IDS INTERNATIONAL FUND INC
DEF 14A, 1994-09-20
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<PAGE>
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

                  Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
             the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.   )

    Filed by the Registrant / /
    Filed by a Party other than the Registrant /X/
    Check the appropriate box:
    / /  Preliminary Proxy Statement
    /X/  Definitive Proxy Statement
    / /  Definitive Additional Materials
    / /  Soliciting  Material  Pursuant  to  Section  240.14a-11(c)  or  Section
         240.14a-12

                          IDS International Fund, Inc.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

*    Filing fee paid with preliminary materials.
/ /  $125 per Exchange Act Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1), or 14a-6(j)(2)
/ /  $500 per  each party  to  the controversy  pursuant  to Exchange  Act  Rule
     14a-6(i)(3)
/ /  Fee   computed  on   table  below   per  Exchange   Act  Rules  14a-6(i)(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:


        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
*    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.:


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     3) Filing Party:


        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     4) Date Filed:


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

<PAGE>
                             IDS INTERNATIONAL FUND
                           901 MARQUETTE AVENUE SOUTH
                                   SUITE 2810
                       MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA 55402-3268

                   NOTICE OF REGULAR MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                          TO BE HELD NOVEMBER 9, 1994

                                                              September 17, 1994

Dear Shareholder:

    We  will hold  a regular  meeting of  the shareholders  of IDS International
Fund, Inc. (the  "Fund") at  2:00 p.m.  on November  9, 1994,  at the  Marquette
Hotel,  7th and Marquette,  Minneapolis, Minnesota in the  Lake Superior Room on
the fourth floor.  The purposes  of the meeting  include the  election of  Board
members,  consideration of  a new agreement  between the Fund  and IDS Financial
Corporation ("IDS") with changes in services and fee structures, and changes  to
the Fund's investment policies. The agenda for the meeting is on the next page.
    Please take the time to read the proxy statement which discusses each agenda
item.  The Board of Directors has approved the proposals and recommends that you
vote in favor of each item. If you were a shareholder on September 11, 1994, you
may vote at  the meeting  or any  adjournment of the  meeting. We  hope you  can
attend.  For those of you who cannot attend, the enclosed card is for your vote.
Please be sure to sign the card and return  it to us as soon as possible in  the
enclosed  postage-paid envelope. The latest  annual report was previously mailed
to you.

                                                 LESLIE L. OGG
                                                 Secretary

IT IS IMPORTANT THAT  YOU VOTE PROMPTLY.  PLEASE FILL IN  AND SIGN THE  ENCLOSED
CARD. PROMPT RESPONSE WILL SAVE YOUR FUND THE COST OF ADDITIONAL MAILINGS.

                                       1
<PAGE>
                                     AGENDA

(1) To elect 14 Board members;

(2)  To  ratify  or  reject  the  selection of  KPMG  Peat  Marwick  LLP  as the
    independent auditors for the Fund;

(3) To approve  or reject a  new Investment Management  Services Agreement  with
    IDS;

(4)  To approve  or reject a  change in the  investment policies of  the Fund to
    permit the Fund to  invest all of its  assets in another investment  company
    with substantially the same investment objectives, policies and restrictions
    as the Fund;

(5) To approve or reject changes to certain of the Fund's fundamental investment
    policies;

(6) To transact any other business that comes before the meeting.

                                       2
<PAGE>
                                PROXY STATEMENT
    As  a shareholder of IDS International Fund (the "Fund"), you are invited to
attend a regular meeting of the Fund. At the meeting, the shareholders will vote
on the matters described below. Each share is entitled to one vote. For those of
you who cannot  come to the  meeting, the  Board of Directors  (the "Board")  is
asking permission to vote for you. The shares will be voted the way you mark the
boxes  on the enclosed card. Proxies not voted, including broker non-votes, will
not be counted toward establishing a quorum. Abstentions will be counted  toward
a  quorum, but will have the  same effect as a no  vote in determining whether a
proposal is approved.
    To avoid the cost of further solicitation,  it is important for you to  vote
promptly.  If you think you might not  attend, please complete the card. If your
plans change and you  can attend, simply  see the Secretary  at the meeting  and
tell him you will be voting your shares in person. Also, if you change your mind
after  you send in the card, you may change your vote or revoke it by writing us
or by sending another card. Make sure you  sign and date the card and return  it
to us.
    On September 11, 1994, the Fund had 69,863,247 shares outstanding. As far as
the  Board has been able  to determine, as of  September 1, 1994, no shareholder
owned 5% or more  of the outstanding  shares of the Fund.  It is estimated  that
this proxy statement will be mailed to shareholders on September 17, 1994.

                         (1) ELECTION OF BOARD MEMBERS
    The  Board has set the number of persons  who serve on the Board at 14. Each
Board member will serve until the next regular shareholders' meeting or until he
or she reaches  the mandatory retirement  age established by  resolution of  the
Board.  Under the current resolution  of the Board, members  who were serving on
the Board of any fund in the IDS  MUTUAL FUND GROUP (the "GROUP") on January  1,
1988,  serve until  the end  of the  meeting of  the Board  following their 75th
birthday and all other  members serve through the  meeting following their  70th
birthday.
    In  voting for Board members, you may  vote all of your shares cumulatively.
This means that you have the right to give each nominee an equal number of votes
or divide the votes among  the nominees as you wish.  You have as many votes  as
the  number of  shares you own,  including fractional shares,  multiplied by the
number of members to be  elected. By completing the  card, you give the  proxies
the  right  to  vote for  the  persons named  below.  If you  elect  to withhold
authority for any individual nominee or nominees,  you may do so by marking  the
box labeled "Exception," and by striking the name of any excepted nominee, as is
further  explained on the card itself. If you do withhold authority, the proxies
will not vote shares  equivalent to the proportionate  number applicable to  the
names for which authority is withheld.
    The persons nominated to serve on the Board are set forth below. Each of the
nominees  is a nominee for trustee or director of each of the other funds within
the GROUP except  William Dudley  who is director  of all  the publicly  offered
funds. The GROUP currently consists of 42 funds with assets of approximately $44
billion.   Each  nominee  was  elected  a  member  of  the  Board  at  the  last
shareholders' meeting except for  Lynne Cheney, David  Hubers, Heinz Hutter  and
Angus Wurtele.

                                       3
<PAGE>
    All  of the nominees have agreed to serve. If an unforeseen event prevents a
nominee from serving, your votes will be  cast for the election of a  substitute
selected  by the  Board. Information  about each  nominee is  provided below. It
includes the period  of service as  a Board member  of funds in  the GROUP,  the
number of shares each owns in the Fund and in all the funds in the GROUP and the
current  committee assignments.  Election requires a  vote by a  majority of the
shares present or represented at the meeting.

LYNNE V. CHENEY         Board member since 1994                           Age 53
Distinguished Fellow, American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy  Research.
Former  Chair of  National Endowment of  the Humanities.  Director, The Reader's
Digest Association Inc., Lockheed Corp., and the Interpublic Group of Companies,
Inc. (advertising).
Shares owned: Fund       0         GROUP  24,328
Committee assignment: Audit

WILLIAM H. DUDLEY**     Board member since 1991                           Age 62
Executive vice president and director of IDS Financial Corporation ("IDS").
Shares owned: Fund  72,804         GROUP 726,479
                                             24,209+
Committee assignment: Executive

ROBERT F. FROEHLKE      Board member since 1987                           Age 71
Former president of all funds in  the GROUP. Director, the ICI Mutual  Insurance
Co.,  Institute  for  Defense  Analyses, Marshall  Erdman  and  Associates, Inc.
(architectural engineering) and Public Oversight Board of the American Institute
of Certified Public Accountants.
Shares owned: Fund   1,539+        GROUP 155,355+
Committee assignments: Contracts, Executive, Personnel

DAVID R. HUBERS**       Board member since 1993                           Age 51
President, chief executive officer and director of IDS. Previously, senior  vice
president, finance and chief financial officer of IDS.
Shares owned: Fund  14,441         GROUP 128,719

HEINZ F. HUTTER         Board member since 1994                           Age 65
President   and  chief  operating   officer,  Cargill,  Incorporated  (commodity
merchants and processors) from February  1991 to September 1994. Executive  vice
president from 1981 to February 1991.
Shares owned: Fund       0         GROUP       0

ANNE P. JONES           Board member since 1985                           Age 59
Partner,  law firm of Sutherland, Asbill & Brennan. Director, Motorola, Inc. and
C-Cor Electronics, Inc.
Shares owned: Fund       0         GROUP  17,043
Committee assignment: Contracts

DONALD M. KENDALL       Board member since 1968                           Age 73
Former chairman and chief executive officer, PepsiCo, Inc.
Shares owned: Fund       0         GROUP       0
Committee assignment: Audit

MELVIN R. LAIRD         Board member since 1974                           Age 72
Senior counsellor for  national and international  affairs, The Reader's  Digest
Association,  Inc. Chairman of  the board, COMSAT  Corporation, former nine-term
congressman, secretary of defense and presidential counsellor.

                                       4
<PAGE>
Director, Martin Marietta Corp., Metropolitan  Life Insurance Co., The  Reader's
Digest  Association,  Inc.,  Science Applications  International  Corp., Wallace
Reader's Digest Funds and Public Oversight Board (SEC Practice Section, American
Institute of Certified Public Accountants).
Shares owned: Fund       0         GROUP 200,468
                                            137,949+
Committee assignment: Personnel

LEWIS W. LEHR           Board member since 1986                           Age 73
Former chairman of the board and  chief executive officer, Minnesota Mining  and
Manufacturing  Company  (3M).  Director, Jack  Eckerd  Corporation (drugstores).
Advisory Director, Peregrine Inc. (microelectronics).
Shares owned: Fund       0         GROUP   5,446
Committee assignments: Audit, Personnel

WILLIAM R. PEARCE*      Board member since 1980                           Age 66
President of all funds in the GROUP since June 1993. Former vice chairman of the
board, Cargill, Incorporated (commodity merchants and processors).
Shares owned: Fund  29,569         GROUP 546,356
                                            190,395+
Committee assignments: Contracts, Executive

EDSON W. SPENCER        Board member since 1991                           Age 68
President, Spencer Associates  Inc. (consulting).  Chairman of  the board,  Mayo
Foundation  (healthcare).  Former  chairman  of the  board  and  chief executive
officer, Honeywell Inc.  Director, Boise Cascade  Corporation (forest  products)
and  CBS Inc. Member of International  Advisory Councils, Robert Bosch (Germany)
and NEC (Japan).
Shares owned: Fund       0         GROUP  15,403
Committee assignments: Audit, Executive

JOHN R. THOMAS**        Board member since 1987                           Age 57
Senior vice president and director of IDS.
Shares owned: Fund  26,018         GROUP 630,858
                                              4,732+

WHEELOCK WHITNEY        Board member since 1977                           Age 68
Chairman, Whitney Management Company (manages family assets).
Shares owned: Fund  19,012         GROUP 2,204,645
Committee assignment: Audit, Contracts, Executive, Personnel

C. ANGUS WURTELE        Board member since 1994                           Age 60
Chairman of  the board  and  chief executive  officer, The  Valspar  Corporation
(paints).  Director,  Bemis  Corporation  (packaging),  Donaldson  Company  (air
cleaners & mufflers) and General Mills, Inc. (consumer foods).
Shares owned: Fund       0         GROUP       0

 *Interested person by reason of being an officer and employee of the Fund.

**Interested person  by reason  of being  an officer,  director,  securityholder
  and/or employee of IDS or American Express Company ("American Express").

 +Shares  owned  by family  members in  which  nominee disclaims  any beneficial
  ownership.

    As of September 1, 1994, all executive officers and Board members as a group
beneficially owned directly  or indirectly  less than 1%  of the  shares of  the
Fund.
    The  committees have been appointed to facilitate the work of the Board. The
Executive  Committee  has  authority   to  act  for   the  full  Board   between

                                       5
<PAGE>
meetings.  It focuses  on investment  activities, routine  compliance issues and
oversight of various operational functions. The Joint Audit Committee meets with
representatives of  the independent  auditors to  consider the  scope of  annual
audits  and reviews the  results of those  audits. It receives  reports from IDS
Internal Audit that pertain to the Fund's operations and addresses special areas
of  concern.  The  Contracts  Committee,  under  the  full  Board's   direction,
negotiates  contracts  and  monitors, evaluates  and  reports to  the  Board the
performance under the terms  of those contracts.  The Joint Personnel  Committee
makes  recommendations  with respect  to the  composition of  the Board  and the
compensation of the  members, officers  and staff  of the  Fund. Candidates  for
vacancies  on the Board  must have a  background that gives  promise of making a
significant contribution  to  furthering  the  interests  of  all  shareholders.
Shareholders  wishing  to  suggest  candidates should  write  in  care  of Joint
Personnel Committee, IDS MUTUAL  FUND GROUP, 901  Marquette Avenue South,  Suite
2810, Minneapolis, MN 55402-3268.
    Over  the  last  fiscal year,  the  Board  held 10  meetings,  the Executive
Committee met twice a month, and  the Audit, Contracts and Personnel  Committees
met  4, 6 and 7 times respectively. Average  attendance at the Board was 92% and
no nominee  attended  less  than 75%  of  the  meetings of  the  Board  and  the
committees on which she or he serves.
    Members  who are  not officers of  the Fund  or directors of  IDS receive an
annual fee and retirement benefits from  the Fund. They also receive  attendance
and  other fees, the cost of  which the Fund shares with  the other funds in the
GROUP. Members of  this Fund's  Board receive  an annual  fee of  $750 and  upon
retirement  at age 70,  or earlier if  for health reasons,  such members receive
monthly payments equal to 1/2 of the annual fee divided by 12 for as many months
as the member served on the Board up  to 120 months or until the date of  death.
There  are no death  benefits and the plan  is not funded.  The fees shared with
other funds are those for attendance for meetings of the Contracts Committee  or
Board,  $500, meetings of the Audit,  Executive, and Personnel Committees, $300,
out-of state, $500, and Chair of Contracts Committee, $5,000. Expenses also  are
reimbursed.
    During  the last fiscal year, the members  of the Board, for attending up to
51 meetings, received the following compensation,  in total, from all the  funds
in the GROUP.

