WITTER DEAN WORLD WIDE INVESTMENT TRUST
PRE 14A, 1995-07-26
Previous: WITTER DEAN WORLD WIDE INVESTMENT TRUST, 497, 1995-07-26
Next: CULP INC, 10-K, 1995-07-26



<PAGE>


              Schedule 14A Information required in proxy statement.
                            Schedule 14A Information
           Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities
                     Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.__)


Filed by the Registrant [ X ]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [    ]

Check the appropriate box:

[ X  ]  Preliminary Proxy Statement
[    ]  Preliminary Additional Materials
[    ]  Definitive Proxy Statement
[    ]  Definitive Additional Materials
[    ]  Soliciting Material Pursuant to Section 240.149-11(c) or
        Section 240.14a-12

DEAN WITTER WORLD WIDE INVESTMENT TRUST . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
         (Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)

MARILYN K. CRANNEY. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
            (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)

        Payment of Filing Fee (check the appropriate box):


[ X  ]  $125 per Exchange Act Rule 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(j)(1), or 14a-6(j)(2)
[    ]  $500 per each party to the controversy pursuant to Exchange Act Rule
        14a-6(j)(3)
[    ]  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules
        14a-6(j)(4) and 0-11.

1)   Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

2)   Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

3)   Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant
     to Exchange Act Rule 0-11:

 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

4)   Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

<PAGE>


     Set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it
     was determined.

[    ]  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act
        Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was
        paid previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration statement
        number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

1)   Amount Previously Paid.

 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

2)   Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

3)   Filing Party:

 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

4)   Date Filed:

 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .


<PAGE>
PRELIMINARY COPY -- TO BE FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ONLY

                    DEAN WITTER WORLD WIDE INVESTMENT TRUST

                             ---------------------

                   NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                          TO BE HELD OCTOBER 31, 1995

                            ------------------------

    A Special Meeting of Shareholders of DEAN WITTER WORLD WIDE INVESTMENT TRUST
(the  "Trust"), an unincorporated business trust organized under the laws of the
Commonwealth  of  Massachusetts,  will  be   held  in  the  Conference   Center,
Forty-Fourth  Floor, 2 World Trade Center, New  York, New York 10048, on October
31, 1995, at 10:00 a.m., New York City time, for the following purposes:

        1.  To approve or disapprove a new investment management agreement  with
    Dean Witter InterCapital Inc. ("InterCapital");

        2.     To  approve  or   disapprove  a  sub-advisory  agreement  between
    InterCapital and Morgan Grenfell Investment Services Limited;

        3.  To approve or disapprove  changes in the investment restrictions  of
    the  Trust to permit  the Trust to  purchase and sell  futures contracts and
    options; and

        4.  To  transact such  other business as  may properly  come before  the
    meeting or any adjournments thereof.

    Shareholders  of record as  of the close  of business on  August 4, 1995 are
entitled to notice of and  to vote at the meeting.  If you cannot be present  in
person,  your management would  greatly appreciate your  filling in, signing and
returning the enclosed proxy promptly in the envelope provided for that purpose.

    In the event that the necessary  quorum to transact business at the  meeting
or  the vote  required to approve  or reject  any proposal is  not obtained, the
persons named as proxies may propose one or more adjournments of the meeting for
a total of not more than 60 days in the aggregate to permit further solicitation
of proxies.  Any such  adjournment  will require  the  affirmative vote  of  the
holders of a majority of the Trust's shares present in person or by proxy at the
meeting.  The persons named  as proxies will  vote in favor  of such adjournment
those proxies which they are  entitled to vote in favor  of Proposal 1 and  will
vote  against  any  such adjournment  those  proxies  to be  voted  against that
proposal.

                                          SHELDON CURTIS,
                                          SECRETARY
August  , 1995
New York, New York

                                    IMPORTANT
      YOU CAN  HELP  AVOID THE  NECESSITY  AND EXPENSE  OF  SENDING  FOLLOW-UP
  LETTERS  TO ENSURE A QUORUM BY PROMPTLY RETURNING THE ENCLOSED PROXY. IF YOU
  ARE UNABLE TO  BE PRESENT IN  PERSON, PLEASE  FILL IN, SIGN  AND RETURN  THE
  ENCLOSED PROXY IN ORDER THAT A QUORUM MAY BE REPRESENTED AT THE MEETING. THE
  ENCLOSED ENVELOPE REQUIRES NO POSTAGE IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES.
<PAGE>
                    DEAN WITTER WORLD WIDE INVESTMENT TRUST
                TWO WORLD TRADE CENTER, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10048

                             ---------------------

                                PROXY STATEMENT
                             ---------------------

                        SPECIAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

                                OCTOBER 31, 1995

    This  statement is furnished in connection  with the solicitation of proxies
by the Board  of Trustees  (the "Board") of  DEAN WITTER  WORLD WIDE  INVESTMENT
TRUST (the "Trust"), for use at the Special Meeting of Shareholders of the Trust
to be held on October 31, 1995 (the "Meeting"), and at any adjournments thereof.

    If  the enclosed form of proxy is  properly executed and returned in time to
be voted  at  the  Meeting, the  proxies  named  therein will  vote  the  shares
represented  by the  proxy in accordance  with the  instructions marked thereon.
Unmarked proxies will be voted in favor of Proposals 1, 2 and 3 as set forth  in
the  attached Notice of Special Meeting of  Shareholders. A proxy may be revoked
at any time prior  to its exercise  by any of the  following: written notice  of
revocation  to the  Secretary of  the Trust, execution  and delivery  of a later
dated proxy to  the Secretary  of the  Trust, or  attendance and  voting at  the
Meeting.

    Shareholders  of record as of  the close of business  on August 4, 1995, the
record date for the determination of  shareholders entitled to notice of and  to
vote  at  the Meeting,  are  entitled to  one  vote for  each  share held  and a
fractional  vote  for  a  fractional  share.  On  August  4,  1995,  there  were
outstanding           shares of beneficial interest  of the Trust, all with $.01
par value. No person was known to own as much as 5% of the outstanding shares of
the Trust on that date. The Trustees and officers of the Trust, together,  owned
less  than 1%  of the  Trust's outstanding shares  on that  date. The percentage
ownership of  shares  of  the Trust  changes  from  time to  time  depending  on
purchases and sales by shareholders and the total number of shares outstanding.

    The  cost of soliciting  proxies for the  Meeting, consisting principally of
printing and mailing expenses, will be  borne by the Trust. The solicitation  of
proxies  will be  by mail,  which may be  supplemented by  solicitation by mail,
telephone or otherwise through Trustees and  officers of the Trust and  officers
and  regular employees of  Dean Witter InterCapital  Inc. ("InterCapital" or the
"Investment Manager"), without special compensation therefor. The first  mailing
of this proxy statement is expected to be made on or about August   , 1995.

      (1) APPROVAL OR DISAPPROVAL OF A NEW INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT

THE PROPOSAL

    The  Trust has,  since the commencement  of its operations,  been advised by
three separate investment  advisers, InterCapital,  Daiwa International  Capital
Management Corp. ("Daiwa") and NatWest Investment Management Limited ("NatWest")
(together,  the  "Advisers"). Each  of these  advisers had  exclusive investment
responsibility with respect to the Trust's  investments in a particular area  of
the world. InterCapital was responsible for investing in North America and South
America,  Daiwa was responsible  for investing in the  Pacific Basin and NatWest
was

                                       2
<PAGE>
responsible for investing in Europe and all other areas of the world not covered
by InterCapital or Daiwa. Daiwa was assisted in providing services to the  Trust
by  its parent, Daiwa International Capital Management Co., Ltd. ("Daiwa Ltd."),
pursuant to a sub-advisory agreement between Daiwa and Daiwa Ltd.

    On July 26, 1995, InterCapital recommended  to the Board of Trustees of  the
Trust,  modifications  in the  management structure  of  the Trust,  intended to
enhance performance of  the Trust. Specifically,  InterCapital recommended  that
responsibility  for the overall  management of the  Trust be vested  in a single
investment manager, InterCapital,  and responsibility  for making  international
investments  be  vested  in  a single  sub-adviser,  Morgan  Grenfell Investment
Services Limited ("Morgan Grenfell").  InterCapital would retain  responsibility
for  investments in the United States and  for supervising the activities of the
sub-adviser. The investment advisory agreements with Daiwa and NatWest, and  the
sub-  advisory  agreement  between  Daiwa  and  Daiwa  Ltd.,  would  in  turn be
terminated.

    InterCapital's recommendation was based on its view that the Trust could  be
operated  more effectively if  responsibility for overseeing  the investments of
the Trust were vested in a single entity rather than spread among three separate
organizations. In addition, InterCapital believed, particularly in light of  its
favorable  experience with Morgan Grenfell as  sub-adviser to certain other Dean
Witter Funds, that  the performance  of the Trust  could be  enhanced if  Morgan
Grenfell were assigned responsibility for making the non-U.S. investments of the
Trust, and that the proposed changes would have a positive effect on the Trust's
prospects for future growth.

THE BOARD'S CONSIDERATION

    SELECTION  OF INTERCAPITAL AND MORGAN GRENFELL.   At their meeting in person
on July 26, 1995, the Trustees considered InterCapital's recommendations.  Among
other  things, the Trustees considered the  historical performance of the Trust;
the quality and extent of the  services proposed to be provided by  InterCapital
and  Morgan  Grenfell; the  organizational depth,  reputation and  experience of
InterCapital  in  managing  mutual  funds,  and  Morgan  Grenfell  in  investing
internationally;  and  the performance  of  similar accounts  advised  by Morgan
Grenfell as well as the performance of certain other Dean Witter Funds currently
sub-advised by  Morgan Grenfell.  In addition,  the Trustees  reviewed  material
furnished  by  InterCapital  and  Morgan  Grenfell  regarding  their  personnel,
operations and financial  condition. Prior  to the  meeting, representatives  of
InterCapital  and Morgan Grenfell  reviewed with the  Independent Trustees (that
is, the Trustees who are not "interested persons" of the Trust, as that term  is
defined  in the Investment  Company Act of  1940, as amended  (the "Act")) their
respective philosophies of management,  performance expectations and methods  of
operation.

    The  Board of  Trustees found  InterCapital's experience  in managing mutual
funds and Morgan  Grenfell's experience  in international investing  to be  well
suited  for the Trust.  Based on their  consideration of the  foregoing and such
other factors as they deemed relevant, the Trustees determined that it would  be
in  the  best interests  of  the Trust  and  its shareholders  to  terminate the
existing agreements and select InterCapital  to serve as the investment  manager
of  the Trust  pursuant to  the management  agreement described  below (the "New
Management  Agreement")  and  Morgan  Grenfell  to  serve  as  sub-adviser  with
responsibility  for making  non-U.S. investments  of the  Trust pursuant  to the
sub-advisory  agreement  described  under  Proposal  2  (the  "New  Sub-Advisory
Agreement").

    APPROVAL  OF NEW  MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT.   In  considering whether  or not to
approve the New Management Agreement, the  Board of Trustees reviewed the  terms
of  such Agreement and considered all  materials and information deemed relevant
to its determination. Among  other things, the Board  considered the nature  and
scope  of services  to be rendered,  the quality of  InterCapital's services and
personnel, the appropriateness of the

                                       3
<PAGE>
fees to  be  payable  under the  New  Management  Agreement and  the  terms  and
provisions  of the New Management Agreement. In particular, the Board noted that
under the  New  Management  Agreement  InterCapital  would  retain  60%  of  the
aggregate  advisory  fee  payable by  the  Trust, whereas  under  the Management
Agreement then  in effect  InterCapital  retained 55%  of  such fee.  The  Board
considered  the  appropriateness  of  such  increased  percentage  in  light  of
InterCapital's responsibilities under  the New Management  Agreement. The  Board
also  considered benefits  to be derived  by InterCapital  from its relationship
with the Trust, including any benefits from research or other services  received
from brokers with whom InterCapital may place trades for the Trust's portfolio.

    Based  upon  its review,  at its  July  26 meeting,  the Board  of Trustees,
including all of the Independent Trustees,  determined that the approval of  the
New  Management  Agreement  was in  the  best  interests of  the  Trust  and its
shareholders. The Board  of Trustees  also unanimously voted  (i) to  terminate,
effective  at the close  of business on  July 31, 1995,  the advisory agreements
with Daiwa and NatWest  and the sub-advisory agreement  between Daiwa and  Daiwa
Ltd.  (each of  Daiwa, Daiwa  Ltd. and  NatWest agreed  to waive  the thirty-day
notice period required under its respective  agreement); and (ii) to enter  into
an  interim  investment management  agreement with  InterCapital and  an interim
sub-advisory agreement with Morgan Grenfell. Such interim agreements, which  are
currently  in effect,  will terminate  on the  earlier of  November 28,  1995 or
implementation  of  the  New  Management  Agreement.  Pursuant  to  the  Interim
Agreements,  InterCapital and Morgan  Grenfell receive from  the Trust an annual
fee based on daily net assets of 0.55% (0.5225% on assets over $500 million) and
0.45% (0.4275% on assets over $500 million), respectively.

PRIOR ADVISORY AGREEMENTS

    TERM OF AGREEMENTS.  The investment  advisory agreements in effect prior  to
July  31, 1995  with InterCapital, Daiwa  and NatWest,  respectively (the "Prior
Advisory Agreements"), were last approved by the Board of Trustees on April  20,
1995.  The Prior  Advisory Agreement between  the Trust  and InterCapital, dated
June 30, 1993, was  approved by the  shareholders of the Trust  at a Meeting  of
Shareholders  on January  12, 1993.  The Prior  Advisory Agreements  between the
Trust and each  of Daiwa  and NatWest,  and the  sub-advisory agreement  between
Diawa  and Daiwa Ltd., were each dated August 26, 1983 and were last approved by
the shareholders of  the Trust  on July  16, 1985.  Each such  Agreement had  an
initial  term of one year  and continued in effect  from year to year thereafter
provided such continuance was approved at least annually by vote of a  majority,
as  defined in the Act, of the outstanding  voting securities of the Trust or by
the Trustees of the Trust, and, in either event, by the vote cast in person by a
majority of the  Independent Trustees  at a meeting  called for  the purpose  of
voting on such approval.

    FEES.   Under the Prior Advisory Agreements, InterCapital, Daiwa and NatWest
were entitled to receive an annual fee of 0.55%, 0.225% and 0.225% of daily  net
assets  up  to  $500  million,  respectively,  such  that  the  annual aggregate
management and advisory fees  payable by the Trust  equalled 1.00% of daily  net
assets.  Pursuant  to action  by the  Board  of Trustees,  including all  of the
Independent Trustees,  on  April  8,  1994, these  rates  declined  to  0.5225%,
0.21375% and 0.21375%, respectively, on assets over $500 million.

