
Honolulu, HI
ILLINOIS
215 East Erie Street
Chicago, IL
One North Franklin
Chicago, IL
1415 West 22nd Street
Oak Brook, IL
1700 East Golf Road
Schaumburg, IL
3232 Lake Avenue
Wilmette, IL
LOUISIANA
201 St. Charles Avenue
New Orleans, LA
MAINE
3 Canal Plaza
Portland, ME
MARYLAND
7401 Wisconsin Avenue
Bethesda, MD
1 West Pennsylvania Ave.
Towson, MD
MASSACHUSETTS
470 Boylston Street
Boston, MA
21 Congress Street
Boston, MA
25 State Street
Boston, MA
300 Granite Street
Braintree, MA
44 Mall Road
Burlington, MA
416 Belmont Street
Worcester, MA
MICHIGAN
280 North Woodward Ave.
Birmingham, MI
29155 Northwestern Hwy.
Southfield, MI
MINNESOTA
7600 France Avenue South
Edina, MN
MISSOURI
700 West 47th Street
Kansas City, MO
8885 Ladue Road
Ladue, MO
200 North Broadway
St. Louis, MO
NEW JERSEY
150 Essex Street
Millburn, NJ
56 South Street
Morristown, NJ
501 Route 17, South
Paramus, NJ
NEW YORK
1050 Franklin Avenue
Garden City, NY
999 Walt Whitman Road
Melville, L.I., NY
1271 Avenue of the
Americas
New York, NY
71 Broadway
New York, NY
350 Park Avenue
New York, NY
10 Bank Street
White Plains, NY
NORTH CAROLINA
4611 Sharon Road
Charlotte, NC
2200 West Main Street
Durham, NC
OHIO
600 Vine Street
Cincinnati, OH
28699 Chagrin Boulevard
Woodmere Village, OH
1903 East Ninth Street
Cleveland, OH
OREGON
121 S.W. Morrison Street
Portland, OR
PENNSYLVANIA
1735 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA
439 Fifth Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA
TENNESSEE
5100 Poplar Avenue
Memphis, TN
TEXAS
10000 Research Boulevard
Austin, TX
7001 Preston Road
Dallas, TX
1155 Dairy Ashford
Houston, TX
2701 Drexel Drive
Houston, TX
1010 Lamar Street
Houston, TX
400 East Las Colinas Blvd.
Irving, TX
14100 San Pedro
San Antonio, TX
UTAH
215 South State Street
Salt Lake City, UT
VERMONT
199 Main Street
Burlington, VT
VIRGINIA
8180 Greensboro Drive
McLean, VA
WASHINGTON
411 108th Avenue, N.E.
Bellevue, WA
511 Pine Street
Seattle, WA
WASHINGTON, DC
1900 K Street, N.W.
Washington, DC
WISCONSIN
595 North Barker Road
Brookfield, WI
INVESTMENT ADVISER
(registered trademark)
Fidelity Management & Research
Company
Boston, MA
INVESTMENT SUB-ADVISER,
MONEY MARKET FUND
FMR Texas Inc.
Irving, TX
OFFICERS
Edward C. Johnson 3d, President
J. Gary Burkhead, Senior Vice President
Fred L. Henning Jr., Vice President
INTERMEDIATE AND INCOME FUND
Sarah H. Zenoble, Vice President
MONEY MARKET FUND
Norman Lind, Vice President -
INCOME AND INTERMEDIATE FUND
Janice Bradburn, Vice President -
MONEY MARKET FUND
Arthur S. Loring, Secretary
Kenneth A. Rathgeber, Treasurer
Thomas D. Maher, Assistant
Vice President
John H. Costello, Assistant Treasurer
Leonard M. Rush, Assistant Treasurer
Thomas J. Simpson, Assistant
Treasurer
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
J. Gary Burkhead
Ralph F. Cox *
Phyllis Burke Davis *
Edward C. Johnson 3d
E. Bradley Jones *
Donald J. Kirk *
Peter S. Lynch
Marvin L. Mann *
William O. McCoy * (dagger)
Gerald C. McDonough *
Thomas R. Williams *
* INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES
(dagger) MEMBER OF THE ADVISORY BOARD FOR SPARTAN
NEW YORK MUNICIPAL MONEY MARKET FUND
GENERAL DISTRIBUTOR
Fidelity Distributors Corporation
Boston, MA
TRANSFER AND SHAREHOLDER
SERVICING AGENTS
UMB Bank, n.a.
Kansas City, MO
and
Fidelity Service Company, Inc.
Boston, MA
CUSTODIAN
UMB Bank, n.a.
Kansas City, MO
THE FIDELITY TELEPHONE CONNECTION
MUTUAL FUND 24-HOUR SERVICE
Exchanges/Redemptions 1-800-544-7777
Account Assistance 1-800-544-6666
Product Information 1-800-544-8888
Retirement Accounts 1-800-544-4774 (8 a.m. - 9 p.m.)
TDD Service 1-800-544-0118
for the deaf and hearing impaired
(9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Eastern time)
TouchTone Xpress 1-800-544-5555
SM
AUTOMATED LINE FOR QUICKEST SERVICE