                        NOMINEE COMPENSATION FROM GROUP

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         Retirement      Estimated
                          Aggregate       Benefits        Annual      Total Cash
                        Compensation   Accrued as Fund  Benefit on   Compensation
Nominee                   from Fund       Expenses      Retirement    from GROUP
- ----------------------  -------------  ---------------  -----------  -------------
<S>                     <C>            <C>              <C>          <C>
Robert F. Froehlke        $     574       $     646      $     375     $  32,633
 (part of year)
Anne P. Jones                 1,746             393            375        74,100
Donald M. Kendall             1,480           1,763            375        66,000
Melvin R. Laird               1,600           1,272            375        69,600
Lewis W. Lehr                 1,643           1,752            366        70,300
William R. Pearce             1,344             676            375        47,167
 (part of year)
Edson W. Spencer              1,666             833            200        71,500
Wheelock Whitney              1,681             752            375        72,300
</TABLE>

                                       6
<PAGE>
    Besides Mr. Pearce, who is president, the Fund's other officer is:
    Leslie  L.  Ogg, 56,  Vice  president and  general  counsel of  all publicly
offered funds in the GROUP since 1978. Vice president and secretary of the  Life
Funds  and treasurer and  secretary of all  publicly offered funds  in the GROUP
since July 1989.
    Officers serve at the pleasure of the Board.
    During the last fiscal  year, no officer earned  more than $60,000 from  the
Fund.  All officers as a group (two persons) earned cash compensation, including
salaries and thrift plan, of $3,056 for the last fiscal year.

                     (2) RATIFY OR REJECT THE SELECTION OF
                 KPMG PEAT MARWICK LLP AS INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
    For the fiscal year ending October 31, 1995, KPMG Peat Marwick LLP has  been
selected  to serve as the independent auditors  for the Fund. This selection was
made by the members of the Board who are not officers of the Fund or  associated
with  the investment  manager pursuant  to a  recommendation by  the Joint Audit
Committee. When  a  meeting of  shareholders  is  held, the  selection  also  is
considered by the shareholders.
    The  audit services provided to the funds  in the GROUP by KPMG Peat Marwick
LLP include the examination  of the annual  financial statements, assistance  in
connection  with filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC")
and meeting  with the  Joint  Audit Committee.  A  representative of  KPMG  Peat
Marwick  LLP is expected to  be at the meeting and  will have the opportunity to
make a statement and answer questions.
    RECOMMENDATION AND VOTE  REQUIRED.  The  Board recommends that  you vote  to
ratify  the selection of the independent auditors. Ratification of the selection
requires a  vote by  a majority  of the  shares present  or represented  at  the
meeting. If the selection of the independent auditors is not ratified, the Board
will consider what further action must be taken.

                     (3) APPROVE OR REJECT A NEW INVESTMENT
                         MANAGEMENT SERVICES AGREEMENT
    IDS  has  provided  the  Fund  investment  advice,  administrative services,
transfer agent services and distribution  since the Fund began operation.  These
services are now provided under four separate contracts.
    The  Fund is considering two changes in  its current structure. First, it is
considering issuing multiple classes of  shares. This would permit investors  to
choose when and how to pay a sales charge. Second, at some future time, the Fund
may  separate the asset management function from the investor services function,
creating what are known as master/feeder  funds. The master fund will offer  its
shares  only  to  other  investment companies  and  investment  groups including
pension plans and  trust accounts. The  master/feeder structure facilitates  the
use  of a number of different distribution channels. The master/feeder structure
will not necessarily be used by all  funds in the GROUP and will be  implemented
for  this Fund only if the Board determines  that it is in the best interests of
the Fund and its shareholders.
    In order to proceed with the changes, new contracts with IDS are  necessary.
Under  the proposed contracts, based  on the net asset  values and the number of
shareholder accounts  in the  Fund  in 1993,  shareholders  would have  paid  an
additional  $1.60 for  each $1,000  invested. In  return for  that increase, IDS
believes it can provide more and better services to shareholders.

                                       7
<PAGE>
    The proposed  contracts will  become effective  only if  and when  the  Fund
issues  multiple classes of shares. If  the proposed contracts are approved, the
Fund plans to offer multiple classes of shares before the end of March 1995.
    BOARD DELIBERATIONS.   In considering the  desirability of issuing  multiple
classes  of shares,  the members  of the Board  took several  steps. First, they
asked  the  Board's  Contracts  Committee,  composed  of  members  who  are  not
affiliated  with IDS  ("independent members"),  to test  and evaluate  a plan to
offer multiple classes of shares. The Committee determined that many  investment
companies  are  now  offering  multiple  classes  of  shares  because  they give
investors the choice among several  sales charge options. Also, they  determined
that  issuing multiple classes of shares  enables an investment company to offer
shares more effectively  to institutional and  retirement accounts. Second,  the
Board  asked the Committee to consider terms of the new contracts. By the end of
1993, proposed contract terms were deemed sufficiently complete to be considered
and evaluated by all independent members of the Board. Third, the members of the
Board approved  the filing  of an  application with  the SEC  for the  necessary
authority   to  offer  multiple  classes  of  shares.  An  order  approving  the
application was granted on March 16, 1994. Fourth, the Board authorized the Fund
to seek a private letter ruling from the Internal Revenue Service to assure  the
plan  to offer multiple classes of shares  would not create any tax problems for
the Fund or its shareholders. Multiple classes of shares will be issued only  if
that assurance is provided. If the private letter ruling has not yet been issued
at  the time the Fund intends to  implement multiple classes of shares, the Fund
may rely on an opinion of tax counsel.
    In February, the independent members of the Board began an evaluation of the
plan and the proposed contracts against two standards: first, they had to  offer
important  benefits both to the Fund and  its shareholders and, second, they had
to be fair to the Fund and  its shareholders. In the course of this  evaluation,
independent  members met  with representatives  of American  Express, the parent
company of IDS, and IDS to discuss  the business plans of both companies.  Also,
they  reviewed the  changes taking place  in the money  management industry with
noted research  analysts  and  industry executives.  And,  they  considered  the
benefits  existing shareholders  derive from  continued growth  of the  Fund and
tested the fairness of contract terms  by employing the services of  consultants
considered experts in their fields.
    Independent  members  of the  Board also  reviewed five  performance reports
prepared by IDS and an extensive review of those reports by Price Waterhouse,  a
service it has provided the Fund in each of the past 13 years. The five reports,
prepared   for  the  Fund  each  year  by  IDS,  cover  investment  performance,
shareholder services, compliance,  sales and marketing,  and IDS'  profitability
from its relationships with all funds in the GROUP. In addition, they considered
information  provided by IDS  in response to questions  asked by the independent
members and the  Fund's staff  and from various  periodic reports  given to  the
Board or to committees of the Board.
    CURRENT  INVESTMENT  MANAGEMENT  AND  SERVICES  AGREEMENT.    Currently, IDS
provides investment  advice and  administrative services  to the  Fund under  an
Investment  Management and  Services Agreement  (the "IMS  Agreement") which was
last approved by shareholders on November  13, 1991. At that time,  shareholders
approved a change in the rate of the fee

                                       8
<PAGE>
payable to IDS, a new performance incentive adjustment, a change in the language
pertaining  to  payment  of expenses,  and  the elimination  of  the contractual
provisions   applicable   to   services   provided   as   transfer   agent   and
dividend-disbursing  agent.  The  Fund  and IDS  then  entered  into  a separate
Transfer Agent Agreement (the "TA Agreement").
    The fee paid to  IDS for its  services under the IMS  Agreement is based  on
three components. The first component of the fee, a group asset charge, is based
on  a graduated  scale applied to  the net assets  of all the  funds, except the
money-market funds, in the GROUP.  The scale begins at  0.46% of net assets  for
the  first $5 billion and declines for each additional $5 billion until a fee of
0.32% is paid  for net assets  exceeding $50 billion.  The second component,  an
individual  asset charge, is a fixed fee of  0.46% of the net assets of the Fund
itself. The complete group asset charge schedule and net assets for all funds in
the GROUP appear under  the caption "Certain  Information Concerning IDS"  which
follows later in this proxy statement.
    The  third component of the fee  is the performance incentive adjustment. It
is computed  by measuring  the  percentage difference  over a  rolling  12-month
period  between the performance of one capital  share of the Fund and the change
in the Lipper International Fund Index. One percentage point is subtracted  from
the  calculation to help  assure that incentive  adjustments are attributable to
IDS'  investment  decisions  rather   than  random  fluctuations.  The   maximum
adjustment for a year is 0.12% of assets.
    The  Fund pays  its taxes,  brokerage commissions  and nonadvisory expenses,
which include  custodian  fees; audit  and  certain legal  fees;  fidelity  bond
premiums;  registration fees for shares; office expenses of the Fund; consultant
fees; compensation of Board members,  officers and employees (except anyone  who
is  also an officer, director  or employee of IDS  or its affiliates); corporate
filing fees; a portion of the Investment Company Institute dues;  organizational
expenses; expenses incurred in connection with lending portfolio securities; and
other expenses properly payable by the Fund, approved by the Board.
    If,  at the end  of any month,  the fees payable  by the Fund  under the IMS
Agreement and its  nonadvisory expenses exceed  the most restrictive  applicable
state  expense limitation -- which at the current  time is 2.5% of the first $30
million of the average daily net assets, 2% of the next $70 million and 1.5%  of
average daily net assets over $100 million on an annual basis -- IDS will assume
all  expenses in  excess of  the limit.  IDS then  may bill  the Fund  for those
expenses in subsequent months up to the  end of that fiscal year, but not  after
that date.
    PROPOSED  INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT SERVICES AGREEMENT.   The proposed agreement
is the same  as the  current IMS  Agreement except that:  (a) the  fee is  based
solely  on the assets of the Fund, not on  assets of the GROUP and on the unique
characteristics of the Fund, including the  Fund's use of the services  provided
by  IDS in the areas of investment research, portfolio management and investment
services and (b) in  order to facilitate the  implementation of a  master/feeder
structure  in  the future,  certain  provisions relating  to  administration and
accounting services have  been eliminated.  IDS will continue  to provide  those
administration  and accounting services under a separate Administrative Services
Agreement (the "Admin

                                       9
<PAGE>
Agreement"). A copy of  the proposed IMS Agreement  reflecting these changes  is
set  forth as  Exhibit A. The  proposed fees  under the IMS  Agreement are shown
below:
                                 PROPOSED FEES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                 Assets        Annual Rate At
               (Billions)     Each Asset Level
               -----------    ----------------
               <S>            <C>
               First $0.25              0.800%
               Next $0.25               0.775
               Next $0.25               0.750
               Next $0.25               0.725
               Next $1                  0.700
               Over $2                  0.675
</TABLE>

    Subject to approval by the SEC, the performance incentive adjustment will be
calculated based on the net asset value of Class A shares.
    On July 31, 1994, the Fund's net assets were approximately $0.7 billion; for
1993, approximately  $0.3 billion;  and for  1992, approximately  $0.2  billion.
Based  on the current  net assets in the  GROUP, the effective  rate paid by the
Fund under  the  current IMS  Agreement  is 0.85%  and  under the  proposed  IMS
Agreement is 0.78%.
    The  Board's independent members based their  evaluation of the proposed IMS
Agreement  on  a  number  of  factors.  The  IDS  annual  report  on  investment
performance  describes  the total  return of  each  of the  funds in  the GROUP;
reviews IDS'  organizational  structure and  the  performance of  the  portfolio
managers;  and provides other information about  IDS' qualifications to serve as
investment adviser.  Periodic reports  to committees  of the  Board reflect  the
ability  of IDS to actually carry out the duties of administrator which include,
among other things, pricing portfolios, maintaining accurate accounting records,
issuing timely financial and tax reports,  and complying with federal and  state
requirements. Terms of the proposed contract, especially the graduated fee scale
and  the types  of expenses paid  by the Fund,  were compared to  those of other
investment companies deemed by a respected, independent industry authority  most
comparable  to  the Fund.  The independent  members concluded  that IDS  has the
qualifications needed to  serve the  Fund as  investment adviser  under the  IMS
Agreement.  Overall the funds in the GROUP have benefited from IDS' accurate and
timely recordkeeping and, as a GROUP, a majority of funds have been consistently
in the second quartile of their competitive groupings.
    NEW CONTRACTS TO  BE APPROVED  BY THE BOARD.   If  shareholders approve  the
proposed  IMS Agreement, the Board  will approve a 12b-1  plan and new contracts
necessary for issuing  multiple classes  of shares.  The Fund  intends to  offer
shares  with a front-end  sales charge and  a service fee  (Class A), a rear-end
sales charge, service fee and 12b-1 fee (Class B) and, for certain institutional
retirement and fixed fee accounts, no sales charge or service fee (Class Y).  At
the  time multiple classes are implemented, IDS,  as sole shareholder of Class B
and Class  Y shares,  will  approve the  12b-1  plan for  Class  B and  the  IMS
Agreement  for  Class  B and  Class  Y. The  12b-1  plan and  the  contracts are
discussed below. The shares you currently own will become Class A shares.
    - SHAREHOLDER SERVICES.  IDS now provides shareholder services under a  plan
and  supplemental agreement  of distribution. Because  distribution services are
included,  it  is   considered  a   12b-1  plan   (so  called   because  it   is

                                       10
<PAGE>
authorized  under Rule 12b-1,  a regulation issued  under the Investment Company
Act of  1940, the  "1940 Act").  The Fund  currently pays  a fee  determined  by
multiplying  all the active shareholder  accounts by $6. The  fee is intended to
help IDS defray that portion of its distribution costs not covered by the  sales
charges,  further  costs  incurred  in  maintaining  and  improving  shareholder
services and in financing the sale of shares. The fee paid to IDS in 1993  under
this plan was equal to 0.11% of net assets.
    The   proposed  contract  for  shareholder   services  does  not  cover  any
distribution costs and  is not  a 12b-1  plan. The Fund  will pay  0.15% of  net
assets of accounts holding Class A or Class B shares directly for the benefit of
planners  and servicing agents  for the services  they provide shareholders. The
Fund also will pay IDS 0.025% for use in monitoring those services and providing
additional training and support to planners  and servicing agents to assure  the
Fund  shareholders receive good  service. The services  provided are designed to
help shareholders consider thoughtfully their  investment goals and monitor  the
progress they are making in achieving those goals. The Fund will pay the service
fee  only with  respect to net  assets of  accounts actually serviced  by an IDS
planner or other servicing agents. The fee will not be used to finance the  sale
of shares.
    In  evaluating the proposed  contract, the independent  members of the Board
considered both the general use  of such fees in  the industry and the  proposed
level  in relation to the services provided  and similar fees charged by others.
They concluded  the services  contemplated will  provide important  benefits  to
shareholders  and that the terms  of the proposed contract  are fair both to the
Fund and its shareholders. Accordingly, the Board will approve the contract  for
shareholder services if shareholders approve the proposed IMS Agreement.
    -  12B-1  PLAN.    IDS  Financial  Services  Inc.  ("IDSFS"),  as  exclusive
underwriter for the Fund, has agreed to offer multiple classes of shares for the
Fund. IDSFS  will incur  substantial costs  on the  date Class  B shares  (those
shares  that do not pay a sales charge  at the time of purchase) are sold. IDSFS
is repaid those costs by the Fund over several years out of the assets of  Class
B shares.
    The 12b-1 plan applies only to Class B shares. Under the plan, the Fund will
pay  IDSFS 0.75% of the assets of that  class each year to cover the sales costs
IDSFS incurs. After eight  years, Class B  shares will be  converted to Class  A
shares. Class B shares redeemed before being converted to Class A shares will be
assessed  a contingent deferred  sales charge designed  to approximate the sales
charge that would have been paid had  the shares been held for eight years.  The
sales  charges for Class A  and Class B shares  are structured so that investors
will have  approximately  the same  total  returns at  the  end of  eight  years
regardless of which class is chosen.
    The   independent  members  concluded  that  the  proposed  contract  should
contribute to positive cash flows, growing asset size, and services of  enhanced
scope  and quality that can  be provided by a  growing and profitable investment
manager and distributor. The ability to offer multiple classes of shares  should
help  IDS develop  new markets for  the Fund in  light of current  trends in the
investment market. The members  of the Board have  approved the adoption of  the
multiple  class structure believing that it serves the best interest of the Fund
and its shareholders. Accordingly, if the shareholders