    SERVICES  PROVIDED.  Under  the Prior Advisory  Agreements, InterCapital was
responsible for investing the Trust's  assets allocated for investment in  North
America  and  South America,  Daiwa was  responsible  for investing  the Trust's
assets allocated for investment in the Pacific Basin and NatWest was responsible
for investing the  Trust's assets allocated  in Europe and  all other areas  not
covered by InterCapital and Daiwa.

    Administrative  and business  management services  required for  the Trust's
operations were also provided by InterCapital. These services included preparing
and filing registration statements, proxy statements and other reports  required
by law or regulation; maintaining books and records of the Trust; and providing,
at its own

                                       4
<PAGE>
expense,  such office  space, facilities,  equipment, clerical  help and certain
bookkeeping and legal services  as the Trust may  reasonably require to  conduct
its   business,  except  insofar  as   InterCapital  believed  participation  or
assistance of independent attorneys and accountants were necessary or desirable.
It also paid the salaries and fees of all officers and Trustees of the Trust who
were employees  of InterCapital.  In addition,  InterCapital arranged  for  Dean
Witter  Services Company Inc. ("DWSC"),  its wholly-owned subsidiary, to perform
the administrative and business management services for the Trust pursuant to  a
services agreement with InterCapital.

    EXPENSES.   Expenses not expressly assumed by the Advisers, DWSC, or by Dean
Witter Distributors  Inc.  ("Distributors"),  the  distributor  of  the  Trust's
shares,  were to be paid by the Trust. The expenses borne by the Trust included,
but were not limited to: fees pursuant to the plan of distribution; charges  and
expenses  of any registrar, custodian, subcustodian, share transfer and dividend
disbursing agent; brokerage commissions; taxes; engraving and printing of  share
certificates;  registration costs of the Trust  and its shares under federal and
state securities laws; the cost and expense of printing, including  typesetting,
and  distributing prospectuses and  statements of additional  information of the
Trust and  supplements thereto  to  the Trust's  shareholders; all  expenses  of
shareholders'  and  Trustees' meetings  and of  preparing, printing  and mailing
proxy statements  and  reports to  shareholders;  fees and  travel  expenses  of
Trustees  or members of any advisory board or committee who are not employees of
the Advisers or any corporate affiliate of any of them; all expenses incident to
any dividend,  withdrawal or  redemption options;  charges and  expenses of  any
outside  service used for  pricing of the  Trust's shares; fees  and expenses of
legal counsel, including counsel to the Trustees who are not interested  persons
of  the Trust  or of  the Advisers  (not including  compensation or  expenses of
attorneys who  are  employees  of the  Advisers)  and  independent  accountants;
membership dues of industry associations; interest on Trust borrowings; postage;
insurance premiums on property or personnel (including officers and Trustees) of
the Trust which inure to its benefit; extraordinary expenses (including, but not
limited   to,  legal  claims  and  liabilities  and  litigation  costs  and  any
indemnification relating thereto); and all other costs of the Trust's operation.

    Pursuant to the Prior Advisory  Agreements, total operating expenses of  the
Trust  were subject  to applicable  limitations under  rules and  regulations of
states where the Trust  is authorized to sell  its shares. Therefore,  operating
expenses  were effectively  subject to the  most restrictive  of such applicable
expense  limitations,  as  amended  from  time  to  time.  Presently,  the  most
restrictive  limitation applicable  to the  Trust is  as follows:  In any fiscal
year, the  Trust's  total  operating expenses,  exclusive  of  taxes,  interest,
brokerage fees, distribution fees, extraordinary expenses and certain excludable
expenses  (to  the  extent permitted  by  applicable state  securities  laws and
regulations), may not exceed  the lower of  2 1/2% of  the first $30,000,000  of
average  daily net assets, 2%  of the next $70,000,000 and  1 1/2% of any excess
over $100,000,000.  The  Prior  Advisory Agreements  required  the  Advisers  to
reimburse the Trust for the amount of any excess. In the event reimbursement had
been  required, InterCapital  was responsible for  55%, Daiwa  22.5% and NatWest
22.5% of such reimbursable amount. The Trust's expenses did not exceed the  most
restrictive limitation during the fiscal year ended March 31, 1995.

    TERMINATION  PROVISIONS.   Each  Prior Advisory  Agreement provided  that it
could be terminated at any time by  the respective Adviser, the Trustees of  the
Trust or by a vote of a majority of the outstanding shares of the Trust, in each
instance without the payment of any penalty, on thirty days' notice, and that it
would  automatically terminate upon any "assignment," as that term is defined in
the Act. Each Agreement also provided  that the respective Adviser would not  be
liable  to the  Trust in  the absence of  willful misfeasance,  bad faith, gross
negligence or reckless disregard of its obligations under the Agreement.

                                       5
<PAGE>
THE NEW MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT

    COMPARISON OF  NEW AGREEMENT  TO PRIOR  AGREEMENT.   The  terms of  the  New
Management  Agreement with InterCapital are substantially identical to the Prior
Advisory Agreement with  InterCapital except  that under the  New Agreement  (i)
InterCapital  will serve as the  sole investment manager of  the Trust (and have
supervisory authority over one or more sub-advisers) rather than as one of three
co-advisers; (ii) InterCapital will have exclusive investment responsibility for
investment in  the U.S.  whereas, under  the Prior  Agreement, InterCapital  was
responsible  for  investment  in  North America  and  South  America;  and (iii)
InterCapital will retain  60% of the  aggregate advisory fee  paid by the  Trust
whereas,  under the Prior Agreement, InterCapital  retained 55% of such fee. The
overall fees  paid by  the  Trust for  investment  advisory services  will  not,
however,  be  changed.  As noted  above,  the  Board of  Trustees  of  the Trust
determined that  the  additional  percentage  of  the  overall  fee  payable  to
InterCapital  under  the  New  Management  Agreement,  reflecting InterCapital's
responsibilities for the overall management  of the Trust under that  Agreement,
was appropriate. The initial termination date of the New Management Agreement is
April  30, 1997, after which  it is subject to  the same renewal and termination
provisions as the Prior Advisory Agreements.

    SERVICES PROVIDED.   Under the New  Management Agreement, InterCapital  will
manage  the Trust's investments  in securities of  U.S. issuers. InterCapital is
also instructed  to retain,  at its  own expense,  one or  more sub-advisers  to
manage  Trust  assets invested  outside of  the  U.S. InterCapital  has retained
Morgan Grenfell as  sub-adviser for  non-U.S. investments. (See  Proposal 2  for
complete  information about Morgan Grenfell and the New Sub-Advisory Agreement.)
InterCapital is responsible  for supervising the  activities of Morgan  Grenfell
including  monitoring compliance by the sub-adviser with the investment policies
and restrictions of the Trust and  with such other limitations or directions  as
the Trustees of the Trust may from time to time prescribe. Geographic allocation
decisions  will be made periodically by InterCapital and Morgan Grenfell and, if
they cannot agree,  InterCapital will have  final responsibility for  allocating
the Trust's assets among the various geographic regions for investment.

    FEES.     Under  the  New  Management  Agreement,  the  Trust  will  pay  to
InterCapital an annual management fee at a rate of 1.00% of daily net assets  up
to $500 million and at a rate of 0.95% on assets over $500 million. InterCapital
in  turn will pay,  out of its  fees, a fee  to Morgan Grenfell  equal on annual
basis to 40% of the fee received by InterCapital.

    The Trust accrued to the Advisers under the Prior Advisory Agreements  total
compensation of $5,588,682 during the fiscal year ended March 31, 1995, of which
$3,073,775 was paid to InterCapital. If the New Management Agreement had been in
effect  during  that year  the total  amount  paid by  the Trust  for investment
management services would  have been exactly  the same. However,  InterCapital's
retained  compensation would have  been $3,353,209, representing  an increase of
9.1%. The  net assets  of the  Trust totalled  $512,258,000 at  March 31,  1995.
Although  the  maximum  aggregate  1.00%  fee,  under  both  the  Prior Advisory
Agreements and New Management Agreement, is higher than that paid by most  other
investment  companies, the  fee reflects the  specialized nature  of the Trust's
investment policies. See Appendix  III for a tabular  comparison of current  and
PRO FORMA fees.

    The  form of the New  Management Agreement is attached  as Exhibit A to this
Proxy Statement. The foregoing summary is  qualified in its entirety by  Exhibit
A.

DEAN WITTER INTERCAPITAL INC.

    InterCapital was incorporated in July, 1992 and is a wholly-owned subsidiary
of  Dean  Witter,  Discover  &  Co.  ("DWDC"),  a  balanced  financial  services
organization  providing  a  broad  range  of  nationally  marketed  credit   and

                                       6
<PAGE>
investment  products. In an internal reorganization which took place in January,
1993,   InterCapital   assumed   the   investment   advisory,   management   and
administrative  activities previously performed by  the InterCapital Division of
Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. ("DWR").

    The Principal Executive  Officer and  Directors of  InterCapital, and  their
principal  occupations,  are:  Philip  J.  Purcell,  Chairman  of  the  Board of
Directors  and  Chief  Executive  Officer  of  DWDC  and  DWR  and  Director  of
InterCapital,  DWSC and Distributors; Richard  M. DeMartini, President and Chief
Operating Officer of Dean Witter Capital,  Executive Vice President of DWDC  and
Director  of DWR, Distributors, InterCapital, DWSC and Dean Witter Trust Company
("DWTC"); James F. Higgins, President and Chief Operating Officer of Dean Witter
Financial, Executive Vice President of  DWDC and Director of DWR,  Distributors,
InterCapital,  DWSC and DWTC;  Charles A. Fiumefreddo,  Executive Vice President
and Director of DWR, Chairman of the Board of Directors, Chief Executive Officer
and Director of InterCapital, DWSC and Distributors and Chairman of the Board of
Directors and Director of DWTC; Christine A. Edwards, Executive Vice  President,
Secretary  and  General Counsel  of DWDC,  Executive Vice  President, Secretary,
General Counsel and Director of DWR, Executive Vice President, Secretary,  Chief
Legal  Officer and  Director of  Distributors and  Director of  InterCapital and
DWSC; and  Thomas C.  Schneider, Executive  Vice President  and Chief  Financial
Officer  of  DWDC  and Executive  Vice  President, Chief  Financial  Officer and
Director of DWR, Distributors,  InterCapital and DWSC.  The business address  of
the  foregoing Directors  and Executive Officer  is Two World  Trade Center, New
York, New York 10048.

    Appendix I to this proxy statement lists the investment companies for  which
InterCapital  provides investment management or investment advisory services and
which have similar investment  objectives to that of  the Trust, and sets  forth
the  net  assets of  and the  fees  payable to  InterCapital by  such companies,
including the Trust.  InterCapital, DWSC, DWDC  and Distributors maintain  their
offices at Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048.

    There  are various lawsuits pending  against DWDC involving material amounts
which, in  the opinion  of its  management, will  be resolved  with no  material
effect on the consolidated financial position of the company or on the financial
ability  of the Investment Manager to fulfill  its commitment to the Trust under
the New Management Agreement.

    During the fiscal year ended March 31, 1995, the Trust accrued the following
compensation to service providers that are affiliates of the Investment Manager:
(1) to DWTC, the Trust's Transfer  Agent, transfer agency fees of $908,753;  and
(2)  to Distributors,  the Trust's  principal underwriter,  distribution fees of
$5,619,558. All  fees  paid  Distributors  were  paid  pursuant  to  a  plan  of
distribution  adopted by the Board of Trustees  pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the
Act, and approved by the Trust's  shareholders on October 1, 1984. In  addition,
Distributors  has  entered  into a  selected  dealer agreement  with  DWR, which
through its own  sales organization  sells shares of  the Trust.  Each of  these
affiliated  companies will continue  to provide services  to the Trust following
shareholder approval of the New Management Agreement.

    Because DWR and InterCapital are under the common control of DWDC, DWR is an
affiliated broker of InterCapital. For the fiscal year ended March 31, 1995, the
Trust paid $89,120 in brokerage  commissions to DWR, representing  approximately
4.73%  of the total brokerage commissions paid  by the Trust during the year and
which were  paid on  account of  transactions  having a  dollar value  equal  to
approximately 12.22% of the aggregate dollar value of all portfolio transactions
during the year for which commissions were paid.

                                       7
<PAGE>
    Brokerage  transactions  with respect  to Pacific  Basin equities  are often
conducted through affiliates  of Daiwa's  corporate parent, Daiwa  Ltd. For  the
fiscal year ended March 31, 1995, the Trust paid $2,667 in brokerage commissions
to  affiliates  of Daiwa  Ltd., representing  approximately  0.14% of  the total
brokerage commissions paid  by the Trust  for the  year and which  were paid  on
account  of transactions having  a dollar value equal  to approximately 0.09% of
the aggregate dollar  value of all  portfolio transactions during  the year  for
which commissions were paid.

VOTE REQUIRED

    Under  the Act,  approval of the  New Management Agreement  will require the
affirmative vote of the holders  of (a) 67% or more  of the shares of the  Trust
present,  in person or by proxy, at the Meeting, if the holders of more than 50%
of the  outstanding  shares  are  so  present, or  (b)  more  than  50%  of  the
outstanding   shares  of  the  Trust,  whichever  is  less.  In  the  event  the
shareholders do  not  approve  the  New Management  Agreement  by  the  required
majority  vote, the Board  will take such action  as it deems to  be in the best
interests of the Trust and its shareholders, which may include calling a special
meeting of shareholders to vote on another new management agreement. Abstentions
and broker "non-votes" will have the same effect as a vote against the proposal.

    THE  TRUSTEES,  INCLUDING  ALL  OF  THE  INDEPENDENT  TRUSTEES,  UNANIMOUSLY
RECOMMEND THAT THE SHAREHOLDERS APPROVE THE NEW MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT.
    (2) APPROVAL  OR DISAPPROVAL  OF THE NEW  SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENT BETWEEN
        INTERCAPITAL AND MORGAN GRENFELL

THE PROPOSAL

    As discussed under  Proposal 1,  as part  of its  proposed modifications  in
management   structure  intended  to  enhance  the  performance  of  the  Trust,
InterCapital recommended  to  the Board  of  Trustees the  selection  of  Morgan
Grenfell  to serve as sub-adviser to the Trust  pursuant to the terms of the New
Sub-Advisory Agreement described below.