                                       11
<PAGE>
approve the  proposed IMS  Agreement, a  new 12b-1  plan will  be approved.  Any
changes in the 12b-1 plan will require the approval of the Class B shareholders,
if and when shares of that class are sold.
    -  ADMIN AGREEMENT.   Currently, administration and  accounting services are
included in the  current IMS Agreement.  Going forward it  is proposed to  cover
those  services  in a  separate  agreement. The  fees  under the  proposed Admin
Agreement are as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                 Assets        Annual Rate At
               (Billions)     Each Asset Level
               -----------    ----------------
               <S>            <C>
               First $0.25              0.060%
               Next $0.25               0.055
               Next $0.25               0.050
               Next $0.25               0.045
               Next $1                  0.040
               Over $2                  0.035
</TABLE>

    If shareholders approve  the IMS  Agreement, the  Board will  approve a  new
Admin Agreement. In subsequent years, the Board could consider changing the fees
under the Admin Agreement without shareholder approval.
    - TRANSFER AGENT SERVICES.  The Board reviewed the annual report provided by
IDS  with  respect  to  the  scope  and  quality  of  the  services  it provides
shareholders as transfer agent. The report describes the standards by which  IDS
measures the quality of transfer agent services and assesses how well it has met
those  standards.  The  report  describes  the  types  of  services  IDS  offers
(including  providing  shareholders  with  an   average  cost  basis  of   their
investments  in  the Fund  made over  time)  and compares  them to  the services
offered by others.
    Under  the  proposed  TA  Agreement,  the  fee  for  the  current  class  of
shareholders  will not  change. IDS  will be paid  a fee  by the  Fund for these
services out  of the  assets of  Class A  shares determined  by multiplying  the
number  of Class A shareholder  accounts by $15 and, from  the assets of Class B
shares, by multiplying  the number  of Class  B accounts  by $16  and, from  the
assets  of Class Y shares, by multiplying the number of Class Y accounts by $15.
The members of the Board will approve the proposed TA Agreement if  shareholders
approve  the proposed IMS  Agreement. The TA Agreement  is reviewed annually. It
may be changed at any time by agreement between IDS and the Fund.
    - DISTRIBUTION.    The distribution  contract  between IDSFS  and  the  Fund
provides  that IDSFS has the exclusive right to act as principal underwriter for
the Fund. The contract will be modified to reflect the changes that result  from
implementation of the multiple class structure.
    - BROKERAGE.  The Fund executes some portfolio transactions through American
Enterprise  Investment  Services  Inc., a  wholly  owned subsidiary  of  IDS, at
advantageous rates. Executions  of the Fund's  remaining portfolio  transactions
are  through  other brokerage  firms at  competitive rates  which enable  IDS to
receive services, such as market research, that benefit the Fund.
    - CUSTODIAN.  IDS Trust  Company serves as custodian  for the assets of  the
Fund.   The  contract  is   reviewed  annually  to   determine  that  IDS  Trust

                                       12
<PAGE>
Company provides required custodial services at least equal in scope and quality
to those provided by others  at rates that are fair  and reasonable in light  of
the usual and customary charges made by others.
    CURRENT AND PRO FORMA DATA.  For the last fiscal year, fees and expenses the
Fund  actually paid as well as fees and expenses the Fund would have paid if the
proposed IMS Agreement, proposed  Admin Agreement, proposed shareholder  service
agreement and proposed TA Agreement had been in effect are shown below:
                                 FUND EXPENSES
                   (AS A PERCENT OF AVERAGE DAILY NET ASSETS)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             Pro Forma
                                                    Actual   Class A*
                                                    ------   ---------
<S>                                                 <C>      <C>
Annual Operating Expenses
  IMS Agreement                                        0.85%      0.80%
  12b-1 Plan                                           0.11      --
  Other Expenses                                       0.51       0.71
Total Fund Operating Expenses                          1.47       1.51
<FN>
*The figures for Class A include a small percentage of shares that will be moved
 into Class Y.
</TABLE>

    EXAMPLE:  Suppose  for each  year  for the  next  10 years,  pro  forma fund
expenses are as above and  annual return is 5%. If  you sold your shares at  the
end  of  the following  years, for  each  $1,000 invested,  you would  pay total
expenses of:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
1 year   3 years   5 years   10 years
- ------   -------   -------   --------
<S>      <C>       <C>       <C>
 $65       $95      $128       $222
</TABLE>

    If the proposed IMS Agreement  had been in effect,  in the last fiscal  year
the  Fund would have paid $2,289,874 to  IDS under that agreement, a decrease of
6.6%.
    For the last fiscal  year, IDS received $2,450,648  from the Fund under  the
IMS  Agreement,  $316,971  under  the  12b-1  Plan  and  $789,361  under  the TA
Agreement. In  addition,  IDSFS, a  wholly  owned subsidiary  of  IDS,  received
$3,383,685 in sales charges from sales of shares of the Fund.
    BASIS  OF RECOMMENDATION  BY THE  BOARD ON THE  PROPOSED IMS  AGREEMENT.  In
reaching its recommendation to shareholders, the members of the Board considered
the scope and quality of  all services IDS has  provided and expects to  provide
under   the  proposed  contracts.  They  considered  IDS'  present  distribution
strategies, its past success and its willingness to invest additional  resources
in developing new markets for the Fund. They noted IDS' commitment to compliance
with  all applicable laws and regulations and the benefits IDS receives from its
relationships with the Fund. The members considered IDS' investment performance;
the Fund's expense  ratio; the  profitability IDS realizes  from its  investment
company  operations; and the trend of  IDS profitability from fund operations as
well as that of  other investment managers. The  members of the Board  concluded
the  services  provided, measured  in both  scope and  quality, have  been above
average in the industry; investment performance  for funds in the GROUP in  most
years  has been consistent and  generally a majority of  the funds perform above
the median of a group of their competitive funds; expense ratios remain in  line
with  other  funds; and  IDS' profitability  is not  unreasonable. Based  on its
conclusions, the members of the Board  have approved the proposed IMS  Agreement
and recommend unanimously that the shareholders approve it.

                                       13
<PAGE>
    On  May 12,  1994, at a  meeting called  for the purpose  of considering the
proposed IMS Agreement, the  independent members first and  then the Board as  a
whole,  by  vote,  cast  in  person, approved  the  terms  of  the  proposed IMS
Agreement. After the second year, the proposed IMS Agreement will continue  from
year  to year provided continuance  is approved at least  annually by the Board.
The proposed  IMS Agreement  may be  terminated without  penalty either  by  the
Board, by IDS or by a vote of a majority of the outstanding shares of the Fund.
    RECOMMENDATION  AND VOTE REQUIRED.   The Board  recommends that shareholders
approve the proposed IMS  Agreement. Approval requires  the affirmative vote  of
the majority of the outstanding shares of the Fund which the 1940 Act defines as
67%  or more of the shares represented at the meeting held to consider the issue
if more than  50% are represented  or more than  50% of the  shares entitled  to
vote, whichever is less.

               (4) APPROVE OR DISAPPROVE A NEW INVESTMENT POLICY
                        TO PERMIT THE FUND TO INVEST ALL
                  OF ITS ASSETS IN AN INVESTMENT COMPANY WITH
                 SUBSTANTIALLY THE SAME INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES,
                     POLICIES AND RESTRICTIONS AS THE FUND
    As  discussed  in  Proposal 3  above,  at  some future  time  the  Board may
determine that it is in the best  interests of the Fund and its shareholders  to
create  what is known as a master/feeder fund structure. Such a structure allows
several investment  companies and  other investment  groups, including  pensions
plans  and  trust accounts,  to have  their investment  portfolios managed  as a
combined pool called the master fund. The purpose of the structure is to achieve
operational efficiencies.
    Currently, the  Fund's investment  policies, including  those pertaining  to
investing  all of  its assets in  one company, would  prohibit the master/feeder
structure. The Board recommends that shareholders adopt the following investment
policy: "NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OF THE  FUND'S OTHER INVESTMENT POLICIES, THE  FUND
MAY  INVEST  ITS  ASSETS IN  AN  OPEN-END MANAGEMENT  INVESTMENT  COMPANY HAVING
SUBSTANTIALLY THE SAME INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES,  POLICIES AND RESTRICTIONS AS  THE
FUND FOR THE PURPOSE OF HAVING THOSE ASSETS MANAGED AS PART OF A COMBINED POOL."
    Adoption  of this  policy will  permit the  Fund to  invest its  assets in a
master fund, without any additional vote of shareholders. The Fund's  operations
and  shareholder  services will  not  be affected.  Even  though the  assets are
invested in  securities  of  the  master fund,  you  will  continue  to  receive
information about the underlying investments the same as you now receive in your
annual  and semi-annual reports. Fees and  expenses are not expected to increase
as a result of that change.
    RECOMMENDATION AND VOTE  REQUIRED.  The  Board recommends that  shareholders
approve the new investment policy. Approval requires the affirmative vote of 67%
or  more  of  the  shares  represented  at the  meeting  if  more  than  50% are
represented or more than 50% of the shares entitled to vote, whichever is  less.
If  the change is  not approved, the Fund  will continue to  operate in the same
fashion as it is now operating.

                                       14
<PAGE>
             (5) APPROVE OR REJECT CHANGES TO FUNDAMENTAL POLICIES
    The Fund has a number of investment  policies that can be changed only  with
approval  of  shareholders.  These  policies are  referred  to  as "fundamental"
policies.  Policies  that  can  be  changed  by  the  Board  are  called   "non-
fundamental".  The Board recommends changing  the fundamental policies described
below. These policies  were established a  number of years  ago. New  investment
strategies  and new investment instruments continue to be created and developed.
If the policies are  changed to non-fundamental or  revised, the Fund will  have
the  flexibility  to  use  those  strategies  and  instruments  promptly without
incurring the cost of  shareholder meetings. Some  policies were established  to
conform  to the requirements of  federal or state law  that existed at the time.
These policies do not need to be fundamental under those laws and, if changed to
non-fundamental, the Board could react to changes in the laws.
    A.  PERMIT THE FUND TO BUY ON  MARGIN OR SELL SHORT TO THE EXTENT  PERMITTED
BY  THE  BOARD.   Currently, the  Fund is  prohibited from  buying on  margin or
selling short. Buying on margin is borrowing money to buy securities and selling
short is selling  securities the  Fund does not  own. Both  strategies are  cash
market  transactions that create leverage but  are appropriate if properly used.
Leveraging occurs when the market  value of an investment changes  significantly
more than the amount of cash invested. Currently, the Fund can implement similar
strategies to buying on margin or selling short. Depending on market conditions,
however,  it may be preferable to use these strategies. The Fund would use these
strategies only to  the extent consistent  with its goal  and in a  conservative
fashion.  If  the policies  pertaining to  use of  margin and  short-selling are
non-fundamental, as market conditions change, the Board can consider requests of
the portfolio manager to employ investment strategies using these techniques.
    B.  PERMIT THE FUND TO PLEDGE  ASSETS AS COLLATERAL TO THE EXTENT  PERMITTED
BY  THE BOARD.  The Fund is prohibited  from pledging more than 15% of its total
assets as collateral for loans  or other purposes. If  the policy is changed  to
non-fundamental, when appropriate, the Board would be able to raise or lower the
maximum  percentage in order to implement investment strategies or to meet other
possible needs.
    C.  PERMIT THE BOARD TO CHANGE THE LIMIT ON INVESTMENTS IN ISSUERS WITH LESS
THAN THREE YEARS OF OPERATING HISTORY.  The Fund may not invest more than 5%  of
its  total assets  in companies  that have  less than  three years  of operating
history. This percentage currently is set by a state law which may change in the
future. If the policy is made non-fundamental and the state changes its law, the
Board could take such action as appropriate.
    D.  PERMIT  THE BOARD  TO ESTABLISH  POLICIES WHEN  THE FUND  COULD MAKE  AN
INVESTMENT  FOR THE PURPOSE OF EXERCISING CONTROL  OR MANAGING THE COMPANY.  The
Fund is prohibited from making investments to control or manage a company. While
it is not the intent of the Fund to control or manage a company and it generally
is precluded  from doing  so by  various  laws, from  time to  time one  of  its
investments  may experience financial difficulties. It may be in the interest of
the Fund to make an additional investment while at the same time asserting  some
influence regarding management.
    E.   PERMIT  THE BOARD TO  ESTABLISH POLICIES  FOR INVESTING IN  OIL, GAS OR
OTHER  MINERAL  EXPLORATION  OR  DEVELOPMENT  PROGRAMS.    Currently,  a   state

                                       15
<PAGE>
law  limits investments by the Fund in  oil, gas or other mineral exploration or
development  programs.  Should  the  law  change,  the  Board  could   establish
appropriate guidelines.
    F.   REVISE THE FUNDAMENTAL POLICY ON MAKING LOANS.  Currently, the Fund has
a fundamental policy prohibiting  it from making cash  loans. It is proposed  to
revise the policy to state that "THE FUND WILL NOT MAKE CASH LOANS, IF THE TOTAL
COMMITMENT   AMOUNT  EXCEEDS  5%  OF  THE   FUND'S  TOTAL  ASSETS."  In  certain
circumstances the Fund may make investments, such as purchasing short-term  debt
instruments  from banks, that  may be considered  cash loans. The  Fund will not
make loans to affiliated companies or to any individual.
    G/H.   REVISE  THE  FUNDAMENTAL  POLICY ON  INVESTING  IN  REAL  ESTATE  AND
COMMODITIES.   Currently, the Fund has a fundamental policy that states that the
Fund will  not buy  or sell  real estate,  commodities or  commodity  contracts,
except  the Fund may enter into stock index futures contracts. It is proposed to
separate the policy into two parts.
    G.  REAL ESTATE.   The real  estate policy will be  revised as follows:  THE
FUND  WILL NOT BUY OR SELL REAL ESTATE, UNLESS ACQUIRED AS A RESULT OF OWNERSHIP
OF SECURITIES OR OTHER INSTRUMENTS, EXCEPT THIS SHALL NOT PREVENT THE FUND  FROM
INVESTING IN SECURITIES OR OTHER INSTRUMENTS BACKED BY REAL ESTATE OR SECURITIES
OF  COMPANIES ENGAGED IN THE  REAL ESTATE BUSINESS. The  Fund does not expect to
hold real  estate directly.  However,  it may  invest  in securities  issued  or
guaranteed   by  companies   engaged  in   acquiring,  constructing,  financing,
developing or operating real estate  projects, including real estate  investment
trusts (REITs).
    H.  COMMODITIES.  The commodities policy will be changed to read as follows:
THE  FUND WILL NOT BUY OR SELL  PHYSICAL COMMODITIES UNLESS ACQUIRED AS A RESULT
OF OWNERSHIP OF SECURITIES OR OTHER  INSTRUMENTS, EXCEPT THIS SHALL NOT  PREVENT
THE  FUND FROM BUYING OR SELLING OPTIONS AND FUTURES CONTRACTS OR FROM INVESTING
IN SECURITIES OR OTHER  INSTRUMENTS BACKED BY, OR  WHOSE VALUE IS DERIVED  FROM,
PHYSICAL  COMMODITIES. The proposed  limitation would clarify  that the Fund may
invest without limit  in securities  or other  instruments backed  by, or  whose
value is derived from, physical commodities.
    RECOMMENDATION  AND VOTE REQUIRED.   The Board  recommends that shareholders
approve the  proposed  changes  in the  Fund's  fundamental  policies.  Approval
requires  the affirmative vote of  67% or more of  the shares represented at the
meeting if more than 50% are represented or more than 50% of the shares entitled
to vote, whichever  is less.  If the  changes are  not approved,  the Fund  will
continue to operate in accordance with its current investment policies.

                                       16
<PAGE>
                       CERTAIN INFORMATION CONCERNING IDS
    IDS  is the adviser or subadviser for the 42 funds in the GROUP. The size of
each fund, as of  July 31, 1994, and  the fee schedule for  each fund under  its
management agreement are shown below:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Name                        Net Assets
- -----------------------  ----------------
<S>                      <C>
Publicly Offered Funds
 (Non-Money Market):
- --------------------
Blue Chip
  Advantage............  $    142,209,588
Bond...................     2,259,063,867
California
  Tax-Exempt...........       258,866,435
Discovery..............       522,606,718
Diversified Equity
  Income...............       864,567,489
Equity Plus............       607,697,337
Extra Income...........     1,671,295,135
Federal Income.........     1,029,328,886
Global Bond............       452,984,951
Global Growth..........       568,444,460
Growth.................       951,623,593
High Yield.............     6,356,086,929
Insured
  Tax-Exempt...........       533,030,027
International..........       721,297,012
Managed
  Retirement...........     2,127,121,745
Massachusetts
  Tax-Exempt...........        72,980,822

<CAPTION>
Name                        Net Assets
- -----------------------  ----------------
<S>                      <C>
Michigan
  Tax-Exempt...........  $     77,856,447
Minnesota
  Tax-Exempt...........       415,296,413
Mutual.................     3,036,337,955
New Dimensions.........     4,110,064,854
New York
  Tax-Exempt...........       121,406,333
Ohio
  Tax-Exempt...........        72,861,916
Precious Metals........        68,615,909
Progressive............       268,085,661
Selective..............     1,510,417,028
Stock..................     2,288,148,561
Strategy --
  Aggressive Equity....       642,558,227
  Equity...............     1,145,543,613
  Income...............       706,837,475
  Short-Term Income....       217,227,269
  Worldwide Growth.....       276,483,905
Tax-Exempt Bond........     1,190,034,011
Utilities Income.......       658,813,634
</TABLE>

Life Funds Offered Only Through Annuities
 (Non-Money Market):
- --------------------

<TABLE>
<S>                         <C>
Aggressive Growth........   $  669,816,381
Capital Resource.........    2,714,729,872

International Equity.....   $1,029,638,190
Managed..................    2,414,506,241
Special Income...........    1,577,327,715
</TABLE>

                                       17
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Group Asset Charge
- -------------------------------------------------------
   Group Assets       Annual Rate at       Effective
  (in billions)      Each Asset Level     Annual Rate
- ------------------   ----------------   ---------------
<S>                  <C>                <C>
First $5                  0.46%                   0.46%
Next $5                   0.44                    0.45
Next $5                   0.42                    0.44
Next $5                   0.40                    0.43
Next $5                   0.39                    0.422
Next $5                   0.38                    0.415
Next $5                   0.36                    0.407
Next $5                   0.35                    0.40
Next $5                   0.34                    0.393
Next $5                   0.33                    0.387
Over $50                  0.32
</TABLE>

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

Individual Asset Charge
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(% of average daily net assets)

<TABLE>
<S>                        <C>
Blue Chip Advantage......       0.10%
Bond.....................       0.13
California Tax-Exempt....       0.13
Discovery................       0.23
Diversified Equity
 Income..................       0.14
Equity Plus..............       0.14
Extra Income.............       0.21
Federal Income...........       0.13
Global Bond..............       0.46
Global Growth............       0.46
Growth...................       0.23
High Yield...............       0.11
Insured Tax-Exempt.......       0.13
International............       0.46
Managed Retirement.......       0.14
Massachusetts
 Tax-Exempt..............       0.13
Michigan
 Tax-Exempt..............       0.13
Minnesota
 Tax-Exempt..............       0.13
Mutual...................       0.14
New Dimensions...........       0.23%
New York
 Tax-Exempt..............       0.13
Ohio Tax-Exempt..........       0.13
Precious Metals..........       0.46
Progressive..............       0.23
Selective................       0.13
Stock....................       0.14
Strategy --
  Aggressive Equity......       0.23
  Equity.................       0.14
  Income.................       0.13
  Short-Term Income......       0.13
  Worldwide Growth.......       0.46
Tax-Exempt Bond..........       0.13
Utilities Income.........       0.14
Life Aggressive Growth...       0.25
Life Capital Resource....       0.25
Life International
 Equity..................       0.50
Life Managed.............       0.25
Life Special Income......       0.25
</TABLE>

- ----------------------------------------------------------------
Money Market Funds:
- -------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Name                        Net Assets
- -----------------------  ----------------
<S>                      <C>
Cash                     $  1,153,600,779
Planned Investment             25,859,200

<CAPTION>
Name                        Net Assets
- -----------------------  ----------------
<S>                      <C>
Tax-Free                 $    120,773,901
Life Moneyshare               184,907,484
</TABLE>

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

                                       18
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                 Asset Charge      Cash       Planned
Money Market Funds               (in billions)    Tax-Free   Investment   Moneyshare
- ------------------------------   -------------    -------    ---------    ---------
<S>                              <C>              <C>        <C>          <C>
Cash                             First $1         0.34%        0.20%        0.54%
Planned Investment               Next 0.5         0.32         0.18         0.52
Tax-Free                         Next 0.5         0.30         0.16         0.50
Life Moneyshare                  Next 0.5         0.28         0.14         0.48
                                 Over 2.5         0.26         0.12         0.46
</TABLE>

    IDS  manages investments for its own  account and has an investment advisory
agreement with a  subsidiary, IDS  Certificate Company ("IDSC"),  a face  amount
certificate  company having total assets, as  of July 31, 1994, of approximately
$2.8 billion. The current advisory agreement between IDS and IDSC provides for a
graduated scale of  fees equal on  an annual basis  to 0.75% of  the first  $250
million  total book value (carrying  cost) of assets of  IDSC, 0.65% on the next
$250 million, 0.55% on the next $250 million, 0.50% on the next $250 million and
0.45% on the value in excess of $1 billion. Not included in this computation are
mortgages, real estate and other assets on which IDSC pays a service fee leaving
a balance of approximately $2.5 billion.
    IDS has  advisory  agreements  to  furnish investment  advice  to  IDS  Life
Insurance  Company ("IDS Life") relative to investment  of the six Life Funds in
the GROUP described above  as well as the  three additional funds listed  below.
The  fee under each advisory agreement is  0.25% of the Fund's average daily net
assets. The size of the three additional funds, as of July 31, 1994 is:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     Net Assets
                                                                   --------------
<S>                                                                <C>
IDS Life Variable Annuity A                                        $  228,562,074
IDS Life Variable Annuity B                                           505,695,830
IDS Life Series Fund, Inc. --
  Equity Portfolio                                                    160,257,659
  Government Securities Portfolio                                      11,431,837
  Income Portfolio                                                     34,594,515
  Managed Portfolio                                                   174,232,786
  Money Market Portfolio                                               10,130,671
</TABLE>

    There are additional expenses  that apply to the  variable accounts and  the
life insurance policies or annuity contracts.
    IDS  is paid  at a  rate of 1%  of the  net assets  for providing investment
advice to Sunrise Fund which had net assets of $63,696,199 as of July 31, 1994.
    PRESIDENT AND BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF IDS.   David R. Hubers is President  and
Chief  Executive  Officer  of IDS.  Listed  below  are the  names  and principal
occupations of the directors  of IDS as  of July 31,  1994. Except as  otherwise
noted  below,  the  address  of  each director  is  IDS  Tower,  Minneapolis, MN
55440-0010.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Name and Address                              Principal Occupation
- --------------------------------------------  -----------------------------------
<S>                                           <C>
Peter J. Anderson                             Sr. Vice President
Karl J. Breyer                                Sr. Vice President and General
                                                Counsel
James E. Choat                                Sr. Vice President
William H. Dudley                             Executive Vice President
Roger S. Edgar                                Sr. Vice President
</TABLE>

                                       19
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Name and Address                              Principal Occupation
- --------------------------------------------  -----------------------------------
<S>                                           <C>
Gordon L. Eid                                 Sr. Vice President and Deputy
                                                General Counsel
Louis C. Fornetti                             Sr. Vice President and Chief
                                                Financial Officer
Harvey Golub                                  Chairman and Chief Executive
    American Express                            Officer, American Express
    New York, New York
David R. Hubers                               President and Chief Executive
                                                Officer
Marietta L. Johns                             Sr. Vice President
Susan D. Kinder                               Sr. Vice President
Richard W. Kling                              Sr. Vice President
Steven C. Kumagai                             Sr. Vice President
Peter A. Lefferts                             Sr. Vice President
Douglas A. Lennick                            Executive Vice President
Jonathan S. Linen                             Vice Chairman, American Express
    American Express
    New York, New York
James A. Mitchell                             Executive Vice President
Barry J. Murphy                               Sr. Vice President
Erven A. Samsel                               Sr. Vice President
R. Reed Saunders                              Sr. Vice President
Jeffrey E. Stiefler                           President, American Express
    American Express
    New York, New York
Fenton R. Talbot                              Sr. Vice President, American
    American Express                            Express
    New York, New York
John R. Thomas                                Sr. Vice President
Norman Weaver, Jr.                            Sr. Vice President
William N. Westhoff                           Sr. Vice President
Michael R. Woodward                           Sr. Vice President
</TABLE>

    IDS is a wholly owned subsidiary of American Express. American Express is  a
financial  services company located  at American Express  Tower, World Financial
Center, New York, New York.

                  CERTAIN INFORMATION CONCERNING INTERNATIONAL
    PRESIDENT AND BOARD  OF DIRECTORS OF  INTERNATIONAL.  Peter  L. Lamaison  is
President  and  Chief  Executive  Officer  of  International.  Listed  below are

                                       20
<PAGE>
the names and principal occupations of the directors of International as of July
31, 1994. Except as noted below, the  address of each director is IDS Tower  10,
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55440-0010.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Name                                          Principal Occupation
- --------------------------------------------  -----------------------------------
<S>                                           <C>
Peter J. Anderson                             Chairman of the Board and Executive
                                                Vice President
William H. Dudley                             Executive Vice President IDS
Peter L. Lamaison                             President and Chief Executive
    Level 4, 155 Bishopsgate                    Officer
    London, England EC2M3TY
</TABLE>

    International is a wholly-owned subsidiary of IDS. Its principal offices are
located  in the IDS Tower, Minneapolis, Minnesota, but its investment operations
are managed at its offices in London, England. International was established  in
1981  to manage global  investments. International manages  certain mutual funds
and other funds on behalf of pension  and foundation clients. At July 31,  1994,
International managed security portfolios totaling approximately $3.3 billion.
                                 MISCELLANEOUS
    INVESTMENT DECISIONS, PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE.  Each investment
decision  made for  the Fund  is made independently  from any  decision made for
another fund in the  GROUP or other account  advised by IDS, IDS  International,
Inc.  ("International") or any subsidiary thereof.  On occasion the Fund and one
of the other funds in the GROUP or another client of the investment manager  may
simultaneously  purchase  or  sell  the  same security.  In  that  case,  IDS or
International executes the  transaction in  a manner  which the  Fund agrees  in
advance  is fair. Ordinarily, the  transactions of the Fund  and another fund or
client of IDS will be  averaged as to price and  allocated as to amount  between
the Fund and the other fund or client pursuant to a formula considered equitable
by  the parties to the transactions.  Although sharing in large transactions may
at times adversely affect the price or volume of securities purchased or sold by
the Fund, the Fund hopes to gain an overall advantage in execution.
    In selecting broker-dealers  to execute transactions,  IDS may consider  the
price  of the security, including commission or mark-up, the size and difficulty
of the  order,  the  reliability, integrity,  financial  soundness  and  general
operation  and execution capabilities  of the broker,  the broker's expertise in
particular markets, and research services provided by the broker.
    IDS is directed to use its best  efforts to obtain the best available  price
and  most favorable execution except where otherwise authorized by the Board. In
so doing,  if,  in  the  professional opinion  of  the  person  responsible  for
selecting  the broker  or dealer, several  firms can execute  the transaction on
that basis,  consideration will  be given  to those  firms that  offer  research
services.  Research services may be  used by IDS in  providing advice to all the
funds in the GROUP or to other accounts advised by IDS and, according to IDS, it
is not possible to relate the benefits to any particular fund or account.
    Certain securities markets outside  the U.S. are  not subject to  negotiated
rates  of commission, but instead follow  a schedule of fixed minimum commission
rates. In selecting broker-dealers in these markets, IDS and International  seek
to   obtain   quality  execution   at  favorable   security  prices.   The  U.S.