THE NEW SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENT

    The New Sub-Advisory  Agreement requires  that Morgan  Grenfell provide  the
Trust  with investment advisory services with  respect to investments in issuers
located outside the U.S.,  and obtain and evaluate  such information and  advice
relating to the economy, securities markets and securities as it deems necessary
or  useful to discharge its duties  under the New Sub-Advisory Agreement. Morgan
Grenfell is  also charged  with the  responsibility to  manage continuously  the
assets  of  the Trust  in  a manner  consistent  with the  investment objective,
policies and restrictions of the Trust; to make decisions as to foreign currency
matters,  and  forward  foreign  exchange  contracts  and  options  and  futures
contracts  in foreign currencies;  to determine the  securities to be purchased,
sold or otherwise disposed  of by the  Trust and the  timing of such  purchases,
sales  and  dispositions; to  furnish or  make  available to  the Trust  and the
Investment  Manager  such  information,   evaluations,  analyses  and   opinions
formulated or obtained by it in the discharge of its duties as the Trust and the
Investment  Manager  may  reasonably request.  All  securities  transactions are
reviewed periodically  by the  Investment Manager  and are,  in every  instance,
subject  to the overall supervision of the Investment Manager. The Board reviews
the Trust's portfolio semi-annually. The Investment Manager and Morgan  Grenfell
shall  each be obligated to make its respective officers and employees available
to the other from time to time at reasonable times to review investment policies
of the Trust and to consult with each other.

                                       8
<PAGE>
    The New Sub-Advisory Agreement provides  that Morgan Grenfell shall, at  its
own expense, maintain such staff and employ or retain such personnel and consult
with  such  other  persons as  it  shall, from  time  to time,  determine  to be
necessary or  useful  to  the  performance of  its  obligations  under  the  New
Sub-Advisory  Agreement. Morgan Grenfell also bears other costs of rendering the
investment advisory services performed  by it pursuant  to the New  Sub-Advisory
Agreement,  including  such clerical  help and  bookkeeping  services as  it may
require.

    In return for the services it renders under the New Sub-Advisory  Agreement,
Morgan  Grenfell is  to be paid  by the Investment  Manager monthly compensation
equal to 40% of the Investment Manager's compensation receivable pursuant to the
New Management Agreement. See Appendix III  for a tabular comparison of  current
and  PRO FORMA fees. Any subsequent change in the New Management Agreement which
has the effect of raising or lowering the compensation of the Investment Manager
will have  the concomitant  effect of  raising or  lowering the  fee payable  to
Morgan  Grenfell. In addition, if the Investment Manager undertakes to waive all
or part of  its fee under  the New Management  Agreement, Morgan Grenfell's  fee
payable  under the New Sub-Advisory Agreement will be waived proportionately, in
whole or in part.

    As stated in  Proposal 1,  the New  Management Agreement  provides that  the
operating  expenses of  the Trust  are subject  to applicable  limitations under
rules and  regulations of  states where  the  Trust is  authorized to  sell  its
shares.  In the event  the operating expenses  of the Trust  exceed such expense
limitations, Morgan Grenfell will reduce its  sub-advisory fee to the extent  of
40%  of  such  excess  and  will reimburse  the  Investment  Manager  for annual
operating expenses in the amount of 40% of such excess of any expense limitation
that may be applicable.

    Morgan Grenfell has agreed, pursuant to the New Sub-Advisory Agreement, that
neither Morgan Grenfell nor  any of its affiliates  (organized with a  corporate
name  or other name under  which it is performing  its business activities which
contains the  names  "Morgan Grenfell")  will  undertake to  act  as  investment
adviser  or sub-adviser  for any other  U.S. registered  investment company with
similar investment policies  which is  sold primarily to  retail investors,  and
which is sponsored, distributed or managed by a U.S. registered broker-dealer or
one of its affiliates.

    The  New Sub-Advisory Agreement  provides that, after  its initial period of
effectiveness, which expires on  April 30, 1997, it  may be continued in  effect
from year to year provided that each such continuance is approved by the vote of
a  majority, as defined in the Act,  of the outstanding voting securities of the
Trust or by the Trustees of the Trust, and, in either event, by the vote cast in
person by a majority of the Independent Trustees who are not parties to the  New
Sub-Advisory  Agreement or "interested persons" of any such party (as defined in
the Act) at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval.

    The New Sub-Advisory Agreement  also provides that it  may be terminated  at
any  time by Morgan Grenfell, the Investment Manager  or the Board, or by a vote
of the  majority of  the outstanding  voting securities  of the  Trust, in  each
instance without the payment of any penalty, on thirty days' written notice, and
provides  for its  automatic termination  in the  event of  its "assignment," as
defined in the Act.

    The form of the New Sub-Advisory Agreement is attached as Exhibit B to  this
Proxy  Statement. The foregoing summary is  qualified in its entirety by Exhibit
B.

MORGAN GRENFELL INVESTMENT SERVICES LIMITED

    Morgan Grenfell was organized as a British corporation in 1972 and currently
manages assets of approximately  $10.4 billion primarily  for U.S. and  Canadian
corporate  and public  employee benefit plans,  investment companies, endowments
and foundations. Morgan Grenfell's  principal office is  located at 20  Finsbury
Circus,  London,  England.  Morgan  Grenfell  is  a  wholly-owned  subsidiary of
London-based Morgan Grenfell Asset

                                       9
<PAGE>
Management Limited,  whose  subsidiaries in  total  manage assets  of  over  $51
billion.  Morgan  Grenfell Asset  Management  Limited is  itself  a wholly-owned
subsidiary of London-based Morgan Grenfell  Group plc (which is wholly-owned  by
Deutsche  Bank AG, an international commercial and investment banking group). It
is anticipated that Morgan Grenfell Group  plc will change its name to  Deutsche
Morgan  Grenfell Group plc in the near  future. Morgan Grenfell is registered as
an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.

    Appendix II to this proxy statement lists the investment companies for which
Morgan Grenfell  serves  as an  investment  adviser and  which  have  investment
objectives  similar to that of  the Trust, and sets forth  the net assets of and
the fees payable to Morgan Grenfell by each such company, including the Trust.

    The Principal Executive Officer and  Directors of Morgan Grenfell and  their
principal  occupations are respectively as follows: Michael Bullock, Chairman of
the Board  of Directors;  Patrick  W. W.  Disney,  Chief Executive  Officer  and
Director  of  Morgan Grenfell;  Graham  B. Bamping,  Martin  A. Hall,  Julian R.
Johnston, Ian D.  Kelson, William G.  M. Thomas, Patrick  N. C. Walker,  Stephen
A.J.  Ward  and Alan  M. Wheatley,  Directors of  Morgan Grenfell.  The business
address of the foregoing Directors and Executive Officer is 20 Finsbury  Circus,
London, England.

    Following   implementation  of   the  New  Sub-Advisory   Agreement,  it  is
anticipated that some portion of securities  transactions for the Trust will  be
executed  through  brokers  affiliated with  Morgan  Grenfell,  including Morgan
Grenfell and Partners  Securities Pte  Ltd and Morgan  Grenfell Asia  Securities
(Hong Kong) Limited.

THE BOARD'S CONSIDERATION

    In   approving   InterCapital's   recommendation  of   Morgan   Grenfell  as
sub-adviser, the Board of Trustees considered the nature, quality and extent  of
services   proposed  to  be  rendered,   historical  performance,  the  proposed
investment  strategy,  the  proposed  fee  and  related  arrangements,  and  the
organizational  depth, reputation, expertise and  experience of Morgan Grenfell,
including Morgan Grenfell's experience as  sub-adviser to six other Dean  Witter
Funds  and  portfolios.  In  connection with  this  determination,  the Trustees
reviewed materials  furnished by  Morgan Grenfell  relevant to  their  decision.
Those   materials  included  information  regarding   Morgan  Grenfell  and  its
personnel,  operations  and  financial  condition.  Representatives  of   Morgan
Grenfell  reviewed with  the Board of  Trustees Morgan  Grenfell's philosophy of
management, performance, expectations and methods  of operation insofar as  they
would relate to the Trust.

    In  addition, the  Board of  Trustees reviewed  and discussed  the terms and
provisions  of  the  New  Sub-Advisory  Agreement.  See  "The  New  Sub-Advisory
Agreement" above.

    Based  upon the  Board's review and  evaluations of these  materials and its
consideration of all factors deemed relevant, the Board determined that the  New
Sub-Advisory  Agreement is  reasonable, fair  and in  the best  interests of the
Trust and  its  shareholders.  Accordingly,  the Board,  including  all  of  the
Independent  Trustees,  approved the  New  Sub-Advisory Agreement  and  voted to
recommend its approval to the Trust's shareholders.

VOTE REQUIRED

    Under the Act, approval of the  New Sub-Advisory Agreement will require  the
affirmative  vote of the holders of  (a) 67% or more of  the shares of the Trust
present, in person or by proxy, at the Meeting, if the holders of more than  50%
of  the  outstanding  shares  are  so  present, or  (b)  more  than  50%  of the
outstanding  shares  of  the  Trust,  whichever  is  less.  In  the  event   the
shareholders  do not  approve the  New Sub-  Advisory Agreement  by the required

                                       10
<PAGE>
majority vote, the Board  will take such action  as it deems to  be in the  best
interests of the Trust and its shareholders, which may include calling a special
meeting  of shareholders to vote  on another sub-advisory agreement. Abstentions
and broker "non-votes" will have the same effect as a vote against the proposal.

    THE  TRUSTEES,  INCLUDING  ALL  OF  THE  INDEPENDENT  TRUSTEES,  UNANIMOUSLY
RECOMMEND THAT THE SHAREHOLDERS APPROVE THE NEW SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENT.

    (3) APPROVAL OR DISAPPROVAL OF CHANGES IN THE INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS OF
        THE TRUST TO PERMIT THE TRUST TO PURCHASE AND SELL FUTURES CONTRACTS
        AND OPTIONS

THE PROPOSAL

    The  Trustees, at  their July  26 meeting,  approved the  adoption of  a new
non-fundamental investment  policy for  the  Trust and  certain changes  in  the
Trust's investment restrictions to permit the Trust to purchase and sell futures
contracts  and  options. The  proposed  changes in  investment  restrictions are
subject to approval  by the  Trust's shareholders. However,  the new  investment
policy adopted by the Trustees cannot be implemented if the restrictions are not
amended as proposed.

    The new investment policy would permit the Trust:

    (1)  to  write and/or  purchase put and  call options  on currencies and
         engage in  transactions involving  currency futures  contracts  and
         options   on  such  contracts,  for  purposes  of  hedging  against
         potential changes in the  market value of  the currencies in  which
         its investment (or anticipated investments) are denominated;

    (2)  to  (a) purchase put and call  options on securities which it holds
         (or has the right to acquire), (b) engage in transactions involving
         interest rate futures  contracts and bond  index futures  contracts
         and  options  on such  contracts,  and (c)  engage  in transactions
         involving stock  index futures  contracts and  options thereon,  in
         each  case for purposes of  hedging its investments (or anticipated
         investments) against potential changes in the market value; and

    (3)  to write  covered  call  options against  securities  held  in  its
         portfolio  and covered put options on eligible portfolio securities
         and purchase  options  of the  same  or similar  series  to  effect
         closing transactions.

    If the changes in this Proposal 3 are approved by shareholders, InterCapital
and  Morgan Grenfell currently intend to engage in only the hedging transactions
described  in  subparagraph  (1)  above  but  may  engage  in  other  types   of
transactions  in the future.  The new policy concerning  futures and options, if
implemented, will  be non-fundamental  and  therefore could  be changed  by  the
Trustees in the future without shareholder approval.

    Currently, investment restrictions (3), (5) and (9) in the Trust's Statement
of Additional Information either prevent or are affected by the proposed policy.
Accordingly,  the Trustees voted to eliminate two restrictions that provide that
"the Trust  may not...(3)  purchase  or sell  commodities or  commodity  futures
contracts...[or]  (5)  write,  purchase  or sell  puts,  calls,  or combinations
thereof," and  approved  the  amendment  of  restriction  (9),  prohibiting  the
issuance  of senior securities, such  that it would not  apply to the extent the
Trust may be deemed to have issued a senior security by reason of purchasing  or
selling  futures contracts or options,  in each case subject  to the approval of
the shareholders of the Trust.

                                       11
<PAGE>
    A complete  description of  the  techniques covered  by the  new  investment
policy and the risks associated with such techniques is attached as Appendix IV.

THE BOARD'S CONSIDERATION

    The  Trustees  believe that  approval  of this  Proposal  3 is  in  the best
interest of  the  Trust  and  its shareholders.  InterCapital  has  advised  the
Trustees  that implementation  of the  new investment  policy as  proposed would
afford the Trust greater  flexibility in pursuing  its investment objective  and
enhanced opportunities to seek to protect against currency risks associated with
global  investing.  In  addition,  although  InterCapital  and  Morgan  Grenfell
presently intend to utilize only the currency hedging techniques covered by  the
new  policy, the Trustees believe approval of  the Proposal as presented will be
advantageous in allowing InterCapital and Morgan Grenfell to respond quickly  to
changing  market conditions without  the added time  and expense associated with
shareholder meetings that might otherwise be required.

VOTE REQUIRED

    Under the Act, approval of  the proposed changes in investment  restrictions
will  require the  affirmative vote  of the holders  of (a)  67% or  more of the
shares of the  Trust present,  in person  or by proxy,  at the  Meeting, if  the
holders  of more than 50% of the outstanding  shares are so present, or (b) more
than 50% of the outstanding shares of the Trust, whichever is less. In the event
the shareholders do not approve the proposed changes in investment  restrictions
by the required majority vote, the Board will take such action as it deems to be
in  the best  interests of  the Trust  and its  shareholders, which  may include
calling another meeting  of shareholders  to vote on  a proposal  to change  the
Trust's  investment restrictions.  Abstentions and broker  "non-votes" will have
the same effect as a vote against the proposal.

    THE  TRUSTEES,  INCLUDING  ALL  OF  THE  INDEPENDENT  TRUSTEES,  UNANIMOUSLY
RECOMMEND  THAT THE  SHAREHOLDERS APPROVE  THE PROPOSED  CHANGES IN  THE TRUST'S
INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS.

                             ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

    In the event  that the  necessary quorum to  transact business  or the  vote
required  to approve or reject any proposal  is not obtained at the Meeting, the
persons named as proxies may propose one or more adjournments of the Meeting for
a total of not more than 60 days in the aggregate to permit further solicitation
of proxies.  Any such  adjournment  will require  the  affirmative vote  of  the
holders of a majority of the Trust's shares present in person or by proxy at the
Meeting.  The persons named  as proxies will  vote in favor  of such adjournment
those proxies which they are  entitled to vote in favor  of Proposal 1 and  will
vote  against any  such adjournment those  proxies required to  be voted against
that proposal.

                             SHAREHOLDERS PROPOSALS

    The  Trust  does  not  hold  regular  shareholders  meetings.  Proposals  of
Shareholders  intended to be presented at  the next meeting of Shareholders must
be received a reasonable time prior to  the mailing of the proxy materials  sent
in  connection with the meeting,  for inclusion in the  proxy statement for that
meeting.