                                       21
<PAGE>
and many  foreign  securities  markets,  including  the  U.K.,  are  subject  to
negotiated  rates of commission. Although the  U.K. market is primarily a dealer
market, when trades  are effected in  the U.K.,  they may (1)  involve paying  a
commission  to a market maker to  acknowledge research services, and (2) involve
the use  of  non-market  makers.  Other  markets  may  involve  similar  trading
procedures.
    Research  provided by brokers supplements the research activities of IDS and
International. Such services include economic data on, and analysis of, the U.S.
and foreign  economies; information  on specific  industries; information  about
specific  companies, including earnings  estimates; purchase recommendations for
stocks and bonds; portfolio strategy services; political, economic, business and
industry trend  assessments;  historical statistical  information;  market  data
services  providing  information on  specific issues  and prices;  and technical
analysis of  various  aspects of  the  securities markets,  including  technical
charts.  Research  services  may  take the  form  of  written  reports, computer
software or personal contact by telephone or at seminars or other meetings.  IDS
has  obtained, and  in the  future may  obtain, computer  hardware from brokers,
including but not limited to personal  computers, that will be used  exclusively
for  investment decision-making purposes, which  include the research, portfolio
management and trading functions and such other services to the extent permitted
under an interpretation by the SEC.
    The Board also  has adopted a  policy authorizing IDS  and International  to
compensate  a broker for research services, or for brokerage services, by paying
a commission which might not otherwise be  charged or a commission in excess  of
that  another broker  might charge to  the extent  authorized by law,  if IDS or
International determines,  in  good faith,  that  the amount  of  commission  is
reasonable  in  relation to  the  value of  the  brokerage or  research services
provided by a broker or dealer, viewed  either in the light of that  transaction
or overall responsibilities of IDS to the funds in the GROUP.
    When paying a commission that might not otherwise be charged or a commission
in  excess of the amount another broker might charge, IDS and International must
follow procedures authorized by the Board.  To date, three procedures have  been
authorized. One procedure permits IDS or International to direct an order to buy
or sell a security traded on a national securities exchange to a specific broker
for  research  services it  has provided.  The second  procedure permits  IDS or
International, in order  to obtain  research, to direct  an order  on an  agency
basis  to buy or sell a security traded in the over-the-counter market to a firm
that does not  make a  market in that  security. The  commission paid  generally
includes  compensation for research services. The third procedure permits IDS or
International, in order to obtain research and brokerage services, to cause  the
Fund  to pay  a commission  in excess  of the  amount another  broker might have
charged. IDS  and International  have  assured the  Fund  that under  all  three
procedures  the amount of commission paid  will be reasonable and competitive in
relation to the value of the brokerage services performed or research provided.
    During the last fiscal year, the Fund paid brokerage commissions aggregating
$632,007. Substantially  all  firms  through  whom  transactions  were  executed
provide  research services. No transactions were  directed to brokers because of
research services they provided to the Fund.

                                       22
<PAGE>
    No brokerage commissions were  paid to brokers affiliated  with IDS for  the
most recent fiscal year.
    OTHER  BUSINESS.  At this time the Board does not know of any other business
to come before the  meetings. If something  does come up,  the proxies will  use
their best judgment to vote for you on the matter.
    SIMULTANEOUS  MEETINGS.  The regular meeting  of shareholders of the Fund is
called to be held at  the same time as the  regular meetings of shareholders  of
the  other funds in the GROUP. It is  anticipated that all meetings will be held
simultaneously. If any shareholder at the Fund's meeting objects to the  holding
of  a simultaneous meeting, the  shareholder may move for  an adjournment of the
Fund's meeting to a time immediately  after the simultaneous meetings so that  a
meeting  of the Fund may  be held separately. Should such  a motion be made, the
persons named  as proxies  will  take into  consideration  the reasons  for  the
objection in deciding whether to vote in favor of the adjournment.
    SOLICITATION  OF PROXIES.  The Board is asking  for your vote and for you to
return the proxy card  by mail as  promptly as possible. The  Fund will pay  the
expenses for the proxy material and the postage. Supplementary solicitations may
be made by mail, telephone, telegraph or personal contact by financial planners.
The expenses of supplementary solicitation will be paid by the Fund.
    SHAREHOLDER  PROPOSALS.    The  Fund  does  not  hold  regular  meetings  of
shareholders on an  annual basis.  Therefore, no  anticipated date  of the  next
regular meeting can be provided. If a shareholder has a proposal which she or he
feels  should be presented to all  shareholders, the shareholder should send the
proposal to the  President of the  Fund. The  proposal will be  considered at  a
meeting  of the Board as soon as practicable.  Should it be a matter which would
have to be submitted to shareholders, it  will be presented at the next  special
or regular meeting of shareholders. In addition, should it be a matter which the
Board deems of such significance as to require a special meeting, such a meeting
will be called.
    ADJOURNMENT.   In  the event that  sufficient votes  in favor of  any of the
proposals set forth in  the Notice of  the Meeting and  Proxy Statement are  not
received by the time scheduled for the meeting, the persons named as proxies may
move  for one or more adjournments of the meeting for a period or periods of not
more than 60  days in the  aggregate to permit  further solicitation of  proxies
with  respect  to  any  of  the  proposals.  Any  adjournment  will  require the
affirmative vote of a majority of the shares present at the meeting. The persons
named as proxies will vote in favor  of adjournment those shares which they  are
entitled  to vote  which have voted  in favor  of the proposals.  They will vote
against any  adjournment those  proxies  which have  voted  against any  of  the
proposals. The costs of any additional solicitation and of any adjourned session
will be borne by the Fund.

By Order of the Board                     LESLIE L. OGG
September 17, 1994                        Secretary

IMPORTANT!  IF YOU DO NOT INTEND TO BE  AT THE MEETING IN PERSON, PLEASE FILL IN
AND SIGN THE ENCLOSED PROXY AND MAIL  IT AT ONCE. A RETURN ENVELOPE IS  ENCLOSED
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE.

                                       23
<PAGE>
                           IDS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                      CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
                               DECEMBER 31, 1993
                                 ($ THOUSANDS)

                                     ASSETS

<TABLE>
<S>                                                         <C>
Investments:
  Investment securities at amortized cost -- fair value
    $23,253,854...........................................   $22,156,263
  Other securities generally at cost -- fair value
    $214,108..............................................       191,718
  Mortgage loans -- fair value $2,301,866.................     2,231,302
Cash and cash equivalents.................................        90,715
Life insurance policy and investment certificate loans....       417,931
Accounts and notes receivable.............................       563,450
Deferred acquisition costs................................     1,746,291
Consumer loans............................................       296,161
Land, buildings and equipment -- less accumulated
  depreciation, $103,460..................................       213,984
Goodwill -- less accumulated amortization, $83,970........       251,897
Other assets..............................................       199,805
Assets held in segregated asset accounts -- primarily
  common stocks at fair value.............................     8,991,694
                                                            -------------
                                                             $37,351,211
                                                            -------------
                                                            -------------

                  LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
Liabilities:
  Fixed annuity reserves..................................   $18,492,135
  Life and disability insurance reserves..................     3,169,569
  Investment certificate reserves.........................     2,751,825
  Career Distributors' Retirement Plan....................       234,112
  Open securities transactions............................       299,710
  Short-term borrowings...................................       302,894
  Accounts payable, accrued expenses and other
    liabilities...........................................       961,428
  Liabilities related to segregated asset accounts........     8,991,694
                                                            -------------
        Total liabilities.................................    35,203,367
                                                            -------------
Stockholder's Equity:
  Common stock -- $.01 par -- 100 shares authorized,
    issued and outstanding................................            --
  Additional paid-in capital..............................     1,150,119
  Net unrealized appreciation on equity securities........           114
  Retained earnings.......................................       997,611
                                                            -------------
        Total stockholder's equity........................     2,147,844
                                                            -------------
                                                             $37,351,211
                                                            -------------
                                                            -------------

  Commitments and contingencies
</TABLE>

        See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated balance sheet.

                                      F-1
<PAGE>
                           IDS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                        NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
                                 BALANCE SHEET
                                 ($ THOUSANDS)

1.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
    IDS Financial Corporation (hereinafter referred to as IDS) is a wholly owned
subsidiary of American Express Company (parent).

    PRINCIPLES  OF  CONSOLIDATION.    The  accompanying  condensed  consolidated
balance sheet  is  prepared in  accordance  with generally  accepted  accounting
principles.  It includes the  accounts of IDS  and all of  its subsidiaries. All
material intercompany accounts have been eliminated in consolidation.

    ANNUITY ACCOUNTING.  Liabilities for  single premium deferred annuities  and
installment  annuities are accumulation values.  Liabilities for fixed annuities
in benefit status  are the present  value of future  benefits using  established
industry mortality tables.

    INSURANCE  ACCOUNTING.  Liabilities for  future benefits on traditional life
and disability income  and health  insurance policies  are generally  calculated
using   anticipated  rates  of  mortality,  morbidity,  policy  persistency  and
investment yields.  Liabilities  for  universal  life-type  life  insurance  are
accumulation values.

    DEFERRED   ACQUISITION  COSTS.    The   costs  of  acquiring  new  business,
principally sales compensation, policy issue  costs and underwriting, have  been
deferred on annuity, life insurance and other long-term products.

    For  annuities,  the costs  are amortized  in  relation to  surrender charge
revenue and a portion of the excess of investment income earned from  investment
of  contract considerations over  the interest credited  to contract owners. For
traditional life insurance, and disability income and health insurance policies,
the costs are  amortized over  an appropriate  period in  proportion to  premium
revenue.  For universal  life-type insurance, the  costs are  amortized over the
lives of the policies as a percentage of the estimated gross profits expected to
be realized on the policies.

    SEGREGATED ASSET ACCOUNTS.   Assets  and liabilities  related to  segregated
asset  accounts represent funds  held for the exclusive  benefit of the variable
annuity and variable life insurance contract owners.

    IDS makes contractual mortality assurances to the variable annuity  contract
owners that the net assets of the segregated asset accounts will not be affected
by  future variations in the actual life expectancy experience of the annuitants
and beneficiaries  from  the  mortality  assumptions  implicit  in  the  annuity
contracts.  IDS  makes  periodic fund  transfers  to, or  withdrawals  from, the
segregated asset accounts for such actuarial adjustments for variable  annuities
that  are in the benefit  payment period. IDS guarantees,  for the variable life
insurance funds, the cost of the contractual insurance rates and that the  death
benefit will never be less than the death benefit at the date of issuance.

    INVESTMENT   CERTIFICATES.    Investment  certificates  entitle  certificate
holders, who have  either made lump-sum  or installment payments,  to receive  a
definite  sum  of  money  at maturity.  Payments  from  certificate  holders are
credited to  investment certificate  reserves. Investment  certificate  reserves
accumulate  at specified percentage rates of accumulation. For certificates that
allow for the deduction of a surrender charge, cash surrender values may be less
than   accumulated   investment   certificate   reserves   prior   to   maturity

                                      F-2
<PAGE>
                           IDS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                        NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
                           BALANCE SHEET -- CONTINUED
                                 ($ THOUSANDS)

1.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES -- CONTINUED
dates.  Investment certificate reserves  are maintained for  advance payments by
certificate holders, additional  credits granted and  interest accrued on  each.
The  payment distribution, reserve accumulation rates, cash surrender values and
reserve values, among other matters, are governed by the Investment Company  Act
of 1940.

    GOODWILL.    Goodwill represents  the unamortized  excess  of cost  over the
underlying fair  value of  the net  tangible assets  of IDS  as of  the date  of
acquisition  by its parent. Goodwill is being amortized on a straight-line basis
over the next 30 years.

    INCOME TAXES.  IDS  taxable income is included  in the consolidated  Federal
tax  return of IDS' parent. Each eligible subsidiary of IDS' parent provides for
income taxes on a separate return basis.

    INVESTMENTS.   Bonds and  notes, mortgage-backed  securities, and  preferred
stocks  that either  must be redeemed  by the issuer  or may be  redeemed by the
issuer at  the holder's  request are  carried at  amortized cost.  The  expected
maturities  of  these  investments are,  for  the  most part,  matched  with the
expected  payments  of  fixed  annuity,  life  and  disability  insurance,   and
investment  certificate  future  benefits. IDS  has  the ability  to  hold these
investments to  their  maturities  and has  the  intent  to hold  them  for  the
foreseeable  future.  When there  is a  decline  in value,  which is  other than
temporary, the investments are carried at estimated realizable value.

    Marketable equity securities  of IDS  and its subsidiaries,  other than  the
life  insurance subsidiary, are carried at the lower of aggregate cost or market
value.  Common  and  nonredeemable  preferred  stocks  of  the  life   insurance
subsidiary  are  carried  at  market  value.  The  net  unrealized appreciation/
depreciation on such securities is included in stockholder's equity. When  there
is a decline in value, which is other than temporary, the securities are carried
at estimated realizable value.

    Prepayments  are  anticipated  on  certain  investments  in  mortgage-backed
securities in  determining  the  constant  effective  yield  used  to  recognize
interest  income. Prepayment  estimates are  based on  information received from
brokerage firms which deal in mortgage-backed securities.

    INTEREST RATE CAPS.  IDS purchases interest rate caps as protection  against
exposed  interest rate positions. Cost is amortized to the expiration dates on a
straight-line basis. Benefits are recognized when realized.

    MORTGAGE LOANS.  Mortgage loans on real estate are carried at amortized cost
less reserve for losses. When credit and economic evaluations of the  underlying
real  estate indicate a  loss on the loan  is likely to  occur, an allowance for
such loss is recorded. IDS generally stops accruing interest on loans for  which
interest payments are delinquent more than three months.

    The estimated fair value of the mortgage loans is determined by a discounted
cash flow analysis using mortgage interest rates currently offered for mortgages
of similar maturities.

                                      F-3
<PAGE>
                           IDS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                        NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
                           BALANCE SHEET -- CONTINUED
                                 ($ THOUSANDS)

1.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES -- CONTINUED
    LAND, BUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT.  Land, buildings and equipment are carried at
cost  less accumulated  depreciation. IDS  generally utilizes  the straight-line
method of computing depreciation.

2.  QUALIFIED ASSETS AND ASSETS ON DEPOSIT
    IDS' subsidiary, IDS Certificate Company, has issued investment certificates
to clients. The terms of the  investment certificates and the provisions of  the
Investment  Company Act of 1940 require the maintenance of qualified assets. The
carrying value of qualified  assets at December  31, 1993 aggregated  $2,931,737
and exceeded legal requirements.

    Under  the terms of the investment  certificates, the Investment Company Act
of 1940, depository agreements  and the statutes of  various states relating  to
investment certificates, assets are required to be on deposit with the states or
authorized depositories. Investments, mortgage loans and other assets on deposit
at December 31, 1993, aggregated $2,814,974 and exceeded legal requirements.

    IDS'  banking  subsidiaries  are  generally  required  to  maintain  reserve
balances with the Federal Reserve Bank,  the Depository Trust Company and  other
institutions.  Based upon the  dollar volumes and  types of deposit liabilities,
the subsidiaries maintained $1,373 in reserves at December 31, 1993.

3.  INVESTMENTS
    Fair values of bonds and  notes, mortgage-backed securities, and common  and
preferred  stocks represent quoted market prices where available. In the absence
of quoted market  prices, estimated  fair values are  determined by  established
procedures involving, among other things, review of market indices, price levels
of current offerings and comparable issues, price estimates and market data from
independent brokers.

    Fair  values, and gross unrealized gains and losses of investment securities
at amortized cost at December 31, 1993 were:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  Gross         Gross
                                                    Fair        Unrealized   Unrealized
                                     Cost           Value         Gains        Losses
                                 -------------  -------------  ------------  -----------
<S>                              <C>            <C>            <C>           <C>
Mortgage-backed Securities       $  10,697,725  $  10,995,052  $    358,609   $  61,284
Corporate Bonds and Obligations     10,373,609     11,112,009       792,684      54,282
Preferred Stocks                       801,747        839,941        40,851       2,657
State and Municipal Obligations        258,447        283,010        24,602          39
U.S. Government Agency
 Obligations                            24,735         23,842           484       1,377
                                 -------------  -------------  ------------  -----------
Total Investment Securities      $  22,156,263  $  23,253,854  $  1,217,230   $ 119,639
                                 -------------  -------------  ------------  -----------
                                 -------------  -------------  ------------  -----------
</TABLE>

                                      F-4
<PAGE>
                           IDS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                        NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
                           BALANCE SHEET -- CONTINUED
                                 ($ THOUSANDS)

3.  INVESTMENTS -- CONTINUED
    Contractual maturities of debt  securities carried at  amortized cost as  of
December 31, 1993 were:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       Fair
                                                        Cost           Value
                                                    -------------  -------------
<S>                                                 <C>            <C>
Due within 1 year                                   $     553,129  $     558,107
Due after 1 year through 5 years                        2,062,332      2,174,664
Due after 5 years through 10 years                      6,107,705      6,581,514
Due after 10 years                                      2,735,372      2,944,517
                                                    -------------  -------------
                                                       11,458,538     12,258,802
Mortgage-backed Securities                             10,697,725     10,995,052
                                                    -------------  -------------
Total Investment Securities                         $  22,156,263  $  23,253,854
                                                    -------------  -------------
                                                    -------------  -------------
</TABLE>

    (The  timing  of actual  receipts  will differ  from  contractual maturities
because issuers may call or prepay obligations.)

    At December 31, 1993, IDS had  a valuation allowance of $114 reflecting  the
net  unrealized appreciation of equity securities  carried at fair value at that
date. The amount is  net of $160 of  gross unrealized appreciation and  deferred
taxes of $46.

    IDS  will  implement,  effective  January 1,  1994,  Statement  of Financial
Accounting Standards No. 115,  "Accounting for Certain  Investments in Debt  and
Equity  Securities". Under the new rules, debt  securities that IDS has both the
positive intent and  ability to hold  to maturity will  be carried at  amortized
cost.  Debt securities that IDS does not have the positive intent and ability to
hold to  maturity,  as  well  as  all  marketable  equity  securities,  will  be
classified  as  available  for  sale  or  trading  and  carried  at  fair value.
Unrealized gains and losses on securities classified as available for sale  will
be  carried as a separate component  of Stockholder's Equity. Unrealized holding
gains and  losses  on securities  classified  as  trading will  be  reported  in
earnings.  The effect of the new rules  will be to increase Stockholder's Equity
by approximately  $200  million,  net of  taxes,  as  of January  1,  1994.  The
measurement  of unrealized securities gains  (losses) in Stockholder's Equity is
affected by market conditions, and therefore, subject to volatility.

    Other securities,  at cost,  include shares  in affiliated  mutual funds  at
December 31, 1993 of $106,131. The fair value was $115,465.

    Included  in bonds and notes at December  31, 1993 are interest rate caps at
amortized cost  of  $51,733 with  an  estimated  fair value  of  $21,117.  These
interest  rate caps carry a notional amount  of $5,570,000 and expire on various
dates from 1994 to 1998.
4.  SHORT-TERM BORROWINGS
    IDS has  lines of  credit with  various banks  totaling $495,000,  of  which
$302,894 was outstanding at December 31, 1993. $75,000 of the amount outstanding
was  borrowed from a  related party. The  weighted average interest  rate on the
borrowings was 3.71% at December 31, 1993.

                                      F-5
<PAGE>
                           IDS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                        NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
                           BALANCE SHEET -- CONTINUED
                                 ($ THOUSANDS)

4.  SHORT-TERM BORROWINGS -- CONTINUED
    IDS has  entered into  an  interest rate  swap  agreement expiring  in  1999
enabling  it  to convert  $21,000  of its  variable-rate  borrowings to  a fixed
interest rate of 8.88%. IDS has estimated the cost to terminate the agreement in
the current interest rate environment at $2.0 million at December 31, 1993.
5.  RETIREMENT PLANS
    IDS and  its subsidiaries  have qualified  and non-qualified  pension  plans
which cover all permanent employees age 21 and over and certain other employees.
Pension benefits generally depend upon length of service, compensation and other
factors.  Funding of retirement  costs for the qualified  plan complies with the
applicable minimum  funding requirements  specified by  the Employee  Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974, as amended.

    The  funded status  of the plans  at December 31,  1993 is set  forth in the
table below:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        Unfunded
                                                          Funded Plan     Plan
                                                          -----------  -----------
<S>                                                       <C>          <C>
Actuarial present value of benefit obligations:
  Accumulated benefit obligation........................  $   (67,260)  $  (2,283)
                                                          -----------  -----------
                                                          -----------  -----------
  Projected benefit obligation for service rendered to
    date................................................     (107,261)     (7,003)
Fair value of plan assets, primarily invested in bonds
 and equities...........................................      131,637          --
                                                          -----------  -----------
Plan assets in excess of projected benefit obligation...       24,376      (7,003)
Unrecognized prior service cost being recognized over
 14.2 years.............................................       (1,395)      2,978
Unrecognized net (gain) loss from past experience
 different from assumptions and effects of changes in
 assumptions............................................      (10,266)        801
Unrecognized net transition asset being recognized over
 13.7 years.............................................      (10,812)         --
                                                          -----------  -----------
Prepaid (accrued) pension cost included in other
 assets.................................................  $     1,903   $  (3,224)
                                                          -----------  -----------
                                                          -----------  -----------
</TABLE>

    The weighted average discount rate used in determining the actuarial present
value of the projected benefit  obligation of all plans  was 7.25%. The rate  of
increase in future compensation levels used in determining the actuarial present
value  of the projected benefit  obligation of all plans  was 6.0%. The weighted
average expected long-term rates of return on plan assets was 9.5%.

                                      F-6
<PAGE>
                           IDS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                        NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
                           BALANCE SHEET -- CONTINUED
                                 ($ THOUSANDS)

5.  RETIREMENT PLANS -- CONTINUED
    The Career Distributors'  Retirement Plan is  an unfunded,  noncontributory,
non-qualified  deferred compensation  plan for IDS  financial planners, district
managers and division  vice presidents,  based on  their independent  contractor
earnings.

    IDS  sponsors defined benefit health care plans that provide health care and
life insurance benefits  to employees  and financial planners  who retire  after
having  worked five years and  attained age 55 while in  service with IDS or its
subsidiaries. Upon retirement, annual health care premiums will be paid  through
participant contributions and fixed amounts contributed by IDS based on years of
service.  For employees and financial planners who retired prior to April, 1990,
IDS contributes a percentage of their  annual health care premiums. The cost  of
retiree life insurance will be paid entirely by IDS. IDS funds the cost of these
benefits as they are incurred.

    The  accrued postretirement  benefit cost  included in  other liabilities at
December 31, 1993 was $31,883.

    The  weighted  average   discount  rates  used   in  determining  the   1993
postretirement  benefit obligation  was 7.25.  The rate  of increase  in the per
capita cost of covered  benefits was assumed  to be 13% for  1994; the rate  was
assumed  to  decrease  1%  per year  to  7%  in  2000 and  remain  at  the level
thereafter. An  increase in  the assumed  health care  cost trend  rates by  one
percentage  point, in each  year, would increase  the accumulated postretirement
benefit obligation as of December 31, 1993 by $1,653.

6.  STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
    Various state  laws,  the  Investment  Company Act  of  1940  and  terms  of
investment  certificates restrict the amount  of dividends that the subsidiaries
may pay  to  IDS.  The  amount  of net  assets  of  subsidiaries  which  may  be
transferred to IDS was approximately $699.

7.  COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
    IDS is committed to pay aggregate minimum rentals under noncancelable leases
for  office facilities and equipment in  future years as follows: 1994, $57,313;
1995, $50,341; 1996, $40,737; 1997, $30,572;  1998, $24,337 and an aggregate  of
$70,334 thereafter.

    Life  insurance in force  aggregated $46.1 billion at  December 31, 1993, of
which $3.0 billion was  reinsured. Reinsured risks could  become a liability  in
the  event  the  reinsurers become  unable  to  meet the  obligations  they have
assumed.

    Approved but unused consumer lines of credit aggregated $457,038 at December
31, 1993. Of the amount approved, 95% is in lines of $25 or less, and less  than
1% is in lines exceeding $100.

    IDS  and certain of its subsidiaries  are defendants in various lawsuits. In
the opinion of management, the ultimate  resolution of these lawsuits, taken  in
the aggregate, will not materially affect IDS' consolidated financial position.

                                      F-7
<PAGE>
                           IDS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                        NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
                           BALANCE SHEET -- CONTINUED
                                 ($ THOUSANDS)

8.  CREDIT RISK CONCENTRATIONS
    Concentrations  of credit risk of investment  securities at cost at December
31, 1993 were:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 On Balance
                                                    Sheet
                                                -------------
<S>                                             <C>
By Investment Grade:
  Mortgage-backed Securities                    $  10,697,725
  Aaa/AAA                                             493,228
  Aa/AA                                               288,727
  Aa/A                                                144,222
  A/A                                               2,619,628
  A/BBB                                               671,159
  Baa/BBB                                           5,182,582
  Below Investment Grade                            2,058,992
                                                -------------
                                                $  22,156,263
                                                -------------
                                                -------------
</TABLE>

    Mortgage-backed  securities  are  FHLMC,  FNMA  and  GNMA  pools  which  are
guaranteed  as to  principal and  interest by  agencies of  the U.S. Government.
Other debt securities are rated by Moody's and Standard & Poors (S&P) except for
approximately $2.4  billion  which is  rated  by IDS'  analysts  using  criteria
similar  to Moody's  and S&P. Commitments  to purchase investments  were $nil at
December 31, 1993.

    Concentrations of credit risk of mortgage loans at December 31, 1993 were:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             On Balance    Commitments
                                               Sheet       to Purchase
                                            ------------  -------------
<S>                                         <C>           <C>
Mortgage Loans By Region:
    North Central                           $    896,174   $    36,325
    Atlantic                                     819,082        94,345
    New England                                  162,227        18,130
    South Central                                137,707           900
    Pacific                                      128,311        15,140
    Mountain                                      87,801        14,600
                                            ------------  -------------
                                            $  2,231,302   $   179,440
                                            ------------  -------------
                                            ------------  -------------
</TABLE>

                                      F-8
<PAGE>
                           IDS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                        NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
                           BALANCE SHEET -- CONTINUED
                                 ($ THOUSANDS)

8.  CREDIT RISK CONCENTRATIONS -- CONTINUED

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             On Balance    Commitments
                                               Sheet       to Purchase
                                            ------------  -------------
<S>                                         <C>           <C>
Mortgage Loans By Property Type:
    Apartments                              $    821,645   $    78,560
    Shopping Ctrs/Retail                         705,319        67,355
    Office Buildings                             261,673        15,675
    Industrial Buildings                         253,557         9,250
    Retirement Homes                              85,338         1,000
    Hotels/Motels                                 36,743            --
    Medical Buildings                             30,430         6,100
    Residential                                      142            --
    Other                                         36,455         1,500
                                            ------------  -------------
                                            $  2,231,302  $    179,440
                                            ------------  -------------
                                            ------------  -------------
</TABLE>

    Mortgage loans are first mortgages on real estate. IDS' underwriting  policy
is  that at the time  of loan origination, the loan  amount cannot exceed 75% of
appraised value.  If  a  mortgage  is in  default,  IDS  can  begin  foreclosure
proceedings.  Commitments to purchase mortgages are  made in the ordinary course
of business. The estimated fair value of the mortgage commitments is $nil.

    Concentrations of credit risk  of unsecured consumer  loans at December  31,
1993 were:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             On Balance     Approved
                                                Sheet      But Unused
                                             -----------  -------------
<S>                                          <C>          <C>
Consumer Loans By Region:
    North Central                             $  88,790    $   165,829
    Atlantic                                     76,827        120,307
    Pacific                                      51,707         80,205
    South Central                                34,696         38,637
    New England                                  25,805         27,541
    Mountain                                     18,336         24,519
                                             -----------  -------------
                                              $ 296,161    $   457,038
                                             -----------  -------------
                                             -----------  -------------
</TABLE>

    Consumer  loans have a variable rate of interest. As a result, the estimated
fair value of the consumer loans is  approximated to be the carrying value.  The
estimated fair value of the approved but unused lines of credit is $nil.

    Included  in  accounts  receivable at  December  31, 1993  are  interest and
dividends receivable  on  investments  of  $350,098  and  fees  receivable  from
affiliated mutual funds of $25,507.

9.  FAIR VALUES OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
    The  following  are  fair  values  of  financial  instruments  not presented
elsewhere  in  the  condensed  consolidated  balance  sheet,  and  methods   and
assumptions that were used to estimate these fair values.

                                      F-9
<PAGE>
                           IDS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                        NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
                           BALANCE SHEET -- CONTINUED
                                 ($ THOUSANDS)

9.  FAIR VALUES OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS -- CONTINUED
    The estimated fair values for short-term financial instruments, such as cash
and   cash  equivalents,  short-term  borrowings  and  customers'  deposits  are
approximated to be the carrying amounts disclosed in the condensed  consolidated
balance sheet.

    The  estimated fair value of fixed annuities future policy benefits is based
on the status of the  annuities at December 31,  1993. The estimated fair  value
for  deferred  annuities approximates  the  carrying amount  less  any surrender
charges and related loans.  The estimated fair value  for annuities in  non-life
contingent  payout status  approximates the  present value  of projected benefit
payments at the rate appropriate for  contracts issued in 1993. At December  31,
1993,  the  carrying amount  and  fair value  of  fixed annuities  future policy
benefits, after excluding life  insurance-related contracts carried at  $913,127
was  $17,579,008 and $16,881,747, respectively. The  fair value is net of policy
loans of $59,132 at December 31, 1993.

    The estimated fair value of investment certificate reserves is based upon  a
method  appropriate for each class of  certificate. The estimated fair value for
investment certificates that  reprice within  a year  approximates the  carrying
value.  The estimated fair value for other investment certificates is determined
by a discounted cash flow analysis using investment rates currently offered  for
investment  certificates  of  similar remaining  maturities.  These  amounts are
reduced by applicable surrender charges and related loans. At December 31, 1993,
the estimated fair value of the investment certificate reserves was  $2,694,720,
net of certificate loans of $67,429.