                                       12
<PAGE>
                            REPORTS TO SHAREHOLDERS

    The Trust's most recent Annual Report,  for the fiscal year ended March  31,
1995, is available without charge upon request from Adrienne Ryan at Dean Witter
Trust  Company, Harborside Financial Center, Plaza  Two, Jersey City, New Jersey
07311 (telephone 1-800-526-3143) (toll-free).

                                 OTHER BUSINESS

    The management  knows of  no other  matters which  may be  presented at  the
Meeting. However, if any matters not now known properly come before the Meeting,
it is the intention of the persons named in the enclosed form of proxy, or their
substitutes,  to vote  all shares  that they  are entitled  to vote  on any such
matter, utilizing such  proxy in  accordance with  their best  judgment on  such
matters.

                       By Order of the Board of Trustees

                                 SHELDON CURTIS
                                   SECRETARY

                                       13
<PAGE>
                                                                      APPENDIX I

    InterCapital  serves  as  investment  manager to  the  Trust  and  the other
open-end  investment  companies  listed  below  which  have  similar  investment
objectives to that of the Trust, with the net assets shown as of August 4, 1995.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  NET ASSETS AS   CURRENT INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT
                                                                                   OF 08/04/95             FEE RATE(S)
                                                                                  --------------  -----------------------------
<C>        <S>                                                                    <C>             <C>
       1.  DEAN WITTER AMERICAN VALUE FUND......................................  $               0.625% on assets up to $250
                                                                                                  million and 0.50% on assets
                                                                                                  over $250 million
       2.  DEAN WITTER BALANCED GROWTH FUND.....................................  $               0.60% (1)
       3.  DEAN WITTER CAPITAL GROWTH SECURITIES................................  $               0.65% on assets up to $500
                                                                                                  million, scaled down at
                                                                                                  various asset levels to
                                                                                                  0.475% on assets over $1.5
                                                                                                  billion
       4.  DEAN WITTER DEVELOPING GROWTH SECURITIES TRUST.......................  $               0.50% on assets up to $500
                                                                                                  million and 0.475% on assets
                                                                                                  over $500 million
       5.  DEAN WITTER DIVIDEND GROWTH SECURITIES INC...........................  $               0.625% on assets up to $250
                                                                                                  million, scaled down at
                                                                                                  various asset levels to
                                                                                                  0.325% on assets over $8
                                                                                                  billion
       6.  DEAN WITTER EUROPEAN GROWTH FUND INC.................................  $               1.00% on assets up to $500
                                                                                                  million and 0.95% on assets
                                                                                                  over $500 million (of which
                                                                                                  40% is paid to a Sub-Adviser)
       7.  DEAN WITTER GLOBAL ASSET ALLOCATION FUND.............................  $               1.00% (2) (of which 60% is
                                                                                                  paid to two Sub-Advisers)
       8.  DEAN WITTER GLOBAL DIVIDEND GROWTH SECURITIES........................  $               0.75% on assets up to $1
                                                                                                  billion, scaled down at
                                                                                                  various asset levels to 0.70%
                                                                                                  on assets over $1.5 billion
       9.  DEAN WITTER GLOBAL UTILITIES FUND....................................  $               0.65%
      10.  DEAN WITTER HEALTH SCIENCES TRUST....................................  $               1.00%
      11.  DEAN WITTER INTERNATIONAL SMALLCAP FUND..............................  $               1.25% (of which 40% is paid
                                                                                                  to a Sub-Adviser)
      12.  DEAN WITTER MANAGED ASSETS TRUST.....................................  $               0.60% on assets up to $500
                                                                                                  million and 0.55% on assets
                                                                                                  over $500 million
      13.  DEAN WITTER MID-CAP GROWTH FUND......................................  $               0.75%
      14.  DEAN WITTER NATURAL RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT SECURITIES INC..............  $               0.625% on assets up to $250
                                                                                                  million and 0.50% on assets
                                                                                                  over $250 million
      15.  DEAN WITTER PACIFIC GROWTH FUND INC..................................  $               1.00% on assets up to $1
                                                                                                  billion and 0.95% on assets
                                                                                                  over $1 billion (of which 40%
                                                                                                  is paid to a Sub-Adviser)
      16.  DEAN WITTER PRECIOUS METALS AND MINERALS TRUST.......................  $               0.80%
      17.  DEAN WITTER STRATEGIST FUND..........................................  $               0.60% on assets up to $500
                                                                                                  million, scaled down at
                                                                                                  various asset levels to 0.50%
                                                                                                  on assets over $1 billion
</TABLE>

                                      I-1
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  NET ASSETS AS   CURRENT INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT
                                                                                   OF 08/04/95             FEE RATE(S)
                                                                                  --------------  -----------------------------
<C>        <S>                                                                    <C>             <C>
      18.  DEAN WITTER UTILITIES FUND...........................................  $               0.65% on assets up to $500
                                                                                                  million, scaled down at
                                                                                                  various asset levels to 0.45%
                                                                                                  on assets over $3.5 billion
      19.  DEAN WITTER VALUE-ADDED MARKET SERIES................................  $               0.50% on assets up to $500
                                                                                                  million and 0.45% on assets
                                                                                                  over $500 million
      20.  DEAN WITTER WORLD WIDE INVESTMENT TRUST..............................  $               0.55% on assets up to $500
                                                                                                  million and 0.5225% on assets
                                                                                                  over $500 million (3)
      21.  DEAN WITTER RETIREMENT SERIES:
           (A) AMERICAN VALUE SERIES............................................  $               0.85% (4)
           (B) CAPITAL GROWTH SERIES............................................  $               0.85% (4)
           (C) DIVIDEND GROWTH SERIES...........................................  $               0.75% (4)
           (D) GLOBAL EQUITY SERIES.............................................  $               1.00% (4)
           (E) STRATEGIST SERIES................................................  $               0.85% (4)
           (F) UTILITIES SERIES.................................................  $               0.75% (4)
           (G) VALUE-ADDED MARKET SERIES........................................  $               0.50% (4)
      22.  DEAN WITTER SELECT DIMENSIONS INVESTMENT SERIES:*
           (A) AMERICAN VALUE PORTFOLIO.........................................  $               0.625% (5)
           (B) BALANCED PORTFOLIO...............................................  $               0.75% (5) (of which 40% is
                                                                                                  paid to a Sub-Adviser)
           (C) CORE EQUITY PORTFOLIO............................................  $               0.85% (5) (of which 40% is
                                                                                                  paid to a Sub-Adviser)
           (D) DEVELOPING GROWTH PORTFOLIO......................................  $               0.50% (5)
           (E) DIVIDEND GROWTH PORTFOLIO........................................  $               0.625% (5)
           (F) EMERGING MARKETS PORTFOLIO.......................................  $               1.25% (5) (of which 40% is
                                                                                                  paid to a Sub-Adviser)
           (G) GLOBAL EQUITY PORTFOLIO..........................................  $               1.00% (5)
           (H) UTILITIES PORTFOLIO..............................................  $               0.65% (5)
           (I) VALUE-ADDED MARKET PORTFOLIO.....................................  $               0.50% (5)
      23.  DEAN WITTER VARIABLE INVESTMENT SERIES:*
           (A) CAPITAL GROWTH PORTFOLIO.........................................  $               0.65%
           (B) DIVIDEND GROWTH PORTFOLIO........................................  $               0.625% on assets up to $500
                                                                                                  million and 0.50% on assets
                                                                                                  over $500 million
           (C) EQUITY PORTFOLIO.................................................  $               0.50%
           (D) EUROPEAN GROWTH PORTFOLIO........................................  $               1.00% (of which 40% is paid
                                                                                                  to a Sub-Adviser)
           (E) GLOBAL DIVIDEND GROWTH PORTFOLIO.................................  $               0.75%
           (F) MANAGED ASSETS PORTFOLIO.........................................  $               0.50%
           (G) PACIFIC GROWTH PORTFOLIO.........................................  $               1.00% (of which 40% is paid
                                                                                                  to a Sub-Adviser)
           (H) UTILITIES PORTFOLIO..............................................  $               0.65% on assets up to $500
                                                                                                  million and 0.55% on assets
                                                                                                  over $500 million
<FN>
- ------------------------------
*    Open-end  investment company  offered only  to life  insurance companies in
     connection with variable annuity and/or variable life insurance contracts.

(1)  InterCapital has undertaken  to assume all  operating expenses (except  for
     any  brokerage fees) of Dean  Witter Balanced Growth Fund  and to waive the
     compensation provided for in its investment management agreement with  that
     company  until such time as  that company has $50  million of net assets or
     until September 28, 1995, whichever occurs first.
</TABLE>

                                      I-2
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>  <C>
(2)  InterCapital has undertaken  to assume all  operating expenses (except  for
     any  12b-1 and brokerage fees) of  Dean Witter Global Asset Allocation Fund
     and to waive  the compensation  provided for in  its investment  management
     agreement with that company until such time as that company has $50 million
     of net assets or until August 23, 1995, whichever occurs first.

(3)  Under  the  proposed New  Investment  Management Agreement,  the investment
     management fee for Dean Witter World  Wide Investment Trust will be at  the
     annual  rates of 1.0% on assets up to $500 million and 0.95% on assets over
     $500 million (of which 40% will be paid to a Sub-Adviser).

(4)  InterCapital has undertaken  to assume all  operating expenses (except  for
     any  brokerage fees and a portion of organizational expenses) of the Series
     of Dean Witter Retirement Series and to waive the compensation provided for
     in its investment management agreement with that company in respect of each
     Series until December 31, 1995.

(5)  InterCapital has undertaken  to assume all  operating expenses (except  for
     any  brokerage  fees  and  a portion  of  organizational  expenses)  of the
     Portfolios of Dean Witter Select Dimensions Investment Series and to  waive
     the  compensation provided for in  its investment management agreement with
     that company in respect of each Portfolio until such time as the  pertinent
     Portfolio  has  $50  million of  net  assets  or until  December  31, 1995,
     whichever occurs first.
</TABLE>

                                      I-3
<PAGE>
                                                                     APPENDIX II

    Morgan  Grenfell Investment Services Limited serves as investment adviser or
sub-adviser to  the Trust  and the  other open-end  investment companies  listed
below  which have similar investment  objectives to that of  the Trust, with the
net assets shown as of August 4, 1995.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                   CURRENT INVESTMENT ADVISORY
                                                                                  NET ASSETS AS                OR
                                                                                   OF 08/04/95      SUB-ADVISORY FEE RATE(S)
                                                                                  --------------  -----------------------------
<C>        <S>                                                                    <C>             <C>
       1.  DEAN WITTER EUROPEAN GROWTH FUND INC.................................  $               0.40% on assets up to $500
                                                                                                  million and 0.38% on assets
                                                                                                  over $500 million
       2.  DEAN WITTER GLOBAL ASSET ALLOCATION FUND.............................  $               0.30%
       3.  DEAN WITTER INTERNATIONAL SMALLCAP FUND..............................  $               0.50%
       4.  DEAN WITTER PACIFIC GROWTH FUND INC..................................  $               0.40% on assets up to $1
                                                                                                  billion and 0.38% on assets
                                                                                                  over $1 billion
       5.  DEAN WITTER VARIABLE INVESTMENT SERIES:*
           (A) EUROPEAN GROWTH PORTFOLIO........................................  $               0.40%
           (B) PACIFIC GROWTH PORTFOLIO.........................................  $               0.40%
       6.  DEAN WITTER WORLD WIDE INVESTMENT TRUST..............................  $               0.45% on assets up to $500
                                                                                                  million and 0.4275% on assets
                                                                                                  over $500 million (1)
       7.  MGIS EMERGING MARKETS EQUITY FUND....................................  $               1.00%
       8.  MGIS EUROPEAN SMALL CAP EQUITY FUND..................................  $               1.00%
       9.  MGIS INTERNATIONAL GROUP TRUST -- EUROPEAN FUND......................  $               0.70%
      10.  MGIS INTERNATIONAL SMALL CAP EQUITY FUND.............................  $               1.00%
      11.  RSI RETIREMENT FUND**................................................  $               0.60% on assets up to $50
                                                                                                  million and 0.50% on assets
                                                                                                  over $50 million
      12.  SEI EUROPEAN PORTFOLIO COLLECTIVE TRUST**............................  $               0.40% on assets up to $100
                                                                                                  million, scaled down at
                                                                                                  various asset levels to 0.20%
                                                                                                  on assets over $150 million
      13.  SEI EUROPEAN PORTFOLIO MUTUAL FUND**.................................  $               0.325%
<FN>
- ------------------------------
*    Open-end investment company  offered only  to life  insurance companies  in
     connection with variable annuity and/or variable life insurance contracts.

**   Open-end investment company offered only to institutional pension funds.

(1)  Under  the proposed  New Sub-Advisory  Agreement, the  sub-advisory fee for
     Dean Witter World  Wide Investment  Trust will be  at the  annual rates  of
     0.40% on assets up to $500 million and 0.38% on assets over $500 million.
</TABLE>

                                      II-1
<PAGE>
                                                                    APPENDIX III

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     PRO FORMA COMPENSATION UNDER NEW
                        COMPENSATION UNDER MANAGEMENT AND CO-           MANAGEMENT AND SUB-ADVISORY         % CHANGE IN $
                                 ADVISORY AGREEMENTS                          AGREEMENTS (1)                    AMOUNT
                      -----------------------------------------   ---------------------------------------   --------------
                      RATE UP TO    RATE OVER    AMOUNT FOR FY    RATE UP TO   RATE OVER    AMOUNT FOR FY
  ADVISER               $500MM       $500MM           '95           $500MM       $500MM          '95
- --------------------  ----------   -----------   --------------   ----------   ----------   -------------
<S>                   <C>          <C>           <C>              <C>          <C>          <C>             <C>
InterCapital........      0.55%       0.5225%     $3,073,775           0.60%        0.57%   $3,353,209            9.1

Daiwa...............      0.225%      0.21375%    $1,257,453         --           --            --               (100)

NatWest.............      0.225%      0.21375%    $1,257,453         --           --            --               (100)

Morgan Grenfell.....      --           --            --                0.40%        0.38%   $2,235,473            100
                      ----------   -----------   --------------         ---          ---    -------------         ---

  TOTAL.............      1.00%       0.95%       $5,588,682(2)        1.00%        0.95%   $5,588,682(2)           0
                        ---         ---          -----------           ----         ----    -----------          ----
                        ---         ---          ------------          ----         ----    ------------     --------
<FN>
- ------------------------
(1)  Dollar  amounts  under  New  Management  and  Sub-Advisory  Agreements  are
     hypothetical and  represent amounts  that would  have been  paid had  those
     Agreements  been in effect  during the Trust's fiscal  year ended March 31,
     1995. The PRO  FORMA rates and  amounts reflect that,  pursuant to the  New
     Sub-Advisory  Agreement,  InterCapital  will pay  40%  of  its compensation
     received as Investment Manager to Morgan Grenfell for services rendered  as
     sub-adviser.

(2)  All  dollar amounts reflect the actual  effective rate paid during the year
     ended March 31, 1995, which was less  than 1.00% based on a combination  of
     the maximum rate and the rate on assets over $500 million.

     Note:  None of the other  expenses of the Trust is  expected to change as a
     result of the actions recommended in this proxy statement.
</TABLE>

                                     III-1
<PAGE>
                                                                     APPENDIX IV
                         PROPOSED NEW INVESTMENT POLICY

OPTIONS AND FUTURES TRANSACTIONS

    The  Trust  shall have  the ability  to write  covered call  options against
securities held in  its portfolio  and purchase options  of the  same series  to
effect  closing  transactions, and  to hedge  against  potential changes  in the
market value of its investments  (or anticipated investments) by purchasing  put
and  call  options  on portfolio  (or  eligible portfolio)  securities  (and the
currencies in which they are denominated) and engaging in transactions involving
futures contracts and options on such contracts.

    OPTIONS ON FOREIGN CURRENCIES.  The Trust shall have the ability to purchase
and write options on foreign currencies  for purposes similar to those  involved
with  investing in forward foreign currency  exchange contracts. For example, in
order to protect against  declines in the dollar  value of portfolio  securities
which  are denominated in a foreign currency, the Trust may purchase put options
on an amount of  such foreign currency  equivalent to the  current value of  the
portfolio  securities involved. As a result, the  Trust would be enabled to sell
the foreign currency for  a fixed amount of  U.S. dollars, thereby "locking  in"
the  dollar value of the  portfolio securities (less the  amount of the premiums
paid for the options). Conversely, the Trust shall have the ability to  purchase
call options on foreign currencies in which securities it anticipates purchasing
are  denominated  to secure  a set  U.S.  dollar price  for such  securities and
protect against a decline in the value  of the U.S. dollar against such  foreign
currency. The Trust shall also be able to purchase call and put options to close
out written option positions.

    The  Trust shall also be able to write call options on foreign currencies to
protect against  potential  declines  in  its  portfolio  securities  which  are
denominated  in foreign  currencies. If the  U.S. dollar value  of the portfolio
securities falls as  a result  of a  decline in  the exchange  rate between  the
foreign  currency in which it is denominated and the U.S. dollar, then a loss to
the Trust occasioned by  such value decline would  be ameliorated by receipt  of
the  premium on the option  sold. At the same time,  however, the Trust gives up
the benefit of any rise in value of the relevant portfolio securities above  the
exercise  price of  the option and,  in fact,  only receives a  benefit from the
writing of the option to the extent  that the value of the portfolio  securities
falls  below the price of the premium received.  The Trust shall also be able to
write options to close out long call option positions.

    Options on foreign  currencies are affected  by all of  those factors  which
influence foreign exchange rates and investments generally. Since the value of a
foreign  currency  option  depends upon  the  value of  the  underlying currency
relative to the  U.S. dollar,  the price  of an  option position  may vary  with
changes  in  the  value  of  the currencies  and  have  no  relationship  to the
investment merits of a foreign security, including foreign securities held in  a
"hedged"   investment   portfolio.   In  addition,   because   foreign  currency
transactions occurring  in the  interbank  market involve  substantially  larger
amounts  than those that may be involved in the use of foreign currency options,
the Trust may be disadvantaged by having to deal in an odd lot market (generally
consisting of transactions of less than  $1 million) for the underlying  foreign
currencies at prices that are less favorable than for round lots.

    There  is  no  systematic reporting  of  last sale  information  for foreign
currencies or  any  regulatory  requirement that  quotations  available  through
dealers  or other market sources be firm or revised on a timely basis. Quotation
information available is generally representative of very large transactions  in
the  interbank market and  thus may not  reflect relatively smaller transactions
where rates may be less favorable.

    COVERED CALL WRITING.   The Trust shall be  permitted to write covered  call
options  on portfolio securities and on  the U.S. Dollar and foreign currencies,
without  limit,  in  order  to  aid  in  achieving  its  investment  objectives.
Generally,  a call option  is "covered" if the  Trust owns, or  has the right to
acquire, without additional cash

                                      IV-1
<PAGE>
consideration (or for additional  cash consideration held for  the Trust by  its
Custodian in a segregated account) the underlying security (currency) subject to
the  option except that in the case of  call options on U.S. Treasury Bills, the
Trust might own U.S. Treasury Bills of a different series from those  underlying
the  call option,  but with  a principal amount  and value  corresponding to the
exercise price and a maturity date no later than that of the security (currency)
deliverable under the call option.  A call option is  also covered if the  Trust
holds  a call on the same security  as the underlying security (currency) of the
written option, where the exercise price of the call used for coverage is  equal
to  or less  than the  exercise price of  the call  written or  greater than the
exercise price  of  the  call  written  if the  mark  to  market  difference  is
maintained  by the Trust in cash, U.S. Government securities or other high grade
debt obligations held in a segregated account maintained with its Custodian.

    The Trust will  receive from  the purchaser,  in return  for a  call it  has
written,  a "premium"; i.e., the price of  the option. Receipt of these premiums
may better enable the  Trust to earn  a higher level of  current income than  it
would  earn from holding the underlying securities (currencies) alone. Moreover,
the premium received will offset a portion of the potential loss incurred by the
Trust if the securities (currencies)  underlying the option are ultimately  sold
(exchanged)  by the Trust  at a loss.  The premium received  will fluctuate with
varying economic  market  conditions.  If  the market  value  of  the  portfolio
securities  (or the  currencies in which  they are denominated)  upon which call
options have been written increases, the Trust may receive a lower total  return
from  the portion of  its portfolio upon  which calls have  been written than it
would have had such calls not been written.

    As regards  listed options  and  certain over-the-counter  ("OTC")  options,
during the option period, the Trust may be required, at any time, to deliver the
underlying  security (currency)  against payment  of the  exercise price  on any
calls it has written (exercise of certain listed and OTC options may be  limited
to specific expiration dates). This obligation is terminated upon the expiration
of  the option period or at such earlier  time when the writer effects a closing
purchase  transaction.  A  closing  purchase  transaction  is  accomplished   by
purchasing  an  option of  the  same series  as  the option  previously written.
However, once the Trust has been assigned an exercise notice, the Trust will  be
unable to effect a closing purchase transaction.

    Closing purchase transactions are ordinarily effected to realize a profit on
an  outstanding call option,  to prevent an  underlying security (currency) from
being called, to permit the sale of  an underlying security (or the exchange  of
the  underlying currency) or to enable the Trust to write another call option on
the underlying security  (currency) with  either a different  exercise price  or
expiration date or both. The Trust may realize a net gain or loss from a closing
purchase  transaction depending upon whether the  amount of the premium received
on the  call option  is more  or less  than the  cost of  effecting the  closing
purchase transaction. Any loss incurred in a closing purchase transaction may be
wholly or partially offset by unrealized appreciation in the market value of the
underlying  security  (currency). Conversely,  a gain  resulting from  a closing
purchase transaction  could be  offset in  whole or  in part  or exceeded  by  a
decline in the market value of the underlying security (currency).

    If  a call  option expires  unexercised, the  Trust realizes  a gain  in the
amount of the  premium on  the option  less the  commission paid.  Such a  gain,
however,  may be offset  by depreciation in  the market value  of the underlying
security (currency) during the option period. If a call option is exercised, the
Trust realizes  a  gain  or  loss  from the  sale  of  the  underlying  security
(currency)  equal to the difference between the purchase price of the underlying
security (currency) and the proceeds of the sale of the security (currency) plus
the premium received for the option less the commission paid.

    Options written by the  Trust will normally have  expiration dates of up  to
eighteen  months from the date written. The  exercise price of a call option may
be below, equal to or above the current market value of the underlying  security
at the time the option is written. See "Risks of Options Transactions," below.

                                      IV-2
<PAGE>
    PURCHASING CALL AND PUT OPTIONS.  The Trust shall be able to purchase listed
and  OTC call and put options in amounts equalling up to 5% of its total assets.
The Trust  may purchase  a call  option in  order to  close out  a covered  call
position  (see "Covered Call Writing" above),  to protect against an increase in
price of a security it anticipates purchasing  or, in the case of a call  option
on  foreign currency,  to hedge  against an  adverse exchange  rate move  of the
currency  in  which  the  security  it  anticipates  purchasing  is  denominated
vis-a-vis the currency in which the exercise price is denominated. A call option
purchased to effect a closing transaction on a call written over-the-counter may
be a listed or an OTC option. In either case, the call purchased is likely to be
on  the same  securities (currencies)  and have  the same  terms as  the written
option. If purchased  over-the-counter, the option  would generally be  acquired
from the dealer or financial institution which purchased the call written by the
Trust.

    The  Trust shall be able to  purchase put options on securities (currencies)
which it holds in its portfolio only to protect itself against a decline in  the
value  of the security. If the value  of the underlying security (currency) were
to fall below the exercise price of the put purchased in an amount greater  than
the  premium paid for the  option, the Trust would  incur no additional loss. In
addition, the Trust  may sell  a put option  which it  has previously  purchased
prior  to the sale of the securities (currencies) underlying such option. Such a
sale would result in a net gain or loss depending on whether the amount received
on the sale is more or less than the premium and other transaction costs paid on
the put option sold. Such gain or loss could be offset in whole or in part by  a
change  in the  market value  of the  underlying security  (currency). If  a put
option purchased  by the  Trust expires  without being  sold or  exercised,  the
premium would be lost.

    RISKS  OF OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS.  During  the option period, the covered call
writer has, in return for  the premium on the  option, given up the  opportunity
for capital appreciation above the exercise price should the market price of the
underlying security (or the value of its denominated currency) increase, but has
retained  the risk of loss  should the price of  the underlying security (or the
value of its denominated currency) decline.  The writer has no control over  the
time  when it  may be  required to  fulfill its  obligation as  a writer  of the
option. Once an option writer has received an exercise notice, it cannot  effect
a  closing purchase transaction  in order to terminate  its obligation under the
option and must  deliver or receive  the underlying securities  at the  exercise
price.

    Prior  to exercise or expiration, an  option position can only be terminated
by entering into  a closing purchase  or sale  transaction. If the  Trust, as  a
covered  option writer,  is not  able to  either enter  into a  closing purchase
transaction (or purchase an  offsetting OTC position, which  does not close  out
the  original position but constitutes an asset of equal value to the obligation
under the  option written),  it  will be  required  to maintain  the  securities
subject  to the call, or the collateral underlying the put, even though it might
not be advantageous to do  so, until a closing  transaction can be entered  into
(or the option is exercised or expires).

    The  markets in foreign currency options  are relatively new and the Trust's
ability to establish and close out positions  on such options is subject to  the
maintenance  of a liquid secondary market.  Although the Trust will not purchase
or write such options unless and until, in the opinion of the management of  the
Trust,  the market for them has developed  sufficiently to ensure that the risks
in connection with  such options are  not greater than  the risks in  connection
with  the underlying currency, there can be no assurance that a liquid secondary
market will  exist for  a particular  option  at any  specific time.  Among  the
possible reasons for the absence of a liquid secondary market on exchanges where
listed  options  are  traded or  in  the  OTC market  (an  "Exchange")  are: (i)
insufficient  trading  interest  in   certain  options;  (ii)  restrictions   on
transactions  imposed by an Exchange; (iii)  trading halts, suspensions or other
restrictions imposed with respect to particular classes or series of options  or
underlying  securities;  (iv)  interruption  of  the  normal  operations  on  an
Exchange; (v)  inadequacy  of the  facilities  of  an Exchange  or  the  Options
Clearing  Corporation  ("OCC")  to  handle current  trading  volume;  or  (vi) a
decision by one or more  Exchanges to discontinue the  trading of options (or  a
particular class or series of options), in which

                                      IV-3
<PAGE>
event  the secondary  market on  that Exchange  (or in  that class  or series of
options) would cease  to exist,  although outstanding options  on that  Exchange
that  had been issued  by the OCC as  a result of trades  on that Exchange would
generally continue to be exercisable in accordance with their terms.

    In the event of the bankruptcy of  a broker through which the Trust  engages
in  transactions in options, the Trust  could experience delays and/or losses in
liquidating open positions purchased or sold  through the broker and/or incur  a
loss  of all or part  of its margin deposits with  the broker. Similarly, in the
event of the bankruptcy of the writer  of an OTC option purchased by the  Trust,
the  Trust could experience  a loss of all  or part of the  value of the option.
Transactions are  entered into  by  the Trust  only  with brokers  or  financial
institutions deemed creditworthy by the Trust's management.

    Each  of  the Exchanges  has established  limitations governing  the maximum
number of options on the same  underlying security or futures contract  (whether
or  not covered) which may be written by a single investor, whether acting alone
or in concert with others (regardless of whether such options are written on the
same or different Exchanges or  are held or written on  one or more accounts  or
through one or more brokers). An Exchange may order the liquidation of positions
found  to be in violation  of these limits and it  may impose other sanctions or
restrictions. These position limits  may restrict the  number of listed  options
which the Trust may write.

    The  hours of trading for options may  not conform to the hours during which
the underlying securities (currencies) are traded. To the extent that the option
markets close before  the markets  for the  underlying securities  (currencies),
significant  price and rate  movements can take place  in the underlying markets
that are not reflected in the option markets.

    FUTURES CONTRACTS.  The  Trust shall be able  to purchase and sell  interest
rate,  currency,  and index  futures contracts  ("futures contracts"),  that are
traded on U.S. and foreign commodity exchanges, on such underlying securities as
U.S. Treasury bonds, notes and bills and/or any foreign government  fixed-income
security  ("interest rate" futures), on  various currencies ("currency" futures)
and on such indexes  of U.S. and  foreign securities as may  exist or come  into
being ("index" futures).

    Although  most interest rate  futures contracts call  for actual delivery or
acceptance of  securities,  the contracts  usually  are closed  out  before  the
settlement  date without  the making or  taking of delivery.  A futures contract
sale is  closed  out by  effecting  a futures  contract  purchase for  the  same
aggregate  amount  of the  specific  type of  security  (currency) and  the same
delivery date. If  the sale  price exceeds  the offsetting  purchase price,  the
seller  would be paid the difference and would realize a gain. If the offsetting
purchase price exceeds the sale price,  the seller would pay the difference  and
would  realize a loss. Similarly,  a futures contract purchase  is closed out by
effecting a futures contract sale for the same aggregate amount of the  specific
type  of security (currency) and the same  delivery date. If the offsetting sale
price exceeds the purchase price, the purchaser would realize a gain, whereas if
the purchase  price  exceeds the  offsetting  sale price,  the  purchaser  would
realize  a loss. There is no assurance that the Trust will be able to enter into
a closing transaction.