    The estimated fair value of liabilities related to segregated asset accounts
is the carrying amount less variable insurance contracts carried at $346,276 and
surrender charges, if applicable. At December 31, 1993, the estimated fair value
of these liabilities was $8,305,209.

10.  RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
    IDS  has entered into various related party transactions with its parent and
the parent's other affiliates.

    IDS has a  reinsurance agreement  to assume a  single premium  life line  of
business  from an  affiliated company.  The accompanying  condensed consolidated
balance sheet at December 31, 1993  includes $759,714 of liabilities for  future
policy benefits related to this agreement.

    IDS  has a reinsurance agreement to cede 50% of its long-term care insurance
business to  an  affiliated  company. The  accompanying  condensed  consolidated
balance  sheet at December 31, 1993  includes $44,086 of reinsurance receivables
related to this agreement.

    IDS purchased a $35,000 five year  secured note from an affiliated  company.
The note bears a market interest rate, revised semi-annually, which was 8.42% at
December 31, 1993.

    Included  in other liabilities  is $30,420 at December  31, 1993 for federal
income taxes payable to the parent.

                                      F-10
<PAGE>
                           IDS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                        NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
                           BALANCE SHEET -- CONTINUED
                                 ($ THOUSANDS)

11.  INCOME TAXES
    At December 31,  1993, the  life insurance subsidiary  had a  policyholders'
surplus  account balance of $19,032. The  policyholders' surplus is only taxable
if dividends to shareholders exceed the shareholders' surplus account and/or the
company is  liquidated.  Deferred taxes  of  $6,661 have  not  been  established
because no distributions of such amounts are contemplated.

                                      F-11
<PAGE>
                         REPORT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

The Board of Directors and Stockholder
IDS Financial Corporation

    We  have audited, in accordance  with generally accepted auditing standards,
the consolidated financial statements of  IDS Financial Corporation at  December
31,  1993, not presented separately herein, and  in our report dated February 3,
1994, we  expressed  an  unqualified opinion  on  those  consolidated  financial
statements.  In  our  opinion, the  information  set forth  in  the accompanying
condensed consolidated balance sheet is  fairly stated in all material  respects
in  relation to  the consolidated  financial statements  from which  it has been
derived.

Ernst & Young LLP
Minneapolis, Minnesota
February 3, 1994

                                      F-12
<PAGE>
                            IDS INTERNATIONAL, INC.
                                 BALANCE SHEET
                               DECEMBER 31, 1993

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         1993
                                                                     ------------
<S>                                                                  <C>
                                     ASSETS
Cash and cash equivalents..........................................  $  2,520,444

Accounts receivable:
  Investment management advisory fees and other....................     2,545,728
  Affiliates.......................................................       845,087
Leasehold improvements -- less accumulated amortization of
 $283,474..........................................................        88,811
Furniture and equipment -- less accumulated depreciation of
 $864,970..........................................................       377,262
Deferred income taxes..............................................        83,892
Other assets.......................................................       626,922
                                                                     ------------
                                                                     $  7,088,146
                                                                     ------------
                                                                     ------------

                      LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY

Liabilities:
  Accrued employee compensation and benefits.......................  $    964,230
  Accounts payable:
    Affiliates.....................................................       177,759
    Foreign income tax.............................................       826,790
    Accrued rent...................................................       357,499
    Other..........................................................     1,055,580
  Obligation under capital lease...................................         4,653
                                                                     ------------
        Total liabilities..........................................     3,386,511
                                                                     ------------

Stockholder's equity:
  Common stock, par value $10 per share; 100 shares authorized,
    issued and outstanding.........................................         1,000
  Additional paid-in capital.......................................       345,000
  Retained earnings................................................     3,355,635
                                                                     ------------
        Total stockholder's equity.................................     3,701,635
                                                                     ------------
                                                                     $  7,088,146
                                                                     ------------
                                                                     ------------
</TABLE>

                            See accompanying notes.

                                      F-13
<PAGE>
                            IDS INTERNATIONAL, INC.
                             NOTES TO BALANCE SHEET
                               DECEMBER 31, 1993

1.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

    ORGANIZATION.    IDS International,  Inc. (the  Company)  is a  wholly owned
subsidiary  of  IDS  Financial  Corporation  (IDS),  which  is  a  wholly  owned
subsidiary of American Express Company.

    The  Company is registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission as an
investment adviser pursuant to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.

    The Company is a member of the Investment Management Regulatory Organisation
Limited (IMRO), a United Kingdom regulatory agency. This balance sheet has  been
prepared  in  United  States  dollars  using  United  States  generally accepted
accounting principles.

    Included in  the balance  sheet at  December 31,  1993, are  assets and  net
assets  located in the United Kingdom in the amounts of approximately $2,745,247
and $(201,447), respectively.

    The Company managed  investments with a  market value of  $2,850 million  at
December 31, 1993.

    CASH  AND CASH EQUIVALENTS.   Investments with a maturity  of ninety days or
less at  acquisition  are considered  cash  equivalents. These  investments  are
stated at cost, which approximates market value.

    INVESTMENT  MANAGEMENT ADVISORY  FEES.  Investment  management advisory fees
are recognized as  a percentage of  clients' assets managed  in accordance  with
management agreements with clients.

    FURNITURE AND EQUIPMENT AND LEASEHOLD IMPROVEMENTS.  Furniture and equipment
and  leasehold improvements are  carried at cost  less accumulated depreciation.
Depreciation is provided over the estimated  useful lives of three to ten  years
of  the respective  assets on a  straight-line basis.  Depreciation on leasehold
improvements and  capitalizable  leased automobiles  is  provided for  over  the
anticipated lives of the leases.

    FOREIGN   CURRENCY  TRANSLATION.    Transactions  in  foreign  currency  are
translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange  rate in effect on the date of  the
transaction.  At each balance sheet date, recorded balances that are denominated
in a foreign currency  are adjusted to  reflect the exchange  rate in effect  on
that date.

    INCOME TAXES.  The Company accounts for income taxes under the provisions of
Statement  of  Financial Accounting  Standards (SFAS)  No. 109,  "Accounting for
Income Taxes."

    The Company's taxable income or loss is included in the consolidated federal
income tax return of American Express  Company. The Company provides for  income
taxes  on a separate return  basis, except that, under  an agreement between IDS
and American Express  Company, benefit is  recognized for losses  to the  extent
they  can be used  on the consolidated return.  It is the policy  of IDS and its
subsidiaries that IDS will reimburse a subsidiary for any tax benefits recorded.

2.  RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

    Included in  cash  and  cash  equivalents  is  an  investment  in  IDS  Cash
Management Fund of $1,959,239 at December 31, 1993.

                                      F-14
<PAGE>
                            IDS INTERNATIONAL, INC.
                      NOTES TO BALANCE SHEET -- CONTINUED
                               DECEMBER 31, 1993

2.  RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS -- CONTINUED
    Included  in intercompany  accounts is  a net payable  to IDS  of $27,194 at
December 31, 1993.

3.  DEFERRED INCOME TAXES

    Deferred income tax  expense (benefit) results  from temporary  differences.
Temporary  differences  are  differences between  the  tax bases  of  assets and
liabilities and their  reported amounts  in the financial  statements that  will
result  in differences between income for  tax purposes and income for financial
statement purposes  in future  years. Temporary  differences and  the  Company's
deferred tax liability consist primarily of compensation items.

4.  MINIMUM LIQUIDITY MARGIN
    As  a member of IMRO, the Company  must maintain a minimum liquidity margin,
as defined, at all times. At December 31, 1993, the minimum required and  actual
liquidity margins were approximately $710,000 and $2,526,000, respectively.

5.  RETIREMENT PLAN
    The  Company participates in  a retirement plan  of American Express Company
which covers  all permanent  employees age  30  and over  who have  met  certain
employment  requirements.  The benefits  are based  on the  number of  years the
employee participates in the plan, their final average monthly salary, the level
of United Kingdom pension benefits the employee is eligible for and the level of
vesting the employee has earned in  the plan. American Express Company's  policy
is to fund retirement plan costs accrued subject to Inland Revenue requirements.

    The  Company participates in  defined benefit health care  plans of IDS that
provide health care and life insurance benefits to retired employees and retired
financial  planners.   The   plans   include   participant   contributions   and
service-related  eligibility requirements.  Upon retirement,  such employees are
considered to have been employees of IDS.

6.  COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
    The Company  entered  into  a  lease agreement  for  office  space  (with  a
non-affiliated company) effective November 22, 1991. The lease expires March 24,
2000.  The Company may  break the lease  beginning December 25,  1996, upon nine
months prior written notice.

    At December 31, 1993, the Company's rent payment commitments are as follows:

<TABLE>
<S>                                    <C>
1994                                   $  417,858
1995                                      459,716
1996                                      448,223
                                       ----------
                                       $1,325,797
                                       ----------
                                       ----------
</TABLE>

    The lease  agreement includes  free rent  for 15  months on  the full  8,300
square  feet, with  an additional 12  months free  rent on 800  square feet. The
Company is accruing rent expense during the free rent period.

                                      F-15
<PAGE>
                            IDS INTERNATIONAL, INC.
                      NOTES TO BALANCE SHEET -- CONTINUED
                               DECEMBER 31, 1993

7.  FOREIGN CURRENCY EXCHANGE CONTRACTS
    To reduce  foreign  currency exposure  in  foreign operating  expenses,  the
Company  entered into contracts in October, 1993 to purchase L3,915,000 Sterling
during the period from January  4, 1994 to December 31,  1994 at a cost of  U.S.
$5,884,026.

    These contracts qualify as hedges, accordingly, net gains on these contracts
of  $180,090 were deferred at  December 31, 1993 (included  in other assets) and
will be recognized  in 1994  as an adjustment  to the  related foreign  currency
transactions.

    The  market risk,  due to foreign  exchange rate  fluctuations attributed to
these contracts,  is offset  by the  market risk  attributed to  the  associated
foreign operating expenses.

                                      F-16
<PAGE>
                         REPORT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

The Board of Directors and Stockholder
IDS International, Inc.

    We have audited the accompanying balance sheet of IDS International, Inc. as
of  December 31, 1993. This balance sheet is the responsibility of the Company's
management. Our responsibility is  to express an opinion  on this balance  sheet
based on our audit.

    We  conducted  our  audit  in accordance  with  generally  accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to  obtain
reasonable  assurance  about  whether this  balance  sheet is  free  of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence  supporting
the  amounts  and  disclosures in  the  balance  sheet. An  audit  also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles used  and  significant estimates  made  by
management,  as well  as evaluating the  overall balance  sheet presentation. We
believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

    In our opinion, the balance sheet  referred to above present fairly, in  all
material respects, the financial position of IDS International, Inc. at December
31, 1993, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.

Ernst & Young LLP
Minneapolis, Minnesota
March 25, 1994

                                      F-17
<PAGE>
                                                                       EXHIBIT A

                                    FORM OF
                    INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT SERVICES AGREEMENT
    AGREEMENT  made the     th day  of             ,  199 ,  by and  between IDS
International  Fund,  Inc.  (the  "Fund"),  a  Minnesota  corporation,  and  IDS
Financial Corporation ("IDS"), a Delaware corporation.

PART ONE: INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AND OTHER SERVICES

    (1)  The Fund hereby retains  IDS, and IDS hereby  agrees, for the period of
this Agreement and  under the  terms and  conditions hereinafter  set forth,  to
furnish  the Fund continuously with suggested investment planning; to determine,
consistent with the Fund's investment objectives and policies, which  securities
in  IDS' discretion shall be purchased, held or sold and to execute or cause the
execution of purchase or sell orders; to prepare and make available to the  Fund
all  necessary research and statistical data in connection therewith; to furnish
all services of whatever  nature required in connection  with the management  of
the  Fund as provided under  this Agreement; and to pay  such expenses as may be
provided for in Part Three; subject always  to the direction and control of  the
Board  of Directors  (the "Board"), the  Executive Committee  and the authorized
officers of  the  Fund. IDS  agrees  to  maintain an  adequate  organization  of
competent  persons to provide  the services and to  perform the functions herein
mentioned. IDS agrees to meet with any persons at such times as the Board  deems
appropriate for the purpose of reviewing IDS' performance under this Agreement.
    (2) IDS agrees that the investment planning and investment decisions will be
in  accordance with general investment policies of  the Fund as disclosed to IDS
from time  to  time by  the  Fund  and as  set  forth in  its  prospectuses  and
registration  statements filed  with the  United States  Securities and Exchange
Commission (the "SEC").
    (3) IDS  agrees  that it  will  maintain all  required  records,  memoranda,
instructions  or authorizations  relating to  the acquisition  or disposition of
securities for the Fund.
    (4) The Fund agrees  that it will  furnish to IDS  any information that  the
latter  may reasonably request with  respect to the services  performed or to be
performed by IDS under this Agreement.
    (5) IDS is authorized to select the brokers or dealers that will execute the
purchases and sales of portfolio securities for the Fund and is directed to  use
its  best  efforts  to  obtain  the  best  available  price  and  most favorable
execution, except as prescribed  herein. Subject to  prior authorization by  the
Fund's  Board of appropriate policies and procedures, and subject to termination
at any  time by  the Board,  IDS may  also be  authorized to  effect  individual
securities  transactions at commission rates in excess of the minimum commission
rates available, to  the extent  authorized by law,  if IDS  determines in  good
faith  that such amount of commission was reasonable in relation to the value of
the brokerage and research services provided by such broker or dealer, viewed in
terms of either  that particular  transaction or  IDS' overall  responsibilities
with  respect  to the  Fund  and other  funds for  which  it acts  as investment
adviser.
    (6) It  is  understood and  agreed  that in  furnishing  the Fund  with  the
services  as herein  provided, neither IDS,  nor any officer,  director or agent

                                      A-1
<PAGE>
thereof shall be held liable  to the Fund or  its creditors or shareholders  for
errors  of judgment  or for anything  except willful misfeasance,  bad faith, or
gross negligence in the performance of its duties, or reckless disregard of  its
obligations  and  duties  under  the  terms of  this  Agreement.  It  is further
understood and  agreed  that IDS  may  rely  upon information  furnished  to  it
reasonably believed to be accurate and reliable.