    INTEREST RATE FUTURES  CONTRACTS.  When  the Trust enters  into an  interest
rate  futures contract,  it is  initially required  to deposit  with the Trust's
Custodian, in a  segregated account  in the name  of the  broker performing  the
transaction,  an "initial margin" of cash or U.S. Government securities or other
high grade  short-term obligations  equal to  approximately 3%  of the  contract
amount.  Initial margin requirements  are established by  the Exchanges on which
futures contracts trade and may, from time to time, change. In addition, brokers
may establish margin  deposit requirements in  excess of those  required by  the
Exchanges.

                                      IV-4
<PAGE>
    Initial   margin  in  futures  transactions  is  different  from  margin  in
securities transactions in that initial margin does not involve the borrowing of
funds by a broker's client but is,  rather, a good faith deposit on the  futures
contract  which will be returned to the Trust upon the proper termination of the
futures contract. The margin  deposits made are marked  to market daily and  the
Trust  may be required  to make subsequent  deposits of cash  or U.S. Government
securities  (called  "variation  margin")  with  the  Trust's  futures  contract
clearing  broker,  which are  reflective of  price  fluctuations in  the futures
contract. Currently, interest rate  futures contracts can  be purchased on  debt
securities  such  as U.S.  Treasury bills  and bonds,  U.S. Treasury  notes with
maturities between 6 1/2 and 10  years, GNMA certificates and bank  certificates
of deposit.

    CURRENCY FUTURES CONTRACTS.  Generally, foreign currency futures provide for
the  delivery of a specified  amount of a given  currency, on the delivery date,
for a set exercise price denominated in U.S. dollars or other currency.  Foreign
currency  futures contracts would be entered into  for the same reason and under
the same  circumstances  as  forward foreign  currency  exchange  contracts,  as
described in the Trust's Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information. The
Investment  Manager  and/or the  Sub-Adviser will  assess  such factors  as cost
spreads, liquidity  and  transaction costs  in  determining whether  to  utilize
futures  contracts or forward contracts its in foreign currency transactions and
hedging strategy. Currently,  currency futures  exist for,  among other  foreign
currencies, the Japanese yen, German mark, Canadian dollar, British pound, Swiss
franc and European currency unit.

    Purchasers  and sellers of foreign currency futures contracts are subject to
the same risks that  apply to the  buying and selling  of futures generally.  In
addition, there are risks associated with foreign currency futures contracts and
their  use  as a  hedging device  similar  to those  associated with  options on
foreign currencies described  above. Further, settlement  of a currency  futures
contract  must occur within  the country issuing  the underlying currency. Thus,
the Trust must  accept or make  delivery of the  underlying foreign currency  in
accordance  with any  U.S. or foreign  restrictions or  regulation regarding the
maintenance of  foreign  banking  arrangements  by U.S.  residents  and  may  be
required  to pay any fees, taxes or  charges associated with such delivery which
are assessed in the issuing country.

    Options on currency futures contracts may involve certain additional  risks.
Trading  options on currency futures contracts is relatively new. The ability to
establish and close out positions on such options is subject to the  maintenance
of  a liquid secondary market. To reduce  this risk, the Trust will not purchase
or write  options  on  currency  futures contracts  unless  and  until,  in  the
Investment  Manager's  opinion,  the  market  for  such  options  has  developed
sufficiently that the risks in connection with such options are not greater than
the risks in connection with transactions in the underlying foreign currency.

    INDEX FUTURES CONTRACTS.  The Trust shall be able to invest in index futures
contracts. Index  futures contracts  do  not require  the physical  delivery  of
securities, but provide for a final cash settlement on the expiration date which
reflects  accumulated profits  and losses  credited or  debited to  each party's
account based  on  movements  in the  relevant  index  during the  term  of  the
contract.

    The  Trust  is required  to maintain  margin  deposits with  brokerage firms
through which it  effects index futures  contracts in a  manner similar to  that
described  above  for interest  rate futures  contracts. Currently,  the initial
margin requirements  range from  3% to  10%  of the  contract amount  for  index
futures.  In addition,  current industry  practice requires  daily variations in
gains and losses to be reflected in variation margin payments.

    At any time prior to expiration of the futures contract, the Trust may close
the position by taking an opposite position. A final determination of  variation
margin  is then made, additional  cash is required to be  paid by or released to
the Trust and the Trust realizes a loss or gain.

                                      IV-5
<PAGE>
    OPTIONS ON FUTURES CONTRACTS.  The writer of an option on a futures contract
is required to  deposit initial  and variation margin  pursuant to  requirements
similar  to those  applicable to futures  contracts. Premiums  received from the
writing of  an option  on a  futures  contract are  included in  initial  margin
deposits.

    RISKS  OF TRANSACTIONS IN FUTURES CONTRACTS  AND RELATED OPTIONS.  While the
futures contracts and related options transactions to be engaged in by the Trust
for the purpose of hedging the Trust's portfolio securities are not  speculative
in  nature, there are  risks inherent in  the use of  such instruments. One such
risk which may arise in employing futures contracts to protect against the price
volatility of  portfolio  securities  (and  the currencies  in  which  they  are
denominated)  is that  the prices of  securities and indexes  subject to futures
contracts (and thereby  the futures contract  prices) may correlate  imperfectly
with  the  behavior  of prices  of  the  Trust's portfolio  securities  (and the
currencies in which they are denominated).  Another such risk is that prices  of
interest  rate futures  contracts may  not move  in tandem  with the  changes in
prevailing interest rates against which the Trust seeks a hedge.

    A correlation may also be  distorted (a) temporarily, by short-term  traders
seeking  to  profit from  the difference  between a  contract or  security price
objective and  their  cost  of  borrowed funds;  (b)  by  investors  in  futures
contracts  electing to close out their contracts through offsetting transactions
rather than  meet  margin deposit  requirements;  (c) by  investors  in  futures
contracts  opting to make or take  delivery of underlying securities rather than
engage in  closing  transactions,  thereby reducing  liquidity  of  the  futures
market; and (d) temporarily, by speculators who view the deposit requirements in
the futures markets as less onerous than margin requirements in the cash market.
Due to the possibility of price distortions in the futures market and because of
the  imperfect correlation  between movements  in the  prices of  securities and
movements in the  prices of futures  contracts, a correct  forecast of  interest
rate trends or prices may still not result in a successful hedging transaction.

    The  Trust shall  have the  ability to  sell a  futures contract  to protect
against the  decline in  the  value of  securities held  by  the Trust  (or  the
currency in which such securities are denominated). However, it is possible that
the  futures market may advance and the  value of securities (or the currency in
which they are denominated) held in the  portfolio of the Trust may decline.  If
this  occurred, the  Trust would  lose money  on the  futures contract  and also
experience a decline in value of  its portfolio securities. However, while  this
could  occur for a  very brief period or  to a very small  degree, over time the
value of a diversified portfolio will tend to move in the same direction as  the
futures contracts.

    If  the Trust purchases a futures contract  to hedge against the increase in
value of securities it intends to buy (or the currency in which such  securities
are  denominated), and the value of such securities (currencies) decreases, then
the Trust may  determine not to  invest in  the securities as  planned and  will
realize  a loss on the futures contract that is not offset by a reduction in the
price of the securities.

    The Trust will  not engage  in futures  or options  on futures  transactions
which  are impermissible pursuant  to Rule 4.5 under  the Commodity Exchange Act
and, in  accordance  with Rule  4.5,  will use  futures  or options  on  futures
transactions  solely for bona  fide hedging transactions  (within the meaning of
the Commodity Exchange Act), provided, however, that the Trust may, in  addition
to   bona  fide  hedging  transactions,  use  futures  and  options  on  futures
transactions if the aggregate initial margin and premiums required to  establish
such  positions, less the amount by which  any such options positions are in the
money (within the meaning of  the Commodity Exchange Act),  do not exceed 5%  of
the Trust's net assets.

    Exchanges limit the amount by which the price of a futures contract may move
on any day. If the price moves equal the daily limit on successive days, then it
may prove impossible to liquidate a futures position until the daily limit moves
have  ceased. In the event of adverse  price movements, the Trust would continue
to be required to

                                      IV-6
<PAGE>
make daily cash payments of variation margin on open futures positions. In  such
situations,  if the Trust has  insufficient cash, it may  have to sell portfolio
securities to meet daily variation margin requirements at a time when it may  be
disadvantageous to do so. In addition, the Trust may be required to take or make
delivery  of the instruments underlying interest rate futures contracts it holds
at a  time when  it is  disadvantageous to  do so.  The inability  to close  out
futures  contracts and options thereon could also  have an adverse impact on the
Trust's ability to effectively hedge its portfolio.

    Futures contracts and options thereon which are purchased or sold on foreign
commodities  exchanges  may  have  greater  price  volatility  than  their  U.S.
counterparts.  Furthermore, foreign commodities exchanges  may be less regulated
and under less governmental scrutiny than U.S. exchanges. Brokerage commissions,
clearing costs and other transaction costs  may be higher on foreign  exchanges.
Greater  margin requirements may limit the Trust's ability to enter into certain
commodity transactions on foreign exchanges. Moreover, differences in  clearance
and  delivery  requirements  on foreign  exchanges  may occasion  delays  in the
settlement of the Trust's transactions effected on foreign exchanges.

    In the event of the bankruptcy of  a broker through which the Trust  engages
in transactions in futures or options thereon, the Trust could experience delays
and/or losses in liquidating open positions purchased or sold through the broker
and/or  incur a  loss of  all or part  of its  margin deposits  with the broker.
Similarly, in  the event  of  the bankruptcy  of the  writer  of an  OTC  option
purchased  by the Trust, the Trust could experience a loss of all or part of the
value of  the option.  Transactions are  entered  into by  the Trust  only  with
brokers or financial institutions deemed creditworthy by the Trust's management.

    There  is no assurance that a liquid secondary market will exist for futures
contracts and related  options in which  the Trust  may invest. In  the event  a
liquid  market does  not exist, it  may not be  possible to close  out a futures
position, and in the event of adverse price movements, the Trust would  continue
to  be required to  make daily cash  payments of variation  margin. In addition,
limitations imposed by an exchange or board of trade on which futures  contracts
are traded may compel or prevent the Trust from closing out a contract which may
result  in reduced gain or increased loss to  the Trust. The absence of a liquid
market in futures contracts might  cause the Trust to  make or take delivery  of
the  underlying securities (currencies) at a time when it may be disadvantageous
to do so.

    Compared to the purchase or sale of futures contracts, the purchase of  call
or  put options on futures  contracts involves less potential  risk to the Trust
because the maximum amount  at risk is  the premium paid  for the options  (plus
transaction  costs). However, there may be  circumstances when the purchase of a
call or put option  on a futures contract  would result in a  loss to the  Trust
notwithstanding that the purchase or sale of a futures contract would not result
in  a loss, as in the  instance where there is no  movement in the prices of the
futures contract or underlying securities (currencies).

                                      IV-7
<PAGE>
                                                                       EXHIBIT A

                        INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT

    AGREEMENT  made as of the   day of          , 1995 by and between World Wide
Investment Trust, an unincorporated business  trust organized under the laws  of
the  Commonwealth  of Massachusetts  (hereinafter called  the "Fund"),  and Dean
Witter  InterCapital  Inc.,  a  Delaware  corporation  (hereinafter  called  the
"Investment Manager"):

    Whereas,  The  Fund  is  engaged  in  business  as  an  open-end  management
investment company and is registered as such under the Investment Company Act of
1940, as amended (the "Act"); and

    Whereas, The Investment Manager is registered as an investment adviser under
the Investment Advisers Act of  1940, and engages in  the business of acting  as
investment adviser; and

    Whereas,  The  Fund  desires  to retain  the  Investment  Manager  to render
management and investment advisory services in  the manner and on the terms  and
conditions hereinafter set forth; and

    Whereas,  The Investment Manager desires to  be retained to perform services
on said terms and conditions:

    Now, Therefore, this Agreement

                                W I T N E S S E T H:

that in  consideration of  the  premises and  the mutual  covenants  hereinafter
contained, the Fund and the Investment Manager agree as follows:

    1.   The  Fund hereby  retains the Investment  Manager to  act as investment
manager of  the  Fund  and, subject  to  the  supervision of  the  Trustees,  to
supervise  the  investment  activities of  the  Fund as  hereinafter  set forth.
Without limiting the generality of  the foregoing, the Investment Manager  shall
obtain  and  evaluate  such  information and  advice  relating  to  the economy,
securities and commodities markets  and securities and  commodities as it  deems
necessary or useful to discharge its duties hereunder; shall continuously manage
the assets of the Fund in a manner consistent with the investment objectives and
policies  of  the Fund;  shall determine  the securities  and commodities  to be
purchased, sold or  otherwise disposed of  by the  Fund and the  timing of  such
purchases, sales and dispositions; and shall take such further action, including
the placing of purchase and sale orders on behalf of the Fund, as the Investment
Manager  shall deem necessary or appropriate.  The Investment Manager shall also
furnish to  or place  at  the disposal  of the  Fund  such of  the  information,
evaluations,  analyses  and opinions  formulated or  obtained by  the Investment
Manager in the  discharge of  its duties  as the Fund  may, from  time to  time,
reasonably request.

    2.    The  Investment  Manager  shall, at  its  own  expense,  enter  into a
Sub-Advisory Agreement (or Agreements) with  a Sub-Adviser (or Sub-Advisers)  to
make  determinations  as to  certain  of the  securities  and commodities  to be
purchased, sold or  otherwise disposed of  by the  Fund and the  timing of  such
purchases,  sales and dispositions,  and to take  such further action, including
the placing  of  purchase  and  sale  orders on  behalf  of  the  Fund,  as  the
Sub-Adviser(s),   in  consultation  with  the  Investment  Manager,  shall  deem
necessary  or  appropriate;  provided  that  the  Investment  Manager  shall  be
responsible for monitoring compliance by such Sub-Adviser(s) with the investment
policies  and  restrictions  of the  Fund  and  with such  other  limitations or
directions as the Trustees of the Fund may from time to time prescribe.

    3.  The Investment  Manager shall, at its  own expense, maintain such  staff
and  employ or retain such  personnel and consult with  such other persons as it
shall from time to time determine to  be necessary or useful to the  performance
of  its obligations under this Agreement. Without limiting the generality of the
foregoing, the staff

                                      A-1
<PAGE>
and personnel  of the  Investment Manager  shall be  deemed to  include  persons
employed  or otherwise retained by the Investment Manager to furnish statistical
and  other  factual  data,  advice   regarding  economic  factors  and   trends,
information  with  respect to  technical and  scientific developments,  and such
other information, advice and assistance  as the Investment Manager may  desire.
The Investment Manager shall, as agent for the Fund, maintain the Fund's records
and  books of account (other than those maintained by the Fund's transfer agent,
registrar, custodian  and  other  agencies).  All  such  books  and  records  so
maintained  shall be the  property of the  Fund and, upon  request therefor, the
Investment Manager shall surrender to the Fund such of the books and records  so
requested.

    4.  The Fund will, from time to time, furnish or otherwise make available to
the  Investment  Manager  such  financial reports,  proxy  statements  and other
information relating to the business and  affairs of the Fund as the  Investment
Manager  may reasonably require in order to discharge its duties and obligations
hereunder.

    5.  The Investment Manager shall  bear the cost of rendering the  investment
management  and supervisory services to be performed by it under this Agreement,
and shall,  at  its  own expense,  pay  the  compensation of  the  officers  and
employees,  if any, of the  Fund, and provide such  office space, facilities and
equipment and such  clerical help  and bookkeeping  services as  the Fund  shall
reasonably  require in the conduct of its business. The Investment Manager shall
also bear the cost of telephone service, heat, light, power and other  utilities
provided to the Fund.

    6.  The Fund assumes and shall pay or cause to be paid all other expenses of
the   Fund,  including  without  limitation:  fees   pursuant  to  any  plan  of
distribution that the Fund may adopt; the charges and expenses of any registrar,
any custodian or  depository appointed by  the Fund for  the safekeeping of  its
cash,  portfolio securities  or commodities  and other  property, and  any stock
transfer or dividend agent or agents appointed by the Fund; brokers' commissions
chargeable to the Fund  in connection with portfolio  transactions to which  the
Fund  is a  party; all taxes,  including securities or  commodities issuance and
transfer taxes,  and  fees  payable by  the  Fund  to federal,  state  or  other
governmental   agencies;  the  cost   and  expense  of   engraving  or  printing
certificates representing  shares  of  the  Fund;  all  costs  and  expenses  in
connection with the registration and maintenance of registration of the Fund and
its  shares with the  Securities and Exchange Commission  and various states and
other jurisdictions (including filing fees  and legal fees and disbursements  of
counsel);   the  cost  and  expense  of  printing,  including  typesetting,  and
distributing prospectuses and statements of  additional information of the  Fund
and   supplements  thereto   to  the   Fund's  shareholders;   all  expenses  of
shareholders' and  Trustees' meetings  and of  preparing, printing  and  mailing
proxy  statements  and  reports to  shareholders;  fees and  travel  expenses of
Trustees or members of any advisory board or committee who are not employees  of
the Investment Manager or any corporate affiliate of the Investment Manager; all
expenses  incident to the  payment of any  dividend, distribution, withdrawal or
redemption, whether in shares  or in cash; charges  and expenses of any  outside
service  used for pricing  of the Fund's  shares; charges and  expenses of legal
counsel, including counsel to  the Trustees of the  Fund who are not  interested
persons  (as defined in the  Act) of the Fund or  the Investment Manager, and of
independent accountants, in  connection with  any matter relating  to the  Fund;
membership  dues of industry associations;  interest payable on Fund borrowings;
postage; insurance premiums  on property  or personnel  (including officers  and
Trustees)  of  the  Fund  which inure  to  its  benefit;  extraordinary expenses
(including but not limited to, legal claims and liabilities and litigation costs
and any indemnification related thereto); and all other charges and costs of the
Fund's operation unless otherwise explicitly provided herein.

    7.   For the  services to  be rendered,  the facilities  furnished, and  the
expenses assumed by the Investment Manager, the Fund shall pay to the Investment
Manager  monthly compensation determined by  applying the following annual rates
to the Fund's daily net assets: 1.0% of daily net assets up to $500 million  and
0.95%  of daily net assets  over $500 million. Except  as hereinafter set forth,
compensation under this Agreement shall be calculated

                                      A-2
<PAGE>
and accrued daily and the amounts of  the daily accruals shall be paid  monthly.
Such  calculations shall be made by applying 1/365ths of the annual rates to the
Fund's net assets each day determined as of the close of business on that day or
the last previous business day.  If this Agreement becomes effective  subsequent
to  the first day of a month or shall  terminate before the last day of a month,
compensation for that part  of the month  this Agreement is  in effect shall  be
prorated  in a manner consistent  with the calculation of  the fees as set forth
above.

    Subject to the provisions of paragraph  7 hereof, payment of the  Investment
Manager's  compensation for  the preceding  month shall  be made  as promptly as
possible after  completion  of  the computations  contemplated  by  paragraph  7
hereof.

    8.   In  the event  the operating  expenses of  the Fund,  including amounts
payable to the Investment Manager pursuant to paragraph 6 hereof, for any fiscal
year ending on a date on which  this Agreement is in effect, exceed the  expense
limitations  applicable  to  the  Fund  imposed  by  state  securities  laws  or
regulations thereunder, as such limitations may  be raised or lowered from  time
to time, the Investment Manager shall reduce its management fee to the extent of
such  excess and, if  required, pursuant to  any such laws  or regulations, will
reimburse the  Fund for  annual  operating expenses  in  excess of  any  expense
limitation  that may be  applicable; provided, however,  there shall be excluded
from such expenses  the amount  of any interest,  taxes, brokerage  commissions,
distribution fees and extraordinary expenses (including but not limited to legal
claims  and  liabilities and  litigation costs  and any  indemnification related
thereto) paid or payable by the Fund. Such reduction, if any, shall be  computed
and  accrued daily, shall be settled on a monthly basis, and shall be based upon
the expense limitation applicable to the Fund as at the end of the last business
day of the month. Should two or  more such expense limitations be applicable  as
at  the end of the last business day of the month, that expense limitation which
results in  the largest  reduction  in the  Investment  Manager's fee  shall  be
applicable.

    For  purposes of this provision, should any applicable expense limitation be
based upon the gross income  of the Fund, such  gross income shall include,  but
not  be limited to, interest on debt  securities in the Fund's portfolio accrued
to and including the last day of the Fund's fiscal year, and dividends  declared
on equity securities in the Fund's portfolio, the record dates for which fall on
or  prior to the last day of such  fiscal year, but shall not include gains from
the sale of securities.

    9.  The Investment Manager will use its best efforts in the supervision  and
management  of the  investment activities  of the Fund,  but, in  the absence of
willful misfeasance, bad faith,  gross negligence or  reckless disregard of  its
obligations hereunder, the Investment Manager shall not be liable to the Fund or
any  of its investors for any error of judgment or mistake of law or for any act
or omission by the Investment Manager or for any losses sustained by the Fund or
its investors.

    10.   Nothing  contained in  this  Agreement shall  prevent  the  Investment
Manager  or  any affiliated  person  of the  Investment  Manager from  acting as
investment adviser or  manager for  any other  person, firm  or corporation  and
shall  not  in any  way  bind or  restrict the  Investment  Manager or  any such
affiliated person from buying, selling or trading any securities or  commodities
for their own accounts or for the account of others for whom they may be acting.
Nothing  in this  Agreement shall  limit or restrict  the right  of any Trustee,
officer or employee of the Investment Manager to engage in any other business or
to devote his  or her  time and  attention in part  to the  management or  other
aspects of any other business whether of a similar or dissimilar nature.

    11.   This Agreement  shall remain in  effect until April  30, 1997 and from
year to year thereafter provided such continuance is approved at least  annually
by  the vote of holders of a majority, as defined in the Act, of the outstanding
voting securities of the Fund or by  the Trustees of the Fund; provided that  in
either  event  such continuance  is  also approved  annually  by the  vote  of a
majority of the Trustees of  the Fund who are not  parties to this Agreement  or
"interested  persons" (as defined in the Act) of any such party, which vote must
be cast in person

                                      A-3
<PAGE>
at a  meeting called  for the  purpose  of voting  on such  approval;  provided,
however,  that (a)  the Fund  may, at any  time and  without the  payment of any
penalty, terminate  this  Agreement upon  thirty  days' written  notice  to  the
Investment  Manager, either by majority  vote of the Trustees  of the Fund or by
the vote of a  majority of the  outstanding voting securities  of the Fund;  (b)
this  Agreement shall immediately  terminate in the event  of its assignment (to
the extent required by the Act  and the rules thereunder) unless such  automatic
terminations  shall be  prevented by  an exemptive  order of  the Securities and
Exchange Commission; and (c) the Investment Manager may terminate this Agreement
without payment  of penalty  on thirty  days' written  notice to  the Fund.  Any
notice  under this Agreement shall be given in writing, addressed and delivered,
or mailed post-paid, to the other party at the principal office of such party.

    12.   This Agreement  may be  amended by  the parties  without the  vote  or
consent of the shareholders of the Fund to supply any omission, to cure, correct
or  supplement any ambiguous, defective or  inconsistent provision hereof, or if
they deem  it  necessary  to  conform this  Agreement  to  the  requirements  of
applicable  federal laws or regulations, but neither the Fund nor the Investment
Manager shall be liable for failing to do so.

    13.  This Agreement shall  be construed in accordance  with the laws of  the
State  of New York and  the applicable provisions of the  Act. To the extent the
applicable law  of the  State of  New York,  or any  of the  provisions  herein,
conflicts with the applicable provisions of the Act, the latter shall control.

    14.   The  Investment Manager and  the Fund  each agree that  the name "Dean
Witter", which comprises a component of the Fund's name, is a property right  of
Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. The Fund agrees and consents that (i) it will only use
the name "Dean Witter" as a component of its name and for no other purpose, (ii)
it  will not purport to grant to any third party the right to use the name "Dean
Witter" for  any purpose,  (iii)  the Investment  Manager  or its  parent,  Dean
Witter,  Discover & Co., or any  corporate affiliate of the Investment Manager's
parent, may use or grant to others the  right to use the name "Dean Witter",  or
any  combination or abbreviation thereof, as all  or a portion of a corporate or
business name or for any commercial purpose, including a grant of such right  to
any  other investment company, (iv) at the  request of the Investment Manager or
its parent, the Fund  will take such  action as may be  required to provide  its
consent to the use of the name "Dean Witter", or any combination or abbreviation
thereof,  by the Investment Manager or its  parent or any corporate affiliate of
the Investment Manager's parent, or by any person to whom the Investment Manager
or its parent  or any  corporate affiliate  of the  Investment Manager's  parent
shall  have granted the right  to such use, and (v)  upon the termination of any
investment advisory agreement into which the Investment Manager and the Fund may
enter, or upon  termination of affiliation  of the Investment  Manager with  its
parent,  the Fund shall, upon  request by the Investment  Manager or its parent,
cease to use the name  "Dean Witter" as a component  of its name, and shall  not
use  the name, or any combination or abbreviation thereof, as a part of its name
or for any other commercial purpose, and shall cause its officers, Trustees  and
shareholders  to take any  and all actions  which the Investment  Manager or its
parent may request  to effect the  foregoing and to  reconvey to the  Investment
Manager or its parent any and all rights to such name.

    15.  The Declaration of Trust establishing Dean Witter World Wide Investment
Trust, dated July 7, 1983, a copy of which, together with all amendments thereto
(the  "Declaration"),  is  on  file  in  the  office  of  the  Secretary  of the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts,  provides that  the name Dean  Witter World  Wide
Investment  Trust refers to  the Trustees under  the Declaration collectively as
Trustees, but not  as individuals  or personally; and  no Trustee,  shareholder,
officer,  employee or agent of Dean Witter  World Wide Investment Trust shall be
held to  any  personal liability,  nor  shall resort  be  had to  their  private
property  for  the satisfaction  of  any obligation  or  claim or  otherwise, in
connection with the affairs of said Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust, but
the Trust Estate only shall be liable.

                                      A-4
<PAGE>
    IN WITNESS  WHEREOF, the  parties hereto  have executed  and delivered  this
Agreement on the day and year first above written in New York, New York.

                                          DEAN WITTER WORLD WIDE INVESTMENT
                                          TRUST
                                          By:...................................

Attest:...............................

                                          DEAN WITTER INTERCAPITAL INC.
                                          By:...................................

Attest:...............................

                                      A-5
<PAGE>
                                                                       EXHIBIT B

                             SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENT

    AGREEMENT  made as of the       day of           , 1995  by and between Dean
Witter InterCapital  Inc., a  Delaware corporation  (herein referred  to as  the
"Investment  Manager"),  and  Morgan  Grenfell  Investment  Services  Limited, a
British corporation (herein referred to as the "Sub-Adviser").

    WHEREAS, Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust (herein referred to as  the
"Fund")  is engaged in business as an open-end management investment company and
is registered as such under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended  (the
"Act"); and

    WHEREAS,  the Investment Manager  has entered into  an Investment Management
Agreement with  the Fund  (the "Investment  Management Agreement")  wherein  the
Investment  Manager has agreed to provide  investment management services to the
Fund; and

    WHEREAS, the Sub-Adviser is registered as an investment advisor as under the
Investment Advisers Act  of 1940 and  is a member  of the Investment  Management
Regulatory  Organization  (IMRO), and,  as  such, is  regulated  by IMRO  in the
conduct of its investment business in the  U.K., and engages in the business  of
acting as an investment adviser; and

    WHEREAS,  the  Investment  Manager desires  to  retain the  services  of the
Sub-Adviser to render investment  advisory services for the  Fund in the  manner
and on the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth; and

    WHEREAS, the Sub-Adviser desires to be retained by the Investment Manager to
perform services on said terms and conditions:

    NOW,  THEREFORE, in consideration of the  mutual covenants and agreements of
the parties  hereto as  herein set  forth,  the parties  covenant and  agree  as
follows:

    1.  Subject to the supervision  of the Fund, its  officers and Trustees, and
the Investment  Manager,  and  in  accordance  with  the  investment  objective,
policies  and restrictions set forth  in the then-current Registration Statement
relating to the Fund, and such investment objectives, policies and  restrictions
from time to time prescribed by the Trustees of the Fund and communicated by the
Investment  Manager to  the Sub-Adviser, the  Sub-Adviser agrees  to provide the
Fund with investment advisory services with respect to the Fund's investments in
all areas  of the  world except  the United  States of  America; to  obtain  and
evaluate such information and advice relating to the economy, securities markets
and  securities  as  it  deems  necessary  or  useful  to  discharge  its duties
hereunder; to continuously manage the assets of the Fund in a manner  consistent
with  the investment objective and policies of the Fund; to make decisions as to
foreign currency matters and make determinations as to forward foreign  exchange
contracts  and options and futures contracts in foreign currencies; to determine
the securities to be purchased,  sold or otherwise disposed  of by the Fund  and
the  timing  of such  purchases, sales  and dispositions;  to take  such further
action, including the placing of purchase and sale orders on behalf of the Fund,
as it shall deem  necessary or appropriate;  and to furnish to  or place at  the
disposal  of  the  Fund and  the  Investment  Manager such  of  the information,
evaluations, analyses and opinions formulated or obtained by it in the discharge
of its duties as  the Fund and  the Investment Manager may,  from time to  time,
reasonably  request. The Investment Manager and  the Sub-Adviser shall each make
its officers  and  employees  available  to  the other  from  time  to  time  at
reasonable  times to review investment policies of  the Fund and to consult with
each other.