PART TWO: COMPENSATION TO INVESTMENT MANAGER

    (1)  The Fund agrees to  pay to IDS, and IDS  covenants and agrees to accept
from the Fund in full payment for  the services furnished, a fee composed of  an
asset charge and a performance incentive adjustment.
        (a) The asset charge
            (i)  The asset charge  for each calendar  day of each  year shall be
        equal to the total of 1/365th (1/366th in each leap year) of the  amount
        computed  in accordance with paragraph (ii) below. The computation shall
        be made for  each day  on the basis  of net  assets as of  the close  of
        business of the full business day two (2) business days prior to the day
        for  which the computation is being made.  In the case of the suspension
        of the computation  of net asset  value, the asset  charge for each  day
        during  such suspension shall be computed as of the close of business on
        the last full business  day on which the  net assets were computed.  Net
        assets  as  of  the close  of  a  full business  day  shall  include all
        transactions in shares of the Fund recorded on the books of the Fund for
        that day.
            (ii) The asset charge shall be based  on the net assets of the  Fund
        as set forth in the following table.

                                  ASSET CHARGE

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
  Assets      Annual Rate at
(Billions)   Each Asset Level
- -----------  ----------------
<S>          <C>
First $0.25      0.800%
Next $0.25       0.775
Next $0.25       0.750
Next $0.25       0.725
Next $1          0.700
Over $2          0.675
</TABLE>

        (b) The performance incentive adjustment
            (i)  The performance incentive adjustment, determined monthly, shall
        be computed by  measuring the  percentage point  difference between  the
        performance  of one Class A share of the Fund and the performance of the
        Lipper International Fund  Index (the "Index").  The performance of  one
        Class  A share of the Fund shall be measured by computing the percentage
        difference, carried to two decimal places, between the opening net asset
        value of one share of the Fund  and the closing net asset value of  such
        share as of the last business day of the period selected for comparison,
        adjusted for vidends or capital gain distributions treated as reinvested
        at  the end  of the  month during  which the  distribution was  made but
        without adjustment for expenses related to a particular class of shares.
        The performance of the Index will  then be established by measuring  the
        percentage difference, carried to two decimal places,

                                      A-2
<PAGE>
        between  the beginning and ending Index  for the comparison period, with
        dividends or capital gain distributions on the securities which comprise
        the Index being  treated as reinvested  at the end  of the month  during
        which the distribution was made.
            (ii)  In  computing the  adjustment, one  percentage point  shall be
        deducted from the difference, as determined in (b)(i) above. The  result
        shall  be  converted  to  a  decimal  value  (e.g.,  2.38%  to  0.0238),
        multiplied by .01 and then multiplied  by the Fund's average net  assets
        for  the comparison period. This product next  shall be divided by 12 to
        put the adjustment on a monthly basis. Where the performance of the Fund
        exceeds the Index, the amount so determined shall be an increase in fees
        as computed under paragraph (a).  Where Fund performance is exceeded  by
        the  Index, the amount so  determined shall be a  decrease in such fees.
        The percentage point difference between the performance of the Fund  and
        that  of the  Index, as  determined above,  is limited  to a  maximum of
        0.0012 per year.
           (iii) The  12  month  comparison  period will  roll  over  with  each
        succeeding  month, so that  it always equals 12  months, ending with the
        month for which the performance adjustment is being computed.
            (iv) If the Index ceases to be  published for a period of more  than
        90   days,  changes  in  any   material  respect  or  otherwise  becomes
        impracticable to use for purposes of the adjustment, no adjustment  will
        be made under this paragraph (b) until such time as the Board approves a
        substitute index.
    (2)  The fee  shall be  paid on  a monthly  basis and,  in the  event of the
termination of this Agreement, the fee accrued shall be prorated on the basis of
the number  of days  that this  Agreement is  in effect  during the  month  with
respect to which such payment is made.
    (3)  The fee provided for hereunder shall be paid in cash by the Fund to IDS
within five business days after the last day of each month.

PART THREE: ALLOCATION OF EXPENSES
    (1) The Fund agrees to pay:
        (a) Fees  payable  to IDS  for  its services  under  the terms  of  this
    Agreement.
        (b) Taxes.
        (c)  Brokerage commissions and  charges in connection  with the purchase
    and sale of assets.
        (d) Custodian fees and charges.
        (e) Fees and charges of its independent certified public accountants for
    services the Fund requests.
        (f) Premium on  the bond  required by  Rule 17g-1  under the  Investment
    Company Act of 1940.
        (g)  Fees  and  expenses of  attorneys  (i)  it employs  in  matters not
    involving the assertion of a  claim by a third  party against the Fund,  its
    directors and officers, (ii) it employs in conjunction with a claim asserted
    by  the Board against IDS, except that IDS shall reimburse the Fund for such
    fees and expenses  if it is  ultimately determined by  a court of  competent
    jurisdiction,  or IDS agrees, that  it is liable in whole  or in part to the
    Fund, and (iii) it employs to assert a claim against a third party.

                                      A-3
<PAGE>
        (h) Fees paid for the qualification and registration for public sale  of
    the  securities of the Fund  under the laws of the  United States and of the
    several states in which such securities shall be offered for sale.
        (i) Fees of consultants employed by the Fund.
        (j) Directors, officers and employees expenses which shall include fees,
    salaries, memberships, dues, travel, seminars, pension, profit sharing,  and
    all  other  benefits  paid  to  or  provided  for  directors,  officers  and
    employees, directors and officers liability insurance, errors and  omissions
    liability  insurance,  worker's  compensation insurance  and  other expenses
    applicable to the directors,  officers and employees,  except the Fund  will
    not  pay any fees or expenses of any person who is an officer or employee of
    IDS or its affiliates.
        (k) Filing fees  and charges  incurred by  the Fund  in connection  with
    filing any amendment to its articles of incorporation, or incurred in filing
    any   other  document  with   the  State  of   Minnesota  or  its  political
    subdivisions.
        (l) Organizational expenses of the Fund.
        (m) Expenses incurred in connection with lending portfolio securities of
    the Fund.
        (n) Expenses properly payable by the Fund, approved by the Board.
    (2) IDS agrees to pay all expenses associated with the services it  provides
under  the terms of this  Agreement. Further, IDS agrees that  if, at the end of
any month, the expenses of the Fund under this Agreement and any other agreement
between the Fund and IDS, but excluding  those expenses set forth in (1)(b)  and
(1)(c) of this Part Three, exceed the most restrictive applicable state expenses
limitation,  the Fund shall not  pay those expenses set  forth in (1)(a) and (d)
through (n)  of this  Part Three  to the  extent necessary  to keep  the  Fund's
expenses from exceeding the limitation, it being understood that IDS will assume
all  unpaid expenses and bill  the Fund for them in  subsequent months but in no
event can the accumulation of unpaid expenses or billing be carried past the end
of the Fund's fiscal year.

PART FOUR: MISCELLANEOUS

    (1) IDS  shall be  deemed to  be an  independent contractor  and, except  as
expressly  provided or authorized in this  Agreement, shall have no authority to
act for or represent the Fund.
    (2) A "full business day" shall be as defined in the By-laws.
    (3) The Fund  recognizes that  IDS now renders  and may  continue to  render
investment  advice and other services to  other investment companies and persons
which may or may not have  investment policies and investments similar to  those
of  the  Fund and  that  IDS manages  its own  investments  and/or those  of its
subsidiaries. IDS  shall be  free to  render such  investment advice  and  other
services and the Fund hereby consents thereto.
    (4)  Neither this Agreement nor any transaction had pursuant hereto shall be
invalidated or in any way affected by the fact that directors, officers,  agents
and/or shareholders of the Fund are or may be interested in IDS or any successor
or  assignee thereof,  as directors,  officers, stockholders  or otherwise; that
directors, officers, stockholders or agents of  IDS are or may be interested  in
the  Fund as directors, officers, shareholders, or otherwise; or that IDS or any
successor  or   assignee,   is  or   may   be   interested  in   the   Fund   as

                                      A-4
<PAGE>
shareholder  or otherwise, provided, however, that neither IDS, nor any officer,
director or employee thereof or of the Fund, shall sell to or buy from the  Fund
any  property  or security  other  than shares  issued  by the  Fund,  except in
accordance with applicable regulations or orders of the SEC.
    (5) Any notice under  this Agreement shall be  given in writing,  addressed,
and  delivered, or mailed postpaid,  to the party to  this Agreement entitled to
receive such,  at  such party's  principal  place of  business  in  Minneapolis,
Minnesota,  or to such  other address as  either party may  designate in writing
mailed to the other.
    (6) IDS agrees that no officer, director or employee of IDS will deal for or
on behalf  of  the  Fund  with  himself as  principal  or  agent,  or  with  any
corporation  or partnership  in which he  may have a  financial interest, except
that this shall not prohibit:
        (a) Officers,  directors or  employees of  IDS from  having a  financial
    interest in the Fund or in IDS.
        (b)  The purchase of securities for the  Fund, or the sale of securities
    owned by the Fund, through a security broker or dealer, one or more of whose
    partners, officers,  directors  or  employees is  an  officer,  director  or
    employee  of IDS, provided such transactions  are handled in the capacity of
    broker only  and  provided  commissions  charged  do  not  exceed  customary
    brokerage charges for such services.
        (c)  Transactions with the  Fund by a broker-dealer  affiliate of IDS as
    may be  allowed by  rule  or order  of  the SEC,  and  if made  pursuant  to
    procedures adopted by the Fund's Board.
    (7) IDS agrees that, except as herein otherwise expressly provided or as may
be  permitted consistent with the use of  a broker-dealer affiliate of IDS under
applicable provisions of the federal securities laws, neither it nor any of  its
officers,  directors or employees  shall at any  time during the  period of this
Agreement, make, accept or receive, directly or indirectly, any fees, profits or
emoluments of  any  character  in  connection  with  the  purchase  or  sale  of
securities  (except shares  issued by the  Fund) or  other assets by  or for the
Fund.

PART FIVE: RENEWAL AND TERMINATION

    (1) This Agreement shall continue in effect until         , 199 , or until a
new agreement is approved by a vote of the majority of the outstanding shares of
the Fund and by vote of the Fund's Board, including the vote required by (b)  of
this  paragraph, and if  no new agreement  is so approved,  this Agreement shall
continue from year  to year  thereafter unless  and until  terminated by  either
party   as  hereinafter  provided,   except  that  such   continuance  shall  be
specifically approved at least  annually (a) by  the Board of the  Fund or by  a
vote  of the majority of the outstanding shares  of the Fund and (b) by the vote
of a  majority  of the  directors  who are  not  parties to  this  Agreement  or
interested persons of any such party, cast in person at a meeting called for the
purpose  of  voting  on such  approval.  As  used in  this  paragraph,  the term
"interested person" shall have the same  meaning as set forth in the  Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act").
    (2)  This Agreement may be terminated by either  the Fund or IDS at any time
by giving  the  other  party  60  days' written  notice  of  such  intention  to
terminate,  provided that any  termination shall be made  without the payment of
any penalty, and provided further that termination may be effected either by the
Board  of  the  Fund  or  by  a   vote  of  the  majority  of  the   outstanding

                                      A-5
<PAGE>
voting  shares of the Fund.  The vote of the  majority of the outstanding voting
shares of the Fund  for the purpose  of this Part  Five shall be  the vote at  a
shareholders' regular meeting, or a special meeting duly called for the purpose,
of  67% or more of the  Fund's shares present at such  meeting if the holders of
more than 50%  of the outstanding  voting shares are  present or represented  by
proxy,  or more than 50% of the outstanding voting shares of the Fund, whichever
is less.
    (3) This Agreement shall terminate in the event of its assignment, the  term
"assignment"  for this purpose having the same  meaning as set forth in the 1940
Act.
    IN WITNESS THEREOF, the parties hereto have executed the foregoing Agreement
as of the day and year first above written.

                                          IDS INTERNATIONAL FUND, INC.

                                          By: --------------------------

                                          IDS FINANCIAL CORPORATION

                                          By: --------------------------

Fund# 28
Job# 94stp3000

                                      A-6
<PAGE>

                               FORM OF PROXY CARD

VOTE THIS PROXY CARD TODAY!
YOUR PROMPT RESPONSE WILL SAVE YOUR FUND
THE EXPENSE OF ADDITIONAL MAILINGS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Please fold and detach card at perforation before mailing

IDS INTERNATIONAL FUND, INC.

PROXY/VOTING
INSTRUCTION CARD
___________________________________________________________________

THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

The undersigned hereby appoints William R. Pearce, Leslie L. Ogg and Robert F.
Froehlke, or any one of them, as proxies, with full power of substitution, to
represent and to vote all of the shares of the undersigned at the regular
meeting to be held on November 9, 1994, and any adjournment thereof.


TO HAVE YOUR VOTE COUNTED, YOU MUST SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THIS PROXY.  IT WILL
BE VOTED AS MARKED, OR IF NOT MARKED, WILL BE VOTED "FOR" EACH PROPOSAL.

THE BOARD RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" ALL PROPOSALS.


(client name and address)

X______________________

X______________________

Date_____________, 1994

Owners please sign as names appear at left.  Executors, administrators,
trustees, etc., should indicate position when signing.

<PAGE>

VOTE THIS PROXY CARD TODAY!
YOUR PROMPT RESPONSE WILL SAVE YOUR FUND
THE EXPENSE OF ADDITIONAL MAILINGS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Please fold and detach card at perforation before mailing

1. Election of Board Members           FOR ( )    WITHHELD ( )    EXCEPTION ( )

To vote for all nominees, mark the "FOR" box in item 1.  To withhold authority
to vote for all nominees, mark the "WITHHELD" box.  To withhold authority to
vote for any nominee, mark the "EXCEPTION" box and strike a line through the
nominee's name.

Fourteen board members are to be elected at the meeting.  The nominees are LYNNE
V. CHENEY, WILLIAM H. DUDLEY, ROBERT F. FROEHLKE, DAVID R. HUBERS, HEINZ F.
HUTTER, ANNE P. JONES, DONALD M. KENDALL, MELVIN R. LAIRD, LEWIS W. LEHR,
WILLIAM R. PEARCE, EDSON W. SPENCER, JOHN R. THOMAS, WHEELOCK WHITNEY, C. ANGUS
WURTELE.

2. Ratification of                     FOR ( )     AGAINST ( )      ABSTAIN ( )
   Independent Auditors

3. Approval of New Investment          FOR ( )     AGAINST ( )      ABSTAIN ( )
   Management Services Agreement

4. Approval of a Change in             FOR ( )     AGAINST ( )      ABSTAIN ( )
   Investment Policies to Permit
   the Fund to Invest All its
   Assets in Another Investment
   Company

5. Approval of Changes in   FOR each policy     ( )   AGAINST   ( ) ABSTAIN ( )
   Fundamental Investment   listed below (except      ALL           ALL
   Policies                 as marked to the
                            contrary)

If you do NOT wish to approve a policy change, please check the appropriate box
below:
( )  A. Margin/Sell Short          ( )  E. Exploration/Development
( )  B. Pledge Assets              ( )  F. Cash Loans
( )  C. Start Up Companies         ( )  G. Real Estate
( )  D. Control or Manage          ( )  H. Commodities




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