                                      B-1
<PAGE>
    2. The Sub-Adviser shall, at its own expense, maintain such staff and employ
or retain such personnel and  consult with such other  persons as it shall  from
time  to time  determine to  be necessary  or useful  to the  performance of its
obligations under  this  Agreement.  Without  limiting  the  generality  of  the
foregoing, the staff and personnel of the Sub-Adviser shall be deemed to include
persons employed or otherwise retained by the Sub-Adviser to furnish statistical
and   other  factual  data,  advice   regarding  economic  factors  and  trends,
information with  respect to  technical and  scientific developments,  and  such
other  information, advice and assistance as  the Investment Manager may desire.
The Sub-Adviser  shall  maintain whatever  records  as  may be  required  to  be
maintained  by it under  the Act. All  such records so  maintained shall be made
available to the Fund, upon the request of the Investment Manager or the Fund.

    3. The Fund will, from time to time, furnish or otherwise make available  to
the  Sub-Adviser such financial reports,  proxy statements and other information
relating to  the  business  and affairs  of  the  Fund as  the  Sub-Adviser  may
reasonably require in order to discharge its duties and obligations hereunder or
to comply with any applicable law and regulations and the investment objectives,
policies  and restrictions from time  to time prescribed by  the Trustees of the
Fund.

    4. The Sub-Adviser shall bear the cost of rendering the investment  advisory
services  to be  performed by  it under  this Agreement,  and shall,  at its own
expense, pay the  compensation of  the officers and  employees, if  any, of  the
Fund,  employed  by  the Sub-Adviser,  and  such clerical  help  and bookkeeping
services as the Sub-Adviser  shall reasonably require  in performing its  duties
hereunder.

    5.  The Fund assumes and shall pay or cause to be paid all other expenses of
the Fund,  including,  without  limitation:  any fees  paid  to  the  Investment
Manager;  fees pursuant to any plan of distribution that the Fund may adopt; the
charges  and  expenses  of  any  registrar,  any  custodian,  sub-custodian   or
depository  appointed by  the Fund  for the  safekeeping of  its cash, portfolio
securities and  other property,  and any  stock transfer  or dividend  agent  or
agents  appointed by  the Fund; brokers'  commissions chargeable to  the Fund in
connection with portfolio securities transactions to which the Fund is a  party;
all taxes, including securities issuance and transfer taxes, and fees payable by
the  Fund to federal,  state or other  governmental agencies or  pursuant to any
foreign laws;  the  cost  and  expense of  engraving  or  printing  certificates
representing  shares of the Fund; all costs  and expenses in connection with the
registration and maintenance of registration of the Fund and its shares with the
Securities and Exchange Commission and various states and other jurisdictions or
pursuant to  any  foreign  laws  (including  filing  fees  and  legal  fees  and
disbursements   of  counsel);  the  cost  and  expense  of  printing  (including
typesetting) and distributing prospectuses of  the Fund and supplements  thereto
to the Fund's shareholders; all expenses of shareholders' and Trustees' meetings
and  of  preparing,  printing  and  mailing  proxy  statements  and  reports  to
shareholders; fees and travel  expenses of Trustees or  members of any  advisory
board  or  committee  who  are  not  employees  of  the  Investment  Manager  or
Sub-Adviser; all expenses incident to the payment of any dividend, distribution,
withdrawal or redemption whether in shares  or in cash; charges and expenses  of
any  outside service used for pricing of the Fund's shares; charges and expenses
of legal counsel,  including counsel to  the Trustees  of the Fund  who are  not
interested  persons (as defined in the Act)  of the Fund, the Investment Manager
or the  Sub-Adviser, and  of  independent accountants,  in connection  with  any
matter  relating to the Fund; membership dues of industry associations; interest
payable on Fund borrowings; postage; insurance premiums on property or personnel
(including officers  and Trustees)  of  the Fund  which  inure to  its  benefit;
extraordinary   expenses  (including  but  not   limited  to  legal  claims  and
liabilities and litigation costs and  any indemnification related thereto);  and
all  other charges and costs of the Fund's operation unless otherwise explicitly
provided herein.

                                      B-2
<PAGE>
    6. For  the services  to  be rendered,  the  facilities furnished,  and  the
expenses  assumed by  the Sub-Adviser, the  Investment Manager shall  pay to the
Sub-Adviser monthly  compensation  equal  to 40%  of  its  monthly  compensation
receivable  pursuant  to  the Investment  Management  Agreement.  Any subsequent
change in the Investment Management Agreement which has the effect of raising or
lowering the compensation of  the Investment Manager  will have the  concomitant
effect  of raising  or lowering  the fee payable  to the  Sub-Adviser under this
Agreement. In addition, if the Investment  Manager has undertaken in the  Fund's
Registration  Statement as filed under the Act (the "Registration Statement") or
elsewhere to  waive all  or part  of  its fee  under the  Investment  Management
Agreement,   the  Sub-Adviser's  fee  payable   under  this  Agreement  will  be
proportionately waived in whole or in  part. The calculation of the fee  payable
to  the Sub-Adviser pursuant to this Agreement  will be made, each month, at the
time designated for the monthly calculation of the fee payable to the Investment
Manager pursuant  to  the Investment  Management  Agreement. If  this  Agreement
becomes  effective subsequent  to the  first day of  a month  or shall terminate
before the last  day of a  month, compensation for  the part of  the month  this
Agreement  is  in effect  shall  be prorated  in  a manner  consistent  with the
calculation of  the  fee  as set  forth  above.  Subject to  the  provisions  of
paragraph  7 hereof, payment of the Sub-Adviser's compensation for the preceding
month shall be made as promptly as possible after completion of the computations
contemplated by paragraph 7 hereof.

    7. In  the event  the  operating expenses  of  the Fund,  including  amounts
payable  to  the  Investment  Manager  pursuant  to  the  Investment  Management
Agreement, for any fiscal year  ending on a date on  which this Agreement is  in
effect,  exceed the expense limitations applicable  to the Fund imposed by state
securities laws or regulations thereunder, as such limitations may be raised  or
lowered  from time to time, the Sub-Adviser shall reduce its advisory fee to the
extent of 40%  of such excess  and, if required,  pursuant to any  such laws  or
regulations, will reimburse the Investment Manager for annual operating expenses
in  the amount  of 40%  of such  excess of  any expense  limitation that  may be
applicable, it being understood that the Investment Manager has agreed to effect
a reduction and  reimbursement of  100% of such  excess in  accordance with  the
terms  of the Investment Management Agreement; provided, however, there shall be
excluded from  such  expenses  the  amount of  any  interest,  taxes,  brokerage
commissions,  distribution fees  and extraordinary  expenses (including  but not
limited  to  legal  claims  and   liabilities  and  litigation  costs  and   any
indemnification related thereto) paid or payable by the Fund. Such reduction, if
any,  shall be computed and accrued daily,  shall be settled on a monthly basis,
and shall be based upon the expense limitation applicable to the Fund as at  the
end  of the  last business  day of the  month. Should  two or  more such expense
limitations be applicable as at the end  of the last business day of the  month,
that expense limitation which results in the largest reduction in the Investment
Manager's fee or the largest expense reimbursement shall be applicable.

    For  purposes of this provision, should any applicable expense limitation be
based upon the gross income  of the Fund, such  gross income shall include,  but
not  be limited to, interest on debt  securities in the Fund's portfolio accrued
to and including the last day of the Fund's fiscal year, and dividends  declared
on equity securities in the Fund's portfolio, the record dates for which fall on
or  prior to the last day of such  fiscal year, but shall not include gains from
the sale of securities.

    8. The  Sub-Adviser  will  use  its  best  efforts  in  the  performance  of
investment  activities on  behalf of  the Fund, but,  in the  absence of willful
misfeasance,  bad  faith,  gross  negligence   or  reckless  disregard  of   its
obligations  hereunder, the  Sub-Adviser shall not  be liable  to the Investment
Manager or the Fund or any of its investors for any error of judgment or mistake
of law or for any act or omission by the Sub-Adviser or for any losses sustained
by the Fund or its investors.

    9. It is  understood that any  of the shareholders,  Trustees, officers  and
employees of the Fund may be a shareholder, director, officer or employee of, or
be   otherwise   interested   in,   the   Sub-Adviser,   and   in   any   person

                                      B-3
<PAGE>
controlled by  or  under common  control  with  the Sub-Adviser,  and  that  the
Sub-Advisor  and  any person  controlled  by or  under  common control  with the
Sub-Adviser may have an  interest in the  Fund. It is  also understood that  the
Sub-Adviser  and any affiliated persons thereof  or any persons controlled by or
under common control with the Sub-Adviser have and may have advisory, management
service or other contracts  with other organizations and  persons, and may  have
other  interests and  businesses, and  further may  purchase, sell  or trade any
securities or commodities for  their own accounts or  for the account of  others
for whom they may be acting; provided, however, that neither the Sub-Adviser nor
any  of its affiliates organized with a corporate name or other name under which
it is  performing  its business  activities  which contains  the  names  "Morgan
Grenfell"  shall undertake to  act as investment adviser  or sub-adviser for any
other U.S. registered investment company with similar investment policies  which
is  sold primarily to  retail investors, and which  is sponsored, distributed or
managed by a U.S. registered broker-dealer or one of its affiliates.

    10. This Agreement shall remain in effect until April 30, 1997 and from year
to year thereafter provided  such continuance is approved  at least annually  by
the  vote of holders  of a majority, as  defined in the  Act, of the outstanding
voting securities of the Fund or by the Trustees of the Fund; provided, that  in
either  event  such continuance  is  also approved  annually  by the  vote  of a
majority of the Trustees of  the Fund who are not  parties to this Agreement  or
"interested  persons" (as defined in the Act) of any such party, which vote must
be cast  in person  at  a meeting  called  for the  purpose  of voting  on  such
approval;  provided, however, that (a) the Fund may, at any time and without the
payment of  any penalty,  terminate  this Agreement  upon thirty  days'  written
notice to the Investment Manager and the Sub-Adviser, either by majority vote of
the  Trustees of the Fund or by the vote of a majority of the outstanding voting
securities of the Fund;  (b) this Agreement shall  immediately terminate in  the
event  of its assignment (within  the meaning of the  Act) unless such automatic
termination shall  be prevented  by an  exemptive order  of the  Securities  and
Exchange Commission; (c) this Agreement shall immediately terminate in the event
of  the termination of  the Investment Management  Agreement; (d) the Investment
Manager may terminate this Agreement without payment of penalty on thirty  days'
written  notice to  the Fund  and the Sub-Advisor  and; (e)  the Sub-Adviser may
terminate this Agreement without the payment of penalty on thirty days'  written
notice  to the Fund and the Investment  Manager. Any notice under this Agreement
shall be given in writing, addressed and delivered, or mailed post-paid, to  the
other party at the principal office of such party.

    11. This Agreement may be amended by the parties without the vote or consent
of  the shareholders  of the Fund  to supply  any omission, to  cure, correct or
supplement any ambiguous, defective or inconsistent provision hereof, or if they
deem it necessary to  conform this Agreement to  the requirements of  applicable
federal laws or regulations, but none of the Fund, the Investment Manager or the
Sub-Adviser shall be liable for failing to do so.

    12.  This Agreement  shall be  construed in accordance  with the  law of the
State of New York and  the applicable provisions of the  Act. To the extent  the
applicable  law  of the  State of  New York,  or any  of the  provisions herein,
conflicts with the applicable provisions of the Act, the latter shall control.

                                      B-4
<PAGE>
    IN WITNESS  WHEREOF, the  parties hereto  have executed  and delivered  this
Agreement on the day and year first above written in New York, New York.

                                      DEAN WITTER INTERCAPITAL INC.

                                      By:.......................................

                                      Attest:...................................

                                      MORGAN GRENFELL INVESTMENT
                                      SERVICES LIMITED

                                      By:.......................................

                                      Attest:...................................

ACCEPTED AND AGREED TO AS OF
THE DAY AND YEAR FIRST ABOVE WRITTEN:

DEAN WITTER WORLD WIDE INVESTMENT TRUST

By:.......................................

Attest:...................................

                                      B-5
<PAGE>
                    DEAN WITTER WORLD WIDE INVESTMENT TRUST
              SPECIAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS -- OCTOBER 31, 1995
                                     PROXY

    The  undersigned hereby appoints EDMUND C. PUCKHABER, SHELDON CURTIS, ROBERT
M. SCANLAN or any of them, proxies, each with the power of substitution, to vote
on behalf of  the undersigned  at the Special  Meeting of  Shareholders of  DEAN
WITTER  WORLD WIDE INVESTMENT TRUST on October  31, 1995 at 10:00 a.m., New York
City time, and at  any adjournment thereof,  on the proposals  set forth in  the
Notice of meeting dated August   , 1995 as follows:

    THIS  PROXY IS SOLICITED BY THE TRUSTEES. IF NO SPECIFICATION IS MADE ON THE
REVERSE SIDE, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED FOR THE PROPOSALS.

  IMPORTANT: PLEASE MARK, SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THE PROXY CARD IN THE ENCLOSED
                                   ENVELOPE.

                        (Continued, and to be dated and signed on reverse side.)
<PAGE>
PLEASE MARK BOXES / / OR /X/ IN BLUE OR BLACK INK.

1. APPROVAL OF NEW INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT:

             / / FOR             / / AGAINST             / / ABSTAIN

2. APPROVAL OF NEW SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENT:

             / / FOR             / / AGAINST             / / ABSTAIN

3. APPROVAL OF CHANGES IN THE INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS:

             / / FOR             / / AGAINST             / / ABSTAIN

and in  their discretion  in the  transaction of  any other  business which  may
properly come before the meeting.

                                                                  042

                                                 Please  sign personally. If the
                                                 share  is  registered  in  more
                                                 than one name, each joint owner
                                                 or  each fiduciary  should sign
                                                 personally.   Only   authorized
                                                 officers    should   sign   for
                                                 Incorporations.

                                                 Dated
                                                 -------------------------------

                                                 -------------------------------
                                                            Signature

                                                 -------------------------------
                                                            Signature


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